OpenMDAO is an open-source high-performance computing platform for systems analysis and multidisciplinary optimization, written in Python. It enables you to decompose your models, making them easier to build and maintain, while still solving them in a tightly coupled manner with efficient parallel numerical methods.
The OpenMDAO project is primarily focused on supporting gradient-based optimization with analytic derivatives to allow you to explore large design spaces with hundreds or thousands of design variables, but the framework also has a number of parallel computing features that can work with gradient-free optimization, mixed-integer nonlinear programming, and traditional design space exploration.
If you are using OpenMDAO, please cite us!
Documentation for the latest version can be found here.
Documentation archives for prior versions can be found here.
While the API is relatively stable, OpenMDAO remains in active development. There will be periodic changes to the API. User's are encouraged to pin their version of OpenMDAO to a recent release and update periodically.
You have two options for installing OpenMDAO, (1) from the Python Package Index (PyPI), and (2) from the GitHub repository.
OpenMDAO includes several optional sets of dependencies including:
test
for installing the developer tools (e.g., testing, coverage),
docs
for building the documentation and
visualization
for some extra visualization tools.
Specifying all
will include all of the optional dependencies.
Install from PyPI
This is the easiest way to install OpenMDAO. To install only the runtime dependencies:
pip install openmdao
To install all the optional dependencies:
pip install openmdao[all]
This allows you to install OpenMDAO from a local copy of the source code.
git clone http://github.com/OpenMDAO/OpenMDAO
cd OpenMDAO
pip install .
If you would like to make changes to OpenMDAO it is recommended you
install it in editable mode (i.e., development mode) by adding the -e
flag when calling pip
, this way any changes you make to the source code will
be included when you import OpenMDAO in Python. You will also want to
install the packages necessary for running OpenMDAO's tests and documentation
generator. You can install everything needed for development by running:
pip install -e OpenMDAO[all]
OpenMDAO 3.x.y represents the current, supported version. It requires Python 3.8 or later and is maintained here. To upgrade to the latest release, run:
pip install --upgrade openmdao
OpenMDAO 2.10.x was the last version to support Python 2.x and is no longer supported. To install this older release, run:
pip install "openmdao<3"
OpenMDAO 1.7.4 was an earlier version of OpenMDAO and is also no longer supported. The code repository is now named OpenMDAO1, and has moved here. To install it, run:
pip install "openmdao<2"
The legacy OpenMDAO v0.x (versions 0.13.0 and older) of the OpenMDAO-Framework are here.
Users are encouraged to run the unit tests to ensure OpenMDAO is performing correctly. In order to do so, you must install the testing dependencies.
-
Install OpenMDAO and its testing dependencies:
pip install openmdao[test]
Alternatively, you can clone the repository, as explained here, and install the development dependencies as described here.
-
Run tests:
testflo openmdao -n 1
-
If everything works correctly, you should see a message stating that there were zero failures. If the tests produce failures, you are encouraged to report them as an issue. If so, please make sure you include your system spec, and include the error message.
If tests fail, please include your system information, you can obtain that by running the following commands in python and copying the results produced by the last line.
import platform, sys info = platform.uname() (info.system, info.version), (info.machine, info.processor), sys.version
Which should produce a result similar to:
(('Windows', '10.0.17134'), ('AMD64', 'Intel64 Family 6 Model 94 Stepping 3, GenuineIntel'), '3.6.6 | packaged by conda-forge | (default, Jul 26 2018, 11:48:23) ...')
Documentation for the latest version can always be found here, but if you would like to build a local copy you can find instructions to do so here.