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# This file is part of Autoconf. -*- Autoconf -*- # Fortran languages support. # Copyright (C) 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 # Free Software Foundation, Inc. # # This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) # any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA # 02110-1301, USA. # # As a special exception, the Free Software Foundation gives unlimited # permission to copy, distribute and modify the configure scripts that # are the output of Autoconf. You need not follow the terms of the GNU # General Public License when using or distributing such scripts, even # though portions of the text of Autoconf appear in them. The GNU # General Public License (GPL) does govern all other use of the material # that constitutes the Autoconf program. # # Certain portions of the Autoconf source text are designed to be copied # (in certain cases, depending on the input) into the output of # Autoconf. We call these the "data" portions. The rest of the Autoconf # source text consists of comments plus executable code that decides which # of the data portions to output in any given case. We call these # comments and executable code the "non-data" portions. Autoconf never # copies any of the non-data portions into its output. # # This special exception to the GPL applies to versions of Autoconf # released by the Free Software Foundation. When you make and # distribute a modified version of Autoconf, you may extend this special # exception to the GPL to apply to your modified version as well, *unless* # your modified version has the potential to copy into its output some # of the text that was the non-data portion of the version that you started # with. (In other words, unless your change moves or copies text from # the non-data portions to the data portions.) If your modification has # such potential, you must delete any notice of this special exception # to the GPL from your modified version. # # Written by David MacKenzie, with help from # Franc,ois Pinard, Karl Berry, Richard Pixley, Ian Lance Taylor, # Roland McGrath, Noah Friedman, david d zuhn, and many others. # Table of Contents: # # Preamble # # 0. Utility macros # # 1. Language selection # and routines to produce programs in a given language. # # 2. Producing programs in a given language. # # 3. Looking for a compiler # And possibly the associated preprocessor. # # 4. Compilers' characteristics. ## ---------- ## ## Preamble. ## ## ---------- ## # Fortran vs. Fortran 77: # This file contains macros for both "Fortran 77" and "Fortran", where # the former is the "classic" autoconf Fortran interface and is intended # for legacy F77 codes, while the latter is intended to support newer Fortran # dialects. Fortran 77 uses environment variables F77, FFLAGS, and FLIBS, # while Fortran uses FC, FCFLAGS, and FCLIBS. For each user-callable AC_* # macro, there is generally both an F77 and an FC version, where both versions # share the same _AC_*_FC_* backend. This backend macro requires that # the appropriate language be AC_LANG_PUSH'ed, and uses _AC_LANG_ABBREV and # _AC_LANG_PREFIX in order to name cache and environment variables, etc. ## ------------------- ## ## 0. Utility macros. ## ## ------------------- ## # _AC_LIST_MEMBER_IF(ELEMENT, LIST, [ACTION-IF-FOUND], [ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND]) # --------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # Processing the elements of a list is tedious in shell programming, # as lists tend to be implemented as space delimited strings. # # This macro searches LIST for ELEMENT, and executes ACTION-IF-FOUND # if ELEMENT is a member of LIST, otherwise it executes # ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND. AC_DEFUN([_AC_LIST_MEMBER_IF], [dnl Do some sanity checking of the arguments. m4_if([$1], , [AC_FATAL([$0: missing argument 1])])dnl m4_if([$2], , [AC_FATAL([$0: missing argument 2])])dnl ac_exists=false for ac_i in $2; do if test x"$1" = x"$ac_i"; then ac_exists=true break fi done AS_IF([test x"$ac_exists" = xtrue], [$3], [$4])[]dnl ])# _AC_LIST_MEMBER_IF # _AC_LINKER_OPTION(LINKER-OPTIONS, SHELL-VARIABLE) # ------------------------------------------------- # # Specifying options to the compiler (whether it be the C, C++ or # Fortran 77 compiler) that are meant for the linker is compiler # dependent. This macro lets you give options to the compiler that # are meant for the linker in a portable, compiler-independent way. # # This macro take two arguments, a list of linker options that the # compiler should pass to the linker (LINKER-OPTIONS) and the name of # a shell variable (SHELL-VARIABLE). The list of linker options are # appended to the shell variable in a compiler-dependent way. # # For example, if the selected language is C, then this: # # _AC_LINKER_OPTION([-R /usr/local/lib/foo], foo_LDFLAGS) # # will expand into this if the selected C compiler is gcc: # # foo_LDFLAGS="-Xlinker -R -Xlinker /usr/local/lib/foo" # # otherwise, it will expand into this: # # foo_LDFLAGS"-R /usr/local/lib/foo" # # You are encouraged to add support for compilers that this macro # doesn't currently support. # FIXME: Get rid of this macro. AC_DEFUN([_AC_LINKER_OPTION], [if test "$ac_compiler_gnu" = yes; then for ac_link_opt in $1; do $2="[$]$2 -Xlinker $ac_link_opt" done else $2="[$]$2 $1" fi[]dnl ])# _AC_LINKER_OPTION ## ----------------------- ## ## 1. Language selection. ## ## ----------------------- ## # AC_LANG(Fortran 77) # ------------------- m4_define([AC_LANG(Fortran 77)], [ac_ext=f ac_compile='$F77 -c $FFLAGS conftest.$ac_ext >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD' ac_link='$F77 -o conftest$ac_exeext $FFLAGS $LDFLAGS conftest.