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1 % $Header: /u/gcmpack/manual/part6/exch2.tex,v 1.23 2005/06/10 19:34:09 afe Exp $
2 % $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 \subsection{exch2: Extended Cubed Sphere \mbox{Topology}}
14 \label{sec:exch2}
15
16
17 \subsubsection{Introduction}
18
19 The \texttt{exch2} package extends the original cubed sphere topology
20 configuration to allow more flexible domain decomposition and
21 parallelization. Cube faces (also called subdomains) may be divided
22 into any number of tiles that divide evenly into the grid point
23 dimensions of the subdomain. Furthermore, the tiles can run on
24 separate processors individually or in groups, which provides for
25 manual compile-time load balancing across a relatively arbitrary
26 number of processors. \\
27
28 The exchange parameters are declared in
29 \filelink{pkg/exch2/W2\_EXCH2\_TOPOLOGY.h}{pkg-exch2-W2_EXCH2_TOPOLOGY.h}
30 and assigned in
31 \filelink{pkg/exch2/w2\_e2setup.F}{pkg-exch2-w2_e2setup.F}. The
32 validity of the cube topology depends on the \file{SIZE.h} file as
33 detailed below. The default files provided in the release configure a
34 cubed sphere topology of six tiles, one per subdomain, each with
35 32$\times$32 grid points, with all tiles running on a single processor. Both
36 files are generated by Matlab scripts in
37 \file{utils/exch2/matlab-topology-generator}; see Section
38 \ref{sec:topogen} \sectiontitle{Generating Topology Files for exch2}
39 for details on creating alternate topologies. Pregenerated examples
40 of these files with alternate topologies are provided under
41 \file{utils/exch2/code-mods} along with the appropriate \file{SIZE.h}
42 file for single-processor execution.
43
44 \subsubsection{Invoking exch2}
45
46 To use exch2 with the cubed sphere, the following conditions must be
47 met: \\
48
49 $\bullet$ The exch2 package is included when \file{genmake2} is run.
50 The easiest way to do this is to add the line \code{exch2} to the
51 \file{profile.conf} file -- see Section
52 \ref{sect:buildingCode} \sectiontitle{Building the code} for general
53 details. \\
54
55 $\bullet$ An example of \file{W2\_EXCH2\_TOPOLOGY.h} and
56 \file{w2\_e2setup.F} must reside in a directory containing files
57 symbolically linked by the \file{genmake2} script. The safest place to
58 put these is the directory indicated in the \code{-mods=DIR} command
59 line modifier (typically \file{../code}), or the build directory.
60 The default versions of these files reside in \file{pkg/exch2} and
61 are linked automatically if no other versions exist elsewhere in the
62 build path, but they should be left untouched to avoid breaking
63 configurations other than the one you intend to modify.\\
64
65 $\bullet$ Files containing grid parameters, named
66 \file{tile00$n$.mitgrid} where $n$=\code{(1:6)} (one per subdomain),
67 must be in the working directory when the MITgcm executable is run.
