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restart command

Syntax:

restart 0
restart N root
restart N file1 file2 

Examples:

restart 0
restart 1000 poly.restart
restart 1000 restart.*.equil
restart 10000 poly.%.1 poly.%.2 

Description:

Write out a binary restart file every so many timesteps as a run proceeds. A value of 0 means do not write out restart files. Using one filename as an argument will create a series of filenames which include the timestep in the filename. Using two filenames will produce only 2 restart files. LAMMPS will toggle between the 2 names as it writes successive restart files.

Similar to dump files, the restart filename(s) can contain two wild-card characters. If a "*" appears in the filename, it is replaced with the current timestep value. This is only recognized when a single filename is used (not when toggling back and forth). Thus, the 3rd example above creates restart files as follows: restart.1000.equil, restart.2000.equil, etc. If a single filename is used with no "*", then the timestep value is appended. E.g. the 2nd example above creates restart files as follows: poly.restart.1000, poly.restart.2000, etc.

If a "%" character appears in the restart filename(s), then one file is written for each processor and the "%" character is replaced with the processor ID from 0 to P-1. An additional file with the "%" replaced by "base" is also written, which contains global information. For example, the files written on step 1000 for filename restart.% would be restart.base.1000, restart.0.1000, restart.1.1000, ..., restart.P-1.1000. This creates smaller files and can be a fast mode of output and subsequent input on parallel machines that support parallel I/O.

Restart files are written on timesteps that are a multiple of N but not on the first timestep of a run or minimization. A restart file is not written on the last timestep of a run unless it is a multiple of N. A restart file is written on the last timestep of a minimization if N > 0 and the minimization converges.

See the read_restart command for information about what is stored in a restart file.

Restart files can be read by a read_restart command to restart a simulation from a particular state. Because the file is binary (to enable exact restarts), it may not be readable on another machine. In this case, the restart2data program in the tools directory can be used to convert a restart file to an ASCII data file. Both the read_restart command and restart2data tool can read in a restart file that was written with the "%" character so that multiple files were created.

Restrictions: none

Related commands:

write_restart, read_restart

Default:

restart 0