lanl/Draco

Name: Draco

Owner: Los Alamos National Laboratory

Description: An object-oriented component library supporting radiation transport applications.

Created: 2016-03-02 17:00:24.0

Updated: 2018-05-20 17:09:23.0

Pushed: 2018-05-20 17:09:21.0

Homepage: null

Size: 18399

Language: C++

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README

Draco

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Draco is an object-oriented component library geared towards numerically intensive, radiation (particle) transport applications built for parallel computing hardware. It consists of semi-independent packages and a robust build system. The packages in draco provide a set of components that can be used by multiple clients to build transport codes. The build system can also be extracted for use in clients.

To clone draco:

$ git clone https://github.com/lanl/Draco.git

To get started, please see Development - Quick Start Guide in the wiki. Pull requestes must satisfy the requirements listed in the Style Guide.

Authors

Many thanks go to Draco's contributors.

Draco was originally written by staff from Los Alamos's CCS-2 Computational Physics and Methods Group:

CCS-2 Draco Team: Kelly G. Thompson, Kent G. Budge, James S. Warsa, Alex R. Long, Kendra P. Keady, Jae H. Chang, Matt A. Cleveland, Ryan T. Wollaeger, Andrew T. Till, Daniel Holladay, Massimiliano Rosa, and Kris C. Garrett.

Prior Contributers: Jeff D. Densmore, Gabriel M. Rockefeller, Allan B. Wollaber, Rob B. Lowrie, Lori A. Pritchett-Sheats, Paul W. Talbot, and Katherine J. Wang.

Release

Draco is released under the BSD 3-Clause License. For more details see the LICENSE file.

LANL code designation: LA-CC-16-016


This work is supported by the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Grant Number U24TR002306. This work is solely the responsibility of the creators and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.