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@ -1,221 +1,265 @@
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LAMMPS.F90 defines a Fortran 2003 module, LAMMPS, which wraps all functions in
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src/library.h so they can be used directly from Fortran-encoded programs.
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All functions in src/library.h that use and/or return C-style pointers have
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Fortran wrapper functions that use Fortran-style arrays, pointers, and
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strings; all C-style memory management is handled internally with no user
|
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intervention.
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This interface was created by Karl Hammond who you can contact with
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questions:
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Karl D. Hammond
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University of Tennessee, Knoxville
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karlh at ugcs.caltech.edu
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karlh at utk.edu
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-------------------------------------
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--COMPILATION--
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First, be advised that mixed-language programming is not trivial. It requires
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you to link in the required libraries of all languages you use (in this case,
|
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those for Fortran, C, and C++), as well as any other libraries required.
|
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You are also advised to read the --USE-- section below before trying to
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compile.
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The following steps will work to compile this module (replace ${LAMMPS_SRC}
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with the path to your LAMMPS source directory):
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(1) Compile LAMMPS as a static library. Call the resulting file ${LAMMPS_LIB},
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which will have an actual name lake liblmp_openmpi.a. If compiling
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using the MPI stubs in ${LAMMPS_SRC}/STUBS, you will need to know where
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libmpi.a is as well (I'll call it ${MPI_STUBS} hereafter)
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(2) Copy said library to your Fortran program's source directory or include
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its location in a -L${LAMMPS_SRC} flag to your compiler.
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(3) Compile (but don't link!) LAMMPS.F90. Example:
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mpif90 -c LAMMPS.f90
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OR
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gfortran -c LAMMPS.F90
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Copy the LAMMPS.o and lammps.mod (or whatever your compiler calls module
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files) to your Fortran program's source directory.
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NOTE: you may get a warning such as,
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subroutine lammps_open_wrapper (argc, argv, communicator, ptr) &
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Variable 'communicator' at (1) is a parameter to the BIND(C)
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procedure 'lammps_open_wrapper' but may not be C interoperable
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This is normal (see --IMPLEMENTATION NOTES--).
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(4) Compile (but don't link) LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp. You will need its header
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file as well. You will have to provide the locations of LAMMPS's
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header files. For example,
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mpicxx -c -I${LAMMPS_SRC} LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp
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OR
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g++ -c -I${LAMMPS_SRC} -I${LAMMPS_SRC}/STUBS LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp
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OR
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icpc -c -I${LAMMPS_SRC} -I${LAMMPS_SRC}/STUBS LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp
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Copy the resulting object file LAMMPS-wrapper.o to your Fortran program's
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source directory.
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(4b) OPTIONAL: Make a library so you can carry around two files instead of
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three. Example:
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ar rs liblammps_fortran.a LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o
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This will create the file liblammps_fortran.a that you can use in place
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of "LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o" in part (6). Note that you will still
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need to have the .mod file from part (3).
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It is also possible to add LAMMPS.o and LAMMPS-wrapper.o into the
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LAMMPS library (e.g., liblmp_openmpi.a) instead of creating a separate
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library, like so:
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ar rs ${LAMMPS_LIB} LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o
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In this case, you can now use the Fortran wrapper functions as if they
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were part of the usual LAMMPS library interface (if you have the module
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file visible to the compiler, that is).
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(5) Compile your Fortran program. Example:
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mpif90 -c myfreeformatfile.f90
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mpif90 -c myfixedformatfile.f
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OR
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gfortran -c myfreeformatfile.f90
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gfortran -c myfixedformatfile.f
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The object files generated by these steps are collectively referred to
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as ${my_object_files} in the next step(s).
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IMPORTANT: If the Fortran module from part (3) is not in the current
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directory or in one searched by the compiler for module files, you will
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need to include that location via the -I flag to the compiler.
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(6) Link everything together, including any libraries needed by LAMMPS (such
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as the C++ standard library, the C math library, the JPEG library, fftw,
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etc.) For example,
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mpif90 LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o ${my_object_files} \
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${LAMMPS_LIB} -lstdc++ -lm
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OR
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gfortran LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o ${my_object_files} \
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${LAMMPS_LIB} ${MPI_STUBS} -lstdc++ -lm
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OR
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ifort LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o ${my_object_files} \
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${LAMMPS_LIB} ${MPI_STUBS} -cxxlib -limf -lm
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Any other required libraries (e.g. -ljpeg, -lfftw) should be added to
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the end of this line.
