Commit Graph

80 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
79048eb68f STYLE: use writeEntry(), beginBlock(), endBlock() methods
- use dictionary::get<..> instead of lookup in a few more places
2020-04-28 10:41:23 +02:00
ee96dba0cf STYLE: simplify Random constructors
COMP: use generated methods in a few more places
2020-01-21 12:12:44 +01:00
fdf8d10ab4 Merge commit 'e9219558d7' into develop-v1906 2019-12-05 11:47:19 +00:00
e9219558d7 GIT: Header file updates 2019-10-31 14:48:44 +00:00
4de1215b44 STYLE: use default for constructors/destructors 2019-10-28 16:13:42 +01:00
38b53e5346 STYLE: use default destructor in header definitions 2019-09-24 12:14:36 +02:00
f94be1bebb ENH: use FatalIOErrorInLookup instead of FatalErrorInLookup 2019-07-16 10:26:51 +02:00
fb09f56aba ENH: use FatalErrorInLookup macros (#1362) 2019-07-12 18:00:00 +02:00
60234ab007 STYLE: reduced nesting on return branching 2019-02-13 08:06:36 +01:00
154029ddd0 BOT: Cleaned up header files 2019-02-06 12:28:23 +00:00
1d85fecf4d ENH: use Zero when zero-initializing types
- makes the intent clearer and avoids the need for additional
  constructor casting. Eg,

      labelList(10, Zero)    vs.  labelList(10, 0)
      scalarField(10, Zero)  vs.  scalarField(10, scalar(0))
      vectorField(10, Zero)  vs.  vectorField(10, vector::zero)
2018-12-11 23:50:15 +01:00
dd87c98393 ENH: add read guard for dimensionedType constructors (#762)
- deprecate dimensionedType constructors using an Istream in favour of
  versions accepting a keyword and a dictionary.

  Dictionary entries are almost the exclusive means of read
  constructing a dimensionedType. By construct from the dictionary
  entry instead of doing a lookup() first, we can detect possible
  input errors such as too many tokens as a result of a input syntax
  error.

  Constructing a dimensionedType from a dictionary entry now has
  two forms.

  1.  dimensionedType(key, dims, dict);

      This is the constructor that will normally be used.

      It accepts entries with optional leading names and/or
      dimensions. If the entry contains dimensions, they are
      verified against the expected dimensions and an IOError is
      raised if they do not correspond. On conclusion, checks the
      token stream for any trailing rubbish.

  2.  dimensionedType(key, dict);

      This constructor is used less frequently.

      Similar to the previous description, except that it is initially
      dimensionless. If entry contains dimensions, they are used
      without further verification. The constructor also includes a
      token stream check.

      This constructor is useful when the dimensions are entirely
      defined from the dictionary input, but also when handling
      transition code where the input dimensions are not obvious from
      the source.

      This constructor can also be handy when obtaining values from
      a dictionary without needing to worry about the input dimensions.
      For example,

         Info<< "rho: " << dimensionedScalar("rho", dict).value() << nl;

      This will accept a large range of inputs without hassle.

ENH: consistent handling of dimensionedType for inputs (#1083)

BUG: incorrect Omega dimensions (fixes #2084)
2018-11-20 15:14:10 +01:00
8fabc32539 ENH: simplify objectRegistry access names (issue #322)
New name:  findObject(), cfindObject()
  Old name:  lookupObjectPtr()

      Return a const pointer or nullptr on failure.

  New name:  findObject()
  Old name:  --

      Return a non-const pointer or nullptr on failure.

  New name:  getObjectPtr()
  Old name:  lookupObjectRefPtr()

      Return a non-const pointer or nullptr on failure.
      Can be called on a const object and it will perform a
      const_cast.