68 These files are provided in the example experiments for cubed sphere
69 configurations with 32$\times$32 cube sides
70 -- please contact MITgcm support if you want to generate
71 files for other configurations. \\
72
73 $\bullet$ As always when compiling MITgcm, the file \file{SIZE.h} must
74 be placed where \file{genmake2} will find it. In particular for
75 exch2, the domain decomposition specified in \file{SIZE.h} must
76 correspond with the particular configuration's topology specified in
77 \file{W2\_EXCH2\_TOPOLOGY.h} and \file{w2\_e2setup.F}. Domain
78 decomposition issues particular to exch2 are addressed in Section
79 \ref{sec:topogen} \sectiontitle{Generating Topology Files for exch2}
80 and \ref{sec:exch2mpi} \sectiontitle{exch2, SIZE.h, and Multiprocessing}; a more
81 general background on the subject relevant to MITgcm is presented in
82 Section \ref{sect:specifying_a_decomposition}
83 \sectiontitle{Specifying a decomposition}.\\
84
85 At the time of this writing the following examples use exch2 and may
86 be used for guidance:
87
88 \begin{verbatim}
89 verification/adjust_nlfs.cs-32x32x1
90 verification/adjustment.cs-32x32x1
91 verification/aim.5l_cs
92 verification/global_ocean.cs32x15
93 verification/hs94.cs-32x32x5
94 \end{verbatim}
95
96
97
98
99 \subsubsection{Generating Topology Files for exch2}
100 \label{sec:topogen}
101
102 Alternate cubed sphere topologies may be created using the Matlab
103 scripts in \file{utils/exch2/matlab-topology-generator}. Running the
104 m-file
105 \filelink{driver.m}{utils-exch2-matlab-topology-generator_driver.m}
106 from the Matlab prompt (there are no parameters to pass) generates
107 exch2 topology files \file{W2\_EXCH2\_TOPOLOGY.h} and
108 \file{w2\_e2setup.F} in the working directory and displays a figure of
109 the topology via Matlab -- figures \ref{fig:6tile}, \ref{fig:12tile},
110 and \ref{fig:24tile} are examples of the generated diagrams. The other
111 m-files in the directory are
112 subroutines called from \file{driver.m} and should not be run ``bare'' except
113 for development purposes. \\
114
115 The parameters that determine the dimensions and topology of the
116 generated configuration are \code{nr}, \code{nb}, \code{ng},
117 \code{tnx} and \code{tny}, and all are assigned early in the script. \\
118
119 The first three determine the height and width of the subdomains and
120 hence the size of the overall domain. Each one determines the number
121 of grid points, and therefore the resolution, along the subdomain
122 sides in a ``great circle'' around each the three spatial axes of the cube. At the time
123 of this writing MITgcm requires these three parameters to be equal,
124 but they provide for future releases to accomodate different
125 resolutions around the axes to allow subdomains with differing resolutions.\\
126
127 The parameters \code{tnx} and \code{tny} determine the width and height of
128 the tiles into which the subdomains are decomposed, and must evenly
129 divide the integer assigned to \code{nr}, \code{nb} and \code{ng}.
130 The result is a rectangular tiling of the subdomain. Figure
131 \ref{fig:24tile} shows one possible topology for a twenty-four-tile
132 cube, and figure \ref{fig:12tile} shows one for twelve tiles. \\
133
134 \begin{figure}
135 \begin{center}
136 \resizebox{4in}{!}{
137 \includegraphics{part6/s24t_16x16.ps}
138 }
139 \end{center}
140
141 \caption{Plot of a cubed sphere topology with a 32$\times$192 domain
142 divided into six 32$\times$32 subdomains, each of which is divided
143 into four tiles of width \code{tnx=16} and height \code{tny=16} for a
144 total of twenty-four tiles. The colored borders of the subdomains
145 represent the parameters \code{nr} (red), \code{nb} (blue), and
146 \code{ng} (green). } \label{fig:24tile}
147 \end{figure}
148
149 \begin{figure}
150 \begin{center}
151 \resizebox{4in}{!}{
152 \includegraphics{part6/s12t_16x32.ps}
153 }
154 \end{center}
155 \caption{Plot of a cubed sphere topology with a 32$\times$192 domain
156 divided into six 32$\times$32 subdomains of two tiles each
157 (\code{tnx=16, tny=32}).
158 } \label{fig:12tile}
159 \end{figure}
160
161 \begin{figure}
162 \begin{center}
163 \resizebox{4in}{!}{
164 \includegraphics{part6/s6t_32x32.ps}
165 }
166 \end{center}
167 \caption{Plot of a cubed sphere topology with a 32$\times$192 domain
168 divided into six 32$\times$32 subdomains with one tile each
169 (\code{tnx=32, tny=32}). This is the default configuration.
