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Chapter 1

Introduction

The Sun Fortran compilers, f77 and f95, described in this book (and the companion Sun WorkShop Fortran Programming Guide) are available under the Solaris operating environment on the various hardware platforms that Solaris supports. The compilers themselves conform to published Fortran language standards, and provide many extended features, including multiprocessor parallelization, sophisticated optimized code compilation, and mixed C/Fortran language support.

The Fortran compilers are components of the Sun Performance WorkShopTM. The Fortran 90 compiler, f90, has been renamed f95. The f90 command is now an alias for f95 -- both invoke the Sun Performance WorkShop 6 Fortran 95 compiler.

Standards Conformance

The responsible standards bodies may revise these standards from time to time. The versions of the applicable standards to which these compilers conform may be revised or replaced, resulting in features in future releases of the Sun Fortran compilers that create incompatibilities with earlier releases.

Features of the Fortran Compilers

Sun Fortran compilers provide the following features or extensions:

Other Fortran Utilities

The following utilities provide assistance in the development of software programs in Fortran:

Debugging Utilities

The following debugging utilities are available:

Sun Performance LibraryTM

The Sun Performance Library is a library of optimized subroutines and functions for computational linear algebra and Fourier transforms. It is based on the standard libraries LAPACK, BLAS1, BLAS2, BLAS3, FFTPACK, VFFTPACK, and LINPACK generally available through Netlib (www.netlib.org).

Each subprogram in the Sun Performance Library performs the same operation and has the same interface as the standard library versions, but is generally much faster and accurate, and are usable in a multiprocessing environment.

See the performance_library README file, and the Sun Performance Library User's Guide for details. (Man pages for the performance library routines are in section 3P.)

Interval Arithmetic

This release of the Fortran 95 compiler introduces two new compiler flags, -xia and -xinterval, that enable the compiler to recognize new language extensions and generate the appropriate code to implement interval arithmetic computations.

See the Interval Arithmetic Programming Reference for details.

Man Pages

Online manual (man) pages provide immediate documentation about a command, function, subroutine, or collection of such things. See the Preface for the proper setting of the MANPATH environment variable for accessing Sun WorkShop man pages.)

You can display a man page by running the command:

demo% man topic

Throughout the Fortran documentation, man page references appear with the topic name and man section number: f95(1) is accessed with man f95. Other sections, denoted by ieee_flags(3M) for example, are accessed using the -s option on the man command:

demo% man -s 3M ieee_flags

The Fortran library routines are documented in the man page section 3F.

The following lists man pages of interest to Fortran users:

f77(1) and f95(1) The Fortran compilers command-line options
analyzer(1) Sun WorkShop Performance Analyzer
asa(1) Fortran carriage-control print output post-processor
dbx(1) Command-line interactive debugger
fpp(1) Fortran source code pre-processor
cpp(1) C source code pre-processor
fsplit(1) Pre-processor splits Fortran 77 routines into single files
ieee_flags(3M) Examine, set, or clear floating-point exception bits
ieee_handler(3M) Handle floating-point exceptions
matherr(3M) Math library error handling routine
ild(1) Incremental link editor for object files
ld(1) Link editor for object files


READMEs

The READMEs directory contains files that describe new features, software incompatibilities, bugs, and information that was discovered after the manuals were printed. The location of this directory depends on where your software was installed. The path is: install_directory/SUNWspro/READMEs/. In a normal install, install_directory is /opt.     

TABLE 1-1   READMEs of Interest
README File Describes...
fortran_77
new and changed features, known limitations, documentation errata for this release of the FORTRAN 77 compiler, f77.
fortran_95
new and changed features, known limitations, documentation errata for this release of the Fortran 95 compiler, f95.
fpp_readme
overview of fpp features and capabilities
interval_arithmetic
overview of the interval arithmetic features in f95
math_libraries
optimized and specialized math libraries available.
profiling_tools
using the performance profiling tools, prof, gprof, and tcov.
runtime_libraries
libraries and executables that can be redistributed under the terms of the End User License.
64bit_Compilers
compiling for 64-bit Solaris operating environments.
performance_library
overview of the Sun Performance Library


The READMEs for all compilers are easily accessed by the -xhelp=readme command-line option. For example, the command:

f95 -xhelp=readme

will display the fortran_95 README file directly.

Command-Line Help

You can view very brief descriptions of the f77 and f90 command line options by invoking the compiler's -help option as shown below:

%f77 -help  -or-  
f95 -help
_______________________________________________________________
Items within [ ] are optional. Items within < > are variable
parameters.Bar | indicates choice of literal values. For example:
   -someoption[=<yes|no>] implies  -someoption  is  
   -someoption=yes
_______________________________________________________________
-a:            Collect data for tcov basic block profiling
                   (old format)
-ansi:         Report non-ANSI extensions.
-arg=local:    Preserve actual arguments over ENTRY statements
-autopar:      Enable automatic loop parallelization 
                       (requires WorkShop license)
-Bdynamic:     Allow dynamic linking
-Bstatic:      Require static linking
-c:            Compile only - produce .o files, suppress linking
-C:            Enable runtime subscript range checking
-cg89:         Generate code for generic SPARC V7 architecture
-cg92:         Generate code for SPARC V8 architecture
-copyargs:     Allow assignment to constant arguments
...etc.


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