The h5diff program returns 1 (failure) if there are any differences at all, even if using a relative or absolute difference tolerance and seeing no differences above the tolerance. In that situation, the output will be empty, but the return value 1. To make this test behave similar to the other regression tests, we now check if its output is empty instead. Also: set relative tolerance to 0.01 and remove the absolute test. This test is not meant to trigger for numerics changes, but should capture errors in the writing of the HDF5 file.
Open Porous Media Simulators and Automatic Differentiation Library
CONTENT
opm-simulators contains simulator programs for porous media flow. The most important (and tested) part is the Flow reservoir simulator, which is a fully implicit black-oil simulator that also supports solvent and polymer options. It is built using automatic differentiation, using the local AD class Evaluation from opm-material.
LICENSE
The library is distributed under the GNU General Public License, version 3 or later (GPLv3+).
PLATFORMS
The opm-simulators module is designed to run on Linux platforms. It is also regularly run on Mac OS X. No efforts have been made to ensure that the code will compile and run on windows platforms.
REQUIREMENTS
opm-simulators requires several other OPM modules, see http://opm-project.org/?page_id=274. In addition, opm-simulators requires Dune and some other software to be available, for details see https://opm-project.org/?page_id=239.
DOWNLOADING
For a read-only download: git clone git://github.com/OPM/opm-simulators.git
If you want to contribute, fork OPM/opm-simulators on github.
BUILDING
See build instructions at http://opm-project.org/?page_id=36
DOCUMENTATION
Efforts have been made to document the code with Doxygen. In order to build the documentation, enter the command
make doc
in the topmost directory.
REPORTING ISSUES
Issues can be reported in the Git issue tracker online at:
https://github.com/OPM/opm-simulators/issues
To help diagnose build errors, please provide a link to a build log together with the issue description.
You can capture such a log from the build using the `script' utility, e.g.:
LOGFILE=$(date +%Y%m%d-%H%M-)build.log ;
cmake -E cmake_echo_color --cyan --bold "Log file: $LOGFILE" ;
script -q $LOGFILE -c 'cmake ../opm-core -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug' &&
script -q $LOGFILE -a -c 'ionice nice make -j 4 -l 3' ||
cat CMakeCache.txt CMakeFiles/CMake*.log >> $LOGFILE
The resulting file can be uploaded to for instance gist.github.com.