The Cyclus fuel cycle simulator is an agent-based and extensible framework for modeling the flow of material through future nuclear fuel cycles. For more information on the entire "ecosystem" please refer to the Cyclus website.
The core of the Cyclus nuclear fuel cycle simulator from the University of Wisconsin-Madison is intended to be a simulation framework for the development of innovative fuel cycle simulations.
This README is intended primarily for those who intend to contribute to the development of the Cyclus Core. If you are interested Cyclus as a user or in developing Cyclus archetypes, you may want to consult Getting Started with Cyclus.
- This README provides basic information about:
- the dependencies required by Cyclus
- installation of Cyclus from the command line
- how to run Cyclus and the Cyclus unit tests
The Cyclus Core contains all the fundamental pieces of the Cyclus framework required to interface with the input file, write the output file, and manage material flow during the simulation via the Dynamic Resource Exchange. It does not contain any fuel cycle facility models. A set of nuclear facilities can be obtained by installing Cycamore, the Cyclus Additionnal Module. Cycamore is supported by the Cyclus Developer Team.
Third party modules can also be installed (or developed) with additional facilities. Please visit the Cyclus website for a list of contributed modules.
- For general information about Cyclus, visit the Cyclus Homepage,
- For detailed installation instructions, visit the INSTALLATION Guide,
- To see user and developer documentation for this code, please visit the Users Guide,
- If you would like to contribute to Cyclus, please check our Contribution Guidelines.
Table of Contents
In order to facilitate future compatibility with multiple platforms,
Cyclus is built using CMake
. A full list of the Cyclus package
dependencies is shown below:
Package | Minimum Version |
---|---|
CMake |
2.8 |
boost |
1.46.1 |
libxml2 |
2 |
libxml++ |
2.36 |
python |
2.7 or 3.3+ |
sqlite3 |
3.7.10 |
HDF5 |
1.8.4 |
Coin-Cbc |
2.5 |
For detailed instructions on installing dependencies, see Installing Dependencies.
Assuming you have the dependencies installed correctly, installing Cyclus based on the source code from github is fairly straightforward:
- Clone the Cyclus repository:
git clone https://github.com/cyclus/cyclus.git
, - to install Cyclus locally (in
~/.local/
) just run:python install.py
from thecyclus
folder, - finally, add the following Cyclus installation path (
~/.local/bin
) to the front on your$PATH
. - additionnaly if you are using MacOSX, also add
~/.local/lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages
to your$PYTHONPATH
For more detailed installation procedure, and/or custom installation please refer to the INSTALLATION guide.
Installing Cyclus will also install a test driver (i.e., an executable of all of our tests). You can run the tests yourself via:
$ cyclus_unit_tests
As noted previously, the Cyclus Core will not allow you to run fuel cycle simulations as it does not include nuclear facilities. To run fuel cycle simulations, first download Cycamore (GitHub Cyamore Repository):
- Clone the Cycamore Repo:
git clone https://github.com/cyclus/cycamore.git
, - Install in the same location you installed Cyclus (eg. in
~/.local/
):python install.py
from thecycamore
folder.
You can find instructions for writing an input file for cyclus from Cyclus User
Guide or use sample input files from Cycamore Repo. Assuming you have some
file input.xml
, you can run Cyclus via:
$ cyclus path/to/input.xml
For a more detailed explanation, check out the Cyclus User Guide.
We happily welcome new developers into the Cyclus Developer Team. If you are willing to contribute into Cyclus, please follow this procedure:
- Fork Cyclus repository,
- Create a working branch on your fork from the
develop
branch, - Implement your modification of the Cyclus source code,
- Submit a Pull request into
Cyclus/develop
branch, - Wait for reviews/merge (the proposer of a pull request cannot be the Merger).
You may also want to read our Contribution Guidelines.