This commit extends the processing of segment-related summary
vectors to also support specifications of the form
SOFR
/
designating all segments of all multi-segmented wells at all times.
Expand SummaryConfig unit test to exercise this extended record
processing mode.
This commit extends the SummaryConfig class to recognise a small
subset of segment-related summary vectors. In particular, this
brings support for 'SGFR', 'SOFR', 'SPR', and 'SWFR'--at least in a
restricted sense. We do not yet support cases like
SOFR
/
which designates all segments in all wells at all times.
The unit testing is presently minimal and must be expanded before
this is ready for inclusion into master. In particular, we only
check that cases like
SOFR
'PROD01' 1 /
/
generate the expected summary vector nodes (class SummaryNode).
Tune the makefile according to new principles, which adds a few bells
and whistles and for clarity.
Synopsis:
* The dependency on opm-common is completely gone. This is reflected in
travis and appveyor as well. No non-kitware cmake modules are used.
* Directories are flattened, quite a bit - source code is located in the
lib/ directory if it belongs to opm-parser, and external/ if third
party.
* The sibling build feature is implemented through cmake's
export(PACKAGE) rather than implicitly looking through source files.
* Targets explicitly set required public and private include
directories, compile options and definitions, which cmake will handle
and propagate
* opm-parser-config.cmake for downstream users is now provided.
* Dependencies are set up using targets. In the future, when cmake 3.x+
can be used, these should be either targets from newer Find modules,
or interface libraries.
* Fewer system specific assumptions are coded in, instead we assume
cmake or users set up system specific details.
* All module wide configuration and looking up libraries is handled in
the root makefile - all sub directories only set up libraries and
compile options for the module in question.
* Targets are defined and links handled transitively because cmake now
is told about them. ${module_LIBRARIES} variables are gone.
This is largely guided by the principles outlined in
https://rix0r.nl/blog/2015/08/13/cmake-guide/
Most source files are just moved - if they have some content change then
it's nothing more than include fixes or similar in order to make them
compile.