- use these updated names and functionality in more places

NB: The older methods names are deprecated, but continue to be defined.
2018-10-17 16:44:10 +02:00
8eddcc072a ENH: avoid readScalar, readLabel etc from dictionary (#762, #1033)
- use the dictionary 'get' methods instead of readScalar for
  additional checking

     Unchecked:  readScalar(dict.lookup("key"));
     Checked:    dict.get<scalar>("key");

- In templated classes that also inherit from a dictionary, an additional
  'template' keyword will be required. Eg,

     this->coeffsDict().template get<scalar>("key");

  For this common use case, the predefined getXXX shortcuts may be
  useful. Eg,

     this->coeffsDict().getScalar("key");
2018-10-12 08:14:47 +02:00
6697bb4735 ENH: improve, simplify, rationalize coordinate system handling (issue #863)
Previously the coordinate system functionality was split between
coordinateSystem and coordinateRotation. The coordinateRotation stored
the rotation tensor and handled all tensor transformations.

The functionality has now been revised and consolidated into the
coordinateSystem classes. The sole purpose of coordinateRotation
is now just to provide a selectable mechanism of how to define the
rotation tensor (eg, axis-angle, euler angles, local axes) for user
input, but after providing the appropriate rotation tensor it has
no further influence on the transformations.

--

The coordinateSystem class now contains an origin and a base rotation
tensor directly and various transformation methods.

  - The origin represents the "shift" for a local coordinate system.

  - The base rotation tensor represents the "tilt" or orientation
    of the local coordinate system in general (eg, for mapping
    positions), but may require position-dependent tensors when
    transforming vectors and tensors.

For some coordinate systems (currently the cylindrical coordinate system),
the rotation tensor required for rotating a vector or tensor is
position-dependent.

The new coordinateSystem and its derivates (cartesian, cylindrical,
indirect) now provide a uniform() method to define if the rotation
tensor is position dependent/independent.

The coordinateSystem transform and invTransform methods are now
available in two-parameter forms for obtaining position-dependent
rotation tensors. Eg,

      ... = cs.transform(globalPt, someVector);

In some cases it can be useful to use query uniform() to avoid
storage of redundant values.

      if (cs.uniform())
      {
          vector xx = cs.transform(someVector);
      }
      else
      {
          List<vector> xx = cs.transform(manyPoints, someVector);
      }

Support transform/invTransform for common data types:
   (scalar, vector, sphericalTensor, symmTensor, tensor).

====================
  Breaking Changes
====================

- These changes to coordinate systems and rotations may represent
  a breaking change for existing user coding.

- Relocating the rotation tensor into coordinateSystem itself means
  that the coordinate system 'R()' method now returns the rotation
  directly instead of the coordinateRotation. The method name 'R()'
  was chosen for consistency with other low-level entities (eg,
  quaternion).

  The following changes will be needed in coding:

      Old:  tensor rot = cs.R().R();
      New:  tensor rot = cs.R();

      Old:  cs.R().transform(...);
      New:  cs.transform(...);

  Accessing the runTime selectable coordinateRotation
  has moved to the rotation() method:

      Old:  Info<< "Rotation input: " << cs.R() << nl;
      New:  Info<< "Rotation input: " << cs.rotation() << nl;

- Naming consistency changes may also cause code to break.

      Old:  transformVector()
      New:  transformPrincipal()

  The old method name transformTensor() now simply becomes transform().

====================
  New methods
====================

For operations requiring caching of the coordinate rotations, the
'R()' method can be used with multiple input points:

       tensorField rots(cs.R(somePoints));

   and later

       Foam::transformList(rots, someVectors);

The rotation() method can also be used to change the rotation tensor
via a new coordinateRotation definition (issue #879).

The new methods transformPoint/invTransformPoint provide
transformations with an origin offset using Cartesian for both local
and global points. These can be used to determine the local position
based on the origin/rotation without interpreting it as a r-theta-z
value, for example.

================
  Input format
================

- Streamline dictionary input requirements

  * The default type is cartesian.
  * The default rotation type is the commonly used axes rotation
    specification (with e1/e2/3), which is assumed if the 'rotation'
    sub-dictionary does not exist.

