Abstract
GLVis is an OpenGL tool for visualization of finite element meshes and functions. When started without any options, GLVis starts a server, which waits for a socket connections and visualizes any recieved data. This way the results of simulations on a remote (parallel) machine can be visualized on the lical user desktop. GLVis can also be used to visualize a mesh with or without a finite element function (solution). It can run a batch sequence of commands (GLVis scripts), or display previously saved socket streams. For more information, see the project website: http://glvis.org/.
- Developers:
-
Kolev, Tzanio [1] ; Dobrev, Veselin [1]
- Lawrence Livermore National Lab. (LLNL), Livermore, CA (United States)
- Release Date:
- 2010-06-21
- Project Type:
- Open Source, Publicly Available Repository
- Software Type:
- Scientific
- Licenses:
-
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License
- Sponsoring Org.:
-
USDOEPrimary Award/Contract Number:AC52-07NA27344
- Code ID:
- 1691
- Site Accession Number:
- 4602
- Research Org.:
- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
- Country of Origin:
- United States
Citation Formats
Kolev, Tzanio, and Dobrev, Veselin.
GLVis: OpenGL Finite Element Visualization Tool.
Computer Software.
https://github.com/glvis/glvis.
USDOE.
21 Jun. 2010.
Web.
doi:10.11578/dc.20171025.1249.
Kolev, Tzanio, & Dobrev, Veselin.
(2010, June 21).
GLVis: OpenGL Finite Element Visualization Tool.
[Computer software].
https://github.com/glvis/glvis.
https://doi.org/10.11578/dc.20171025.1249.
Kolev, Tzanio, and Dobrev, Veselin.
"GLVis: OpenGL Finite Element Visualization Tool." Computer software.
June 21, 2010.
https://github.com/glvis/glvis.
https://doi.org/10.11578/dc.20171025.1249.
@misc{
doecode_1691,
title = {GLVis: OpenGL Finite Element Visualization Tool},
author = {Kolev, Tzanio and Dobrev, Veselin},
abstractNote = {GLVis is an OpenGL tool for visualization of finite element meshes and functions. When started without any options, GLVis starts a server, which waits for a socket connections and visualizes any recieved data. This way the results of simulations on a remote (parallel) machine can be visualized on the lical user desktop. GLVis can also be used to visualize a mesh with or without a finite element function (solution). It can run a batch sequence of commands (GLVis scripts), or display previously saved socket streams. For more information, see the project website: http://glvis.org/.},
doi = {10.11578/dc.20171025.1249},
url = {https://doi.org/10.11578/dc.20171025.1249},
howpublished = {[Computer Software] \url{https://doi.org/10.11578/dc.20171025.1249}},
year = {2010},
month = {jun}
}