Monday, September 27, 2010

Revit 2011 Subscription Advantage Pack

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So what goodies does the Revit 2011 Subscription Advantage Release have for us?

Revit Server

Many users and firms who have deployed Revit are using worksharing,this is the ability to allow multiply users to work on the same model. By enabling worksharing and sub-dividing the central model into worksets, users can take a copy of the central file, this becomes there local copy. Any changes that they make to the local copy can be published to the central model. At the same time changes made by others can also be sync’d between the central file and their local file. Whilst the initial concept is daunting, once you have the appropriate standards and protocols in place, you have your staff trained, worksharing works well.

Now over the last couple of years, how firms do business has changed and this is largely due to the internet. So rather than working in the same office, these days it’s come place for designs team to be disbursed between two offices in the same geographical location or even across different geographical locations. Lots of different solutions have been employed to try and solve this headache, such as using remote desktop, blade servers, high speed WAN connections, Riverbed, model exchanging etc.

Therefore, with the ever increasing requirement it was only a matter of time before we saw Autodesk extend Revits worksharing functionality from a LAN setup to WAN based. Revit 2011 subscription extension finally makes this concept possible, with the introduction of Revit Server.

So what is Revit server and how does it actually work? Revit Server is basically an extension of the typical worksharing setup. In a server setup the central model resides on a central server which then communicates with a local server across a WAN. Users still take locally copies of the central model which exist on the local server. The big difference is that the local server copy is silently requesting updates from the central server. Updates are stored on the local server so that they are immediately available when the user requires them. When a Reload Latest is performed, the local model is automatically updated with the data stored on the local server. At the same time the local server connects with the central server and requests any additional updates. As updates reside on the local server, the transparent movement of data in the background means that updates are quicker. It is certainly not the case that users have to wait for updates, as data is transferred across the WAN.

If a user decides to Sync with Central; first a Reload Latest updates the local model with changes made by other team members; the central model is also updated to reflect changes made to the local copy. Once the changes and updates have been made to the central file residing on the local server, the local server then sends the updates to the central server.

WAN configuration

You can also make the local server and central server reside in one location, as in the example below, it is not the case that you would need a separate Central Server.

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  • You connect to your server via the Connect to Revit Server icon.

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  • This opens this dialogue and allows you to connect to the server.

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  • On the open dialogue, you will see your servers listed.

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Administration

To administer the Server setup, the Revit Server Administration tool provides model management and review capabilities. The server configuration should be setup by an IT administrator or BIM manager, certainly careful planning is required before embarking on a server setup. Once again, ensuring robust standards and processes are in place, is essential. The Server Administrator tool is a browser-based tool and this allows the BIM manager to manage a server based projects. Projects can be renamed, deleted, folders and central models moved on the central server. Revit server comprises of two main components, your regular copy of Revit and the server component. The server component can act as a local server or a central server. Server component must be installed on a Windows server with the following specifications.

  • Microsoft Windows Server® 2008, 64 bit (not 2008 R2)
  • Microsoft Internet Information Server 7.0
  • Web Services
  • Microsoft .NET 3.5 SP1
  • Prefer a project server doesn’t have office email exchange and other web heavy applications

Revit Server Administrator tool requires Microsoft Internet Explorer 7.0 or newer. The Silverlight plug-in will also be installed as a by product of using this application.It should also be noted that the connection needs to be behind the firewall so if you want remote firms to connect, they would need to do this via a VPN access or remote desktop.

A couple of points to note, users can’t delete, rename or move central files. Editing request feature has been disabled. You can’t rollback, as this feature has been disabled. It is also no longer possible to work at “risk”. Finally, the Work sharing Monitor does not function with a Revit Server, but this will be replaced by a BlueStreak add-in monitoring tool, but this is due out in the next few months. Also, if you do have Riverbed enabled you will see some benefits from your investment, because you will see some acceleration.

