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GFORTRAN(1) |
GNU |
GFORTRAN(1) |
gfortran - GNU Fortran compiler
gfortran [-c|-S|-E]
[-g] [-pg] [-Olevel]
[-Wwarn...] [-pedantic]
[-Idir...] [-Ldir...]
[-Dmacro[=defn]...] [-Umacro]
[-foption...]
[-mmachine-option...]
[-o outfile] infile...
Only the most useful options are listed here; see below for the
remainder.
The gfortran command supports all the options supported by the gcc
command. Only options specific to GNU Fortran are documented here.
All GCC and GNU Fortran options are accepted both by
gfortran and by gcc (as well as any other drivers built at the
same time, such as g++), since adding GNU Fortran to the GCC
distribution enables acceptance of GNU Fortran options by all of the
relevant drivers.
In some cases, options have positive and negative forms; the
negative form of -ffoo would be -fno-foo. This manual
documents only one of these two forms, whichever one is not the default.
Here is a summary of all the options specific to GNU Fortran, grouped by type.
Explanations are in the following sections.
- Fortran Language Options
- -fall-intrinsics -fbackslash -fcray-pointer -fd-lines-as-code
-fd-lines-as-comments -fdefault-double-8 -fdefault-integer-8
-fdefault-real-8 -fdollar-ok -ffixed-line-length-n
-ffixed-line-length-none -ffree-form -ffree-line-length-n
-ffree-line-length-none -fimplicit-none -finteger-4-integer-8
-fmax-identifier-length -fmodule-private -fno-fixed-form
-fno-range-check -fopenmp -freal-4-real-10 -freal-4-real-16
-freal-4-real-8 -freal-8-real-10 -freal-8-real-16 -freal-8-real-4
-std=std
- Preprocessing Options
- -A-question[=answer]
-Aquestion=answer -C -CC
-Dmacro[=defn] -H -P -Umacro
-cpp -dD -dI -dM -dN -dU -fworking-directory -imultilib
dir -iprefix file -iquote -isysroot dir
-isystem dir -nocpp -nostdinc
-undef
- Error and Warning Options
- -Waliasing -Wall -Wampersand -Warray-bounds -Wc-binding-type
-Wcharacter-truncation -Wconversion -Wfunction-elimination
-Wimplicit-interface -Wimplicit-procedure -Wintrinsic-shadow
-Wintrinsics-std -Wline-truncation -Wno-align-commons -Wno-tabs
-Wreal-q-constant -Wsurprising -Wunderflow -Wunused-parameter
-Wrealloc-lhs Wrealloc-lhs-all -Wtarget-lifetime
-fmax-errors=n -fsyntax-only -pedantic
-pedantic-errors
- Debugging Options
- -fbacktrace -fdump-fortran-optimized -fdump-fortran-original
-fdump-parse-tree -ffpe-trap=list
- Directory Options
- -Idir -Jdir -fintrinsic-modules-path
dir
- Link Options
- -static-libgfortran
- Runtime Options
- -fconvert=conversion
-fmax-subrecord-length=length
-frecord-marker=length -fsign-zero
- Code Generation Options
- -faggressive-function-elimination -fblas-matmul-limit=n
-fbounds-check -fcheck-array-temporaries
-fcheck=<all|array-temps|bounds|do|mem|pointer|recursion>
-fcoarray=<none|single|lib> -fexternal-blas
-ff2c -ffrontend-optimize -finit-character=n
-finit-integer=n -finit-local-zero
-finit-logical=<true|false>
-finit-real=<zero|inf|-inf|nan|snan>
-fmax-array-constructor=n
-fmax-stack-var-size=n -fno-align-commons
-fno-automatic -fno-protect-parens -fno-underscoring
-fno-whole-file -fsecond-underscore -fpack-derived -frealloc-lhs
-frecursive -frepack-arrays -fshort-enums -fstack-arrays
The following options control the details of the Fortran dialect accepted by the
compiler:
- -ffree-form
- -ffixed-form
- Specify the layout used by the source file. The free form layout was
introduced in Fortran 90. Fixed form was traditionally used in older
Fortran programs. When neither option is specified, the source form is
determined by the file extension.
- -fall-intrinsics
- This option causes all intrinsic procedures (including the GNU-specific
extensions) to be accepted. This can be useful with -std=f95 to
force standard-compliance but get access to the full range of intrinsics
available with gfortran. As a consequence, -Wintrinsics-std
will be ignored and no user-defined procedure with the same name as any
intrinsic will be called except when it is explicitly declared
"EXTERNAL".
- -fd-lines-as-code
- -fd-lines-as-comments
- Enable special treatment for lines beginning with
"d" or
"D" in fixed form sources. If the
-fd-lines-as-code option is given they are treated as if the first
column contained a blank. If the -fd-lines-as-comments option is
given, they are treated as comment lines.
- -fdefault-double-8
- Set the "DOUBLE PRECISION" type to an 8
byte wide type. If -fdefault-real-8 is given,
"DOUBLE PRECISION" would instead be
promoted to 16 bytes if possible, and -fdefault-double-8 can be
used to prevent this. The kind of real constants like
"1.d0" will not be changed by
-fdefault-real-8 though, so also -fdefault-double-8 does not
affect it.
- -fdefault-integer-8
- Set the default integer and logical types to an 8 byte wide type. Do
nothing if this is already the default. This option also affects the kind
of integer constants like 42.
