The timeName() function simply returns the dimensionedScalar::name() which holds
the user-time name of the current time and now that timeName() is no longer
virtual the dimensionedScalar::name() can be called directly. The timeName()
function implementation is maintained for backward-compatibility.
This reference represents unnecessary storage. The mesh can be obtained
from tracking data or passed to the particle evolution functions by
argument.
In addition, removing the mesh reference makes it possible to construct
as particle from an Istream without the need for an iNew class. This
simplifies stream-based transfer, and makes it possible for particles to
be communicated by a polyDistributionMap.
This reduces duplication and inconsistency between the List, Field, Map,
and PtrList variants. It also allows for future extension to other
container types such as DynamicList.
This has required implementation of finer control of stitching in the
fvMesh read constructor and readUpdate methods. Stitching is now
controlled independently of the mesh changers. Full-geometric stitching
is now always the default unless explicitly overridden in the calls to
fvMesh's read methods.
This new mapping structure is designed to support run-time mesh-to-mesh mapping
to allow arbitrary changes to the mesh structure, for example during extreme
motion requiring significant topology change including region disconnection etc.
Mesh motion and topology change are now combinable run-time selectable options
within fvMesh, replacing the restrictive dynamicFvMesh which supported only
motion OR topology change.
All solvers which instantiated a dynamicFvMesh now instantiate an fvMesh which
reads the optional constant/dynamicFvMeshDict to construct an fvMeshMover and/or
an fvMeshTopoChanger. These two are specified within the optional mover and
topoChanger sub-dictionaries of dynamicFvMeshDict.
When the fvMesh is updated the fvMeshTopoChanger is first executed which can
change the mesh topology in anyway, adding or removing points as required, for
example for automatic mesh refinement/unrefinement, and all registered fields
are mapped onto the updated mesh. The fvMeshMover is then executed which moved
the points only and calculates the cell volume change and corresponding
mesh-fluxes for conservative moving mesh transport. If multiple topological
changes or movements are required these would be combined into special
fvMeshMovers and fvMeshTopoChangers which handle the processing of a list of
changes, e.g. solidBodyMotionFunctions:multiMotion.
The tutorials/multiphase/interFoam/laminar/sloshingTank3D3DoF case has been
updated to demonstrate this new functionality by combining solid-body motion
with mesh refinement/unrefinement:
/*--------------------------------*- C++ -*----------------------------------*\
========= |
\\ / F ield | OpenFOAM: The Open Source CFD Toolbox
\\ / O peration | Website: https://openfoam.org
\\ / A nd | Version: dev
\\/ M anipulation |
\*---------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
FoamFile
{
format ascii;
class dictionary;
location "constant";
object dynamicMeshDict;
}
// * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * //
mover
{
type motionSolver;
libs ("libfvMeshMovers.so" "libfvMotionSolvers.so");
motionSolver solidBody;
solidBodyMotionFunction SDA;
CofG (0 0 0);
lamda 50;
rollAmax 0.2;
rollAmin 0.1;
heaveA 4;
swayA 2.4;
Q 2;
Tp 14;
Tpn 12;
dTi 0.06;
dTp -0.001;
}
topoChanger
{
type refiner;
libs ("libfvMeshTopoChangers.so");
// How often to refine
refineInterval 1;
// Field to be refinement on
field alpha.water;
// Refine field in between lower..upper
lowerRefineLevel 0.001;
upperRefineLevel 0.999;
// Have slower than 2:1 refinement
nBufferLayers 1;
// Refine cells only up to maxRefinement levels
maxRefinement 1;
// Stop refinement if maxCells reached
maxCells 200000;
// Flux field and corresponding velocity field. Fluxes on changed
// faces get recalculated by interpolating the velocity. Use 'none'
// on surfaceScalarFields that do not need to be reinterpolated.
correctFluxes
(
(phi none)
(nHatf none)
(rhoPhi none)
(alphaPhi.water none)
(meshPhi none)
(meshPhi_0 none)
(ghf none)
);
// Write the refinement level as a volScalarField
dumpLevel true;
}
// ************************************************************************* //
Note that currently this is the only working combination of mesh-motion with
topology change within the new framework and further development is required to
update the set of topology changers so that topology changes with mapping are
separated from the mesh-motion so that they can be combined with any of the
other movements or topology changes in any manner.