170 }
171 \label{fig:6tile}
172 \end{figure}
173
174
175 Tiles can be selected from the topology to be omitted from being
176 allocated memory and processors. This tuning is useful in ocean
177 modeling for omitting tiles that fall entirely on land. The tiles
178 omitted are specified in the file
179 \filelink{blanklist.txt}{utils-exch2-matlab-topology-generator_blanklist.txt}
180 by their tile number in the topology, separated by a newline. \\
181
182
183
184
185 \subsubsection{exch2, SIZE.h, and Multiprocessing}
186 \label{sec:exch2mpi}
187
188 Once the topology configuration files are created, the Fortran
189 \code{PARAMETER}s in \file{SIZE.h} must be configured to match.
190 Section \ref{sect:specifying_a_decomposition} \sectiontitle{Specifying
191 a decomposition} provides a general description of domain
192 decomposition within MITgcm and its relation to \file{SIZE.h}. The
193 current section specifies constraints that the exch2 package
194 imposes and describes how to enable parallel execution with
195 MPI. \\
196
197 As in the general case, the parameters \varlink{sNx}{sNx} and
198 \varlink{sNy}{sNy} define the size of the individual tiles, and so
199 must be assigned the same respective values as \code{tnx} and
200 \code{tny} in \file{driver.m}.\\
201
202 The halo width parameters \varlink{OLx}{OLx} and \varlink{OLy}{OLy}
203 have no special bearing on exch2 and may be assigned as in the general
204 case. The same holds for \varlink{Nr}{Nr}, the number of vertical
205 levels in the model.\\
206
207 The parameters \varlink{nSx}{nSx}, \varlink{nSy}{nSy},
208 \varlink{nPx}{nPx}, and \varlink{nPy}{nPy} relate to the number of
209 tiles and how they are distributed on processors. When using exch2,
210 the tiles are stored in the $x$ dimension, and so
211 \code{\varlink{nSy}{nSy}=1} in all cases. Since the tiles as
212 configured by exch2 cannot be split up accross processors without
213 regenerating the topology, \code{\varlink{nPy}{nPy}=1} as well. \\
214
215 The number of tiles MITgcm allocates and how they are distributed
216 between processors depends on \varlink{nPx}{nPx} and
217 \varlink{nSx}{nSx}. \varlink{nSx}{nSx} is the number of tiles per
218 processor and \varlink{nPx}{nPx} is the number of processors. The
219 total number of tiles in the topology minus those listed in
220 \file{blanklist.txt} must equal \code{nSx*nPx}. Note that in order to
221 obtain maximum usage from a given number of processors in some cases,
222 this restriction might entail sharing a processor with a tile that
223 would otherwise be excluded because it is topographically outside of
224 the domain and therefore in \file{blanklist.txt}. For example,
225 suppose you have five processors and a domain decomposition of
226 thirty-six tiles that allows you to exclude seven tiles. To evenly
227 distribute the remaining twenty-nine tiles among five processors, you
228 would have to run one ``dummy'' tile to make an even six tiles per
229 processor. Such dummy tiles are \emph{not} listed in
230 \file{blanklist.txt}.\\
231
232
233 The following is an example of \file{SIZE.h} for the twelve-tile
234 configuration illustrated in figure \ref{fig:12tile} running on
235 one processor: \\
236
237 \begin{verbatim}
238 PARAMETER (
239 & sNx = 16,
240 & sNy = 32,
241 & OLx = 2,
242 & OLy = 2,
243 & nSx = 12,
244 & nSy = 1,
245 & nPx = 1,
246 & nPy = 1,
247 & Nx = sNx*nSx*nPx,
248 & Ny = sNy*nSy*nPy,
249 & Nr = 5)
250 \end{verbatim}
251
252 The following is an example for the twenty-four-tile topology in
253 figure \ref{fig:24tile} running on six processors:
254
255 \begin{verbatim}
256 PARAMETER (
257 & sNx = 16,
258 & sNy = 16,
259 & OLx = 2,
260 & OLy = 2,
261 & nSx = 4,
262 & nSy = 1,
263 & nPx = 6,
264 & nPy = 1,
265 & Nx = sNx*nSx*nPx,
266 & Ny = sNy*nSy*nPy,
267 & Nr = 5)
268 \end{verbatim}
269
270
271
272
273
274 \subsubsection{Key Variables}
275
276 The descriptions of the variables are divided up into scalars,
277 one-dimensional arrays indexed to the tile number, and two and
278 three-dimensional arrays indexed to tile number and neighboring tile.
