// Copyright (c) 2017-2022, Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC and other CEED contributors. // All Rights Reserved. See the top-level LICENSE and NOTICE files for details. // // SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause // // This file is part of CEED: http://github.com/ceed // libCEED + MFEM Example: BP1 // // This example illustrates a simple usage of libCEED with the MFEM (mfem.org) finite element library. // // The example reads a mesh from a file and solves a simple linear system with a mass matrix (L2-projection of a given analytic function provided by // 'solution'). The mass matrix required for performing the projection is expressed as a new class, CeedMassOperator, derived from mfem::Operator. // Internally, CeedMassOperator uses a CeedOperator object constructed based on an mfem::FiniteElementSpace. // All libCEED objects use a Ceed device object constructed based on a command line argument (-ceed). // // The mass matrix is inverted using a simple conjugate gradient algorithm corresponding to CEED BP1, see http://ceed.exascaleproject.org/bps. // Arbitrary mesh and solution orders in 1D, 2D and 3D are supported from the same code. // // Build with: // // make bp1 [MFEM_DIR=] [CEED_DIR=] // // Sample runs: // // ./bp1 // ./bp1 -ceed /cpu/self // ./bp1 -ceed /gpu/cuda // ./bp1 -m ../../../mfem/data/fichera.mesh // ./bp1 -m ../../../mfem/data/star.vtk -o 3 // ./bp1 -m ../../../mfem/data/inline-segment.mesh -o 8 /// @file /// MFEM mass operator based on libCEED #include "bp1.hpp" #include #include /// Continuous function to project on the discrete FE space double solution(const mfem::Vector &pt) { return pt.Norml2(); // distance to the origin } //TESTARGS -ceed {ceed_resource} -t -no-vis --size 2000 --order 4 int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { // 1. Parse command-line options. const char *ceed_spec = "/cpu/self"; #ifndef MFEM_DIR const char *mesh_file = "../../../mfem/data/star.mesh"; #else const char *mesh_file = MFEM_DIR "/data/star.mesh"; #endif int order = 1; bool visualization = true; bool test = false; double max_nnodes = 50000; mfem::OptionsParser args(argc, argv); args.AddOption(&ceed_spec, "-c", "-ceed", "Ceed specification."); args.AddOption(&mesh_file, "-m", "--mesh", "Mesh file to use."); args.AddOption(&order, "-o", "--order", "Finite element order (polynomial degree)."); args.AddOption(&max_nnodes, "-s", "--size", "Maximum size (number of DoFs)"); args.AddOption(&visualization, "-vis", "--visualization", "-no-vis", "--no-visualization", "Enable or disable GLVis visualization."); args.AddOption(&test, "-t", "--test", "-no-test", "--no-test", "Enable or disable test mode."); args.Parse(); if (!args.Good()) { args.PrintUsage(std::cout); return 1; } if (!test) { args.PrintOptions(std::cout); } // 2. Initialize a Ceed device object using the given Ceed specification. Ceed ceed; CeedInit(ceed_spec, &ceed); // 3. Read the mesh from the given mesh file. mfem::Mesh *mesh = new mfem::Mesh(mesh_file, 1, 1); int dim = mesh->Dimension(); // 4. Refine the mesh to increase the resolution. // In this example we do 'ref_levels' of uniform refinement. // We choose 'ref_levels' to be the largest number that gives a final system with no more than 50,000 unknowns, approximately. { int ref_levels = (int)floor((log(max_nnodes / mesh->GetNE()) - dim * log(order)) / log(2.) / dim); for (int l = 0; l < ref_levels; l++) { mesh->UniformRefinement(); } } if (mesh->GetNodalFESpace() == NULL) { mesh->SetCurvature(1, false, -1, mfem::Ordering::byNODES); } if (mesh->NURBSext) { mesh->SetCurvature(order, false, -1, mfem::Ordering::byNODES); } // 5. Define a finite element space on the mesh. // Here we use continuous Lagrange finite elements of the specified order. MFEM_VERIFY(order > 0, "invalid order"); mfem::FiniteElementCollection *fec = new mfem::H1_FECollection(order, dim); mfem::FiniteElementSpace *fespace = new mfem::FiniteElementSpace(mesh, fec); if (!test) { std::cout << "Number of finite element unknowns: " << fespace->GetTrueVSize() << std::endl; } // 6. Construct a rhs vector using the linear form f(v) = (solution, v), where v is a test function. mfem::LinearForm b(fespace); mfem::FunctionCoefficient sol_coeff(solution); b.AddDomainIntegrator(new mfem::DomainLFIntegrator(sol_coeff)); b.Assemble(); // 7. Construct a CeedMassOperator utilizing the 'ceed' device and using the 'fespace' object to extract data needed by the Ceed objects. CeedMassOperator mass(ceed, fespace); // 8. Solve the discrete system using the conjugate gradients (CG) method. mfem::CGSolver cg; cg.SetRelTol(1e-6); cg.SetMaxIter(100); if (test) { cg.SetPrintLevel(0); } else { cg.SetPrintLevel(3); } cg.SetOperator(mass); mfem::GridFunction sol(fespace); sol = 0.0; cg.Mult(b, sol); // 9. Compute and print the L2 projection error. double err_l2 = sol.ComputeL2Error(sol_coeff); if (!test) { std::cout << "L2 projection error: " << err_l2 << std::endl; } else { if (fabs(sol.ComputeL2Error(sol_coeff)) > 2e-4) { std::cout << "Error too large: " << err_l2 << std::endl; } } // 10. Open a socket connection to GLVis and send the mesh and solution for visualization. if (visualization) { char vishost[] = "localhost"; int visport = 19916; mfem::socketstream sol_sock(vishost, visport); sol_sock.precision(8); sol_sock << "solution\n" << *mesh << sol << std::flush; } // 11. Free memory and exit. delete fespace; delete fec; delete mesh; CeedDestroy(&ceed); return 0; }