- -fdefault-real-8
- Set the default real type to an 8 byte wide type. Do nothing if this is
already the default. This option also affects the kind of non-double real
constants like 1.0, and does promote the default
width of "DOUBLE PRECISION" to 16 bytes
if possible, unless "-fdefault-double-8"
is given, too.
- -fdollar-ok
- Allow $ as a valid non-first character in a symbol name. Symbols
that start with $ are rejected since it is unclear which rules to
apply to implicit typing as different vendors implement different rules.
Using $ in "IMPLICIT" statements
is also rejected.
- -fbackslash
- Change the interpretation of backslashes in string literals from a single
backslash character to "C-style" escape characters. The
following combinations are expanded
"\a",
"\b",
"\f",
"\n",
"\r",
"\t",
"\v",
"\\", and
"\0" to the ASCII characters alert,
backspace, form feed, newline, carriage return, horizontal tab, vertical
tab, backslash, and NUL, respectively. Additionally,
"\x"nn,
"\u"nnnn and
"\U"nnnnnnnn (where each n
is a hexadecimal digit) are translated into the Unicode characters
corresponding to the specified code points. All other combinations of a
character preceded by \ are unexpanded.
- -fmodule-private
- Set the default accessibility of module entities to
"PRIVATE". Use-associated entities will
not be accessible unless they are explicitly declared as
"PUBLIC".
- -ffixed-line-length-n
- Set column after which characters are ignored in typical fixed-form lines
in the source file, and through which spaces are assumed (as if padded to
that length) after the ends of short fixed-form lines.
Popular values for n include 72 (the standard and the
default), 80 (card image), and 132 (corresponding to
"extended-source" options in some popular compilers). n
may also be none, meaning that the entire line is meaningful and
that continued character constants never have implicit spaces appended
to them to fill out the line. -ffixed-line-length-0 means the
same thing as -ffixed-line-length-none.
- -ffree-line-length-n
- Set column after which characters are ignored in typical free-form lines
in the source file. The default value is 132. n may be none,
meaning that the entire line is meaningful. -ffree-line-length-0
means the same thing as -ffree-line-length-none.
- -fmax-identifier-length=n
- Specify the maximum allowed identifier length. Typical values are 31
(Fortran 95) and 63 (Fortran 2003 and Fortran 2008).
- -fimplicit-none
- Specify that no implicit typing is allowed, unless overridden by explicit
"IMPLICIT" statements. This is the
equivalent of adding "implicit none" to
the start of every procedure.
- -finteger-4-integer-8
- Promote all "INTEGER(KIND=4)" entities
to an "INTEGER(KIND=8)" entities. If
"KIND=8" is unavailable, then an error
will be issued. This option should be used with care and may not be
suitable for your codes. Areas of possible concern include calls to
external procedures, alignment in
"EQUIVALENCE" and/or
"COMMON", generic interfaces, BOZ
literal constant conversion, and I/O. Inspection of the intermediate
representation of the translated Fortran code, produced by
-fdump-tree-original, is suggested.
- -fcray-pointer
- Enable the Cray pointer extension, which provides C-like pointer
functionality.
- -fopenmp
- Enable the OpenMP extensions. This includes OpenMP
"!$omp" directives in free form and
"c$omp", *$omp
and "!$omp" directives in fixed form,
"!$" conditional compilation sentinels
in free form and "c$",
"*$" and
"!$" sentinels in fixed form, and when
linking arranges for the OpenMP runtime library to be linked in. The
option -fopenmp implies -frecursive.
- -fno-range-check
- Disable range checking on results of simplification of constant
expressions during compilation. For example, GNU Fortran will give an
error at compile time when simplifying "a = 1. /
0". With this option, no error will be given and
"a" will be assigned the value
"+Infinity". If an expression evaluates
to a value outside of the relevant range of
["-HUGE()":"HUGE()"],
then the expression will be replaced by
"-Inf" or
"+Inf" as appropriate. Similarly,
"DATA i/Z'FFFFFFFF'/" will result in an
integer overflow on most systems, but with -fno-range-check the
value will "wrap around" and
"i" will be initialized to -1
instead.
- -freal-4-real-8
- -freal-4-real-10
- -freal-8-real-4
- -freal-8-real-10
- -freal-8-real-16
- Promote all "REAL(KIND=M)" entities to
"REAL(KIND=N)" entities. If
"REAL(KIND=N)" is unavailable, then an
error will be issued. All other real kind types are unaffected by this
option. These options should be used with care and may not be suitable for
your codes. Areas of possible concern include calls to external
procedures, alignment in "EQUIVALENCE"
and/or "COMMON", generic interfaces, BOZ
literal constant conversion, and I/O. Inspection of the intermediate
representation of the translated Fortran code, produced by
-fdump-tree-original, is suggested.
- -std=std
- Specify the standard to which the program is expected to conform, which
may be one of f95, f2003, f2008, gnu, or
legacy. The default value for std is gnu, which
specifies a superset of the Fortran 95 standard that includes all of the
extensions supported by GNU Fortran, although warnings will be given for
obsolete extensions not recommended for use in new code. The legacy
value is equivalent but without the warnings for obsolete extensions, and
may be useful for old non-standard programs. The f95, f2003
and f2008 values specify strict conformance to the Fortran 95,
Fortran 2003 and Fortran 2008 standards, respectively; errors are given
for all extensions beyond the relevant language standard, and warnings are
given for the Fortran 77 features that are permitted but obsolescent in
later standards. -std=f2008ts allows the Fortran 2008 standard
including the additions of the Technical Specification (TS) 29113 on
Further Interoperability of Fortran with C.