279 This division reflects the functionality of these variables: The
280 scalars are common to every part of the topology, the tile-indexed
281 arrays to individual tiles, and the arrays indexed by tile and
282 neighbor to relationships between tiles and their neighbors. \\
283
284 Scalars:
285
286 The number of tiles in a particular topology is set with the parameter
287 \code{NTILES}, and the maximum number of neighbors of any tiles by
288 \code{MAX\_NEIGHBOURS}. These parameters are used for defining the
289 size of the various one and two dimensional arrays that store tile
290 parameters indexed to the tile number and are assigned in the files
291 generated by \file{driver.m}.\\
292
293 The scalar parameters \varlink{exch2\_domain\_nxt}{exch2_domain_nxt}
294 and \varlink{exch2\_domain\_nyt}{exch2_domain_nyt} express the number
295 of tiles in the $x$ and $y$ global indices. For example, the default
296 setup of six tiles (Fig. \ref{fig:6tile}) has
297 \code{exch2\_domain\_nxt=6} and \code{exch2\_domain\_nyt=1}. A
298 topology of twenty-four square tiles, four per subdomain (as in figure
299 \ref{fig:24tile}), will have \code{exch2\_domain\_nxt=12} and
300 \code{exch2\_domain\_nyt=2}. Note that these parameters express the
301 tile layout in order to allow global data files that are tile-layout-neutral.
302 They have no bearing on the internal storage of the arrays. The tiles
303 are stored internally in a range from \code{\varlink{bi}{bi}=(1:NTILES)} in the
304 $x$ axis, and the $y$ axis variable \varlink{bj}{bj} is assumed to
305 equal \code{1} throughout the package. \\
306
307 Arrays indexed to tile number:
308
309 The following arrays are of length \code{NTILES} and are indexed to
310 the tile number, which is indicated in the diagrams with the notation
311 \textsf{t}$n$. The indices are omitted in the descriptions. \\
312
313 The arrays \varlink{exch2\_tnx}{exch2_tnx} and
314 \varlink{exch2\_tny}{exch2_tny} express the $x$ and $y$ dimensions of
315 each tile. At present for each tile \texttt{exch2\_tnx=sNx} and
316 \texttt{exch2\_tny=sNy}, as assigned in \file{SIZE.h} and described in
317 Section \ref{sec:exch2mpi} \sectiontitle{exch2, SIZE.h, and
318 Multiprocessing}. Future releases of MITgcm may allow varying tile
319 sizes. \\
320
321 The arrays \varlink{exch2\_tbasex}{exch2_tbasex} and
322 \varlink{exch2\_tbasey}{exch2_tbasey} determine the tiles'
323 Cartesian origin within a subdomain
324 and locate the edges of different tiles relative to each other. As
325 an example, in the default six-tile topology (Fig. \ref{fig:6tile})
326 each index in these arrays is set to \code{0} since a tile occupies
327 its entire subdomain. The twenty-four-tile case discussed above will
328 have values of \code{0} or \code{16}, depending on the quadrant of the
329 tile within the subdomain. The elements of the arrays
330 \varlink{exch2\_txglobalo}{exch2_txglobalo} and
331 \varlink{exch2\_txglobalo}{exch2_txglobalo} are similar to
332 \varlink{exch2\_tbasex}{exch2_tbasex} and
333 \varlink{exch2\_tbasey}{exch2_tbasey}, but locate the tile edges within the
334 global address space, similar to that used by global output and input
335 files. \\
336
337 The array \varlink{exch2\_myFace}{exch2_myFace} contains the number of
338 the subdomain of each tile, in a range \code{(1:6)} in the case of the
339 standard cube topology and indicated by \textbf{\textsf{f}}$n$ in
340 figures \ref{fig:12tile} and
341 \ref{fig:24tile}. \varlink{exch2\_nNeighbours}{exch2_nNeighbours}
342 contains a count of the neighboring tiles each tile has, and sets
343 the bounds for looping over neighboring tiles.
