eWoms [0] is a C++ software framework concerned with fully-implicit numerical models for flow and transport in porous media. It gets developed as an integral part of the Open Porous Media (OPM) initiative [1]. Like all OPM software, eWoms is made available under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).
The name "eWoms" is an acronym for the German phrase "eierlegende Wollmilchsau" (egg-laying wool-milk pig) and reflects the fact that its goal is to be an all-encompassing simulation framework for flow and transport processes in porous media.
To achieve this goal, eWoms aims to be as generic as possible, easy to extend, well performing, and well maintained: It is -- in principle -- capable of simulating all macro-scale scenarios that are relevant for academic research and industrial applications which involve flow and transport processes in porous media, while performance-wise, simulators based on eWoms are often on-par or even faster than the best commercial solutions.
eWoms uses the same agile development model as all OPM modules; in particular the main development branch is considered to be unstable and it thus often incorporates "hard" API changes without a deprecation period. For this reason, if you are primarily interested in using eWoms, you are advised to stick to a stable/release version and to carefully read the change log before upgrading. eWoms releases are part of OPM releases, i.e., approximately two are prepared each year.
As a base, eWoms uses the DUNE [2] numerical C++ framework, and it has been spun off from the source code of the Dumux [3] porous media simulation suite. Be aware, though, that although Dumux and eWoms have similar goals and share quite a few concepts, their implementations have diverged considerably since separation.
For compiling and installing eWoms, DUNE's 'dunecontrol' utility is recommended to be used. For details, confer the INSTALL file.
eWoms is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL) version two or -- at your option -- any later version. The exact wording of the GPL can either be read online [4, 5] or it can be found in the COPYING file.
Please note that eWoms' license -- unlike DUNE's -- does not feature a template exception. In particular, this means that programs which use eWoms header files must make the program's full source code available under the GPL to everyone to whom it is distributed to.
[0] https://github.com/OPM/ewoms [1] http://www.opm-project.org [2] https://dune-project.org [3] http://dumux.org [4] https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.html [5] https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html