Preprocessor related options. See section Preprocessing and conditional
compilation for more detailed information on preprocessing in
gfortran.
- -cpp
- -nocpp
- Enable preprocessing. The preprocessor is automatically invoked if the
file extension is .fpp, .FPP, .F, .FOR,
.FTN, .F90, .F95, .F03 or .F08. Use
this option to manually enable preprocessing of any kind of Fortran file.
To disable preprocessing of files with any of the above listed
extensions, use the negative form: -nocpp.
The preprocessor is run in traditional mode. Any restrictions
of the file-format, especially the limits on line length, apply for
preprocessed output as well, so it might be advisable to use the
-ffree-line-length-none or -ffixed-line-length-none
options.
- -dM
- Instead of the normal output, generate a list of
'#define' directives for all the macros defined
during the execution of the preprocessor, including predefined macros.
This gives you a way of finding out what is predefined in your version of
the preprocessor. Assuming you have no file foo.f90, the command
touch foo.f90; gfortran -cpp -E -dM foo.f90
will show all the predefined macros.
- -dD
- Like -dM except in two respects: it does not include the predefined
macros, and it outputs both the
"#define" directives and the result of
preprocessing. Both kinds of output go to the standard output file.
- -dN
- Like -dD, but emit only the macro names, not their expansions.
- -dU
- Like dD except that only macros that are expanded, or whose
definedness is tested in preprocessor directives, are output; the output
is delayed until the use or test of the macro; and
'#undef' directives are also output for macros
tested but undefined at the time.
- -dI
- Output '#include' directives in addition to the
result of preprocessing.
- -fworking-directory
- Enable generation of linemarkers in the preprocessor output that will let
the compiler know the current working directory at the time of
preprocessing. When this option is enabled, the preprocessor will emit,
after the initial linemarker, a second linemarker with the current working
directory followed by two slashes. GCC will use this directory, when it is
present in the preprocessed input, as the directory emitted as the current
working directory in some debugging information formats. This option is
implicitly enabled if debugging information is enabled, but this can be
inhibited with the negated form -fno-working-directory. If the
-P flag is present in the command line, this option has no effect,
since no "#line" directives are emitted
whatsoever.
- -idirafter dir
- Search dir for include files, but do it after all directories
specified with -I and the standard system directories have been
exhausted. dir is treated as a system include directory. If dir
begins with "=", then the
"=" will be replaced by the sysroot
prefix; see --sysroot and -isysroot.
- -imultilib dir
- Use dir as a subdirectory of the directory containing
target-specific C++ headers.
- -iprefix prefix
- Specify prefix as the prefix for subsequent -iwithprefix
options. If the prefix represents a directory, you should include
the final '/'.
- -isysroot dir
- This option is like the --sysroot option, but applies only to
header files. See the --sysroot option for more information.
- -iquote dir
- Search dir only for header files requested with
"#include "file""; they are
not searched for "#include
<file>", before all directories specified by -I
and before the standard system directories. If dir begins with
"=", then the
"=" will be replaced by the sysroot
prefix; see --sysroot and -isysroot.
- -isystem dir
- Search dir for header files, after all directories specified by
-I but before the standard system directories. Mark it as a system
directory, so that it gets the same special treatment as is applied to the
standard system directories. If dir begins with
"=", then the
"=" will be replaced by the sysroot
prefix; see --sysroot and -isysroot.
- -nostdinc
- Do not search the standard system directories for header files. Only the
directories you have specified with -I options (and the directory
of the current file, if appropriate) are searched.
- -undef
- Do not predefine any system-specific or GCC-specific macros. The standard
predefined macros remain defined.
- -Apredicate=answer
- Make an assertion with the predicate predicate and answer
answer. This form is preferred to the older form -A
predicate(answer), which is still supported, because it does not use shell
special characters.
- -A-predicate=answer
- Cancel an assertion with the predicate predicate and answer
answer.
- -C
- Do not discard comments. All comments are passed through to the output
file, except for comments in processed directives, which are deleted along
with the directive.
You should be prepared for side effects when using -C;
it causes the preprocessor to treat comments as tokens in their own
right. For example, comments appearing at the start of what would be a
directive line have the effect of turning that line into an ordinary
source line, since the first token on the line is no longer a
'#'.
Warning: this currently handles C-Style comments only. The
preprocessor does not yet recognize Fortran-style comments.
- -CC
- Do not discard comments, including during macro expansion. This is like
-C, except that comments contained within macros are also passed
through to the output file where the macro is expanded.
In addition to the side-effects of the -C option, the
-CC option causes all C++-style comments inside a macro to be
converted to C-style comments. This is to prevent later use of that
macro from inadvertently commenting out the remainder of the source
line. The -CC option is generally used to support lint
comments.
Warning: this currently handles C- and C++-Style comments
only. The preprocessor does not yet recognize Fortran-style
comments.
- -Dname
- Predefine name as a macro, with definition 1.
- -Dname=definition
- The contents of definition are tokenized and processed as if they
appeared during translation phase three in a
'#define' directive. In particular, the definition
will be truncated by embedded newline characters.
