Install and Run¶
Prerequisites¶
In this guide, it is assumed that readers have a basic knowledge of Unix and its command line operations. For the installation of SALMON, following packages are required.
- Fortran90/C compiler. SALMON assumes users have one of the following compilers:
- GCC (Gnu Compiler Collection)
- Intel Fortran/C Compiler
- Fujitsu Compiler (at FX100 / K-Computer)
- One of the following library packages for linear algebra:
- BLAS/LAPACK
- Intel Math Kernel Library (MKL)
- Fujitsu Scientific Subroutine Library 2 (SSL-II)
- Build tools:
- CMake
If you use other compilers, you may need to change build scripts (CMake). See Additional options in configure.py script. If no numerical library is installed on your computer system, you may need to install BLAS/LAPACK by yourself. See Troubleshooting of the Installation Process.
For the installation of SALMON, we adopt the CMake tools as the first option. If there were any problems to use CMake tools in your environment, you may use the GNU make tools. See Troubleshooting of the Installation Process.
Download¶
The newest version of SALMON can be downloaded from download page.
To extract files from the downloaded file salmon-<VERSION>.tar.gz
, type the following command in the command-line:
$ tar -zxvf ./salmon-<VERSION>.tar.gz
After the extraction, the following directories will be created:
SALMON
|- src Source codes
|- example Samples
|- cmakefiles CMake related files
|- gnumakefiles GNU Makefiles for building
Build and Install¶
To compile SALMON to create executable the binary files, we adopt to use CMake tools as the first option. In case you fail to build SALMON using CMake in your environment, we may use Gnu Make. See Build using GNU Makefile.
Checking CMake availability¶
First, examine whether CMake is usable in your environment or not. Type the following in Unix command-line:
$ cmake --version
If CMake is not installed in your system, an error message such as cmake: command not found
will appear.
If CMake is installed on your system, the version number will be shown.
To build SALMON, CMake of version 3.0.2 or later is required.
If you confirm that CMake of version 3.0.2 or later is installed in your system, proceed to Build using CMake.
However, we realize that old versions of CMake are installed in many systems.
If CMake is not installed or CMake of older versions is installed in your system, you need to install the new version by yourself.
It is a simple procedure and explained below.
Installation of CMake¶
CMake is a cross-platform build tool.
The simplest way to make CMake usable in your environment is to get the binary distribution of CMake from the download page. (The file name of the binary distribution will be cmake-<VERSION>-<PLATFORM>.tar.gz
). In standard Unix environment, a file for the platform of Linux x86_64 will be appropriate.
To download the file, proceed as follows: We assume that you are in the directory that you extracted files from the downloaded file of SALMON,
and that you will use the version 3.8.2. First get the URL of the download link from your browser, and use wget
command in your Unix command-line:
$ wget https://cmake.org/files/v3.8/cmake-3.8.2-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz
Next, unpack the archive by:
$ tar -zxvf cmake-3.8.2-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz
and you will have the binary make-3.8.2-Linux-x86_64/bin/cmake
in your directory.
To make the cmake
command usable in your command-line, you need to modify the environment variable $PATH
so that the executable of CMake are settled inside the directory specified in your $PATH
.
If you use the bash shell, you need to modify the file ~/.bashrc
that specifies the $PATH
variable. It can be done by typing the following command in your login directory:
$ export PATH=<SALMON_INSTALLATION_DIRECTORY>/cmake-3.8.2-Linux-x86_64/bin:$PATH
and then reload the configuration by typing:
$ source ~/.bashrc
Build using CMake¶
Confirming that CMake of version 3.0.2 or later can be usable in your environment, proceed the following steps. We assume that you are in the directory SALMON.
Create a new temporary directory
build
and move to the directory:$ mkdir build $ cd build
Execute the python script ''configure.py'' and then make:
$ python ../configure.py --arch=ARCHITECTURE --prefix=../ $ make $ make install
In executing the python script, you need to specify ARCHITECTURE
that indicates the architecture of the CPU in your computer system such as intel-avx
. The options of the ARCHITECUTRE
are as follows:
arch | Detail | Compiler | Numerical Library |
---|---|---|---|
intel-knl | Intel Knights Landing | Intel Compiler | Intel MKL |
intel-knc | Intel Knights Corner | Intel Compiler | Intel MKL |
intel-avx | Intel Processer (Ivy-, Sandy-Bridge) | Intel Compiler | Intel MKL |
intel-avx2 | Intel Processer (Haswell, Broadwell ..) | Intel Compiler | Intel MKL |
intel-avx512 | Intel Processer (Skylake-SP) | Intel Compiler | Intel MKL |
fujitsu-fx100 | FX100 Supercomputer | Fujitsu Compiler | SSL-II |
fujitsu-k | Fujitsu FX100 / K-computer | Fujitsu Compiler | SSL-II |
If the build is successful, you will get a file salmon.cpu
at the directory salmon/bin
.