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You should now have a working executable.
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Steps 3 and 4 above are accomplished, possibly after some modifications to
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the makefile, by make using the attached makefile.
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-------------------------------------
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--USAGE--
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To use this API, your program unit (PROGRAM/SUBROUTINE/FUNCTION/MODULE/etc.)
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should look something like this:
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program call_lammps
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use LAMMPS
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! Other modules, etc.
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implicit none
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type (lammps_instance) :: lmp ! This is a pointer to your LAMMPS instance
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double precision :: fix
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double precision, dimension(:), allocatable :: fix2
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! Rest of declarations
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call lammps_open_no_mpi ('lmp -in /dev/null -screen out.lammps',lmp)
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! Set up rest of program here
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call lammps_file (lmp, 'in.example')
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call lammps_extract_fix (fix, lmp, '2', 0, 1, 1, 1)
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call lammps_extract_fix (fix2, lmp, '4', 0, 2, 1, 1)
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call lammps_close (lmp)
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end program call_lammps
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Important notes:
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* All arguments which are char* variables in library.cpp are character (len=*)
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variables here. For example,
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call lammps_command (lmp, 'units metal')
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will work as expected.
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* The public functions (the only ones you can use) have interfaces as
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described in the comments at the top of LAMMPS.F90. They are not always
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the same as those in library.h, since C strings are replaced by Fortran
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strings and the like.
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* The module attempts to check whether you have done something stupid (such
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as assign a 2D array to a scalar), but it's not perfect. For example, the
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command
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call lammps_extract_global (nlocal, ptr, 'nlocal')
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will give nlocal correctly if nlocal is of type INTEGER, but it will give
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the wrong answer if nlocal is of type REAL or DOUBLE PRECISION. This is a
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feature of the (void*) type cast in library.cpp. There is no way I can
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check this for you!
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* You are allowed to use REAL or DOUBLE PRECISION floating-point numbers.
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All LAMMPS data (which are of type REAL(C_double)) are rounded off if
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placed in single precision variables. It is tacitly assumed that NO C++
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variables are of type float; everything is int or double (since this is
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all library.cpp currently handles).
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* An example of a complete program is offered at the end of this file.
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-------------------------------------
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--TROUBLESHOOTING--
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Compile-time errors probably indicate that your compiler is not new enough to
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support Fortran 2003 features. For example, GCC 4.1.2 will not compile this
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module, but GCC 4.4.0 will.
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If your compiler balks at 'use, intrinsic :: ISO_C_binding,' try removing the
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intrinsic part so it looks like an ordinary module. However, it is likely
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that such a compiler will also have problems with everything else in the
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file as well.
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If you get a segfault as soon as the lammps_open call is made, check that you
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compiled your program AND LAMMPS-header.cpp using the same MPI headers. Using
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the stubs for one and the actual MPI library for the other will cause major
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problems.
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If you find run-time errors, please pass them along via the LAMMPS Users
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mailing list. Please provide a minimal working example along with the names
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and versions of the compilers you are using. Please make sure the error is
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repeatable and is in MY code, not yours (generating a minimal working example
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will usually ensure this anyway).
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-------------------------------------
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--IMPLEMENTATION NOTES--
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The Fortran procedures have the same names as the C procedures, and
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their purpose is the same, but they may take different arguments. Here are
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some of the important differences:
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* lammps_open and lammps_open_no_mpi take a string instead of argc and
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argv. This is necessary because C and C++ have a very different way
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of treating strings than Fortran.
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* All C++ functions that accept char* pointers now accept Fortran-style
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strings within this interface instead.
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* All of the lammps_extract_[something] functions, which return void*
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C-style pointers, have been replaced by generic subroutines that return
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Fortran variables (which may be arrays). The first argument houses the
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variable to be returned; all other arguments are identical except as
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stipulated above. Note that it is not possible to declare generic
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functions that are selected based solely on the type/kind/rank (TKR)
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signature of the return value, only based on the TKR of the arguments.
