Skip to content
Snippets Groups Projects
README.md 5.68 KiB
Newer Older
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
# Python module for binary_c
Docstring coverage: 
![docstring coverage](./badges/docstring_coverage.svg)
Test coverage: 
![test coverage](./badges/test_coverage.svg)
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed

Powered by:
![![astropy](http://img.shields.io/badge/powered%20by-AstroPy-orange.svg?style=flat)](http://www.astropy.org/) 

Binary population synthesis code that interfaces with binary_c. Based on a original work by Jeff Andrews. Updated and extended for Python3 by David Hendriks, Robert Izzard.
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
The current release is version [version](VERSION), make sure to use that version number when installing!
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
## Installation
To install binary_c-python we need to make sure we meet the requirements of installation, and 
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
### Python requirements
To run this code you need to at least have installations of:
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed

dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
- Python 3.7 or higher (3.6 is EOL, and we are using 3.9 for development)
- binary_c version 2.2.0 or higher
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
The packages that are required for this code to run are listed in the requirements.txt, which automatically gets read out by setup.py
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
### Environment variables
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
Before compilation you need to have certain environment variables:
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
Required:
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
- `BINARY_C` should point to the root directory of your binary_c installation
- `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` should include $BINARY_C/src and whatever directories are required to run binary_c (e.g. locations of libgsl, libmemoize, librinterpolate, etc.)
- `LIBRARY_PATH` should include whatever directories are required to build binary_c (e.g. locations of libgsl, libmemoize, librinterpolate, etc.)
- `GSL_DIR` should point to the root location where you installed GSL to. This root dir should contain `bin/`, `lib/` etc
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
### Build instructions
First, make sure you have built binary_c (See `$BINARY_C/doc/binary_c2.pdf` section: installation for all the installation instructions for `binary_c`)) and that it functions correctly.
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed

David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
### Installation via PIP:
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
To install this package via pip:

David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
```
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
pip install binarycpython
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
```
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed

This will install the latest stable installation that is available on Pip. The version on the master branch should be the same version as the latest stable version on Pip
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
### Installation from source:
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
We can also install the package from source, which is useful for development versions and when you want to modify the code. It is recommended that you install this into a virtual environment. From within the `commands/` directory, run 
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
./install.sh
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
This will install the package, along with all the dependencies, into the current active (virtual) python environment.
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
If this is not the first time you install the package, but rather rebuild it because you made changes in either binary_c or binarycpython, you can run
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
./install_without_dependencies.sh
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
to reinstall just binarycpython.
#### After installation
After installing the code via source it is useful to run the test suite before doing any programming with it. The test suite is stored in `binarycpython/tests` and running `python main.py` in there will run all the tests. 
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
	
	
## Usage
### Examples
See the examples/ directory for example scripts and notebooks. The documentation contains example pages as well. 
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
### Usage notes
Make sure that with every change/recompilation you make in `binary_c`, you also rebuild this package. Whenever you change the sourcecode of this package, you need to reinstall it into your virtualenvironment as well
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
### Documentation
Look in the docs/ directory. Within the build/html/ there is the html version of the documentation. The 
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
## Development:
If you want to contribute to the code, then it is recommended that you install the packages in `development_requirements.txt`:

```
pip install -r development_requirements.txt
```

dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
Please do not hesitate to contact us to discuss any developments. 

dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
### Building documentation
To build the documentation manually, run
```
./generate_docs.sh
```
from within the `commands/` directory

### Running unit tests
To generate the unit test and docstring coverage report, run
```
./generate_reports.sh
```
from within the `commands/` directory

David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
## FAQ/Issues:
dh00601's avatar
dh00601 committed
Here we provide a non-exhaustive list of some issues we encountered and solutions for these: 

David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
Building issues with binary_c itself: 
- see the documentation of binary_c (in doc/). 
- If you have MESA installed, make sure that the `$MESASDK_ROOT/bin/mesasdk_init.sh` is not sourced. It comes with its own version of some programs, and those can interfere with installing.  

David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
When Pip install fails:
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
- Run the installation with `-v` and/or `--log <logfile>` to get some more info
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
- If gcc throws errors like `gcc: error: unrecognized command line option ‘-ftz’; did you mean ‘-flto’?`, this might be due to that the python on that system was built with a different compiler. It then passes the python3.6-config --cflags to the binarycpython installation, which, if done with gcc, will not work. Try a different python3.6. I suggest using `pyenv` to manage python versions. If installing a version of python with pyenv is not possible, then try to use a python version that is avaible to the machine that is built with the same compiler as binary_c was built with. 
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
- if pip installation results in `No files/directories in /tmp/pip-1ckzg0p9-build/pip-egg-info (from PKG-INFO)`, try running it verbose (`-v`) to see what is actually going wrong. 
- If pip terminates with the error FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '<...>/binary_c-config' Then make sure that the path to your main $BINARY_C directory is set correctly.
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
Other:
- When running jupyter notebooks, make sure you are running the jupyter installation from the same virtual environment. 
David Hendriks's avatar
David Hendriks committed
- When the output of binary_c seems to be different than expected, you might need to rebuild this python package. Everytime binary_c is compiled, this package needs to be rebuilt too.