If you specify many-core architechtures, intel-knl
or intel-knc
, you find a file salmon.mic
or both files salmon.cpu
and salmon.mic
.
Files necessary to run SALMON¶
To run SALMON, at least two kinds of files are required for any calculations.
One is an input file with the filename extension *.inp
that should be read from the standard input stdin
.
This file should be prepared in the Fortran90 namelist format.
Pseudopotential files of relevant elements are also required.
Depending on your purpose, some other files may also be necessary.
For example, coordinates of atomic positions of the target material may be either written in the input file or prepared as a separate file.
Pseudopotentials¶
SALMON utilizes norm-conserving pseudpotentials.
You may find pseudopotentials of some elements in the samples prepared in Exercises.
In SALMON, several formats of pseudopotentials may be usable.
Pseudopotentials with an extension .fhi
can be obtained from the website listed below.
(This is a part of previous atomic data files for the ABINIT code.)
Pseudopotential | Website |
---|---|
Pseudopotentials for the ABINIT code | https://www.abinit.org/sites/default/files/PrevAtomicData/psp-links/psp-links/lda_fhi |
Filenames of the pseudopotentials should be written in the input file.
input file¶
Input files are composed of several blocks of namelists:
&namelist1
variable1 = int_value
variable2 = 'char_value'
/
&namelist2
variable1 = real8_value
variable2 = int_value1, int_value2, int_value3
/
A block of namelists starts with &namelist
line and ends with /
line.
The blocks may appear in any order.
Between two lines of &namelist
and /
, descriptions of variables and their values appear.
Note that many variables have their default values so that it is not necessary to give values for all variables.
Descriptions of the variables may appear at any position if they are between &namelist
and /
.
SALMON describes electron dynamics in systems with both isolated and periodic boundary conditions.
The boundary condition is specified by the variable iperiodic
in the namelist &system
.
Calculations are usually achieved in two steps; first, the ground state calculation is carried out and then electron dynamics calculations in real time is carried out. A choice of the calculation mode is specified by the variable calc_mode
in the namelist &calculation
.
For isolated systems, the ground state and the electron dynamics calculations should be carried out as two separate executions.
First the ground state calculation is carried out specifying calc_mode = 'GS'
.
Then the real-time electron dynamics calculation is carried out specifying calc_mode = 'RT'
.
For periodic systems, two calculations should be carried out as a single execution specifying calc_mode = 'GS_RT'
.
In Exercises, we prepare six exercises that cover typical calculations feasible by SALMON. We prepare explanations of the input files of the exercises that will help to prepare input files of your own interests.
There are more than 20 groups of namelists. A complete list of namelist variables is given in the file SALMON/manual/input_variables.md
.
Namelist variables that are used in our exercises are explained at Inputs.
Run SALMON¶
Before running SALMON, the following preparations are required as described above: The executable file of salmon.cpu
and salmon.mic
(if your system is the many-core machine) should be built from the source file of SALMON. An input file inputfile.inp
and pseudopotential files should also be prepared.
The execution of the calculation can be done as follows: In single process environment, type the following command:
$ salmon.cpu < inputfile.inp > fileout.out
In multiprocess environment in which the command to execute parallel calculations using MPI is mpiexec
, type the following command:
$ mpiexec -n NPROC salmon.cpu < inputfile.inp > fileout.out
where NPROC is the number of MPI processes that you will use. In many-core processor (e.g. intel-knl) environment, the execution command is:
$ mpiexec.hydra -n NPROC salmon.mic < inputfile.inp > fileout.out
The execution command and the job submission procedure depends much on local environment. We summarize general conditions to execute SALMON:
- SALMON runs in both single-process and multi-process environments using MPI.
- executable files are prepared as
/salmon/bin/salmon.cpu
and/or/salmon/bin/salmon.mic
in the standard build procedure. - to start calculations,
inputfile.inp
should be read throughstdin
.
