/[MITgcm]/MITgcm_contrib/darwinview/src/darwinView_guide
ViewVC logotype

Annotation of /MITgcm_contrib/darwinview/src/darwinView_guide

Parent Directory Parent Directory | Revision Log Revision Log | View Revision Graph Revision Graph


Revision 1.1 - (hide annotations) (download)
Fri Aug 3 14:35:24 2007 UTC (17 years, 11 months ago) by marissa
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: HEAD
readme

1 marissa 1.1 The darwinView User's Guide
2    
3     Marissa Weichman
4     Chris Hill
5    
6     Background
7    
8     Darwin project is exploring marine biogeochemistry by populating oceanic
9     configurations of the M.I.T General Circulation Model (MITgcm) with "virtual"
10     biologeochemical species that can interact and evolve. Different species
11     are characterized by their combinations of different physiology ranges,
12     over which a species can flourish. For example, some species may be very
13     sensitive to ocean temperature or nutrient concentrations while other species
14     may thrive over a wide temperature range but require high levels of
15     solar radiation to flourish. By seeding an ocean circulation model with
16     ensembles of different species, with probability distributions guided by
17     biological measurement, we can use this approach to develop an understanding
18     of the actual and potential biodiversity in the marine ecosystem.
19    
20     The darwinView project
21    
22     At a practical level the modeling in Darwin yields three-dimensional, time
23     evolving maps of species distributions that are studied to help us understand
24     the marine ecosystem. The distributions are embedded in three-dimensional,
25     time evolving maps of nutrient, and physical field distributions. The result is
26     a high-dimensional "space" of output which we wish to explore and from
27     which we want to extract understanding.
28    
29     The goal of darwinView is to develop some quick-look, interactive,
30     visualization tools that can allow researchers to rapidly explore Darwin
31     project outputs from MITgcm. Detailed studies of simulation outputs employ
32     analytical packages like Matlab and Ferret. The idea of a quick look tool
33     is not to try and replicate the functionality of these systems, but to
34     make a tool for visually quickly scanning outputs to identify interesting
35     behaviors.
36    
37     What is darwinView
38    
39     1 - a program to display multiple panels of Darwin project outputs
40     from MITgcm at once.
41    
42     2 - allows moving through data in space (up-down, east-west, north-south depending
43     on view) and time over a many fields at once.
44    
45     3 - movement through data can be manual or automatic (scripted or autoplay).
46    
47     4 - can display to a single screen or to a walled display.
48    
49     5 - displayed fields are annotated with scale, coordinates, key etc.
50    
51     6 - some limited controls on display are available.
52     o user-set color scale
53     o log scale
54     o global scale over all fields
55     o local scale for each species, depth and time
56    
57     7 - can read data from both binary (big or little endian) and NetCDF files
58    
59    
60     How to Use darwinView
61    
62     * Before You Compile the Program:
63    
64     - Make sure you have all the components necessary to run the program:
65    
66     o darwin.bash - bash script that handles data files
67     o darwin.c - the main OpenGL program
68     o netcdf.c - the program that handles NetCDF files
69     o jet.h - a table of color values
70    
71     - Make sure the following are installed on your computer:
72    
73     o Bash Unix shell
74     o gcc C compiler
75     o C programming libraries
76     o OpenGL libraries
77     o NetCDF libraries, if you intend to read from NetCDF files
78    
79     - Make sure your data is organized correctly:
80    
81     o Binary data should be organized in a directory whose only contents are subdirectories
82     representing different time steps. Each subdirectory should contain one binary file for
83     each variable (species concentration, compound concentration or otherwise). Each binary
84     file should contain data for all three dimensions (x, y and z) for its timestep. In
85     addition, the user must prepare a file containing a list of the variables that will be
86     displayed. The variable names should be on one line, separated by spaces. The user will
87     be prompted for the name of this file.
88    
89     o NetCDF files should all be placed in one directory. Make sure all the tiles for the
90     desired timesteps are present. In addition, the user must prepare three files: one
91     containing a list of variables that will be displayed, one containing a list of
92     tiles that make up each plot, and one containing a list of the desired time steps. In
93     each file, the variable names should be on one line, separated by spaces. The user will
94     be prompted for the names of these three files. Finally, the program handles NetCDF files
95     by converting them to binary. Therefore, a directory must be created for the program to
96     write to. The user will be prompted for the name of this directory.
97    
98     o The darwinView program has the option of scaling the z-axis, so depth levels aren't
99     equally spaced. If you plan to use this feature, a file must be prepared containing a list
100     of the depths of each layer. The list should begin with the layer closest to the surface
101     and progress down the water column, one depth per line. The number of lines should be
102     equal to the z-dimension (number of depth layers). The user will be prompted for the name
103     of this file when the scaled z-axis feature is enabled.
104    
105     * Compiling the Program:
106    
107     - The darwinView program is called through a bash script which prompts for information the program
108     needs to run. Type "bash darwin.bash" to run the script.
109    
110     o First, the script prompts for the format of the data. If you are using binary files,
111     type "binary" then type enter. If you are using NetCDF files, type "netcdf", then enter.
112    
113     o The script then asks if the user would like to use the default settings. If you have run