$ac_ext $LIBS >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD' ac_compiler_gnu=$ac_cv_f77_compiler_gnu ]) # AC_LANG(Fortran) # ---------------- m4_define([AC_LANG(Fortran)], [ac_ext=${ac_fc_srcext-f} ac_compile='$FC -c $FCFLAGS $ac_fcflags_srcext conftest.$ac_ext >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD' ac_link='$FC -o conftest$ac_exeext $FCFLAGS $LDFLAGS $ac_fcflags_srcext conftest.$ac_ext $LIBS >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD' ac_compiler_gnu=$ac_cv_fc_compiler_gnu ]) # AC_LANG_FORTRAN77 # ----------------- AU_DEFUN([AC_LANG_FORTRAN77], [AC_LANG(Fortran 77)]) # _AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT # ------------------ # Current language must be Fortran or Fortran 77. m4_defun([_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT], [m4_if(_AC_LANG, [Fortran], [], [m4_if(_AC_LANG, [Fortran 77], [], [m4_fatal([$0: current language is not Fortran: ] _AC_LANG)])])]) # _AC_LANG_ABBREV(Fortran 77) # --------------------------- m4_define([_AC_LANG_ABBREV(Fortran 77)], [f77]) # _AC_LANG_ABBREV(Fortran) # ------------------------ m4_define([_AC_LANG_ABBREV(Fortran)], [fc]) # _AC_LANG_PREFIX(Fortran 77) # --------------------------- m4_define([_AC_LANG_PREFIX(Fortran 77)], [F]) # _AC_LANG_PREFIX(Fortran) # ------------------------ m4_define([_AC_LANG_PREFIX(Fortran)], [FC]) # _AC_FC # ------ # Return F77 or FC, depending upon the language. AC_DEFUN([_AC_FC], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl AC_LANG_CASE([Fortran 77], [F77], [Fortran], [FC])]) ## ----------------------- ## ## 2. Producing programs. ## ## ----------------------- ## # AC_LANG_SOURCE(Fortran 77)(BODY) # AC_LANG_SOURCE(Fortran)(BODY) # -------------------------------- # FIXME: Apparently, according to former AC_TRY_COMPILER, the CPP # directives must not be included. But AC_TRY_RUN_NATIVE was not # avoiding them, so? m4_define([AC_LANG_SOURCE(Fortran 77)], [$1]) m4_define([AC_LANG_SOURCE(Fortran)], [$1]) # AC_LANG_PROGRAM(Fortran 77)([PROLOGUE], [BODY]) # ----------------------------------------------- # Yes, we discard the PROLOGUE. m4_define([AC_LANG_PROGRAM(Fortran 77)], [m4_ifval([$1], [m4_warn([syntax], [$0: ignoring PROLOGUE: $1])])dnl program main $2 end]) # AC_LANG_PROGRAM(Fortran)([PROLOGUE], [BODY]) # ----------------------------------------------- # FIXME: can the PROLOGUE be used? m4_define([AC_LANG_PROGRAM(Fortran)], [m4_ifval([$1], [m4_warn([syntax], [$0: ignoring PROLOGUE: $1])])dnl program main $2 end]) # AC_LANG_CALL(Fortran 77)(PROLOGUE, FUNCTION) # -------------------------------------------- # FIXME: This is a guess, help! m4_define([AC_LANG_CALL(Fortran 77)], [AC_LANG_PROGRAM([$1], [ call $2])]) # AC_LANG_CALL(Fortran)(PROLOGUE, FUNCTION) # -------------------------------------------- # FIXME: This is a guess, help! m4_define([AC_LANG_CALL(Fortran)], [AC_LANG_PROGRAM([$1], [ call $2])]) ## -------------------------------------------- ## ## 3. Looking for Compilers and Preprocessors. ## ## -------------------------------------------- ## # AC_LANG_PREPROC(Fortran 77) # --------------------------- # Find the Fortran 77 preprocessor. Must be AC_DEFUN'd to be AC_REQUIRE'able. AC_DEFUN([AC_LANG_PREPROC(Fortran 77)], [m4_warn([syntax], [$0: No preprocessor defined for ]_AC_LANG)]) # AC_LANG_PREPROC(Fortran) # --------------------------- # Find the Fortran preprocessor. Must be AC_DEFUN'd to be AC_REQUIRE'able. AC_DEFUN([AC_LANG_PREPROC(Fortran)], [m4_warn([syntax], [$0: No preprocessor defined for ]_AC_LANG)]) # AC_LANG_COMPILER(Fortran 77) # ---------------------------- # Find the Fortran 77 compiler. Must be AC_DEFUN'd to be # AC_REQUIRE'able. AC_DEFUN([AC_LANG_COMPILER(Fortran 77)], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_F77])]) # AC_LANG_COMPILER(Fortran) # ---------------------------- # Find the Fortran compiler. Must be AC_DEFUN'd to be # AC_REQUIRE'able. AC_DEFUN([AC_LANG_COMPILER(Fortran)], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_FC])]) # ac_cv_prog_g77 # -------------- # We used to name the cache variable this way. AU_DEFUN([ac_cv_prog_g77], [ac_cv_f77_compiler_gnu]) # _AC_FC_DIALECT_YEAR([DIALECT]) # ------------------------------ # Given a Fortran DIALECT, which is Fortran [YY]YY or simply [YY]YY, # convert to a 4-digit year. The dialect must be one of Fortran 77, # 90, 95, or 2000, currently. If DIALECT is simply Fortran or the # empty string, returns the empty string. AC_DEFUN([_AC_FC_DIALECT_YEAR], [m4_case(m4_bpatsubsts(m4_tolower([$1]), [fortran],[], [ *],[]), [77],[1977], [1977],[1977], [90],[1990], [1990],[1990], [95],[1995], [1995],[1995], [2000],[2000], [],[], [m4_fatal([unknown Fortran dialect])])]) # _AC_PROG_FC([DIALECT], [COMPILERS...]) # -------------------------------------- # DIALECT is a Fortran dialect, given by Fortran [YY]YY or simply [YY]YY, # and must be one of those supported by _AC_FC_DIALECT_YEAR # # If DIALECT is supplied, then we search for compilers of that dialect # first, and then later dialects. Otherwise, we search for compilers # of the newest dialect first, and then earlier dialects in increasing age. # This search order is necessarily imperfect because the dialect cannot # always be inferred from the compiler name. # # Known compilers: # f77/f90/f95: generic compiler names # g77: GNU Fortran 77 compiler # gfortran: GNU Fortran 95+ compiler (released in gcc 4.0) # g95: original gcc-based f95 compiler (gfortran is a fork) # ftn: native Fortran 95 compiler on Cray X1 # cf77: native F77 compiler under older Crays (prefer over fort77) # fort77: native F77 compiler under HP-UX (and some older Crays) # frt: Fujitsu F77 compiler # pgf77/pgf90/pghpf/pgf95: Portland Group F77/F90/F95 compilers # xlf/xlf90/xlf95: IBM (AIX) F77/F90/F95 compilers # Prefer xlf9x to the