2. Installation and Configuration

2.1. Installing on Linux/Mac with Mamba and conda-forge

Conda is an open source package management systems and environments management system for installing multiple versions of software packages and their dependencies and switching easily between them. Mamba is a cross-platform package manager and is compatible with conda packages. OpenMC can be installed in a conda environment with mamba. First, conda should be installed with one of the following installers: Miniconda, Anaconda, or Miniforge. Once you have conda installed on your system, OpenMC can be installed via the conda-forge channel with mamba.

First, add the conda-forge channel with:

conda config --add channels conda-forge

Then create and activate a new conda enviroment called openmc-env in which to install OpenMC.

conda create -n openmc-env
conda activate openmc-env

Then install mamba, which will be used to install OpenMC.

conda install mamba

To list the versions of OpenMC that are available on the conda-forge channel, in your terminal window or an Anaconda Prompt run:

mamba search openmc

OpenMC can then be installed with:

mamba install openmc

You are now in a conda environment called openmc-env that has OpenMC installed.

2.2. Installing on Linux/Mac/Windows with Docker

OpenMC can be easily deployed using Docker on any Windows, Mac, or Linux system. With Docker running, execute the following command in the shell to download and run a Docker image with the most recent release of OpenMC from DockerHub:

docker run openmc/openmc:latest

This will take several minutes to run depending on your internet download speed. The command will place you in an interactive shell running in a Docker container with OpenMC installed.

Note

The docker run command supports many options for spawning containers including mounting volumes from the host filesystem, which many users will find useful.

2.3. Installing from Source using Spack

Spack is a package management tool designed to support multiple versions and configurations of software on a wide variety of platforms and environments. Please follow Spack’s setup guide to configure the Spack system.

The OpenMC Spack recipe has been configured with variants that match most options provided in the CMakeLists.txt file. To see a list of these variants and other information use:

spack info openmc

Note

It should be noted that by default OpenMC is built with -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelwithDebInfo. In addition, MPI is OFF while OpenMP is ON.

It is recommended to install OpenMC with the Python API. Information about this Spack recipe can be found with the following command:

spack info py-openmc

Note

The only variant for the Python API is mpi.

The most basic installation of OpenMC can be accomplished by entering the following command:

spack install py-openmc

Caution

When installing any Spack package, dependencies are assumed to be at configured defaults unless otherwise specfied in the specification on the command line. In the above example, assuming the default options weren’t changed in Spack’s package configuration, py-openmc will link against a non-MPI non-release build of openmc. Even if a release build of openmc was built separately, it will rebuild openmc with the default build type. Thus, if you are trying to link against dependencies that were configured different than defaults, ^openmc[variants] will have to be present in the command.

For a release build of OpenMC with MPI support on (provided by OpenMPI), the following command can be used:

spack install py-openmc +mpi ^openmpi ^openmc build_type=Release

Note

+mpi is automatically forwarded to OpenMC.

Tip

When installing py-openmc, it will use Spack’s preferred Python. For example, assuming Spack’s preferred Python is 3.8.7, to build py-openmc against the latest Python 3.7 instead, ^python@3.7.0:3.7.99 should be added to the specification on the command line. Additionally, a compiler type and version can be specified at the end of the command using %gcc@<version>, %intel@<version>, etc.

A useful tool in Spack is to look at the dependency tree before installation. This can be observed using Spack’s spec tool:

spack spec py-openmc +mpi ^openmc build_type=Release

Once installed, environment/lmod modules can be generated or Spack’s load feature can be used to access the installed packages.