    Example,

    Compact specification:

        coordinateSystem
        {
            origin  (0 0 0);
            e2      (0 1 0);
            e3      (0.5 0 0.866025);
        }

    Full specification (also accepts the longer 'coordinateRotation'
    sub-dictionary name):

        coordinateSystem
        {
            type    cartesian;
            origin  (0 0 0);

            rotation
            {
                type    axes;
                e2      (0 1 0);
                e3      (0.5 0 0.866025);
            }
        }

   This simplifies the input for many cases.

- Additional rotation specification 'none' (an identity rotation):

      coordinateSystem
      {
          origin  (0 0 0);
          rotation { type none; }
      }

- Additional rotation specification 'axisAngle', which is similar
  to the -rotate-angle option for transforming points (issue #660).
  For some cases this can be more intuitive.

  For example,

      rotation
      {
          type    axisAngle;
          axis    (0 1 0);
          angle   30;
      }
  vs.
      rotation
      {
          type    axes;
          e2      (0 1 0);
          e3      (0.5 0 0.866025);
      }

- shorter names (or older longer names) for the coordinate rotation
  specification.

     euler         EulerRotation
     starcd        STARCDRotation
     axes          axesRotation

================
  Coding Style
================
- use Foam::coordSystem namespace for categories of coordinate systems
  (cartesian, cylindrical, indirect). This reduces potential name
  clashes and makes a clearer declaration. Eg,

      coordSystem::cartesian csys_;

  The older names (eg, cartesianCS, etc) remain available via typedefs.

- added coordinateRotations namespace for better organization and
  reduce potential name clashes.
2018-10-01 13:54:10 +02:00
34a7ea5da7 STYLE: use auto + cfind for constructor tables 2018-07-19 15:55:08 +02:00
dc521b95df STYLE: consistent use of '= delete' 2018-05-30 12:03:17 +02:00
34606f54b9 COMP: Updated createDpDt for moving meshes 2018-06-01 15:39:28 +01:00
f51ee9a0e2 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/develop' into develop-pre-release 2018-05-31 17:34:16 +01:00
f9fe71815a STYLE: consistent use of '= delete' for removed constructors/assignments
- make the purpose more explicit, and reduces some work for the
  compiler as well.
2018-05-30 12:03:17 +02:00
57291e8692 STYLE: use autoPtr::New and tmp::New for simple return types 2018-02-26 14:00:30 +01:00
660f3e5492 ENH: cleanup autoPtr class (issue #639)
Improve alignment of its behaviour with std::unique_ptr

  - element_type typedef
  - release() method - identical to ptr() method
  - get() method to get the pointer without checking and without releasing it.
  - operator*() for dereferencing

Method name changes

  - renamed rawPtr() to get()
  - renamed rawRef() to ref(), removed unused const version.

Removed methods/operators

  - assignment from a raw pointer was deleted (was rarely used).
    Can be convenient, but uncontrolled and potentially unsafe.
    Do allow assignment from a literal nullptr though, since this
    can never leak (and also corresponds to the unique_ptr API).

Additional methods

  - clone() method: forwards to the clone() method of the underlying
    data object with argument forwarding.

  - reset(autoPtr&&) as an alternative to operator=(autoPtr&&)

STYLE: avoid implicit conversion from autoPtr to object type in many places

- existing implementation has the following:

     operator const T&() const { return operator*(); }

  which means that the following code works:

       autoPtr<mapPolyMesh> map = ...;
       updateMesh(*map);    // OK: explicit dereferencing
       updateMesh(map());   // OK: explicit dereferencing
       updateMesh(map);     // OK: implicit dereferencing

  for clarity it may preferable to avoid the implicit dereferencing

- prefer operator* to operator() when deferenced a return value
  so it is clearer that a pointer is involve and not a function call
  etc    Eg,   return *meshPtr_;  vs.  return meshPtr_();
2018-02-26 12:00:00 +01:00
4636f190da STYLE: engineFoam: Renamed engineFoam -> XiEngineFoam and sprayEngineFoam -> engineFoam
XiEngineFoam is a premixed/partially-premixed combustion engine solver which
exclusively uses the Xi flamelet combustion model.

engineFoam is a general engine solver for inhomogeneous combustion with or
without spray supporting run-time selection of the chemistry-based combustion
model.
2017-09-19 17:01:54 +01:00
01efb2c85b ENH: engineTime: Generalized to provide run-time selection of piston-motion
Standard crank-connecting rod and the new free-piston kinematics motion options
are provides, others can easily be added.

