/[MITgcm]/manual/s_phys_pkgs/text/exch2.tex
ViewVC logotype

Annotation of /manual/s_phys_pkgs/text/exch2.tex

Parent Directory Parent Directory | Revision Log Revision Log | View Revision Graph Revision Graph


Revision 1.9 - (hide annotations) (download) (as text)
Fri Mar 12 20:58:19 2004 UTC (21 years, 4 months ago) by afe
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.8: +62 -16 lines
File MIME type: application/x-tex
o more additions

1 afe 1.9 % $Header: /u/u3/gcmpack/manual/part6/exch2.tex,v 1.8 2004/02/17 21:58:56 edhill Exp $
2 afe 1.1 % $Name: $
3    
4     %% * Introduction
5     %% o what it does, citations (refs go into mitgcm_manual.bib,
6     %% preferably in alphabetic order)
7     %% o Equations
8     %% * Key subroutines and parameters
9     %% * Reference material (auto generated from Protex and structured comments)
10     %% o automatically inserted at \section{Reference}
11    
12    
13 edhill 1.8 \section{Extended Cubed Sphere Exchange}
14 afe 1.3 \label{sec:exch2}
15    
16 afe 1.1
17     \subsection{Introduction}
18 afe 1.2
19 edhill 1.8 The \texttt{exch2} package is an extension to the original cubed
20 afe 1.9 sphere topological configuration that allows more flexible domain
21     decomposition and parallelization. Cube faces (also called
22     subdomains) may be divided into any number of tiles that divide evenly
23     into the grid point dimensions of the subdomain. Furthermore, the
24     individual tiles may be run on separate processors in different
25     combinations, and whether exchanges between particular tiles occur
26     between different processors is determined at runtime. This
27     flexibility provides for manual load balancing across a relatively
28     arbitrary number of processors.
29 edhill 1.8
30     The exchange parameters are declared in
31     \filelink{pkg/exch2/W2\_EXCH2\_TOPOLOGY.h}{pkg-exch2-W2_EXCH2_TOPOLOGY.h}
32     and assigned in
33 afe 1.9 \filelink{pkg/exch2/w2\_e2setup.F}{pkg-exch2-w2_e2setup.F}. The
34     validity of the cube topology depends on the \texttt{SIZE.h} file as
35     detailed below. Both files are generated by Matlab scripts in ??
36     check these in already! and should not be edited. The default files
37     provided in the release configure a cubed sphere arrangement of six
38     tiles, one per subdomain, each with 32$\times$32 grid points, all
39     running on a single processor. Pregenerated examples of these files
40     with alternate topologies are provided in ??.
41    
42     \subsection{Invoking exch2}
43    
44     To use exch2 with the cubed sphere, the following conditions must be met:
45    
46     - the exch2 package is included when \texttt{genmake2} is run. The
47     easiest way to do this is to add the line \texttt{exch2} to the
48     \texttt{profile.conf} file -- see Section \ref{sect:buildingCode}
49     for general details. \\
50    
51     - an example of \texttt{W2\_EXCH2\_TOPOLOGY.h} and
52     \texttt{w2\_e2setup.F} must reside in a directory containing code
53     linked when \texttt{genmake2} runs. The safest place to put these
54     is the directory indicated in the \texttt{-mods=DIR} command line
55     modifier (typically \texttt{../code}), or the build directory. The
56     default versions of these files reside in \texttt{pkg/exch2}, but
57     they should be left untouched to avoid breaking configurations other
58     than the one you intend to modify.\\
59    
60     - files containing grid parameters, named
61     \texttt{tile}xxx\texttt{.mitgrid} where xxx is \texttt{001} through
62     \texttt{006}, must be in the working directory when the MITgcm
63     executable is run. These files are provided in the example
64     experiments for cubed sphere configurations with 32$\times$32 cube
65     sides and are non-trivial to generate -- please contact MITgcm
66     support if you want to generate files for other configurations.
67     This is lame. ?? \\
68    
69     As of the time of writing the following examples use exch2 and may be
70     used for guidance:
71    
72     \begin{verbatim}
73     verification/adjust_nlfs.cs-32x32x1
74     verification/adjustment.cs-32x32x1
75     verification/aim.5l_cs
76     verification/global_ocean.cs32x15
77     verification/hs94.cs-32x32x5
78     \end{verbatim}
79    
80    
