re PR fortran/45170 ([F2003] allocatable character lengths)
[gcc.git] / gcc / fortran / gfortran.texi
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4 @set copyrights-gfortran 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011
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6 @include gcc-common.texi
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8 @settitle The GNU Fortran Compiler
9
10 @c Create a separate index for command line options
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65 @c the page and odd numbered pages to be printed on the right hand
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78
79 @copying
80 Copyright @copyright{} @value{copyrights-gfortran} Free Software Foundation, Inc.
81
82 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
83 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
84 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the
85 Invariant Sections being ``Funding Free Software'', the Front-Cover
86 Texts being (a) (see below), and with the Back-Cover Texts being (b)
87 (see below). A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
88 ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
89
90 (a) The FSF's Front-Cover Text is:
91
92 A GNU Manual
93
94 (b) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is:
95
96 You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU
97 software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise
98 funds for GNU development.
99 @end copying
100
101 @ifinfo
102 @dircategory Software development
103 @direntry
104 * gfortran: (gfortran). The GNU Fortran Compiler.
105 @end direntry
106 This file documents the use and the internals of
107 the GNU Fortran compiler, (@command{gfortran}).
108
109 Published by the Free Software Foundation
110 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor
111 Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
112
113 @insertcopying
114 @end ifinfo
115
116
117 @setchapternewpage odd
118 @titlepage
119 @title Using GNU Fortran
120 @versionsubtitle
121 @author The @t{gfortran} team
122 @page
123 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
124 Published by the Free Software Foundation@*
125 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor@*
126 Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA@*
127 @c Last printed ??ber, 19??.@*
128 @c Printed copies are available for $? each.@*
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131 @insertcopying
132 @end titlepage
133
134 @c TODO: The following "Part" definitions are included here temporarily
135 @c until they are incorporated into the official Texinfo distribution.
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137 @tex
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143 @tex
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146 @end tex
147 @contents
148
149 @page
150
151 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
152 @c TexInfo table of contents.
153 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
154
155 @ifnottex
156 @node Top
157 @top Introduction
158 @cindex Introduction
159
160 This manual documents the use of @command{gfortran},
161 the GNU Fortran compiler. You can find in this manual how to invoke
162 @command{gfortran}, as well as its features and incompatibilities.
163
164 @ifset DEVELOPMENT
165 @emph{Warning:} This document, and the compiler it describes, are still
166 under development. While efforts are made to keep it up-to-date, it might
167 not accurately reflect the status of the most recent GNU Fortran compiler.
168 @end ifset
169
170 @comment
171 @comment When you add a new menu item, please keep the right hand
172 @comment aligned to the same column. Do not use tabs. This provides
173 @comment better formatting.
174 @comment
175 @menu
176 * Introduction::
177
178 Part I: Invoking GNU Fortran
179 * Invoking GNU Fortran:: Command options supported by @command{gfortran}.
180 * Runtime:: Influencing runtime behavior with environment variables.
181
182 Part II: Language Reference
183 * Fortran 2003 and 2008 status:: Fortran 2003 and 2008 features supported by GNU Fortran.
184 * Compiler Characteristics:: User-visible implementation details.
185 * Mixed-Language Programming:: Interoperability with C
186 * Extensions:: Language extensions implemented by GNU Fortran.
187 * Intrinsic Procedures:: Intrinsic procedures supported by GNU Fortran.
188 * Intrinsic Modules:: Intrinsic modules supported by GNU Fortran.
189
190 * Contributing:: How you can help.
191 * Copying:: GNU General Public License says
192 how you can copy and share GNU Fortran.
193 * GNU Free Documentation License::
194 How you can copy and share this manual.
195 * Funding:: How to help assure continued work for free software.
196 * Option Index:: Index of command line options
197 * Keyword Index:: Index of concepts
198 @end menu
199 @end ifnottex
200
201 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
202 @c Introduction
203 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
204
205 @node Introduction
206 @chapter Introduction
207
208 @c The following duplicates the text on the TexInfo table of contents.
209 @iftex
210 This manual documents the use of @command{gfortran}, the GNU Fortran
211 compiler. You can find in this manual how to invoke @command{gfortran},
212 as well as its features and incompatibilities.
213
214 @ifset DEVELOPMENT
215 @emph{Warning:} This document, and the compiler it describes, are still
216 under development. While efforts are made to keep it up-to-date, it
217 might not accurately reflect the status of the most recent GNU Fortran
218 compiler.
219 @end ifset
220 @end iftex
221
222 The GNU Fortran compiler front end was
223 designed initially as a free replacement for,
224 or alternative to, the unix @command{f95} command;
225 @command{gfortran} is the command you'll use to invoke the compiler.
226
227 @menu
228 * About GNU Fortran:: What you should know about the GNU Fortran compiler.
229 * GNU Fortran and GCC:: You can compile Fortran, C, or other programs.
230 * Preprocessing and conditional compilation:: The Fortran preprocessor
231 * GNU Fortran and G77:: Why we chose to start from scratch.
232 * Project Status:: Status of GNU Fortran, roadmap, proposed extensions.
233 * Standards:: Standards supported by GNU Fortran.
234 @end menu
235
236
237 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
238 @c About GNU Fortran
239 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
240
241 @node About GNU Fortran
242 @section About GNU Fortran
243
244 The GNU Fortran compiler supports the Fortran 77, 90 and 95 standards
245 completely, parts of the Fortran 2003 and Fortran 2008 standards, and
246 several vendor extensions. The development goal is to provide the
247 following features:
248
249 @itemize @bullet
250 @item
251 Read a user's program,
252 stored in a file and containing instructions written
253 in Fortran 77, Fortran 90, Fortran 95, Fortran 2003 or Fortran 2008.
254 This file contains @dfn{source code}.
255
256 @item
257 Translate the user's program into instructions a computer
258 can carry out more quickly than it takes to translate the
259 instructions in the first
260 place. The result after compilation of a program is
261 @dfn{machine code},
262 code designed to be efficiently translated and processed
263 by a machine such as your computer.
264 Humans usually aren't as good writing machine code
265 as they are at writing Fortran (or C++, Ada, or Java),
266 because it is easy to make tiny mistakes writing machine code.
267
268 @item
269 Provide the user with information about the reasons why
270 the compiler is unable to create a binary from the source code.
271 Usually this will be the case if the source code is flawed.
272 The Fortran 90 standard requires that the compiler can point out
273 mistakes to the user.
274 An incorrect usage of the language causes an @dfn{error message}.
275
276 The compiler will also attempt to diagnose cases where the
277 user's program contains a correct usage of the language,
278 but instructs the computer to do something questionable.
279 This kind of diagnostics message is called a @dfn{warning message}.
280
281 @item
282 Provide optional information about the translation passes
283 from the source code to machine code.
284 This can help a user of the compiler to find the cause of
285 certain bugs which may not be obvious in the source code,
286 but may be more easily found at a lower level compiler output.
287 It also helps developers to find bugs in the compiler itself.
288
289 @item
290 Provide information in the generated machine code that can
291 make it easier to find bugs in the program (using a debugging tool,
292 called a @dfn{debugger}, such as the GNU Debugger @command{gdb}).
293
294 @item
295 Locate and gather machine code already generated to
296 perform actions requested by statements in the user's program.
297 This machine code is organized into @dfn{modules} and is located
298 and @dfn{linked} to the user program.
299 @end itemize
300
301 The GNU Fortran compiler consists of several components:
302
303 @itemize @bullet
304 @item
305 A version of the @command{gcc} command
306 (which also might be installed as the system's @command{cc} command)
307 that also understands and accepts Fortran source code.
308 The @command{gcc} command is the @dfn{driver} program for
309 all the languages in the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC);
310 With @command{gcc},
311 you can compile the source code of any language for
312 which a front end is available in GCC.
313
314 @item
315 The @command{gfortran} command itself,
316 which also might be installed as the
317 system's @command{f95} command.
318 @command{gfortran} is just another driver program,
319 but specifically for the Fortran compiler only.
320 The difference with @command{gcc} is that @command{gfortran}
321 will automatically link the correct libraries to your program.
322
323 @item
324 A collection of run-time libraries.
325 These libraries contain the machine code needed to support
326 capabilities of the Fortran language that are not directly
327 provided by the machine code generated by the
328 @command{gfortran} compilation phase,
329 such as intrinsic functions and subroutines,
330 and routines for interaction with files and the operating system.
331 @c and mechanisms to spawn,
332 @c unleash and pause threads in parallelized code.
333
334 @item
335 The Fortran compiler itself, (@command{f951}).
336 This is the GNU Fortran parser and code generator,
337 linked to and interfaced with the GCC backend library.
338 @command{f951} ``translates'' the source code to
339 assembler code. You would typically not use this
340 program directly;
341 instead, the @command{gcc} or @command{gfortran} driver
342 programs will call it for you.
343 @end itemize
344
345
346 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
347 @c GNU Fortran and GCC
348 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
349
350 @node GNU Fortran and GCC
351 @section GNU Fortran and GCC
352 @cindex GNU Compiler Collection
353 @cindex GCC
354
355 GNU Fortran is a part of GCC, the @dfn{GNU Compiler Collection}. GCC
356 consists of a collection of front ends for various languages, which
357 translate the source code into a language-independent form called
358 @dfn{GENERIC}. This is then processed by a common middle end which
359 provides optimization, and then passed to one of a collection of back
360 ends which generate code for different computer architectures and
361 operating systems.
362
363 Functionally, this is implemented with a driver program (@command{gcc})
364 which provides the command-line interface for the compiler. It calls
365 the relevant compiler front-end program (e.g., @command{f951} for
366 Fortran) for each file in the source code, and then calls the assembler
367 and linker as appropriate to produce the compiled output. In a copy of
368 GCC which has been compiled with Fortran language support enabled,
369 @command{gcc} will recognize files with @file{.f}, @file{.for}, @file{.ftn},
370 @file{.f90}, @file{.f95}, @file{.f03} and @file{.f08} extensions as
371 Fortran source code, and compile it accordingly. A @command{gfortran}
372 driver program is also provided, which is identical to @command{gcc}
373 except that it automatically links the Fortran runtime libraries into the
374 compiled program.
375
376 Source files with @file{.f}, @file{.for}, @file{.fpp}, @file{.ftn}, @file{.F},
377 @file{.FOR}, @file{.FPP}, and @file{.FTN} extensions are treated as fixed form.
378 Source files with @file{.f90}, @file{.f95}, @file{.f03}, @file{.f08},
379 @file{.F90}, @file{.F95}, @file{.F03} and @file{.F08} extensions are
380 treated as free form. The capitalized versions of either form are run
381 through preprocessing. Source files with the lower case @file{.fpp}
382 extension are also run through preprocessing.
383
384 This manual specifically documents the Fortran front end, which handles
385 the programming language's syntax and semantics. The aspects of GCC
386 which relate to the optimization passes and the back-end code generation
387 are documented in the GCC manual; see
388 @ref{Top,,Introduction,gcc,Using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)}.
389 The two manuals together provide a complete reference for the GNU
390 Fortran compiler.
391
392
393 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
394 @c Preprocessing and conditional compilation
395 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
396
397 @node Preprocessing and conditional compilation
398 @section Preprocessing and conditional compilation
399 @cindex CPP
400 @cindex FPP
401 @cindex Conditional compilation
402 @cindex Preprocessing
403 @cindex preprocessor, include file handling
404
405 Many Fortran compilers including GNU Fortran allow passing the source code
406 through a C preprocessor (CPP; sometimes also called the Fortran preprocessor,
407 FPP) to allow for conditional compilation. In the case of GNU Fortran,
408 this is the GNU C Preprocessor in the traditional mode. On systems with
409 case-preserving file names, the preprocessor is automatically invoked if the
410 filename extension is @file{.F}, @file{.FOR}, @file{.FTN}, @file{.fpp},
411 @file{.FPP}, @file{.F90}, @file{.F95}, @file{.F03} or @file{.F08}. To manually
412 invoke the preprocessor on any file, use @option{-cpp}, to disable
413 preprocessing on files where the preprocessor is run automatically, use
414 @option{-nocpp}.
415
416 If a preprocessed file includes another file with the Fortran @code{INCLUDE}
417 statement, the included file is not preprocessed. To preprocess included
418 files, use the equivalent preprocessor statement @code{#include}.
419
420 If GNU Fortran invokes the preprocessor, @code{__GFORTRAN__}
421 is defined and @code{__GNUC__}, @code{__GNUC_MINOR__} and
422 @code{__GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__} can be used to determine the version of the
423 compiler. See @ref{Top,,Overview,cpp,The C Preprocessor} for details.
424
425 While CPP is the de-facto standard for preprocessing Fortran code,
426 Part 3 of the Fortran 95 standard (ISO/IEC 1539-3:1998) defines
427 Conditional Compilation, which is not widely used and not directly
428 supported by the GNU Fortran compiler. You can use the program coco
429 to preprocess such files (@uref{http://www.daniellnagle.com/coco.html}).
430
431
432 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
433 @c GNU Fortran and G77
434 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
435
436 @node GNU Fortran and G77
437 @section GNU Fortran and G77
438 @cindex Fortran 77
439 @cindex @command{g77}
440
441 The GNU Fortran compiler is the successor to @command{g77}, the Fortran
442 77 front end included in GCC prior to version 4. It is an entirely new
443 program that has been designed to provide Fortran 95 support and
444 extensibility for future Fortran language standards, as well as providing
445 backwards compatibility for Fortran 77 and nearly all of the GNU language
446 extensions supported by @command{g77}.
447
448
449 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
450 @c Project Status
451 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
452
453 @node Project Status
454 @section Project Status
455
456 @quotation
457 As soon as @command{gfortran} can parse all of the statements correctly,
458 it will be in the ``larva'' state.
459 When we generate code, the ``puppa'' state.
460 When @command{gfortran} is done,
461 we'll see if it will be a beautiful butterfly,
462 or just a big bug....
463
464 --Andy Vaught, April 2000
465 @end quotation
466
467 The start of the GNU Fortran 95 project was announced on
468 the GCC homepage in March 18, 2000
469 (even though Andy had already been working on it for a while,
470 of course).
471
472 The GNU Fortran compiler is able to compile nearly all
473 standard-compliant Fortran 95, Fortran 90, and Fortran 77 programs,
474 including a number of standard and non-standard extensions, and can be
475 used on real-world programs. In particular, the supported extensions
476 include OpenMP, Cray-style pointers, and several Fortran 2003 and Fortran
477 2008 features, including TR 15581. However, it is still under
478 development and has a few remaining rough edges.
