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ITHACA-SEM - In real Time Highly Advanced Computational Applications for Spectral Element Methods

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ITHACA-SEM

ITHACA-SEM - In real Time Highly Advanced Computational Applications with Spectral Element Methods - Reduced Order Models for Nektar++

Table of contents

Description

ITHACA-SEM is a C++ implementation of several reduced order modelling techniques. ITHACA-SEM is designed to work with Nektar++ simulations. The current Nektar master branch is periodically merged to this code (last time August 2021). A previous version based on [Nektar++ 4.4.0] is found in the deprecated folder.

Dependencies and installation

Please see the installHowTo.txt in the root directory.

Nektar++ and Eigen is provided within ITHACA-SEM.

Examples

Example session files for Nektar++ are provided in the ITHACA_Test_cases subfolder.

Authors and contributors

ITHACA-SEM is currently developed and mantained at SISSA mathLab by Dr. Martin Hess under the supervision of Prof. Gianluigi Rozza.

Contact us by email for further information or questions about ITHACA-SEM. ITHACA-SEM is at an early development stage, so contributions improving either the code or the documentation are welcome.

How to contribute

We'd love to accept your patches and contributions to this project. There are just a few small guidelines you need to follow.

Submitting a patch

  1. It's generally best to start by opening a new issue describing the bug or feature you're intending to fix. Even if you think it's relatively minor, it's helpful to know what people are working on. Mention in the initial issue that you are planning to work on that bug or feature so that it can be assigned to you.

  2. Follow the normal process of forking the project, and setup a new branch to work in. It's important that each group of changes be done in separate branches in order to ensure that a pull request only includes the commits related to that bug or feature.

  3. Do your best to have well-formed commit messages for each change. This provides consistency throughout the project, and ensures that commit messages are able to be formatted properly by various git tools.

  4. Finally, push the commits to your fork and submit a pull request. Please, remember to rebase properly in order to maintain a clean, linear git history.

License

ITHACA-SEM is freely available under the MIT license.