--- trunk/OOPSE-4/README 2006/01/16 23:10:15 2568 +++ trunk/OOPSE-4/README 2006/05/16 02:06:37 2752 @@ -25,9 +25,10 @@ What you need to compile and use OOPSE: Architecture CC CXX F90 Notes ------------------------- ---- ----- ----- ---------------------- ix86-pc-linux-gnu icc icpc ifort (Intel versions 7-9) - powerpc-apple-darwin8.4.0 gcc g++ xlf (GNU v.4 / IBM XL v. 8.1) + i386-apple-darwin8.6.1 icc icpc ifort (Intel version 9.1) + powerpc-apple-darwin8.6.0 gcc g++ xlf95 (GNU v.4 / IBM XL v. 8.1) x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu pgcc pgCC pgf95 (Portland Group v. 6.0) - sparc-sun-solaris2.8 cc CC f95 (Sun ONE Studio 10) + sparc-sun-solaris2.10 cc CC f95 (Sun ONE Studio 10) We've successfully compiled OOPSE with the Pathscale c, c++, and Fortran95 compilers on the x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu architecture, @@ -35,15 +36,19 @@ What you need to compile and use OOPSE: OOPSE to abort (rather than providing a useful error message) when an error is found in the meta-data file. - The GNU compilers, gcc and g++, work very well, but you will need to - use a Fortran *95* compler for the fortran side of OOPSE, and - pgf90 does not implement the required portions of the f95 - language. Fortran77 and Fortran90 (i.e. g77 and pgf90) are *not* - sufficient to compile the fortran portions of OOPSE. Gfortran - does not yet build our fortran code, but g95 might. If you use - one of these compilers, please let us know of any build or runtime - errors. + OOPSE uses features of the Fortran 95 language. The fortran + portions of our code will not compile if your compiler does not + support these particular features. Some (but not all) Fortran 90 + compilers do support these features. None of the Fortran 77 + compilers can be used to compile OOPSE. + Compilers that are known to fail on OOPSE: g77, Gfortran, Older + Portland Group compilers (pgf77, pgf90). + + Compilers that are known to work on OOPSE: Intel's ifort, + Pathscale's pathf95, IBM's xlf95, Portland's pgf95 (version 6 or + higher), Sun's f95. There may be others that work also. + 2) GNU make (also known as gmake). Regular make won't work. Really. We've tried. Don't bother with regular make. Seriously. You need GNU make. Did we mention that you