344 \varlink{exch2\_tProc}{exch2_tProc} holds the process rank of each
345 tile, and is used in interprocess communication. \\
346
347
348 The arrays \varlink{exch2\_isWedge}{exch2_isWedge},
349 \varlink{exch2\_isEedge}{exch2_isEedge},
350 \varlink{exch2\_isSedge}{exch2_isSedge}, and
351 \varlink{exch2\_isNedge}{exch2_isNedge} are set to \code{1} if the
352 indexed tile lies on the edge of its subdomain, \code{0} if
353 not. The values are used within the topology generator to determine
354 the orientation of neighboring tiles, and to indicate whether a tile
355 lies on the corner of a subdomain. The latter case requires special
356 exchange and numerical handling for the singularities at the eight
357 corners of the cube. \\
358
359
360 Arrays Indexed to Tile Number and Neighbor:
361
362 The following arrays have vectors of length \code{MAX\_NEIGHBOURS} and
363 \code{NTILES} and describe the orientations between the the tiles. \\
364
365 The array \code{exch2\_neighbourId(a,T)} holds the tile number
366 \code{Tn} for each of the tile number \code{T}'s neighboring tiles
367 \code{a}. The neighbor tiles are indexed
368 \code{(1:exch2\_nNeighbours(T))} in the order right to left on the
369 north then south edges, and then top to bottom on the east then west
370 edges. \\
371
372 The \code{exch2\_opposingSend\_record(a,T)} array holds the
373 index \code{b} of the element in \texttt{exch2\_neighbourId(b,Tn)}
374 that holds the tile number \code{T}, given
375 \code{Tn=exch2\_neighborId(a,T)}. In other words,
376 \begin{verbatim}
377 exch2_neighbourId( exch2_opposingSend_record(a,T),
378 exch2_neighbourId(a,T) ) = T
379 \end{verbatim}
380 This provides a back-reference from the neighbor tiles. \\
381
382 The arrays \varlink{exch2\_pi}{exch2_pi} and
383 \varlink{exch2\_pj}{exch2_pj} specify the transformations of indices
384 in exchanges between the neighboring tiles. These transformations are
385 necessary in exchanges between subdomains because a horizontal dimension
386 in one subdomain
387 may map to other horizonal dimension in an adjacent subdomain, and
388 may also have its indexing reversed. This swapping arises from the
389 ``folding'' of two-dimensional arrays into a three-dimensional
390 cube. \\
391
392 The dimensions of \code{exch2\_pi(t,N,T)} and \code{exch2\_pj(t,N,T)}
393 are the neighbor ID \code{N} and the tile number \code{T} as explained
394 above, plus a vector of length \code{2} containing transformation
395 factors \code{t}. The first element of the transformation vector
396 holds the factor to multiply the index in the same dimension, and the
397 second element holds the the same for the orthogonal dimension. To
398 clarify, \code{exch2\_pi(1,N,T)} holds the mapping of the $x$ axis
399 index of tile \code{T} to the $x$ axis of tile \code{T}'s neighbor
400 \code{N}, and \code{exch2\_pi(2,N,T)} holds the mapping of \code{T}'s
401 $x$ index to the neighbor \code{N}'s $y$ index. \\
402
403 One of the two elements of \code{exch2\_pi} or \code{exch2\_pj} for a
404 given tile \code{T} and neighbor \code{N} will be \code{0}, reflecting
405 the fact that the two axes are orthogonal. The other element will be
406 \code{1} or \code{-1}, depending on whether the axes are indexed in
407 the same or opposite directions. For example, the transform vector of
