DOKK / manpages / debian 11 / librheolef-dev / solver.4rheolef.en
solver(4rheolef) rheolef solver(4rheolef)

solver - direct and iterative solver (rheolef-7.1)

The class implements the numerical resolution of a linear system. Let a be a square and invertible matrix in the csr(4) sparse format. The construction of a solver writes:


solver sa (a);


and the resolution of a*x = b expresses simply:


vec<Float> x = sa.solve(b);


When the matrix is modified in a computation loop, the solver could be re-initialized by:


sa.update_values (new_a);
vec<Float> x = sa.solve(b);

The choice between a direct or an iterative method for solving the linear system is by default performed automatically: it depends upon the sparsity pattern of the matrix, in order to achieve the best performances. The solver_option(4) class allows one to change this default behavior.


solver_option sopt;
sopt.iterative = true;
solver sa (a, sopt);
vec<Float> x = sa.solve(b);


The direct approach bases on the Choleski factorization for a symmetric definite positive matrix, and on the LU one otherwise. Conversely, the iterative approach bases on the cg(5) conjugate gradient algorithm for a symmetric definite positive matrix, and on the gmres(5) algorithm otherwise.

This feature is useful e.g. when tracking a change of sign in the determinant of a matrix, e.g. during the continuation(3) algorithm. When using a direct method, the determinant of the matrix can be computed as:


solver_option sopt;
sopt.iterative = false;
solver sa (a, sopt);
cout << sa.det().mantissa << "*"
<< sa.det().base << "^"
<< sa.det().exponant << endl;


The sa.det() method returns an object of type solver::determinant_type that contains a mantissa and an exponent in a given base (generally 2 or 10). For some rare direct solvers, the computation of the determinant is not yet fully supported: it is the case for the Cholesky factorization from the eigen library. In you find such a problem, please switch to another solver library, see the solver_option(4) class.

When the matrix is obtained from the finite element discretization of 3D partial differential problems, the iterative solver is the default choice. Otherwise, the direct solver is selected.

More precisely, the choice between direct or iterative solver depends upon the a.pattern_dimension() property of the csr(4) sparse matrix. When this pattern dimension is 3, an iterative method is faster and less memory consuming than a direct one. See usersguide for a discussion on this subject.

The symmetry-positive-definiteness of the matrix is tested via the a.is_symmetric() and a.is_definite_positive() properties of the csr(4) sparse matrix. These properties determine the choices between Cholesky/LU methods for the direct case, and between cg/gmres algorithms for the iterative one. Most of the time, these properties are automatically well initialized by the finite element assembly procedure, via the integrate(3) function.

Nevertheless, in some special cases, e.g. a linear combination of matrix, or when the matrix has been read from a file, it could be necessary to force either the symmetry or the positive-definiteness property by the appropriate csr(4) member function before to send the matrix to the solver.

When using an iterative method, the default is to perform no preconditionning. Several preconditionners are available: the mic(5) modified incomplete Cholesky for symmetric matrix and the ilut(5) incomplete LU one for unsymmetric matrix and the do-nothing eye(5) identity preconditionner. A preconditionner can be supplied via:


solver_option sopt;
sopt.iterative = true;
solver sa (a, sopt);
sa.set_preconditionner (ilut(a));
vec<Float> x = sa.solve(b);


Note also the eye(5) that returns the solver for the identity matrix: it could be be used for specifying that we do not use a preconditionner. This is the default behavior. The set_preconditionner member function should be called before the first call to the solve method: if no preconditioner has been defined at the first call to solve, the default eye(5) preconditionner is selected.

This documentation has been generated from file linalg/lib/solver.h

The solver class is simply an alias to the solver_basic class

typedef solver_basic<Float> solver;

The solver_basic class provides an interface to a data container:

template <class T, class M = rheo_default_memory_model>
class solver_basic: public smart_pointer_clone<solver_abstract_rep<T,M> > {
public:
// typedefs:

typedef solver_abstract_rep<T,M> rep;
typedef smart_pointer_clone<rep> base;
typedef typename rep::size_type size_type;
typedef typename rep::determinant_type determinant_type; // allocators:
solver_basic ();
explicit solver_basic (const csr<T,M>& a, const solver_option& opt = solver_option());
void update_values (const csr<T,M>& a); // accessors:
vec<T,M> trans_solve (const vec<T,M>& b) const;
vec<T,M> solve (const vec<T,M>& b) const;
determinant_type det() const;
const solver_option& option() const;
void set_preconditioner (const solver_basic<T,M>&);
bool initialized() const;
std::string name() const; };

Pierre Saramito <Pierre.Saramito@imag.fr>

Copyright (C) 2000-2018 Pierre Saramito <Pierre.Saramito@imag.fr> GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>. This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

Sat Mar 13 2021 Version 7.1