<metapackage xmlns:os="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install" xmlns="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install">
  <group distversion="openSUSE Tumbleweed">
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>science</name>
        <summary>Software for Scientists and Engineers</summary>
        <description>This project provides software for engineering and natural science.
http://en.opensuse.org/Portal:Science

If you like to help to maintain the repository, please contact the respective maintainer:
http://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Science_team

For electrical engineering see electronics project:
https://build.opensuse.org/project/show/electronics</description>
        <url>https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/science/Factory/</url>
      </repository>
      <repository recommended="false">
        <name>openSUSE:Factory</name>
        <summary>The next openSUSE distribution</summary>
        <description>openSUSE Tumbleweed: The Bleeding Edge, Perfected.
Tumbleweed is the ultimate rolling release distribution, providing the latest software as it’s released, built upon a foundation of world-class stability and testing.

* Always Current: Get the newest kernel, IDEs, desktops, and applications automatically.

* Powerfully Stable: Experience the velocity of a rolling release without sacrificing the reliability you depend on.

* Engineered for Professionals: The top choice for Developers, Power Users, and openSUSE Contributors who need the best tools for the job.

If you demand the latest stable software, your choice is Tumbleweed.

Staging dashboard is located at: https://build.opensuse.org/staging_workflows/openSUSE:Factory 

List of known devel projects: https://build.opensuse.org/package/view_file/openSUSE:Factory:Staging/dashboard/devel_projects

Have a look at http://en.opensuse.org/Portal:Factory for more details.</description>
        <url>https://download.opensuse.org/tumbleweed/repo/oss/</url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>diy</name>
        <summary>A block-parallel library</summary>
        <description>Diy is a block-parallel library for implementing scalable algorithms
that can execute both in-core and out-of-core. The same program can be
executed with one or more threads per MPI process, seamlessly
combining distributed-memory message passing with shared-memory thread
parallelism.  The abstraction enabling these capabilities is block
parallelism; blocks and their message queues are mapped onto
processing elements (MPI processes or threads) and are migrated
between memory and storage by the diy runtime. Complex communication
patterns, including neighbor exchange, merge reduction, swap
reduction, and all-to-all exchange, are possible in- and out-of-core
in diy.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
</metapackage>