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* The SHAPE of the first argument to lammps_extract_[something] is checked
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against the "shape" of the C array (e.g., double vs. double* vs. double**).
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Calling a subroutine with arguments of inappropriate rank will result in an
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error at run time.
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* All arrays passed to subroutines must be ALLOCATABLE and are REALLOCATED
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to fit the shape of the array LAMMPS will be returning.
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* The indices i and j in lammps_extract_fix are used the same way they
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are in f_ID[i][j] references in LAMMPS (i.e., starting from 1). This is
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different than the way library.cpp uses these numbers, but is more
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consistent with the way arrays are accessed in LAMMPS and in Fortran.
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* The char* pointer normally returned by lammps_command is thrown away
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in this version; note also that lammps_command is now a subroutine
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instead of a function.
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* The pointer to LAMMPS itself is of type(lammps_instance), which is itself
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a synonym for type(C_ptr), part of ISO_C_BINDING. Type (C_ptr) is
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C's void* data type. This should be the only C data type that needs to
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be used by the end user.
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* This module will almost certainly generate a compile-time warning,
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such as,
|
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subroutine lammps_open_wrapper (argc, argv, communicator, ptr) &
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Variable 'communicator' at (1) is a parameter to the BIND(C)
|
||||
procedure 'lammps_open_wrapper' but may not be C interoperable
|
||||
This happens because lammps_open_wrapper actually takes a Fortran
|
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INTEGER argument, whose type is defined by the MPI library itself. The
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Fortran integer is converted to a C integer by the MPI library (if such
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conversion is actually necessary).
|
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* Unlike library.cpp, this module returns COPIES of the data LAMMPS actually
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uses. This is done for safety reasons, as you should, in general, not be
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overwriting LAMMPS data directly from Fortran. If you require this
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functionality, it is possible to write another function that, for example,
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returns a Fortran pointer that resolves to the C/C++ data instead of
|
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copying the contents of that pointer to the original array as is done now.
|
||||
LAMMPS.F90 defines a Fortran 2003 module, LAMMPS, which wraps all functions in
|
||||
src/library.h so they can be used directly from Fortran-encoded programs.
|
||||
|
||||
All functions in src/library.h that use and/or return C-style pointers have
|
||||
Fortran wrapper functions that use Fortran-style arrays, pointers, and
|
||||
strings; all C-style memory management is handled internally with no user
|
||||
intervention. See --USE-- for notes on how this interface differs from the
|
||||
C interface (and the Python interface).
|
||||
|
||||
This interface was created by Karl Hammond who you can contact with
|
||||
questions:
|
||||
|
||||
Karl D. Hammond
|
||||
University of Tennessee, Knoxville
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||||
karlh at ugcs.caltech.edu
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karlh at utk.edu
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||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------
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|
||||
--COMPILATION--
|
||||
|
||||
First, be advised that mixed-language programming is not trivial. It requires
|
||||
you to link in the required libraries of all languages you use (in this case,
|
||||
those for Fortran, C, and C++), as well as any other libraries required.
|
||||
You are also advised to read the --USE-- section below before trying to
|
||||
compile.
|
||||
|
||||
The following steps will work to compile this module (replace ${LAMMPS_SRC}
|
||||
with the path to your LAMMPS source directory).
|
||||
|
||||
Steps 3-5 are accomplished, possibly after some modifications to
|
||||
the makefile, by make using the attached makefile. Said makefile also builds
|
||||
the dynamically-linkable library (liblammps_fortran.so).
|
||||
|
||||
** STATIC LIBRARY INSTRUCTIONS **
|
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(1) Compile LAMMPS as a static library.
|
||||
Call the resulting file ${LAMMPS_LIB}, which will have an actual name
|
||||
like liblmp_openmpi.a. If compiling using the MPI stubs in
|
||||
${LAMMPS_SRC}/STUBS, you will need to know where libmpi_stubs.a
|
||||
is as well (I'll call it ${MPI_STUBS} hereafter)
|
||||
(2) Copy said library to your Fortran program's source directory or replace
|
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${LAMMPS_LIB} with its full path in the instructions below.
