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169 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
169 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
Type "make" to check the validity of the f2c source and compile f2c.
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On a PC, you may need to compile xsum.c with -DMSDOS (i.e., with
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MSDOS #defined).
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If your compiler does not understand ANSI/ISO C syntax (i.e., if
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you have a K&R C compiler), compile with -DKR_headers .
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On non-Unix systems where files have separate binary and text modes,
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you may need to "make xsumr.out" rather than "make xsum.out".
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If (in accordance with what follows) you need to any of the source
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files (excluding the makefile), first issue a "make xsum.out" (or, if
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appropriate, "make xsumr.out") to check the validity of the f2c source,
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then make your changes, then type "make f2c".
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The file usignal.h is for the benefit of strictly ANSI include files
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on a UNIX system -- the ANSI signal.h does not define SIGHUP or SIGQUIT.
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You may need to modify usignal.h if you are not running f2c on a UNIX
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system.
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Should you get the message "xsum0.out xsum1.out differ", see what lines
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are different (`diff xsum0.out xsum1.out`) and ask netlib
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(e.g., netlib@netlib.bell-labs.com) to send you the files in question,
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plus the current xsum0.out (which may have changed) "from f2c/src".
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For example, if exec.c and expr.c have incorrect check sums, you would
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send netlib the message
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send exec.c expr.c xsum0.out from f2c/src
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You can also ftp these files from netlib.bell-labs.com; for more
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details, ask netlib@netlib.bell-labs.com to "send readme from f2c".
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On some systems, the malloc and free in malloc.c let f2c run faster
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than do the standard malloc and free. Other systems may not tolerate
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redefinition of malloc and free (though changes of 8 Nov. 1994 may
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render this less of a problem than hitherto). If yours is such a
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system, you may either modify the makefile appropriately (remove
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"malloc.o" from the "OBJECTS =" assignment), or simply execute
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cc -c -DCRAY malloc.c
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before typing "make". Still other systems have a -lmalloc that
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provides performance competitive with that from malloc.c; you may
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wish to compare the two on your system. In general, if f2c faults
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when you first try to run it, try compiling malloc.c with -DCRAY;
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this is necessary with at least one version of Linux (but not with
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others).
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On some BSD systems, you may need to create a file named "string.h"
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whose single line is
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#include <strings.h>
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you may need to add " -Dstrchr=index" to the "CFLAGS =" assignment
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in the makefile, and you may need to add " memset.o" to the "OBJECTS ="
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assignment in the makefile -- see the comments in memset.c .
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For non-UNIX systems, you may need to change some things in sysdep.c,
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such as the choice of intermediate file names.
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On some systems, you may need to modify parts of sysdep.h (which is
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included by defs.h). In particular, for Sun 4.1 systems and perhaps
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some others, you need to comment out the typedef of size_t. For some
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systems (e.g., IRIX 4.0.1 and AIX) it is better to add
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#define ANSI_Libraries
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to the beginning of sysdep.h (or to supply -DANSI_Libraries in the
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makefile).
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Alas, some systems #define __STDC__ but do not provide a true standard
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(ANSI or ISO) C environment, e.g. do not provide stdlib.h . If yours
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is such a system, then (a) you should complain loudly to your vendor
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about __STDC__ being erroneously defined, and (b) you should insert
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#undef __STDC__
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at the beginning of sysdep.h . You may need to make other adjustments.
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For some non-ANSI versions of stdio, you must change the values given
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to binread and binwrite in sysdep.c from "rb" and "wb" to "r" and "w".
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You may need to make this change if you run f2c and get an error
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message of the form
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Compiler error ... cannot open intermediate file ...
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On many systems, it is best to combine libF77 and libI77 into a single
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library, say libf2c, as suggested in "readme from f2c". If you do not
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do this, then you should adjust the definition of link_msg in sysdep.c
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appropriately (e.g., replacing "-lf2c" by "-lF77 -lI77"). On Unix
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systems, the easiest way to create libf2c.a is to make libF77/libF77.a
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and libI77/libI77.a (after reading and heeding libF77/README and
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libI77/README), and then to say
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cp libF77/libF77.a libf2c.a
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ar ruv libf2c.a libI77/*.o
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ranlib libf2c.a
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The last step, ranlib, may not be necessary on your system. On
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other systems, just compile all the .c files in libF77 and libI77,
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and put the resulting objects (except one or both of the Version
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objects) into a library, called perhaps f2c.lib .
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In general, under Linux it is necessary to compile libI77 with
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-DNON_UNIX_STDIO . Under at least one variant of Linux, you can make
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and install a shared-library version of libf2c by compiling libI77
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with -DNON_UNIX_STDIO, creating libf2c.a as above, and then executing
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mkdir t
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ln lib?77/*.o t
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cd t; cc -shared -o ../libf2c.so -Wl,-soname,libf2c.so.1 *.o
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cd ..
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rm -r t
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rm /usr/lib/libf2c*
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mv libf2c.a libf2c.so /usr/lib
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cd /usr/lib
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ln libf2c.so libf2c.so.1
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ln libf2c.so libf2c.so.1.0.0
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On some other systems, /usr/local/lib is the appropriate installation
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directory.
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Some older C compilers object to
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typedef void (*foo)();
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or to
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typedef void zap;
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zap (*foo)();
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If yours is such a compiler, change the definition of VOID in
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f2c.h from void to int.
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For convenience with systems that use control-Z to denote end-of-file,
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f2c treats control-Z characters (ASCII 26, '\x1a') that appear at the
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beginning of a line as an end-of-file indicator. You can disable this
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test by compiling lex.c with NO_EOF_CHAR_CHECK #defined, or can
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change control-Z to some other character by #defining EOF_CHAR to
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be the desired value.
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If your machine has IEEE, VAX, or IBM-mainframe arithmetic, but your
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printf is inaccurate (e.g., with Symantec C++ version 6.0,
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printf("%.17g",12.) prints 12.000000000000001), you can make f2c print
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correctly rounded numbers by compiling with -DUSE_DTOA and adding
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dtoa.o g_fmt.o to the makefile's OBJECTS = line, so it becomes
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OBJECTS = $(OBJECTSd) malloc.o dtoa.o g_fmt.o
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Also add the rule
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dtoa.o: dtoa.c
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$(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) -DMALLOC=ckalloc -DIEEE... dtoa.c
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(without the initial tab) to the makefile, where IEEE... is one of
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IEEE_MC68k, IEEE_8087, VAX, or IBM, depending on your machine's
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arithmetic. See the comments near the start of dtoa.c.
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The relevant source files, dtoa.c and g_fmt.c, are available
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separately from netlib's fp directory. For example, you could
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send the E-mail message
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send dtoa.c g_fmt.c from fp
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to netlib@netlib.bell-labs.com (or use anonymous ftp from
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netlib.bell-labs.com and look in directory /netlib/fp).
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The makefile has a rule for creating tokdefs.h. If you cannot use the
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makefile, an alternative is to extract tokdefs.h from the beginning of
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gram.c: it's the first 100 lines.
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Please send bug reports to dmg@bell-labs.com . The old index file
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(now called "readme" due to unfortunate changes in netlib conventions:
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"send readme from f2c") will report recent changes in the recent-change
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log at its end; all changes will be shown in the "changes" file
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("send changes from f2c"). To keep current source, you will need to
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request xsum0.out and version.c, in addition to the changed source
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files. Changes first appear on netlib@netlib.bell-labs.com, and in due
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time propagate to the other netlib sites that are kept current.
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