the derivatives changed in some instances compared to the old
implementations. this patch updates them to the new versions.
thanks to [at]atgeirr for discovering this.
This is mostly infrastructural code (Opm::Spline,
Opm::TriDiagonalMatrix, property system and the cubic polynomial
inversion code) that is only used by opm-material and eWoms. The
original intention of bringing this code into opm-core was to allow
other modules to start to use this easily. Since nothing in this
direction happened during the last one and a half years, the code only
represents baggage in the opm-core context and should thus be moved to
their consumer modules to make the life of everyone involved simpler.
I'd prefer to pass it for consistency reasons (because basically every
other class which takes an EclipseState object also requires a deck
object), but some people seem to have a very strong option about
this...
or more accurately: "use FIELD or METRIC units", LAB and PVT-M units
are still unsupported, but they seem to be pretty exotic and are also
not supported by opm-parser either...
note that this patch requires an API change (with the usual
consequences for all downstream modules which use this class) because
the deck needs to be passed to EclipseWriter. If somebody knows a
canonical way to get the names of the written units from EclipseState,
this is API change is not required.
As there are no functors for computing the minimum and maximum,
we convert the std::max and std::min function pointers to
functors (which is not really nice.) Previously we were somehow
tricked into using std::greater and std::less, which of course do
return true or false and not what we need. Additionally, do more
excessive testing with different ranges.
We need to compute quite a few global reductions in the
Newton method of opm-autodiff. This commit adds the functionality
to compute several reductions combined using only one global
communication. Compiles and test succeeds with one or more process.
Rename the the meaning for shut as whats used in Eclipse.
STOP: Well stopped off above the formation. I.e. allow for flow in the
well.
SHUT: Well completely isolated from the formation. The well is removed
from the well list.