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OpenSCM-Runner

OpenSCM-Runner provides a unified API for running emissions scenarios with different simple climate models.

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PyPI : PyPI PyPI: Supported Python versions PyPI install

Other info : License Last Commit Contributors

Full documentation can be found at: openscm-runner.readthedocs.io. We recommend reading the docs there because the internal documentation links don't render correctly on GitHub's viewer.

Installation

OpenSCM-Runner can be installed with conda or pip:

pip install openscm-runner
conda install -c conda-forge openscm-runner

Additional dependencies can be installed using

# To add notebook dependencies
pip install openscm-runner[notebooks]

# To add dependencies for all models
pip install openscm-runner[models]

# To add dependencies for MAGICC
pip install openscm-runner[magicc]

# To add dependencies for FaIR
pip install openscm-runner[fair]

# CICERO-SCM's Fortran binary requires no additional dependencies to be
# installed

# To add dependencies for CICERO-SCM's Python port
pip install openscm-runner[ciceroscmpy]

# If you are installing with conda, we recommend
# installing the extras by hand because there is no stable
# solution yet (issue here: https://github.com/conda/conda/issues/7502)

For developers

For development, we rely on poetry for all our dependency management. To get started, you will need to make sure that poetry is installed (instructions here, we found that pipx and pip worked better to install on a Mac).

For all of work, we use our Makefile. You can read the instructions out and run the commands by hand if you wish, but we generally discourage this because it can be error prone. In order to create your environment, run make virtual-environment.

If there are any issues, the messages from the Makefile should guide you through. If not, please raise an issue in the issue tracker.

For the rest of our developer docs, please see .