2.4. Installing from Source

2.4.1. Prerequisites

Required

  • A C/C++ compiler such as gcc

    OpenMC’s core codebase is written in C++. The source files have been tested to work with a wide variety of compilers. If you are using a Debian-based distribution, you can install the g++ compiler using the following command:

    sudo apt install g++
    
  • CMake cross-platform build system

    The compiling and linking of source files is handled by CMake in a platform-independent manner. If you are using Debian or a Debian derivative such as Ubuntu, you can install CMake using the following command:

    sudo apt install cmake
    
  • HDF5 Library for portable binary output format

    OpenMC uses HDF5 for many input/output files. As such, you will need to have HDF5 installed on your computer. The installed version will need to have been compiled with the same compiler you intend to compile OpenMC with. If compiling with gcc from the APT repositories, users of Debian derivatives can install HDF5 and/or parallel HDF5 through the package manager:

    sudo apt install libhdf5-dev
    

    Parallel versions of the HDF5 library called libhdf5-mpich-dev and libhdf5-openmpi-dev exist which are built against MPICH and OpenMPI, respectively. To link against a parallel HDF5 library, make sure to set the HDF5_PREFER_PARALLEL CMake option, e.g.:

    cmake -DHDF5_PREFER_PARALLEL=on -DOPENMC_USE_MPI=on ..
    

    Note that the exact package names may vary depending on your particular distribution and version.

    If you are using building HDF5 from source in conjunction with MPI, we recommend that your HDF5 installation be built with parallel I/O features. An example of configuring HDF5 is listed below:

    CC=mpicc ./configure --enable-parallel
    

    You may omit --enable-parallel if you want to compile HDF5 in serial.

Optional

  • libpng official reference PNG library

    OpenMC’s built-in plotting capabilities use the libpng library to produce compressed PNG files. In the absence of this library, OpenMC will fallback to writing PPM files, which are uncompressed and only supported by select image viewers. libpng can be installed on Ddebian derivates with:

    sudo apt install libpng-dev
    
  • An MPI implementation for distributed-memory parallel runs

    To compile with support for parallel runs on a distributed-memory architecture, you will need to have a valid implementation of MPI installed on your machine. The code has been tested and is known to work with the latest versions of both OpenMPI and MPICH. OpenMPI and/or MPICH can be installed on Debian derivatives with:

    sudo apt install mpich libmpich-dev
    sudo apt install openmpi-bin libopenmpi-dev
    
  • git version control software for obtaining source code

  • DAGMC toolkit for simulation using CAD-based geometries

    OpenMC supports particle tracking in CAD-based geometries via the Direct Accelerated Geometry Monte Carlo (DAGMC) toolkit (installation instructions). For use in OpenMC, only the MOAB_DIR and BUILD_TALLY variables need to be specified in the CMake configuration step when building DAGMC. This option also allows unstructured mesh tallies on tetrahedral MOAB meshes. In addition to turning this option on, the path to the DAGMC installation should be specified as part of the CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH variable:

    cmake -DOPENMC_USE_DAGMC=on -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/path/to/dagmc/installation ..
    
  • MCPL library for reading and writing .mcpl files

    This option allows OpenMC to read and write MCPL (Monte Carlo Particle Lists) files instead of .h5 files for sources (external source distribution, k-eigenvalue source distribution, and surface sources). To turn this option on in the CMake configuration step, add the following option:

    cmake -DOPENMC_USE_MCPL=on ..
    
  • NCrystal library for defining materials with enhanced thermal neutron transport

    Adding this option allows the creation of materials from NCrystal, which replaces the scattering kernel treatment of ACE files with a modular, on-the-fly approach. To use it install and initialize NCrystal and turn on the option in the CMake configuration step:

    cmake -DOPENMC_USE_NCRYSTAL=on ..
    
  • libMesh mesh library framework for numerical simulations of partial differential equations

    This optional dependency enables support for unstructured mesh tally filters using libMesh meshes. Any 3D element type supported by libMesh can be used, but the implementation is currently restricted to collision estimators. In addition to turning this option on, the path to the libMesh installation should be specified as part of the CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH variable:

    cmake -DOPENMC_USE_LIBMESH=on -DOPENMC_USE_MPI=on -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/path/to/libmesh/installation ..
    