479
480 At present, the GNU Fortran compiler passes the
481 @uref{http://www.fortran-2000.com/ArnaudRecipes/fcvs21_f95.html,
482 NIST Fortran 77 Test Suite}, and produces acceptable results on the
483 @uref{http://www.netlib.org/lapack/faq.html#1.21, LAPACK Test Suite}.
484 It also provides respectable performance on
485 the @uref{http://www.polyhedron.com/pb05.html, Polyhedron Fortran
486 compiler benchmarks} and the
487 @uref{http://www.llnl.gov/asci_benchmarks/asci/limited/lfk/README.html,
488 Livermore Fortran Kernels test}. It has been used to compile a number of
489 large real-world programs, including
490 @uref{http://mysite.verizon.net/serveall/moene.pdf, the HIRLAM
491 weather-forecasting code} and
492 @uref{http://www.theochem.uwa.edu.au/tonto/, the Tonto quantum
493 chemistry package}; see @url{http://gcc.gnu.org/@/wiki/@/GfortranApps} for an
494 extended list.
495
496 Among other things, the GNU Fortran compiler is intended as a replacement
497 for G77. At this point, nearly all programs that could be compiled with
498 G77 can be compiled with GNU Fortran, although there are a few minor known
499 regressions.
500
501 The primary work remaining to be done on GNU Fortran falls into three
502 categories: bug fixing (primarily regarding the treatment of invalid code
503 and providing useful error messages), improving the compiler optimizations
504 and the performance of compiled code, and extending the compiler to support
505 future standards---in particular, Fortran 2003 and Fortran 2008.
506
507
508 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
509 @c Standards
510 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
511
512 @node Standards
513 @section Standards
514 @cindex Standards
515
516 @menu
517 * Varying Length Character Strings::
518 @end menu
519
520 The GNU Fortran compiler implements
521 ISO/IEC 1539:1997 (Fortran 95). As such, it can also compile essentially all
522 standard-compliant Fortran 90 and Fortran 77 programs. It also supports
523 the ISO/IEC TR-15581 enhancements to allocatable arrays.
524
525 In the future, the GNU Fortran compiler will also support ISO/IEC
526 1539-1:2004 (Fortran 2003), ISO/IEC 1539-1:2010 (Fortran 2008) and
527 future Fortran standards. Partial support of the Fortran 2003 and
528 Fortran 2008 standard is already provided; the current status of the
529 support is reported in the @ref{Fortran 2003 status} and
530 @ref{Fortran 2008 status} sections of the documentation.
531
532 Additionally, the GNU Fortran compilers supports the OpenMP specification
533 (version 3.0, @url{http://openmp.org/@/wp/@/openmp-specifications/}).
534
535 @node Varying Length Character Strings
536 @subsection Varying Length Character Strings
537 @cindex Varying length character strings
538 @cindex Varying length strings
539 @cindex strings, varying length
540
541 The Fortran 95 standard specifies in Part 2 (ISO/IEC 1539-2:2000)
542 varying length character strings. While GNU Fortran currently does not
543 support such strings directly, there exist two Fortran implementations
544 for them, which work with GNU Fortran. They can be found at
545 @uref{http://www.fortran.com/@/iso_varying_string.f95} and at
546 @uref{ftp://ftp.nag.co.uk/@/sc22wg5/@/ISO_VARYING_STRING/}.
547
548
549
550 @c =====================================================================
551 @c PART I: INVOCATION REFERENCE
552 @c =====================================================================
553
554 @tex
555 \part{I}{Invoking GNU Fortran}
556 @end tex
557
558 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
559 @c Compiler Options
560 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
561
562 @include invoke.texi
563
564
565 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
566 @c Runtime
567 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
568
569 @node Runtime
570 @chapter Runtime: Influencing runtime behavior with environment variables
571 @cindex environment variable
572
573 The behavior of the @command{gfortran} can be influenced by
574 environment variables.
575
576 Malformed environment variables are silently ignored.
577
578 @menu
579 * GFORTRAN_STDIN_UNIT:: Unit number for standard input
580 * GFORTRAN_STDOUT_UNIT:: Unit number for standard output
581 * GFORTRAN_STDERR_UNIT:: Unit number for standard error
582 * GFORTRAN_USE_STDERR:: Send library output to standard error
583 * GFORTRAN_TMPDIR:: Directory for scratch files
584 * GFORTRAN_UNBUFFERED_ALL:: Don't buffer I/O for all units.
585 * GFORTRAN_UNBUFFERED_PRECONNECTED:: Don't buffer I/O for preconnected units.
586 * GFORTRAN_SHOW_LOCUS:: Show location for runtime errors
587 * GFORTRAN_OPTIONAL_PLUS:: Print leading + where permitted
588 * GFORTRAN_DEFAULT_RECL:: Default record length for new files
589 * GFORTRAN_LIST_SEPARATOR:: Separator for list output
590 * GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT:: Set endianness for unformatted I/O
591 * GFORTRAN_ERROR_DUMPCORE:: Dump core on run-time errors
592 * GFORTRAN_ERROR_BACKTRACE:: Show backtrace on run-time errors
593 @end menu
594
595 @node GFORTRAN_STDIN_UNIT
596 @section @env{GFORTRAN_STDIN_UNIT}---Unit number for standard input
597
598 This environment variable can be used to select the unit number
599 preconnected to standard input. This must be a positive integer.
600 The default value is 5.
601
602 @node GFORTRAN_STDOUT_UNIT
603 @section @env{GFORTRAN_STDOUT_UNIT}---Unit number for standard output
604
605 This environment variable can be used to select the unit number
606 preconnected to standard output. This must be a positive integer.
607 The default value is 6.
608
609 @node GFORTRAN_STDERR_UNIT
610 @section @env{GFORTRAN_STDERR_UNIT}---Unit number for standard error
611
612 This environment variable can be used to select the unit number
613 preconnected to standard error. This must be a positive integer.
614 The default value is 0.
615
616 @node GFORTRAN_USE_STDERR
617 @section @env{GFORTRAN_USE_STDERR}---Send library output to standard error
618
619 This environment variable controls where library output is sent.
620 If the first letter is @samp{y}, @samp{Y} or @samp{1}, standard
621 error is used. If the first letter is @samp{n}, @samp{N} or
622 @samp{0}, standard output is used.
623
624 @node GFORTRAN_TMPDIR
625 @section @env{GFORTRAN_TMPDIR}---Directory for scratch files
626
627 This environment variable controls where scratch files are
628 created. If this environment variable is missing,
629 GNU Fortran searches for the environment variable @env{TMP}, then @env{TEMP}.
630 If these are missing, the default is @file{/tmp}.
631
632 @node GFORTRAN_UNBUFFERED_ALL
633 @section @env{GFORTRAN_UNBUFFERED_ALL}---Don't buffer I/O on all units
634
635 This environment variable controls whether all I/O is unbuffered. If
636 the first letter is @samp{y}, @samp{Y} or @samp{1}, all I/O is
637 unbuffered. This will slow down small sequential reads and writes. If
638 the first letter is @samp{n}, @samp{N} or @samp{0}, I/O is buffered.
639 This is the default.
640
641 @node GFORTRAN_UNBUFFERED_PRECONNECTED
642 @section @env{GFORTRAN_UNBUFFERED_PRECONNECTED}---Don't buffer I/O on preconnected units
643
644 The environment variable named @env{GFORTRAN_UNBUFFERED_PRECONNECTED} controls
645 whether I/O on a preconnected unit (i.e.@: STDOUT or STDERR) is unbuffered. If
646 the first letter is @samp{y}, @samp{Y} or @samp{1}, I/O is unbuffered. This
647 will slow down small sequential reads and writes. If the first letter
648 is @samp{n}, @samp{N} or @samp{0}, I/O is buffered. This is the default.
649
650 @node GFORTRAN_SHOW_LOCUS
651 @section @env{GFORTRAN_SHOW_LOCUS}---Show location for runtime errors
652
653 If the first letter is @samp{y}, @samp{Y} or @samp{1}, filename and
654 line numbers for runtime errors are printed. If the first letter is
655 @samp{n}, @samp{N} or @samp{0}, don't print filename and line numbers
656 for runtime errors. The default is to print the location.
657
658 @node GFORTRAN_OPTIONAL_PLUS
659 @section @env{GFORTRAN_OPTIONAL_PLUS}---Print leading + where permitted
660
661 If the first letter is @samp{y}, @samp{Y} or @samp{1},
662 a plus sign is printed
663 where permitted by the Fortran standard. If the first letter
664 is @samp{n}, @samp{N} or @samp{0}, a plus sign is not printed
665 in most cases. Default is not to print plus signs.
666
667 @node GFORTRAN_DEFAULT_RECL
668 @section @env{GFORTRAN_DEFAULT_RECL}---Default record length for new files
669
670 This environment variable specifies the default record length, in
671 bytes, for files which are opened without a @code{RECL} tag in the
672 @code{OPEN} statement. This must be a positive integer. The
673 default value is 1073741824 bytes (1 GB).
674
675 @node GFORTRAN_LIST_SEPARATOR
676 @section @env{GFORTRAN_LIST_SEPARATOR}---Separator for list output
677
678 This environment variable specifies the separator when writing
679 list-directed output. It may contain any number of spaces and
680 at most one comma. If you specify this on the command line,
681 be sure to quote spaces, as in
682 @smallexample
683 $ GFORTRAN_LIST_SEPARATOR=' , ' ./a.out
684 @end smallexample
685 when @command{a.out} is the compiled Fortran program that you want to run.
686 Default is a single space.
687
688 @node GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT
689 @section @env{GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT}---Set endianness for unformatted I/O
690
691 By setting the @env{GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT} variable, it is possible
692 to change the representation of data for unformatted files.
693 The syntax for the @env{GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT} variable is:
694 @smallexample
695 GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT: mode | mode ';' exception | exception ;
696 mode: 'native' | 'swap' | 'big_endian' | 'little_endian' ;
697 exception: mode ':' unit_list | unit_list ;
698 unit_list: unit_spec | unit_list unit_spec ;
699 unit_spec: INTEGER | INTEGER '-' INTEGER ;
700 @end smallexample
701 The variable consists of an optional default mode, followed by
702 a list of optional exceptions, which are separated by semicolons
703 from the preceding default and each other. Each exception consists
704 of a format and a comma-separated list of units. Valid values for
705 the modes are the same as for the @code{CONVERT} specifier:
706
707 @itemize @w{}
708 @item @code{NATIVE} Use the native format. This is the default.
709 @item @code{SWAP} Swap between little- and big-endian.
710 @item @code{LITTLE_ENDIAN} Use the little-endian format
711 for unformatted files.
712 @item @code{BIG_ENDIAN} Use the big-endian format for unformatted files.
713 @end itemize
714 A missing mode for an exception is taken to mean @code{BIG_ENDIAN}.
715 Examples of values for @env{GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT} are:
716 @itemize @w{}
717 @item @code{'big_endian'} Do all unformatted I/O in big_endian mode.
718 @item @code{'little_endian;native:10-20,25'} Do all unformatted I/O
719 in little_endian mode, except for units 10 to 20 and 25, which are in
720 native format.
721 @item @code{'10-20'} Units 10 to 20 are big-endian, the rest is native.
722 @end itemize
723
724 Setting the environment variables should be done on the command
725 line or via the @command{export}
726 command for @command{sh}-compatible shells and via @command{setenv}
727 for @command{csh}-compatible shells.
728
729 Example for @command{sh}:
730 @smallexample
731 $ gfortran foo.f90
732 $ GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT='big_endian;native:10-20' ./a.out
733 @end smallexample
734
735 Example code for @command{csh}:
736 @smallexample
737 % gfortran foo.f90
738 % setenv GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT 'big_endian;native:10-20'
739 % ./a.out
740 @end smallexample
741
742 Using anything but the native representation for unformatted data
743 carries a significant speed overhead. If speed in this area matters
744 to you, it is best if you use this only for data that needs to be
745 portable.
746
747 @xref{CONVERT specifier}, for an alternative way to specify the
748 data representation for unformatted files. @xref{Runtime Options}, for
749 setting a default data representation for the whole program. The
750 @code{CONVERT} specifier overrides the @option{-fconvert} compile options.
751
752 @emph{Note that the values specified via the GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT
753 environment variable will override the CONVERT specifier in the
754 open statement}. This is to give control over data formats to
755 users who do not have the source code of their program available.
756
757 @node GFORTRAN_ERROR_DUMPCORE
758 @section @env{GFORTRAN_ERROR_DUMPCORE}---Dump core on run-time errors
759
760 If the @env{GFORTRAN_ERROR_DUMPCORE} variable is set to
761 @samp{y}, @samp{Y} or @samp{1} (only the first letter is relevant)
762 then library run-time errors cause core dumps. To disable the core
763 dumps, set the variable to @samp{n}, @samp{N}, @samp{0}. Default
764 is not to core dump unless the @option{-fdump-core} compile option
765 was used.
766
767 @node GFORTRAN_ERROR_BACKTRACE
768 @section @env{GFORTRAN_ERROR_BACKTRACE}---Show backtrace on run-time errors
769
770 If the @env{GFORTRAN_ERROR_BACKTRACE} variable is set to
771 @samp{y}, @samp{Y} or @samp{1} (only the first letter is relevant)
772 then a backtrace is printed when a run-time error occurs.
773 To disable the backtracing, set the variable to
774 @samp{n}, @samp{N}, @samp{0}. Default is not to print a backtrace
775 unless the @option{-fbacktrace} compile option
776 was used.
777
778 @c =====================================================================
779 @c PART II: LANGUAGE REFERENCE
780 @c =====================================================================
781
782 @tex
783 \part{II}{Language Reference}
784 @end tex
785
786 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
787 @c Fortran 2003 and 2008 Status
788 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
789
790 @node Fortran 2003 and 2008 status
791 @chapter Fortran 2003 and 2008 Status
792
793 @menu
794 * Fortran 2003 status::
795 * Fortran 2008 status::
796 @end menu
797
798 @node Fortran 2003 status
799 @section Fortran 2003 status
800
801 GNU Fortran supports several Fortran 2003 features; an incomplete
802 list can be found below. See also the
803 @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Fortran2003, wiki page} about Fortran 2003.
804
805 @itemize
806 @item Procedure pointers including procedure-pointer components with
807 @code{PASS} attribute.
808
809 @item Procedures which are bound to a derived type (type-bound procedures)
810 including @code{PASS}, @code{PROCEDURE} and @code{GENERIC}, and
811 operators bound to a type.
812
813 @item Abstract interfaces and and type extension with the possibility to
814 override type-bound procedures or to have deferred binding.
815
816 @item Polymorphic entities (``@code{CLASS}'') for derived types -- including
817 @code{SAME_TYPE_AS}, @code{EXTENDS_TYPE_OF} and @code{SELECT TYPE}.
