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January 24, 2012, 23:24 |
Parallel Processing
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#1 |
New Member
Pouria
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: U.S
Posts: 9
Rep Power: 14 |
Hi,
I use ICEM on a Linux cluster for creating and meshing a complicated geometry. Since the geometry is huge and composed of different parts, it probably contains more than 15 million mesh elements. Is there any way that I can run ICEM in parallel (such that we run Fluent in parallel on different nodes of the cluster)? I would appreciate your help. |
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January 26, 2012, 11:23 |
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#3 |
New Member
Pouria
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: U.S
Posts: 9
Rep Power: 14 |
Thank you for your response.
Could you please explain how can I do this in windows? |
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February 15, 2012, 13:18 |
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#5 |
New Member
Dustin
Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 18
Rep Power: 14 |
I'm attempting to do the same thing with a CFX mesh in Workbench.
My machine meshes in a reasonable amount of time if nodes are under 1M, but any more than that and I'm wasting my day sitting around waiting for the thing to mesh. The frustrating part is that once I get the setup file (.def), I can submit it to the Linux server and run on 24 cores, or more, giving me the solution in a matter of minutes. Why isn't there a way to do this with the mesh? Is the problem that a patch-conforming tetra mesh algorithm cannot be partitioned? Thanks, -Trues |
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