All of the solvers and tutorials have been updated to use the new form of
dynamicMeshDict but backward-compatibility was not practical due to the complete
reorganisation of the mesh change structure.
used to check the existence of and open an object file, read and check the
header without constructing the object.
'typeIOobject' operates in an equivalent and consistent manner to 'regIOobject'
but the type information is provided by the template argument rather than via
virtual functions for which the derived object would need to be constructed,
which is the case for 'regIOobject'.
'typeIOobject' replaces the previous separate functions 'typeHeaderOk' and
'typeFilePath' with a single consistent interface.
now all path functions in 'IOobject' are either templated on the type or require a
'globalFile' argument to specify if the type is case global e.g. 'IOdictionary' or
decomposed in parallel, e.g. almost everything else.
The 'global()' and 'globalFile()' virtual functions are now in 'regIOobject'
abstract base-class and overridden as required by derived classes. The path
functions using 'global()' and 'globalFile()' to differentiate between global
and processor local objects are now also in 'regIOobject' rather than 'IOobject'
to ensure the path returned is absolutely consistent with the type.
Unfortunately there is still potential for unexpected IO behaviour inconsistent
with the global/local nature of the type due to the 'fileOperation' classes
searching the processor directory for case global objects before searching the
case directory. This approach appears to be a work-around for incomplete
integration with and rationalisation of 'IOobject' but with the changes above it
is no longer necessary. Unfortunately this "up" searching is baked-in at a low
level and mixed-up with various complex ways to pick the processor directory
name out of the object path and will take some unravelling but this work will
undertaken as time allows.
The new algorithm provides robust quality triangulations of non-convex
polygons. It also produces a best attempt for polygons that are badly
warped or self intersecting by minimising the area in which the local
normal is in the opposite direction to the overal polygon normal. It is
memory efficient when applied to multiple polygons as it maintains and
reuses its workspace.
This algorithm replaces implementations in the face and
faceTriangulation classes, which have been removed.
Faces can no longer be decomposed into mixtures of tris and
quadrilaterals. Polygonal faces with more than 4 sides are now
decomposed into triangles in foamToVTK and in paraFoam.
so that it can be included directly into the wmake Makefile to allow full
support of gmake syntax, variables, functions etc.
The Make/files file handled in the same manner as the Make/options file if it
contains the SOURCE entry otherwise it is first processed by cpp for backward
compatibility.
The vtk libraries are not fully independent of the paraview
installation, so in order to have multiple valid compilations of the
PVReaders (which is useful for testing) we need multiple versions of
these libraries, too. So, these libraries have been put into
$PV_PLUGIN_PATH, which is a paraview-version-specific subdirectory of
$FOAM_LIBBIN.
gcc version 5 and above and clang version 3.4 and above fully support the C++14
standard and the compilation rules of OpenFOAM-dev now require this support
allowing for further development and maintenance to benefit from the additional
language features provided in C++14.
PVReaders now support compilation against ParaView version 5.7.0 and
greater. All references to ParaView versions less than 4.0.0 have been
removed.
Based on a patch contributed by CFD Support
This is useful to visualise sources which are created as
volScalarField::Internal, e.g. the turbulence generation term for models like
kEpsilon in which it is named kEpsilon:G.
To avoid additional clutter in the interface volFields, surfaceFields and
pointFields are now selected from a single fields selection box consistent with
the single directory with guaranteed unique names in which they are stored.
Note that when visualising the "phi" flux fields that these are extensive, the
value depends directly on the face area, so unless the mesh is uniform
interpolated continuous colour plots are not physical or informative.
Based on proposal contributed by Mattijs Janssens
Currently these deleted function declarations are still in the private section
of the class declarations but will be moved by hand to the public section over
time as this is too complex to automate reliably.
for
db/functionObjects/timeControl/timeControl.H: timeControls
primitives/bools/Switch/Switch.H: class switchType
primitives/strings/fileName/fileName.H: fileType
primitives/strings/wordRe/wordRe.H: compOption
This method waits until all the threads have completed IO operations and
then clears any cached information about the files on disk. This
replaces the deactivation of threading by means of zeroing the buffer
size when writing and reading of a file happen in sequence. It also
allows paraFoam to update the list of available times.