818 Note that the support for array-valued polymorphic entities is incomplete
819 and unlimited polymophism is currently not supported.
820
821 @item The @code{ASSOCIATE} construct.
822
823 @item Interoperability with C including enumerations,
824
825 @item In structure constructors the components with default values may be
826 omitted.
827
828 @item Extensions to the @code{ALLOCATE} statement, allowing for a
829 type-specification with type parameter and for allocation and initialization
830 from a @code{SOURCE=} expression; @code{ALLOCATE} and @code{DEALLOCATE}
831 optionally return an error message string via @code{ERRMSG=}.
832
833 @item Reallocation on assignment: If an intrinsic assignment is
834 used, an allocatable variable on the left-hand side is automatically allocated
835 (if unallocated) or reallocated (if the shape is different). Currently, scalar
836 deferred character length left-hand sides are correctly handled but arrays
837 are not yet fully implemented.
838
839 @item Transferring of allocations via @code{MOVE_ALLOC}.
840
841 @item The @code{PRIVATE} and @code{PUBLIC} attributes may be given individually
842 to derived-type components.
843
844 @item In pointer assignments, the lower bound may be specified and
845 the remapping of elements is supported.
846
847 @item For pointers an @code{INTENT} may be specified which affect the
848 association status not the value of the pointer target.
849
850 @item Intrinsics @code{command_argument_count}, @code{get_command},
851 @code{get_command_argument}, and @code{get_environment_variable}.
852
853 @item Support for unicode characters (ISO 10646) and UTF-8, including
854 the @code{SELECTED_CHAR_KIND} and @code{NEW_LINE} intrinsic functions.
855
856 @item Support for binary, octal and hexadecimal (BOZ) constants in the
857 intrinsic functions @code{INT}, @code{REAL}, @code{CMPLX} and @code{DBLE}.
858
859 @item
860 @cindex array, constructors
861 @cindex @code{[...]}
862 Array constructors using square brackets. That is, @code{[...]} rather
863 than @code{(/.../)}. Type-specification for array constructors like
864 @code{(/ some-type :: ... /)}.
865
866 @item Extensions to the specification and initialization expressions,
867 including the support for intrinsics with real and complex arguments.
868
869 @item Support for the asynchronous input/output syntax; however, the
870 data transfer is currently always synchronously performed.
871
872 @item
873 @cindex @code{FLUSH} statement
874 @cindex statement, @code{FLUSH}
875 @code{FLUSH} statement.
876
877 @item
878 @cindex @code{IOMSG=} specifier
879 @code{IOMSG=} specifier for I/O statements.
880
881 @item
882 @cindex @code{ENUM} statement
883 @cindex @code{ENUMERATOR} statement
884 @cindex statement, @code{ENUM}
885 @cindex statement, @code{ENUMERATOR}
886 @opindex @code{fshort-enums}
887 Support for the declaration of enumeration constants via the
888 @code{ENUM} and @code{ENUMERATOR} statements. Interoperability with
889 @command{gcc} is guaranteed also for the case where the
890 @command{-fshort-enums} command line option is given.
891
892 @item
893 @cindex TR 15581
894 TR 15581:
895 @itemize
896 @item
897 @cindex @code{ALLOCATABLE} dummy arguments
898 @code{ALLOCATABLE} dummy arguments.
899 @item
900 @cindex @code{ALLOCATABLE} function results
901 @code{ALLOCATABLE} function results
902 @item
903 @cindex @code{ALLOCATABLE} components of derived types
904 @code{ALLOCATABLE} components of derived types
905 @end itemize
906
907 @item
908 @cindex @code{STREAM} I/O
909 @cindex @code{ACCESS='STREAM'} I/O
910 The @code{OPEN} statement supports the @code{ACCESS='STREAM'} specifier,
911 allowing I/O without any record structure.
912
913 @item
914 Namelist input/output for internal files.
915
916 @item Further I/O extensions: Rounding during formatted output, using of
917 a decimal comma instead of a decimal point, setting whether a plus sign
918 should appear for positive numbers.
919
920 @item
921 @cindex @code{PROTECTED} statement
922 @cindex statement, @code{PROTECTED}
923 The @code{PROTECTED} statement and attribute.
924
925 @item
926 @cindex @code{VALUE} statement
927 @cindex statement, @code{VALUE}
928 The @code{VALUE} statement and attribute.
929
930 @item
931 @cindex @code{VOLATILE} statement
932 @cindex statement, @code{VOLATILE}
933 The @code{VOLATILE} statement and attribute.
934
935 @item
936 @cindex @code{IMPORT} statement
937 @cindex statement, @code{IMPORT}
938 The @code{IMPORT} statement, allowing to import
939 host-associated derived types.
940
941 @item The intrinsic modules @code{ISO_FORTRAN_ENVIRONMENT} is supported,
942 which contains parameters of the I/O units, storage sizes. Additionally,
943 procedures for C interoperability are available in the @code{ISO_C_BINDING}
944 module.
945
946 @item
947 @cindex @code{USE, INTRINSIC} statement
948 @cindex statement, @code{USE, INTRINSIC}
949 @cindex @code{ISO_FORTRAN_ENV} statement
950 @cindex statement, @code{ISO_FORTRAN_ENV}
951 @code{USE} statement with @code{INTRINSIC} and @code{NON_INTRINSIC}
952 attribute; supported intrinsic modules: @code{ISO_FORTRAN_ENV},
953 @code{ISO_C_BINDING}, @code{OMP_LIB} and @code{OMP_LIB_KINDS}.
954
955 @item
956 Renaming of operators in the @code{USE} statement.
957
958 @end itemize
959
960
961 @node Fortran 2008 status
962 @section Fortran 2008 status
963
964 The latest version of the Fortran standard is ISO/IEC 1539-1:2010, informally
965 known as Fortran 2008. The official version is available from International
966 Organization for Standardization (ISO) or its national member organizations.
967 The the final draft (FDIS) can be downloaded free of charge from
968 @url{http://www.nag.co.uk/@/sc22wg5/@/links.html}. Fortran is developed by the
969 Working Group 5 of Sub-Committee 22 of the Joint Technical Committee 1 of the
970 International Organization for Standardization and the International
971 Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). This group is known as
972 @uref{http://www.nag.co.uk/sc22wg5/, WG5}.
973
974 The GNU Fortran supports several of the new features of Fortran 2008; the
975 @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Fortran2008Status, wiki} has some information
976 about the current Fortran 2008 implementation status. In particular, the
977 following is implemented.
978
979 @itemize
980 @item The @option{-std=f2008} option and support for the file extensions
981 @file{.f08} and @file{.F08}.
982
983 @item The @code{OPEN} statement now supports the @code{NEWUNIT=} option,
984 which returns a unique file unit, thus preventing inadvertent use of the
985 same unit in different parts of the program.
986
987 @item The @code{g0} format descriptor and unlimited format items.
988
989 @item The mathematical intrinsics @code{ASINH}, @code{ACOSH}, @code{ATANH},
990 @code{ERF}, @code{ERFC}, @code{GAMMA}, @code{LOG_GAMMA}, @code{BESSEL_J0},
991 @code{BESSEL_J1}, @code{BESSEL_JN}, @code{BESSEL_Y0}, @code{BESSEL_Y1},
992 @code{BESSEL_YN}, @code{HYPOT}, @code{NORM2}, and @code{ERFC_SCALED}.
993
994 @item Using complex arguments with @code{TAN}, @code{SINH}, @code{COSH},
995 @code{TANH}, @code{ASIN}, @code{ACOS}, and @code{ATAN} is now possible;
996 @code{ATAN}(@var{Y},@var{X}) is now an alias for @code{ATAN2}(@var{Y},@var{X}).
997
998 @item Support of the @code{PARITY} intrinsic functions.
999
1000 @item The following bit intrinsics: @code{LEADZ} and @code{TRAILZ} for
1001 counting the number of leading and trailing zero bits, @code{POPCNT} and
1002 @code{POPPAR} for counting the number of one bits and returning the parity;
1003 @code{BGE}, @code{BGT}, @code{BLE}, and @code{BLT} for bitwise comparisons;
1004 @code{DSHIFTL} and @code{DSHIFTR} for combined left and right shifts,
1005 @code{MASKL} and @code{MASKR} for simple left and right justified masks,
1006 @code{MERGE_BITS} for a bitwise merge using a mask, @code{SHIFTA},
1007 @code{SHIFTL} and @code{SHIFTR} for shift operations, and the
1008 transformational bit intrinsics @code{IALL}, @code{IANY} and @code{IPARITY}.
1009
1010 @item Support of the @code{EXECUTE_COMMAND_LINE} intrinsic subroutine.
1011
1012 @item Support for the @code{STORAGE_SIZE} intrinsic inquiry function.
1013
1014 @item The @code{INT@{8,16,32@}} and @code{REAL@{32,64,128@}} kind type
1015 parameters and the array-valued named constants @code{INTEGER_KINDS},
1016 @code{LOGICAL_KINDS}, @code{REAL_KINDS} and @code{CHARACTER_KINDS} of
1017 the intrinsic module @code{ISO_FORTRAN_ENV}.
1018
1019 @item The module procedures @code{C_SIZEOF} of the intrinsic module
1020 @code{ISO_C_BINDINGS} and @code{COMPILER_VERSION} and @code{COMPILER_OPTIONS}
1021 of @code{ISO_FORTRAN_ENV}.
1022
1023 @item Experimental coarray support (for one image only), use the
1024 @option{-fcoarray=single} flag to enable it.
1025
1026 @item The @code{BLOCK} construct is supported.
1027
1028 @item The @code{STOP} and the new @code{ERROR STOP} statements now
1029 support all constant expressions.
1030
1031 @item Support for the @code{CONTIGUOUS} attribute.
1032
1033 @item Support for @code{ALLOCATE} with @code{MOLD}.
1034
1035 @item Support for the @code{IMPURE} attribute for procedures, which
1036 allows for @code{ELEMENTAL} procedures without the restrictions of
1037 @code{PURE}.
1038
1039 @item Null pointers (including @code{NULL()}) and not-allocated variables
1040 can be used as actual argument to optional non-pointer, non-allocatable
1041 dummy arguments, denoting an absent argument.
1042
1043 @item Non-pointer variables with @code{TARGET} attribute can be used as
1044 actual argument to @code{POINTER} dummies with @code{INTENT(IN)}.
1045
1046 @item Pointers including procedure pointers and those in a derived
1047 type (pointer components) can now be initialized by a target instead
1048 of only by @code{NULL}.
1049
1050 @item The @code{EXIT} statement (with construct-name) can be now be
1051 used to leave not only the @code{DO} but also the @code{ASSOCIATE},
1052 @code{BLOCK}, @code{IF}, @code{SELECT CASE} and @code{SELECT TYPE}
1053 constructs.
1054
1055 @item Internal procedures can now be used as actual argument.
1056
1057 @item Minor features: obsolesce diagnostics for @code{ENTRY} with
1058 @option{-std=f2008}; a line may start with a semicolon; for internal
1059 and module procedures @code{END} can be used instead of
1060 @code{END SUBROUTINE} and @code{END FUNCTION}; @code{SELECTED_REAL_KIND}
1061 now also takes a @code{RADIX} argument; intrinsic types are supported
1062 for @code{TYPE}(@var{intrinsic-type-spec}); multiple type-bound procedures
1063 can be declared in a single @code{PROCEDURE} statement; implied-shape
1064 arrays are supported for named constants (@code{PARAMETER}).
1065 @end itemize
1066
1067
1068
1069 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
1070 @c Compiler Characteristics
1071 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
1072
1073 @node Compiler Characteristics
1074 @chapter Compiler Characteristics
1075
1076 This chapter describes certain characteristics of the GNU Fortran
1077 compiler, that are not specified by the Fortran standard, but which
1078 might in some way or another become visible to the programmer.
1079
1080 @menu
1081 * KIND Type Parameters::
1082 * Internal representation of LOGICAL variables::
1083 @end menu
1084
1085
1086 @node KIND Type Parameters
1087 @section KIND Type Parameters
1088 @cindex kind
1089
1090 The @code{KIND} type parameters supported by GNU Fortran for the primitive
1091 data types are:
1092
1093 @table @code
1094
1095 @item INTEGER
1096 1, 2, 4, 8*, 16*, default: 4 (1)
1097
1098 @item LOGICAL
1099 1, 2, 4, 8*, 16*, default: 4 (1)
1100
1101 @item REAL
1102 4, 8, 10*, 16*, default: 4 (2)
1103
1104 @item COMPLEX
1105 4, 8, 10*, 16*, default: 4 (2)
1106
1107 @item CHARACTER
1108 1, 4, default: 1
1109
1110 @end table
1111
1112 @noindent
1113 * = not available on all systems @*
1114 (1) Unless -fdefault-integer-8 is used @*
1115 (2) Unless -fdefault-real-8 is used
1116
1117 @noindent
1118 The @code{KIND} value matches the storage size in bytes, except for
1119 @code{COMPLEX} where the storage size is twice as much (or both real and
1120 imaginary part are a real value of the given size). It is recommended to use
1121 the @code{SELECTED_CHAR_KIND}, @code{SELECTED_INT_KIND} and
1122 @code{SELECTED_REAL_KIND} intrinsics or the @code{INT8}, @code{INT16},
1123 @code{INT32}, @code{INT64}, @code{REAL32}, @code{REAL64}, and @code{REAL128}
1124 parameters of the @code{ISO_FORTRAN_ENV} module instead of the concrete values.
1125 The available kind parameters can be found in the constant arrays
1126 @code{CHARACTER_KINDS}, @code{INTEGER_KINDS}, @code{LOGICAL_KINDS} and
1127 @code{REAL_KINDS} in the @code{ISO_FORTRAN_ENV} module
1128 (see @ref{ISO_FORTRAN_ENV}).
1129
1130
1131 @node Internal representation of LOGICAL variables
1132 @section Internal representation of LOGICAL variables
1133 @cindex logical, variable representation
1134
1135 The Fortran standard does not specify how variables of @code{LOGICAL}
1136 type are represented, beyond requiring that @code{LOGICAL} variables
1137 of default kind have the same storage size as default @code{INTEGER}
1138 and @code{REAL} variables. The GNU Fortran internal representation is
1139 as follows.
1140
1141 A @code{LOGICAL(KIND=N)} variable is represented as an
1142 @code{INTEGER(KIND=N)} variable, however, with only two permissible
1143 values: @code{1} for @code{.TRUE.} and @code{0} for
1144 @code{.FALSE.}. Any other integer value results in undefined behavior.