    Note that libMesh is most commonly compiled with MPI support. If that is the case, then OpenMC should be compiled with MPI support as well.

2.4.2. Obtaining the Source

All OpenMC source code is hosted on GitHub. You can download the source code directly from GitHub or, if you have the git version control software installed on your computer, you can use git to obtain the source code. The latter method has the benefit that it is easy to receive updates directly from the GitHub repository. GitHub has a good set of instructions for how to set up git to work with GitHub since this involves setting up ssh keys. With git installed and setup, the following command will download the full source code from the GitHub repository:

git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/openmc-dev/openmc.git

By default, the cloned repository will be set to the development branch. To switch to the source of the latest stable release, run the following commands:

cd openmc
git checkout master

2.4.3. Build Configuration

Compiling OpenMC with CMake is carried out in two steps. First, cmake is run to determine the compiler, whether optional packages (MPI, HDF5) are available, to generate a list of dependencies between source files so that they may be compiled in the correct order, and to generate a normal Makefile. The Makefile is then used by make to actually carry out the compile and linking commands. A typical out-of-source build would thus look something like the following

mkdir build && cd build
cmake ..
make

Note that first a build directory is created as a subdirectory of the source directory. The Makefile in the top-level directory will automatically perform an out-of-source build with default options.

2.4.3.1. CMakeLists.txt Options

The following options are available in the CMakeLists.txt file:

OPENMC_ENABLE_COVERAGE

Compile and link code instrumented for coverage analysis. This is typically used in conjunction with gcov. (Default: off)

OPENMC_ENABLE_PROFILE

Enables profiling using the GNU profiler, gprof. (Default: off)

OPENMC_USE_OPENMP

Enables shared-memory parallelism using the OpenMP API. The C++ compiler being used must support OpenMP. (Default: on)

OPENMC_USE_DAGMC

Enables use of CAD-based DAGMC geometries and MOAB unstructured mesh tallies. Please see the note about DAGMC in the optional dependencies list for more information on this feature. The installation directory for DAGMC should also be defined as DAGMC_ROOT in the CMake configuration command. (Default: off)

OPENMC_USE_MCPL

Turns on support for reading MCPL source files and writing MCPL source points and surface sources. (Default: off)

OPENMC_USE_NCRYSTAL

Turns on support for NCrystal materials. NCrystal must be installed and initialized. (Default: off)

OPENMC_USE_LIBMESH

Enables the use of unstructured mesh tallies with libMesh. (Default: off)

OPENMC_USE_MPI

Turns on compiling with MPI (Default: off). For further information on MPI options, please see the FindMPI.cmake documentation.

To set any of these options (e.g., turning on profiling), the following form should be used:

cmake -DOPENMC_ENABLE_PROFILE=on /path/to/openmc

2.4.3.2. Specifying the Build Type

OpenMC can be configured for debug, release, or release with debug info by setting the CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE option.

Debug

Enable debug compiler flags with no optimization -O0 -g.

Release

Disable debug and enable optimization -O3 -DNDEBUG.

RelWithDebInfo

(Default if no type is specified.) Enable optimization and debug -O2 -g.

Example of configuring for Debug mode:

cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug /path/to/openmc

2.4.3.3. Selecting HDF5 Installation

CMakeLists.txt searches for the h5cc or h5pcc HDF5 C wrapper on your PATH environment variable and subsequently uses it to determine library locations and compile flags. If you have multiple installations of HDF5 or one that does not appear on your PATH, you can set the HDF5_ROOT environment variable to the root directory of the HDF5 installation, e.g.

export HDF5_ROOT=/opt/hdf5/1.8.15
cmake /path/to/openmc

This will cause CMake to search first in /opt/hdf5/1.8.15/bin for h5cc / h5pcc before it searches elsewhere. As noted above, an environment variable can typically be set for a single command, i.e.

