Hello Amr Al Abed
Your Discussion has gone 30 days without a reply. If you still need help with COMSOL and have an on-subscription license, please visit our Support Center for help.
If you do not hold an on-subscription license, you may find an answer in another Discussion or in the Knowledge Base.
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
9 years ago
12 set 2015, 13:05 GMT-4
I have the same question regarding all the variants for `sweeps`. Does anybody know the difference between them?
I have the same question regarding all the variants for `sweeps`. Does anybody know the difference between them?
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
8 years ago
18 mag 2017, 06:45 GMT-4
I am also puzzled by this question. anyone knows the difference?
I am also puzzled by this question. anyone knows the difference?
Walter Frei
COMSOL Employee
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
8 years ago
18 mag 2017, 14:08 GMT-4
Hello,
A parametric sweep is performed within the COMSOL Multiphysics GUI, so you have to have the software up and running.
A batch sweep is the same as a parametric sweep, but you simply run the software from the command line, without the GUI. Functionally, is is equivalent to the parametric sweep, it will take the same time to do a batch sweep as a parametric sweep. For details on this, please see:
www.comsol.com/blogs/how-to-run-simulations-in-batch-mode-from-the-command-line/
You can also launch a batch sweep from within the GUI itself, and keep working within the GUI. For details on this, please see:
www.comsol.com/blogs/the-power-of-the-batch-sweep/
A cluster sweep is only available if you're using a Floating Network License type (
www.comsol.com/products/licensing) and lets you solve on a cluster. That is, different nodes of the cluster will be solving different parameters, in parallel. So, a parametric sweep (or batch sweep) run on a single computer would solve all of the different sweep values sequentially (say 1000 different parameters, one after another.) A cluster sweep could distribute those 1000 different parameters onto, e.g. 100 different nodes, solving only 10 parameters on each cluster node, in parallel. This would cut total runtime by ~100-fold.
Hello,
A parametric sweep is performed within the COMSOL Multiphysics GUI, so you have to have the software up and running.
A batch sweep is the same as a parametric sweep, but you simply run the software from the command line, without the GUI. Functionally, is is equivalent to the parametric sweep, it will take the same time to do a batch sweep as a parametric sweep. For details on this, please see:
https://www.comsol.com/blogs/how-to-run-simulations-in-batch-mode-from-the-command-line/
You can also launch a batch sweep from within the GUI itself, and keep working within the GUI. For details on this, please see: https://www.comsol.com/blogs/the-power-of-the-batch-sweep/
A cluster sweep is only available if you're using a Floating Network License type (https://www.comsol.com/products/licensing) and lets you solve on a cluster. That is, different nodes of the cluster will be solving different parameters, in parallel. So, a parametric sweep (or batch sweep) run on a single computer would solve all of the different sweep values sequentially (say 1000 different parameters, one after another.) A cluster sweep could distribute those 1000 different parameters onto, e.g. 100 different nodes, solving only 10 parameters on each cluster node, in parallel. This would cut total runtime by ~100-fold.
Edgar J. Kaiser
Certified Consultant
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
8 years ago
18 mag 2017, 18:31 GMT-4
Functionally, is is equivalent to the parametric sweep, it will take the same time to do a batch sweep as a parametric sweep.
Walter is that correct? Shouldn't a small model run faster in a batch sweep? E.g. we have four parameter values, we allow 4 parallel processes on a 4 core machine and allow 1 core per process?
Cheers
Edgar
--
Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
www.emphys.com
[QUOTE]
Functionally, is is equivalent to the parametric sweep, it will take the same time to do a batch sweep as a parametric sweep. [/QUOTE]
Walter is that correct? Shouldn't a small model run faster in a batch sweep? E.g. we have four parameter values, we allow 4 parallel processes on a 4 core machine and allow 1 core per process?
Cheers
Edgar
--
Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
http://www.emphys.com