Contributed by Francesco Contino and Nicolas Bourgeois, BURN Research Group.
2017-09-19 09:26:26 +01:00
56bfc75949 Rationalize the "pos" function
"pos" now returns 1 if the argument is greater than 0, otherwise it returns 0.
This is consistent with the common mathematical definition of the "pos" function:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sign_(mathematics)

However the previous implementation in which 1 was also returned for a 0
argument is useful in many situations so the "pos0" has been added which returns
1 if the argument is greater or equal to 0.  Additionally the "neg0" has been
added which returns 1 if if the argument is less than or equal to 0.
2017-06-22 14:32:18 +01:00
d8d6030ab6 INT: Integration of Mattijs' collocated parallel IO additions
Original commit message:
------------------------

Parallel IO: New collated file format

When an OpenFOAM simulation runs in parallel, the data for decomposed fields and
mesh(es) has historically been stored in multiple files within separate
directories for each processor.  Processor directories are named 'processorN',
where N is the processor number.

This commit introduces an alternative "collated" file format where the data for
each decomposed field (and mesh) is collated into a single file, which is
written and read on the master processor.  The files are stored in a single
directory named 'processors'.

The new format produces significantly fewer files - one per field, instead of N
per field.  For large parallel cases, this avoids the restriction on the number
of open files imposed by the operating system limits.

The file writing can be threaded allowing the simulation to continue running
while the data is being written to file.  NFS (Network File System) is not
needed when using the the collated format and additionally, there is an option
to run without NFS with the original uncollated approach, known as
"masterUncollated".

The controls for the file handling are in the OptimisationSwitches of
etc/controlDict:

OptimisationSwitches
{
    ...

    //- Parallel IO file handler
    //  uncollated (default), collated or masterUncollated
    fileHandler uncollated;

    //- collated: thread buffer size for queued file writes.
    //  If set to 0 or not sufficient for the file size threading is not used.
    //  Default: 2e9
    maxThreadFileBufferSize 2e9;

    //- masterUncollated: non-blocking buffer size.
    //  If the file exceeds this buffer size scheduled transfer is used.
    //  Default: 2e9
    maxMasterFileBufferSize 2e9;
}

When using the collated file handling, memory is allocated for the data in the
thread.  maxThreadFileBufferSize sets the maximum size of memory in bytes that
is allocated.  If the data exceeds this size, the write does not use threading.

When using the masterUncollated file handling, non-blocking MPI communication
requires a sufficiently large memory buffer on the master node.
maxMasterFileBufferSize sets the maximum size in bytes of the buffer.  If the
data exceeds this size, the system uses scheduled communication.

The installation defaults for the fileHandler choice, maxThreadFileBufferSize
and maxMasterFileBufferSize (set in etc/controlDict) can be over-ridden within
the case controlDict file, like other parameters.  Additionally the fileHandler
can be set by:
- the "-fileHandler" command line argument;
- a FOAM_FILEHANDLER environment variable.