|
||||
(3) Compile (but don't link!) LAMMPS.F90. Example:
|
||||
mpif90 -c LAMMPS.f90
|
||||
OR
|
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gfortran -c LAMMPS.F90
|
||||
NOTE: you may get a warning such as,
|
||||
subroutine lammps_open_wrapper (argc, argv, communicator, ptr) &
|
||||
Variable 'communicator' at (1) is a parameter to the BIND(C)
|
||||
procedure 'lammps_open_wrapper' but may not be C interoperable
|
||||
This is normal (see --IMPLEMENTATION NOTES--).
|
||||
|
||||
(4) Compile (but don't link) LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp. You will need its header
|
||||
file as well. You will have to provide the locations of LAMMPS's
|
||||
header files. For example,
|
||||
mpicxx -c -I${LAMMPS_SRC} LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp
|
||||
OR
|
||||
g++ -c -I${LAMMPS_SRC} -I${LAMMPS_SRC}/STUBS LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp
|
||||
OR
|
||||
icpc -c -I${LAMMPS_SRC} -I${LAMMPS_SRC}/STUBS LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp
|
||||
(5) OPTIONAL: Make a library from the object files so you can carry around
|
||||
two files instead of three. Example:
|
||||
ar rs liblammps_fortran.a LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o
|
||||
This will create the file liblammps_fortran.a that you can use in place
|
||||
of "LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o" later. Note that you will still
|
||||
need to have the .mod file from part (3).
|
||||
|
||||
It is also possible to add LAMMPS.o and LAMMPS-wrapper.o into the
|
||||
LAMMPS library (e.g., liblmp_openmpi.a) instead of creating a separate
|
||||
library, like so:
|
||||
ar rs ${LAMMPS_LIB} LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o
|
||||
In this case, you can now use the Fortran wrapper functions as if they
|
||||
were part of the usual LAMMPS library interface (if you have the module
|
||||
file visible to the compiler, that is).
|
||||
(6) Compile (but don't link) your Fortran program. Example:
|
||||
mpif90 -c myfreeformatfile.f90
|
||||
mpif90 -c myfixedformatfile.f
|
||||
OR
|
||||
gfortran -c myfreeformatfile.f90
|
||||
gfortran -c myfixedformatfile.f
|
||||
The object files generated by these steps are collectively referred to
|
||||
as ${my_object_files} in the next step(s).
|
||||
|
||||
IMPORTANT: If the Fortran module from part (3) is not in the current
|
||||
directory or in one searched by the compiler for module files, you will
|
||||
need to include that location via the -I flag to the compiler, like so:
|
||||
mpif90 -I${LAMMPS_SRC}/examples/COUPLE/fortran2 -c myfreeformatfile.f90
|
||||
|
||||
(7) Link everything together, including any libraries needed by LAMMPS (such
|
||||
as the C++ standard library, the C math library, the JPEG library, fftw,
|
||||
etc.) For example,
|
||||
mpif90 LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o ${my_object_files} \
|
||||
${LAMMPS_LIB} -lmpi_cxx -lstdc++ -lm
|
||||
OR
|
||||
gfortran LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o ${my_object_files} \
|
||||
${LAMMPS_LIB} ${MPI_STUBS} -lstdc++ -lm
|
||||
OR
|
||||
ifort LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o ${my_object_files} \
|
||||
${LAMMPS_LIB} ${MPI_STUBS} -cxxlib -lm
|
||||
Any other required libraries (e.g. -ljpeg, -lfftw) should be added to
|
||||
the end of this line.
|
||||
|
||||
You should now have a working executable.
|
||||
|
||||
** DYNAMIC LIBRARY INSTRUCTIONS **
|
||||
(1) Compile LAMMPS as a dynamic library
|
||||
(make makeshlib && make -f Makefile.shlib [targetname]).
|
||||
(2) Compile, but don't link, LAMMPS.F90 using the -fPIC flag, such as
|
||||
mpif90 -fPIC -c LAMMPS.f90
|
||||
(3) Compile, but don't link, LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp in the same manner, e.g.
