Difference between revisions of "QMCChem"
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
== Current Features == | == Current Features == | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:screenshot.png|center]] | ||
=== Methods === | === Methods === |
Revision as of 12:02, 21 November 2014
During the last years we have been actively developing the QMC=Chem quantum Monte Carlo code. This code was initially designed for massively parallel simulations, and uses the manager/worker model.
When the program starts its execution, the manager runs on the master node and spawns two other processes: a worker process and a data server. The worker is an efficient Fortran executable with minimal memory and disk space requirements (typically a few megabytes for each), where the only MPI communication is the broadcast of the input data (wave function parameters, initial positions in the 3N-space and random seed). The outline of the task of a worker is the following:
while ( Running ) { compute_a_block_of_data(); Running = send_the_results_to_the_data_server(); }
The data server is a socket server implemented in Python. When it receives the computed data of a worker, it replies to the worker the order given by the manager to compute another block or to stop. The received data is then stored in a database using an asynchronous I/O mechanism. The manager is always aware of the results computed by all the workers and controls the running/stopping state of the workers and the interaction of the user during the simulation.
QMC=Chem is very well suited to massive parallelism and cloud computing:
- All the implemented algorithms are CPU-bound
- All workers are totally independent
- The load balancing is optimal: the workers always work 100% of the time, independently of their respective CPU speeds
- The code was written to be as portable as possible: the manager is written in standard Python and the worker is written in standard Fortran.
- The network traffic is minimal and the amount of data transferred over the network can even be adjusted by the user
- The number of simultaneous worker nodes can be variable during a calculation
- Fault-tolerance is implemented
- The input and output data are not presented as traditional input files and output files. All the input and output data are stored in a database and an API is provided to access the data. This allows different forms of interaction of the user: scripts, graphical user interfaces, command-line tools, web interfaces, etc.
Contents
Current Features
Methods
- VMC
- DMC with stochastic reconfiguration
- Jastrow factor optimization
- CI coefficients optimization
Wave functions
- Single determinant
- Multi-determinant
- Nuclear cusp correction
Links
- Easy development with the IRPF90 tool.
- The access to input/output files is provided via an API produced by the Easy Fortran I/O library generator
- Documentation
Parallel speed-up curve
Number of computed blocks for the CuCl2 molecule. The simulation stops when the wall-time has reached 5 minutes. Each block is composed of 10 walkers realizing 2,000 VMC steps.
Features under development
Properties
- Molecular Forces
- Moments (dipole, quadrupole,...)
- Electron density
Practical aspects
- Web interface for input and output
Input file creation
The QMC=Chem input file can be created using the web interface. Upload a Q5Cost file or an output file from GAMESS, Gaussian or Molpro, and you will download the QMC=Chem input directory.
- Quantum Monte Carlo for large chemical systems: Implementing efficient strategies for petascale platforms and beyond
- QMC=Chem: a quantum Monte Carlo program for large-scale simulations in chemistry at the petascale level and beyond
- Large-scale quantum Monte Carlo electronic structure calculations on the EGEE grid