The following classes (and their children) will be non-copyable and
non-assignable after Cantera 2.3:
- ThermoPhase
- Kinetics
- Transport
- Species
- SpeciesThermoInterpType
- MultiSpeciesThermo
- VPSSMgr
- PDSS
- ResidJacEval
- RootFind
If Cantera is being installed to /usr/local, then on Debian-based distros, we
want the Python module to end up in /usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/dist-packages,
which is actually the default behavior. However, /usr/local/... is *not* the
default installation prefix for Python modules on some other distros (On Fedora,
at least, it's /usr/) so using the default needs to be conditioned on the actual
distro.
The paths added from the CANTERA_DATA environment variable should be searched
before hard-coded paths which are determined based on the installation location.
This helps with debugging cases where the solver fails, especially, if the
failures are not convergence-related and cannot be resolved by successive
attempts at solving the problem.
- Use CXXFLAGS to pass flags to C++ compiler (not CCFLAGS)
- Set CXXFLAGS based on flags that Cantera was compiled with (which will include
things like -pthread and -std=c++0x as necessary
- Remove incorrect / unused target for the target binary
- Add the generated binary to things remove by 'make clean'
If we can compile and run an F90 program that is sufficient. The
previous test required the C compiler to be able to link to the
Fortran standard library, which isn't actually necessary, and would
fail in some cases (such as brew-installed gfortran on OS X).
Matlab 2016a now uses some C++11 features, and symbols included in some of the
Matlab libraries conflict with the versions from system libraries that Cantera
is compiled with and expects to find, resulting in difficult-to-diagnose memory
errors.
At some point (after version 2014b), Matlab started passing an additional
argument to 'display', which broke the logic for setting the default
threshold. This caused all composition data to be excluded from the report shown
by typing the name of the phase object.