samurai
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Intervals coupled with algebra of set to handle adaptive mesh refinement and operators on it.
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The use of mesh adaptation methods in numerical simulation allows to drastically reduce the memory footprint and the computational costs. There are different kinds of methods: AMR patch-based, AMR cell-based, multiresolution cell-based or point-based, ...
Different open source software is available to the community to manage mesh adaptation: AMReX for patch-based AMR, p4est and pablo for cell-based adaptation.
The strength of samurai is that it allows to implement all the above mentioned mesh adaptation methods from the same data structure. The mesh is represented as intervals and a set algebra allows to efficiently search for subsets among these intervals. Samurai also offers a flexible and pleasant interface to easily implement numerical methods.
Table of Contents
-
Get started
- The advection equation
- The projection operator
- There's more
- Features
-
Installation
- From conda
- From Conan Center
- From source
- Get help
- Project assistance
- Contributing
- License
Get started
In this section, we propose two examples: the first one solves a 2D advection equation with mesh adaptation using multiresolution, the second one shows the use of set algebra on intervals.
The advection equation
We want to solve the 2D advection equation given by
$$ \partial_t u + a \cdot \nabla u = 0 \; \text{in} \; [0, 1]\times [0, 1] $$
with homogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions and $a = (1, 1)$. The initial solution is given by
$$ u_0(x, y) = \left\{ \begin{align*} 1 & \; \text{in} \; [0.4, 0.6]\times [0.4, 0.6], \ 0 & \; \text{elsewhere}. \end{align*} \right. $$
To solve this equation, we use the well known upwind scheme.
The following steps describe how to solve this problem with samurai. It is important to note that these steps are generally the same whatever the equations we want to solve.
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Define the configuration of the problem
constexpr size_t dim = 2; using Config = samurai::MRConfig<dim>; std::size_t min_level = 2, max_level = 8;
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Create the Cartesian mesh
const samurai::Box<double, dim> box({0., 0.}, {1., 1.}); samurai::MRMesh<Config> mesh(box, min_level, max_level);
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Create the field on this mesh
auto u = samurai::make_field<double, 1>("u", mesh); samurai::make_bc<samurai::Dirichlet<1>>(u, 0.);
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Initialization of this field
samurai::for_each_cell(mesh, [&](const auto& cell) { double length = 0.2; if (xt::all(xt::abs(cell.center() - 0.5) <= 0.5*length)) { u[cell] = 1; } });
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Create the adaptation method
auto MRadaptation = samurai::make_MRAdapt(u);
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Time loop
double dx = samurai::cell_length(max_level); double dt = 0.5*dx; auto unp1 = samurai::make_field<double, 1>("u", mesh); // Time loop for (std::size_t nite = 0; nite < 50; ++nite) { // adapt u MRadaptation(1e-4, 2); // update the ghosts used by the upwind scheme samurai::update_ghost_mr(u); // upwind scheme samurai::for_each_interval(mesh, [&](std::size_t level, const auto& i, const auto& index) { double dx = samurai::cell_length(level); auto j = index[0]; unp1(level, i, j) = u(level, i, j) - dt / dx * (u(level, i, j) - u(level, i - 1, j) + u(level, i, j) - u(level, i, j - 1)); }); std::swap(unp1.array(), u.array()); }
The whole example can be found here.
The projection operator
When manipulating grids of different resolution levels, it is often necessary to transmit the solution of a level $l$ to a level $l+1$ and vice versa. We are interested here in the projection operator defined by
$$ u(l, i, j) = \frac{1}{4}\sum_{k_i=0}^1\sum_{k_j=0}^1 u(l+1, 2i + k_i, 2j + k_j) $$
This operator allows to compute the cell-average value of the solution at a grid node at level $l$ from cell-average values of the solution known on children-nodes at grid level $l + 1$ for a 2D problem.
We assume that we already have a samurai mesh with several level defined in the variable mesh
. To access to a level, we use the operator mesh[level]
. We also assume that we created a field on this mesh using the make_field
and initialized it.
The following steps describe how to implement the projection operator with samurai.
- Create a subset of the mesh using set algebra
auto set = samurai::intersection(mesh[level], mesh[level+1]).on(level);
- Apply an operator on this subset
set([&](const auto& i, const auto index)
{
auto j = index[0];
u(level, i, j) = 0.25*(u(level+1, 2*i, 2*j)
+ u(level+1, 2*i+1, 2*j)
+ u(level+1, 2*i, 2*j+1)
+ u(level+1, 2*i+1, 2*j+1));
});
The multi dimensional projection operator can be found here.
There's more
If you want to learn more about samurai skills by looking at examples, we encourage you to browse the demos directory.
The tutorial directory is a good first step followed by the FiniteVolume directory.
Features
- [x] Facilitate data manipulation by using the formalism on a uniform Cartesian grid
- [x] Facilitate the implementation of complex operators between grid levels
- [x] High memory compression of an adapted mesh
- [x] Complex mesh creation using a set of meshes
- [x] Finite volume methods using flux construction
- [x] Lattice Boltzmann methods examples
- [ ] Finite difference methods
- [ ] Discontinuous Galerkin methods
- [x] Matrix assembling of the discrete operators using PETSc
- [x] AMR cell-based methods
- [ ] AMR patch-based and block-based methods
- [x] MRA cell-based methods
- [ ] MRA point-based methods
- [x] HDF5 ouput format support
- [ ] MPI implementation
Installation
From conda
mamba install samurai
If you want to compile your scripts, you also have to install a C++ compiler and cmake.
mamba install cxx-compiler cmake
And finally, if you have to use PETSc to assemble the matrix of your problem, you need to install it
mamba install petsc pkg-config
From Conan Center
If you want to install samurai from Conan, you can use the following command:
conan install --requires=samurai/0.13.0
From source
Run the cmake configuration
-
With mamba or conda
First, you need to create the environment with all the dependencies installed
mamba env create --file conda/environment.yml mamba activate samurai-env
cmake . -B build -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DBUILD_DEMOS=ON
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With vcpkg
cmake . -B ./build -DENABLE_VCPKG=ON -DBUILD_DEMOS=ON
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With conan
cmake . -B ./build -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DENABLE_CONAN_OPTION=ON -DBUILD_DEMOS=ON
Build the demos
cmake --build ./build --config Release
Get help
For a better understanding of all the components of samurai, you can consult the documentation https://hpc-math-samurai.readthedocs.io.
If you have any question or remark, you can write a message on github discussions and we will be happy do help you or to discuss with you.
Project assistance
If you want to say thank you or/and support active development of samurai:
- Add a GitHub Star to the project.
- Tweet about samurai.
- Write interesting articles about the project on Dev.to, Medium or your personal blog.
Together, we can make samurai better!
Contributing
First off, thanks for taking the time to contribute! Contributions are what make the open-source community such an amazing place to learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make will benefit everybody else and are greatly appreciated.
Please read our contribution guidelines, and thank you for being involved!
License
This project is licensed under the BSD license.
See LICENSE for more information.