1145
1146 Note that for mixed-language programming using the
1147 @code{ISO_C_BINDING} feature, there is a @code{C_BOOL} kind that can
1148 be used to create @code{LOGICAL(KIND=C_BOOL)} variables which are
1149 interoperable with the C99 _Bool type. The C99 _Bool type has an
1150 internal representation described in the C99 standard, which is
1151 identical to the above description, i.e. with 1 for true and 0 for
1152 false being the only permissible values. Thus the internal
1153 representation of @code{LOGICAL} variables in GNU Fortran is identical
1154 to C99 _Bool, except for a possible difference in storage size
1155 depending on the kind.
1156
1157 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
1158 @c Extensions
1159 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
1160
1161 @c Maybe this chapter should be merged with the 'Standards' section,
1162 @c whenever that is written :-)
1163
1164 @node Extensions
1165 @chapter Extensions
1166 @cindex extensions
1167
1168 The two sections below detail the extensions to standard Fortran that are
1169 implemented in GNU Fortran, as well as some of the popular or
1170 historically important extensions that are not (or not yet) implemented.
1171 For the latter case, we explain the alternatives available to GNU Fortran
1172 users, including replacement by standard-conforming code or GNU
1173 extensions.
1174
1175 @menu
1176 * Extensions implemented in GNU Fortran::
1177 * Extensions not implemented in GNU Fortran::
1178 @end menu
1179
1180
1181 @node Extensions implemented in GNU Fortran
1182 @section Extensions implemented in GNU Fortran
1183 @cindex extensions, implemented
1184
1185 GNU Fortran implements a number of extensions over standard
1186 Fortran. This chapter contains information on their syntax and
1187 meaning. There are currently two categories of GNU Fortran
1188 extensions, those that provide functionality beyond that provided
1189 by any standard, and those that are supported by GNU Fortran
1190 purely for backward compatibility with legacy compilers. By default,
1191 @option{-std=gnu} allows the compiler to accept both types of
1192 extensions, but to warn about the use of the latter. Specifying
1193 either @option{-std=f95}, @option{-std=f2003} or @option{-std=f2008}
1194 disables both types of extensions, and @option{-std=legacy} allows both
1195 without warning.
1196
1197 @menu
1198 * Old-style kind specifications::
1199 * Old-style variable initialization::
1200 * Extensions to namelist::
1201 * X format descriptor without count field::
1202 * Commas in FORMAT specifications::
1203 * Missing period in FORMAT specifications::
1204 * I/O item lists::
1205 * BOZ literal constants::
1206 * Real array indices::
1207 * Unary operators::
1208 * Implicitly convert LOGICAL and INTEGER values::
1209 * Hollerith constants support::
1210 * Cray pointers::
1211 * CONVERT specifier::
1212 * OpenMP::
1213 * Argument list functions::
1214 @end menu
1215
1216 @node Old-style kind specifications
1217 @subsection Old-style kind specifications
1218 @cindex kind, old-style
1219
1220 GNU Fortran allows old-style kind specifications in declarations. These
1221 look like:
1222 @smallexample
1223 TYPESPEC*size x,y,z
1224 @end smallexample
1225 @noindent
1226 where @code{TYPESPEC} is a basic type (@code{INTEGER}, @code{REAL},
1227 etc.), and where @code{size} is a byte count corresponding to the
1228 storage size of a valid kind for that type. (For @code{COMPLEX}
1229 variables, @code{size} is the total size of the real and imaginary
1230 parts.) The statement then declares @code{x}, @code{y} and @code{z} to
1231 be of type @code{TYPESPEC} with the appropriate kind. This is
1232 equivalent to the standard-conforming declaration
1233 @smallexample
1234 TYPESPEC(k) x,y,z
1235 @end smallexample
1236 @noindent
1237 where @code{k} is the kind parameter suitable for the intended precision. As
1238 kind parameters are implementation-dependent, use the @code{KIND},
1239 @code{SELECTED_INT_KIND} and @code{SELECTED_REAL_KIND} intrinsics to retrieve
1240 the correct value, for instance @code{REAL*8 x} can be replaced by:
1241 @smallexample
1242 INTEGER, PARAMETER :: dbl = KIND(1.0d0)
1243 REAL(KIND=dbl) :: x
1244 @end smallexample
1245
1246 @node Old-style variable initialization
1247 @subsection Old-style variable initialization
1248
1249 GNU Fortran allows old-style initialization of variables of the
1250 form:
1251 @smallexample
1252 INTEGER i/1/,j/2/
1253 REAL x(2,2) /3*0.,1./
1254 @end smallexample
1255 The syntax for the initializers is as for the @code{DATA} statement, but
1256 unlike in a @code{DATA} statement, an initializer only applies to the
1257 variable immediately preceding the initialization. In other words,
1258 something like @code{INTEGER I,J/2,3/} is not valid. This style of
1259 initialization is only allowed in declarations without double colons
1260 (@code{::}); the double colons were introduced in Fortran 90, which also
1261 introduced a standard syntax for initializing variables in type
1262 declarations.
1263
1264 Examples of standard-conforming code equivalent to the above example
1265 are:
1266 @smallexample
1267 ! Fortran 90
1268 INTEGER :: i = 1, j = 2
1269 REAL :: x(2,2) = RESHAPE((/0.,0.,0.,1./),SHAPE(x))
1270 ! Fortran 77
1271 INTEGER i, j
1272 REAL x(2,2)
1273 DATA i/1/, j/2/, x/3*0.,1./
1274 @end smallexample
1275
1276 Note that variables which are explicitly initialized in declarations
1277 or in @code{DATA} statements automatically acquire the @code{SAVE}
1278 attribute.
1279
1280 @node Extensions to namelist
1281 @subsection Extensions to namelist
1282 @cindex Namelist
1283
1284 GNU Fortran fully supports the Fortran 95 standard for namelist I/O
1285 including array qualifiers, substrings and fully qualified derived types.
1286 The output from a namelist write is compatible with namelist read. The
1287 output has all names in upper case and indentation to column 1 after the
1288 namelist name. Two extensions are permitted:
1289
1290 Old-style use of @samp{$} instead of @samp{&}
1291 @smallexample
1292 $MYNML
1293 X(:)%Y(2) = 1.0 2.0 3.0
1294 CH(1:4) = "abcd"
1295 $END
1296 @end smallexample
1297
1298 It should be noted that the default terminator is @samp{/} rather than
1299 @samp{&END}.
1300
1301 Querying of the namelist when inputting from stdin. After at least
1302 one space, entering @samp{?} sends to stdout the namelist name and the names of
1303 the variables in the namelist:
1304 @smallexample
1305 ?
1306
1307 &mynml
1308 x
1309 x%y
1310 ch
1311 &end
1312 @end smallexample
1313
1314 Entering @samp{=?} outputs the namelist to stdout, as if
1315 @code{WRITE(*,NML = mynml)} had been called:
1316 @smallexample
1317 =?
1318
1319 &MYNML
1320 X(1)%Y= 0.000000 , 1.000000 , 0.000000 ,
1321 X(2)%Y= 0.000000 , 2.000000 , 0.000000 ,
1322 X(3)%Y= 0.000000 , 3.000000 , 0.000000 ,
1323 CH=abcd, /
1324 @end smallexample
1325
1326 To aid this dialog, when input is from stdin, errors send their
1327 messages to stderr and execution continues, even if @code{IOSTAT} is set.
1328
1329 @code{PRINT} namelist is permitted. This causes an error if
1330 @option{-std=f95} is used.
1331 @smallexample
1332 PROGRAM test_print
1333 REAL, dimension (4) :: x = (/1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0/)
1334 NAMELIST /mynml/ x
1335 PRINT mynml
1336 END PROGRAM test_print
1337 @end smallexample
1338
1339 Expanded namelist reads are permitted. This causes an error if
1340 @option{-std=f95} is used. In the following example, the first element
1341 of the array will be given the value 0.00 and the two succeeding
1342 elements will be given the values 1.00 and 2.00.
1343 @smallexample
1344 &MYNML
1345 X(1,1) = 0.00 , 1.00 , 2.00
1346 /
1347 @end smallexample
1348
1349 @node X format descriptor without count field
1350 @subsection @code{X} format descriptor without count field
1351
1352 To support legacy codes, GNU Fortran permits the count field of the
1353 @code{X} edit descriptor in @code{FORMAT} statements to be omitted.
1354 When omitted, the count is implicitly assumed to be one.
1355
1356 @smallexample
1357 PRINT 10, 2, 3
1358 10 FORMAT (I1, X, I1)
1359 @end smallexample
1360
1361 @node Commas in FORMAT specifications
1362 @subsection Commas in @code{FORMAT} specifications
1363
1364 To support legacy codes, GNU Fortran allows the comma separator
1365 to be omitted immediately before and after character string edit
1366 descriptors in @code{FORMAT} statements.
1367
1368 @smallexample
1369 PRINT 10, 2, 3
1370 10 FORMAT ('FOO='I1' BAR='I2)
1371 @end smallexample
1372
1373
1374 @node Missing period in FORMAT specifications
1375 @subsection Missing period in @code{FORMAT} specifications
1376
1377 To support legacy codes, GNU Fortran allows missing periods in format
1378 specifications if and only if @option{-std=legacy} is given on the
1379 command line. This is considered non-conforming code and is
1380 discouraged.
1381
1382 @smallexample
1383 REAL :: value
1384 READ(*,10) value
1385 10 FORMAT ('F4')
1386 @end smallexample
1387
1388 @node I/O item lists
1389 @subsection I/O item lists
1390 @cindex I/O item lists
1391
1392 To support legacy codes, GNU Fortran allows the input item list
1393 of the @code{READ} statement, and the output item lists of the
1394 @code{WRITE} and @code{PRINT} statements, to start with a comma.
1395
1396 @node BOZ literal constants
1397 @subsection BOZ literal constants
1398 @cindex BOZ literal constants
1399
1400 Besides decimal constants, Fortran also supports binary (@code{b}),
1401 octal (@code{o}) and hexadecimal (@code{z}) integer constants. The
1402 syntax is: @samp{prefix quote digits quote}, were the prefix is
1403 either @code{b}, @code{o} or @code{z}, quote is either @code{'} or
1404 @code{"} and the digits are for binary @code{0} or @code{1}, for
1405 octal between @code{0} and @code{7}, and for hexadecimal between
1406 @code{0} and @code{F}. (Example: @code{b'01011101'}.)
1407
1408 Up to Fortran 95, BOZ literals were only allowed to initialize
1409 integer variables in DATA statements. Since Fortran 2003 BOZ literals
1410 are also allowed as argument of @code{REAL}, @code{DBLE}, @code{INT}
1411 and @code{CMPLX}; the result is the same as if the integer BOZ
1412 literal had been converted by @code{TRANSFER} to, respectively,
1413 @code{real}, @code{double precision}, @code{integer} or @code{complex}.
1414 As GNU Fortran extension the intrinsic procedures @code{FLOAT},
1415 @code{DFLOAT}, @code{COMPLEX} and @code{DCMPLX} are treated alike.
1416
1417 As an extension, GNU Fortran allows hexadecimal BOZ literal constants to
1418 be specified using the @code{X} prefix, in addition to the standard
1419 @code{Z} prefix. The BOZ literal can also be specified by adding a
1420 suffix to the string, for example, @code{Z'ABC'} and @code{'ABC'Z} are
1421 equivalent.
1422
1423 Furthermore, GNU Fortran allows using BOZ literal constants outside
1424 DATA statements and the four intrinsic functions allowed by Fortran 2003.
1425 In DATA statements, in direct assignments, where the right-hand side
1426 only contains a BOZ literal constant, and for old-style initializers of
1427 the form @code{integer i /o'0173'/}, the constant is transferred
1428 as if @code{TRANSFER} had been used; for @code{COMPLEX} numbers, only
1429 the real part is initialized unless @code{CMPLX} is used. In all other
1430 cases, the BOZ literal constant is converted to an @code{INTEGER} value with
1431 the largest decimal representation. This value is then converted
1432 numerically to the type and kind of the variable in question.
1433 (For instance, @code{real :: r = b'0000001' + 1} initializes @code{r}
1434 with @code{2.0}.) As different compilers implement the extension
1435 differently, one should be careful when doing bitwise initialization
1436 of non-integer variables.
1437
1438 Note that initializing an @code{INTEGER} variable with a statement such
1439 as @code{DATA i/Z'FFFFFFFF'/} will give an integer overflow error rather
1440 than the desired result of @math{-1} when @code{i} is a 32-bit integer
1441 on a system that supports 64-bit integers. The @samp{-fno-range-check}
1442 option can be used as a workaround for legacy code that initializes
1443 integers in this manner.
1444
1445 @node Real array indices
1446 @subsection Real array indices
1447 @cindex array, indices of type real
1448
1449 As an extension, GNU Fortran allows the use of @code{REAL} expressions
1450 or variables as array indices.
1451
1452 @node Unary operators
1453 @subsection Unary operators
1454 @cindex operators, unary
1455
1456 As an extension, GNU Fortran allows unary plus and unary minus operators
1457 to appear as the second operand of binary arithmetic operators without
1458 the need for parenthesis.
1459
1460 @smallexample
1461 X = Y * -Z
1462 @end smallexample
1463
1464 @node Implicitly convert LOGICAL and INTEGER values
1465 @subsection Implicitly convert @code{LOGICAL} and @code{INTEGER} values
1466 @cindex conversion, to integer
1467 @cindex conversion, to logical
1468
1469 As an extension for backwards compatibility with other compilers, GNU
1470 Fortran allows the implicit conversion of @code{LOGICAL} values to
1471 @code{INTEGER} values and vice versa. When converting from a
1472 @code{LOGICAL} to an @code{INTEGER}, @code{.FALSE.} is interpreted as
1473 zero, and @code{.TRUE.} is interpreted as one. When converting from
1474 @code{INTEGER} to @code{LOGICAL}, the value zero is interpreted as
1475 @code{.FALSE.} and any nonzero value is interpreted as @code{.TRUE.}.
1476
1477 @smallexample
1478 LOGICAL :: l
1479 l = 1
1480 @end smallexample
1481 @smallexample
1482 INTEGER :: i
1483 i = .TRUE.
1484 @end smallexample
1485
1486 However, there is no implicit conversion of @code{INTEGER} values in
1487 @code{if}-statements, nor of @code{LOGICAL} or @code{INTEGER} values
1488 in I/O operations.
1489
1490 @node Hollerith constants support
1491 @subsection Hollerith constants support
1492 @cindex Hollerith constants
1493
1494 GNU Fortran supports Hollerith constants in assignments, function
1495 arguments, and @code{DATA} and @code{ASSIGN} statements. A Hollerith
1496 constant is written as a string of characters preceded by an integer
1497 constant indicating the character count, and the letter @code{H} or
1498 @code{h}, and stored in bytewise fashion in a numeric (@code{INTEGER},
1499 @code{REAL}, or @code{complex}) or @code{LOGICAL} variable. The
1500 constant will be padded or truncated to fit the size of the variable in
1501 which it is stored.