|
||||
mpicxx -fPIC -c LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp
|
||||
(4) Make the dynamic library, like so:
|
||||
mpif90 -fPIC -shared -o liblammps_fortran.so LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o
|
||||
(5) Compile your program, such as,
|
||||
mpif90 -I${LAMMPS_SRC}/examples/COUPLE/fortran2 -c myfreeformatfile.f90
|
||||
where ${LAMMPS_SRC}/examples/COUPLE/fortran2 contains the .mod file from
|
||||
step (3)
|
||||
(6) Link everything together, such as
|
||||
mpif90 ${my_object_files} -L${LAMMPS_SRC} \
|
||||
-L${LAMMPS_SRC}/examples/COUPLE/fortran2 -llammps_fortran \
|
||||
-llammps_openmpi -lmpi_cxx -lstdc++ -lm
|
||||
|
||||
If you wish to avoid the -L flags, add the directories containing your
|
||||
shared libraries to the LIBRARY_PATH environment variable. At run time, you
|
||||
will have to add these directories to LD_LIBRARY_PATH as well; otherwise,
|
||||
your executable will not find the libraries it needs.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
--USAGE--
|
||||
|
||||
To use this API, your program unit (PROGRAM/SUBROUTINE/FUNCTION/MODULE/etc.)
|
||||
should look something like this:
|
||||
program call_lammps
|
||||
use LAMMPS
|
||||
! Other modules, etc.
|
||||
implicit none
|
||||
type (lammps_instance) :: lmp ! This is a pointer to your LAMMPS instance
|
||||
real (C_double) :: fix
|
||||
real (C_double), dimension(:), pointer :: fix2
|
||||
! Rest of declarations
|
||||
call lammps_open_no_mpi ('lmp -in /dev/null -screen out.lammps',lmp)
|
||||
! Set up rest of program here
|
||||
call lammps_file (lmp, 'in.example')
|
||||
call lammps_extract_fix (fix, lmp, '2', 0, 1, 1, 1)
|
||||
call lammps_extract_fix (fix2, lmp, '4', 0, 2, 1, 1)
|
||||
call lammps_close (lmp)
|
||||
end program call_lammps
|
||||
|
||||
Important notes:
|
||||
* Though I dislike the use of pointers, they are necessary when communicating
|
||||
with C and C++, which do not support Fortran's ALLOCATABLE attribute.
|
||||
* There is no need to deallocate C-allocated memory; this is done for you in
|
||||
the cases when it is done (which are all cases when pointers are not
|
||||
accepted, such as global fix data)
|
||||
* All arguments which are char* variables in library.cpp are character (len=*)
|
||||
variables here. For example,
|
||||
call lammps_command (lmp, 'units metal')
|
||||
will work as expected.
|
||||
* The public functions (the only ones you can use) have interfaces as
|
||||
described in the comments at the top of LAMMPS.F90. They are not always
|
||||
the same as those in library.h, since C strings are replaced by Fortran
|
||||
strings and the like.
|
||||
* The module attempts to check whether you have done something stupid (such
|
||||
as assign a 2D array to a scalar), but it's not perfect. For example, the
|
||||
command
|
||||
call lammps_extract_global (nlocal, ptr, 'nlocal')
|
||||
will give nlocal correctly if nlocal is a pointer to type INTEGER, but it
|
||||
will give the wrong answer if nlocal is a pointer to type REAL. This is a
|
||||
feature of the (void*) type cast in library.cpp. There is no way I can
|
||||
check this for you! It WILL catch you if you pass it an allocatable or
|
||||
fixed-size array when it expects a pointer.
|
||||
* Arrays constructed from temporary data from LAMMPS are ALLOCATABLE, and
|
||||
represent COPIES of data, not the originals. Functions like
|
||||
lammps_extract_atom, which return actual LAMMPS data, are pointers.
|
||||
* IMPORTANT: Due to the differences between C and Fortran arrays (C uses
|
||||
row-major vectors, Fortran uses column-major vectors), all arrays returned
|
||||
from LAMMPS have their indices swapped.