Patch contributed by Mattijs Janssens
Resolves bug report https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=2962
Improvements to existing functionality
--------------------------------------
- MPI is initialised without thread support if it is not needed e.g. uncollated
- Use native c++11 threading; avoids problem with static destruction order.
- etc/cellModels now only read if needed.
- etc/controlDict can now be read from the environment variable FOAM_CONTROLDICT
- Uniform files (e.g. '0/uniform/time') are now read only once on the master only
(with the masterUncollated or collated file handlers)
- collated format writes to 'processorsNNN' instead of 'processors'. The file
format is unchanged.
- Thread buffer and file buffer size are no longer limited to 2Gb.
The global controlDict file contains parameters for file handling. Under some
circumstances, e.g. running in parallel on a system without NFS, the user may
need to set some parameters, e.g. fileHandler, before the global controlDict
file is read from file. To support this, OpenFOAM now allows the global
controlDict to be read as a string set to the FOAM_CONTROLDICT environment
variable.
The FOAM_CONTROLDICT environment variable can be set to the content the global
controlDict file, e.g. from a sh/bash shell:
export FOAM_CONTROLDICT=$(foamDictionary $FOAM_ETC/controlDict)
FOAM_CONTROLDICT can then be passed to mpirun using the -x option, e.g.:
mpirun -np 2 -x FOAM_CONTROLDICT simpleFoam -parallel
Note that while this avoids the need for NFS to read the OpenFOAM configuration
the executable still needs to load shared libraries which must either be copied
locally or available via NFS or equivalent.
New: Multiple IO ranks
----------------------
The masterUncollated and collated fileHandlers can now use multiple ranks for
writing e.g.:
mpirun -np 6 simpleFoam -parallel -ioRanks '(0 3)'
In this example ranks 0 ('processor0') and 3 ('processor3') now handle all the
I/O. Rank 0 handles 0,1,2 and rank 3 handles 3,4,5. The set of IO ranks should always
include 0 as first element and be sorted in increasing order.
The collated fileHandler uses the directory naming processorsNNN_XXX-YYY where
NNN is the total number of processors and XXX and YYY are first and last
processor in the rank, e.g. in above example the directories would be
processors6_0-2
processors6_3-5
and each of the collated files in these contains data of the local ranks
only. The same naming also applies when e.g. running decomposePar:
decomposePar -fileHandler collated -ioRanks '(0 3)'
New: Distributed data
---------------------
The individual root directories can be placed on different hosts with different
paths if necessary. In the current framework it is necessary to specify the
root per slave process but this has been simplified with the option of specifying
the root per host with the -hostRoots command line option:
mpirun -np 6 simpleFoam -parallel -ioRanks '(0 3)' \
-hostRoots '("machineA" "/tmp/" "machineB" "/tmp")'
The hostRoots option is followed by a list of machine name + root directory, the
machine name can contain regular expressions.
New: hostCollated
-----------------
The new hostCollated fileHandler automatically sets the 'ioRanks' according to
the host name with the lowest rank e.g. to run simpleFoam on 6 processors with
ranks 0-2 on machineA and ranks 3-5 on machineB with the machines specified in
the hostfile:
mpirun -np 6 --hostfile hostfile simpleFoam -parallel -fileHandler hostCollated
This is equivalent to
mpirun -np 6 --hostfile hostfile simpleFoam -parallel -fileHandler collated -ioRanks '(0 3)'
This example will write directories:
processors6_0-2/
processors6_3-5/
A typical example would use distributed data e.g. no two nodes, machineA and
machineB, each with three processes:
decomposePar -fileHandler collated -case cavity
# Copy case (constant/*, system/*, processors6/) to master:
rsync -a cavity machineA:/tmp/
# Create root on slave:
ssh machineB mkdir -p /tmp/cavity
# Run
mpirun --hostfile hostfile icoFoam \
-case /tmp/cavity -parallel -fileHandler hostCollated \
-hostRoots '("machineA" "/tmp" "machineB" "/tmp")'
Contributed by Mattijs Janssens