#if !defined(PETSCDMTYPES_H) #define PETSCDMTYPES_H /* SUBMANSEC = DM */ /*S DM - Abstract PETSc object that manages an abstract grid object and its interactions with the algebraic solvers Level: intermediate Notes: The DMDACreate() based object and the DMCompositeCreate() based object are examples of DMs .seealso: `DMCompositeCreate()`, `DMDACreate()`, `DMSetType()`, `DMType` S*/ typedef struct _p_DM* DM; /*E DMBoundaryType - Describes the choice for fill of ghost cells on physical domain boundaries. Level: beginner A boundary may be of type DM_BOUNDARY_NONE (no ghost nodes), DM_BOUNDARY_GHOSTED (ghost vertices/cells exist but aren't filled; you can put values into them and then apply a stencil that uses those ghost locations), DM_BOUNDARY_MIRROR (the ghost value is the same as the value 1 grid point in; that is, the 0th grid point in the real mesh acts like a mirror to define the ghost point value; not yet implemented for 3d), DM_BOUNDARY_PERIODIC (ghost vertices/cells filled by the opposite edge of the domain), or DM_BOUNDARY_TWIST (like periodic, only glued backwards like a Mobius strip). Notes: This is information for the boundary of the __PHYSICAL__ domain. It has nothing to do with boundaries between processes. That width is always determined by the stencil width; see DMDASetStencilWidth(). If the physical grid points have values 0 1 2 3 with DM_BOUNDARY_MIRROR then the local vector with ghost points has the values 1 0 1 2 3 2 . Developer Notes: Should DM_BOUNDARY_MIRROR have the same meaning with DMDA_Q0, that is a staggered grid? In that case should the ghost point have the same value as the 0th grid point where the physical boundary serves as the mirror? References: . * - https://scicomp.stackexchange.com/questions/5355/writing-the-poisson-equation-finite-difference-matrix-with-neumann-boundary-cond .seealso: `DMDASetBoundaryType()`, `DMDACreate1d()`, `DMDACreate2d()`, `DMDACreate3d()`, `DMDACreate()` E*/ typedef enum {DM_BOUNDARY_NONE, DM_BOUNDARY_GHOSTED, DM_BOUNDARY_MIRROR, DM_BOUNDARY_PERIODIC, DM_BOUNDARY_TWIST} DMBoundaryType; /*E DMBoundaryConditionType - indicates what type of boundary condition is to be imposed Note: This flag indicates the type of function which will define the condition: $ DM_BC_ESSENTIAL - A Dirichlet condition using a function of the coordinates $ DM_BC_ESSENTIAL_FIELD - A Dirichlet condition using a function of the coordinates and auxiliary field data $ DM_BC_ESSENTIAL_BD_FIELD - A Dirichlet condition using a function of the coordinates, facet normal, and auxiliary field data $ DM_BC_NATURAL - A Neumann condition using a function of the coordinates $ DM_BC_NATURAL_FIELD - A Neumann condition using a function of the coordinates and auxiliary field data $ DM_BC_NATURAL_RIEMANN - A flux condition which determines the state in ghost cells The user can check whether a boundary condition is essential using (type & DM_BC_ESSENTIAL), and similarly for natural conditions (type & DM_BC_NATURAL) Level: beginner .seealso: `DMAddBoundary()`, `DSAddBoundary()`, `DSGetBoundary()` E*/ typedef enum {DM_BC_ESSENTIAL = 1, DM_BC_ESSENTIAL_FIELD = 5, DM_BC_NATURAL = 2, DM_BC_NATURAL_FIELD = 6, DM_BC_ESSENTIAL_BD_FIELD = 9, DM_BC_NATURAL_RIEMANN = 10} DMBoundaryConditionType; /*E DMPointLocationType - Describes the method to handle point location failure Level: beginner If a search using DM_POINTLOCATION_NONE fails, the failure is signaled with a negative cell number. On the other hand, if DM_POINTLOCATION_NEAREST is used, on failure, the (approximate) nearest point in the mesh is used, replacing the given point in the input vector. DM_POINTLOCATION_REMOVE returns values only for points which were located. .seealso: `DMLocatePoints()` E*/ typedef enum {DM_POINTLOCATION_NONE, DM_POINTLOCATION_NEAREST, DM_POINTLOCATION_REMOVE} DMPointLocationType; /*E DMAdaptationStrategy - Describes the strategy used for