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Revision as of 19:17, 30 November 2007
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What is ParaDiS and how to obtain a copy
ParaDiS is a free large scale dislocation dynamics simulation code to study the fundamental mechanisms of plasticity. It was originally developed at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. It is written in C (with a little C++) and uses the MPI library for communication between processors. It runs routinely on 100-1000 processors and scalability on 132,000 processors of BlueGene/L has been demonstrated.
You can go to http://paradis.stanford.edu to obtain a free copy of the source code of ParaDiS. You will need to requestion an account by submitting a username, a password and a brief description of yourself and your research interests. Once your account request is approved, you will receive a confirmation email and you can download the ParaDiS source code. The same web site also contains the documentation of the ParaDiS code, including tutorials and reference manuals.
The source file you obtain should look something like pub-dd3d.v2.0.tar.gz. It is recommended that you create a ~/Codes directory and extract the source code there.
cd ~/Codes tar zxvf pub-dd3d.v2.0.tar.gz cd dd3dv2.0
This should create a ~/Codes/dd3dv2.0 directory. We will refer to it as $ParaDiS in the following.
How to compile ParaDiS
Go to the $ParaDiS directory. You may need to edit the makefile.setup file. The most important variables are SYS and MODE. SYS specifies the type of your computer and MODE can be either SERIAL or PARALLEL. For example, suppose you want to compile ParaDiS on a Linux/Intel workstation with 1 processor. You want to set SYS = i386 and MODE = SERIAL in the makefile.setup file. Then, you can just type
make dd3d
If the compilation is successful, this creates the main executable dd3d in your $ParaDiS directory. If you type
make
instead, then in addition to dd3d, a few useful executables will be created in the $ParaDiS/Utilities directory.
If there are some problems during compilation, you should then look into the makefile.setup file, and check whether the lines CC_SERIAL.i386, CPP_SERIAL.i386, CCFLAG_SERIAL.i386, CPPFLAG_SERIAL.i386 correctly specify the C/C++ compilers on your computer.