Appendix¶
Additional options in configure.py script¶
Manual specifications of compiler and environment variables¶
In executing configure.py
, you may manually specify compiler and environment variables instead of specifying the architecture, for example:
$ python ../configure.py FC=mpiifort CC=mpiicc FFLAGS="-xAVX" CFLAGS="-restrict -xAVX"
The major options of configure.py
are as follows:
Commandline switch | Detail |
---|---|
-a ARCH, --arch=ARCH | Target architecture |
--enable-mpi, --disable-mpi | enable/disable MPI parallelization |
--enable-scalapack, --disable-scalapack | enable/disable computations with ScaLAPACK library |
--enable-libxc, --with-libxc | see To use Libxc |
FC, FFLAGS | User-defined Fortran Compiler, and the compiler options |
To use Libxc¶
In SALMON, you may use Libxc functional library. To use the Libxc library, some adittional procedures are necessary. First you need to download the source files in your system as follows:
$ wget http://www.tddft.org/programs/octopus/down.php?file=libxc/4.2.1/libxc-4.2.1.tar.gz
$ tar -zxvf libxc-4.2.1.tar.gz
Then, enter the libxc source directory and make the library as follows:
$ ./configure --prefix=INSTALL/PATH/OF/LIBXC
$ make && make install
Finally, enter the SALMON directory and execute configure.py
script specifying the Libxc directory:
$ configure.py --arch=ARCHITECTURE --prefix=PREFIX --with-libxc=INSTALL/PATH/OF/LIBXC
$ make && make install
Build for single process calculations¶
If you use a single processor machine, specify --disable-mpi
in executing the python script:
$ python ../configure.py --arch=<ARCHITECTURE> --disable-mpi
Build in GCC/GFortran environemnt¶
If you use GCC/GFortran compiler, specify the following flags in executing the python script:
$ python ../configure.py FC=gfortran CC=gcc FFLAG=-O3 CFLAG=-O3
Build using GNU Makefile¶
If CMake build fails in your environment, we recommend you to try to use Gnu Make for the build process.
First, enter the directory makefiles
:
$ cd SALMON/makefiles
In the directory, Makefile
files are prepared for several architectures:
- fujitsu
- gnu
- gnu-without-mpi
- intel
- intel-avx
- intel-avx2
- intel-knc
- intel-knl
- intel-without-mpi
Makefile
files with *-without-mpi
indicate that they are for single processor environment.
Choose Makefile
appropriate for your environment, and execute the make command:
$ make -f Makefile.PLATFORM
If the make proceeds successful, a binary file is created in the directory SALMON/bin/
.
Troubleshooting of the Installation Process¶
Installation of CMake¶
The CMake is a cross-platform build tool. In order to build the SALMON from the source code, the CMake of version 3.0.2 or later is required. You may install it following one of the three instructions below.
Installation of pre-compiled binary¶
You can get the binary distribution from the download page. First, move to the directory that you installed SALMON,
cd <SALMON_INSTALLATION_DIRECTORY>
and download the binary distribution (cmake-<VERSION>-<PLATFORM>.tar.gz
) appropriate for your platform. You
can do it by copy the URL of download link from the browser, and use
wget
command:
wget https://cmake.org/files/v3.8/cmake-3.8.2-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz
In this document, we will use version 3.8.2 as an example. You can unpack the downloaded archive
tar -zxvf cmake-3.8.2-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz
and you will have the binary make-3.8.2-Linux-x86_64/bin/cmake
.
Next, to utilize the cmake
command, it is required that the
executable are settled inside the directory specified in your $PATH
.
If you use the bash shell, edit ~/.bashrc
and append the line:
export PATH=<SALMON_INSTALLATION_DIRECTORY>/cmake-3.8.2-Linux-x86_64/bin:$PATH
and reload the configuration:
source ~/.bashrc
Installation by package manager¶
If your system has a built-in package manager, you may conveniently install the CMake tools as below:
Debian/Ubuntu Linux
sudo apt-get install cmake
Fedora Linux/CentOS
sudo yum install cmake
openSUSE Linux
sudo zypper install cmake
Installation from source code¶
You can get the source code distribution from the download page. In
this time, we will use the cmake version 3.8.2 as an example. Download
the archive by wget
comamnd and unpack it as below:
wget https://cmake.org/files/v3.8/cmake-3.8.2.tar.gz
tar -zxvf cmake-3.8.2.tar.gz
And, move to the unpacked directory and build.
cd cmake-3.8.2
./configure --prefix=INSTALLATION_DIRECTORY
make
make install
(replace INSTALLATION_DIRECTORY
to your installation directory.)
Next, to utilize the cmake
command, it is required that the
executable are settled inside the directory specified in your $PATH
.
If you use the bash shell, edit ~/.bashrc
and append the line:
export PATH=INSTALLATION_DIRECTORY/bin:$PATH
and reload the configuration:
source ~/.bashrc