Use add PreCICE to install the Julia language bindings from the official Julia registry
Updated 26 Jun 23

The versioning scheme

The versioning scheme of the Julia bindings is the major and minor preCICE version which the bindings are tested with, followed by the version of the Julia bindings. This differs from the matlab and python bindings due to the Julia versioning guidelines, which only allow major, minor, and patch versions.

Example: version 1 of the Julia bindings for preCICE version 2.4.0 is 2.4.1

Installation

The Julia bindings can be installed with Pkg.jl from the Julia General Repository. For this, preCICE needs to be installed first. For the preCICE installation refer to the Quickstart or the installation overview.

Adding the package

Add the Julia bindings in the Julia prompt by typing:

julia> ]
pkg> add PreCICE 

Alternatively you can also include the package in a Julia script in the following way:

import Pkg; Pkg.add("PreCICE")

Yes, we know, “PreCICE” is not as elegant as “preCICE”, but that’s a Julia convention. 🙈

Adding the package from a local folder

If you have cloned or downloaded the Julia bindings on your local machine, add the Julia bindings to your Julia environment in the following way:

julia> ]
pkg> add <path-to-repository>

Adding a feature branch

If you want to test a new feature, you can install a specific branch of the PreCICE.jl repository with the following command:

julia> ]
pkg> add https://github.com/precice/PreCICE.jl#<branch-name>

Troubleshooting

If preCICE is installed at a custom path, errors of the form ERROR: could not load library "/..." can occur after adding the Julia bindings package. Make sure the preCICE library is in the system library path through echo $LD_LIBRARY_PATH. If the path containing libprecice.so doesn’t appear, update the variable with the correct path.

~$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="<path-to-libprecice.so>:${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}"

A different way to fix this error is to set the custom path of the preCICE installation through the environment variable PRECICE_JL_BINARY. Afterwards you need to rebuild this package:

~$ export PRECICE_JL_BINARY=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/
~$ julia (--project)
julia> ]
pkg> build PreCICE

Usage

The usage of the Julia language bindings for preCICE is very similar to the C++ API. Therefore, please refer to our section on coupling your code for getting started. Some important differences:

  • Call using PreCICE at the beginning of your script.
  • Access API functions using PreCICE.<function>
  • The object PreCICE is the main access point to the preCICE API.
  • We try to follow the Julia styleguide with respect to function and class names. Meaning:, writeBlockScalarData not write_block_scalar_data.
  • The solverdummy shows an example of how to use the Julia bindings for preCICE.

Testing PreCICE.jl

To test the bindings, run:

julia> ]
pkg> test PreCICE

This checks if the preCICE bindings can be found and accessed correctly. You can also test the full functionality of PreCICE.jl. If not set up, the output of the previous test shows an info on what command you need to execute. It will be along the lines of:

cd /home/<user>/.julia/packages/PreCICE/<code>/test && make

After this, you can run the tests again, resulting into individual 22 tests being executed.

Dependencies

This package works with the official Julia binaries listed below. See the platform-specific instructions for official binaries or Julia’s documentation if you are not sure how to download them.

Supported versions

The package is tested for Julia versions 1.6.0, 1.6.5, 1.7.0 and the newest Julia release. Julia versions prior to v1.6.0 are not supported.

Unofficial Julia binaries may not be compatible.