A foamFormatConvert utility allows users to convert files between the collated
and uncollated formats, e.g.
    mpirun -np 2 foamFormatConvert -parallel -fileHandler uncollated

An example case demonstrating the file handling methods is provided in:
$FOAM_TUTORIALS/IO/fileHandling

The work was undertaken by Mattijs Janssens, in collaboration with Henry Weller.
2017-07-07 11:39:56 +01:00
bc1f2fa97e STYLE: use auto and cfind to simplify selector usage (issue #512) 2017-07-03 10:36:03 +02:00
bf2ed1abcf ENH: Updated pressure-work term creation for moving meshes 2017-06-27 11:18:55 +01:00
2af602c2f4 STYLE: for Istream/Ostream check() use FUNCTION_NAME in messages 2017-05-26 10:59:16 +02:00
bb67ccd37d ENH: Cleaned up hash table item found checks 2017-05-19 11:15:35 +01:00
7c12f7743b boundaryField() -> boundaryFieldRef() 2016-04-23 23:16:30 +01:00
7ba41e0095 Removed duplicate, inconsistent and spurious comments in .C files 2016-02-29 18:33:54 +00:00
cd852be3da OpenFOAM: Updated all libraries, solvers and utilities to use the new const-safe tmp
The deprecated non-const tmp functionality is now on the compiler switch
NON_CONST_TMP which can be enabled by adding -DNON_CONST_TMP to EXE_INC
in the Make/options file.  However, it is recommended to upgrade all
code to the new safer tmp by using the '.ref()' member function rather
than the non-const '()' dereference operator when non-const access to
the temporary object is required.

Please report any problems on Mantis.

Henry G. Weller
CFD Direct.
2016-02-26 17:31:28 +00:00
f4ba71ddd0 OpenFOAM libraries: Updated to use the new const-safe tmp 2016-02-26 08:13:59 +00:00
c4d5f65a10 Completed update ...ErrorIn -> ...ErrorInFunction
Avoids the clutter and maintenance effort associated with providing the
function signature string.
2015-11-11 09:03:39 +00:00
8628ef2fea Corrected capitalization of Doxygen documentation comments 2015-02-14 13:10:15 +00:00
1cba7e17b5 fvMotionSolverEngineMesh: construct the motionSolver from the engineTime IOdictionary
Resolves bug-report http://www.openfoam.org/mantisbt/view.php?id=774
2015-02-05 12:27:46 +00:00
52e78fb331 fvMotionSolverEngineMesh: Corrected handling of the piston and liner velocity
Changed the motion specification to be point-based rather than cell-based.
Resolves bug report http://www.openfoam.org/mantisbt/view.php?id=766
2013-03-12 17:00:48 +00:00
a07b59c279 STYLE: Updated copyright year 2013-01-21 16:49:49 +00:00
685635e6a3 ENH: Deleting parabolicCylindricalCS, sphericalCS and toroidalCS
coordinate systems
Modifying constructors from dictionary of coordinateSystem class (no
default type)
Adding localAxesRotation type. It constructs a axes-rotation tensor on each
cell centre.
Adding functionality to coordinateRotation blase class (transformTensor,
transformVector, etc)
2013-01-21 12:17:17 +00:00
100a25ee25 STYLE: defineDebug: move into Foam namespace 2012-12-17 17:35:42 +00:00
3ac086402d COMP: sampling: moved sampledSet writers to fileFormats library 2012-11-16 13:11:17 +00:00
bee3d042ab ENH: fvMotionSolverEngineMesh: updated for new fvMotionSolver 2012-08-31 16:55:59 +01:00
f3590edfa0 BUG: Time: restart with non-standard Time (e.g. engineTime) compared values instead of names. 2012-02-23 14:55:28 +00:00
ca4b8c347c ENH: polyMesh,meshSearch: default value on findCell, pointInCell 2011-11-08 17:03:54 +00:00
ee11f9c0e8 ENH: pointInCell, findCell: switchable in-cell algorithm 2011-10-28 11:33:30 +01:00
c2dd153a14 Copyright transfered to the OpenFOAM Foundation 2011-08-14 12:17:30 +01:00
1a0095489b gcc-4.6.0 warnings: removed initialised but unused variables 2011-04-06 22:55:47 +01:00
c8078e73e1 engineFoam: Corrected mesh construction and tutorial 2011-03-18 10:25:25 +00:00
c3cb632c24 Documentation: converted javadoc @ to LaTeX style \ in Doxygen code docs 2011-02-08 18:22:00 +00:00