generic names because they do not reject file # with extension `.f'. # lf95: Lahey-Fujitsu F95 compiler # fl32: Microsoft Fortran 77 "PowerStation" compiler # af77: Apogee F77 compiler for Intergraph hardware running CLIX # epcf90: "Edinburgh Portable Compiler" F90 # fort: Compaq (now HP) Fortran 90/95 compiler for Tru64 and Linux/Alpha # ifort, previously ifc: Intel Fortran 95 compiler for Linux/x86 # efc: Intel Fortran 95 compiler for IA64 m4_define([_AC_F95_FC], [gfortran g95 xlf95 f95 fort ifort ifc efc pgf95 lf95 ftn]) m4_define([_AC_F90_FC], [xlf90 f90 pgf90 pghpf epcf90]) m4_define([_AC_F77_FC], [g77 xlf f77 frt pgf77 cf77 fort77 fl32 af77]) AC_DEFUN([_AC_PROG_FC], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl AC_CHECK_TOOLS([]_AC_FC[], m4_default([$2], m4_case(_AC_FC_DIALECT_YEAR([$1]), [1995], [_AC_F95_FC], [1990], [_AC_F90_FC _AC_F95_FC], [1977], [_AC_F77_FC _AC_F90_FC _AC_F95_FC], [_AC_F95_FC _AC_F90_FC _AC_F77_FC]))) # Provide some information about the compiler. _AS_ECHO_LOG([checking for _AC_LANG compiler version]) set X $ac_compile ac_compiler=$[2] _AC_DO([$ac_compiler --version >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD]) _AC_DO([$ac_compiler -v >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD]) _AC_DO([$ac_compiler -V >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD]) rm -f a.out m4_expand_once([_AC_COMPILER_EXEEXT])[]dnl m4_expand_once([_AC_COMPILER_OBJEXT])[]dnl # If we don't use `.F' as extension, the preprocessor is not run on the # input file. (Note that this only needs to work for GNU compilers.) ac_save_ext=$ac_ext ac_ext=F _AC_LANG_COMPILER_GNU ac_ext=$ac_save_ext _AC_PROG_FC_G ])# _AC_PROG_FC # AC_PROG_F77([COMPILERS...]) # --------------------------- # COMPILERS is a space separated list of Fortran 77 compilers to search # for. See also _AC_PROG_FC. AC_DEFUN([AC_PROG_F77], [AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran 77)dnl AC_ARG_VAR([F77], [Fortran 77 compiler command])dnl AC_ARG_VAR([FFLAGS], [Fortran 77 compiler flags])dnl _AC_ARG_VAR_LDFLAGS()dnl _AC_ARG_VAR_LIBS()dnl _AC_PROG_FC([Fortran 77], [$1]) if test $ac_compiler_gnu = yes; then G77=yes else G77= fi AC_LANG_POP(Fortran 77)dnl ])# AC_PROG_F77 # AC_PROG_FC([COMPILERS...], [DIALECT]) # ------------------------------------- # COMPILERS is a space separated list of Fortran 77 compilers to search # for, and [DIALECT] is an optional dialect. See also _AC_PROG_FC. AC_DEFUN([AC_PROG_FC], [AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran)dnl AC_ARG_VAR([FC], [Fortran compiler command])dnl AC_ARG_VAR([FCFLAGS], [Fortran compiler flags])dnl _AC_ARG_VAR_LDFLAGS()dnl _AC_ARG_VAR_LIBS()dnl _AC_PROG_FC([$2], [$1]) AC_LANG_POP(Fortran)dnl ])# AC_PROG_FC # _AC_PROG_FC_G # ------------- # Check whether -g works, even if F[C]FLAGS is set, in case the package # plays around with F[C]FLAGS (such as to build both debugging and normal # versions of a library), tasteless as that idea is. m4_define([_AC_PROG_FC_G], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl ac_test_FFLAGS=${[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS+set} ac_save_FFLAGS=$[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS _AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS= AC_CACHE_CHECK(whether $[]_AC_FC[] accepts -g, ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_g, [_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS=-g _AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM()], [ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_g=yes], [ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_g=no]) ]) if test "$ac_test_FFLAGS" = set; then _AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS=$ac_save_FFLAGS elif test $ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_g = yes; then if test "x$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_compiler_gnu" = xyes; then _AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS="-g -O2" else _AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS="-g" fi else if test "x$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_compiler_gnu" = xyes; then _AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS="-O2" else _AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS= fi fi[]dnl ])# _AC_PROG_FC_G # _AC_PROG_FC_C_O # --------------- # Test if the Fortran compiler accepts the options `-c' and `-o' # simultaneously, and define `[F77/FC]_NO_MINUS_C_MINUS_O' if it does not. # # The usefulness of this macro is questionable, as I can't really see # why anyone would use it. The only reason I include it is for # completeness, since a similar test exists for the C compiler. # # FIXME: it seems like we could merge the C/C++/Fortran versions of this. AC_DEFUN([_AC_PROG_FC_C_O], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl AC_CACHE_CHECK([whether $[]_AC_FC[] understands -c and -o together], [ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_c_o], [AC_LANG_CONFTEST([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([])]) # We test twice because some compilers refuse to overwrite an existing # `.o' file with `-o', although they will create one. ac_try='$[]_AC_FC[] $[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS -c conftest.$ac_ext -o conftest2.$ac_objext >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD' rm -f conftest2.* if _AC_DO_VAR(ac_try) && test -f conftest2.