git-svn-id: svn://svn.icms.temple.edu/lammps-ro/trunk@4806 f3b2605a-c512-4ea7-a41b-209d697bcdaa
This commit is contained in:
@ -1,66 +0,0 @@
|
||||
This directory has a C and C++ code that shows how LAMMPS can be
|
||||
linked to a driver application as a library. The purpose is to
|
||||
illustrate how another code could perform computations while using
|
||||
LAMMPS to perform MD, or how an umbrella code or script could call
|
||||
both LAMMPS and some other code to perform a coupled calculation.
|
||||
|
||||
c_driver.c is the C driver
|
||||
c++_driver.c is the C++ driver
|
||||
|
||||
The 2 codes do the same thing, so you can compare them to see how to
|
||||
drive LAMMPS in this manner. The C driver is similar in spirit to
|
||||
what one could use from a Fortran program or scripting language.
|
||||
|
||||
LAMMPS must first be built as a library. See the "Making LAMMPS"
|
||||
section of Section_start.html in the documentation for info on how to
|
||||
do this. Basically, you type something like
|
||||
|
||||
make makelib
|
||||
make -f Makefile.lib g++
|
||||
|
||||
in the LAMMPS src directory to create liblmp_g++.a
|
||||
|
||||
You can then build either driver code with a compile line something
|
||||
like this, which includes paths to the LAMMPS library interface, MPI,
|
||||
and FFTW.
|
||||
|
||||
This builds the C++ driver with the LAMMPS library using a C++ compiler:
|
||||
|
||||
g++ -I/home/sjplimp/lammps/src -c c++_driver.cpp
|
||||
g++ -L/home/sjplimp/lammps/src c++_driver.o \
|
||||
-llmp_g++ -lfftw -lmpich -lpthread -o c++_driver
|
||||
|
||||
This builds the C driver with the LAMMPS library using a C compiler:
|
||||
|
||||
gcc -I/home/sjplimp/lammps/src -c c_driver.cpp
|
||||
gcc -L/home/sjplimp/lammps/src c_driver.o \
|
||||
-llmp_g++ -lfftw -lmpich -lpthread -lstdc++ -o c_driver
|
||||
|
||||
You then run c++_driver or c_driver on a parallel machine on some
|
||||
number of processors Q with 2 arguments:
|
||||
|
||||
mpirun -np Q c_driver P in.lj
|
||||
|
||||
P is the number of procs you want LAMMPS to run on (must be <= Q).
|
||||
In.lj is a LAMMPS input script.
|
||||
|
||||
The driver will launch LAMMPS on P procs, read the input script a line
|
||||
at a time, and pass each command line to LAMMPS. The final line of
|
||||
the script is a "run" command, so LAMMPS will run the problem.
|
||||
|
||||
The driver then requests all the atom coordinates from LAMMPS, moves
|
||||
one of the atoms a small amount "epsilon", passes the coordinates back
|
||||
to LAMMPS, and runs LAMMPS again. If you look at the output, you
|
||||
should see a small energy change between runs, due to the moved atom.
|
||||
|
||||
The C driver is calling C-style routines in the src/library.cpp file
|
||||
of LAMMPS. You could add any functions you wish to this file to
|
||||
manipulate LAMMPS data however you wish.
|
||||
|
||||
The C++ driver does the same thing, except that it instantiates LAMMPS
|
||||
as an object first. Some of the functions in src/library.cpp can be
|
||||
invoked directly as methods within appropriate LAMMPS classes, which
|
||||
is what the driver does. Any public LAMMPS class method could be
|
||||
called from the driver this way. However the get/put functions are
|
||||
only implemented in src/library.cpp, so the C++ driver calls them as
|
||||
C-style functions.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user