Welcome to the Cherab project.
Please see our documentation for guidance on using the code.
Cherab is a large code framework consisting of a core package and feature
packages. Users will generally install the core package and the specific
feature packages they need for their work. For example, users working on the
JET tokamak will require the cherab-core
package, and the cherab-jet
package.
Unless developing new code for a cherab package, most users should clone the master branch. When developing new features for cherab, the development branch should be used as the base.
All cherab packages are standard python packages and basic installation is achieved with:
pip install cherab
This will compile the Cherab cython extensions and install the package. If you
don't have administrator access to install the package, add the --user
flag
to the above line to install the package under your own user account.
Alternatively, consider creating a virtual environment
and installing cherab
in the environment.
When developing cherab it is usually preferred that the packages be installed in "editable" mode. Clone this repository and change directory to the root of the repository, then run:
pip install -e .
This will cause the original installation folder to be added to the site-package
path. Modifications to the code will therefore be visible to python next time
the code is imported. A virtual environment or the --user
flag should be
used if you do not have administrative permission for your python installation.
If you make any changes to Cython files you will need to run ./dev/build.sh
to
rebuild the relevant files.
As all the Cherab packages are dependent on the cherab-core
package, this
package must be installed first. Note that other packages may have their own
inter-dependencies, see the specific package documentation for more information.
Cherab is organised as a namespace package, where each of the submodules is installed in the same location as the core package. Any submodules using Cython with a build-time dependency on Cherab need to use a Cython version newer than 3.0a5, due to a bug in how earlier versions of Cython handle namespaces.
By default, pip will install from wheel archives on PyPI. If a binary wheel is not
available for your version of Python, or if you are installing in editable mode
for development, the package will be compiled locally on your machine. Compilation
is done in parallel by default, using all available processors, but can be
overridden by setting the environment variable CHERAB_NCPU
to the number of
processors to use.
The management of the project is divided into Scientific and Technical Project Management. The Scientific management happens through the normal community routes such as JET and MST1 task force meetings, ITPA meetings, etc.
The Technical Management Committee (TMC) is a smaller subset of the community, being responsible for ensuring the integrity and high code quality of Cherab is maintained. These TMC members would have in-depth knowledge of the code base through a demonstrated history of contributing to the project. The TMC would primarily be responsible for accepting / rejecting merge requests on the basis of code / physics algorithm quality standards.
- Alys Brett (chairwoman, master account holder, responsible for delegation, UKAEA, UK)
- Matt Carr (External consultant, diagnostic physics models)
- Jack Lovell (Oak Ridge, USA)
- Alex Meakins (External consultant, Architecture, software integrity)
- Vlad Neverov (NRC Kurchatov Institute, Moscow)
- Matej Tomes (Compass, IPP, Prague)
- Dr Carine Giroud, Dr Alex Meakins, Dr Matthew Carr, Dr Alfonso Baciero, & Mr Corentin Bertrand. (2018, March 23). Cherab Spectroscopy Modelling Framework (Version v0.1.0). Zenodo. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1206142