1502
1503 Examples of valid uses of Hollerith constants:
1504 @smallexample
1505 complex*16 x(2)
1506 data x /16Habcdefghijklmnop, 16Hqrstuvwxyz012345/
1507 x(1) = 16HABCDEFGHIJKLMNOP
1508 call foo (4h abc)
1509 @end smallexample
1510
1511 Invalid Hollerith constants examples:
1512 @smallexample
1513 integer*4 a
1514 a = 8H12345678 ! Valid, but the Hollerith constant will be truncated.
1515 a = 0H ! At least one character is needed.
1516 @end smallexample
1517
1518 In general, Hollerith constants were used to provide a rudimentary
1519 facility for handling character strings in early Fortran compilers,
1520 prior to the introduction of @code{CHARACTER} variables in Fortran 77;
1521 in those cases, the standard-compliant equivalent is to convert the
1522 program to use proper character strings. On occasion, there may be a
1523 case where the intent is specifically to initialize a numeric variable
1524 with a given byte sequence. In these cases, the same result can be
1525 obtained by using the @code{TRANSFER} statement, as in this example.
1526 @smallexample
1527 INTEGER(KIND=4) :: a
1528 a = TRANSFER ("abcd", a) ! equivalent to: a = 4Habcd
1529 @end smallexample
1530
1531
1532 @node Cray pointers
1533 @subsection Cray pointers
1534 @cindex pointer, Cray
1535
1536 Cray pointers are part of a non-standard extension that provides a
1537 C-like pointer in Fortran. This is accomplished through a pair of
1538 variables: an integer "pointer" that holds a memory address, and a
1539 "pointee" that is used to dereference the pointer.
1540
1541 Pointer/pointee pairs are declared in statements of the form:
1542 @smallexample
1543 pointer ( <pointer> , <pointee> )
1544 @end smallexample
1545 or,
1546 @smallexample
1547 pointer ( <pointer1> , <pointee1> ), ( <pointer2> , <pointee2> ), ...
1548 @end smallexample
1549 The pointer is an integer that is intended to hold a memory address.
1550 The pointee may be an array or scalar. A pointee can be an assumed
1551 size array---that is, the last dimension may be left unspecified by
1552 using a @code{*} in place of a value---but a pointee cannot be an
1553 assumed shape array. No space is allocated for the pointee.
1554
1555 The pointee may have its type declared before or after the pointer
1556 statement, and its array specification (if any) may be declared
1557 before, during, or after the pointer statement. The pointer may be
1558 declared as an integer prior to the pointer statement. However, some
1559 machines have default integer sizes that are different than the size
1560 of a pointer, and so the following code is not portable:
1561 @smallexample
1562 integer ipt
1563 pointer (ipt, iarr)
1564 @end smallexample
1565 If a pointer is declared with a kind that is too small, the compiler
1566 will issue a warning; the resulting binary will probably not work
1567 correctly, because the memory addresses stored in the pointers may be
1568 truncated. It is safer to omit the first line of the above example;
1569 if explicit declaration of ipt's type is omitted, then the compiler
1570 will ensure that ipt is an integer variable large enough to hold a
1571 pointer.
1572
1573 Pointer arithmetic is valid with Cray pointers, but it is not the same
1574 as C pointer arithmetic. Cray pointers are just ordinary integers, so
1575 the user is responsible for determining how many bytes to add to a
1576 pointer in order to increment it. Consider the following example:
1577 @smallexample
1578 real target(10)
1579 real pointee(10)
1580 pointer (ipt, pointee)
1581 ipt = loc (target)
1582 ipt = ipt + 1
1583 @end smallexample
1584 The last statement does not set @code{ipt} to the address of
1585 @code{target(1)}, as it would in C pointer arithmetic. Adding @code{1}
1586 to @code{ipt} just adds one byte to the address stored in @code{ipt}.
1587
1588 Any expression involving the pointee will be translated to use the
1589 value stored in the pointer as the base address.
1590
1591 To get the address of elements, this extension provides an intrinsic
1592 function @code{LOC()}. The @code{LOC()} function is equivalent to the
1593 @code{&} operator in C, except the address is cast to an integer type:
1594 @smallexample
1595 real ar(10)
1596 pointer(ipt, arpte(10))
1597 real arpte
1598 ipt = loc(ar) ! Makes arpte is an alias for ar
1599 arpte(1) = 1.0 ! Sets ar(1) to 1.0
1600 @end smallexample
1601 The pointer can also be set by a call to the @code{MALLOC} intrinsic
1602 (see @ref{MALLOC}).
1603
1604 Cray pointees often are used to alias an existing variable. For
1605 example:
1606 @smallexample
1607 integer target(10)
1608 integer iarr(10)
1609 pointer (ipt, iarr)
1610 ipt = loc(target)
1611 @end smallexample
1612 As long as @code{ipt} remains unchanged, @code{iarr} is now an alias for
1613 @code{target}. The optimizer, however, will not detect this aliasing, so
1614 it is unsafe to use @code{iarr} and @code{target} simultaneously. Using
1615 a pointee in any way that violates the Fortran aliasing rules or
1616 assumptions is illegal. It is the user's responsibility to avoid doing
1617 this; the compiler works under the assumption that no such aliasing
1618 occurs.
1619
1620 Cray pointers will work correctly when there is no aliasing (i.e., when
1621 they are used to access a dynamically allocated block of memory), and
1622 also in any routine where a pointee is used, but any variable with which
1623 it shares storage is not used. Code that violates these rules may not
1624 run as the user intends. This is not a bug in the optimizer; any code
1625 that violates the aliasing rules is illegal. (Note that this is not
1626 unique to GNU Fortran; any Fortran compiler that supports Cray pointers
1627 will ``incorrectly'' optimize code with illegal aliasing.)
1628
1629 There are a number of restrictions on the attributes that can be applied
1630 to Cray pointers and pointees. Pointees may not have the
1631 @code{ALLOCATABLE}, @code{INTENT}, @code{OPTIONAL}, @code{DUMMY},
1632 @code{TARGET}, @code{INTRINSIC}, or @code{POINTER} attributes. Pointers
1633 may not have the @code{DIMENSION}, @code{POINTER}, @code{TARGET},
1634 @code{ALLOCATABLE}, @code{EXTERNAL}, or @code{INTRINSIC} attributes, nor
1635 may they be function results. Pointees may not occur in more than one
1636 pointer statement. A pointee cannot be a pointer. Pointees cannot occur
1637 in equivalence, common, or data statements.
1638
1639 A Cray pointer may also point to a function or a subroutine. For
1640 example, the following excerpt is valid:
1641 @smallexample
1642 implicit none
1643 external sub
1644 pointer (subptr,subpte)
1645 external subpte
1646 subptr = loc(sub)
1647 call subpte()
1648 [...]
1649 subroutine sub
1650 [...]
1651 end subroutine sub
1652 @end smallexample
1653
1654 A pointer may be modified during the course of a program, and this
1655 will change the location to which the pointee refers. However, when
1656 pointees are passed as arguments, they are treated as ordinary
1657 variables in the invoked function. Subsequent changes to the pointer
1658 will not change the base address of the array that was passed.
1659
1660 @node CONVERT specifier
1661 @subsection @code{CONVERT} specifier
1662 @cindex @code{CONVERT} specifier
1663
1664 GNU Fortran allows the conversion of unformatted data between little-
1665 and big-endian representation to facilitate moving of data
1666 between different systems. The conversion can be indicated with
1667 the @code{CONVERT} specifier on the @code{OPEN} statement.
1668 @xref{GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT}, for an alternative way of specifying
1669 the data format via an environment variable.
1670
1671 Valid values for @code{CONVERT} are:
1672 @itemize @w{}
1673 @item @code{CONVERT='NATIVE'} Use the native format. This is the default.
1674 @item @code{CONVERT='SWAP'} Swap between little- and big-endian.
1675 @item @code{CONVERT='LITTLE_ENDIAN'} Use the little-endian representation
1676 for unformatted files.
1677 @item @code{CONVERT='BIG_ENDIAN'} Use the big-endian representation for
1678 unformatted files.
1679 @end itemize
1680
1681 Using the option could look like this:
1682 @smallexample
1683 open(file='big.dat',form='unformatted',access='sequential', &
1684 convert='big_endian')
1685 @end smallexample
1686
1687 The value of the conversion can be queried by using
1688 @code{INQUIRE(CONVERT=ch)}. The values returned are
1689 @code{'BIG_ENDIAN'} and @code{'LITTLE_ENDIAN'}.
1690
1691 @code{CONVERT} works between big- and little-endian for
1692 @code{INTEGER} values of all supported kinds and for @code{REAL}
1693 on IEEE systems of kinds 4 and 8. Conversion between different
1694 ``extended double'' types on different architectures such as
1695 m68k and x86_64, which GNU Fortran
1696 supports as @code{REAL(KIND=10)} and @code{REAL(KIND=16)}, will
1697 probably not work.
1698
1699 @emph{Note that the values specified via the GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT
1700 environment variable will override the CONVERT specifier in the
1701 open statement}. This is to give control over data formats to
1702 users who do not have the source code of their program available.
1703
1704 Using anything but the native representation for unformatted data
1705 carries a significant speed overhead. If speed in this area matters
1706 to you, it is best if you use this only for data that needs to be
1707 portable.
1708
1709 @node OpenMP
1710 @subsection OpenMP
1711 @cindex OpenMP
1712
1713 OpenMP (Open Multi-Processing) is an application programming
1714 interface (API) that supports multi-platform shared memory
1715 multiprocessing programming in C/C++ and Fortran on many
1716 architectures, including Unix and Microsoft Windows platforms.
1717 It consists of a set of compiler directives, library routines,
1718 and environment variables that influence run-time behavior.
1719
1720 GNU Fortran strives to be compatible to the
1721 @uref{http://www.openmp.org/mp-documents/spec30.pdf,
1722 OpenMP Application Program Interface v3.0}.
1723
1724 To enable the processing of the OpenMP directive @code{!$omp} in
1725 free-form source code; the @code{c$omp}, @code{*$omp} and @code{!$omp}
1726 directives in fixed form; the @code{!$} conditional compilation sentinels
1727 in free form; and the @code{c$}, @code{*$} and @code{!$} sentinels
1728 in fixed form, @command{gfortran} needs to be invoked with the
1729 @option{-fopenmp}. This also arranges for automatic linking of the
1730 GNU OpenMP runtime library @ref{Top,,libgomp,libgomp,GNU OpenMP
1731 runtime library}.
1732
1733 The OpenMP Fortran runtime library routines are provided both in a
1734 form of a Fortran 90 module named @code{omp_lib} and in a form of
1735 a Fortran @code{include} file named @file{omp_lib.h}.
1736
1737 An example of a parallelized loop taken from Appendix A.1 of
1738 the OpenMP Application Program Interface v2.5:
1739 @smallexample
1740 SUBROUTINE A1(N, A, B)
1741 INTEGER I, N
1742 REAL B(N), A(N)
1743 !$OMP PARALLEL DO !I is private by default
1744 DO I=2,N
1745 B(I) = (A(I) + A(I-1)) / 2.0
1746 ENDDO
1747 !$OMP END PARALLEL DO
1748 END SUBROUTINE A1
1749 @end smallexample
1750
1751 Please note:
1752 @itemize
1753 @item
1754 @option{-fopenmp} implies @option{-frecursive}, i.e., all local arrays
1755 will be allocated on the stack. When porting existing code to OpenMP,
1756 this may lead to surprising results, especially to segmentation faults
1757 if the stacksize is limited.
1758
1759 @item
1760 On glibc-based systems, OpenMP enabled applications cannot be statically
1761 linked due to limitations of the underlying pthreads-implementation. It
1762 might be possible to get a working solution if
1763 @command{-Wl,--whole-archive -lpthread -Wl,--no-whole-archive} is added
1764 to the command line. However, this is not supported by @command{gcc} and
1765 thus not recommended.
1766 @end itemize
1767
1768 @node Argument list functions
1769 @subsection Argument list functions @code{%VAL}, @code{%REF} and @code{%LOC}
1770 @cindex argument list functions
1771 @cindex @code{%VAL}
1772 @cindex @code{%REF}
1773 @cindex @code{%LOC}
1774
1775 GNU Fortran supports argument list functions @code{%VAL}, @code{%REF}
1776 and @code{%LOC} statements, for backward compatibility with g77.
1777 It is recommended that these should be used only for code that is
1778 accessing facilities outside of GNU Fortran, such as operating system
1779 or windowing facilities. It is best to constrain such uses to isolated
1780 portions of a program--portions that deal specifically and exclusively
1781 with low-level, system-dependent facilities. Such portions might well
1782 provide a portable interface for use by the program as a whole, but are
1783 themselves not portable, and should be thoroughly tested each time they
1784 are rebuilt using a new compiler or version of a compiler.
1785
1786 @code{%VAL} passes a scalar argument by value, @code{%REF} passes it by
1787 reference and @code{%LOC} passes its memory location. Since gfortran
1788 already passes scalar arguments by reference, @code{%REF} is in effect
1789 a do-nothing. @code{%LOC} has the same effect as a Fortran pointer.
1790
1791 An example of passing an argument by value to a C subroutine foo.:
1792 @smallexample
1793 C
1794 C prototype void foo_ (float x);
1795 C
1796 external foo
1797 real*4 x
1798 x = 3.14159
1799 call foo (%VAL (x))
1800 end
1801 @end smallexample
1802
1803 For details refer to the g77 manual
1804 @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/@/onlinedocs/@/gcc-3.4.6/@/g77/@/index.html#Top}.
1805
1806 Also, @code{c_by_val.f} and its partner @code{c_by_val.c} of the
1807 GNU Fortran testsuite are worth a look.
1808
1809
1810 @node Extensions not implemented in GNU Fortran
1811 @section Extensions not implemented in GNU Fortran
1812 @cindex extensions, not implemented
1813
1814 The long history of the Fortran language, its wide use and broad
1815 userbase, the large number of different compiler vendors and the lack of
1816 some features crucial to users in the first standards have lead to the
1817 existence of a number of important extensions to the language. While
1818 some of the most useful or popular extensions are supported by the GNU
1819 Fortran compiler, not all existing extensions are supported. This section
1820 aims at listing these extensions and offering advice on how best make
1821 code that uses them running with the GNU Fortran compiler.
