4.1.1. AMS driver¶
The AMS driver is a new program introduced in the 2018 release that unifies the way in which different computational engines of Amsterdam Modelling Suite are called. You can find more information about AMS in the corresponding part of the documentation.
4.1.1.1. Preparing input¶
Note
Input files handling in the AMS driver is case insensitive.
The input file for the AMS driver consists of keys and values organized in blocks and subblocks:
Task GeometryOptimization
GeometryOptimization
Convergence
Gradients 1.0e-4
End
End
Properties
NormalModes true
End
System
Atoms
C 0.00000000 0.00000000 0.00000000
H 0.63294000 -0.63294000 -0.63294000
H -0.63294000 0.63294000 -0.63294000
H 0.63294000 0.63294000 0.63294000
H -0.63294000 -0.63294000 0.63294000
End
End
Engine DFTB
Model DFTB3
ResourcesDir DFTB.org/3ob-3-1
EndEngine
Such a structure can be reflected in a natural way by a multi-level character of Settings.
The example input file presented above can be generated by:
s = Settings()
#AMS driver input
s.input.ams.Task = 'GeometryOptimization'
s.input.ams.GeometryOptimization.Convergence.Gradients = 1.0e-4
s.input.ams.Properties.NormalModes = 'true'
#DFTB engine input
s.input.DFTB.Model = 'DFTB3'
s.input.DFTB.ResourcesDir = 'DFTB.org/3ob-3-1'
m = Molecule('methane.xyz')
j = AMSJob(molecule=m, settings=s)
j.run()
If an entry is a regular key-value pair it is printed in one line (like Task GeometryOptimization above).
If an entry is a nested Settings instance it is printed as a block and entries inside this instance correspond to the contents of that block.
One of the blocks is special: the engine block.
It defines the computational engine used to perform the task defined in all other blocks.
The contents of the engine block are not processed by the AMS driver, but rather passed to the corresponding engine instead.
Because of that every AMS input file can be seen as composed of two distinct parts: the engine input (everything inside the engine block) and the driver input (everything apart from the engine block).
That distinction is reflected by how a Settings instance for AMSJob is structured.
As we can see, the input branch of job settings is divided into two branches: the ams branch for the driver input and the DFTB branch for the engine input.
Note
In general, PLAMS will use all the contents of the ams branch (spelling not case-sensitive) to construct the driver input and the contents of every other branch to construct a separate engine block with the same name as the branch (like DFTB in the example above).
In the present moment only applications with a single engine block are implemented in the AMS driver, but that will most likely change in the near future.
The contents of each branch of myjob.settings.input are translated to a string using the same logic:
Entries within each block (including the top level) are listed in the alphabetical order.
Both keys and values are kept in their original case.
Strings used as values can contain spaces and all kinds of special characters, including new lines. They are printed in an unchanged form in the input file.
If you need to put a key without any value, you can use
Trueor an empty string as a value:s.input.ams.block.key = True s.input.ams.otherkey = '' ### translates to: block key end otherkey
If a value of a key is
FalseorNonethe key is omitted.En empty
Settingsinstance produces an empty block:s.input.ams.emptyblock = Settings() s.input.ams.otherblock #short syntax equivalent to the line above ### translates to: emptyblock end otherblock end
More instances of the same key within one block can be achieved by using a list of values instead of a single value:
s.input.ams.constraints.atom = [1,5,4] s.input.ams.constraints.block = ['ligand', 'residue'] ### translates to: constraints atom 1 atom 5 atom 4 block ligand block residue end
Some blocks require (or allow) something to be put in the header line, next to the block name. Special key
_his helpful in these situations:s.input.ams.block._h = 'header=very important' s.input.ams.block.key1 = 'value1' s.input.ams.block.key2 = 'value2' ### translates to: someblock header=very important key1 value1 key2 value2 end
Another kind of special key can be used to override the default alphabetic ordering of entries within a block, or just to insert arbitrary strings into the block:
s.input.ams.block._1 = 'entire line that has to be the first line of block' s.input.ams.block._2 = 'second line' s.input.ams.block._4 = 'I will not be printed' s.input.ams.block.key1 = 'value1' s.input.ams.block.key2 = 'value2' ### translates to: block entire line that has to be the first line of block second line key1 value1 key2 value2 end
If a value of a key needs to be a path to some KF file with results of a previous AMS calculation, an instance of
AMSJoborAMSResults(or directlyKFFile) can be used (seeAMSJob.get_input()for details):oldjob = AMSJob(...) oldjob.run() newjob = AMSJob(...) newjob.settings.input.ams.loadsystem.file = oldjob newjob.settings.input.ams.loadengine = (oldjob, 'dftb') ### translates to: loadengine /home/user/plams_workdir/oldjob/dftb.rkf loadsystem file = /home/user/plams_workdir/oldjob/ams.rkf end
Note
The algorithm translating Settings contents into an input file does not check the correctness of the given data - it simply takes keys and values from Settings and prints them in the text file.
