/opm-material

Provides thermodynamic relations, capillary pressure curves, etc.

Primary LanguageC++

The Open Porous Media Material Framework

CONTENT

opm-material is an infrastructural OPM module for code related with constitutive relations, such as relative-permeability/capillary pressure laws, fluid systems, flash solvers, heat conduction laws, et cetera. It is a "library-less" module and requires dune-common and dune-istl.

LICENSE

This module is distributed under the GNU General Public License, version 2 or later (GPLv2+). Note, that for these parts the DUNE template exception does NOT apply.

If you need to know the license of an individual header file, refer to the copyright statement at the beginning of each file. To avoid legal issues, the Open Porous Media initiative recommends you to use a license which is compatible with the GNU General Public license, version 3 or later (GPLv3+) for code which you publish that uses any module provided by the Open Porous Media initiative.

PLATFORMS

The opm-material module is designed to run on Linux platforms. It is also regularly run on Mac OS X. No efforts have been made to ensure that the code will compile and run on windows platforms, but contributions for this are certainly welcome.

DEPENDENCIES FOR DEBIAN BASED DISTRIBUTIONS (Debian Squeeze/Ubuntu Precise)

packages necessary for building

sudo apt-get install -y build-essential gfortran cmake cmake-data util-linux

packages necessary for documentation

sudo apt-get install -y doxygen ghostscript texlive-latex-recommended pgf

packages necessary for version control

sudo apt-get install -y git-core

basic libraries

sudo apt-get install -y libboost-all-dev

required DUNE parts

sudo apt-get install libdune-common-dev libdune-istl-dev

DEPENDENCIES FOR SUSE BASED DISTRIBUTIONS

repository containing prerequisites

sudo zypper ar http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/science/openSUSE_12.3/science.repo

utility libraries

sudo zypper in boost-devel

tools necessary for building

sudo zypper in gcc gcc-c++ gcc-fortran cmake git doxygen

DUNE libraries

sudo zypper in dune-common-devel dune-istl-devel

DEPENDENCIES FOR RHEL BASED DISTRIBUTIONS

packages necessary for building

sudo yum install make gcc-c++ gcc-gfortran cmake28 util-linux

packages necessary for documentation

sudo yum install doxygen ghostscript texlive

packages necessary for version control

sudo yum install git

basic libraries

sudo yum install boost-devel

DUNE libraries

sudo yum-config-manager --add-repo
http://www.opm-project.org/packages/current/redhat/6/opm.repo sudo yum install dune-common-devel dune-istl-devel

DOWNLOADING

For a read-only download: git clone git://github.com/OPM/opm-material.git

If you want to contribute, fork OPM/opm-material on github and open pull requests.

BUILDING

There are two ways to build the opm-material module.

  1. As a stand-alone module. In this setup we recommend creating an entirely separate directory outside the directory containing the source code and doing the build from that separate directory (termed "the build directory"). This configuration is sometimes referred to as an "out-of-source build".

As an example, consider the following layout in which "opm-material" refers to the directory containing the package source code as downloaded from GitHub

workspace
  |
  +-- build
  |
  +-- opm-material
  |     |
  |     +-- ...
  |     |
  |     +-- opm
  |     |
  |     +-- ...

We will configure a release-type (optimised) build using traditional Unix Makefiles within the "build" directory. The following command configures the build

cd path/to/build
cmake ../opm-material -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release

If you want to debug the library you should specify the build type "Debug" instead of "Release" in the command above. This will disable optimizations and make it easier to step through the code.

Building the software then amounts to typing

make

in the top-level "build" directory; i.e., the directory from which we invoked the "cmake" utility. On a multi-core computer system you may want to build the software in parallel (make(1)'s "job-server" mode) in order to reduce the total amount of time needed to complete the build. To do so, replace the above "make" command with

make -j N

or, possibly,

nice -20 make -j N

in which "N" is an integer that should typically not exceed the number of cores in the system.

Once the library has been built, it can be installed in a central, system-wide location (often in "/usr/local") through the command

sudo make install
  1. As a dune module.
  • Put the opm-material directory in the same directory as the other dune modules to be built (e.g. dune-commmon, dune-grid). Note that for Ubuntu you can install Dune from the ppa as outlined above.
  • Run dunecontrol as normal. For more information on the dune build system, see http://www.dune-project.org/doc/installation-notes.html

DOCUMENTATION

Efforts have been made to document the code with Doxygen. In order to build the documentation, enter the command

make doc

in the topmost directory.

REPORTING ISSUES

Issues can be reported in the Git issue tracker online at:

http://github.com/OPM/opm-material/issues

To help diagnose build errors, please provide a link to a build log together with the issue description.

You can capture such a log from the build using the `script' utility, e.g.:

LOGFILE=$(date +%Y%m%d-%H%M-)build.log ;
    cmake -E cmake_echo_color --cyan --bold "Log file: $LOGFILE" ;
script -q $LOGFILE -c 'cmake ../opm-material -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug' &&
script -q $LOGFILE -a -c 'ionice nice make -j 4 -l 3' ||
cat CMakeCache.txt CMakeFiles/CMake*.log >> $LOGFILE

The resulting file can be uploaded to for instance gist.github.com.