adaptive solves Level: beginner DM_ADAPTATION_INITIAL will refine a mesh based on an initial guess. DM_ADAPTATION_SEQUENTIAL will refine the mesh based on a sequence of solves, much like grid sequencing. DM_ADAPTATION_MULTILEVEL will use the sequence of constructed meshes in a multilevel solve, much like the Systematic Upscaling of Brandt. .seealso: `DMAdaptorSolve()` E*/ typedef enum {DM_ADAPTATION_INITIAL, DM_ADAPTATION_SEQUENTIAL, DM_ADAPTATION_MULTILEVEL} DMAdaptationStrategy; /*E DMAdaptationCriterion - Describes the test used to decide whether to coarsen or refine parts of the mesh Level: beginner DM_ADAPTATION_REFINE will uniformly refine a mesh, much like grid sequencing. DM_ADAPTATION_LABEL will adapt the mesh based upon a label of the cells filled with DMAdaptFlag markers. DM_ADAPTATION_METRIC will try to mesh the manifold described by the input metric tensor uniformly. PETSc can also construct such a metric based upon an input primal or a gradient field. .seealso: `DMAdaptorSolve()` E*/ typedef enum {DM_ADAPTATION_NONE, DM_ADAPTATION_REFINE, DM_ADAPTATION_LABEL, DM_ADAPTATION_METRIC} DMAdaptationCriterion; /*E DMAdaptFlag - Marker in the label prescribing adaptation Level: beginner .seealso: `DMAdaptLabel()` E*/ typedef enum {DM_ADAPT_DETERMINE = PETSC_DETERMINE, DM_ADAPT_KEEP = 0, DM_ADAPT_REFINE, DM_ADAPT_COARSEN, DM_ADAPT_COARSEN_LAST, DM_ADAPT_RESERVED_COUNT} DMAdaptFlag; /*E DMDirection - Indicates a coordinate direction Level: beginner .seealso: `DMDAGetRay()`, `DMDAGetProcessorSubset()`, `DMPlexShearGeometry()` E*/ typedef enum {DM_X, DM_Y, DM_Z} DMDirection; /*E DMEnclosureType - The type of enclosure relation between one DM and another Level: beginner For example, one DM dmA may be the boundary of another dmB, in which case it would be labeled DM_ENC_SUBMESH. If the situation is reversed, and dmA has boundary dmB, it would be labeled DM_ENC_SUPERMESH. Likewise, if dmA was a subregion of dmB, it would be labeled DM_ENC_SUBMESH. If no relation can be determined, DM_ENC_NONE is used. If a relation is not yet known, then DM_ENC_UNKNOWN is used. .seealso: `DMGetEnclosureRelation()` E*/ typedef enum {DM_ENC_EQUALITY, DM_ENC_SUPERMESH, DM_ENC_SUBMESH, DM_ENC_NONE, DM_ENC_UNKNOWN} DMEnclosureType; /*E DMPolytopeType - This describes the polytope represented by each cell. Level: beginner While most operations only need the topology information in the Plex, we must sometimes have the user specify a polytope. For instance, when interpolating from a cell-vertex mesh, the type of polytope can be ambiguous. Also, Plex allows different symmetries of prism cell with the same constituent points. Normally these types are autoamtically inferred and the user does not specify them. .seealso: `DMPlexComputeCellTypes()` E*/ typedef enum {DM_POLYTOPE_POINT, DM_POLYTOPE_SEGMENT, DM_POLYTOPE_POINT_PRISM_TENSOR, DM_POLYTOPE_TRIANGLE, DM_POLYTOPE_QUADRILATERAL, DM_POLYTOPE_SEG_PRISM_TENSOR, DM_POLYTOPE_TETRAHEDRON, DM_POLYTOPE_HEXAHEDRON, DM_POLYTOPE_TRI_PRISM, DM_POLYTOPE_TRI_PRISM_TENSOR, DM_POLYTOPE_QUAD_PRISM_TENSOR, DM_POLYTOPE_PYRAMID, DM_POLYTOPE_FV_GHOST, DM_POLYTOPE_INTERIOR_GHOST, DM_POLYTOPE_UNKNOWN, DM_NUM_POLYTOPES} DMPolytopeType; PETSC_EXTERN const char *const DMPolytopeTypes[]; /*E PetscUnit - The seven fundamental SI units Level: beginner .seealso: `DMPlexGetScale()`, `DMPlexSetScale()` E*/ typedef enum {PETSC_UNIT_LENGTH, PETSC_UNIT_MASS, PETSC_UNIT_TIME, PETSC_UNIT_CURRENT, PETSC_UNIT_TEMPERATURE, PETSC_UNIT_AMOUNT, PETSC_UNIT_LUMINOSITY, NUM_PETSC_UNITS} PetscUnit; /*S DMField - PETSc object for defining a field on a mesh topology Level: intermediate S*/ typedef struct _p_DMField* DMField; /*S DMUniversalLabel - A label that encodes a set of DMLabels, bijectively Level: developer S*/ typedef struct _p_UniversalLabel* DMUniversalLabel; typedef struct _n_DMGeneratorFunctionList *DMGeneratorFunctionList; #endif