smesh/doc/gui/input/parallel_compute.rst

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.. _parallel_compute_page:
******************
Parallel Computing
******************
.. warning::
This functionality is a work in progress.
It is only available for NETGEN.
It is only available in TUI.
The goal here is to speed up computation by running sub-meshes in parallel
(multi-threading).
*******
Concept
*******
.. image:: ../images/diagram_parallel_mesh.png
In order to parallelise the computation of the mesh we split the geometry into:
* A 1D+2D compound
* A list of 3D solids
Then create a sub-mesh for each of those geometry.
And associate Hypothesis to the mesh using a hypothesis on the whole geometry
We will first compute sequentially the 1D+2D compound with NETGEN_1D2D.
Then we will compute all the solids in parallel. Having done the 1D+2D first
ensure that all the solids can be computed without any concurrency.
******
How to
******
You follow the same principle as the creation of a sequential Mesh.
#. First you create the mesh:
.. code-block:: python
par_mesh = smesh.ParallelMesh(geom, name="par_mesh")
#. Define the Global Hypothesis that will be split into an hypothesis for the
1D+2D compound and one for each of the 3D solids:
.. code-block:: python
NETGEN_3D_Parameters_1 = smesh.CreateHypothesisByAverageLength( 'NETGEN_Parameters',
'NETGENEngine', 34.641, 0 )
par_mesh.AddGlobalHypothesis(netgen_parameters)
#. Set the parameters for the parallelisation:
.. code-block:: python
param = par_mesh.GetParallelismSettings()
param.SetNbThreads(6)
#. Compute the mesh:
.. code-block:: python
mesh.Compute()
**See Also** a sample script of :ref:`tui_create_parallel_mesh`.