Process

So will this finally start to connect dispersed teams together and bring together true multi-collaboration? For sure, this is what many firms have been striving to achieve and for version 1, this is a great step forward. I am well aware that this project has been a number of years in development. I remember speaking with an Autodesk guy ( under NDA obviously! ) at AU over 3 years ago about the vision and finally this subscription release turns vision into reality.

Conceptual Energy Analysis (CEA)

With the continued focus and requirements for Sustainable design, a few years back Autodesk started to ask questions of the Revit user base. What did they actually need to allow them to understand the sustainable requirements of a building, particularly at the conceptual stage of design? Architects felt that they needed tools that would allow them to have sensible conversations with Engineers, be proactive in the sustainable without being too heavy weight in software terms. Obviously there are tools like IES and Ecotect, but to be honest they are not integrated within the Revit environment. Whilst gbXML can be exported out from a Revit model to other applications, it meant that a designer would have to go outside his or her comfort zone and start to learn additional tools. To top that, gbXML export has never been that great.

image So Autodesk have come up with CEA, technically referred to as the Conceptual Energy Analysis, which is focused around energy analysis of conceptual designs.To engage in the sustainable discussion, it makes obvious sense to start early.

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So the basic workflow is as follows:-

  1. You start by building a conceptual mass

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  1. You next create an analytical model from the massing model

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  1. You then define data and apply this to the the model such as generic materials, location and operating hours of the building etc

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  1. You can also make adjustments to the analytical model and apply items like shading.
  2. You can also sketch on surface of the mass and add custom glazing apertures.

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  1. This data is then pushed to the cloud and calculations are performed. You can submit multiply calculations at once and as the cloud is doing the number crunching you can continue working.

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  1. Calculations are reported back in an html style reports and compare comparison dialogue. These results can be emailed, exported or printed.

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Results

The whole process allows for true iterative sustainable design, as you can easily go back go back to your original mass, make modifications and run the calculation again. Whilst you will have to make assumptions about the design, but iterative integrated process should really assist the designer at early stages of design. What these tools are doing is giving you a comparative results between different design options. At present the data behind the analysis can’t be altered; the reality is that the results value given back may not necessarily meet your exact local cost of energy for instance, but this really doesn’t matter. What the results able you to do is to compare difference, what performs better or worse allowing you to make good decisions.

Revit Structure 2011 Extensions

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The extensions for Revit Structure users will include Revit Server as well as the following extensions.

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6 comments :

Arq. Hernán Grimberg said...

Thank you, but how do I download this? Is this an update to Revit? Is this on SP1 or this is an extension to Revit? I didn't find any reference about this in the Autodesk website.
Thank you.

J. Michael Leinback said...

Can you elaborate on the comment,
"if you do have Riverbed enabled you will see some benefits from your investment, because you will see some acceleration"?

Why would Riverbed be necessary with Revit Server? What degree of acceleration would be expected?

J. Michael Leinback said...

Under Revit Server, you said, "Also, if you do have Riverbed enabled you will see some benefits from your investment, because you will see some acceleration." Can you describe the degree of acceleration that we will recognize?

Why is it necessary to have Riverbed in addition to Revit Server?

Unknown said...

Hi, I did ask Autodesk this question when I was in Boston. They couldn't give exact figures as to what speed boost you would actually get.These Riverbed devices are expensive and I suppose it depends on how big your IT budget is. The reality is we have them within our offices anyway to improve bandwidth for other applications and file sharing not just Revit use, so deciding whether to implement them was not an issue. I would suggest setting things up trialling to see if you can live with the latency, if not and you need a boost, then Riverbed may certainly help. Be sure sure to check Steve Staffords article as he came to a similar conclusion http://revitoped.blogspot.com/2010/09/revit-server.html

Tracy Bird said...

Where do I find the "Revit Server Administration tool"?

Angelina said...

The reality is we have them within our offices anyway to improve bandwidth for other applications and file sharing not just Revit use, so deciding whether to implement them was not an issue. I would suggest setting things up trialling to see if you can live with the latency, if not and you need a boost, then Riverbed may certainly help.