408 the arrays for all tile neighbors on the same subdomain will be
409 \code{(1,0)}, since all tiles on the same subdomain are oriented
410 identically. An axis that corresponds to the orthogonal dimension
411 with the same index direction in a particular tile-neighbor
412 orientation will have \code{(0,1)}. Those with the opposite index
413 direction will have \code{(0,-1)} in order to reverse the ordering. \\
414
415 The arrays \varlink{exch2\_oi}{exch2_oi},
416 \varlink{exch2\_oj}{exch2_oj}, \varlink{exch2\_oi\_f}{exch2_oi_f}, and
417 \varlink{exch2\_oj\_f}{exch2_oj_f} are indexed to tile number and
418 neighbor and specify the relative offset within the subdomain of the
419 array index of a variable going from a neighboring tile \code{N} to a
420 local tile \code{T}. Consider \code{T=1} in the six-tile topology
421 (Fig. \ref{fig:6tile}), where
422
423 \begin{verbatim}
424 exch2_oi(1,1)=33
425 exch2_oi(2,1)=0
426 exch2_oi(3,1)=32
427 exch2_oi(4,1)=-32
428 \end{verbatim}
429
430 The simplest case is \code{exch2\_oi(2,1)}, the southern neighbor,
431 which is \code{Tn=6}. The axes of \code{T} and \code{Tn} have the
432 same orientation and their $x$ axes have the same origin, and so an
433 exchange between the two requires no changes to the $x$ index. For
434 the western neighbor (\code{Tn=5}), \code{code\_oi(3,1)=32} since the
435 \code{x=0} vector on \code{T} corresponds to the \code{y=32} vector on
436 \code{Tn}. The eastern edge of \code{T} shows the reverse case
437 (\code{exch2\_oi(4,1)=-32)}), where \code{x=32} on \code{T} exchanges
438 with \code{x=0} on \code{Tn=2}. \\
439
440 The most interesting case, where \code{exch2\_oi(1,1)=33} and
441 \code{Tn=3}, involves a reversal of indices. As in every case, the
442 offset \code{exch2\_oi} is added to the original $x$ index of \code{T}
443 multiplied by the transformation factor \code{exch2\_pi(t,N,T)}. Here
444 \code{exch2\_pi(1,1,1)=0} since the $x$ axis of \code{T} is orthogonal
445 to the $x$ axis of \code{Tn}. \code{exch2\_pi(2,1,1)=-1} since the
446 $x$ axis of \code{T} corresponds to the $y$ axis of \code{Tn}, but the
447 index is reversed. The result is that the index of the northern edge
448 of \code{T}, which runs \code{(1:32)}, is transformed to
449 \code{(-1:-32)}. \code{exch2\_oi(1,1)} is then added to this range to
450 get back \code{(32:1)} -- the index of the $y$ axis of \code{Tn}
451 relative to \code{T}. This transformation may seem overly convoluted
452 for the six-tile case, but it is necessary to provide a general
453 solution for various topologies. \\
454
455
456
457 Finally, \varlink{exch2\_itlo\_c}{exch2_itlo_c},
458 \varlink{exch2\_ithi\_c}{exch2_ithi_c},
459 \varlink{exch2\_jtlo\_c}{exch2_jtlo_c} and
460 \varlink{exch2\_jthi\_c}{exch2_jthi_c} hold the location and index
461 bounds of the edge segment of the neighbor tile \code{N}'s subdomain
462 that gets exchanged with the local tile \code{T}. To take the example
463 of tile \code{T=2} in the twelve-tile topology
464 (Fig. \ref{fig:12tile}): \\
465
466 \begin{verbatim}
467 exch2_itlo_c(4,2)=17
468 exch2_ithi_c(4,2)=17
469 exch2_jtlo_c(4,2)=0
470 exch2_jthi_c(4,2)=33
471 \end{verbatim}
472
473 Here \code{N=4}, indicating the western neighbor, which is
474 \code{Tn=1}. \code{Tn} resides on the same subdomain as \code{T}, so
475 the tiles have the same orientation and the same $x$ and $y$ axes.
