forked from lijiext/lammps
475 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
475 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
"Previous Section"_Section_tools.html - "LAMMPS WWW Site"_lws -
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"LAMMPS Documentation"_ld - "LAMMPS Commands"_lc - "Next
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Section"_Section_errors.html :c
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:link(lws,http://lammps.sandia.gov)
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:link(ld,Manual.html)
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:link(lc,Section_commands.html#comm)
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:line
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8. Modifying & extending LAMMPS :h3
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LAMMPS is designed in a modular fashion so as to be easy to modify and
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extend with new functionality. In this section, changes and additions
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users can make are listed along with some minimal instructions.
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Realistically, the best way to add a new feature is to find a similar
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feature in LAMMPS and look at the corresponding source and header
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files to figure out what it does. You will need some knowledge of C++
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to be able to understand the hi-level structure of LAMMPS and its
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class organization, but functions (class methods) that do actual
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computations are written in vanilla C-style code and operate on simple
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C-style data structures (vectors and arrays).
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Most of the new features described in this section require you to
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write a new C++ class (except for dump, thermo, and variable options,
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described below, where you can make small edits to existing files).
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Creating a new class requires 2 files, a source code file (*.cpp) and
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a header file (*.h). Their contents are briefly discussed below.
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Enabling LAMMPS to invoke the new class is as simple as adding two
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definition lines to the style_user.h file, in the same syntax as the
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existing LAMMPS classes are defined in the style.h file.
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The power of C++ and its object-orientation is that usually, all the
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code and variables needed to define the new feature are contained in
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the 2 files you write, and thus shouldn't make the rest of the code
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more complex or cause side-effect bugs.
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Here is a concrete example. Suppose you write 2 files pair_foo.cpp
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and pair_foo.h that define a new class PairFoo that computes pairwise
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potentials described in the classic 1997 "paper"_#Foo by Foo, et al.
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If you wish to invoke those potentials in a LAMMPS input script with a
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command like
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pair_style foo 0.1 3.5 :pre
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you simply need to put your 2 files in the LAMMPS src directory, add 2
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lines to the style_user.h file, and re-make the code.
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The first line added to style_user.h would be
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PairStyle(foo,PairFoo) :pre
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in the #ifdef PairClass section, where "foo" is the style keyword in
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the pair_style command, and PairFoo is the class name in your C++
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files.
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The 2nd line added to style_user.h would be
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#include "pair_foo.h" :pre
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in the #ifdef PairInclude section, where pair_foo.h is the name of
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your new include file.
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When you re-make LAMMPS, your new pairwise potential becomes part of
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the executable and can be invoked with a pair_style command like the
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example above. Arguments like 0.1 and 3.5 can be defined and
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processed by your new class.
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Note that if you are using Makefile.list instead of Makefile to build
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LAMMPS, you will need to explicitly add the names of your new .cpp and
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.h file to Makefile.list.
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Here is a list of the kinds of new features that can be added in this
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way. The dump and thermo options do not typically require new styles;
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LAMMPS can simply be recompiled after new code is added to
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dump_custom.cpp or thermo_custom.cpp.
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"Pairwise potentials"_#pair
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"Bond, angle, dihedral, improper potentials"_#bond
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"Dump options"_#dump
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"Thermodynamic output options"_#thermo
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"Temperature computation options"_#temp
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"Region geometry options"_#region
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"Fix options"_#fix which include integrators, \
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temperature and pressure control, force constraints, \
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boundary conditions, diagnostic output, etc
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"Atom options"_#atom
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"Variable options"_#variable
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"New top-level commands"_#command :ul
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As illustrated by the pairwise example, these options are
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referred to in the LAMMPS documentation as the "style" of a particular
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command.
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The instructions below for each category will list the header file for
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the parent class that these styles are sub-classes of. Public
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variables in that file are ones used and set by the sub-classes which
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are also used by the parent class. Sometimes they are also used by
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the rest of LAMMPS. Virtual functions in the header file which are
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set = 0 are ones you must define in your new class to give it the
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functionality LAMMPS expects. Virtual functions that are not set to 0
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are functions you can optionally define.
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Here are some additional guidelines for modifying LAMMPS and adding
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new functionality:
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Think about whether what you want to do would be better as a pre- or
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post-processing step. Many computations are more easily and more
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quickly done that way.
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Don't do anything within the timestepping of a run that isn't
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parallel. E.g. don't accumulate a bunch of data on a single processor
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and analyze it. You run the risk of seriously degrading the parallel
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efficiency.
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If your new feature reads arguments or writes output, make sure you
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follow the unit conventions discussed by the "units"_units.html
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command.
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If you add something you think is truly useful and doesn't impact
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LAMMPS performance when it isn't used, send an email to the
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"developers"_http://lammps.sandia.gov/authors.html. We might be
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interested in adding it to the LAMMPS distribution.
