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stdlib's Introduction

Fortran Standard Library

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Goals and Motivation

The Fortran Standard, as published by the ISO (https://wg5-fortran.org/), does not have a Standard Library. The goal of this project is to provide a community driven and agreed upon de facto "standard" library for Fortran, called a Fortran Standard Library (stdlib). We have a rigorous process how stdlib is developed as documented in our Workflow. stdlib is both a specification and a reference implementation. We are cooperating with the Fortran Standards Committee (e.g., the effort started at the J3 committee repository) and the plan is to continue working with the Committee in the future (such as in the step 5. in the Workflow document), so that if the Committee wants to standardize some feature already available in stdlib, it would base it on stdlib's implementation.

Scope

The goal of the Fortran Standard Library is to achieve the following general scope:

  • Utilities (containers, strings, files, OS/environment integration, unit testing & assertions, logging, ...)
  • Algorithms (searching and sorting, merging, ...)
  • Mathematics (linear algebra, sparse matrices, special functions, fast Fourier transform, random numbers, statistics, ordinary differential equations, numerical integration, optimization, ...)

Getting started

Get the code

git clone https://github.com/fortran-lang/stdlib
cd stdlib

Requirements

To build the Fortran standard library you need

  • a Fortran 2008 compliant compiler, or better, a Fortran 2018 compliant compiler (GCC Fortran and Intel Fortran compilers are known to work for stdlib)
  • CMake version 3.14 or newer (alternatively Make can be used)
  • a build backend for CMake, like Make or Ninja (the latter is recommended on Windows)
  • the fypp preprocessor (used as meta-programming tool)

If your system package manager does not provide the required build tools, all build dependencies can be installed with the Python command line installer pip:

pip install --user fypp cmake ninja

Alternatively, you can install the build tools from the conda-forge channel with the conda package manager:

conda config --add channels conda-forge
conda create -n stdlib-tools fypp cmake ninja
conda activate stdlib-tools

You can install conda using the miniforge installer. Also, you can install a Fortran compiler from conda-forge by installing the fortran-compiler package, which installs GFortran.

Supported Compilers

The following combinations are tested on the default branch of stdlib:

Name Version Platform Architecture
GCC Fortran 9, 10, 11 Ubuntu 20.04 x86_64
GCC Fortran 9, 10, 11 MacOS Catalina 10.15 x86_64
GCC Fortran (MSYS) 10 Windows Server 2019 x86_64
GCC Fortran (MinGW) 10 Windows Server 2019 x86_64, i686
Intel oneAPI classic 2021.1 Ubuntu 20.04 x86_64
Intel oneAPI classic 2021.1 MacOS Catalina 10.15 x86_64

The following combinations are known to work, but they are not tested in the CI:

Name Version Platform Architecture
GCC Fortran (MinGW) 9.3.0, 10.2.0, 11.2.0 Windows 10 x86_64, i686

We try to test as many available compilers and platforms as possible. A list of tested compilers which are currently not working and the respective issue are listed below.

Name Version Platform Architecture Status
GCC Fortran <9 any any #296, #430
NVIDIA HPC SDK 20.7, 20.9, 20.11 Manjaro Linux 20 x86_64 #107
NAG 7.0 RHEL x86_64 #108
Intel Parallel Studio XE 16, 17, 18 OpenSUSE x86_64 failed to compile

Please share your experience with successful and failing builds for compiler/platform/architecture combinations not covered above.

Build with CMake

Configure the build with

cmake -B build

You can pass additional options to CMake to customize the build. Important options are

  • -G Ninja to use the Ninja backend instead of the default Make backend. Other build backends are available with a similar syntax.
  • -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX is used to provide the install location for the library. If not provided the defaults will depend on your operating system, see here.
  • -DCMAKE_MAXIMUM_RANK the maximum array rank procedures should be generated for. The default value is chosen as 4. The maximum is 15 for Fortran 2003 compliant compilers, otherwise 7 for compilers not supporting Fortran 2003 completely yet. The minimum required rank to compile this project is 4. Compiling with maximum rank 15 can be resource intensive and requires at least 16 GB of memory to allow parallel compilation or 4 GB memory for sequential compilation.
  • -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS set to on in case you want link your application dynamically against the standard library (default: off).

For example, to configure a build using the Ninja backend while specifying compiler flags FFLAGS, generating procedures up to rank 7, and installing to your home directory, use

export FFLAGS="-O3"
cmake -B build -G Ninja -DCMAKE_MAXIMUM_RANK:String=7 -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$HOME/.local

To build the standard library run

cmake --build build

To test your build, run the test suite after the build has finished with

cmake --build build --target test

Please report failing tests on our issue tracker including details of the compiler used, the operating system and platform architecture.

To install the project to the declared prefix run

cmake --install build

Now you have a working version of stdlib you can use for your project.

If at some point you wish to recompile stdlib with different options, you might want to delete the build folder. This will ensure that cached variables from earlier builds do not affect the new build.

Build with make

Alternatively, you can build using provided Makefiles:

make -f Makefile.manual

You can limit the maximum rank by setting -DMAXRANK=<num> in the ADD_FYPPFLAGS environment variable (which can reduce the compilation time):

make -f Makefile.manual ADD_FYPPFLAGS=-DMAXRANK=4

You can also specify the compiler and compiler-flags by setting the FC and FFLAGS environmental variables. Among other things, this facilitates use of compiler optimizations that are not specified in the Makefile.manual defaults.

make -f Makefile.manual ADD_FYPPFLAGS=-DMAXRANK=4 FC=gfortran FFLAGS="-O3"

Build with fortran-lang/fpm

Fortran Package Manager (fpm) is a package manager and build system for Fortran.
You can build stdlib using provided fpm.toml:

git checkout stdlib-fpm
fpm build --profile release

To use stdlib within your fpm project, add the following lines to your fpm.toml file:

[dependencies]
stdlib = { git="https://github.com/fortran-lang/stdlib", branch="stdlib-fpm" }

Using stdlib in your project

The stdlib project exports CMake package files and pkg-config files to make stdlib usable for other projects. The package files are located in the library directory in the installation prefix.

For CMake builds of stdlib you can find a local installation with

find_package(fortran_stdlib REQUIRED)
...
target_link_libraries(
  ${PROJECT_NAME}
  PRIVATE
  fortran_stdlib::fortran_stdlib
)

To make the installed stdlib project discoverable add the stdlib directory to the CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH. The usual install location of the package files is $PREFIX/lib/cmake/fortran_stdlib.

For non-CMake build systems (like make) you can use the exported pkg-config file by setting PKG_CONFIG_PATH to include the directory containing the exported pc-file. The usual install location of the pc-file is $PREFIX/lib/pkgconfig. In make you can obtain the required compile and link arguments with

STDLIB_CFLAGS := $(shell pkg-config --cflags fortran_stdlib)
STDLIB_LIBS := $(shell pkg-config --libs fortran_stdlib)

Documentation

Documentation is a work in progress (see issue #4) but already available at stdlib.fortran-lang.org. This includes API documentation automatically generated from static analysis and markup comments in the source files using the FORD tool, as well as a specification document or "spec" for each proposed feature.

Some discussions and prototypes of proposed APIs along with a list of popular open source Fortran projects are available on the wiki.

Contributing

Links

stdlib's People

Contributors

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