81    
82    
83     \subsection{Generating Topology Files}
84 afe 1.4
85     \subsection{Key Variables}
86    
87     The descriptions of the variables are divided up into scalars,
88 edhill 1.8 one-dimensional arrays indexed to the tile number, and two and three
89     dimensional arrays indexed to tile number and neighboring tile. This
90     division actually reflects the functionality of these variables: the
91     scalars are common to every part of the topology, the tile-indexed
92     arrays to individual tiles, and the arrays indexed to tile and
93     neighbor to relationships between tiles and their neighbors.
94 afe 1.4
95     \subsubsection{Scalars}
96    
97     The number of tiles in a particular topology is set with the parameter
98 edhill 1.8 \texttt{NTILES}, and the maximum number of neighbors of any tiles by
99     \texttt{MAX\_NEIGHBOURS}. These parameters are used for defining the
100     size of the various one and two dimensional arrays that store tile
101 afe 1.9 parameters indexed to the tile number.\\
102 edhill 1.8
103     The scalar parameters \varlink{exch2\_domain\_nxt}{exch2_domain_nxt}
104     and \varlink{exch2\_domain\_nyt}{exch2_domain_nyt} express the number
105     of tiles in the x and y global indices. For example, the default
106     setup of six tiles has \texttt{exch2\_domain\_nxt=6} and
107     \texttt{exch2\_domain\_nyt=1}. A topology of twenty-four square (in
108     gridpoints) tiles, four (2x2) per subdomain, will have
109     \texttt{exch2\_domain\_nxt=12} and \texttt{exch2\_domain\_nyt=2}.
110     Note that these parameters express the tile layout to allow global
111     data files that are tile-layout-neutral and have no bearing on the
112     internal storage of the arrays. The tiles are internally stored in a
113     range from \texttt{1,bi} (in the x axis) and y-axis variable
114     \texttt{bj} is generally ignored within the package.
115 afe 1.4
116 afe 1.6 \subsubsection{Arrays Indexed to Tile Number}
117 afe 1.4
118 edhill 1.8 The following arrays are of size \texttt{NTILES}, are indexed to the
119     tile number, and the indices are omitted in their descriptions.
120 afe 1.4
121 edhill 1.8 The arrays \varlink{exch2\_tnx}{exch2_tnx} and
122     \varlink{exch2\_tny}{exch2_tny} express the x and y dimensions of each
123     tile. At present for each tile \texttt{exch2\_tnx=sNx} and
124     \texttt{exch2\_tny=sNy}, as assigned in \texttt{SIZE.h}. Future
125     releases of MITgcm are to allow varying tile sizes.
126    
127     The location of the tiles' Cartesian origin within a subdomain are
128     determined by the arrays \varlink{exch2\_tbasex}{exch2_tbasex} and
129     \varlink{exch2\_tbasey}{exch2_tbasey}. These variables are used to
130     relate the location of the edges of the tiles to each other. As an
131     example, in the default six-tile topology (the degenerate case) each
132     index in these arrays are set to 0. The twenty-four, 32x32 cube face
133     case discussed above will have values of 0 or 16, depending on the
134     quadrant the tile falls within the subdomain. The array
135     \varlink{exch2\_myFace}{exch2_myFace} contains the number of the
136     cubeface/subdomain of each tile, numbered 1-6 in the case of the
137     standard cube topology.
138    
139     The arrays \varlink{exch2\_txglobalo}{exch2_txglobalo} and
140     \varlink{exch2\_txglobalo}{exch2_txglobalo} are similar to
141     \varlink{exch2\_tbasex}{exch2_tbasex} and
142     \varlink{exch2\_tbasey}{exch2_tbasey}, but locate the tiles within the
143     global address space, similar to that used by global files.
144    
145     The arrays \varlink{exch2\_isWedge}{exch2_isWedge},
146     \varlink{exch2\_isEedge}{exch2_isEedge},
147     \varlink{exch2\_isSedge}{exch2_isSedge}, and
148     \varlink{exch2\_isNedge}{exch2_isNedge} are set to 1 if the indexed
149     tile lies on the edge of a subdomain, 0 if not. The values are used
150     within the topology generator to determine the orientation of
151     neighboring tiles and to indicate whether a tile lies on the corner of
152     a subdomain. The latter case indicates special exchange and numerical
153     handling for the singularities at the eight corners of the cube.
154     \varlink{exch2\_nNeighbours}{exch2_nNeighbours} contains a count of