HDF5_ROOT=/opt/hdf5/1.8.15 cmake /path/to/openmc

2.4.4. Compiling on Linux and Mac OS X

To compile OpenMC on Linux or Max OS X, run the following commands from within the root directory of the source code:

mkdir build && cd build
cmake ..
make
make install

This will build an executable named openmc and install it (by default in /usr/local/bin). If you do not have administrative privileges, you can install OpenMC locally by specifying an install prefix when running cmake:

cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$HOME/.local ..

The CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX variable can be changed to any path for which you have write-access.

2.4.5. Compiling on Windows

Recent versions of Windows include a subsystem for Linux that allows one to run Bash within Ubuntu running in Windows. First, follow the installation guide here to get Bash on Ubuntu on Windows set up. Once you are within bash, obtain the necessary prerequisites via apt. Finally, follow the instructions for compiling on linux.

2.4.6. Testing Build

To run the test suite, you will first need to download a pre-generated cross section library along with windowed multipole data. Please refer to our Test Suite documentation for further details.

2.5. Installing Python API

If you installed OpenMC using Conda, no further steps are necessary in order to use OpenMC’s Python API. However, if you are installing from source, the Python API is not installed by default when make install is run because in many situations it doesn’t make sense to install a Python package in the same location as the openmc executable (for example, if you are installing the package into a virtual environment). The easiest way to install the openmc Python package is to use pip, which is included by default in Python 3.4+. From the root directory of the OpenMC distribution/repository, run:

python -m pip install .

pip will first check that all required third-party packages have been installed, and if they are not present, they will be installed by downloading the appropriate packages from the Python Package Index (PyPI).

2.5.1. Installing in “Development” Mode

If you are primarily doing development with OpenMC, it is strongly recommended to install the Python package in “editable” mode.

2.5.2. Prerequisites

The Python API works with Python 3.7+. In addition to Python itself, the API relies on a number of third-party packages. All prerequisites can be installed using Conda (recommended), pip, or through the package manager in most Linux distributions.

Required

NumPy

NumPy is used extensively within the Python API for its powerful N-dimensional array.

SciPy

SciPy’s special functions, sparse matrices, and spatial data structures are used for several optional features in the API.

pandas

Pandas is used to generate tally DataFrames as demonstrated in an example notebook.

h5py

h5py provides Python bindings to the HDF5 library. Since OpenMC outputs various HDF5 files, h5py is needed to provide access to data within these files from Python.

Matplotlib

Matplotlib is used to providing plotting functionality in the API like the Universe.plot() method and the openmc.plot_xs() function.

uncertainties

Uncertainties are used for decay data in the openmc.data module.

lxml

lxml is used for various parts of the Python API.

Optional

mpi4py

mpi4py provides Python bindings to MPI for running distributed-memory parallel runs. This package is needed if you plan on running depletion simulations in parallel using MPI.

Cython

Cython is used for resonance reconstruction for ENDF data converted to openmc.data.IncidentNeutron.

vtk

The Python VTK bindings are needed to convert voxel and track files to VTK format.

pytest

The pytest framework is used for unit testing the Python API.

If you are running simulations that require OpenMC’s Python bindings to the C API (including depletion and CMFD), it is recommended to build h5py (and mpi4py, if you are using MPI) using the same compilers and HDF5 version as for OpenMC. Thus, the install process would proceed as follows:

mkdir build && cd build
HDF5_ROOT=<path to HDF5> CXX=<path to mpicxx> cmake ..
make
make install

cd ..
MPICC=<path to mpicc> python -m pip install mpi4py
HDF5_DIR=<path to HDF5> python -m pip install --no-binary=h5py h5py

If you are using parallel HDF5, you’ll also need to make sure the right MPI wrapper is used when installing h5py:

CC=<path to mpicc> HDF5_MPI=ON HDF5_DIR=<path to HDF5> python -m pip install --no-binary=h5py h5py