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Simulator

Developing

Main development platform is Linux although we aim to provide MacOS and Windows binaries as well. Of the many Linux distributions we aim to support Ubuntu 20.04 primarily but every distribution should work where you have access to the required dependencies.

Dependencies

To build you will need the following system dependencies installed:

  • Python 3.8 binaries

  • Python 3.8 headers

  • clang-format-10

  • clang-tidy-10

  • parallel

  • wget

  • gcc or clang (c++17 support is required)

Additionally you will need a few python packages. It is recommended to install all dependencies listed in requirements.txt into a virtual environment, e.g.:

python -m venv ~/simulator-venv
source ~/simulator-venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt

Once system and python dependencies are installed you will need to build third-party dependencies with cpp/scripts/setup-dependencies.sh, e.g.:

./cpp/scripts/setup-dependencies.sh ~/simulator-deps

The above call will download several third-party libraries, compile them and install them into ~/simulator-deps (or any other location you specified)

Building C++ libraries

Do the 'cmake-dance' and create a build folder, configure the project and build the sources:

mkdir ~/simulator-build
cd ~/simulator-build
cmake -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=~/simulator-deps -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug <path-to-repository>/cpp
cmake --build . -j

The command above assumes that the third party dependencies that you build with setup-dependencies.sh have been installed into ~/simulator-deps. If you selected a different location, make sure to substitute the location in the above call.

Running tests

To run all tests at once call ctest -j$(nproc) in the build folder.

Running jps

To run jps the location of the jpscore library (e.g., on Linux jpscore.so) needs to be in the PYTHONPATH, e.g.:

PYTHONPATH=~/simulator-build/bin ./jps/jps --help

Repository Layout

The repository layout follows the high level architecture of the jps tool. The core is a C++ library for pedestrian simulation. It is wrapped with pybind11 to allow the use of the simulation library with python. Lastly, there is the actual jps application written in python. The python layer is used to handle all the non-resource / compute intensive parts of the application, i.e. initial setup, file handling etc.

+----------------+
|      jps       | -> jps/
+----------------+
+----------------+
| Python wrapper | -> cpp/pycore/
+----------------+
+----------------+
|   Simulation   | -> cpp/libcore/
+----------------+

The above separation can be seen in the folder structure as well:

.
├── container     <= dockerfile for CI environment
├── cpp           <= hosts the main CMakeLists.txt
│   ├── cmake
│   ├── libcore   <= core library
│   │   ├── source
│   │   └── test
│   ├── pycore    <= python binding
│   │   ├── source
│   │   └── test
│   └── scripts   <= support scripts, e.g. dependency download, compile & install
├── jps
│   ├── jps       <= *jps* entry point
│   └── jupedsim  <= remaining python code
└── scripts       <= scripts used in devlopment / CI

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