Files
opm-common/examples/opmi.cpp
Jørgen Kvalsvik e884b0664c Redesign cmake
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.
2017-06-01 15:29:23 +02:00

63 lines
2.0 KiB
C++

/*
Copyright 2013 Statoil ASA.
This file is part of the Open Porous Media project (OPM).
OPM is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
OPM is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with OPM. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include <iostream>
#include <opm/parser/eclipse/Parser/Parser.hpp>
#include <opm/parser/eclipse/Parser/MessageContainer.hpp>
#include <opm/parser/eclipse/Parser/ParseContext.hpp>
#include <opm/parser/eclipse/Deck/Deck.hpp>
#include <opm/parser/eclipse/EclipseState/EclipseState.hpp>
inline void dumpMessages( const Opm::MessageContainer& messageContainer) {
auto extractMessage = [](const Opm::Message& msg) {
const auto& location = msg.location;
if (location)
return location.filename + ":" + std::to_string( location.lineno ) + " " + msg.message;
else
return msg.message;
};
for(const auto& msg : messageContainer)
std::cout << extractMessage(msg) << std::endl;
}
inline void loadDeck( const char * deck_file) {
Opm::ParseContext parseContext;
Opm::Parser parser;
std::cout << "Loading deck: " << deck_file << " ..... "; std::cout.flush();
auto deck = parser.parseFile(deck_file, parseContext);
std::cout << "parse complete - creating EclipseState .... "; std::cout.flush();
Opm::EclipseState state( deck, parseContext );
std::cout << "complete." << std::endl;
dumpMessages( deck.getMessageContainer() );
}
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
for (int iarg = 1; iarg < argc; iarg++)
loadDeck( argv[iarg] );
}