If you are invoking the preprocessor from a shell or
shell-like program you may need to use the shell's quoting syntax to
protect characters such as spaces that have a meaning in the shell
syntax.
If you wish to define a function-like macro on the command
line, write its argument list with surrounding parentheses before the
equals sign (if any). Parentheses are meaningful to most shells, so you
will need to quote the option. With sh and csh,
"-D'name(args...)=definition'"
works.
-D and -U options are processed in the order
they are given on the command line. All -imacros file and -include file
options are processed after all -D and -U options.
- -H
- Print the name of each header file used, in addition to other normal
activities. Each name is indented to show how deep in the
'#include' stack it is.
- -P
- Inhibit generation of linemarkers in the output from the preprocessor.
This might be useful when running the preprocessor on something that is
not C code, and will be sent to a program which might be confused by the
linemarkers.
- -Uname
- Cancel any previous definition of name, either built in or provided
with a -D option.
Errors are diagnostic messages that report that the GNU Fortran compiler cannot
compile the relevant piece of source code. The compiler will continue to
process the program in an attempt to report further errors to aid in
debugging, but will not produce any compiled output.
Warnings are diagnostic messages that report constructions which
are not inherently erroneous but which are risky or suggest there is likely
to be a bug in the program. Unless -Werror is specified, they do not
prevent compilation of the program.
You can request many specific warnings with options beginning
-W, for example -Wimplicit to request warnings on implicit
declarations. Each of these specific warning options also has a negative
form beginning -Wno- to turn off warnings; for example,
-Wno-implicit. This manual lists only one of the two forms, whichever
is not the default.
These options control the amount and kinds of errors and warnings
produced by GNU Fortran:
- -fmax-errors=n
- Limits the maximum number of error messages to n, at which point
GNU Fortran bails out rather than attempting to continue processing the
source code. If n is 0, there is no limit on the number of error
messages produced.
- -fsyntax-only
- Check the code for syntax errors, but do not actually compile it. This
will generate module files for each module present in the code, but no
other output file.
- -pedantic
- Issue warnings for uses of extensions to Fortran 95. -pedantic also
applies to C-language constructs where they occur in GNU Fortran source
files, such as use of \e in a character constant within a directive
like "#include".
Valid Fortran 95 programs should compile properly with or
without this option. However, without this option, certain GNU
extensions and traditional Fortran features are supported as well. With
this option, many of them are rejected.
Some users try to use -pedantic to check programs for
conformance. They soon find that it does not do quite what they
want---it finds some nonstandard practices, but not all. However,
improvements to GNU Fortran in this area are welcome.
This should be used in conjunction with -std=f95,
-std=f2003 or -std=f2008.
- -pedantic-errors
- Like -pedantic, except that errors are produced rather than
warnings.
- -Wall
- Enables commonly used warning options pertaining to usage that we
recommend avoiding and that we believe are easy to avoid. This currently
includes -Waliasing, -Wampersand, -Wconversion,
-Wsurprising, -Wc-binding-type, -Wintrinsics-std,
-Wno-tabs, -Wintrinsic-shadow, -Wline-truncation,
-Wtarget-lifetime, -Wreal-q-constant and
-Wunused.
- -Waliasing
- Warn about possible aliasing of dummy arguments. Specifically, it warns if
the same actual argument is associated with a dummy argument with
"INTENT(IN)" and a dummy argument with
"INTENT(OUT)" in a call with an explicit
interface.
The following example will trigger the warning.
interface
subroutine bar(a,b)
integer, intent(in) :: a
integer, intent(out) :: b
end subroutine
end interface
integer :: a
call bar(a,a)
- -Wampersand
- Warn about missing ampersand in continued character constants. The warning
is given with -Wampersand, -pedantic, -std=f95,
-std=f2003 and -std=f2008. Note: With no ampersand given in
a continued character constant, GNU Fortran assumes continuation at the
first non-comment, non-whitespace character after the ampersand that
initiated the continuation.
- -Warray-temporaries
- Warn about array temporaries generated by the compiler. The information
generated by this warning is sometimes useful in optimization, in order to
avoid such temporaries.
- -Wc-binding-type
- Warn if the a variable might not be C interoperable. In particular, warn
if the variable has been declared using an intrinsic type with default
kind instead of using a kind parameter defined for C interoperability in
the intrinsic "ISO_C_Binding" module.
This option is implied by -Wall.
- -Wcharacter-truncation
- Warn when a character assignment will truncate the assigned string.
- -Wline-truncation
- Warn when a source code line will be truncated. This option is implied by
-Wall.
- -Wconversion
- Warn about implicit conversions that are likely to change the value of the
expression after conversion. Implied by -Wall.
- -Wconversion-extra
- Warn about implicit conversions between different types and kinds.
- -Wextra
- Enables some warning options for usages of language features which may be
problematic. This currently includes -Wcompare-reals and
-Wunused-parameter.
- -Wimplicit-interface
- Warn if a procedure is called without an explicit interface. Note this
only checks that an explicit interface is present. It does not check that
the declared interfaces are consistent across program units.
- -Wimplicit-procedure
- Warn if a procedure is called that has neither an explicit interface nor
has been declared as "EXTERNAL".
- -Wintrinsics-std
- Warn if gfortran finds a procedure named like an intrinsic not
available in the currently selected standard (with -std) and treats
it as "EXTERNAL" procedure because of
this. -fall-intrinsics can be used to never trigger this behavior
and always link to the intrinsic regardless of the selected standard.
