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Artemis

Contributors: Adam Dempsey, Shengtai Li, Alex Long, Patrick Mullen, Ben Ryan, Ryan Wollaeger

Software release number O4811

Documentation

The latest documentation is hosted here

To build the documentation locally,

cd artemis/doc/
make html

If you encounter errors you may need to install additional python packages:

pip install sphinx pyyaml sphinx_rtd_theme

Once the documentation is built, if you have built the docs on a remote server (e.g. darwin), to view the documentation in your browser on your local machine, from a terminal on your local machine:

ssh -L 8080:localhost:8080 [email protected]
cd /path/to/artemis/doc/_build/html
python3 -m http.server 8080

Then again on your local machine navigate your browser to

http://localhost:8080

and the documentation should display.

Required dependencies

  • CMake 3.13 or greater
  • C++ compiler (C++17 support)
  • MPI
  • OpenMP
  • HDF5
  • Parthenon
  • singularity-eos

Environment

On deployed platforms, the environment with required dependencies can be set up via

source env/bash

Currently supported computers/partitions are:

Darwin

skylake-gold
volta-x86 (gpu)

Chicoma

cpu
gpu

Venado

gg (cpu)
gh (gpu)

Installation

git submodule update --init --recursive
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ../
make -j install

Submodules

The most reliable way to update submodule versions is to simply remove the external folder:

rm -rf external/

and re-initialize the submodules

git submodule update --init --recursive

Formatting the software

Any contributions to the Artemis software must be compliant with the C++ clang formatter and the Python black formatter. Linting contributions can be done via an automated formatting script: CFM=clang-format-12 ./style/format.sh

Testing

There is a suite of tests in the tst/ directory. Tests are run with the included run_tests.py script. This script can be run in three ways:

  1. With default arguments, where the current version of the source will be built. The resulting executable can be saved for reuse with --save_build, and if saved can be reused in subsequent test runs with --reuse_build. Note that --save_build must continue to be supplied as well to avoid the reused build being deleted after the tests are run.
  2. If the run_tests.py script is called from a directory with a valid artemis executable, that executable will be used for testing and will not be cleaned up afterwards.
  3. If the path to an artemis executable is provided to the --exe option of run_tests.py, that executable will be used for testing and will not be cleaned up afterwards.

In all cases, the tests will be run from a tst directory created in the same folder as the executable being used. Figures will be created in artemis/tst/figs and the log file in artemis/tst.

To run the full regression suite, do

python3 run_tests.py regression.suite

You can also pass a list of individual tests to the script, or create your own suite file.

CI

We use the github CI for regression testing. The CI will not run if the PR is marked "Draft:" or "WIP:". Removing these labels from the title will not automatically launch the CI. To launch the CI with an empty commit, do

git commit --allow-empty -m "trigger pipeline" && git push

A portion of the CI is run on LANL's internal Darwin platform. To launch this CI job, someone with Darwin access (usually a LANL employee) must first create a Github Personal Access Token, like so:

  • github.com profile -> Settings -> Developer Settings -> Personal Access Tokens -> Tokens (classic)
  • Click the Generate New Token button -> Generate New Token (classic)
  • Name it something like artemis_token in the Note box
  • Click the workflow checkbox (which will also check the repo boxes)
  • Generate token
  • You only get to see the token once, so immediately copy it.

Store the token securely in your own environment as ARTEMIS_GITHUB_TOKEN, e.g. in your Darwin ~/.bashrc:

export ARTEMIS_GITHUB_TOKEN=[token]

and then, again from Darwin, manually launch the CI runner:

cd artemis
./tst/launch_ci_runner.py [Number of the github PR]

Note that launch_ci_runner.py will create a temporary checkout of the current state of the branch associated with this PR according to the origin remote, so you don't need to worry about the state of your local checkout of artemis.

Release

Artemis is released under the BSD 3-Clause License. For more details see the LICENSE.md file.

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