"Previous Section"_Section_errors.html - "LAMMPS WWW Site"_lws - "LAMMPS Documentation"_ld - "LAMMPS Commands"_lc - "Next Section"_Manual.html :c :link(lws,http://lammps.sandia.gov) :link(ld,Manual.html) :link(lc,Section_commands.html#comm) :line 13. Future and history :h3 This section lists features we plan to add to LAMMPS, features of previous versions of LAMMPS, and features of other parallel molecular dynamics codes our group has distributed. 13.1 "Coming attractions"_#hist_1 13.2 "Past versions"_#hist_2 :all(b) :line :line 13.1 Coming attractions :h4,link(hist_1) The "Wish list link"_http://lammps.sandia.gov/future.html on the LAMMPS WWW page gives a list of features we are hoping to add to LAMMPS in the future, including contact names of individuals you can email if you are interested in contributing to the developement or would be a future user of that feature. You can also send "email to the developers"_http://lammps.sandia.gov/authors.html if you want to add your wish to the list. :line 13.2 Past versions :h4,link(hist_2) LAMMPS development began in the mid 1990s under a cooperative research & development agreement (CRADA) between two DOE labs (Sandia and LLNL) and 3 companies (Cray, Bristol Myers Squibb, and Dupont). The goal was to develop a large-scale parallel classical MD code; the coding effort was led by Steve Plimpton at Sandia. After the CRADA ended, a final F77 version, LAMMPS 99, was released. As development of LAMMPS continued at Sandia, its memory management was converted to F90; a final F90 version was released as LAMMPS 2001. The current LAMMPS is a rewrite in C++ and was first publicly released as an open source code in 2004. It includes many new features beyond those in LAMMPS 99 or 2001. It also includes features from older parallel MD codes written at Sandia, namely ParaDyn, Warp, and GranFlow (see below). In late 2006 we began merging new capabilities into LAMMPS that were developed by Aidan Thompson at Sandia for his MD code GRASP, which has a parallel framework similar to LAMMPS. Most notably, these have included many-body potentials - Stillinger-Weber, Tersoff, ReaxFF - and the associated charge-equilibration routines needed for ReaxFF. The "History link"_http://lammps.sandia.gov/history.html on the LAMMPS WWW page gives a timeline of features added to the C++ open-source version of LAMMPS over the last several years. These older codes are available for download from the "LAMMPS WWW site"_lws, except for Warp & GranFlow which were primarily used internally. A brief listing of their features is given here. LAMMPS 2001 F90 + MPI dynamic memory spatial-decomposition parallelism NVE, NVT, NPT, NPH, rRESPA integrators LJ and Coulombic pairwise force fields all-atom, united-atom, bead-spring polymer force fields CHARMM-compatible force fields class 2 force fields 3d/2d Ewald & PPPM various force and temperature constraints SHAKE Hessian-free truncated-Newton minimizer user-defined diagnostics :ul LAMMPS 99 F77 + MPI static memory allocation spatial-decomposition parallelism most of the LAMMPS 2001 features with a few exceptions no 2d Ewald & PPPM molecular force fields are missing a few CHARMM terms no SHAKE :ul Warp F90 + MPI spatial-decomposition parallelism embedded atom method (EAM) metal potentials + LJ lattice and grain-boundary atom creation NVE, NVT integrators boundary conditions for applying shear stresses temperature controls for actively sheared systems per-atom energy and centro-symmetry computation and output :ul ParaDyn F77 + MPI atom- and force-decomposition parallelism embedded atom method (EAM) metal potentials lattice atom creation NVE, NVT, NPT integrators all serial DYNAMO features for controls and constraints :ul GranFlow F90 + MPI spatial-decomposition parallelism frictional granular potentials NVE integrator boundary conditions for granular flow and packing and walls particle insertion :ul