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Tag: engineering applications
-
EuroBSDCon 2008 - Pedro Giffuni -
Working with Engineering Applications in FreeBSD
Source: EuroBSDCon
Added: 22 October 2008
Tags: eurobsdcon, eurobsdcon2008, freebsd, engineering applications, pedro giffuni
MP3
(1 byte, 51 minutes), OGG
(1 byte, 51 minutes), PDF
(1 byte, n pages)
In recent years, traditional branches of engineering like Civil, Chemical, Mechanical,
Electrical and Industrial Engineering are requiring extensive computing facilities for
their needs. Several well known labs (Sandia, Lawrence Livermore) rely on huge clusters
to do all types of complex analysis that were unthinkable a couple of decades ago. While
the free BSD variants share the environment with traditional UNIX systems, frequently
used for such computations, it was not common to find adequate free software packages to
carry complex calculations. Eventually commercial versions of important math related
packages started to appear for the Linux platform. Even when the big packages were
distant, the BSDs learned and adapted in resourceful ways: Matlab and Mathematica,
running under Linux emulation, demanded functionality from the BSDs and NetBSD
implemented a signal trampoline to be able to run AutoCAD with IRIX binary compatibility.
A notable project that was always available under a free license was Berkeley's Spice
circuit analysis program, however it was an exception rather than the rule. Even when the
scientific community pressed for a while to get other important tools like NASA's FEA
package Nastran under a free license, the objective of being able to access and enhance
open scientific tools was elusive. About a decade ago the situation started to improve:
FreeBSD's ports system started growing exponentially, first with a high content in the
math category, afterwards with a CAD section and after sustained growth in those
categories a science section was created. This growth was mostly pushed by Universities
and their research projects and in general are not well known with respect to the
commercial counterparts. I started porting math/engineering code for FreeBSD around 1996.
Back then it was absolutely unthinkable for a Mechanical Engineer to depend only on
FreeBSD for it's daily work. The situation nowadays is different: there are some very
high quality engineering analysis packages like EDF's Code Aster, with more than 12 years
of professional development, that just can't be ignored. A Finite Element package, like
Code Aster, can easily cost 5000 US$, is priced according to the maximum problem size it
can solve, can require yearly licenses, and is rarely available with source code. In
NASTRAN's case the source code is only available for US citizens under a yearly fee. Free
software does have serious limitations though; just like in office applications there are
proprietary CAD formats or sometimes the package simply doesn't have the required
functionality. Having the sources, of course, always has the advantage of being able to
implement (or pay for) some specific functionality you might need. Many commercial
packages have been recently ported to Linux, but even when they gain some of the
advantages of an open environment they still have yet another limitation: they have been
very slow to make use of the multicored features of the new processors in the market, a
huge limitation now that the speed war between processors has been limited by the
overheating problem. The objective of the talk is to give an overview of several CAD/CAE
packages that have been made available recently as part of FreeBSD's ports system and the
decisions that were made to port them. BRLCAD and Varkon are two CAD utilities that made
a transition from closed source to an open environment and in the process in the process
of getting ported to BSD have gained greater portability and general "bug" fixes critical
for their consolidation as usable and maintainable projects. There are also some tricks
that have not been well documented: it is possible to enable threads and some extra
optimizations on some packages, and it is also possible to replace the standard BLAS
library with the faster GOTO BLAS without rebuilding the package. It is also possible to
build the packages optimized for a clustered environment, but perhaps what is most
interesting of all is how all the packages interrelate with each other and can turn
FreeBSD into a complete enginering environment. No OS distribution so far is offering all
the engineering specific utilities offered through FreeBSD's ports system: from design to
visualization, passing through analysis FreeBSD is becoming an option that can't be
ignored, and best of all, it is an effort that will benefit not only FreeBSD but the
wider audience.
Pedro F. Giffuni M. Sc. Industrial Engineering - University of Pittsburgh Mechanical
Engineer - Universidad Nacional de Colombia I was born in Bogota, Colombia but I am an
Italian citizen. My experience with computers started when I was about 12 years old With
the TRS-80 Color Computer first using Basic and the OS-9. I studied electronics for 3
years but became tired of worrying about "whatever happened to electrons in there" and
moved to Mechanical Engineering. For a while I rested from the computer world until the
Internet came stepping along. I started using FreeBSD around 1995 and soon fell in love
with the idea of being able to install a complete version of UNIX from the net with just
one floppy. After submitting a the 999th port to the FreeBSD project Walnut Creek was
kind enough to give me a subscription for several years to FreeBSD's CD-ROM. Since then
I've been on and off porting software packages or fixing the bugs I have caused while
porting them. Of course there has always been great respect for the other BSDs and their
wonderful license and while I've given up on the idea of one day seeing a "UnifiedBSD" I
am glad to see different approaches sharing ideas in a healthful environment.
Keywords: BSD, engineering, CAE, CAD, math, mechanical, FreeBSD ports