Skip to content

eic/epic

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
Dec 2, 2022
Aug 6, 2022
Sep 19, 2022
Dec 2, 2022
Dec 2, 2022
Oct 6, 2022
May 27, 2022
Jul 26, 2022
Jul 26, 2022
Dec 2, 2022
Oct 28, 2022
Jul 26, 2022
May 27, 2022
Oct 6, 2022
Oct 12, 2022
May 27, 2022
Oct 27, 2022
Oct 14, 2022
Jun 14, 2022

Repository files navigation

Overview

The EPIC Detector at IP6 for Electron-Ion Collider experiment.

Detector geometry viewer:


Browse latest

Detector views

Constants listing

Getting Started

You will likely want to use this repository along with the IP6 repository:

git clone https://github.com/eic/epic.git
git clone https://github.com/eic/ip6.git
ln -s ../ip6/ip6 epic/ip6

Compilation

To configure, build, and install the geometry (to the install directory), use the following commands:

cmake -B build -S . -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=install
cmake --build build
cmake --install build

To load the geometry, you can use the scripts in the install directory:

source install/setup.sh

or

source install/setup.csh

Adding/changing detector geometry

Hint: Use the CI/CD pipelines.

To avoid dealing with setting up all the dependencies, we recommend using the continuous integration/continuous deployment (CI/CD) pipelines to make changes and assess their effects. Any feedback to help this process is appreciated.

Here is how to begin:

  1. Look at existing detector constructions and reuse if possible. Note that "compact detector descriptions" -> xml files, and "detector construction" -> cpp file.
  2. Modify xml file or detector construction.
  3. Create a WIP (or draft) merge request or pull request and look at the CI output for debugging. Then go to back to 2 if changes are needed.
  4. Remove the WIP/Draft part of the merge request if you would like to see your changes merged into the main.

See:

Compiling (avoid it)

First, see if the use case above is best for you. It most likely is and can save a lot of time for newcomers. To run the simulation locally, we suggest using the singularity image. More details can be found at the links below:

Related useful links