the formatting for the standard git status output is unstable,
and has changed in newer versions of the git client. this lead
to missing lines in untracked files.
If a well is under a group that is limited by a target, it should use as little gaslift as possible.
The reduction algorithm will reduce the gaslift of the well as long as the groups potential is above the groups target.
Introduces two new data types BasicRates and LimitedRates to capture
oil, gas, and water rates, and whether they have been limited by well
or group targets. This reduces the number of variables that are passed
to and returned from various methods and thus makes the code easier to
read.
There was a fallout when skipping concating these files to the
default ones (PR #1708). We should also have deactivated creating
these files at all. As a result these files appeared in all parallel
runs that were aborted.
This change now prevents creating and logging to these files in
parallel in a default
run (--enable-parallel-logging-fallout-warning=false).
Developers can still activate logging and concating to see whether
everything is only logged on the io process by passing
--enable-parallel-logging-fallout-warning=true.
Closes 3725
The headers BlackoilWellModel.hpp, StandardWell.hpp,and WellInterface.hpp
all include various GasLift*.hpp headers directly. That means that any
client code that uses those well-related headers will need to have the
GasLift* headers available too.
Also sorts the headers under opm/simulators/wells to make the it easier
to read.
Introduces a gaslift debugging variable in ALQState in WellState. This
variable will persist between timesteps in contrast to when debugging
variables are defined in GasLiftSingleWell, GasLiftGroupState, or GasLiftStage2.
Currently only an integer variable debug_counter is added to ALQState,
which can be used as follows: First debugging is switched on globally
for BlackOilWellModel, GasLiftSingleWell, GasLiftGroupState, and
GasLiftStage2 by setting glift_debug to a true value in BlackOilWellModelGeneric.
Then, the following debugging code can be added to e.g. one of
GasLiftSingleWell, GasLiftGroupState, or GasLiftStage2 :
auto count = debugUpdateGlobalCounter_();
if (count == some_integer) {
displayDebugMessage_("stop here");
}
Here, the integer "some_integer" is determined typically by looking at
the debugging output of a previous run. This can be done since the
call to debugUpdateGlobalCounter_() will print out the current value
of the counter and then increment the counter by one. And it will be
easy to recognize these values in the debug ouput. If you find a place
in the output that looks suspect, just take a note of the counter
value in the output around that point and insert the value for
"some_integer", then after recompiling the code with the desired value
for "some_integer", it is now easy to set a breakpoint in GDB at the
line
displayDebugMessage_("stop here").
shown in the above snippet. This should improve the ability to quickly
to set a breakpoint in GDB around at a given time and point in the simulation.