- -Wreal-q-constant
- Produce a warning if a real-literal-constant contains a
"q" exponent-letter.
- -Wsurprising
- Produce a warning when "suspicious" code constructs are
encountered. While technically legal these usually indicate that an error
has been made.
This currently produces a warning under the following
circumstances:
- An INTEGER SELECT construct has a CASE that can never be matched as its
lower value is greater than its upper value.
- A LOGICAL SELECT construct has three CASE statements.
- A TRANSFER specifies a source that is shorter than the destination.
- The type of a function result is declared more than once with the same
type. If -pedantic or standard-conforming mode is enabled, this is
an error.
- A "CHARACTER" variable is declared with
negative length.
- -Wtabs
- By default, tabs are accepted as whitespace, but tabs are not members of
the Fortran Character Set. For continuation lines, a tab followed by a
digit between 1 and 9 is supported. -Wno-tabs will cause a warning
to be issued if a tab is encountered. Note, -Wno-tabs is active for
-pedantic, -std=f95, -std=f2003, -std=f2008
and -Wall.
- -Wunderflow
- Produce a warning when numerical constant expressions are encountered,
which yield an UNDERFLOW during compilation.
- -Wintrinsic-shadow
- Warn if a user-defined procedure or module procedure has the same name as
an intrinsic; in this case, an explicit interface or
"EXTERNAL" or
"INTRINSIC" declaration might be needed
to get calls later resolved to the desired intrinsic/procedure. This
option is implied by -Wall.
- -Wunused-dummy-argument
- Warn about unused dummy arguments. This option is implied by
-Wall.
- -Wunused-parameter
- Contrary to gcc's meaning of -Wunused-parameter,
gfortran's implementation of this option does not warn about unused
dummy arguments (see -Wunused-dummy-argument), but about unused
"PARAMETER" values.
-Wunused-parameter is not included in -Wall but is implied
by -Wall -Wextra.
- -Walign-commons
- By default, gfortran warns about any occasion of variables being
padded for proper alignment inside a
"COMMON" block. This warning can be
turned off via -Wno-align-commons. See also
-falign-commons.
- -Wfunction-elimination
- Warn if any calls to functions are eliminated by the optimizations enabled
by the -ffrontend-optimize option.
- -Wrealloc-lhs
- Warn when the compiler might insert code to for allocation or reallocation
of an allocatable array variable of intrinsic type in intrinsic
assignments. In hot loops, the Fortran 2003 reallocation feature may
reduce the performance. If the array is already allocated with the correct
shape, consider using a whole-array array-spec (e.g.
"(:,:,:)") for the variable on the
left-hand side to prevent the reallocation check. Note that in some cases
the warning is shown, even if the compiler will optimize reallocation
checks away. For instance, when the right-hand side contains the same
variable multiplied by a scalar. See also -frealloc-lhs.
- -Wrealloc-lhs-all
- Warn when the compiler inserts code to for allocation or reallocation of
an allocatable variable; this includes scalars and derived types.
- -Wcompare-reals
- Warn when comparing real or complex types for equality or inequality. This
option is implied by -Wextra.
- -Wtarget-lifetime
- Warn if the pointer in a pointer assignment might be longer than the its
target. This option is implied by -Wall.
- -Werror
- Turns all warnings into errors.
Some of these have no effect when compiling programs written in
Fortran.
GNU Fortran has various special options that are used for debugging either your
program or the GNU Fortran compiler.
- -fdump-fortran-original
- Output the internal parse tree after translating the source program into
internal representation. Only really useful for debugging the GNU Fortran
compiler itself.
- -fdump-fortran-optimized
- Output the parse tree after front-end optimization. Only really useful for
debugging the GNU Fortran compiler itself.
- -fdump-parse-tree
- Output the internal parse tree after translating the source program into
internal representation. Only really useful for debugging the GNU Fortran
compiler itself. This option is deprecated; use
"-fdump-fortran-original" instead.
- -ffpe-trap=list
- Specify a list of floating point exception traps to enable. On most
systems, if a floating point exception occurs and the trap for that
exception is enabled, a SIGFPE signal will be sent and the program being
aborted, producing a core file useful for debugging. list is a
(possibly empty) comma-separated list of the following exceptions:
invalid (invalid floating point operation, such as
"SQRT(-1.0)"), zero (division by
zero), overflow (overflow in a floating point operation),
underflow (underflow in a floating point operation), inexact
(loss of precision during operation), and denormal (operation
performed on a denormal value). The first five exceptions correspond to
the five IEEE 754 exceptions, whereas the last one (denormal) is
not part of the IEEE 754 standard but is available on some common
architectures such as x86.
The first three exceptions (invalid, zero, and
overflow) often indicate serious errors, and unless the program
has provisions for dealing with these exceptions, enabling traps for
these three exceptions is probably a good idea.
Many, if not most, floating point operations incur loss of
precision due to rounding, and hence the
"ffpe-trap=inexact" is likely to be
uninteresting in practice.
By default no exception traps are enabled.
- -fno-backtrace
- When a serious runtime error is encountered or a deadly signal is emitted
(segmentation fault, illegal instruction, bus error, floating-point
exception, and the other POSIX signals that have the action core),
the Fortran runtime library tries to output a backtrace of the error.
