| [ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
7.2 Solver example
Here is a small example of how to interface a C++ solver with Gmsh. The following listing reproduces the ‘utils/solvers/c++/solver.cpp’ file from the Gmsh source distribution (C, Perl and Python examples are also available).
// This is a dummy C++ client solver for Gmsh: it does not solve
// anything, but shows how to program your own solver to interact with
// the Gmsh solver module.
//
// To compile this solver, type something like:
//
// g++ solver.cpp -o solver.exe
//
// To run it, merge the contents of the file solver.opt into your
// default Gmsh option file, or launch Gmsh with the command:
//
// gmsh -option solver.opt
//
// You will then see a new button labeled "My C++ solver" in Gmsh's
// solver menu.
#include <math.h>
#include "GmshSocket.h"
typedef enum { send_options, run_code } action;
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
action what_to_do = run_code;
char *name = 0, *option = 0, *socket = 0;
// parse command line
int i = 0;
while(i < argc) {
if(argv[i][0] == '-') {
if(!strcmp(argv[i] + 1, "socket")) {
i++;
if(argv[i]) socket = argv[i++];
}
else if(!strcmp(argv[i] + 1, "options")) {
i++;
what_to_do = send_options;
}
else if(!strcmp(argv[i] + 1, "run")) {
i++;
what_to_do = run_code;
if(argv[i]) option = argv[i++];
}
}
else
name = argv[i++];
}
if(!socket) {
printf("No socket specified: running non-interactively...\n");
exit(1);
}
// connect to Gmsh
GmshClient client;
if(client.Connect(socket) < 0){
printf("Unable to connect to Gmsh\n");
exit(1);
}
client.Start();
if(what_to_do == send_options) {
// send the available options for this computation
client.Option(1, "FormulationH");
client.Option(1, "ConvTest");
client.Option(1, "Blablabli");
}
else if(what_to_do == run_code){
// do the computation and merge some views
for(int i = 0; i < 10; i++){
client.Info("Computing curve...");
// fake computation for 500ms:
#if !defined(WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__)
usleep(500 * 1000);
#else
Sleep(500);
#endif
client.Info("Done computing curve");
FILE *file = fopen("solver.pos", "w");
if(!file)
client.Error("Unable to open output file");
else {
fprintf(file, "View.Type = 2;\n");
fprintf(file, "View.Axes = 3;\n");
fprintf(file, "Delete View[0];\n");
fprintf(file, "View \"%s\"{\n", option);
for(int j = 0; j < 100; j++)
fprintf(file, "SP(%d,0,0){%g};\n", j,sin(j*i*M_PI/10.));
fprintf(file, "};\n");
fclose(file);
client.MergeFile("solver.pos");
}
}
client.Info("Done!");
}
client.Stop();
client.Disconnect();
}
To define the above solver as the second external solver in Gmsh, you then
need to define the following options (either merge them in your Gmsh option
file, or use the -option command-line option—see Command-line options):
Solver.Name1 = "My C++ Solver"; Solver.Executable1 = "solver.exe"; Solver.OptionCommand1 = "-options"; Solver.FirstOption1 = "My options"; Solver.FirstButton1 = "Run !"; Solver.FirstButtonCommand1 = "-run %s"; Solver.ClientServer1 = 1; Solver.MergeViews1 = 1; Solver.PopupMessages1 = 1;
| [ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