155     how many neighboring tiles each tile has, and is used for setting
156     bounds for looping over neighboring tiles.
157     \varlink{exch2\_tProc}{exch2_tProc} holds the process rank of each
158     tile, and is used in interprocess communication.
159 afe 1.4
160 afe 1.6 \subsubsection{Arrays Indexed to Tile Number and Neighbor}
161 afe 1.4
162 edhill 1.8 The following arrays are all of size \texttt{MAX\_NEIGHBOURS} $\times$
163     \texttt{NTILES} and describe the orientations between the the tiles.
164 afe 1.5
165 edhill 1.8 The array \texttt{exch2\_neighbourId(a,T)} holds the tile number for
166     each of the $n$ neighboring tiles. The neighbor tiles are indexed
167     \texttt{(1,MAX\_NEIGHBOURS} in the order right to left on the north
168     then south edges, and then top to bottom on the east and west edges.
169     Maybe throw in a fig here, eh?
170    
171     The \texttt{exch2\_opposingSend\_record(a,T)} array holds the index c
172     in \texttt{exch2\_neighbourId(b,$T_{n}$)} that holds the tile number T.
173     In other words,
174     \begin{verbatim}
175     exch2_neighbourId( exch2_opposingSend_record(a,T),
176     exch2_neighbourId(a,T) ) = T
177 afe 1.5 \end{verbatim}
178 edhill 1.8 and this provides a back-reference from the neighbor tiles.
179 afe 1.5
180 edhill 1.8 The arrays \varlink{exch2\_pi}{exch2_pi},
181     \varlink{exch2\_pj}{exch2_pj}, \varlink{exch2\_oi}{exch2_oi},
182     \varlink{exch2\_oj}{exch2_oj}, \varlink{exch2\_oi\_f}{exch2_oi_f}, and
183     \varlink{exch2\_oj\_f}{exch2_oj_f} specify the transformations in
184     exchanges between the neighboring tiles. The dimensions of
185     \texttt{exch2\_pi(t,N,T)} and \texttt{exch2\_pj(t,N,T)} are the
186     neighbor ID \textit{N} and the tile number \textit{T} as explained
187     above, plus the transformation vector {\em t }, of length two. The
188     first element of the transformation vector indicates the factor by
189     which variables representing the same vector component of a tile will
190     be multiplied, and the second element indicates the transform to the
191     variable in the other direction. As an example,
192     \texttt{exch2\_pi(1,N,T)} holds the transform of the i-component of a
193     vector variable in tile \texttt{T} to the i-component of tile
194     \texttt{T}'s neighbor \texttt{N}, and \texttt{exch2\_pi(2,N,T)} hold
195     the component of neighbor \texttt{N}'s j-component.
196    
197     Under the current cube topology, one of the two elements of
198     \texttt{exch2\_pi} or \texttt{exch2\_pj} for a given tile \texttt{T}
199     and neighbor \texttt{N} will be 0, reflecting the fact that the vector
200     components are orthogonal. The other element will be 1 or -1,
201     depending on whether the components are indexed in the same or
202     opposite directions. For example, the transform dimension of the
203     arrays for all tile neighbors on the same subdomain will be [1,0],
204     since all tiles on the same subdomain are oriented identically.
205     Vectors that correspond to the orthogonal dimension with the same
206     index direction will have [0,1], whereas those in the opposite index
207     direction will have [0,-1].
208 afe 1.5
209 afe 1.4
210 edhill 1.8 {\footnotesize
211 afe 1.4 \begin{verbatim}
212     C exch2_pi :: X index row of target to source permutation
213     C :: matrix for each neighbour entry.
214     C exch2_pj :: Y index row of target to source permutation
215     C :: matrix for each neighbour entry.
216     C exch2_oi :: X index element of target to source
217     C :: offset vector for cell-centered quantities
218     C :: of each neighbor entry.
219     C exch2_oj :: Y index element of target to source
220     C :: offset vector for cell-centered quantities
221     C :: of each neighbor entry.
222     C exch2_oi_f :: X index element of target to source
223     C :: offset vector for face quantities
224     C :: of each neighbor entry.
225     C exch2_oj_f :: Y index element of target to source
226     C :: offset vector for face quantities
227     C :: of each neighbor entry.
228     \end{verbatim}
229 edhill 1.8 }
230 afe 1.1
231    
232    
233     \subsection{Key Routines}
234    
235    
236    
237     \subsection{References}

  ViewVC Help
Powered by ViewVC 1.1.22