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Python interface to ANSYS APDL CORBA server.

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This repository is deprecated

This respository has been depricated in favor of the new gRPC interface developed by Ansys and installed automatically by installing with:

pip install ansys-mapdl-core

This repository will remain here for informational purposes, but will remain archived. You can still use it, but consider it unmaintained.

ansys_corba

This python module provides minimum support for connecting to an ANSYS APDL server using Python. While it is designed to be used as a support module to support pymapdl, it can be used individually to send text commands to an APDL instance, but with none of the syntax checking or error handling pymapdl uses. In short, if you find yourself here, install pymapdl unless you really want a quick and dirty solution to driving ANSYS APDL from Python.

This module relies on documentation provided by ANSYS APDL and uses compiled libraries using both source file from omniORB. See the shell files on the GitHub repository for Linux build instructions. Building for Windows was a nightmare.

Installation

Pre-compiled binary files are available for Python 2.7 and 3.5-3.8 for Linux and Windows. As this repository is no longer maintained in favor of the gRPC interface, these will be the only supported versions of Python.

Installation is simply:

pip install ansys_corba

Usage

Once again, you really should be using pymapdl. It handles figuring out where the mapdl_broadcasts.txt file is and when to open a connection with the server. If you'd rather live on the wild side, here's how you'd open MAPDL, connect to a CORBA server, and send over a few commands:

import sys
import time
import os
from ansys_corba import CORBA
import subprocess

# edit this to match your ansys exe
ansys_loc = 'C:\\Program Files\\ANSYS Inc\\v170\\ansys\\bin\winx64\\ANSYS170.exe'

# ansys apdl logging here:
logfile = 'mapdl_broadcasts.txt'
if os.path.isfile(logfile):
    os.remove(logfile)

# make temporary input file to stop ansys from prompting the user
with open('tmp.inp', 'w') as f:
    f.write('FINISH')

# start ANSYS
command = '"%s" -aas -i tmp.inp -o out.txt -b' % ansys_loc
subprocess.Popen(command, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)

# monitor log file and wait for connection
print('Starting ANSYS...')
while True:
    try:
        if os.path.isfile(logfile):
            with open(logfile, 'r') as f:
                text = f.read()
                if 'visited:collaborativecosolverunitior' in text:
                    print('ANSYS started')
                    break
                time.sleep(0.1)
    except KeyboardInterrupt:
        sys.exit()

with open('./aaS_MapdlId.txt') as f:
    key = f.read()

# create server
orb = CORBA.ORB_init()
mapdl = orb.string_to_object(key)

# run simple commands to demonstrate this works
mapdl.executeCommand('/prep7')
out = mapdl.executeCommandToString('cylind, 2, , , 2, 0, 90')
print(out.replace('\\n', '\n'))
mapdl.executeCommand('FINISH')
mapdl.terminate()  # could use exit, but it returns an error

There's several things that could break here, for example, your path to MAPDL, or finding the mapdl_broadcasts.txt file. If this python script isn't running in the same directory as ANSYS, it will hang until you kill the process or exit it with a keyboard interrupt.

Further Documentation

Once you've opened a connection to MAPDL, there's really only three commands that you need to use. This documentation was shamelessly taken from the official MAPDL AAS documentation:

  • executeCommand:

    Issues a command to the connected Mechanical APDL session. Output from the command is not returned.

  • executeCommandToString

    Issues a command to the connected Mechanical APDL session and returns the output as a string.

  • terminate

    Terminates the connected Mechanical APDL as a Server session.

See the MAPDL AAS documentation for more details.

Notes

Installing from source is not possible using PyPi as the shared libraries need to be compiled outside of Python. I've included docker_buildlinux.sh and docker.sh which can be used to build the source code for Linux. Building for Windows is more complicated and requires following the readme within the omniorb source along with some trial and error.

License and Acknowledgments

This code is licensed under the MIT license.

This module, ansys_corba makes no commercial claim over MAPDL whatsoever. This tool extends the functionality of MAPDL by adding a python interface in both file interface as well as interactive scripting without changing the core behavior or license of the original software. The use of the interactive APDL control of ansys_corba requires a legally licensed local copy of MAPDL.

Also, this module wouldn't be possible without omniORB as most of the source code is directly take from omniORBpy with only minor modifications to the file structure and the addition of documentation specific to MAPDL.

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Python interface to ANSYS APDL CORBA server.

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