Files
OpenFOAM-12/etc
Will Bainbridge 7ab73932cf Function1: Generalisation and removal of unused code
Function1 has been generalised in order to provide functionality
previously provided by some near-duplicate pieces of code.

The interpolationTable and tableReader classes have been removed and
their usage cases replaced by Function1. The interfaces to Function1,
Table and TableFile has been improved for the purpose of using it
internally; i.e., without user input.

Some boundary conditions, fvOptions and function objects which
previously used interpolationTable or other low-level interpolation
classes directly have been changed to use Function1 instead. These
changes may not be backwards compatible. See header documentation for
details.

In addition, the timeVaryingUniformFixedValue boundary condition has
been removed as its functionality is duplicated entirely by
uniformFixedValuePointPatchField.
2019-10-23 13:13:53 +01:00
..
2019-10-18 11:46:20 +01:00
2016-02-10 20:49:04 +00:00

OpenFOAM Configuration

The main OpenFOAM settings are located in the parent etc/ directory. The bash and csh shells are supported and to configure OpenFOAM source etc/bashrc or etc/cshrc respectively which source the following files in the config.sh or config.csh respectively:

  • settings: core settings
  • aliases: aliases for interactive shells
  • unset: sourced to clear as many OpenFOAM environment settings as possible
  • mpi: MPI communications library settings
  • ensight: application settings for EnSight
  • paraview: application settings for ParaView
  • scotch: application settings for compiling against scotch
  • metis: application settings for compiling against metis 5

The config.*/example directories contains various example configuration files for the corresponding shell:

  • compiler: an example of fine tuning ThirdParty compiler settings
  • openmpi: an example of fine tuning openmpi settings for OpenFOAM
  • paraview: an example of chaining to the standard config/paraview with a different ParaView_VERSION
  • prefs: an example of supplying alternative site-defined settings