1822
1823 @c More can be found here:
1824 @c -- http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-3.4.6/g77/Missing-Features.html
1825 @c -- the list of Fortran and libgfortran bugs closed as WONTFIX:
1826 @c http://tinyurl.com/2u4h5y
1827
1828 @menu
1829 * STRUCTURE and RECORD::
1830 @c * UNION and MAP::
1831 * ENCODE and DECODE statements::
1832 * Variable FORMAT expressions::
1833 @c * Q edit descriptor::
1834 @c * AUTOMATIC statement::
1835 @c * TYPE and ACCEPT I/O Statements::
1836 @c * .XOR. operator::
1837 @c * CARRIAGECONTROL, DEFAULTFILE, DISPOSE and RECORDTYPE I/O specifiers::
1838 @c * Omitted arguments in procedure call::
1839 * Alternate complex function syntax::
1840 @end menu
1841
1842
1843 @node STRUCTURE and RECORD
1844 @subsection @code{STRUCTURE} and @code{RECORD}
1845 @cindex @code{STRUCTURE}
1846 @cindex @code{RECORD}
1847
1848 Structures are user-defined aggregate data types; this functionality was
1849 standardized in Fortran 90 with an different syntax, under the name of
1850 ``derived types''. Here is an example of code using the non portable
1851 structure syntax:
1852
1853 @example
1854 ! Declaring a structure named ``item'' and containing three fields:
1855 ! an integer ID, an description string and a floating-point price.
1856 STRUCTURE /item/
1857 INTEGER id
1858 CHARACTER(LEN=200) description
1859 REAL price
1860 END STRUCTURE
1861
1862 ! Define two variables, an single record of type ``item''
1863 ! named ``pear'', and an array of items named ``store_catalog''
1864 RECORD /item/ pear, store_catalog(100)
1865
1866 ! We can directly access the fields of both variables
1867 pear.id = 92316
1868 pear.description = "juicy D'Anjou pear"
1869 pear.price = 0.15
1870 store_catalog(7).id = 7831
1871 store_catalog(7).description = "milk bottle"
1872 store_catalog(7).price = 1.2
1873
1874 ! We can also manipulate the whole structure
1875 store_catalog(12) = pear
1876 print *, store_catalog(12)
1877 @end example
1878
1879 @noindent
1880 This code can easily be rewritten in the Fortran 90 syntax as following:
1881
1882 @example
1883 ! ``STRUCTURE /name/ ... END STRUCTURE'' becomes
1884 ! ``TYPE name ... END TYPE''
1885 TYPE item
1886 INTEGER id
1887 CHARACTER(LEN=200) description
1888 REAL price
1889 END TYPE
1890
1891 ! ``RECORD /name/ variable'' becomes ``TYPE(name) variable''
1892 TYPE(item) pear, store_catalog(100)
1893
1894 ! Instead of using a dot (.) to access fields of a record, the
1895 ! standard syntax uses a percent sign (%)
1896 pear%id = 92316
1897 pear%description = "juicy D'Anjou pear"
1898 pear%price = 0.15
1899 store_catalog(7)%id = 7831
1900 store_catalog(7)%description = "milk bottle"
1901 store_catalog(7)%price = 1.2
1902
1903 ! Assignments of a whole variable don't change
1904 store_catalog(12) = pear
1905 print *, store_catalog(12)
1906 @end example
1907
1908
1909 @c @node UNION and MAP
1910 @c @subsection @code{UNION} and @code{MAP}
1911 @c @cindex @code{UNION}
1912 @c @cindex @code{MAP}
1913 @c
1914 @c For help writing this one, see
1915 @c http://www.eng.umd.edu/~nsw/ench250/fortran1.htm#UNION and
1916 @c http://www.tacc.utexas.edu/services/userguides/pgi/pgiws_ug/pgi32u06.htm
1917
1918
1919 @node ENCODE and DECODE statements
1920 @subsection @code{ENCODE} and @code{DECODE} statements
1921 @cindex @code{ENCODE}
1922 @cindex @code{DECODE}
1923
1924 GNU Fortran doesn't support the @code{ENCODE} and @code{DECODE}
1925 statements. These statements are best replaced by @code{READ} and
1926 @code{WRITE} statements involving internal files (@code{CHARACTER}
1927 variables and arrays), which have been part of the Fortran standard since
1928 Fortran 77. For example, replace a code fragment like
1929
1930 @smallexample
1931 INTEGER*1 LINE(80)
1932 REAL A, B, C
1933 c ... Code that sets LINE
1934 DECODE (80, 9000, LINE) A, B, C
1935 9000 FORMAT (1X, 3(F10.5))
1936 @end smallexample
1937
1938 @noindent
1939 with the following:
1940
1941 @smallexample
1942 CHARACTER(LEN=80) LINE
1943 REAL A, B, C
1944 c ... Code that sets LINE
1945 READ (UNIT=LINE, FMT=9000) A, B, C
1946 9000 FORMAT (1X, 3(F10.5))
1947 @end smallexample
1948
1949 Similarly, replace a code fragment like
1950
1951 @smallexample
1952 INTEGER*1 LINE(80)
1953 REAL A, B, C
1954 c ... Code that sets A, B and C
1955 ENCODE (80, 9000, LINE) A, B, C
1956 9000 FORMAT (1X, 'OUTPUT IS ', 3(F10.5))
1957 @end smallexample
1958
1959 @noindent
1960 with the following:
1961
1962 @smallexample
1963 CHARACTER(LEN=80) LINE
1964 REAL A, B, C
1965 c ... Code that sets A, B and C
1966 WRITE (UNIT=LINE, FMT=9000) A, B, C
1967 9000 FORMAT (1X, 'OUTPUT IS ', 3(F10.5))
1968 @end smallexample
1969
1970
1971 @node Variable FORMAT expressions
1972 @subsection Variable @code{FORMAT} expressions
1973 @cindex @code{FORMAT}
1974
1975 A variable @code{FORMAT} expression is format statement which includes
1976 angle brackets enclosing a Fortran expression: @code{FORMAT(I<N>)}. GNU
1977 Fortran does not support this legacy extension. The effect of variable
1978 format expressions can be reproduced by using the more powerful (and
1979 standard) combination of internal output and string formats. For example,
1980 replace a code fragment like this:
1981
1982 @smallexample
1983 WRITE(6,20) INT1
1984 20 FORMAT(I<N+1>)
1985 @end smallexample
1986
1987 @noindent
1988 with the following:
1989
1990 @smallexample
1991 c Variable declaration
1992 CHARACTER(LEN=20) FMT
1993 c
1994 c Other code here...
1995 c
1996 WRITE(FMT,'("(I", I0, ")")') N+1
1997 WRITE(6,FMT) INT1
1998 @end smallexample
1999
2000 @noindent
2001 or with:
2002
2003 @smallexample
2004 c Variable declaration
2005 CHARACTER(LEN=20) FMT
2006 c
2007 c Other code here...
2008 c
2009 WRITE(FMT,*) N+1
2010 WRITE(6,"(I" // ADJUSTL(FMT) // ")") INT1
2011 @end smallexample
2012
2013
2014 @node Alternate complex function syntax
2015 @subsection Alternate complex function syntax
2016 @cindex Complex function
2017
2018 Some Fortran compilers, including @command{g77}, let the user declare
2019 complex functions with the syntax @code{COMPLEX FUNCTION name*16()}, as
2020 well as @code{COMPLEX*16 FUNCTION name()}. Both are non-standard, legacy
2021 extensions. @command{gfortran} accepts the latter form, which is more
2022 common, but not the former.
2023
2024
2025
2026 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2027 @c Mixed-Language Programming
2028 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2029
2030 @node Mixed-Language Programming
2031 @chapter Mixed-Language Programming
2032 @cindex Interoperability
2033 @cindex Mixed-language programming
2034
2035 @menu
2036 * Interoperability with C::
2037 * GNU Fortran Compiler Directives::
2038 * Non-Fortran Main Program::
2039 @end menu
2040
2041 This chapter is about mixed-language interoperability, but also applies
2042 if one links Fortran code compiled by different compilers. In most cases,
2043 use of the C Binding features of the Fortran 2003 standard is sufficient,
2044 and their use is highly recommended.
2045
2046
2047 @node Interoperability with C
2048 @section Interoperability with C
2049
2050 @menu
2051 * Intrinsic Types::
2052 * Derived Types and struct::
2053 * Interoperable Global Variables::
2054 * Interoperable Subroutines and Functions::
2055 * Working with Pointers::
2056 * Further Interoperability of Fortran with C::
2057 @end menu
2058
2059 Since Fortran 2003 (ISO/IEC 1539-1:2004(E)) there is a
2060 standardized way to generate procedure and derived-type
2061 declarations and global variables which are interoperable with C
2062 (ISO/IEC 9899:1999). The @code{bind(C)} attribute has been added
2063 to inform the compiler that a symbol shall be interoperable with C;
2064 also, some constraints are added. Note, however, that not
2065 all C features have a Fortran equivalent or vice versa. For instance,
2066 neither C's unsigned integers nor C's functions with variable number
2067 of arguments have an equivalent in Fortran.
2068
2069 Note that array dimensions are reversely ordered in C and that arrays in
2070 C always start with index 0 while in Fortran they start by default with
2071 1. Thus, an array declaration @code{A(n,m)} in Fortran matches
2072 @code{A[m][n]} in C and accessing the element @code{A(i,j)} matches
2073 @code{A[j-1][i-1]}. The element following @code{A(i,j)} (C: @code{A[j-1][i-1]};
2074 assuming @math{i < n}) in memory is @code{A(i+1,j)} (C: @code{A[j-1][i]}).
2075
2076 @node Intrinsic Types
2077 @subsection Intrinsic Types
2078
2079 In order to ensure that exactly the same variable type and kind is used
2080 in C and Fortran, the named constants shall be used which are defined in the
2081 @code{ISO_C_BINDING} intrinsic module. That module contains named constants
2082 for kind parameters and character named constants for the escape sequences
2083 in C. For a list of the constants, see @ref{ISO_C_BINDING}.
2084
2085 @node Derived Types and struct
2086 @subsection Derived Types and struct
2087
2088 For compatibility of derived types with @code{struct}, one needs to use
2089 the @code{BIND(C)} attribute in the type declaration. For instance, the
2090 following type declaration
2091
2092 @smallexample
2093 USE ISO_C_BINDING
2094 TYPE, BIND(C) :: myType
2095 INTEGER(C_INT) :: i1, i2
2096 INTEGER(C_SIGNED_CHAR) :: i3
2097 REAL(C_DOUBLE) :: d1
2098 COMPLEX(C_FLOAT_COMPLEX) :: c1
2099 CHARACTER(KIND=C_CHAR) :: str(5)
2100 END TYPE
2101 @end smallexample
2102
2103 matches the following @code{struct} declaration in C
2104
2105 @smallexample
2106 struct @{
2107 int i1, i2;
2108 /* Note: "char" might be signed or unsigned. */
2109 signed char i3;
2110 double d1;
2111 float _Complex c1;
2112 char str[5];
2113 @} myType;
2114 @end smallexample
2115
2116 Derived types with the C binding attribute shall not have the @code{sequence}
2117 attribute, type parameters, the @code{extends} attribute, nor type-bound
2118 procedures. Every component must be of interoperable type and kind and may not
2119 have the @code{pointer} or @code{allocatable} attribute. The names of the
2120 variables are irrelevant for interoperability.
2121
2122 As there exist no direct Fortran equivalents, neither unions nor structs
2123 with bit field or variable-length array members are interoperable.
2124
2125 @node Interoperable Global Variables
2126 @subsection Interoperable Global Variables
2127
2128 Variables can be made accessible from C using the C binding attribute,
2129 optionally together with specifying a binding name. Those variables
2130 have to be declared in the declaration part of a @code{MODULE},
2131 be of interoperable type, and have neither the @code{pointer} nor
2132 the @code{allocatable} attribute.
2133
2134 @smallexample
2135 MODULE m
2136 USE myType_module
2137 USE ISO_C_BINDING
2138 integer(C_INT), bind(C, name="_MyProject_flags") :: global_flag
2139 type(myType), bind(C) :: tp
2140 END MODULE
2141 @end smallexample
2142
2143 Here, @code{_MyProject_flags} is the case-sensitive name of the variable
2144 as seen from C programs while @code{global_flag} is the case-insensitive
2145 name as seen from Fortran. If no binding name is specified, as for
2146 @var{tp}, the C binding name is the (lowercase) Fortran binding name.
2147 If a binding name is specified, only a single variable may be after the
2148 double colon. Note of warning: You cannot use a global variable to
2149 access @var{errno} of the C library as the C standard allows it to be
2150 a macro. Use the @code{IERRNO} intrinsic (GNU extension) instead.
2151
2152 @node Interoperable Subroutines and Functions
2153 @subsection Interoperable Subroutines and Functions
2154
2155 Subroutines and functions have to have the @code{BIND(C)} attribute to
2156 be compatible with C. The dummy argument declaration is relatively
2157 straightforward. However, one needs to be careful because C uses
2158 call-by-value by default while Fortran behaves usually similar to
2159 call-by-reference. Furthermore, strings and pointers are handled
2160 differently. Note that only explicit size and assumed-size arrays are
2161 supported but not assumed-shape or allocatable arrays.
2162
2163 To pass a variable by value, use the @code{VALUE} attribute.
2164 Thus the following C prototype
2165
2166 @smallexample
2167 @code{int func(int i, int *j)}
2168 @end smallexample
2169
2170 matches the Fortran declaration
2171
2172 @smallexample
2173 integer(c_int) function func(i,j)
2174 use iso_c_binding, only: c_int
2175 integer(c_int), VALUE :: i
2176 integer(c_int) :: j
2177 @end smallexample
2178
2179 Note that pointer arguments also frequently need the @code{VALUE} attribute,
2180 see @ref{Working with Pointers}.
2181
2182 Strings are handled quite differently in C and Fortran. In C a string
2183 is a @code{NUL}-terminated array of characters while in Fortran each string
2184 has a length associated with it and is thus not terminated (by e.g.
2185 @code{NUL}). For example, if one wants to use the following C function,
2186
2187 @smallexample
2188 #include <stdio.h>
2189 void print_C(char *string) /* equivalent: char string[] */
2190 @{
2191 printf("%s\n", string);
2192 @}
2193 @end smallexample
2194
2195 to print ``Hello World'' from Fortran, one can call it using
2196
2197 @smallexample
2198 use iso_c_binding, only: C_CHAR, C_NULL_CHAR
2199 interface
2200 subroutine print_c(string) bind(C, name="print_C")
2201 use iso_c_binding, only: c_char
2202 character(kind=c_char) :: string(*)
2203 end subroutine print_c
2204 end interface
2205 call print_c(C_CHAR_"Hello World"//C_NULL_CHAR)
2206 @end smallexample
2207
2208 As the example shows, one needs to ensure that the
2209 string is @code{NUL} terminated. Additionally, the dummy argument
2210 @var{string} of @code{print_C} is a length-one assumed-size
2211 array; using @code{character(len=*)} is not allowed. The example
2212 above uses @code{c_char_"Hello World"} to ensure the string
2213 literal has the right type; typically the default character
2214 kind and @code{c_char} are the same and thus @code{"Hello World"}
2215 is equivalent. However, the standard does not guarantee this.