|
||||
* An example of a complete program, simple.f90, is included with this
|
||||
package.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
--TROUBLESHOOTING--
|
||||
|
||||
Compile-time errors (when compiling LAMMPS.F90, that is) probably indicate
|
||||
that your compiler is not new enough to support Fortran 2003 features. For
|
||||
example, GCC 4.1.2 will not compile this module, but GCC 4.4.0 will.
|
||||
|
||||
If your compiler balks at 'use, intrinsic :: ISO_C_binding,' try removing the
|
||||
intrinsic part so it looks like an ordinary module. However, it is likely
|
||||
that such a compiler will also have problems with everything else in the
|
||||
file as well.
|
||||
|
||||
If you get a segfault as soon as the lammps_open call is made, check that you
|
||||
compiled your program AND LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp using the same MPI headers. Using
|
||||
the stubs for one and the actual MPI library for the other will cause Bad
|
||||
Things to happen.
|
||||
|
||||
If you find run-time errors, please pass them along via the LAMMPS Users
|
||||
mailing list (please CC me as well; address above). Please provide a minimal
|
||||
working example along with the names and versions of the compilers you are
|
||||
using. Please make sure the error is repeatable and is in MY code, not yours
|
||||
(generating a minimal working example will usually ensure this anyway).
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
--IMPLEMENTATION NOTES--
|
||||
|
||||
The Fortran procedures have the same names as the C procedures, and
|
||||
their purpose is the same, but they may take different arguments. Here are
|
||||
some of the important differences:
|
||||
* lammps_open and lammps_open_no_mpi take a string instead of argc and
|
||||
argv. This is necessary because C and C++ have a very different way
|
||||
of treating strings than Fortran. If you want the command line to be
|
||||
passed to lammps_open (as it often would be from C/C++), use the
|
||||
GET_COMMAND intrinsic to obtain it.
|
||||
* All C++ functions that accept char* pointers now accept Fortran-style
|
||||
strings within this interface instead.
|
||||
* All of the lammps_extract_[something] functions, which return void*
|
||||
C-style pointers, have been replaced by generic subroutines that return
|
||||
Fortran variables (which may be arrays). The first argument houses the
|
||||
variable/pointer to be returned (pretend it's on the left-hand side); all
|
||||
other arguments are identical except as stipulated above.
|
||||
Note that it is not possible to declare generic functions that are selected
|
||||
based solely on the type/kind/rank (TKR) signature of the return value,
|
||||
only based on the TKR of the arguments.
|
||||
* The SHAPE of the first argument to lammps_extract_[something] is checked
|
||||
against the "shape" of the C array (e.g., double vs. double* vs. double**).
|
||||
Calling a subroutine with arguments of inappropriate rank will result in an
|
||||
error at run time.
|
||||
* The indices i and j in lammps_extract_fix are used the same way they
|
||||
are in f_ID[i][j] references in LAMMPS (i.e., starting from 1). This is
|
||||
different than the way library.cpp uses these numbers, but is more
|
||||
consistent with the way arrays are accessed in LAMMPS and in Fortran.
|
||||
* The char* pointer normally returned by lammps_command is thrown away
|
||||
in this version; note also that lammps_command is now a subroutine
|
||||
instead of a function.
|
||||
* The pointer to LAMMPS itself is of type(lammps_instance), which is itself
|
||||
a synonym for type(C_ptr), part of ISO_C_BINDING. Type (C_ptr) is
|
||||
C's void* data type.
|
||||
* This module will almost certainly generate a compile-time warning,
|
||||
such as,
|
||||
subroutine lammps_open_wrapper (argc, argv, communicator, ptr) &
|
||||
Variable 'communicator' at (1) is a parameter to the BIND(C)
|
||||
procedure 'lammps_open_wrapper' but may not be C interoperable
|
||||
This happens because lammps_open_wrapper actually takes a Fortran
|
||||
INTEGER argument, whose type is defined by the MPI library itself. The
|
||||
Fortran integer is converted to a C integer by the MPI library (if such
|
||||
conversion is actually necessary).
|
||||
* lammps_extract_global returns COPIES of the (scalar) data, as does the
|
||||
C version.
|
||||
* lammps_extract_atom, lammps_extract_compute, and lammps_extract_fix
|
||||
have a first argument that will be associated with ACTUAL LAMMPS DATA.