"-fno-backtrace" disables the backtrace
generation. This option only has influence for compilation of the Fortran
main program.
These options affect how GNU Fortran searches for files specified by the
"INCLUDE" directive and where it searches
for previously compiled modules.
It also affects the search paths used by cpp when used to
preprocess Fortran source.
- -Idir
- These affect interpretation of the
"INCLUDE" directive (as well as of the
"#include" directive of the cpp
preprocessor).
Also note that the general behavior of -I and
"INCLUDE" is pretty much the same as
of -I with "#include" in the
cpp preprocessor, with regard to looking for header.gcc
files and other such things.
This path is also used to search for .mod files when
previously compiled modules are required by a
"USE" statement.
- -Jdir
- This option specifies where to put .mod files for compiled modules.
It is also added to the list of directories to searched by an
"USE" statement.
The default is the current directory.
- -fintrinsic-modules-path dir
- This option specifies the location of pre-compiled intrinsic modules, if
they are not in the default location expected by the compiler.
These options come into play when the compiler links object files into an
executable output file. They are meaningless if the compiler is not doing a
link step.
- -static-libgfortran
- On systems that provide libgfortran as a shared and a static
library, this option forces the use of the static version. If no shared
version of libgfortran was built when the compiler was configured,
this option has no effect.
These options affect the runtime behavior of programs compiled with GNU Fortran.
- -fconvert=conversion
- Specify the representation of data for unformatted files. Valid values for
conversion are: native, the default; swap, swap between big-
and little-endian; big-endian, use big-endian representation for
unformatted files; little-endian, use little-endian representation
for unformatted files.
This option has an effect only when used in the main
program. The "CONVERT" specifier and the
GFORTRAN_CONVERT_UNIT environment variable override the default
specified by -fconvert.
- -frecord-marker=length
- Specify the length of record markers for unformatted files. Valid values
for length are 4 and 8. Default is 4. This is different from
previous versions of gfortran, which specified a default record
marker length of 8 on most systems. If you want to read or write files
compatible with earlier versions of gfortran, use
-frecord-marker=8.
- -fmax-subrecord-length=length
- Specify the maximum length for a subrecord. The maximum permitted value
for length is 2147483639, which is also the default. Only really useful
for use by the gfortran testsuite.
- -fsign-zero
- When enabled, floating point numbers of value zero with the sign bit set
are written as negative number in formatted output and treated as negative
in the "SIGN" intrinsic.
-fno-sign-zero does not print the negative sign of zero values (or
values rounded to zero for I/O) and regards zero as positive number in the
"SIGN" intrinsic for compatibility with
Fortran 77. The default is -fsign-zero.
These machine-independent options control the interface conventions used in code
generation.
Most of them have both positive and negative forms; the negative
form of -ffoo would be -fno-foo. In the table below, only one
of the forms is listed---the one which is not the default. You can figure
out the other form by either removing no- or adding it.
- -fno-automatic
- Treat each program unit (except those marked as RECURSIVE) as if the
"SAVE" statement were specified for
every local variable and array referenced in it. Does not affect common
blocks. (Some Fortran compilers provide this option under the name
-static or -save.) The default, which is -fautomatic,
uses the stack for local variables smaller than the value given by
-fmax-stack-var-size. Use the option -frecursive to use no
static memory.
- -ff2c
- Generate code designed to be compatible with code generated by g77
and f2c.
The calling conventions used by g77 (originally
implemented in f2c) require functions that return type default
"REAL" to actually return the C type
"double", and functions that return
type "COMPLEX" to return the values
via an extra argument in the calling sequence that points to where to
store the return value. Under the default GNU calling conventions, such
functions simply return their results as they would in GNU C---default
"REAL" functions return the C type
"float", and
"COMPLEX" functions return the GNU C
type "complex". Additionally, this
option implies the -fsecond-underscore option, unless
-fno-second-underscore is explicitly requested.
This does not affect the generation of code that interfaces
with the libgfortran library.
Caution: It is not a good idea to mix Fortran code
compiled with -ff2c with code compiled with the default
-fno-f2c calling conventions as, calling
"COMPLEX" or default
"REAL" functions between program parts
which were compiled with different calling conventions will break at
execution time.
Caution: This will break code which passes intrinsic
functions of type default "REAL" or
"COMPLEX" as actual arguments, as the
library implementations use the -fno-f2c calling conventions.
- -fno-underscoring
- Do not transform names of entities specified in the Fortran source file by
appending underscores to them.
With -funderscoring in effect, GNU Fortran appends one
underscore to external names with no underscores. This is done to ensure
compatibility with code produced by many UNIX Fortran compilers.
Caution: The default behavior of GNU Fortran is
incompatible with f2c and g77, please use the -ff2c
option if you want object files compiled with GNU Fortran to be
compatible with object code created with these tools.
Use of -fno-underscoring is not recommended unless you
are experimenting with issues such as integration of GNU Fortran into
existing system environments (vis-a-vis existing libraries, tools, and
so on).
For example, with -funderscoring, and assuming other
defaults like -fcase-lower and that
"j()" and
"max_count()" are external functions
while "my_var" and
"lvar" are local variables, a
statement like
I = J() + MAX_COUNT (MY_VAR, LVAR)
is implemented as something akin to:
i = j_() + max_count__(&my_var__, &lvar);
With -fno-underscoring, the same statement is
implemented as:
i = j() + max_count(&my_var, &lvar);
Use of -fno-underscoring allows direct specification of
user-defined names while debugging and when interfacing GNU Fortran code
with other languages.
