This merge request is Phase 1 of several to implement the distributed parallel
contour tree in VTKm. This merge requests adds the base outline for the
algorithm. The implementation of the details of the algorithm in the
BoundaryRestrictedAugmentedContourTree.h is currently still missing.
However, these will require a substantial (~3000) lines of additional code.
The goal is to stage the integration process across merge requests to make
the review process simpler.
934f085e0 Build diy as a library
f0a37ac6a Merge branch 'upstream-diy' into diy-mpi-nompi
7687aabf8 diy 2020-06-05 (b62915aa)
6ca2b9f87 Point to new version of Diy
Acked-by: Kitware Robot <kwrobot@kitware.com>
Acked-by: Robert Maynard <robert.maynard@kitware.com>
Merge-request: !2123
544a078cd Remove use of deprecated policies in examples
06f5119c2 Fix deprecation warning
f29a4712b Correct field types for ComputeMoments filter
a20ec03d0 Disable proxies in filter benchmark
72cd0107e Deprecate Execute with policy
Acked-by: Kitware Robot <kwrobot@kitware.com>
Acked-by: Robert Maynard <robert.maynard@kitware.com>
Merge-request: !2093
This means that the filters in the examples will no longer properly
support the policies handed to them, but that is the direction we are
headed as the policies are now deprecated.
Most of this code is not templated methods. Rather, it implements over
several types to call templated functions, which creates quite a bit of
code. Rather than have all code using a reader recompile the code, just
compile it once and put it in a library.
The version of `Filter::Execute` that takes a policy as an argument is now
deprecated. Filters are now able to specify their own fields and types,
which is often why you want to customize the policy for an execution. The
other reason is that you are compiling VTK-m into some other source that
uses a particular types of storage. However, there is now a mechanism in
the CMake configuration to allow you to provide a header that customizes
the "default" types used in filters. This is a much more convenient way to
compile filters for specific types.
One thing that filters were not able to do was to customize what cell sets
they allowed using. This allows filters to self-select what types of cell
sets they support (beyond simply just structured or unstructured). To
support this, the lists `SupportedCellSets`, `SupportedStructuredCellSets`,
and `SupportedUnstructuredCellSets` have been added to `Filter`. When you
apply a policy to a cell set, you now have to also provide the filter.
These are caused when using 32-bit Id's. Although there are some
benchmarks that test for this, some code in benchmarking and examples is
not covered by them.