Due to that you are not going to be warned if you make a typo, use a wrong keyword or improper syntax.
4.1.1.2. Preparing runscript¶
Runscripts for the AMS driver are very simple (see AMSJob.get_runscript()).
The only adjustable option (apart from usual pre, post, shebang and stdout_redirect which are common for all single jobs) is myjob.settings.runscript.nproc, indicating the number of parallel processes to run AMS with (like with -n flag or NSCM environmental variable).
4.1.1.3. Molecule handling¶
There are several ways in which the description of the simulated system can be supplied to AMSJob.
The most convenient one is simply by passing a Molecule instance:
mol = Molecule('/path/to/some/file.xyz')
myjob = AMSJob(name='test', molecule=mol, settings=...)
or:
mol = Molecule('/path/to/some/file.xyz')
myjob = AMSJob(...)
myjob.molecule = mol
A Molecule instance stored as the molecule attribute is automatically processed during the input file preparation and printed in the proper format (see AMS manual for details).
Various details of this process can be adjusted based on attributes of the supplied Molecule.
If mol.lattice is nonempty, the information about periodicity vectors is printed to the lattice subblock of the system block.
If the supplied lattice consists of 1 or 2 vectors that do not follow the convention requied by AMS (1D – vector aligned with X axis; 2D – vectors aligned with XY plane) the whole system is rotated to meet these criteria.
If mol.properties.charge exists, it is used as the charge key in the system block.
Moreover, each Atom present in the supplied Molecule has its own properties attribute that can be used to adjust the details of the line generated for this atom in the atoms block:
- The atomic symbol is generated based on the atomic number stored in the
atnumattribute of theAtom. The atomic number of 0 corresponds to the “dummy atom” for which the symbol is empty. - If
atom.properties.ghostexists and isTrue, the atomic symbol is prefixed withGh.. - If
atom.properties.nameexists, the name is added after the atomic symbol, separated by a single dot. - Leading, trailing and double dots are removed from the atomic symbol.
- If
atom.properties.suffixexists, it is placed at the end of the line, after the numerical coordinates (it should ba a string)
Example:
mol = Molecule('xyz/Ethanol.xyz')
mol[1].properties.ghost = True
mol[2].properties.name = 'D'
mol[3].properties.ghost = True
mol[3].properties.name = 'T'
mol[4].properties.atnum = 0
mol[4].properties.name = 'J.XYZ'
mol[5].properties.atnum = 0
mol[5].properties.name = 'J.ASD'
mol[5].properties.ghost = True
mol[6].properties.suffix = 'whatever text'
myjob = AMSJob(molecule=mol)
The corresponding fragment of the input file produced by the above code:
system
atoms
1 Gh.C 0.01247 0.02254 1.08262
2 C.D -0.00894 -0.01624 -0.43421
3 Gh.H.T -0.49334 0.93505 1.44716
4 J.XYZ 1.05522 0.04512 1.44808
5 Gh.J.ASD -0.64695 -1.12346 2.54219
6 H 0.50112 -0.91640 -0.80440 whatever text
7 H 0.49999 0.86726 -0.84481
8 H -1.04310 -0.02739 -0.80544
9 O -0.66442 -1.15471 1.56909
end
end
Another, more cumbersome way to provide the system information to AMSJob is to manually populate the system block in job settings:
s = Settings()
s.input.ams.system.atoms._1 = 'H 0.0 0.0 0.0'
s.input.ams.system.atoms._2 = 'O 1.0 0.0 0.0'
s.input.ams.system.charge = 1.0
#other settings adjustments
myjob = AMSJob(settings=s)
An alternative way of supplying molecular coordinates is to use the GeometryFile key in the system block:
s = Settings()
s.input.ams.system.geometryfile = '/path/to/some/file.xyz'
#other settings adjustments
myjob = AMSJob(settings=s)
(Currently only the extended XYZ format for details) is supported.)
Finally, one could use the LoadSystem top-level key and point to an existing .rkf file with results of some previous calculation:
s = Settings()
s.input.loadsystem = '/path/to/some/ams.rkf'
#other settings adjustments
myjob = AMSJob(settings=s)
4.1.1.3.1. Multiple molecules¶
The AMS driver allows multiple occurences of the system block in the input file.