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:line
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Pairwise potentials :link(pair),h4
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All classes that compute pairwise interactions are sub-classes of the
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Pair class. See the pair.h file for a list of methods this class
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defines.
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Pair_lj_cut.cpp and pair_lj_cut.h are the simplest example of a Pair
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class. They implement the {lj/cut} style of the
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"pair_style"_pair_style.html command.
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Here is a brief description of the class methods in pair.h:
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compute: the workhorse routine that computes the pairwise interactions
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settings: reads the input script line with any arguments you define
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coeff: set coefficients for one i,j type pair
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init_one: perform initialization for one i,j type pair
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write & read_restart: write/read i,j pair coeffs to restart files
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write & read_restart_settings: write/read global settings to restart files
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single: force and energy of a single pairwise interaction between 2 atoms
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compute_inner/middle/outer: versions of compute used by rRESPA :tb(s=:)
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The inner/middle/outer routines are optional. Only a few of the
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pairwise potentials use these in conjunction with rRESPA as set by the
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"run_style"_run_style.html command.
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:line
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Bond, angle, dihedral, improper potentials :link(bond),h4
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All classes that compute molecular interactions are sub-classes of the
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Bond, Angle, Dihedral, and Improper classes. See the bond.h, angle.h,
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dihedral.h, and improper.h file for a list of methods these classes
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defines.
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Bond_harmonic.cpp and bond_harmonic.h are the simplest example of a
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Bond class. Ditto for the harmonic forms of the angle, dihedral, and
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improper style commands. The bond_harmonic files implement the
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{harmonic} style of the "bond_style"_bond_style.html command.
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Here is a brief description of the class methods in bond.h, angle.h,
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etc:
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compute: the workhorse routine that computes the molecular interactions
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coeff: set coefficients for one bond type
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equilibrium_distance: length of bond, used by SHAKE
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write & read_restart: writes/reads coeffs to restart files
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single: force and energy of a single bond :tb(s=:)
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:line
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Dump options :link(dump),h4
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There are several classes that print dump files (snapshots of atoms)
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that are sub-classes of the Dump class. These include the
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dump_atom.cpp, dump_bond.cpp, and dump_custom.cpp files.
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New dump classes can be added, but it is typically simpler to modify
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the DumpCustom class contained in the dump_custom.cpp file. See the
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"dump"_dump.html command and its {custom} style for a list of what
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atom information can already be dumped by DumpCustom. If the
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attribute you want to dump is not in the list, or if you define a "new
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atom style"_#atom with new attributes (e.g. atoms that store their own
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magnetic moment), here is how to dump it out in a snapshot file:
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Search the dump_custom.cpp and dump_custom.h files for the word
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"customize". It appears in roughly half a dozen locations. In each
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of the locations you can add a bit of code that will extend the
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DumpCustom class to enable it to dump a new quantity. E.g. you will
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add a keyword, add an if test, add a new small method that packs the
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requested data into a buffer, etc. For the latter, you can perform a
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modest amount of computation in this method; see the pack_xs()
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function for an example.
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If desired, a dump custom option can also compute more complicated
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quantities by invoking a fix that computed quantities at the end of a
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timestep (should be the same timestep the dump is invoked on). See
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the ENERGY, CENTRO, and stress options (SXX, SYY, etc) in
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dump_custom.cpp for examples.
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When you re-make LAMMPS, your new option should now be useable via the
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dump custom command.
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:line
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Thermodynamic output options :link(thermo),h4
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There is only one class that computes and prints thermodynamic
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information to the screen and log file, although the
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"thermo_style"_thermo_style.html command treats its options as styles.
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There are several styles defined in thermo.cpp: "one", "multi", and
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"granular". There is also a flexible "custom" style which allows you
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to specify what quantities will be printed each timestep where
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thermodynamics is computed. See the "thermo_style"_thermo_style.html
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command for a list of pre-defined quantities.
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Here is how you can extend the thermo output capabilities. Search the
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thermo.cpp and thermo.h files for the word "customize" which will tell
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you where to make these additions. Note that fixes can also print-out
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thermodynamic quantities via the "fix_modify"_fix_modify.html command,
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so you do not need to modify thermo.cpp to print fix information.
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If you want to create a new style (like "one" or "granular") that
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prints a collection of pre-defined quantities, you add a few lines
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that define the new style to thermo.cpp. First, add a #DEFINE line at
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the top of the file which lists the quantities to print. Then add the
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style name you have chosen to the if test in the constructor to copy
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the defined string to the line[] variable.
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You can also add new quantities to the custom list. Add your new
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keyword to the if test in the parse_fields() function where the call
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to addfield() specifies the text string (8 character max) that will be
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printed with the quantity, the function that will compute it, and the
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data type (INT,FLOAT) of the quantity. Then at the bottom of the
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file, add a function compute_*() which computes the quantity you wish
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to print. The function assigns the quantity to the variable "dvalue"
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if it is a floating-point quantity, or to "ivalue" if it is an
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integer. See the other compute_*() functions for examples of how
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various quantities can be accessed, computed, summed across
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processors, normalized as per-atom values, etc. Also, if it makes
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sense to allow the quantity to be stored in a variable in the input
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script, add a couple of lines to the compute_value() function that is
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called when a variable is evaluated. Finally, add a prototype for
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your new compute method to thermo.h.
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:line
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Temperature computation options :link(temp),h4
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All classes that compute the temperature of the system are sub-classes
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of the Temperature class. See the temperature.h file for a list of
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methods these classes defines. Temperatures are computed by LAMMPS
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when velocities are set, when thermodynamics are computed, and when
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temperature is controlled by various thermostats like the "fix
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nvt"_fix_nvt.html of "fix langevin"_fix_langevin.html commands.
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Temp_full.cpp and temp_full.h are the simplest example of a
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Temperature class. They implement the {full} style of the
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"temperature"_temperature.html command.
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Here is a brief description of the class methods in temperature.h:
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init: setup the temperature computation
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compute: compute and return temperature :tb(s=:)
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:line
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Region geometry options :link(region),h4
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All classes that define geometric regions are sub-classes of the
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Region class. See the region.h file for a list of methods these
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classes defines. Regions are used elsewhere in LAMMPS to group atoms,
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delete atoms to create a void, insert atoms in a specified region,
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etc.
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Region_sphere.cpp and region_sphere.h are the simplest example of a
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Region class. They implement the {sphere} style of the
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"region"_region.html command.
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Here is a brief description of the single class method required:
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match: determine whether a point is in the region :tb(s=:)
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:line
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Fix options :link(fix),h4
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In LAMMPS, a "fix" is any operation that is computed during
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timestepping that alters some property of the system. Essentially
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everything that happens during a simulation besides force computation,
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neighbor list manipulation, and output, is a "fix". This includes
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time integration (update of velocity and coordinates), force
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constraints (SHAKE or walls), and diagnostics (compute a diffusion
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coefficient). See the fix.h file for a list of methods these classes
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defines.
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There are dozens of fix options in LAMMPS; choose one as a template
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that is similar to what you want to implement. They can be as simple
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as zeroing out forces (see "fix enforce2d"_fix_enforce2d.html which
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corresponds to the {enforce2d} style) or as complicated as applying
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SHAKE constraints on bonds and angles (see "fix shake"_fix_shake.html
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which corresponds to the {shake} style) which involves many extra
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computations.
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Here is a brief description of the class methods in fix.h:
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setmask: determines when the fix is called during the timestep
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init: initialization before a run
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setup: called immediately before the 1st timestep
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initial_integrate: called at very beginning of each timestep
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pre_exchange: called before atom exchange on re-neighboring steps
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pre_neighbor: called before neighbor list build
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post_force: called after pair & molecular forces are computed
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final_integrate: called at end of each timestep
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end_of_step: called at very end of timestep
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write_restart: dumps fix info to restart file
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restart: uses info from restart file to re-initialize the fix
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grow_arrays: allocate memory for atom-based arrays used by fix
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copy_arrays: copy atom info when an atom migrates to a new processor
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memory_usage: report memory used by fix
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pack_exchange: store atom's data in a buffer
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unpack_exchange: retrieve atom's data from a buffer
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pack_restart: store atom's data for writing to restart file
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unpack_restart: retrieve atom's data from a restart file buffer
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size_restart: size of atom's data
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maxsize_restart: max size of atom's data
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initial_integrate_respa: same as initial_integrate, but for rRESPA
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post_force_respa: same as post_force, but for rRESPA
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final_integrate_respa: same as final_integrate, but for rRESPA
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pack_comm: pack a buffer to communicate a per-atom quantity
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unpack_comm: unpack a buffer to communicate a per-atom quantity
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pack_reverse_comm: pack a buffer to reverse communicate a per-atom quantity
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unpack_reverse_comm: unpack a buffer to reverse communicate a per-atom quantity
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thermo_fields: define quantities for thermodynamic output
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thermo_compute: compute thermodynamic quantities :tb(s=:)
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Typically, only a small fraction of these methods are defined for a
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particular fix. Setmask is mandatory, as it determines when the fix
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will be invoked during the timestep. Fixes that perform time
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integration ({nve}, {nvt}, {npt}) implement initial_integrate and
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final_integrate to perform velocity Verlet updates. Fixes that
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constrain forces implement post_force. Fixes that perform diagnostics
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typically implement end_of_step. For an end_of_step fix, one of your
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fix arguments must be the variable "nevery" which is used to determine
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when to call the fix. By convention, this is the first argument the
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fix defines (after the ID, group-ID, style).