114     the program before and none of your settings have changed, type "y" for yes, then hit
115     enter. If you have not run the program before, or would like to change your settings,
116     type "n" for no, then hit enter.
117    
118     o If you typed "n", the program should begin running, and you can skip to the section
119     "running the program". If you typed "y", it will prompt for more information.
120    
121     o Next, the program asks for the dimensions of the data, meaning the x, y and z values
122     of the data. These are entered in the format "x y z". For example, a set of data might
123     cover 360 longitude steps, 160 latitude steps and 20 depth steps. The user would
124     therefore enter "360 160 20".
125    
126     o Next, the user is prompted for the dimensions of the data sets. darwinView is designed
127     to graph several different sets of data simultaneously. For example, if a user were
128     graphing concentrations of four species of phytoplankton, and wanted them arranged in a
129     square, he would enter "2x2". For a horizontal line, he would enter "4x1", and for a
130     vertical line he would enter "1x4".
131    
132     o If you are using the program to read from binary files, you are then prompted for the
133     directory containing the data to be read from. This directory should contain a
134     subdirectory for each timestep, as described in the section "Before You Compile the
135     Program." Finally, you are prompted for the name of the file containing the list of
136     variable names as described in the section "Before You Compile the Program." The
137     program should now begin running, and you can skip to the section "Running the Program."
138     (Note: all of the input asked for up until this point is saved in the file
139     .darwinview/binconfig. If your settings have not changed by the next time you run the
140     program, you can simply select "use default settings" to skip retyping the information.)
141    
142     o If you are using the program to read from NetCDF files, you are then prompted for the
143     directory containing the data to be read from. This directory should contain all the
144     tiles for the necessary timesteps, as described in the section "Before You Compile the
145     Program."
146    
147     o Next, you are prompted for the directory to write to. This directory should be empty.
148    
149     o Finally, you are prompted for the names of the three files: one containing a list of
150     desired variable names, one containing a list of tile names, and one containing a list of
151     time steps (as described in the section "Before You Compile the Program). The program
152     should now begin running. (Note: all of the input asked for up until this point is saved
153     in the files .darwinview/netcdf and .darwinview/ncconfig. If your settings have not changed
154     by the next time you run the program, you can simply select "use default settings" to skip
155     retyping the information.)
156    
157     * Running the Program
158    
159     - When the program window first comes up, you should see the x-y plane of each data set. The
160     default color scale is set to local. At the top of each graph, the name of the file being read
161     from, the depth level being viewed and the time step being viewed are labeled.
162    
163     -The right mouse button brings up a menu with the following options:
164     - Local color scale - switch to the local color scale, where the maximum and minimum
165     values are specific for each variable, time and level. Default
166     when the program begins running.
167     - Global color scale - switch to the global color scale, where the maximum and minimum
168     are calculated based on the entire data set (all variables, times
169     and levels).
170     - User-set color scale - switch to the user-set color scale, where the user is prompted
171     for the maximum and minimum. All variables are then scaled
172     according to these values.
173     - Log scale - toggles the log scale on/off. The log scale can be used in
174     conjunction with any of the color scale options listed above.
175     - Allow negatives - toggles the allowance of negatives on/off. When the program
176     begins running, off is the default. In off mode, all negative
177     values are set to the lowest positive value.
178     - Switch endian - toggles between big and little endian. Default is big endian.
179    
180     -There are also a number of key commands:
181     - left arrow key - move all plots forward one time step. If the animate feature is
182     set, pushing this key cycles forwards through the time steps.
183     - right arrow key - move all plots back one time step. If the animate feature is set,
184     pushing this key cycles backwards through the time steps.
185     - down arrow key - in the xy view, move down one depth level. In the xz view, move
186     down one North-South slice. In the yz slice, move right one
187     East-West slice. If the animate feature is set, pushing this key
188     cycles downwards through the depth levels in the xy view, down
189     the North-South slices in the xz view, and right across the
190     East-West slices in the yz view.
191     - up arrow key - in the xy view, move up one depth level. In the xz view, move up
192     one North-South slice. In the yz view, move left one East-West
193     slice. If the animate feature is set, pushing this key cycles
194     upwards through the depth levels in the xy view, up the North-
195     South slices in the xz view, and left across the East-West slices
196     in the yz view.
197     - r - reset the view (return to the xy plane at the first time and level)
198     - a - toggle the animate feature on/off
199     - x - toggle between xy and xz view, which plots how a certain North-South
200     slice changes over depth.
201     - y - toggle between xy and yz view, which plots how a certain East-West
202     slice changes over depth.
203     - z - toggles scaling of the z-axis when the program is in the xz or yz
204     view. The user will be prompted for the name of the file containing
205     containing the depth information the first time "z" is pressed (as
206     described in the section "Before you Compile the Program").
207     - q - quit the program
208    

  ViewVC Help
Powered by ViewVC 1.1.22