cres
This crate implements the cell resampling algorithm for the elimination of negative weights in Monte Carlo collider event samples. The algorithm is described in
Unbiased Elimination of Negative Weights in Monte Carlo Samples
J. Andersen, A. Maier
arXiv:2109.07851
Efficient negative-weight elimination in large high-multiplicity Monte Carlo event samples
Jeppe R. Andersen, Andreas Maier, Daniel MaƮtre
arXiv:2303.15246
Installation
If Rust and Cargo are installed on your system, run
cargo install cres
Precompiled executables are available on hepforge.
To install the development version, clone this repository and run
cargo install --path path/to/local/cres/repository
Check the Features section for more options.
To generate shell command completion, run
cres-generate-shell-completion SHELL
For bash and fish, command completion should work upon the next login. For other shells, the completion code is written to standard output. Consult your shell's documentation if you are unsure what to do with it. To list the supported shells, run
cres-generate-shell-completion --help
Usage
The basic usage is
cres -a JETALGO -R JETR --jetpt JETPT --max-cell-size R -o OUT.HEPMC2 IN.HEPMC2
This takes a file IN.HEPMC2 (or several files) in hepmc2 or Les
Houches Event format with mixed-weight events and produces a file
OUT.HEPMC2 with a smaller contribution from negative weights. The
input file can be compressed with bzip2, gzip, zstd, or lz4. The input
format is detected automatically, the output format can be set with
the --outformat option and defaults to hepmc2.
We recommend to set the jet algorithm JETALGO, jet radius JETR,
and minimum jet transverse momentum JETPT to the same values that
were used to generate the input events. The supported jet algorithms
are anti-kt, kt, and Cambridge-Aachen. When including QED corrections,
for instance through a shower, one should also set
--leptonalgorithm, --leptonradius, and --leptonpt.
Setting a maximum cell radius R is optional, but highly
recommended. Lower values lead to much faster resampling and smaller
smearing effects. Larger values eliminate a larger fraction of
negative weights. It is recommended to start with a value between 1
and 10 and adjust as needed.
Options
To see a full list of options with short descriptions run
cres --help
The most important options are
-
--max-cell-sizecan be used to limit the size of the generated cells. This ensures that weights are only transferred between events which are sufficiently similar. The downside is that not all negative event weights will be removed.Cell resampling is much faster with a small cell size limit. It is therefore recommended to start with a small value, for example 10, and gradually increase the value if too many negative weights are left.
-
--leptonalgorithm,--leptonradius,--leptonptenable clustering for leptons and photons. These options should be set whenever QED corrections are included, for example through showering. -
--ptweightspecifies how much transverse momenta affect distances between particles with momenta p and q according to the formulad(p, q) = \sqrt{ ptweight^2 (p_\perp - q_\perp)^2 + \sum (p_i - q_i)^2 } -
With
--minweightevents are also unweighted in addition to the resampling. Events with weightw < minweightare discarded with probability1-|w|/minweightand reweighted tosign(w) * minweightotherwise. Finally, all event weights are rescaled to exactly preserve the original sum of weights. The seed for unweighting can be chosen with the--seedoption.
There are too many options
To avoid cluttering the command line, options can be saved in an argfile. Each line should contain exactly one option, and option name and value have to be separated by '='. For example:
--jetalgorithm=anti-kt
--jetradius=0.4
--jetpt=30
The argfile can be used like this:
cres @argfile -o OUT.HEPMC2 IN.HEPMC2
Environment variables
The CRES_LOG environment variable allows fine-grained control over
the command line output. For example, to see the debugging output of
the jet clustering, set
CRES_LOG=jetty=debug,cres=info
See the env_logger crate for a
comprehensive documentation.
By default, cres uses as many cores as possible. For small event
samples, limiting the number of threads can be faster. You can set the
number of threads with the --threads command line option or with the
RAYON_NUM_THREADS environment variable.
Features
To install cres with additional features, add --features name1,name2
to your installation command. Default features don't have to be added
manually. To disable them, add the --no-default-features flag.
Default features
-
multiweight: Enables the--weightsoption for treating multiple weights in one run. If you only want to consider a single weight you can disable this feature to save some memory and computing time. -
lhef: Support for reading and writing files in the Les Houches Event format.
Non-default features
-
ntuple: Support for reading and writing ROOT ntuple files. This requires a recent version oflibclangand a ROOT installation withroot-configin the executable path.Linking may fail due to a cargo bug. In that case, determine the necessary flags by running
root-config --libsand manually add them, e.g.RUSTFLAGS='-C link-arg=-lCore' cargo install cres --features ntuple -
stripper-xml: Experimental support for the XML format used by STRIPPER. -
capi: Enables the C API for usingcresas a C library. For examples, see the examples subdirectory. The API is limited and only available on unixoid platforms. It will be extended on request.
Use as a library
For full flexibility like custom distance functions cres can be used
as a library. For examples, see the
examples
subdirectory. The API is documented on
docs.rs.