2216
2217 The use of strings is now further illustrated using the C library
2218 function @code{strncpy}, whose prototype is
2219
2220 @smallexample
2221 char *strncpy(char *restrict s1, const char *restrict s2, size_t n);
2222 @end smallexample
2223
2224 The function @code{strncpy} copies at most @var{n} characters from
2225 string @var{s2} to @var{s1} and returns @var{s1}. In the following
2226 example, we ignore the return value:
2227
2228 @smallexample
2229 use iso_c_binding
2230 implicit none
2231 character(len=30) :: str,str2
2232 interface
2233 ! Ignore the return value of strncpy -> subroutine
2234 ! "restrict" is always assumed if we do not pass a pointer
2235 subroutine strncpy(dest, src, n) bind(C)
2236 import
2237 character(kind=c_char), intent(out) :: dest(*)
2238 character(kind=c_char), intent(in) :: src(*)
2239 integer(c_size_t), value, intent(in) :: n
2240 end subroutine strncpy
2241 end interface
2242 str = repeat('X',30) ! Initialize whole string with 'X'
2243 call strncpy(str, c_char_"Hello World"//C_NULL_CHAR, &
2244 len(c_char_"Hello World",kind=c_size_t))
2245 print '(a)', str ! prints: "Hello WorldXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX"
2246 end
2247 @end smallexample
2248
2249 The intrinsic procedures are described in @ref{Intrinsic Procedures}.
2250
2251 @node Working with Pointers
2252 @subsection Working with Pointers
2253
2254 C pointers are represented in Fortran via the special opaque derived type
2255 @code{type(c_ptr)} (with private components). Thus one needs to
2256 use intrinsic conversion procedures to convert from or to C pointers.
2257 For example,
2258
2259 @smallexample
2260 use iso_c_binding
2261 type(c_ptr) :: cptr1, cptr2
2262 integer, target :: array(7), scalar
2263 integer, pointer :: pa(:), ps
2264 cptr1 = c_loc(array(1)) ! The programmer needs to ensure that the
2265 ! array is contiguous if required by the C
2266 ! procedure
2267 cptr2 = c_loc(scalar)
2268 call c_f_pointer(cptr2, ps)
2269 call c_f_pointer(cptr2, pa, shape=[7])
2270 @end smallexample
2271
2272 When converting C to Fortran arrays, the one-dimensional @code{SHAPE} argument
2273 has to be passed.
2274
2275 If a pointer is a dummy-argument of an interoperable procedure, it usually
2276 has to be declared using the @code{VALUE} attribute. @code{void*}
2277 matches @code{TYPE(C_PTR), VALUE}, while @code{TYPE(C_PTR)} alone
2278 matches @code{void**}.
2279
2280 Procedure pointers are handled analogously to pointers; the C type is
2281 @code{TYPE(C_FUNPTR)} and the intrinsic conversion procedures are
2282 @code{C_F_PROCPOINTER} and @code{C_FUNLOC}.
2283
2284 Let's consider two examples of actually passing a procedure pointer from
2285 C to Fortran and vice versa. Note that these examples are also very
2286 similar to passing ordinary pointers between both languages.
2287 First, consider this code in C:
2288
2289 @smallexample
2290 /* Procedure implemented in Fortran. */
2291 void get_values (void (*)(double));
2292
2293 /* Call-back routine we want called from Fortran. */
2294 void
2295 print_it (double x)
2296 @{
2297 printf ("Number is %f.\n", x);
2298 @}
2299
2300 /* Call Fortran routine and pass call-back to it. */
2301 void
2302 foobar ()
2303 @{
2304 get_values (&print_it);
2305 @}
2306 @end smallexample
2307
2308 A matching implementation for @code{get_values} in Fortran, that correctly
2309 receives the procedure pointer from C and is able to call it, is given
2310 in the following @code{MODULE}:
2311
2312 @smallexample
2313 MODULE m
2314 IMPLICIT NONE
2315
2316 ! Define interface of call-back routine.
2317 ABSTRACT INTERFACE
2318 SUBROUTINE callback (x)
2319 USE, INTRINSIC :: ISO_C_BINDING
2320 REAL(KIND=C_DOUBLE), INTENT(IN), VALUE :: x
2321 END SUBROUTINE callback
2322 END INTERFACE
2323
2324 CONTAINS
2325
2326 ! Define C-bound procedure.
2327 SUBROUTINE get_values (cproc) BIND(C)
2328 USE, INTRINSIC :: ISO_C_BINDING
2329 TYPE(C_FUNPTR), INTENT(IN), VALUE :: cproc
2330
2331 PROCEDURE(callback), POINTER :: proc
2332
2333 ! Convert C to Fortran procedure pointer.
2334 CALL C_F_PROCPOINTER (cproc, proc)
2335
2336 ! Call it.
2337 CALL proc (1.0_C_DOUBLE)
2338 CALL proc (-42.0_C_DOUBLE)
2339 CALL proc (18.12_C_DOUBLE)
2340 END SUBROUTINE get_values
2341
2342 END MODULE m
2343 @end smallexample
2344
2345 Next, we want to call a C routine that expects a procedure pointer argument
2346 and pass it a Fortran procedure (which clearly must be interoperable!).
2347 Again, the C function may be:
2348
2349 @smallexample
2350 int
2351 call_it (int (*func)(int), int arg)
2352 @{
2353 return func (arg);
2354 @}
2355 @end smallexample
2356
2357 It can be used as in the following Fortran code:
2358
2359 @smallexample
2360 MODULE m
2361 USE, INTRINSIC :: ISO_C_BINDING
2362 IMPLICIT NONE
2363
2364 ! Define interface of C function.
2365 INTERFACE
2366 INTEGER(KIND=C_INT) FUNCTION call_it (func, arg) BIND(C)
2367 USE, INTRINSIC :: ISO_C_BINDING
2368 TYPE(C_FUNPTR), INTENT(IN), VALUE :: func
2369 INTEGER(KIND=C_INT), INTENT(IN), VALUE :: arg
2370 END FUNCTION call_it
2371 END INTERFACE
2372
2373 CONTAINS
2374
2375 ! Define procedure passed to C function.
2376 ! It must be interoperable!
2377 INTEGER(KIND=C_INT) FUNCTION double_it (arg) BIND(C)
2378 INTEGER(KIND=C_INT), INTENT(IN), VALUE :: arg
2379 double_it = arg + arg
2380 END FUNCTION double_it
2381
2382 ! Call C function.
2383 SUBROUTINE foobar ()
2384 TYPE(C_FUNPTR) :: cproc
2385 INTEGER(KIND=C_INT) :: i
2386
2387 ! Get C procedure pointer.
2388 cproc = C_FUNLOC (double_it)
2389
2390 ! Use it.
2391 DO i = 1_C_INT, 10_C_INT
2392 PRINT *, call_it (cproc, i)
2393 END DO
2394 END SUBROUTINE foobar
2395
2396 END MODULE m
2397 @end smallexample
2398
2399 @node Further Interoperability of Fortran with C
2400 @subsection Further Interoperability of Fortran with C
2401
2402 Assumed-shape and allocatable arrays are passed using an array descriptor
2403 (dope vector). The internal structure of the array descriptor used
2404 by GNU Fortran is not yet documented and will change. There will also be
2405 a Technical Report (TR 29113) which standardizes an interoperable
2406 array descriptor. Until then, you can use the Chasm Language
2407 Interoperability Tools, @url{http://chasm-interop.sourceforge.net/},
2408 which provide an interface to GNU Fortran's array descriptor.
2409
2410 The technical report 29113 will presumably also include support for
2411 C-interoperable @code{OPTIONAL} and for assumed-rank and assumed-type
2412 dummy arguments. However, the TR has neither been approved nor implemented
2413 in GNU Fortran; therefore, these features are not yet available.
2414
2415
2416
2417 @node GNU Fortran Compiler Directives
2418 @section GNU Fortran Compiler Directives
2419
2420 The Fortran standard standard describes how a conforming program shall
2421 behave; however, the exact implementation is not standardized. In order
2422 to allow the user to choose specific implementation details, compiler
2423 directives can be used to set attributes of variables and procedures
2424 which are not part of the standard. Whether a given attribute is
2425 supported and its exact effects depend on both the operating system and
2426 on the processor; see
2427 @ref{Top,,C Extensions,gcc,Using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)}
2428 for details.
2429
2430 For procedures and procedure pointers, the following attributes can
2431 be used to change the calling convention:
2432
2433 @itemize
2434 @item @code{CDECL} -- standard C calling convention
2435 @item @code{STDCALL} -- convention where the called procedure pops the stack
2436 @item @code{FASTCALL} -- part of the arguments are passed via registers
2437 instead using the stack
2438 @end itemize
2439
2440 Besides changing the calling convention, the attributes also influence
2441 the decoration of the symbol name, e.g., by a leading underscore or by
2442 a trailing at-sign followed by the number of bytes on the stack. When
2443 assigning a procedure to a procedure pointer, both should use the same
2444 calling convention.
2445
2446 On some systems, procedures and global variables (module variables and
2447 @code{COMMON} blocks) need special handling to be accessible when they
2448 are in a shared library. The following attributes are available:
2449
2450 @itemize
2451 @item @code{DLLEXPORT} -- provide a global pointer to a pointer in the DLL
2452 @item @code{DLLIMPORT} -- reference the function or variable using a global pointer
2453 @end itemize
2454
2455 The attributes are specified using the syntax
2456
2457 @code{!GCC$ ATTRIBUTES} @var{attribute-list} @code{::} @var{variable-list}
2458
2459 where in free-form source code only whitespace is allowed before @code{!GCC$}
2460 and in fixed-form source code @code{!GCC$}, @code{cGCC$} or @code{*GCC$} shall
2461 start in the first column.
2462
2463 For procedures, the compiler directives shall be placed into the body
2464 of the procedure; for variables and procedure pointers, they shall be in
2465 the same declaration part as the variable or procedure pointer.
2466
2467
2468
2469 @node Non-Fortran Main Program
2470 @section Non-Fortran Main Program
2471
2472 @menu
2473 * _gfortran_set_args:: Save command-line arguments
2474 * _gfortran_set_options:: Set library option flags
2475 * _gfortran_set_convert:: Set endian conversion
2476 * _gfortran_set_record_marker:: Set length of record markers
2477 * _gfortran_set_max_subrecord_length:: Set subrecord length
2478 * _gfortran_set_fpe:: Set when a Floating Point Exception should be raised
2479 @end menu
2480
2481 Even if you are doing mixed-language programming, it is very
2482 likely that you do not need to know or use the information in this
2483 section. Since it is about the internal structure of GNU Fortran,
2484 it may also change in GCC minor releases.
2485
2486 When you compile a @code{PROGRAM} with GNU Fortran, a function
2487 with the name @code{main} (in the symbol table of the object file)
2488 is generated, which initializes the libgfortran library and then
2489 calls the actual program which uses the name @code{MAIN__}, for
2490 historic reasons. If you link GNU Fortran compiled procedures
2491 to, e.g., a C or C++ program or to a Fortran program compiled by
2492 a different compiler, the libgfortran library is not initialized
2493 and thus a few intrinsic procedures do not work properly, e.g.
2494 those for obtaining the command-line arguments.
2495
2496 Therefore, if your @code{PROGRAM} is not compiled with
2497 GNU Fortran and the GNU Fortran compiled procedures require
2498 intrinsics relying on the library initialization, you need to
2499 initialize the library yourself. Using the default options,
2500 gfortran calls @code{_gfortran_set_args} and
2501 @code{_gfortran_set_options}. The initialization of the former
2502 is needed if the called procedures access the command line
2503 (and for backtracing); the latter sets some flags based on the
2504 standard chosen or to enable backtracing. In typical programs,
2505 it is not necessary to call any initialization function.
2506
2507 If your @code{PROGRAM} is compiled with GNU Fortran, you shall
2508 not call any of the following functions. The libgfortran
2509 initialization functions are shown in C syntax but using C
2510 bindings they are also accessible from Fortran.
2511
2512
2513 @node _gfortran_set_args
2514 @subsection @code{_gfortran_set_args} --- Save command-line arguments
2515 @fnindex _gfortran_set_args
2516 @cindex libgfortran initialization, set_args
2517
2518 @table @asis
2519 @item @emph{Description}:
2520 @code{_gfortran_set_args} saves the command-line arguments; this
2521 initialization is required if any of the command-line intrinsics
2522 is called. Additionally, it shall be called if backtracing is
2523 enabled (see @code{_gfortran_set_options}).
2524
2525 @item @emph{Syntax}:
2526 @code{void _gfortran_set_args (int argc, char *argv[])}
2527
2528 @item @emph{Arguments}:
2529 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .70
2530 @item @var{argc} @tab number of command line argument strings
2531 @item @var{argv} @tab the command-line argument strings; argv[0]
2532 is the pathname of the executable itself.
2533 @end multitable
2534
2535 @item @emph{Example}:
2536 @smallexample
2537 int main (int argc, char *argv[])
2538 @{
2539 /* Initialize libgfortran. */
2540 _gfortran_set_args (argc, argv);
2541 return 0;
2542 @}
2543 @end smallexample
2544 @end table
2545
2546
2547 @node _gfortran_set_options
2548 @subsection @code{_gfortran_set_options} --- Set library option flags
2549 @fnindex _gfortran_set_options
2550 @cindex libgfortran initialization, set_options
2551
2552 @table @asis
2553 @item @emph{Description}:
2554 @code{_gfortran_set_options} sets several flags related to the Fortran
2555 standard to be used, whether backtracing or core dumps should be enabled
2556 and whether range checks should be performed. The syntax allows for
2557 upward compatibility since the number of passed flags is specified; for
2558 non-passed flags, the default value is used. See also
2559 @pxref{Code Gen Options}. Please note that not all flags are actually
2560 used.
2561
2562 @item @emph{Syntax}:
2563 @code{void _gfortran_set_options (int num, int options[])}
2564
2565 @item @emph{Arguments}:
2566 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .70
2567 @item @var{num} @tab number of options passed
2568 @item @var{argv} @tab The list of flag values
2569 @end multitable
2570
2571 @item @emph{option flag list}:
2572 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .70
2573 @item @var{option}[0] @tab Allowed standard; can give run-time errors
2574 if e.g. an input-output edit descriptor is invalid in a given standard.
2575 Possible values are (bitwise or-ed) @code{GFC_STD_F77} (1),
2576 @code{GFC_STD_F95_OBS} (2), @code{GFC_STD_F95_DEL} (4), @code{GFC_STD_F95}
2577 (8), @code{GFC_STD_F2003} (16), @code{GFC_STD_GNU} (32),
2578 @code{GFC_STD_LEGACY} (64), @code{GFC_STD_F2008} (128), and
2579 @code{GFC_STD_F2008_OBS} (256). Default: @code{GFC_STD_F95_OBS
2580 | GFC_STD_F95_DEL | GFC_STD_F95 | GFC_STD_F2003 | GFC_STD_F2008
2581 | GFC_STD_F2008_OBS | GFC_STD_F77 | GFC_STD_GNU | GFC_STD_LEGACY}.
2582 @item @var{option}[1] @tab Standard-warning flag; prints a warning to
2583 standard error. Default: @code{GFC_STD_F95_DEL | GFC_STD_LEGACY}.
2584 @item @var{option}[2] @tab If non zero, enable pedantic checking.
2585 Default: off.
2586 @item @var{option}[3] @tab If non zero, enable core dumps on run-time
2587 errors. Default: off.
2588 @item @var{option}[4] @tab If non zero, enable backtracing on run-time
2589 errors. Default: off.
2590 Note: Installs a signal handler and requires command-line
2591 initialization using @code{_gfortran_set_args}.
2592 @item @var{option}[5] @tab If non zero, supports signed zeros.
2593 Default: enabled.
2594 @item @var{option}[6] @tab Enables run-time checking. Possible values
2595 are (bitwise or-ed): GFC_RTCHECK_BOUNDS (1), GFC_RTCHECK_ARRAY_TEMPS (2),
2596 GFC_RTCHECK_RECURSION (4), GFC_RTCHECK_DO (16), GFC_RTCHECK_POINTER (32).
2597 Default: disabled.
2598 @item @var{option}[7] @tab If non zero, range checking is enabled.
2599 Default: enabled. See -frange-check (@pxref{Code Gen Options}).
2600 @end multitable
2601
2602 @item @emph{Example}:
2603 @smallexample
2604 /* Use gfortran 4.5 default options. */
2605 static int options[] = @{68, 255, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1@};
2606 _gfortran_set_options (8, &options);
2607 @end smallexample
2608 @end table
2609
2610
2611 @node _gfortran_set_convert
2612 @subsection @code{_gfortran_set_convert} --- Set endian conversion
2613 @fnindex _gfortran_set_convert
2614 @cindex libgfortran initialization, set_convert
2615
2616 @table @asis
2617 @item @emph{Description}:
2618 @code{_gfortran_set_convert} set the representation of data for
2619 unformatted files.
2620
2621 @item @emph{Syntax}:
2622 @code{void _gfortran_set_convert (int conv)}
2623
2624 @item @emph{Arguments}:
2625 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .70
2626 @item @var{conv} @tab Endian conversion, possible values:
2627 GFC_CONVERT_NATIVE (0, default), GFC_CONVERT_SWAP (1),
2628 GFC_CONVERT_BIG (2), GFC_CONVERT_LITTLE (3).
2629 @end multitable
2630
2631 @item @emph{Example}:
2632 @smallexample
2633 int main (int argc, char *argv[])
2634 @{
2635 /* Initialize libgfortran. */
2636 _gfortran_set_args (argc, argv);
2637 _gfortran_set_convert (1);
2638 return 0;
2639 @}
2640 @end smallexample
2641 @end table
2642
2643
2644 @node _gfortran_set_record_marker
2645 @subsection @code{_gfortran_set_record_marker} --- Set length of record markers
2646 @fnindex _gfortran_set_record_marker
2647 @cindex libgfortran initialization, set_record_marker
2648
2649 @table @asis
2650 @item @emph{Description}:
2651 @code{_gfortran_set_record_marker} sets the length of record markers
2652 for unformatted files.
2653
2654 @item @emph{Syntax}:
2655 @code{void _gfortran_set_record_marker (int val)}
2656
2657 @item @emph{Arguments}:
2658 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .70
2659 @item @var{val} @tab Length of the record marker; valid values
2660 are 4 and 8. Default is 4.
2661 @end multitable
2662
2663 @item @emph{Example}:
2664 @smallexample
2665 int main (int argc, char *argv[])
2666 @{
2667 /* Initialize libgfortran. */
2668 _gfortran_set_args (argc, argv);
2669 _gfortran_set_record_marker (8);
2670 return 0;
2671 @}
2672 @end smallexample
2673 @end table
2674
2675
2676 @node _gfortran_set_fpe
2677 @subsection @code{_gfortran_set_fpe} --- Set when a Floating Point Exception should be raised
2678 @fnindex _gfortran_set_fpe
2679 @cindex libgfortran initialization, set_fpe
2680
2681 @table @asis
2682 @item @emph{Description}:
2683 @code{_gfortran_set_fpe} sets the IEEE exceptions for which a
2684 Floating Point Exception (FPE) should be raised. On most systems,
2685 this will result in a SIGFPE signal being sent and the program
2686 being interrupted.
2687
2688 @item @emph{Syntax}:
2689 @code{void _gfortran_set_fpe (int val)}
2690
2691 @item @emph{Arguments}:
2692 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .70
2693 @item @var{option}[0] @tab IEEE exceptions. Possible values are
2694 (bitwise or-ed) zero (0, default) no trapping,
2695 @code{GFC_FPE_INVALID} (1), @code{GFC_FPE_DENORMAL} (2),
2696 @code{GFC_FPE_ZERO} (4), @code{GFC_FPE_OVERFLOW} (8),
2697 @code{GFC_FPE_UNDERFLOW} (16), and @code{GFC_FPE_PRECISION} (32).
2698 @end multitable
2699
2700 @item @emph{Example}:
2701 @smallexample
2702 int main (int argc, char *argv[])
2703 @{
2704 /* Initialize libgfortran. */
2705 _gfortran_set_args (argc, argv);
2706 /* FPE for invalid operations such as SQRT(-1.0). */
2707 _gfortran_set_fpe (1);
2708 return 0;
2709 @}
2710 @end smallexample
2711 @end table
2712
2713
2714 @node _gfortran_set_max_subrecord_length
2715 @subsection @code{_gfortran_set_max_subrecord_length} --- Set subrecord length
2716 @fnindex _gfortran_set_max_subrecord_length
2717 @cindex libgfortran initialization, set_max_subrecord_length
2718
2719 @table @asis
2720 @item @emph{Description}:
2721 @code{_gfortran_set_max_subrecord_length} set the maximum length
2722 for a subrecord. This option only makes sense for testing and
2723 debugging of unformatted I/O.
2724
2725 @item @emph{Syntax}:
2726 @code{void _gfortran_set_max_subrecord_length (int val)}
2727
2728 @item @emph{Arguments}:
2729 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .70
2730 @item @var{val} @tab the maximum length for a subrecord;
2731 the maximum permitted value is 2147483639, which is also
2732 the default.
2733 @end multitable
2734
2735 @item @emph{Example}:
2736 @smallexample
2737 int main (int argc, char *argv[])
2738 @{
2739 /* Initialize libgfortran. */
2740 _gfortran_set_args (argc, argv);
2741 _gfortran_set_max_subrecord_length (8);
2742 return 0;
2743 @}
2744 @end smallexample
2745 @end table
2746
2747
2748
2749 @c Intrinsic Procedures
2750 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2751
2752 @include intrinsic.texi
2753
2754
2755 @tex
2756 \blankpart
2757 @end tex
2758
2759 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2760 @c Contributing
2761 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2762
2763 @node Contributing
2764 @unnumbered Contributing
2765 @cindex Contributing
2766
2767 Free software is only possible if people contribute to efforts
2768 to create it.
2769 We're always in need of more people helping out with ideas
2770 and comments, writing documentation and contributing code.
2771
2772 If you want to contribute to GNU Fortran,
2773 have a look at the long lists of projects you can take on.
2774 Some of these projects are small,
2775 some of them are large;
2776 some are completely orthogonal to the rest of what is
2777 happening on GNU Fortran,
2778 but others are ``mainstream'' projects in need of enthusiastic hackers.
2779 All of these projects are important!
2780 We'll eventually get around to the things here,
2781 but they are also things doable by someone who is willing and able.
2782
2783 @menu
2784 * Contributors::
2785 * Projects::
2786 * Proposed Extensions::
2787 @end menu
2788
2789
2790 @node Contributors
2791 @section Contributors to GNU Fortran
2792 @cindex Contributors
2793 @cindex Credits
2794 @cindex Authors
2795
2796 Most of the parser was hand-crafted by @emph{Andy Vaught}, who is
2797 also the initiator of the whole project. Thanks Andy!
2798 Most of the interface with GCC was written by @emph{Paul Brook}.
2799
2800 The following individuals have contributed code and/or
2801 ideas and significant help to the GNU Fortran project
2802 (in alphabetical order):
2803
2804 @itemize @minus
2805 @item Janne Blomqvist
2806 @item Steven Bosscher
2807 @item Paul Brook
2808 @item Tobias Burnus
2809 @item Fran@,{c}ois-Xavier Coudert
2810 @item Bud Davis
2811 @item Jerry DeLisle
2812 @item Erik Edelmann
2813 @item Bernhard Fischer
2814 @item Daniel Franke
2815 @item Richard Guenther
2816 @item Richard Henderson
2817 @item Katherine Holcomb
2818 @item Jakub Jelinek
2819 @item Niels Kristian Bech Jensen
2820 @item Steven Johnson
2821 @item Steven G. Kargl
2822 @item Thomas Koenig
2823 @item Asher Langton
2824 @item H. J. Lu
2825 @item Toon Moene
2826 @item Brooks Moses
2827 @item Andrew Pinski
2828 @item Tim Prince
2829 @item Christopher D. Rickett
2830 @item Richard Sandiford
2831 @item Tobias Schl@"uter
2832 @item Roger Sayle
2833 @item Paul Thomas
2834 @item Andy Vaught
2835 @item Feng Wang
2836 @item Janus Weil
2837 @item Daniel Kraft
2838 @end itemize
2839
2840 The following people have contributed bug reports,
2841 smaller or larger patches,
2842 and much needed feedback and encouragement for the
2843 GNU Fortran project:
2844
2845 @itemize @minus
2846 @item Bill Clodius
2847 @item Dominique d'Humi@`eres
2848 @item Kate Hedstrom
2849 @item Erik Schnetter
2850 @item Joost VandeVondele
2851 @end itemize
2852
2853 Many other individuals have helped debug,
2854 test and improve the GNU Fortran compiler over the past few years,
2855 and we welcome you to do the same!
2856 If you already have done so,
2857 and you would like to see your name listed in the
2858 list above, please contact us.
2859
2860
2861 @node Projects
2862 @section Projects
2863
2864 @table @emph
2865
2866 @item Help build the test suite
2867 Solicit more code for donation to the test suite: the more extensive the
2868 testsuite, the smaller the risk of breaking things in the future! We can
2869 keep code private on request.
2870
2871 @item Bug hunting/squishing
2872 Find bugs and write more test cases! Test cases are especially very
2873 welcome, because it allows us to concentrate on fixing bugs instead of
2874 isolating them. Going through the bugzilla database at
2875 @url{http://gcc.gnu.org/@/bugzilla/} to reduce testcases posted there and
2876 add more information (for example, for which version does the testcase
2877 work, for which versions does it fail?) is also very helpful.
2878
2879 @end table
2880
2881
2882 @node Proposed Extensions
2883 @section Proposed Extensions
2884
2885 Here's a list of proposed extensions for the GNU Fortran compiler, in no particular
2886 order. Most of these are necessary to be fully compatible with
2887 existing Fortran compilers, but they are not part of the official
2888 J3 Fortran 95 standard.
2889
2890 @subsection Compiler extensions:
2891 @itemize @bullet
2892 @item
2893 User-specified alignment rules for structures.
2894
2895 @item
2896 Automatically extend single precision constants to double.
2897
2898 @item
2899 Compile code that conserves memory by dynamically allocating common and
2900 module storage either on stack or heap.
2901
2902 @item
2903 Compile flag to generate code for array conformance checking (suggest -CC).
2904
2905 @item
2906 User control of symbol names (underscores, etc).
2907
2908 @item
2909 Compile setting for maximum size of stack frame size before spilling
2910 parts to static or heap.
2911
2912 @item
2913 Flag to force local variables into static space.
2914
2915 @item
2916 Flag to force local variables onto stack.
2917 @end itemize
2918
2919
2920 @subsection Environment Options
2921 @itemize @bullet
2922 @item
2923 Pluggable library modules for random numbers, linear algebra.
2924 LA should use BLAS calling conventions.
2925
2926 @item
2927 Environment variables controlling actions on arithmetic exceptions like
2928 overflow, underflow, precision loss---Generate NaN, abort, default.
2929 action.
2930
2931 @item
2932 Set precision for fp units that support it (i387).
2933
2934 @item
2935 Variable for setting fp rounding mode.
2936
2937 @item
2938 Variable to fill uninitialized variables with a user-defined bit
2939 pattern.
2940
2941 @item
2942 Environment variable controlling filename that is opened for that unit
2943 number.
2944
2945 @item
2946 Environment variable to clear/trash memory being freed.
2947
2948 @item
2949 Environment variable to control tracing of allocations and frees.
2950
2951 @item
2952 Environment variable to display allocated memory at normal program end.
2953
2954 @item
2955 Environment variable for filename for * IO-unit.
2956
2957 @item
2958 Environment variable for temporary file directory.
2959
2960 @item
2961 Environment variable forcing standard output to be line buffered (unix).
2962
2963 @end itemize
2964
2965
2966 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2967 @c GNU General Public License
2968 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2969
2970 @include gpl_v3.texi
2971
2972
2973
2974 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2975 @c GNU Free Documentation License
2976 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2977
2978 @include fdl.texi
2979
2980
2981
2982 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2983 @c Funding Free Software
2984 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2985
2986 @include funding.texi
2987
2988 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2989 @c Indices
2990 @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2991
2992 @node Option Index
2993 @unnumbered Option Index
2994 @command{gfortran}'s command line options are indexed here without any
2995 initial @samp{-} or @samp{--}. Where an option has both positive and
2996 negative forms (such as -foption and -fno-option), relevant entries in
2997 the manual are indexed under the most appropriate form; it may sometimes
2998 be useful to look up both forms.
2999 @printindex op
3000
3001 @node Keyword Index
3002 @unnumbered Keyword Index
3003 @printindex cp
3004
3005 @bye