476 The $x$ axis is orthogonal to the western edge and the tile is 16
477 points wide, so \code{exch2\_itlo\_c} and \code{exch2\_ithi\_c}
478 indicate the column beyond \code{Tn}'s eastern edge, in that tile's
479 halo region. Since the border of the tiles extends through the entire
480 height of the subdomain, the $y$ axis bounds \code{exch2\_jtlo\_c} to
481 \code{exch2\_jthi\_c} cover the height of \code{(1:32)}, plus 1 in
482 either direction to cover part of the halo. \\
483
484 For the north edge of the same tile \code{T=2} where \code{N=1} and
485 the neighbor tile is \code{Tn=5}:
486
487 \begin{verbatim}
488 exch2_itlo_c(1,2)=0
489 exch2_ithi_c(1,2)=0
490 exch2_jtlo_c(1,2)=0
491 exch2_jthi_c(1,2)=17
492 \end{verbatim}
493
494 \code{T}'s northern edge is parallel to the $x$ axis, but since
495 \code{Tn}'s $y$ axis corresponds to \code{T}'s $x$ axis, \code{T}'s
496 northern edge exchanges with \code{Tn}'s western edge. The western
497 edge of the tiles corresponds to the lower bound of the $x$ axis, so
498 \code{exch2\_itlo\_c} and \code{exch2\_ithi\_c} are \code{0}, in the
499 western halo region of \code{Tn}. The range of
500 \code{exch2\_jtlo\_c} and \code{exch2\_jthi\_c} correspond to the
501 width of \code{T}'s northern edge, expanded by one into the halo. \\
502
503
504 \subsubsection{Key Routines}
505
506 Most of the subroutines particular to exch2 handle the exchanges
507 themselves and are of the same format as those described in
508 \ref{sect:cube_sphere_communication} \sectiontitle{Cube sphere
509 communication}. Like the original routines, they are written as
510 templates which the local Makefile converts from \code{RX} into
511 \code{RL} and \code{RS} forms. \\
512
513 The interfaces with the core model subroutines are
514 \code{EXCH\_UV\_XY\_RX}, \code{EXCH\_UV\_XYZ\_RX} and
515 \code{EXCH\_XY\_RX}. They override the standard exchange routines
516 when \code{genmake2} is run with \code{exch2} option. They in turn
517 call the local exch2 subroutines \code{EXCH2\_UV\_XY\_RX} and
518 \code{EXCH2\_UV\_XYZ\_RX} for two and three-dimensional vector
519 quantities, and \code{EXCH2\_XY\_RX} and \code{EXCH2\_XYZ\_RX} for two
520 and three-dimensional scalar quantities. These subroutines set the
521 dimensions of the area to be exchanged, call \code{EXCH2\_RX1\_CUBE}
522 for scalars and \code{EXCH2\_RX2\_CUBE} for vectors, and then handle
523 the singularities at the cube corners. \\
524
525 The separate scalar and vector forms of \code{EXCH2\_RX1\_CUBE} and
526 \code{EXCH2\_RX2\_CUBE} reflect that the vector-handling subroutine
527 needs to pass both the $u$ and $v$ components of the physical vectors.
528 This swapping arises from the topological folding discussed above, where the
529 $x$ and $y$ axes get swapped in some cases, and is not an
530 issue with the scalar case. These subroutines call
531 \code{EXCH2\_SEND\_RX1} and \code{EXCH2\_SEND\_RX2}, which do most of
532 the work using the variables discussed above. \\
533

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