Hi again,
Yes, you can search for cpr in the document. On just about any pdf-viewer, the
key shortcut Ctrl-f should give you a search field. Entering cpr, and pressing
"Next" three times will bring you to the parameter overview with all its CPR
variants (page 1762).
Cheers,
Alf
__
Hi David,
It looks like you are using the tuning parameters I put in Pull Request 2669 in
opm-simulators. If you compile Flow from git and include that PR, those will be
your new defaults. I am surprised if those values are good for the Volve case
though. You can add the line:
use-cpr=True
to t
Hi Alf,
Thank you for your response.
Your suggested command for running CPR from the command-line (flow
VOLVE_2020ZZ_OPM.DATA --use-cpr=1) works fine for me.
Regarding the find facility, there does not seem to be an option to search for
free text (say "cpr") within the document. Am I missing some
How advanced is your project running on OPM? Comparable to those running
commercial scale Eclipse / VIP / Nexus / tNavigator ?
Sent from my iPhone
> On 30 Aug 2020, at 4:13 PM, Heikki Jutila wrote:
>
> Dear All,
>
> I tried to remember where the OPMRun download link is. I'm running OPM using
Hi Alf,
Thank you for your email.
My simulation is run using the following command:
flow --parameter-file=VOLVE_2020ZZ_OPM.PARAM
where VOLVE_2020ZZ_OPM.PARAM is as per the attached file.
Would your command "$ flow DECK.DATA --use-cpr" (modified as required) be put
in the .PARAM file?
Similar quest
Dear All,
I tried to remember where the OPMRun download link is. I'm running OPM using
Ubuntu 20.04 under WSL. OPM run seem sreally useful for scheduling
sensitivity runs and checking your deck's syntax.
Heikki Jutila
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