Different system blocks are distinguished by their names defined in the header of the block:
system protein
atoms
...
end
end
system ligand
atoms
...
end
end
The system without such a name is considered the main system.
Multiple systems can be used in AMSJob by setting the molecule attribute to a dictionary, instead of a single Molecule.
Such a dictionary should have strings as keys and Molecule instances as values.
The main system should have '' (an empty string) as a key.
Other methods of providing the contents of the system block mentioned above can also be used to provide multiple system blocks.
myjob.settings.input.ams.system can be a list containg multiple Settings instances, one for each system.
Each such instance can be have manually filled atoms block or use the geometryfile key.
Special header _h key can be used to set headers and hence names of different system blocks.
Multiple instances of the LoadSystem key (also provided as a list, also with _h headers) can also be used.
All the methods mentioned above (molecule attribute, GeometryFile, LoadSystem, manual system block preparation) can be combined in any configuration.
In case of a conflict, the data stored in settings.input.ams.system takes precedence over molecule.
It is, however, the user’s responsibility to make sure that among all the systems provided there is exactly one main system (without a name).
4.1.1.4. AMSJob API¶
-
class
AMSJob(name='plamsjob', molecule=None, settings=None, depend=None)[source]¶ A class representing a single computation with AMS driver. The corresponding results type is
AMSResults.-
get_input()[source]¶ Generate the input file. This method is just a wrapper around
_serialize_input().Each instance of
AMSJoborAMSResultspresent as a value insettings.inputbranch is replaced with an absolute path toams.rkffile of that job.If you need to use a path to some engine specific
.rkffile rather than the mainams.rkffile, you can to it by supplying a tuple(x, name)wherexis an instance ofAMSJoborAMSResultsandnameis a string with the name of the.rkffile you want. For example,(myjob, 'dftb')will transform to the absolute path todftb.rkffile inmyjob’s folder, if such a file is present.Instances of
KFFileare replaced with absolute paths to corresponding files.
-
get_runscript()[source]¶ Generate the runscript. Returned string is of the form:
AMS_JOBNAME=jobname AMS_RESULTSDIR=. $ADFBIN/ams [-n nproc] <jobname.in [>jobname.out]
-nflag is added ifsettings.runscript.nprocexists.[>jobname.out]is used based onsettings.runscript.stdout_redirect.
-
check()[source]¶ Check if
termination statusvariable fromGeneralsection of main KF file equalsNORMAL TERMINATION.
-
hash_input()[source]¶ Calculate the hash of the input file.
All instances of
AMSJoborAMSResultspresent as values insettings.inputbranch are replaced with hashes of corresponding job’s inputs. Instances ofKFFileare replaced with absolute paths to corresponding files.
-
classmethod
from_inputfile(filename: str, heredoc_delimit: str = 'eor', **kwargs) → scm.plams.interfaces.adfsuite.ams.AMSJob[source]¶ Construct an
AMSJobinstance from an ADF inputfile or runfile.If a runscript is provide than this method will attempt to extract the input file based on the heredoc delimiter (see heredoc_delimit).
-
static
settings_to_mol(s: scm.plams.core.settings.Settings) → dict[source]¶ Pop the s.input.ams.system block from a settings instance and convert it into a dictionary of molecules.
The provided settings should be in the same style as the ones produced by the SCM input parser. Dictionary keys are taken from the header of each system block. The existing s.input.ams.system block is removed in the process, assuming it was present in the first place.
-
4.1.1.5. AMSResults API¶
-
class
AMSResults(*args, **kwargs)[source]¶ A specialized
Resultssubclass for accessing the results ofAMSJob.-
collect()[source]¶ Collect files present in the job folder. Use parent method from
Results, then create an instance ofKFFilefor each.rkffile present in the job folder. Collect these files inrkfsdictionary, with keys being filenames without.rkfextension.The information about
.rkffiles generated by engines is taken from the mainams.rkffile.This method is called automatically during the final part of the job execution and there is no need to call it manually.
-
refresh()[source]¶ Refresh the contents of
fileslist.Use the parent method from
Results, then look atKFFileinstances present inrkfsdictionary and check if they point to existing files. If not, try to reinstantiate them with current job path (that can happen while loading a pickled job after the entire job folder was moved).
-
engine_names()[source]¶ Return a list of all names of engine specific
.rkffiles. The identifier of the main result file ('ams') is not present in the returned list, only engine specific names are listed.
