lammps/examples/COUPLE/fortran2c9188c00959erunner
README
LAMMPS.F90 defines a Fortran 2003 module, LAMMPS, which wraps all functions in src/library.h so they can be used directly from Fortran-encoded programs.
All functions in src/library.h that use and/or return C-style pointers have Fortran wrapper functions that use Fortran-style arrays, pointers, and strings; all C-style memory management is handled internally with no user intervention. See --USE-- for notes on how this interface differs from the C interface (and the Python interface).
This interface was created by Karl Hammond who you can contact with questions:
Karl D. Hammond University of Tennessee, Knoxville karlh at ugcs.caltech.edu karlh at utk.edu
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--COMPILATION--
First, be advised that mixed-language programming is not trivial. It requires you to link in the required libraries of all languages you use (in this case, those for Fortran, C, and C++), as well as any other libraries required. You are also advised to read the --USE-- section below before trying to compile.
The following steps will work to compile this module (replace ${LAMMPS_SRC} with the path to your LAMMPS source directory).
Steps 3-5 are accomplished, possibly after some modifications to the makefile, by make using the attached makefile. Said makefile also builds the dynamically-linkable library (liblammps_fortran.so).
- STATIC LIBRARY INSTRUCTIONS ** (1) Compile LAMMPS as a static library. Call the resulting file ${LAMMPS_LIB}, which will have an actual name like liblmp_openmpi.a. If compiling using the MPI stubs in ${LAMMPS_SRC}/STUBS, you will need to know where libmpi_stubs.a is as well (I'll call it ${MPI_STUBS} hereafter) (2) Copy said library to your Fortran program's source directory or replace ${LAMMPS_LIB} with its full path in the instructions below. (3) Compile (but don't link!) LAMMPS.F90. Example: mpif90 -c LAMMPS.f90 OR gfortran -c LAMMPS.F90 NOTE: you may get a warning such as, subroutine lammps_open_wrapper (argc, argv, communicator, ptr) & Variable 'communicator' at (1) is a parameter to the BIND(C) procedure 'lammps_open_wrapper' but may not be C interoperable This is normal (see --IMPLEMENTATION NOTES--). (4) Compile (but don't link) LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp. You will need its header file as well. You will have to provide the locations of LAMMPS's header files. For example, mpicxx -c -I${LAMMPS_SRC} LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp OR g++ -c -I${LAMMPS_SRC} -I${LAMMPS_SRC}/STUBS LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp OR icpc -c -I${LAMMPS_SRC} -I${LAMMPS_SRC}/STUBS LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp (5) OPTIONAL: Make a library from the object files so you can carry around two files instead of three. Example: ar rs liblammps_fortran.a LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o This will create the file liblammps_fortran.a that you can use in place of "LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o" later. Note that you will still need to have the .mod file from part (3). It is also possible to add LAMMPS.o and LAMMPS-wrapper.o into the LAMMPS library (e.g., liblmp_openmpi.a) instead of creating a separate library, like so: ar rs ${LAMMPS_LIB} LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o In this case, you can now use the Fortran wrapper functions as if they were part of the usual LAMMPS library interface (if you have the module file visible to the compiler, that is). (6) Compile (but don't link) your Fortran program. Example: mpif90 -c myfreeformatfile.f90 mpif90 -c myfixedformatfile.f OR gfortran -c myfreeformatfile.f90 gfortran -c myfixedformatfile.f The object files generated by these steps are collectively referred to as ${my_object_files} in the next step(s). IMPORTANT: If the Fortran module from part (3) is not in the current directory or in one searched by the compiler for module files, you will need to include that location via the -I flag to the compiler, like so: mpif90 -I${LAMMPS_SRC}/examples/COUPLE/fortran2 -c myfreeformatfile.f90 (7) Link everything together, including any libraries needed by LAMMPS (such as the C++ standard library, the C math library, the JPEG library, fftw, etc.) For example, mpif90 LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o ${my_object_files} \ ${LAMMPS_LIB} -lmpi_cxx -lstdc++ -lm OR gfortran LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o ${my_object_files} \ ${LAMMPS_LIB} ${MPI_STUBS} -lstdc++ -lm OR ifort LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o ${my_object_files} \ ${LAMMPS_LIB} ${MPI_STUBS} -cxxlib -lm Any other required libraries (e.g. -ljpeg, -lfftw) should be added to the end of this line.