$ac_objext && _AC_DO_VAR(ac_try); then ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_c_o=yes else ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_c_o=no fi rm -f conftest*]) if test $ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_c_o = no; then AC_DEFINE([]_AC_FC[]_NO_MINUS_C_MINUS_O, 1, [Define to 1 if your Fortran compiler doesn't accept -c and -o together.]) fi ])# _AC_PROG_FC_C_O # AC_PROG_F77_C_O # --------------- AC_DEFUN([AC_PROG_F77_C_O], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_F77])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran 77)dnl _AC_PROG_FC_C_O AC_LANG_POP(Fortran 77)dnl ])# AC_PROG_F77_C_O # AC_PROG_FC_C_O # --------------- AC_DEFUN([AC_PROG_FC_C_O], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_FC])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran)dnl _AC_PROG_FC_C_O AC_LANG_POP(Fortran)dnl ])# AC_PROG_FC_C_O ## ------------------------------- ## ## 4. Compilers' characteristics. ## ## ------------------------------- ## # _AC_PROG_FC_V_OUTPUT([FLAG = $ac_cv_prog_{f77/fc}_v]) # ------------------------------------------------- # Link a trivial Fortran program, compiling with a verbose output FLAG # (whose default value, $ac_cv_prog_{f77/fc}_v, is computed by # _AC_PROG_FC_V), and return the output in $ac_{f77/fc}_v_output. This # output is processed in the way expected by _AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS, # so that any link flags that are echoed by the compiler appear as # space-separated items. AC_DEFUN([_AC_PROG_FC_V_OUTPUT], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl AC_LANG_CONFTEST([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([])]) # Compile and link our simple test program by passing a flag (argument # 1 to this macro) to the Fortran compiler in order to get # "verbose" output that we can then parse for the Fortran linker # flags. ac_save_FFLAGS=$[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS _AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS="$[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS m4_default([$1], [$ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v])" eval "set x $ac_link" shift _AS_ECHO_LOG([$[*]]) # gfortran 4.3 outputs lines setting COLLECT_GCC_OPTIONS, COMPILER_PATH, # LIBRARY_PATH; skip all such settings. ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output=`eval $ac_link AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD>&1 2>&1 | grep -v 'Driving:' | grep -v "^[[_$as_cr_Letters]][[_$as_cr_alnum]]*="` AS_ECHO(["$ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output"]) >&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD _AC_LANG_PREFIX[]FLAGS=$ac_save_FFLAGS rm -rf conftest* # On HP/UX there is a line like: "LPATH is: /foo:/bar:/baz" where # /foo, /bar, and /baz are search directories for the Fortran linker. # Here, we change these into -L/foo -L/bar -L/baz (and put it first): ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output="`echo $ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output | grep 'LPATH is:' | sed 's|.*LPATH is\(: *[[^ ]]*\).*|\1|;s|: */| -L/|g'` $ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output" # FIXME: we keep getting bitten by quoted arguments; a more general fix # that detects unbalanced quotes in FLIBS should be implemented # and (ugh) tested at some point. case $ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output in # If we are using xlf then replace all the commas with spaces. *xlfentry*) ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output=`echo $ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output | sed 's/,/ /g'` ;; # With Intel ifc, ignore the quoted -mGLOB_options_string stuff (quoted # $LIBS confuse us, and the libraries appear later in the output anyway). *mGLOB_options_string*) ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output=`echo $ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output | sed 's/"-mGLOB[[^"]]*"/ /g'` ;; # Portland Group compiler has singly- or doubly-quoted -cmdline argument # Singly-quoted arguments were reported for versions 5.2-4 and 6.0-4. # Doubly-quoted arguments were reported for "PGF90/x86 Linux/x86 5.0-2". *-cmdline\ * | *-ignore\ * | *-def\ *) ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output=`echo $ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output | sed "\ s/-cmdline *'[[^']]*'/ /g; s/-cmdline *\"[[^\"]]*\"/ /g s/-ignore *'[[^']]*'/ /g; s/-ignore *\"[[^\"]]*\"/ /g s/-def *'[[^']]*'/ /g; s/-def *\"[[^\"]]*\"/ /g"` ;; # If we are using Cray Fortran then delete quotes. *cft90*) ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output=`echo $ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output | sed 's/"//g'` ;; esac ])# _AC_PROG_FC_V_OUTPUT # _AC_PROG_FC_V # -------------- # # Determine the flag that causes the Fortran compiler to print # information of library and object files (normally -v) # Needed for _AC_FC_LIBRARY_FLAGS # Some compilers don't accept -v (Lahey: -verbose, xlf: -V, Fujitsu: -###) AC_DEFUN([_AC_PROG_FC_V], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl AC_CACHE_CHECK([how to get verbose linking output from $[]_AC_FC[]], [ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v], [AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM()], [ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v= # Try some options frequently used verbose output for ac_verb in -v -verbose --verbose -V -\#\#\#; do _AC_PROG_FC_V_OUTPUT($ac_verb) # look for -l* and *.a constructs in the output for ac_arg in $ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output; do case $ac_arg in [[\\/]]*.a | ?:[[\\/]]*.a | -[[lLRu]]*) ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v=$ac_verb break 2 ;; esac done done if test -z "$ac_cv_prog_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v"; then AC_MSG_WARN([cannot determine how to obtain linking information from $[]_AC_FC[]]) fi], [AC_MSG_WARN([compilation failed])]) ])])# _AC_PROG_FC_V # _AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS # ---------------------- # # Determine the linker flags (e.g. "-L" and "-l") for the Fortran # intrinsic and runtime libraries