CMake Fortran Issues
Introduction
CMake has a number of Fortran issues that have been discussed many different times on list and duplicated a fair number of times in the bug tracker as well.
Maik Beckmann is trying to make sense of all the confusion by collecting information on all Fortran issues at http://www.cmake.org/Bug/view.php?id=5809
Please join the work there by
- Contributing patches.
- Testing the patches that already exist there.
- Reporting things that don't work.
- Sending simplified examples of things which don't work.
- Sharing your expert knowledge of CMake.
Concepts expressed using Makefiles
This section is intended to discuss the makefile rules which CMake has to generate.
A simple program
A f9x program which is build by compiling in linking two source files a.f90 and main.f90. The tree structure is:
- example_simpleProgram
- build
- Makefile
- prog.dir
- build.make
- main.f90
- a.f90
- build
a.f90:
SUBROUTINE printHello WRITE(*,*) "Hello f9x world" END SUBROUTINE
main.f90:
PROGRAM hello CALL printHello END PROGRAM
Makefile:
all: prog.dir/all prog.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all clean: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/clean
build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o: ../a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../a.f90 prog.dir/main.o: ../main.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../main.f90 prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog
Now change into build and type
- $ make
to build. The current CMake is able to build the same without any problems. This is also valid for any fortran code that doesn't use modules.
You can download this example as tarball example_simpleProgram.tar.gz at http://www.cmake.org/Bug/view.php?id=5809
A simple program with module
The same as before, but now a.f90 provides a module which main.f90 uses. The tree structure is:
- example_simpleProgram_withModule
- build
- Makefile
- prog.dir
- build.make
- main.f90
- a.f90
- build
a.f90:
MODULE localMod ! CONTAINS SUBROUTINE printHello WRITE(*,*) "Hello f9x world" END SUBROUTINE END MODULE
main.f90:
PROGRAM hello USE localMod CALL printHello END PROGRAM
Makefile:
all: prog.dir/all prog.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all clean: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/clean
build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o: ../a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../a.f90 -M prog.dir prog.dir/localmod.mod: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o: ../main.f90 prog.dir/localmod.mod gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../main.f90 -I prog.dir prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/localmod.mod prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog
Now change into build and type
- $ make
to build. This is nothing the current CMake can't do. Now do (you're at the build directory)
$ touch ../a.f90
and enter
$ make
again. You'll see that a.f90 is recompiled, like the current CMake does, but main.f90 is recompiled too! This is different from current CMake, but its the right way, since a module dependency is a compile time dependency like an include.