|
||||
This means the first argument must be:
|
||||
* The right rank (via the DIMENSION modifier)
|
||||
* A C-interoperable POINTER type (i.e., INTEGER (C_int) or
|
||||
REAL (C_double)).
|
||||
* lammps_extract_variable returns COPIES of the data, as the C library
|
||||
interface does. There is no need to deallocate using lammps_free.
|
||||
* The 'data' argument to lammps_gather_atoms and lammps_scatter atoms must
|
||||
be ALLOCATABLE. It should be of type INTEGER or DOUBLE PRECISION. It
|
||||
does NOT need to be C inter-operable (and indeed should not be).
|
||||
* The 'count' argument of lammps_scatter_atoms is unnecessary; the shape of
|
||||
the array determines the number of elements LAMMPS will read.
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -1,10 +1,11 @@
|
|||
units metal
|
||||
lattice bcc 3.1656
|
||||
units lj
|
||||
atom_modify map array
|
||||
lattice bcc 1.0
|
||||
region simbox block 0 10 0 10 0 10
|
||||
create_box 2 simbox
|
||||
create_atoms 1 region simbox
|
||||
pair_style eam/fs
|
||||
pair_coeff * * path/to/my_potential.eam.fs A1 A2
|
||||
pair_style lj/cut 2.5
|
||||
pair_coeff * * 1.0 1.0
|
||||
mass 1 58.2 # These are made-up numbers
|
||||
mass 2 28.3
|
||||
velocity all create 1200.0 7474848 dist gaussian
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -1,44 +1,111 @@
|
|||
program simple
|
||||
|
||||
use MPI
|
||||
use LAMMPS
|
||||
|
||||
! The following line is unnecessary, as I have included these three entities
|
||||
! with the LAMMPS module, but I leave them in anyway to remind people where
|
||||
! they came from
|
||||
use, intrinsic :: ISO_C_binding, only : C_double, C_ptr, C_int
|
||||
|
||||
implicit none
|
||||
|
||||
type (lammps_instance) :: lmp
|
||||
double precision :: compute, fix, fix2
|
||||
double precision, dimension(:), allocatable :: compute_v, mass, r
|
||||
double precision, dimension(:,:), allocatable :: x
|
||||
real, dimension(:,:), allocatable :: x_r
|
||||
! Notes:
|
||||
! * If LAMMPS returns a scalar that is allocated by the library interface
|
||||
! (see library.cpp), then that memory is deallocated automatically and
|
||||
! the argument to lammps_extract_fix must be a SCALAR.
|
||||
! * If LAMMPS returns a pointer to an array, consisting of internal LAMMPS
|
||||
! data, then the argument must be an interoperable Fortran pointer.
|
||||
! Interoperable means it is of type INTEGER (C_INT) or of type
|
||||
! REAL (C_DOUBLE) in this context.
|
||||
! * Pointers should NEVER be deallocated, as that would deallocate internal
|
||||
! LAMMPS data!
|
||||
! * Note that just because you can read the values of, say, a compute at
|
||||
! any time does not mean those values represent the "correct" values.
|
||||
! LAMMPS will abort you if you try to grab a pointer to a non-current
|
||||
! entity, but once it's bound, it's your responsibility to check that
|
||||
! it's current before evaluating.
|
||||
! * IMPORTANT: Two-dimensional arrays (such as 'x' from extract_atom)
|
||||
! will be transposed from what they might look like in C++. This is
|
||||
! because of different bookkeeping conventions between Fortran and C
|
||||
! that date back to about 1970 or so (when C was written).