that are required to successfully # link a Fortran program or shared library. The output variable # FLIBS/FCLIBS is set to these flags. # # This macro is intended to be used in those situations when it is # necessary to mix, e.g. C++ and Fortran, source code into a single # program or shared library. # # For example, if object files from a C++ and Fortran compiler must # be linked together, then the C++ compiler/linker must be used for # linking (since special C++-ish things need to happen at link time # like calling global constructors, instantiating templates, enabling # exception support, etc.). # # However, the Fortran intrinsic and runtime libraries must be # linked in as well, but the C++ compiler/linker doesn't know how to # add these Fortran libraries. Hence, the macro # "AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS" was created to determine these Fortran # libraries. # # This macro was packaged in its current form by Matthew D. Langston. # However, nearly all of this macro came from the "OCTAVE_FLIBS" macro # in "octave-2.0.13/aclocal.m4", and full credit should go to John # W. Eaton for writing this extremely useful macro. Thank you John. AC_DEFUN([_AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl _AC_PROG_FC_V AC_CACHE_CHECK([for _AC_LANG libraries of $[]_AC_FC[]], ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs, [if test "x$[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]LIBS" != "x"; then ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs="$[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]LIBS" # Let the user override the test. else _AC_PROG_FC_V_OUTPUT ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs= # Save positional arguments (if any) ac_save_positional="$[@]" set X $ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output while test $[@%:@] != 1; do shift ac_arg=$[1] case $ac_arg in [[\\/]]*.a | ?:[[\\/]]*.a) _AC_LIST_MEMBER_IF($ac_arg, $ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs, , ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs="$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs $ac_arg") ;; -bI:*) _AC_LIST_MEMBER_IF($ac_arg, $ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs, , [_AC_LINKER_OPTION([$ac_arg], ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs)]) ;; # Ignore these flags. -lang* | -lcrt*.o | -lc | -lgcc* | -lSystem | -libmil | -LANG:=* | -LIST:* | -LNO:*) ;; -lkernel32) test x"$CYGWIN" != xyes && ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs="$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs $ac_arg" ;; -[[LRuYz]]) # These flags, when seen by themselves, take an argument. # We remove the space between option and argument and re-iterate # unless we find an empty arg or a new option (starting with -) case $[2] in "" | -*);; *) ac_arg="$ac_arg$[2]" shift; shift set X $ac_arg "$[@]" ;; esac ;; -YP,*) for ac_j in `AS_ECHO(["$ac_arg"]) | sed -e 's/-YP,/-L/;s/:/ -L/g'`; do _AC_LIST_MEMBER_IF($ac_j, $ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs, , [ac_arg="$ac_arg $ac_j" ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs="$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs $ac_j"]) done ;; -[[lLR]]*) _AC_LIST_MEMBER_IF($ac_arg, $ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs, , ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs="$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs $ac_arg") ;; -zallextract*| -zdefaultextract) ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs="$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs $ac_arg" ;; # Ignore everything else. esac done # restore positional arguments set X $ac_save_positional; shift # We only consider "LD_RUN_PATH" on Solaris systems. If this is seen, # then we insist that the "run path" must be an absolute path (i.e. it # must begin with a "/"). case `(uname -sr) 2>/dev/null` in "SunOS 5"*) ac_ld_run_path=`AS_ECHO(["$ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_v_output"]) | sed -n 's,^.*LD_RUN_PATH *= *\(/[[^ ]]*\).*$,-R\1,p'` test "x$ac_ld_run_path" != x && _AC_LINKER_OPTION([$ac_ld_run_path], ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs) ;; esac fi # test "x$[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]LIBS" = "x" ]) []_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]LIBS="$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_libs" AC_SUBST([]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]LIBS) ])# _AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS # AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS # ---------------------- AC_DEFUN([AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_F77])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran 77)dnl _AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS AC_LANG_POP(Fortran 77)dnl ])# AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS # AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS # ---------------------- AC_DEFUN([AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_FC])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran)dnl _AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS AC_LANG_POP(Fortran)dnl ])# AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS # _AC_FC_DUMMY_MAIN([ACTION-IF-FOUND], [ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND]) # ----------------------------------------------------------- # # Detect name of dummy main routine required by the Fortran libraries, # (if any) and define {F77,FC}_DUMMY_MAIN to this name (which should be # used for a dummy declaration, if it is defined). On some systems, # linking a C program to the Fortran library does not work unless you # supply a dummy function called something like MAIN__. # # Execute ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND if no way of successfully linking a C # program with the {F77,FC} libs is found; default to exiting with an error # message. Execute ACTION-IF-FOUND if a dummy routine name is needed # and found or if it is not needed (default to defining {F77,FC}_DUMMY_MAIN # when needed). # # What is technically happening is that the Fortran libraries provide # their own main() function, which usually initializes Fortran I/O and # similar stuff, and then calls MAIN__, which is the entry point of # your program. Usually, a C program will override this with its own # main() routine, but the linker sometimes complain if you don't # provide a dummy (never-called) MAIN__ routine anyway. # # Of course, programs that want to allow Fortran subroutines to do # I/O, etcetera, should call their main routine MAIN__() (or whatever) # instead of main(). A separate autoconf test (_AC_FC_MAIN) checks # for the routine to use in this case (since the semantics of the test # are slightly different). To link to e.g. purely numerical # libraries, this is normally not necessary, however, and most C/C++ # programs are reluctant to turn over so much control to Fortran. =) # # The name variants we check for are (in order): # MAIN__ (g77, MAIN__ required on some systems; IRIX, MAIN__ optional) # MAIN_, __main (SunOS) # MAIN _MAIN __MAIN main_ main__ _main (we follow DDD and try these too) AC_DEFUN([_AC_FC_DUMMY_MAIN], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl m4_define(_AC_LANG_PROGRAM_C_[]_AC_FC[]_HOOKS, [#ifdef ]_AC_FC[_DUMMY_MAIN ]AC_LANG_CASE([Fortran], [#ifndef FC_DUMMY_MAIN_EQ_F77]) [# ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" # endif int ]_AC_FC[_DUMMY_MAIN() { return 1; } ]AC_LANG_CASE([Fortran], [#endif]) [#endif ]) AC_CACHE_CHECK([for dummy main to link with _AC_LANG libraries], ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_dummy_main, [ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_dm_save_LIBS=$LIBS LIBS="$LIBS $[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]LIBS" ac_fortran_dm_var=[]_AC_FC[]_DUMMY_MAIN AC_LANG_PUSH(C)dnl # First, try linking without a dummy main: AC_LINK_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([], [])], [ac_cv_fortran_dummy_main=none], [ac_cv_fortran_dummy_main=unknown]) if test $ac_cv_fortran_dummy_main = unknown; then for ac_func in MAIN__ MAIN_ __main MAIN _MAIN __MAIN main_ main__ _main; do AC_LINK_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([[@%:@define $ac_fortran_dm_var $ac_func]])], [ac_cv_fortran_dummy_main=$ac_func; break]) done fi AC_LANG_POP(C)dnl ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_dummy_main=$ac_cv_fortran_dummy_main rm -rf conftest* LIBS=$ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_dm_save_LIBS ]) []_AC_FC[]_DUMMY_MAIN=$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_dummy_main AS_IF([test "$[]_AC_FC[]_DUMMY_MAIN" != unknown], [m4_default([$1], [if test $[]_AC_FC[]_DUMMY_MAIN != none; then AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED([]_AC_FC[]_DUMMY_MAIN, $[]_AC_FC[]_DUMMY_MAIN, [Define to dummy `main' function (if any) required to link to the Fortran libraries.]) if test "x$ac_cv_fc_dummy_main" = "x$ac_cv_f77_dummy_main"; then AC_DEFINE([FC_DUMMY_MAIN_EQ_F77], 1, [Define if F77 and FC dummy `main' functions are identical.]) fi fi])], [m4_default([$2], [AC_MSG_FAILURE([linking to Fortran libraries from C fails])])]) ])# _AC_FC_DUMMY_MAIN # AC_F77_DUMMY_MAIN # ---------------------- AC_DEFUN([AC_F77_DUMMY_MAIN], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran 77)dnl _AC_FC_DUMMY_MAIN($@) AC_LANG_POP(Fortran 77)dnl ])# AC_F77_DUMMY_MAIN # AC_FC_DUMMY_MAIN # ---------------------- AC_DEFUN([AC_FC_DUMMY_MAIN], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran)dnl _AC_FC_DUMMY_MAIN($@) AC_LANG_POP(Fortran)dnl ])# AC_FC_DUMMY_MAIN # _AC_FC_MAIN # ----------- # Define {F77,FC}_MAIN to name of alternate main() function for use with # the Fortran libraries. (Typically, the libraries may define their # own main() to initialize I/O, etcetera, that then call your own # routine called MAIN__ or whatever.) See _AC_FC_DUMMY_MAIN, above. # If no such alternate name is found, just define {F77,FC}_MAIN to main. # AC_DEFUN([_AC_FC_MAIN], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl AC_CACHE_CHECK([for alternate main to link with _AC_LANG libraries], ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_main, [ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_m_save_LIBS=$LIBS LIBS="$LIBS $[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]LIBS" ac_fortran_dm_var=[]_AC_FC[]_DUMMY_MAIN AC_LANG_PUSH(C)dnl ac_cv_fortran_main="main" # default entry point name for ac_func in MAIN__ MAIN_ __main MAIN _MAIN __MAIN main_ main__ _main; do AC_LINK_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([@%:@ifdef FC_DUMMY_MAIN_EQ_F77 @%:@ undef F77_DUMMY_MAIN @%:@ undef FC_DUMMY_MAIN @%:@else @%:@ undef $ac_fortran_dm_var @%:@endif @%:@define main $ac_func])], [ac_cv_fortran_main=$ac_func; break]) done AC_LANG_POP(C)dnl ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_main=$ac_cv_fortran_main rm -rf conftest* LIBS=$ac_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_m_save_LIBS ]) AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED([]_AC_FC[]_MAIN, $ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_main, [Define to alternate name for `main' routine that is called from a `main' in the Fortran libraries.]) ])# _AC_FC_MAIN # AC_F77_MAIN # ----------- AC_DEFUN([AC_F77_MAIN], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran 77)dnl _AC_FC_MAIN AC_LANG_POP(Fortran 77)dnl ])# AC_F77_MAIN # AC_FC_MAIN # ---------- AC_DEFUN([AC_FC_MAIN], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran)dnl _AC_FC_MAIN AC_LANG_POP(Fortran)dnl ])# AC_FC_MAIN # __AC_FC_NAME_MANGLING # --------------------- # Test for the name mangling scheme used by the Fortran compiler. # # Sets ac_cv_{f77,fc}_mangling. The value contains three fields, separated # by commas: # # lower case / upper case: # case translation of the Fortran symbols # underscore / no underscore: # whether the compiler appends "_" to symbol names # extra underscore / no extra underscore: # whether the compiler appends an extra "_" to symbol names already # containing at least one underscore # AC_DEFUN([__AC_FC_NAME_MANGLING], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl AC_CACHE_CHECK([for _AC_LANG name-mangling scheme], ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling, [AC_COMPILE_IFELSE( [ subroutine foobar() return end subroutine foo_bar() return end], [mv conftest.