-
rkfpath(file='ams')[source]¶ Return the absolute path of a chosen
.rkffile.The file argument should be the identifier of the file to read. It defaults to
'ams'. To access a file calledsomething.rkfyou need to call this function withfile='something'. If there exists only one engine results.rkffile, you can call this function withfile='engine'to access this file.
-
readrkf(section, variable, file='ams')[source]¶ Read data from section/variable of a chosen
.rkffile.The file argument should be the identifier of the file to read. It defaults to
'ams'. To access a file calledsomething.rkfyou need to call this function withfile='something'. If there exists only one engine results.rkffile, you can call this function withfile='engine'to access this file.The type of the returned value depends on the type of variable defined inside KF file. It can be: single int, list of ints, single float, list of floats, single boolean, list of booleans or string.
Note
If arguments section or variable are incorrect (not present in the chosen file), the returned value is
None. Please mind the fact that KF files are case sensitive.
-
read_rkf_section(section, file='ams')[source]¶ Return a dictionary with all variables from a given section of a chosen
.rkffile.The file argument should be the identifier of the file to read. It defaults to
'ams'. To access a file calledsomething.rkfyou need to call this function withfile='something'. If there exists only one engine results.rkffile, you can call this function withfile='engine'to access this file.Note
If section is not present in the chosen file, the returned value is an empty dictionary. Please mind the fact that KF files are case sensitive.
-
get_rkf_skeleton(file='ams')[source]¶ Return a dictionary with the structure of a chosen
.rkffile. Each key corresponds to a section name with the value being a set of variable names present in that section.The file argument should be the identifier of the file to read. It defaults to
'ams'. To access a file calledsomething.rkfyou need to call this function withfile='something'. If there exists only one engine results.rkffile, you can call this function withfile='engine'to access this file.
-
get_molecule(section, file='ams')[source]¶ Return a
Moleculeinstance stored in a given section of a chosen.rkffile.The file argument should be the identifier of the file to read. It defaults to
'ams'. To access a file calledsomething.rkfyou need to call this function withfile='something'. If there exists only one engine results.rkffile, you can call this function withfile='engine'to access this file.All data used by this method is taken from the chosen
.rkffile. Themoleculeattribute of the corresponding job is ignored.
-
get_input_molecule()[source]¶ Return a
Moleculeinstance with initial coordinates.All data used by this method is taken from
ams.rkffile. Themoleculeattribute of the corresponding job is ignored.
-
get_main_molecule()[source]¶ Return a
Moleculeinstance with final coordinates.All data used by this method is taken from
ams.rkffile. Themoleculeattribute of the corresponding job is ignored.
-
get_history_molecule(step)[source]¶ Return a
Moleculeinstance with coordinates taken from a particular step in theHistorysection ofams.rkffile.All data used by this method is taken from
ams.rkffile. Themoleculeattribute of the corresponding job is ignored.
-
get_engine_results(engine=None)[source]¶ Return a dictionary with contents of
AMSResultssection from an engine results.rkffile.The engine argument should be the identifier of the file you wish to read. To access a file called
something.rkfyou need to call this function withengine='something'. The engine argument can be omitted if there’s only one engine results file in the job folder.
-
get_engine_properties(engine=None)[source]¶ Return a dictionary with all the entries from
Propertiessection from an engine results.rkffile.The engine argument should be the identifier of the file you wish to read. To access a file called
something.rkfyou need to call this function withengine='something'. The engine argument can be omitted if there’s only one engine results file in the job folder.
-
get_energy(unit='au', engine=None)[source]¶ Return final bond energy, expressed in unit.
The engine argument should be the identifier of the file you wish to read. To access a file called
something.rkfyou need to call this function withengine='something'. The engine argument can be omitted if there’s only one engine results file in the job folder.
-
get_frequencies(unit='cm^-1', engine=None)[source]¶ Return a numpy array of vibrational frequencies, expressed in unit.
The engine argument should be the identifier of the file you wish to read. To access a file called
something.rkfyou need to call this function withengine='something'. The engine argument can be omitted if there’s only one engine results file in the job folder.
-
recreate_molecule()[source]¶ Recreate the input molecule for the corresponding job based on files present in the job folder. This method is used by
load_external().If
ams.rkfis present in the job folder, extract data from theInputMoleculesection.
-
recreate_settings()[source]¶ Recreate the input
Settingsinstance for the corresponding job based on files present in the job folder. This method is used byload_external().If
ams.rkfis present in the job folder, extract user input and parse it back to aSettingsinstance usingscm.input_parsermodule. Remove thesystembranch from that instance.
-