Note that just because the names match does not mean
that the interface implemented by GNU Fortran for an external name
matches the interface implemented by some other language for that same
name. That is, getting code produced by GNU Fortran to link to code
produced by some other compiler using this or any other method can be
only a small part of the overall solution---getting the code generated
by both compilers to agree on issues other than naming can require
significant effort, and, unlike naming disagreements, linkers normally
cannot detect disagreements in these other areas.
Also, note that with -fno-underscoring, the lack of
appended underscores introduces the very real possibility that a
user-defined external name will conflict with a name in a system
library, which could make finding unresolved-reference bugs quite
difficult in some cases---they might occur at program run time, and show
up only as buggy behavior at run time.
In future versions of GNU Fortran we hope to improve naming
and linking issues so that debugging always involves using the names as
they appear in the source, even if the names as seen by the linker are
mangled to prevent accidental linking between procedures with
incompatible interfaces.
- -fno-whole-file
- This flag causes the compiler to resolve and translate each procedure in a
file separately.
By default, the whole file is parsed and placed in a single
front-end tree. During resolution, in addition to all the usual checks
and fixups, references to external procedures that are in the same file
effect resolution of that procedure, if not already done, and a check of
the interfaces. The dependences are resolved by changing the order in
which the file is translated into the backend tree. Thus, a procedure
that is referenced is translated before the reference and the
duplication of backend tree declarations eliminated.
The -fno-whole-file option is deprecated and may lead
to wrong code.
- -fsecond-underscore
- By default, GNU Fortran appends an underscore to external names. If this
option is used GNU Fortran appends two underscores to names with
underscores and one underscore to external names with no underscores. GNU
Fortran also appends two underscores to internal names with underscores to
avoid naming collisions with external names.
This option has no effect if -fno-underscoring is in
effect. It is implied by the -ff2c option.
Otherwise, with this option, an external name such as
"MAX_COUNT" is implemented as a
reference to the link-time external symbol
"max_count__", instead of
"max_count_". This is required for
compatibility with g77 and f2c, and is implied by use of
the -ff2c option.
- -fcoarray=<keyword>
- none
- Disable coarray support; using coarray declarations and image-control
statements will produce a compile-time error. (Default)
- single
- Single-image mode, i.e. "num_images()"
is always one.
- lib
- Library-based coarray parallelization; a suitable GNU Fortran coarray
library needs to be linked.
- -fcheck=<keyword>
- Enable the generation of run-time checks; the argument shall be a
comma-delimited list of the following keywords.
- all
- Enable all run-time test of -fcheck.
- array-temps
- Warns at run time when for passing an actual argument a temporary array
had to be generated. The information generated by this warning is
sometimes useful in optimization, in order to avoid such temporaries.
Note: The warning is only printed once per location.
- bounds
- Enable generation of run-time checks for array subscripts and against the
declared minimum and maximum values. It also checks array indices for
assumed and deferred shape arrays against the actual allocated bounds and
ensures that all string lengths are equal for character array constructors
without an explicit typespec.
Some checks require that -fcheck=bounds is set for the
compilation of the main program.
Note: In the future this may also include other forms of
checking, e.g., checking substring references.
- do
- Enable generation of run-time checks for invalid modification of loop
iteration variables.
- mem
- Enable generation of run-time checks for memory allocation. Note: This
option does not affect explicit allocations using the
"ALLOCATE" statement, which will be
always checked.
- pointer
- Enable generation of run-time checks for pointers and allocatables.
- recursion
- Enable generation of run-time checks for recursively called subroutines
and functions which are not marked as recursive. See also
-frecursive. Note: This check does not work for OpenMP programs and
is disabled if used together with -frecursive and
-fopenmp.
- -fbounds-check
- Deprecated alias for -fcheck=bounds.
- -fcheck-array-temporaries
- Deprecated alias for -fcheck=array-temps.
- -fmax-array-constructor=n
- This option can be used to increase the upper limit permitted in array
constructors. The code below requires this option to expand the array at
compile time.
program test
implicit none
integer j
integer, parameter :: n = 100000
integer, parameter :: i(n) = (/ (2*j, j = 1, n) /)
print '(10(I0,1X))', i
end program test
Caution: This option can lead to long compile times and
excessively large object files.
The default value for n is 65535.
- -fmax-stack-var-size=n
- This option specifies the size in bytes of the largest array that will be
put on the stack; if the size is exceeded static memory is used (except in
procedures marked as RECURSIVE). Use the option -frecursive to
allow for recursive procedures which do not have a RECURSIVE attribute or
for parallel programs. Use -fno-automatic to never use the stack.
This option currently only affects local arrays declared with
constant bounds, and may not apply to all character variables. Future
versions of GNU Fortran may improve this behavior.
The default value for n is 32768.
- -fstack-arrays
- Adding this option will make the Fortran compiler put all local arrays,
even those of unknown size onto stack memory. If your program uses very
large local arrays it is possible that you will have to extend your
runtime limits for stack memory on some operating systems. This flag is
enabled by default at optimization level -Ofast.
- -fpack-derived
- This option tells GNU Fortran to pack derived type members as closely as
possible. Code compiled with this option is likely to be incompatible with
code compiled without this option, and may execute slower.
