rAKA/feb1692ed4c6master-stable
master-stable vs master
Commit | Author | Details | Committed | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6a524c970887 | richart | more advanced gitlab ci | Dec 5 2019 | ||||
ce482faff6f4 | D244 | richart | Adding first version of gitlab ci | Dec 4 2019 | |||
b4bea500977c | D244 | richart | Adding first version of gitlab ci | Dec 4 2019 | |||
24e2aff1a2d7 | D242 | richart | Merge branch 'master' of c4science.ch:/diffusion/AKA/akantu | Jun 16 2019 | |||
a27deb06d94b | D242 | richart | Change patch version to match bugfixes | Jun 12 2019 | |||
3129ab1917e0 | D242 | richart | Change patch version to match bugfixes | Jun 12 2019 | |||
976b85225a21 | D242 | richart | clang-format | Jun 12 2019 | |||
cce3dea5210c | D242 | richart | potential bug | Jun 12 2019 | |||
1535c398255a | D242 | richart | Change patch version to match bugfixes | Jun 11 2019 | |||
9a65fed9dfbc | D238 | richart | Abaqus reader broken with Boost 1.67 (wont fix) | Jun 5 2019 |
/
README.md
Akantu: Swiss-Made Open-Source Finite-Element Library
Akantu means a little element in Kinyarwanda, a Bantu language. From now on it is also an open- source object-oriented library which has the ambi- tion to be generic and efficient.
Building Akantu
Dependencies
In order to compile Akantu any compiler supporting fully C++14 should work. In addition some libraries are required:
- CMake (>= 3.5.1)
- Boost (preprocessor and Spirit)
- zlib
- blas/lapack
For the python interface:
- Python (>=3 is recommended)
- pybind11 (if not present the build system will try to download it)
To run parallel simulations:
- MPI
- Scotch
To use the static or implicit dynamic solvers at least one of the following libraries is needed:
- MUMPS (since this is usually compiled in static you also need MUMPS dependencies)
- PETSc
To compile the tests and examples:
- Gmsh
- google-test (if not present the build system will try to download it)
On .deb based systems
sh > sudo apt install cmake libboost-dev zlib1g-dev liblapack-dev libblas-dev gmsh # For parallel > sudo apt install mpi-default-dev libmumps-dev # For sequential > sudo apt install libmumps-seq-dev
Configuring and compilation
Akantu is a CMake project, so to configure it, you can follow the usual way:
sh > cd akantu > mkdir build > cd build > ccmake .. [ Set the options that you need ] > make > make install
Using the python interface
You can install `Akantu` using pip, this will install a pre-compiled version:
sh > pip install akantu
You can then import the package in a python script as:
python import akantu
The python API is similar to the C++ one. If you encounter any problem with the python interface, you are welcome to do a merge request or post an issue on GitLab.
Tutorials with the python interface
To help getting started, multiple tutorials using the python interface are available as notebooks with pre-installed version of Akantu on Binder. The following tutorials are currently available: