What is BasicTools

BasicTools was primary designed as a basic set of tools to work on meshes in the context of finite element computations. The main functionalities of the library are:

  • IO support: A set of classes to read and write meshes (and solutions fields) from/to a large variety of file formats. BasicTools does not have a proper file format mainly because existent formats provide most, if not all, of the functionalities needed.

  • Mesh manipulation: Routines to filter, define, extract and manipulate meshes in many ways.

  • Fields manipulation: Finite element fields can be defined using different kinds of interpolation (P0/P1/P2), in the full mesh or only in restricted zones, and also at integration points. This classes have overloaded operators to make computation of quantities of interest an easy task.

  • Integration: Routines for the integration of weak formulations (tangent matrices, right hand terms, integral over only a part of a mesh).

  • Field transfer: Basic routine to transfer field from one mesh to another.

  • Finite element solver: Using all the previous tools, some basic finite element solvers are available to solve generic partial differential equations on unstructured meshes.

Installing BasicTools

Conda

If you use conda, you can install BasicTools from the conda-forge channels [3].

A good practice is to use a virtual environment rather than modifying the base environment:

conda create -n my-env
conda activate my-env

The actual install command is:

conda install -c conda-forge basictools

the Conda-Forge packages of BasicTools are split in 4 packages :

  • BasicTools-core: BasicTools package with the mandatory dependencies.

  • BasicTools-extensions: a meta package with the extra dependencies to enable all functionalities of BasicTools

  • BasicTools: this meta package install BasicTools-core and BasicTools-extensions to have a full installation in one shot

  • BasicTools-envdev: is a meta package with the dependencies necessarily for the development, debugging, compilation and documentation generation.

PIP

The pip installation requires a local compilation, so you need to have a C++ (C++17 compatible) compiler installed locally on your system. Two C++ libraries, Eigen and boost, are needed during compilation (we onnly use the header only libraries part of this libraries). Eigen can be found inside the pip package eignecy. To use this embedded version the BASICTOOLS_USE_EIGENCYEIGEN must be set to 1. The C++ boost library is not present in PyPI so a manual installation is required.

To compile and install BasicTools (version 1.9.12 in this case) with pip:

wget https://boostorg.jfrog.io/artifactory/main/release/1.82.0/source/boost_1_82_0.zip
unzip boost_1_82_0.zip
set BASICTOOLS_USE_EIGENCYEIGEN=1
set BASICTOOLS_EXTERNAL_BOOST_DIR=%cd%\boost_1_82_0
pip install eigency mkl numpy sympy mkl-include cython wheel
pip install BasicTools@https://gitlab.com/drti/basic-tools/-/archive/1.9.12/basic-tools-1.9.11.tar.bz2

or for the latest master version:

wget https://boostorg.jfrog.io/artifactory/main/release/1.82.0/source/boost_1_82_0.zip
unzip boost_1_82_0.zip
set BASICTOOLS_USE_EIGENCYEIGEN=1
set BASICTOOLS_EXTERNAL_BOOST_DIR=%cd%\boost_1_82_0
pip install eigency mkl numpy sympy mkl-include cython wheel
pip install BasicTools@git+https://gitlab.com/drti/basic-tools.git

Note

On linux/OsX you must:
  • Change the set to export or setenv depending on your os/shell

  • Change the %cd% to $PWD depending on your os/shell

The user can set the environment variable PREFIX to point to external libraries (like mkl and eigen header). For advanced configuration please refer to the setup.py file on the git repository.

It is also a good practice to use a virtual environment when using pip.

Note

We can not guarantee that every combination of operating system, Python version and packaging system works.

Manual installation (from sources) for developers

In the case you want to make changes to BasicTools or contribute new features, an installation from sources is mandatory. The sources can be downloaded from gitlab.com [1]:

git clone https://gitlab.com/drti/basic-tools.git

Then inside the repository folder, the user must compile the C++ extensions to have the optimized algorithms available:

python setup.py build_clib
python setup.py build_ext --inplace

Then the user must add the BASICTOOLS_REPOSITORY/src/ folder to the PYTHONPATH environment variables (more information on [6]). Or using pip for development:

pip install -e .

The user can also install permanently using (Not recommended):

pip install .

The documentation for BasicTools can be compiled using sphinx:

python setup.py build_sphinx

Asking for Help

Questions can be submitted using the Issues system of Gitlab [2].

Bugs should ideally be reported with a minimal non working example to make debugging easier for the developers.

Contributing to BasicTools

If you want to contribute some code you must:

  • clone the master branch of BasicTools from [1]

  • create a development branch

  • modify/create changes, commit changes

  • compile BasicTools

  • test your branch (see section For Developers)

  • accept the Contribution Agreement (see section Licensing and External Contributions)

  • push your branch to Gitlab

  • create a merge request

Requirements

Python Dependencies

Python minimal version: 3.8. Some features may be unavailable when optional packages are not installed.

Module Name

Version

Used during (Optional #)

Conda packages name

Notes

Compile

Run

Debug

Doc

BasicTools-core

BasicTools-extensions

BasicTools

BasicTools-envdev

python

>=3.8

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

Supported distributions are: conda

numpy

>=1.20

*

*

*

*

*

*

array manipulation and linear algebra

scipy

>=1.9

*

*

*

*

*

sparse (coo_matrix), spatial (KDTree, delaunay, ConvexHull)

sympy

*

*

*

*

*

*

matrices, Symbols, lambdify, Derivative, symplify

cython

*

*

*

*

*

Compilation of c++ extensions

vtk

*

*

*

*

*

stlReader, UnstructuredMeshFieldOperations, ImplicitGeometryObjects, vtkBridge

eigency

>=2

*

*

*

*

*

*

Compilation and run of c++ extensions

mkl

*

*

*

*

*

*

Can be deactivated at compilation using the env variable : BASICTOOLS_DISABLE_MKL

mkl-include

*

*

*

Can be deactivated at compilation using the env variable : BASICTOOLS_DISABLE_MKL

psutil

#

*

*

*

*

*

memory usage and cpu_count()

scikit-sparse

*#

*

*

*

Linear solver: Cholesky “cholesky”

matplotlib

#

*

*

*

*

plot shape function for debugin

pyamg

*#

*

*

*

linear solver: Algebraic Multigrid “AMG”

h5py

*#

*

*

*

xdmf Reader/Writer

meshio

*#

*

*

*

main usage in MeshIOBridge.py (derivated usage in Mesh File Converter)

sphinx

*

*

Documentation Generation

sphinx-rtd-theme

*

*

Documentation Generation

breathe

*

*

cmake documentation integration

setuptools-scm

*

Only during conda packaging

pyvista

*#

*

*

*

pyvista bridge

networkx

>=3

*

*

*

*

*

only use in UnstructuredMeshGraphTools.py

mpi4py

#

only use in MPIInterface.py

pytest

*

To test BasicTools in development face

C++ Dependencies

Name

Version

Used during

Conda packages name

Notes

Compile

Run

Debug

Doc

BasicTools-envdev

eigen

>=3.4

*

*

For compilation of the C++ extensions

boost-cpp

*

*

For the compilation of the extension field transfer

External Dependencies

Name

Version

Compile

Run

Debug

Doc

Notes

cmake

>=3.8

(*)

*

for the cpp documentation generation (*) experimental cmake extensions compilation

abaqus

#

odb reader. This feature is deprecated (only available on python 2.7, BasicTools 1.7.2)

Footnotes