- -frepack-arrays
- In some circumstances GNU Fortran may pass assumed shape array sections
via a descriptor describing a noncontiguous area of memory. This option
adds code to the function prologue to repack the data into a contiguous
block at runtime.
This should result in faster accesses to the array. However it
can introduce significant overhead to the function call, especially when
the passed data is noncontiguous.
- -fshort-enums
- This option is provided for interoperability with C code that was compiled
with the -fshort-enums option. It will make GNU Fortran choose the
smallest "INTEGER" kind a given
enumerator set will fit in, and give all its enumerators this kind.
- -fexternal-blas
- This option will make gfortran generate calls to BLAS functions for
some matrix operations like "MATMUL",
instead of using our own algorithms, if the size of the matrices involved
is larger than a given limit (see -fblas-matmul-limit). This may be
profitable if an optimized vendor BLAS library is available. The BLAS
library will have to be specified at link time.
- -fblas-matmul-limit=n
- Only significant when -fexternal-blas is in effect. Matrix
multiplication of matrices with size larger than (or equal to) n
will be performed by calls to BLAS functions, while others will be handled
by gfortran internal algorithms. If the matrices involved are not
square, the size comparison is performed using the geometric mean of the
dimensions of the argument and result matrices.
The default value for n is 30.
- -frecursive
- Allow indirect recursion by forcing all local arrays to be allocated on
the stack. This flag cannot be used together with
-fmax-stack-var-size= or -fno-automatic.
- -finit-local-zero
- -finit-integer=n
- -finit-real=<zero|inf|-inf|nan|snan>
- -finit-logical=<true|false>
- -finit-character=n
- The -finit-local-zero option instructs the compiler to initialize
local "INTEGER",
"REAL", and
"COMPLEX" variables to zero,
"LOGICAL" variables to false, and
"CHARACTER" variables to a string of
null bytes. Finer-grained initialization options are provided by the
-finit-integer=n,
-finit-real=<zero|inf|-inf|nan|snan> (which also
initializes the real and imaginary parts of local
"COMPLEX" variables),
-finit-logical=<true|false>, and
-finit-character=n (where n is an ASCII character
value) options. These options do not initialize
- allocatable arrays
- components of derived type variables
- variables that appear in an
"EQUIVALENCE" statement.
(These limitations may be removed in future releases).
Note that the -finit-real=nan option initializes
"REAL" and
"COMPLEX" variables with a quiet NaN. For
a signalling NaN use -finit-real=snan; note, however, that
compile-time optimizations may convert them into quiet NaN and that trapping
needs to be enabled (e.g. via -ffpe-trap).
Finally, note that enabling any of the -finit-* options
will silence warnings that would have been emitted by -Wuninitialized
for the affected local variables.
- -falign-commons
- By default, gfortran enforces proper alignment of all variables in
a "COMMON" block by padding them as
needed. On certain platforms this is mandatory, on others it increases
performance. If a "COMMON" block is not
declared with consistent data types everywhere, this padding can cause
trouble, and -fno-align-commons can be used to disable automatic
alignment. The same form of this option should be used for all files that
share a "COMMON" block. To avoid
potential alignment issues in "COMMON"
blocks, it is recommended to order objects from largest to smallest.
- -fno-protect-parens
- By default the parentheses in expression are honored for all optimization
levels such that the compiler does not do any re-association. Using
-fno-protect-parens allows the compiler to reorder
"REAL" and
"COMPLEX" expressions to produce faster
code. Note that for the re-association optimization
-fno-signed-zeros and -fno-trapping-math need to be in
effect. The parentheses protection is enabled by default, unless
-Ofast is given.
- -frealloc-lhs
- An allocatable left-hand side of an intrinsic assignment is automatically
(re)allocated if it is either unallocated or has a different shape. The
option is enabled by default except when -std=f95 is given. See
also -Wrealloc-lhs.
- -faggressive-function-elimination
- Functions with identical argument lists are eliminated within statements,
regardless of whether these functions are marked
"PURE" or not. For example, in
a = f(b,c) + f(b,c)
there will only be a single call to
"f". This option only works if
-ffrontend-optimize is in effect.
- -ffrontend-optimize
- This option performs front-end optimization, based on manipulating parts
the Fortran parse tree. Enabled by default by any -O option.
Optimizations enabled by this option include elimination of identical
function calls within expressions, removing unnecessary calls to
"TRIM" in comparisons and assignments
and replacing TRIM(a) with
"a(1:LEN_TRIM(a))". It can be deselected
by specifying -fno-frontend-optimize.
The gfortran compiler currently does not make use of any environment
variables to control its operation above and beyond those that affect the
operation of gcc.
For instructions on reporting bugs, see
<http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla>.
gpl(7), gfdl(7), fsf-funding(7), cpp(1),
gcov(1), gcc(1), as(1), ld(1), gdb(1),
adb(1), dbx(1), sdb(1) and the Info entries for
gcc, cpp, gfortran, as, ld, binutils
and gdb.
See the Info entry for gfortran for contributors to GCC and GNU Fortran.
Copyright (c) 2004-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3
or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the
Invariant Sections being "Funding Free Software", the Front-Cover
Texts being (a) (see below), and with the Back-Cover Texts being (b) (see
below). A copy of the license is included in the gfdl(7) man
page.
(a) The FSF's Front-Cover Text is:
A GNU Manual
(b) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is:
You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU
software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise
funds for GNU development.
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