Mercurial > repos > public > sbplib
view +scheme/bcSetup.m @ 1031:2ef20d00b386 feature/advectionRV
For easier comparison, return both the first order and residual viscosity when evaluating the residual. Add the first order and residual viscosity to the state of the RungekuttaRV time steppers
author | Vidar Stiernström <vidar.stiernstrom@it.uu.se> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 17 Jan 2019 10:25:06 +0100 |
parents | b45a6dcb61ac |
children | 386ef449df51 |
line wrap: on
line source
% Takes a diffOp and a cell array of boundary condition definitions. % Each bc is a struct with the fields % * type -- Type of boundary condition % * boundary -- Boundary identifier % * data -- A function_handle for a function which provides boundary data.(see below) % Also takes S_sign which modifies the sign of the penalty function, [-1,1] % Returns a closure matrix and a forcing function S. % % The boundary data function can either be a function of time or a function of time and space coordinates. % In the case where it only depends on time it should return the data as grid function for the boundary. % In the case where it also takes space coordinates the number of space coordinates should match the number of dimensions of the problem domain. % For example in the 2D case: f(t,x,y). function [closure, S] = bcSetup(diffOp, bcs, S_sign) default_arg('S_sign', 1); assertType(bcs, 'cell'); assert(S_sign == 1 || S_sign == -1, 'S_sign must be either 1 or -1'); [closure, penalties] = scheme.bc.closureSetup(diffOp, bcs); S = scheme.bc.forcingSetup(diffOp, penalties, bcs, S_sign); end