Tutorial Aggiungere equazioni FEM

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Tutorial
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Aggiungere equazioni FEM
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M42kus
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In questo tutorial aggiungeremo a FreeCAD l'equazione di flusso e implementeremo il supporto per il risolutore elmer. Prima di leggere questo tutorial è necessario aver letto e compreso il tutorial Estendere il modulo FEM.

The task can be split into four parts. The first step is to make the FEM workbench aware of a new type of equation. This step must only be done if the equation doesn't exist in FreeCAD jet (as opposed to a equation that is already in FreeCAD but not supported by the target solver). The secound step is to add a concrete document object representing the elmer specific equation. The third step is to add support for the new equation to the solver object of elmer. After that the analysis export of elmer must be extended to support the new equation type.

New Equation Type

In this step we are going to modify the following files:

  • src/Mod/Fem/femsolver/equationbase.py
  • src/Mod/Fem/femcommands/commands.py
  • src/Mod/Fem/Gui/Workbench.cpp
  • src/Mod/Fem/Gui/Resources/Fem.qrc

The equation type is shared among all equation objects of the different solver. Each type has a string specifier (e.g. "Heat") and a dedicated command that adds the equation to the selected solver. This allows for a simpler GUI where we have only one button for the heat equation which is used for all supported solver.

First add the new equation to the equationbase.py module. Each equation requires two classes. A document proxy and a view proxy. Just copy-paste them from an existing equation type and adjust the icon path inside getIcon(self) of the view proxy.

class FlowProxy(BaseProxy):
    pass

class FlowViewProxy(BaseViewProxy):
    def getIcon(self):
        return ":/icons/FEM_EquationFlow.svg"

Those two classes will later be used as base classes for the Elmer specific equation classes. In addition to those base classes we have to create a new command class that adds a flow equation to the selected solver object. Additionally, the new .svg image has to be registered for the GUI-button with <file>icons/FEM_EquationFlow.svg</file> in Fem.qrc (in /Gui/Resources/). The related .svg has to be put into /Gui/Resources/icons/.

Next, the command/equation has to be added to the femcommands/commands.py module. Just copy an existing command and adjust the icon, menu text and tool-tip in __init__(self). Don't forget to register the command at the bottom of the module file by using the addCommand(...) method. Please see the discussion in the forum at https://forum.freecadweb.org/viewtopic.php?f=18&t=46693&start=10#p402004 if icons are involed.

class _EquationFlow(CommandManager):
    "The FEM_EquationFlow command definition"

    def __init__(self):
        super(_EquationFlow, self).__init__()
        self.menuetext = "Flow equation"
        self.tooltip = "Creates a FEM equation for flow"
        self.is_active = "with_solver_elmer"
        self.do_activated = "add_obj_on_gui_selobj_noset_edit"
...
FreeCADGui.addCommand(
    "FEM_EquationFlow",
    _EquationFlow()
)


Our newly created command still needs to be made accessible via the GUI of the FEM workbench. To add it to the toolbar search for the following code snippet in /Gui/Workbench.cpp and add the new command to the rest of the equation commands.

 
     Gui::ToolBarItem* solve = new Gui::ToolBarItem(root);
     solve->setCommand("Solve");
     *solve << "FEM_SolverCalculixCxxtools"
           << "FEM_SolverCalculiX"
           << "FEM_SolverElmer"
           << "Separator"
           << "FEM_EquationElasticity"
           << "FEM_EquationElectrostatic"
+          << "FEM_EquationFlow"
           << "FEM_EquationFluxsolver"
           << "FEM_EquationElectricforce"
           << "FEM_EquationHeat"
           << "Separator"
           << "FEM_SolverControl"
           << "FEM_SolverRun";

We are also going to add the flow equation command to the solve menu of the FEM workbench. To do this insert our equation into the following code snippet in Workbench.cpp.

 
    Gui::MenuItem* solve = new Gui::MenuItem;
    root->insertItem(item, solve);
    solve->setCommand("&Solve");
    *solve << "FEM_SolverCalculixCxxtools"
           << "FEM_SolverCalculiX"
           << "FEM_SolverElmer"
           << "FEM_SolverZ88"
           << "Separator"
           << "FEM_EquationElasticity"
           << "FEM_EquationElectrostatic"
+          << "FEM_EquationFlow"
           << "FEM_EquationFluxsolver"
           << "FEM_EquationElectricforce"
           << "FEM_EquationHeat"
           << "Separator"
           << "FEM_SolverControl"
           << "FEM_SolverRun";


Elmer's Equation Object

In this step we are going to modify the following file:

  • src/Mod/Fem/CMakeLists.txt

and add the following new file:

  • src/Mod/Fem/femsolver/elmer/equations/flow.py

Lets start with the module that implements the document object. In can be copied from an existing equation. If the new equation only supports keywords for linear systems copy the femsolver/elmer/equations/elasticity.py module. If it supports non-linear keywords too copy femsolver/elmer/equations/heat.py. The flow equation in Elmer is a potentially non-linear equation. This means that we are going to base our work on heat.py.

After copying heat.py to flow.py adjust - the name argument of the create module function, - the Type attribute of the Proxy class, - the base classes of the Proxy and the ViewProxy classes, - and the properties added via the obj.addProperty(..) function to those needed by the equation.

def create(doc, name="Flow"):
    return femutils.createObject(
        doc, name, Proxy, ViewProxy)


class Proxy(nonlinear.Proxy, equationbase.FlowProxy):

    Type = "Fem::EquationElmerFlow"

    def __init__(self, obj):
        super(Proxy, self).__init__(obj)
        obj.Priority = 10


class ViewProxy(nonlinear.ViewProxy, equationbase.FlowViewProxy):
    pass

At the moment of writing this tutorial Elmer flow equation doesn't have any special properties. See Elmer elasticity equation for an example with properties.

Last but not least register the new module file (flow.py) in src/Mod/Fem/CMakeLists.txt the way described in Extend FEM Module. The suitable lists can be easily found by searching for existing equation modules files of Elmer.

Finally one hast to register a makeEquationStatcurrent definition in ObjectsFem.py by duplicating an available entry.


Extend Solver Object

In this step we are going to modify the following file:

  • src/Mod/Fem/femsolver/elmer/solver.py

Right now we made FreeCAD aware that there is a new type of equation and even added a command that adds this equation to the selected solver object. We also implemented a concrete equation object for Elmer. Whats left to do now it to make the connection between Elmer and the flow equation. This must be done directly in Elmer solver object.

Register the module in which we just implemented our new equation object (flow.py) with the equation specifier from step 1 ("Flow") in the _EQUATIONS list in elmer/solver.py.

from .equations import electrostatic
+from .equations import flow

...

_EQUATIONS = {
    "Heat": heat,
    "Elasticity": elasticity,
+    "Flow": flow,
}

Extend Analysis Export

In this step we are going to modify the following file:

  • src/Mod/Fem/femsolver/elmer/writer.py

This is the most demanding part of implementing a new equation. This file contains the Writer class which exports the analysis into Elmer sif format.

For every supported equation there are a series of methods handling the export of the respective equation. Just copy all of them from an existing equation and adjust them to your needs. Our flow equation uses the following methods:

  • _handleFlow
  • _getFlowSolver
  • _handleFlowConstants
  • _handleFlowMaterial
  • _handleFlowInitialVelocity
  • _handleFlowBndConditions
  • _handleFlowEquation