$ac_objext cfortran_test.$ac_objext ac_save_LIBS=$LIBS LIBS="cfortran_test.$ac_objext $LIBS $[]_AC_LANG_PREFIX[]LIBS" AC_LANG_PUSH(C)dnl ac_success=no for ac_foobar in foobar FOOBAR; do for ac_underscore in "" "_"; do ac_func="$ac_foobar$ac_underscore" AC_LINK_IFELSE([AC_LANG_CALL([], [$ac_func])], [ac_success=yes; break 2]) done done AC_LANG_POP(C)dnl if test "$ac_success" = "yes"; then case $ac_foobar in foobar) ac_case=lower ac_foo_bar=foo_bar ;; FOOBAR) ac_case=upper ac_foo_bar=FOO_BAR ;; esac AC_LANG_PUSH(C)dnl ac_success_extra=no for ac_extra in "" "_"; do ac_func="$ac_foo_bar$ac_underscore$ac_extra" AC_LINK_IFELSE([AC_LANG_CALL([], [$ac_func])], [ac_success_extra=yes; break]) done AC_LANG_POP(C)dnl if test "$ac_success_extra" = "yes"; then ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling="$ac_case case" if test -z "$ac_underscore"; then ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling="$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling, no underscore" else ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling="$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling, underscore" fi if test -z "$ac_extra"; then ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling="$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling, no extra underscore" else ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling="$ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling, extra underscore" fi else ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling="unknown" fi else ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling="unknown" fi LIBS=$ac_save_LIBS rm -rf conftest* rm -f cfortran_test*], [AC_MSG_FAILURE([cannot compile a simple Fortran program])]) ]) ])# __AC_FC_NAME_MANGLING # The replacement is empty. AU_DEFUN([AC_F77_NAME_MANGLING], []) # _AC_F77_NAME_MANGLING # ---------------------- AC_DEFUN([_AC_F77_NAME_MANGLING], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS])dnl AC_REQUIRE([AC_F77_DUMMY_MAIN])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran 77)dnl __AC_FC_NAME_MANGLING AC_LANG_POP(Fortran 77)dnl ])# _AC_F77_NAME_MANGLING # _AC_FC_NAME_MANGLING # ---------------------- AC_DEFUN([_AC_FC_NAME_MANGLING], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_FC_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS])dnl AC_REQUIRE([AC_FC_DUMMY_MAIN])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran)dnl __AC_FC_NAME_MANGLING AC_LANG_POP(Fortran)dnl ])# _AC_FC_NAME_MANGLING # _AC_FC_WRAPPERS # --------------- # Defines C macros {F77,FC}_FUNC(name,NAME) and {F77,FC}_FUNC_(name,NAME) to # properly mangle the names of C identifiers, and C identifiers with # underscores, respectively, so that they match the name mangling # scheme used by the Fortran compiler. AC_DEFUN([_AC_FC_WRAPPERS], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl AH_TEMPLATE(_AC_FC[_FUNC], [Define to a macro mangling the given C identifier (in lower and upper case), which must not contain underscores, for linking with Fortran.])dnl AH_TEMPLATE(_AC_FC[_FUNC_], [As ]_AC_FC[_FUNC, but for C identifiers containing underscores.])dnl case $ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling in "lower case, no underscore, no extra underscore") AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC(name,NAME)], [name]) AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC_(name,NAME)], [name]) ;; "lower case, no underscore, extra underscore") AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC(name,NAME)], [name]) AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC_(name,NAME)], [name ## _]) ;; "lower case, underscore, no extra underscore") AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC(name,NAME)], [name ## _]) AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC_(name,NAME)], [name ## _]) ;; "lower case, underscore, extra underscore") AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC(name,NAME)], [name ## _]) AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC_(name,NAME)], [name ## __]) ;; "upper case, no underscore, no extra underscore") AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC(name,NAME)], [NAME]) AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC_(name,NAME)], [NAME]) ;; "upper case, no underscore, extra underscore") AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC(name,NAME)], [NAME]) AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC_(name,NAME)], [NAME ## _]) ;; "upper case, underscore, no extra underscore") AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC(name,NAME)], [NAME ## _]) AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC_(name,NAME)], [NAME ## _]) ;; "upper case, underscore, extra underscore") AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC(name,NAME)], [NAME ## _]) AC_DEFINE(_AC_FC[_FUNC_(name,NAME)], [NAME ## __]) ;; *) AC_MSG_WARN([unknown Fortran name-mangling scheme]) ;; esac ])# _AC_FC_WRAPPERS # AC_F77_WRAPPERS # --------------- AC_DEFUN([AC_F77_WRAPPERS], [AC_REQUIRE([_AC_F77_NAME_MANGLING])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran 77)dnl _AC_FC_WRAPPERS AC_LANG_POP(Fortran 77)dnl ])# AC_F77_WRAPPERS # AC_FC_WRAPPERS # -------------- AC_DEFUN([AC_FC_WRAPPERS], [AC_REQUIRE([_AC_FC_NAME_MANGLING])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran)dnl _AC_FC_WRAPPERS AC_LANG_POP(Fortran)dnl ])# AC_FC_WRAPPERS # _AC_FC_FUNC(NAME, [SHELLVAR = NAME]) # ------------------------------------ # For a Fortran subroutine of given NAME, define a shell variable # $SHELLVAR to the Fortran-mangled name. If the SHELLVAR # argument is not supplied, it defaults to NAME. AC_DEFUN([_AC_FC_FUNC], [_AC_FORTRAN_ASSERT()dnl case $ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling in upper*) ac_val="m4_toupper([$1])" ;; lower*) ac_val="m4_tolower([$1])" ;; *) ac_val="unknown" ;; esac case $ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling in *," underscore"*) ac_val="$ac_val"_ ;; esac m4_if(m4_index([$1],[_]),-1,[], [case $ac_cv_[]_AC_LANG_ABBREV[]_mangling in *," extra underscore"*) ac_val="$ac_val"_ ;; esac ]) m4_default([$2],[$1])="$ac_val" ])# _AC_FC_FUNC # AC_F77_FUNC(NAME, [SHELLVAR = NAME]) # ------------------------------------ AC_DEFUN([AC_F77_FUNC], [AC_REQUIRE([_AC_F77_NAME_MANGLING])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran 77)dnl _AC_FC_FUNC([$1],[$2]) AC_LANG_POP(Fortran 77)dnl ])# AC_F77_FUNC # AC_FC_FUNC(NAME, [SHELLVAR = NAME]) # ----------------------------------- AC_DEFUN([AC_FC_FUNC], [AC_REQUIRE([_AC_FC_NAME_MANGLING])dnl AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran)dnl _AC_FC_FUNC([$1],[$2]) AC_LANG_POP(Fortran)dnl ])# AC_FC_FUNC # AC_FC_SRCEXT(EXT, [ACTION-IF-SUCCESS], [ACTION-IF-FAILURE]) # ----------------------------------------------------------- # Set the source-code extension used in Fortran (FC) tests to EXT (which # defaults to f). Also, look for any necessary additional FCFLAGS needed # to allow this extension, and store them in the output variable # FCFLAGS_<EXT> (e.g. FCFLAGS_f90 for EXT=f90). If successful, # call ACTION-IF-SUCCESS. If unable to compile source code with EXT, # call ACTION-IF-FAILURE, which defaults to failing with an error # message. # # (The flags for the current source-code extension, if any, are stored in # $ac_fcflags_srcext and used automatically in subsequent autoconf tests.) # # For ordinary extensions like f90, etcetera, the modified FCFLAGS # are currently needed for IBM's xlf* and Intel's ifc (grrr). Unfortunately, # xlf* will only take flags to recognize one extension at a time, so if the # user wants to compile multiple extensions (.f90 and .f95, say), she # will need to use the FCFLAGS_F90 and FCFLAGS_F95 individually rather # than just adding them all to FCFLAGS, for example. # # Also, for Intel's ifc compiler (which does not accept .f95 by default in # some versions), the $FCFLAGS_<EXT> variable *must* go immediately before # the source file on the command line, unlike other $FCFLAGS. Ugh. AC_DEFUN([AC_FC_SRCEXT], [AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran)dnl AC_CACHE_CHECK([for Fortran flag to compile .$1 files], ac_cv_fc_srcext_$1, [ac_ext=$1 ac_fcflags_srcext_save=$ac_fcflags_srcext ac_fcflags_srcext= ac_cv_fc_srcext_$1=unknown for ac_flag in none -qsuffix=f=$1 -Tf; do test "x$ac_flag" != xnone && ac_fcflags_srcext="$ac_flag" AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM()], [ac_cv_fc_srcext_$1=$ac_flag; break]) done rm -f conftest.$ac_objext conftest.$1 ac_fcflags_srcext=$ac_fcflags_srcext_save ]) if test "x$ac_cv_fc_srcext_$1" = xunknown; then m4_default([$3],[AC_MSG_ERROR([Fortran could not compile .$1 files])]) else ac_fc_srcext=$1 if test "x$ac_cv_fc_srcext_$1" = xnone; then ac_fcflags_srcext="" FCFLAGS_[]$1[]="" else ac_fcflags_srcext=$ac_cv_fc_srcext_$1 FCFLAGS_[]$1[]=$ac_cv_fc_srcext_$1 fi AC_SUBST(FCFLAGS_[]$1) $2 fi AC_LANG_POP(Fortran)dnl ])# AC_FC_SRCEXT # AC_FC_FREEFORM([ACTION-IF-SUCCESS], [ACTION-IF-FAILURE = FAILURE]) # ------------------------------------------------------------------ # Look for a compiler flag to make the Fortran (FC) compiler accept # free-format source code, and adds it to FCFLAGS. Call # ACTION-IF-SUCCESS (defaults to nothing) if successful (i.e. can # compile code using new extension) and ACTION-IF-FAILURE (defaults to # failing with an error message) if not. (Defined via DEFUN_ONCE to # prevent flag from being added to FCFLAGS multiple times.) # # The known flags are: # -ffree-form: GNU g77 # -FR: Intel compiler (icc, ecc) # -free: Compaq compiler (fort) # -qfree: IBM compiler (xlf) # -Mfree, -Mfreeform: Portland Group compiler # -freeform: SGI compiler # -f free: Absoft Fortran # We try to test the "more popular" flags first, by some prejudiced # notion of popularity. AC_DEFUN_ONCE([AC_FC_FREEFORM], [AC_LANG_PUSH(Fortran)dnl AC_CACHE_CHECK([for Fortran flag needed to allow free-form source], ac_cv_fc_freeform, [ac_cv_fc_freeform=unknown ac_fc_freeform_FCFLAGS_save=$FCFLAGS for ac_flag in none -ffree-form -FR -free -qfree -Mfree -Mfreeform \ -freeform "-f free" do test "x$ac_flag" != xnone && FCFLAGS="$ac_fc_freeform_FCFLAGS_save $ac_flag" AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([ program freeform ! FIXME: how to best confuse non-freeform compilers? print *, 'Hello ', & 'world.' end], [ac_cv_fc_freeform=$ac_flag; break]) done rm -f conftest.err conftest.$ac_objext conftest.$ac_ext FCFLAGS=$ac_fc_freeform_FCFLAGS_save ]) if test "x$ac_cv_fc_freeform" = xunknown; then m4_default([$2], [AC_MSG_ERROR([Fortran does not accept free-form source], 77)]) else if test "x$ac_cv_fc_freeform" != xnone; then FCFLAGS="$FCFLAGS $ac_cv_fc_freeform" fi $1 fi AC_LANG_POP(Fortran)dnl ])# AC_FC_FREEFORM