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If the fix needs to store information for each atom that persists from
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timestep to timestep, it can manage that memory and migrate it with
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the atoms as they move from processors to processor by implementing
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the grow_arrays, copy_arrays, pack_exchange, and unpack_exchange
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methods. Similarly, the pack_restart and unpack_restart methods can be
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implemented to store information about the fix in restart files. If
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you wish an integrator or force constraint fix to work with rRESPA (see
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the "run_style"_run_style.html command), the initial_integrate,
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post_force_integrate, and final_integrate_respa methods can be
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implemented. The thermo_fields and thermo_compute methods enable a
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fix to contribute values to thermodynamic output, as printed
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quantities and/or to be summed to the potential energy of the system.
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:line
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Atom options :link(atom),h4
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All classes that define an atom style are sub-classes of the Atom
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class. See the atom.h file for a list of methods these classes
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defines. The atom style determines what quantities are associated
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with an atom in a LAMMPS simulation. If one of the existing atom
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styles does not define all the arrays you need to store with an atom,
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then a new atom class can be created.
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Atom_atomic.cpp and atom_atomic.h are the simplest example of an Atom
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class. They implement the {atomic} style of the
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"atom_style"_atom_style.html command.
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Here is a brief description of the class methods in atom.h:
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copy: copy info for one atom to another atom's array location
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pack_comm: store an atom's info in a buffer communicated every timestep
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unpack_comm: retrieve an atom's info from the buffer
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pack_reverse: store an atom's info in a buffer communicating partial forces
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unpack_reverse: retrieve an atom's info from the buffer
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pack_border: store an atom's info in a buffer communicated on neighbor re-builds
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unpack_border: retrieve an atom's info from the buffer
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pack_exchange: store all an atom's info to migrate to another processor
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unpack_exchange: retrieve an atom's info from the buffer
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:tb(s=:)
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There are also several methods in atom.cpp you will need to augment
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with information about your new atom class, following the patterns of
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the other atom styles. These routines are so similar for all classes,
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that it was simpler to just have one master routine for all classes.
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constructor: create style variable and atom array ptrs to NULL
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destructor: free memory for atom arrays
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set_style: set style variable
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check_style: check for pure style vs hybrid style
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style2arg: convert style variables to keywords
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grow: re-allocate atom arrays to longer lengths
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unpack_data: parse atom lines from data file
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create_one: create an individual atom of this style
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size_restart: number of restart quantities associated with proc's atoms
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pack_restart: pack atom quantities into a buffer
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unpack_restart: unpack atom quantities from a buffer
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memory_usage: memory allocated by atom arrays
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:tb(s=:)
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:line
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Variable options :link(variable),h4
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The variable class stores and evaluates input script variables $a, $b,
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... $z, as described in "this section"_Section_commands.html#3_2.
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{Equal}-style variables are defined by an equation that is evaluated
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each time the variable is used. The equation can include functions,
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vectors, keywords, and numbers as described in the
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"variable"_variable.html command. The list of valid functions,
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vectors, and keywords, can be extended by adding a few lines of code
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to the evaluate() method at the end of the variable.cpp file. Search
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for the word "customize" to find the correct locations for adding
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code.
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A new function (e.g. foo(arg1,arg2,...)) can be added in the section
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that starts with the comment
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// customize by adding function to this list and to if statement :pre
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A new vector (e.g. q[]) can be added in the section that starts with
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the comment
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// customize by adding vector to this list and to if statement :pre
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A new keyword (e.g. mysum) can be added in the section that starts with
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the comment
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// customize by adding keyword to this list and to if statement :pre
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Note that keywords supported by the "thermo_style
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custom"_themo_style.html command are evaluated by the thermo routines,
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so do not need to be added to variable.cpp.
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:line
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New top-level commands :link(command),h4
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It is possible to add a new command to a LAMMPS input script as
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opposed to adding a new style to an existing command (atom_style,
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pair_style, fix, etc). For example the create_atoms, read_data,
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velocity, and run commands are all top-level LAMMPS commands that are
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listed in the Command section of style.h. When such a command is
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encountered in the LAMMPS input script, the topmost level of LAMMPS
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(lammps.cpp) simply creates a class with the corresponding name,
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invokes the "command" method of the class, and passes it the arguments
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from the input script. The command method can perform whatever
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operations it wishes on the LAMMPS data structures.
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Thus to add a new command, you simply need to add a *.cpp and *.h file
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containing a single class:
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command: operations performed by the new command :tb(s=:)
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Of course, the new class can define other methods and variables that
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it uses internally.
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:line
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:link(Foo)
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[(Foo)] Foo, Morefoo, and Maxfoo, J of Classic Potentials, 75, 345 (1997).
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