|
||||
! * Arrays start from 1, EXCEPT for mass from extract_atom, which
|
||||
! starts from 0. This is because the C array actually has a blank
|
||||
! first element (and thus mass[1] corresponds to the mass of type 1)
|
||||
|
||||
type (C_ptr) :: lmp
|
||||
real (C_double), pointer :: compute => NULL()
|
||||
real (C_double) :: fix, fix2
|
||||
real (C_double), dimension(:), pointer :: compute_v => NULL()
|
||||
real (C_double), dimension(:,:), pointer :: x => NULL()
|
||||
real (C_double), dimension(:), pointer :: mass => NULL()
|
||||
integer, dimension(:), allocatable :: types
|
||||
double precision, dimension(:), allocatable :: r
|
||||
integer :: error, narg, me, nprocs
|
||||
character (len=1024) :: command_line
|
||||
|
||||
call MPI_Init (error)
|
||||
call MPI_Comm_rank (MPI_COMM_WORLD, me, error)
|
||||
call MPI_Comm_size (MPI_COMM_WORLD, nprocs, error)
|
||||
|
||||
! You are free to pass any string you like to lammps_open or
|
||||
! lammps_open_no_mpi; here is how you pass it the command line
|
||||
!call get_command (command_line)
|
||||
!call lammps_open (command_line, MPI_COMM_WORLD, lmp)
|
||||
|
||||
! And here's how to to it with a string constant of your choice
|
||||
call lammps_open_no_mpi ('lmp -log log.simple', lmp)
|
||||
|
||||
call lammps_open_no_mpi ('',lmp)
|
||||
call lammps_file (lmp, 'in.simple')
|
||||
call lammps_command (lmp, 'run 500')
|
||||
|
||||
! This extracts f_2 as a scalar (the last two arguments can be arbitrary)
|
||||
call lammps_extract_fix (fix, lmp, '2', 0, 1, 1, 1)
|
||||
print *, 'Fix is ', fix
|
||||
|
||||
! This extracts f_4[1][1] as a scalar
|
||||
call lammps_extract_fix (fix2, lmp, '4', 0, 2, 1, 1)
|
||||
print *, 'Fix 2 is ', fix2
|
||||
|
||||
! This extracts the scalar compute of compute thermo_temp
|
||||
call lammps_extract_compute (compute, lmp, 'thermo_temp', 0, 0)
|
||||
print *, 'Compute is ', compute
|
||||
|
||||
! This extracts the vector compute of compute thermo_temp
|
||||
call lammps_extract_compute (compute_v, lmp, 'thermo_temp', 0, 1)
|
||||
print *, 'Vector is ', compute_v
|
||||
|
||||
! This extracts the masses
|
||||
call lammps_extract_atom (mass, lmp, 'mass')
|
||||
print *, 'Mass is ', mass
|
||||
print *, 'Mass is ', mass(1:)
|
||||
|
||||
! Extracts a pointer to the arrays of positions for all atoms
|
||||
call lammps_extract_atom (x, lmp, 'x')
|
||||
if ( .not. allocated (x) ) print *, 'x is not allocated'
|
||||
print *, 'x is ', x(1,:)
|
||||
if ( .not. associated (x) ) print *, 'x is not associated'
|
||||
print *, 'x is ', x(:,1) ! Prints x, y, z for atom 1
|
||||
|
||||
call lammps_extract_atom (x_r, lmp, 'x')
|
||||
if ( .not. allocated (x_r) ) print *, 'x is not allocated'
|
||||
print *, 'x_r is ', x_r(1,:)
|
||||
! Extracts pointer to atom types
|
||||
call lammps_gather_atoms (lmp, 'type', 1, types)
|
||||
print *, 'types is ', types(1:3)
|
||||
|
||||
call lammps_get_coords (lmp, r)
|
||||
print *, 'r is ', r(1:3)
|
||||
! Allocates an array and assigns all positions to it
|
||||
call lammps_gather_atoms (lmp, 'x', 3, r)
|
||||
print *, 'size(r) = ', size(r)
|
||||
print *, 'r is ', r(1:6)
|
||||
|
||||
! Puts those position data back
|
||||
call lammps_scatter_atoms (lmp, 'x', r)
|
||||
|
||||
call lammps_command (lmp, 'run 1')
|
||||
print *, 'x is ', x(:,1) ! Note that the position updates!
|
||||
print *, 'Compute is ', compute ! This did only because "temp" is part of
|
||||
! the thermo output; the vector part did
|
||||
! not, and won't until we give LAMMPS a
|
||||
! thermo output or other command that
|
||||
! requires its value
|
||||
|
||||
call lammps_close (lmp)
|
||||
|
||||
call MPI_Finalize (error)
|
||||
|
||||
end program simple
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue