226 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
226 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
If your compiler does not recognize ANSI C headers,
|
|
compile with KR_headers defined: either add -DKR_headers
|
|
to the definition of CFLAGS in the makefile, or insert
|
|
|
|
#define KR_headers
|
|
|
|
at the top of f2c.h and fmtlib.c .
|
|
|
|
|
|
If you have a really ancient K&R C compiler that does not understand
|
|
void, add -Dvoid=int to the definition of CFLAGS in the makefile.
|
|
|
|
If you use a C++ compiler, first create a local f2c.h by appending
|
|
f2ch.add to the usual f2c.h, e.g., by issuing the command
|
|
make f2c.h
|
|
which assumes f2c.h is installed in /usr/include .
|
|
|
|
If your system lacks /usr/include/fcntl.h , then you
|
|
should simply create an empty fcntl.h in this directory.
|
|
If your compiler then complains about creat and open not
|
|
having a prototype, compile with OPEN_DECL defined.
|
|
On many systems, open and creat are declared in fcntl.h .
|
|
|
|
If your system has /usr/include/fcntl.h, you may need to add
|
|
-D_POSIX_SOURCE to the makefile's definition of CFLAGS.
|
|
|
|
If your system's sprintf does not work the way ANSI C
|
|
specifies -- specifically, if it does not return the
|
|
number of characters transmitted -- then insert the line
|
|
|
|
#define USE_STRLEN
|
|
|
|
at the end of fmt.h . This is necessary with
|
|
at least some versions of Sun and DEC software.
|
|
In particular, if you get a warning about an improper
|
|
pointer/integer combination in compiling wref.c, then
|
|
you need to compile with -DUSE_STRLEN .
|
|
|
|
If your system's fopen does not like the ANSI binary
|
|
reading and writing modes "rb" and "wb", then you should
|
|
compile open.c with NON_ANSI_RW_MODES #defined.
|
|
|
|
If you get error messages about references to cf->_ptr
|
|
and cf->_base when compiling wrtfmt.c and wsfe.c or to
|
|
stderr->_flag when compiling err.c, then insert the line
|
|
|
|
#define NON_UNIX_STDIO
|
|
|
|
at the beginning of fio.h, and recompile everything (or
|
|
at least those modules that contain NON_UNIX_STDIO).
|
|
|
|
Unformatted sequential records consist of a length of record
|
|
contents, the record contents themselves, and the length of
|
|
record contents again (for backspace). Prior to 17 Oct. 1991,
|
|
the length was of type int; now it is of type long, but you
|
|
can change it back to int by inserting
|
|
|
|
#define UIOLEN_int
|
|
|
|
at the beginning of fio.h. This affects only sue.c and uio.c .
|
|
|
|
On VAX, Cray, or Research Tenth-Edition Unix systems, you may
|
|
need to add -DVAX, -DCRAY, or -DV10 (respectively) to CFLAGS
|
|
to make fp.h work correctly. Alternatively, you may need to
|
|
edit fp.h to suit your machine.
|
|
|
|
You may need to supply the following non-ANSI routines:
|
|
|
|
fstat(int fileds, struct stat *buf) is similar
|
|
to stat(char *name, struct stat *buf), except that
|
|
the first argument, fileds, is the file descriptor
|
|
returned by open rather than the name of the file.
|
|
fstat is used in the system-dependent routine
|
|
canseek (in the libI77 source file err.c), which
|
|
is supposed to return 1 if it's possible to issue
|
|
seeks on the file in question, 0 if it's not; you may
|
|
need to suitably modify err.c . On non-UNIX systems,
|
|
you can avoid references to fstat and stat by compiling
|
|
with NON_UNIX_STDIO defined; in that case, you may need
|
|
to supply access(char *Name,0), which is supposed to
|
|
return 0 if file Name exists, nonzero otherwise.
|
|
|
|
char * mktemp(char *buf) is supposed to replace the
|
|
6 trailing X's in buf with a unique number and then
|
|
return buf. The idea is to get a unique name for
|
|
a temporary file.
|
|
|
|
On non-UNIX systems, you may need to change a few other,
|
|
e.g.: the form of name computed by mktemp() in endfile.c and
|
|
open.c; the use of the open(), close(), and creat() system
|
|
calls in endfile.c, err.c, open.c; and the modes in calls on
|
|
fopen() and fdopen() (and perhaps the use of fdopen() itself
|
|
-- it's supposed to return a FILE* corresponding to a given
|
|
an integer file descriptor) in err.c and open.c (component ufmt
|
|
of struct unit is 1 for formatted I/O -- text mode on some systems
|
|
-- and 0 for unformatted I/O -- binary mode on some systems).
|
|
Compiling with -DNON_UNIX_STDIO omits all references to creat()
|
|
and almost all references to open() and close(), the exception
|
|
being in the function f__isdev() (in open.c).
|
|
|
|
For MS-DOS, compile all of libI77 with -DMSDOS (which implies
|
|
-DNON_UNIX_STDIO). You may need to make other compiler-dependent
|
|
adjustments; for example, for Turbo C++ you need to adjust the mktemp
|
|
invocations and to #undef ungetc in lread.c and rsne.c .
|
|
|
|
If you want to be able to load against libI77 but not libF77,
|
|
then you will need to add sig_die.o (from libF77) to libI77.
|
|
|
|
If you wish to use translated Fortran that has funny notions
|
|
of record length for direct unformatted I/O (i.e., that assumes
|
|
RECL= values in OPEN statements are not bytes but rather counts
|
|
of some other units -- e.g., 4-character words for VMS), then you
|
|
should insert an appropriate #define for url_Adjust at the
|
|
beginning of open.c . For VMS Fortran, for example,
|
|
#define url_Adjust(x) x *= 4
|
|
would suffice.
|
|
|
|
To check for transmission errors, issue the command
|
|
make check
|
|
This assumes you have the xsum program whose source, xsum.c,
|
|
is distributed as part of "all from f2c/src". If you do not
|
|
have xsum, you can obtain xsum.c by sending the following E-mail
|
|
message to netlib@netlib.bell-labs.com
|
|
send xsum.c from f2c/src
|
|
|
|
The makefile assumes you have installed f2c.h in a standard
|
|
place (and does not cause recompilation when f2c.h is changed);
|
|
f2c.h comes with "all from f2c" (the source for f2c) and is
|
|
available separately ("f2c.h from f2c").
|
|
|
|
By default, Fortran I/O units 5, 6, and 0 are pre-connected to
|
|
stdin, stdout, and stderr, respectively. You can change this
|
|
behavior by changing f_init() in err.c to suit your needs.
|
|
Note that f2c assumes READ(*... means READ(5... and WRITE(*...
|
|
means WRITE(6... . Moreover, an OPEN(n,... statement that does
|
|
not specify a file name (and does not specify STATUS='SCRATCH')
|
|
assumes FILE='fort.n' . You can change this by editing open.c
|
|
and endfile.c suitably.
|
|
|
|
Unless you adjust the "#define MXUNIT" line in fio.h, Fortran units
|
|
0, 1, ..., 99 are available, i.e., the highest allowed unit number
|
|
is MXUNIT - 1.
|
|
|
|
Lines protected from compilation by #ifdef Allow_TYQUAD
|
|
are for a possible extension to 64-bit integers in which
|
|
integer = int = 32 bits and longint = long = 64 bits.
|
|
|
|
Extensions (Feb. 1993) to NAMELIST processing:
|
|
1. Reading a ? instead of &name (the start of a namelist) causes
|
|
the namelist being sought to be written to stdout (unit 6);
|
|
to omit this feature, compile rsne.c with -DNo_Namelist_Questions.
|
|
2. Reading the wrong namelist name now leads to an error message
|
|
and an attempt to skip input until the right namelist name is found;
|
|
to omit this feature, compile rsne.c with -DNo_Bad_Namelist_Skip.
|
|
3. Namelist writes now insert newlines before each variable; to omit
|
|
this feature, compile xwsne.c with -DNo_Extra_Namelist_Newlines.
|
|
4. (Sept. 1995) When looking for the &name that starts namelist
|
|
input, lines whose first non-blank character is something other
|
|
than &, $, or ? are treated as comment lines and ignored, unless
|
|
rsne.c is compiled with -DNo_Namelist_Comments.
|
|
|
|
Nonstandard extension (Feb. 1993) to open: for sequential files,
|
|
ACCESS='APPEND' (or access='anything else starting with "A" or "a"')
|
|
causes the file to be positioned at end-of-file, so a write will
|
|
append to the file.
|
|
|
|
Some buggy Fortran programs use unformatted direct I/O to write
|
|
an incomplete record and later read more from that record than
|
|
they have written. For records other than the last, the unwritten
|
|
portion of the record reads as binary zeros. The last record is
|
|
a special case: attempting to read more from it than was written
|
|
gives end-of-file -- which may help one find a bug. Some other
|
|
Fortran I/O libraries treat the last record no differently than
|
|
others and thus give no help in finding the bug of reading more
|
|
than was written. If you wish to have this behavior, compile
|
|
uio.c with -DPad_UDread .
|
|
|
|
If you want to be able to catch write failures (e.g., due to a
|
|
disk being full) with an ERR= specifier, compile dfe.c, due.c,
|
|
sfe.c, sue.c, and wsle.c with -DALWAYS_FLUSH. This will lead to
|
|
slower execution and more I/O, but should make ERR= work as
|
|
expected, provided fflush returns an error return when its
|
|
physical write fails.
|
|
|
|
Carriage controls are meant to be interpreted by the UNIX col
|
|
program (or a similar program). Sometimes it's convenient to use
|
|
only ' ' as the carriage control character (normal single spacing).
|
|
If you compile lwrite.c and wsfe.c with -DOMIT_BLANK_CC, formatted
|
|
external output lines will have an initial ' ' quietly omitted,
|
|
making use of the col program unnecessary with output that only
|
|
has ' ' for carriage control.
|
|
|
|
The Fortran 77 Standard leaves it up to the implementation whether
|
|
formatted writes of floating-point numbers of absolute value < 1 have
|
|
a zero before the decimal point. By default, libI77 omits such
|
|
superfluous zeros, but you can cause them to appear by compiling
|
|
lwrite.c, wref.c, and wrtfmt.c with -DWANT_LEAD_0 .
|
|
|
|
If your system lacks a ranlib command, you don't need it.
|
|
Either comment out the makefile's ranlib invocation, or install
|
|
a harmless "ranlib" command somewhere in your PATH, such as the
|
|
one-line shell script
|
|
|
|
exit 0
|
|
|
|
or (on some systems)
|
|
|
|
exec /usr/bin/ar lts $1 >/dev/null
|
|
|
|
Most of the routines in libI77 are support routines for Fortran
|
|
I/O. There are a few exceptions, summarized below -- I/O related
|
|
functions and subroutines that appear to your program as ordinary
|
|
external Fortran routines.
|
|
|
|
1. CALL FLUSH flushes all buffers.
|
|
|
|
2. FTELL(i) is an INTEGER function that returns the current
|
|
offset of Fortran unit i (or -1 if unit i is not open).
|
|
|
|
3. CALL FSEEK(i, offset, whence, *errlab) attemps to move
|
|
Fortran unit i to the specified offset: absolute offset
|
|
if whence = 0; relative to the current offset if whence = 1;
|
|
relative to the end of the file if whence = 2. It branches
|
|
to label errlab if unit i is not open or if the call
|
|
otherwise fails.
|