Incidently, remove the possibility of passing model derivatives as arguments to
the k_order_perturbation. That possibility was only used by the risky steady
state code.
Closes: #1338
— FCFLAGS needs to contain the compilation flags used when compiling Octave,
otherwise it fails at configure stage when looking for gfortran
— Explicitly add -L$OCTLIBDIR, because with Octave 5 it is no longer there, and
on Fedora the Octave libraries are no in the default linker search path
After simulating a block containing purely forward variables (thus of type
“evaluate backward”), the it_ variable of the evaluator would be left in an
inconsistent state (typically 0, which means that taking the value of a lagged
variable would lead to an invalid read).
By the way, fix a symmetric problem for backward blocks (which could
potentially create a invalid read for purely backward models).
Ref. #1727
- block trust region solver now available under solve_algo=13
It is essentially the same as solve_algo=4, except that Jacobian by finite
difference is not handled. A test file is added for that case
- block trust region solver with shortcut for equations that can be evaluated
is now available under solve_algo=14 (in replacement of the pure-MATLAB solver)
Closes: Enterprise/dynare#3
— add interface for more functions (cell, logical, struct)
— add new mexPrintf wrapper that trims and prints a newline
— functions that take indices of type mwIndex now 1-based indices
— improve the wrapper for mxArrayToString so that it returns a character scalar
In particular, higher order derivatives are now returned as sparse matrices by
the static/dynamic files, instead of 3-column matrices (which was inconsistent
with the M-file mode).
In Octave, when some values given to the sparse() function are numerically
zero, then the nzmax of the generated sparse matrix is shrinked accordingly;
while under MATLAB, the nzmax is the length of the vector of values, zeros
included.
The check at the top of
DynamicModelMFile::unpackSparseMatrixAndCopyIntoTwoDMatData() would then fail
under Octave if some higher-derivatives had an element which is symbolically
non-zero but numerically zero.
We therefore relax the check, and accordingly adapt the code that handles
numerical zeros.
This bug was uncovered by tests/pruning/AnSchorfheide_pruned_state_space.mod,
which was failing under Octave.
Because at some point throwing exceptions from MEX files (with mexErrMsgTxt())
was not working under Windows 64-bit, we had designed a workaround to avoid
using exceptions.
Most MEX files were returning an error code as their first (or sometimes last)
argument, and that code would have to be checked from the MATLAB code.
Since this workaround is no longer needed, this commit removes it. As a
consequence, the interface of many MEX files is modified.
For some background, see https://www.dynare.org/pipermail/dev/2010-September/000895.html
It applies the approximated policy function to a set of particles, using
Dynare++ routines.
There is support for parallelization, using Dynare++ multithreading
model (itself based on C++11 threads; we don’t use OpenMP because it is
incompatible with MKL). For the time being, default to a single thread. This
should be later refined through empirical testing.
This MEX solves nonlinear systems of equations using a trust region algorithm.
The problem is subdivided in smaller problems by doing a block
triangularisation of the Jacobian at the guess value, using the
Dulmage-Mendelsohn algorithm.
The interface of the MEX is simply:
[x, info] = block_trust_region(f, guess_value);
Where f is either a function handle or a string designating a function.
f must take one argument (the evaluation point), and return either one or two
arguments (the residuals and, optionally, the Jacobian).
On success, info=0; on failure, info=1.