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1bcb2dfaeSJed Brown# libCEED: Examples
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317be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonThis page provides a brief description of the examples for the libCEED library.
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5bcb2dfaeSJed Brown## Basic libCEED Examples
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717be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonTwo examples that rely only upon libCEED without any external libraries are provided in the [ceed/](./ceed) folder.
817be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonFor more details, please see the dedicated [documentation section](https://libceed.org/en/latest/examples/ceed/index.html).
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10bcb2dfaeSJed Brown## Bakeoff Problems
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12525f58efSJeremy L Thompson<!-- bps-inclusion -->
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1417be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonThe Center for Efficient Exascale Discretizations (CEED) uses Bakeoff Problems (BPs) to test and compare the performance of high-order finite element implementations.
1517be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonThe definitions of the problems are given on the ceed [website](https://ceed.exascaleproject.org/bps/).
16*45e62b5fSJeremy L ThompsonEach of the following bakeoff problems that use external discretization libraries (such as deal.II, MFEM, PETSc, and Nek5000) are located in the subdirectories `deal.II/`, `mfem/`, `petsc/`, and `nek5000/`, respectively.
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18bcb2dfaeSJed BrownHere we provide a short summary:
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2068e843eeSJed Brown:::{list-table}
2168e843eeSJed Brown:header-rows: 1
2268e843eeSJed Brown:widths: auto
2368e843eeSJed Brown* - User code
2468e843eeSJed Brown  - Supported BPs
25*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson* - `deal.II`
26*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson  - * BP1 (scalar mass operator) with $Q=P+1$
27*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson    * BP2 (vector mass operator) with $Q=P+1$
28*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson    * BP3 (scalar Laplace operator) with $Q=P+1$
29*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson    * BP4 (vector Laplace operator) with $Q=P+1$
30*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson    * BP5 (collocated scalar Laplace operator) with $Q=P$
31*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson    * BP6 (collocated vector Laplace operator) with $Q=P$
3268e843eeSJed Brown* - `mfem`
3368e843eeSJed Brown  - * BP1 (scalar mass operator) with $Q=P+1$
3468e843eeSJed Brown    * BP3 (scalar Laplace operator) with $Q=P+1$
3568e843eeSJed Brown* - `petsc`
3668e843eeSJed Brown  - * BP1 (scalar mass operator) with $Q=P+1$
3768e843eeSJed Brown    * BP2 (vector mass operator) with $Q=P+1$
3868e843eeSJed Brown    * BP3 (scalar Laplace operator) with $Q=P+1$
3968e843eeSJed Brown    * BP4 (vector Laplace operator) with $Q=P+1$
4068e843eeSJed Brown    * BP5 (collocated scalar Laplace operator) with $Q=P$
4168e843eeSJed Brown    * BP6 (collocated vector Laplace operator) with $Q=P$
4268e843eeSJed Brown* - `nek5000`
4368e843eeSJed Brown  - * BP1 (scalar mass operator) with $Q=P+1$
4468e843eeSJed Brown    * BP3 (scalar Laplace operator) with $Q=P+1$
4568e843eeSJed Brown:::
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4717be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonThese are all **T-vector**-to-**T-vector** and include parallel scatter, element scatter, element evaluation kernel, element gather, and parallel gather (with the parallel gathers/scatters done externally to libCEED).
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49bcb2dfaeSJed BrownBP1 and BP2 are $L^2$ projections, and thus have no boundary condition.
50bcb2dfaeSJed BrownThe rest of the BPs have homogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions.
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5217be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonThe BPs are parametrized by the number $P$ of Gauss-Legendre-Lobatto nodal points (with $P=p+1$, and $p$ the degree of the basis polynomial) for the Lagrange polynomials, as well as the number of quadrature points, $Q$.
5317be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonA $Q$-point Gauss-Legendre quadrature is used for all BPs except BP5 and BP6, which choose $Q = P$ and Gauss-Legendre-Lobatto quadrature to collocate with the interpolation nodes.
5417be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonThis latter choice is popular in applications that use spectral element methods because it produces a diagonal mass matrix (enabling easy explicit time integration) and significantly reduces the number of floating point operations to apply the operator.
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56525f58efSJeremy L Thompson<!-- bps-exclusion -->
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5813964f07SJed BrownFor a more detailed description of the operators employed in the BPs, please see the dedicated [BPs documentation section](https://libceed.org/en/latest/examples/bps.html).
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60*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson## PETSc+libCEED Fluid Dynamics Navier-Stokes Mini-App
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6217be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonThe Navier-Stokes problem solves the compressible Navier-Stokes equations using an explicit or implicit time integration.
6317be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonA more detailed description of the problem formulation can be found in the [fluids/](./fluids) folder and the corresponding [fluids documentation page](https://libceed.org/en/latest/examples/fluids/index.html).
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65*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson## PETSc+libCEED Solid Mechanics Elasticity Mini-App
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6717be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonThis example solves the steady-state static momentum balance equations using unstructured high-order finite/spectral element spatial discretizations.
6817be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonA more detailed description of the problem formulation can be found in the [solids/](./solids) folder and the corresponding [solids documentation page](https://libceed.org/en/latest/examples/solids/index.html).
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70bcb2dfaeSJed Brown## PETSc+libCEED Surface Area Examples
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7217be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonThese examples, located in the [petsc/](./petsc) folder, use the mass operator to compute the surface area of a cube or a discrete cubed-sphere, using PETSc.
7317be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonFor a detailed description, please see the corresponding [area documentation page](https://libceed.org/en/latest/examples/petsc/index.html#area).
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75bcb2dfaeSJed Brown## PETSc+libCEED Bakeoff Problems on the Cubed-Sphere
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7717be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonThese examples, located in the [petsc/](./petsc) folder, reproduce the Bakeoff Problems 1-6 on a discrete cubed-sphere, using PETSc.
7817be3a41SJeremy L ThompsonFor a detailed description, please see the corresponding [problems on the cubed-sphere documentation page](https://libceed.org/en/latest/examples/petsc/index.html#bakeoff-problems-on-the-cubed-sphere).
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80*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson## libCEED Python Examples
81*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson
82*45e62b5fSJeremy L ThompsonThese Jupyter notebooks explore the concepts of the libCEED API, including how to install the Python interface and the usage of each API object, with interactive examples.
83*45e62b5fSJeremy L ThompsonThe basic libCEED C examples in `/ceed` folder are also available as Python examples.
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85*45e62b5fSJeremy L Thompson## libCEED Rust Examples
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87*45e62b5fSJeremy L ThompsonThe basic libCEED C examples in `/ceed` folder are also available as Rust examples.
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89bcb2dfaeSJed Brown## Running Examples
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91*45e62b5fSJeremy L ThompsonTo build the examples, set the `DEAL_II_DIR`, `MFEM_DIR`, `PETSC_DIR`, and `NEK5K_DIR` variables and, from the `examples/` directory, run
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93bcb2dfaeSJed Brown```{include} ../README.md
94525f58efSJeremy L Thompson:start-after: <!-- running-examples-inclusion -->
95525f58efSJeremy L Thompson:end-before: <!-- running-examples-exclusion -->
96bcb2dfaeSJed Brown```
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