A correct MPI program should do that.
As MPI_Finalize is part of the destructor of MainObject we need to
make sure that it's destructor is called before the return statement.
We do that manually by resetting the unique_ptr that we now use to
store the MainObject,
this is used transferring ownership of setup structures to the
simulator. drop all the flowEbosXXX set deck methods and use the
generic vanguard. also means various structs that were only passed
in the blackoil simulator are now passed in all simulators.
Initialization is now done in the Main::initMPI() method.
For configurations with dune-fem, this also caused crashes
with dune-fem versions prior to 2.8.
this is very convenient during development.
we can then remove the FLOW_BLACKOIL_ONLY option,
as it is no longer needed - use the flow_blackoil binary instead.
however we need to keep this support in Main.hpp due to the python
bindings relying on it.
Expect non-reference type shared pointers arguments instead of references
to shared pointer. This will make it clear to the caller that the called
function is making a copy of the pointer for its own use and not trying
to modify the original pointer of the caller.
Adds a new constructor to Main.hpp that takes shared pointers to Deck,
EclipseState, Schedule, and SummaryConfig. This makes it possible to
share these variables with Python without worrying about lifetime issues
of the underlying C++ objects. For example, a Python script can first
create an opm.io.schedule.Schedule object which is modified from Python.
Then, assume the same Python script creates an
opm.simulators.BlackOilSimulator which is initialized with the same
schedule object. Since the underlying C++ object is a shared pointer,
the Schedule object in Python may go out of scope (get deleted by Python)
without having the C++ schedule object being deleted. And the Python
BlackOilSimulator may continue to be used after the Python Schedule object
has been deleted since it still has a valid C++ schedule object.
We resort to consistently use unique_ptrs in EclBaseVanguard for
the data read from ECL files or set externally. This means that
during the simulation EclBaseVanguard owns this data and not Main
or the ebos setup functions. This ownership transfer becomes
transparent due to std::move.
This came up when trying to fix the parallel runs of ebos and during
that removing some code duplication.
Make Opm::FlowMainEbos capture the variables argc, argv, outputCout, and
outputFiles. Passing the variables to the constructor and saving them as
class variables in Opm::FlowMainEbos makes the implementation of the
Python interface simpler. For example, the step_init() method does not
need to ask Opm::Main about the values of the variables when it needs to
run execute() in FlowMainEbos.
Another advantage of this refactoring could be that less variables needs
to be passed around from Opm::Main, to flow_ebos_xxx.cpp, and then again
to FlowMainEbos.