You should now have a working executable.
- DYNAMIC LIBRARY INSTRUCTIONS ** (1) Compile LAMMPS as a dynamic library (make makeshlib && make -f Makefile.shlib [targetname]). (2) Compile, but don't link, LAMMPS.F90 using the -fPIC flag, such as mpif90 -fPIC -c LAMMPS.f90 (3) Compile, but don't link, LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp in the same manner, e.g. mpicxx -fPIC -c LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp (4) Make the dynamic library, like so: mpif90 -fPIC -shared -o liblammps_fortran.so LAMMPS.o LAMMPS-wrapper.o (5) Compile your program, such as, mpif90 -I${LAMMPS_SRC}/examples/COUPLE/fortran2 -c myfreeformatfile.f90 where ${LAMMPS_SRC}/examples/COUPLE/fortran2 contains the .mod file from step (3) (6) Link everything together, such as mpif90 ${my_object_files} -L${LAMMPS_SRC} \ -L${LAMMPS_SRC}/examples/COUPLE/fortran2 -llammps_fortran \ -llammps_openmpi -lmpi_cxx -lstdc++ -lm
If you wish to avoid the -L flags, add the directories containing your shared libraries to the LIBRARY_PATH environment variable. At run time, you will have to add these directories to LD_LIBRARY_PATH as well; otherwise, your executable will not find the libraries it needs.
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--USAGE--
To use this API, your program unit (PROGRAM/SUBROUTINE/FUNCTION/MODULE/etc.) should look something like this:
program call_lammps use LAMMPS ! Other modules, etc. implicit none type (lammps_instance) :: lmp ! This is a pointer to your LAMMPS instance real (C_double) :: fix real (C_double), dimension(:), pointer :: fix2 ! Rest of declarations call lammps_open_no_mpi ('lmp -in /dev/null -screen out.lammps',lmp) ! Set up rest of program here call lammps_file (lmp, 'in.example') call lammps_extract_fix (fix, lmp, '2', 0, 1, 1, 1) call lammps_extract_fix (fix2, lmp, '4', 0, 2, 1, 1) call lammps_close (lmp) end program call_lammps
Important notes:
- Though I dislike the use of pointers, they are necessary when communicating with C and C++, which do not support Fortran's ALLOCATABLE attribute.
- There is no need to deallocate C-allocated memory; this is done for you in the cases when it is done (which are all cases when pointers are not accepted, such as global fix data)
- All arguments which are char* variables in library.cpp are character (len=*) variables here. For example, call lammps_command (lmp, 'units metal') will work as expected.
- The public functions (the only ones you can use) have interfaces as described in the comments at the top of LAMMPS.F90. They are not always the same as those in library.h, since C strings are replaced by Fortran strings and the like.
- The module attempts to check whether you have done something stupid (such as assign a 2D array to a scalar), but it's not perfect. For example, the command call lammps_extract_global (nlocal, ptr, 'nlocal') will give nlocal correctly if nlocal is a pointer to type INTEGER, but it will give the wrong answer if nlocal is a pointer to type REAL. This is a feature of the (void*) type cast in library.cpp. There is no way I can check this for you! It WILL catch you if you pass it an allocatable or fixed-size array when it expects a pointer.
- Arrays constructed from temporary data from LAMMPS are ALLOCATABLE, and represent COPIES of data, not the originals. Functions like lammps_extract_atom, which return actual LAMMPS data, are pointers.
- IMPORTANT: Due to the differences between C and Fortran arrays (C uses row-major vectors, Fortran uses column-major vectors), all arrays returned from LAMMPS have their indices swapped.
- An example of a complete program, simple.f90, is included with this package.
--TROUBLESHOOTING--
Compile-time errors (when compiling LAMMPS.F90, that is) probably indicate that your compiler is not new enough to support Fortran 2003 features. For example, GCC 4.1.2 will not compile this module, but GCC 4.4.0 will.
If your compiler balks at 'use, intrinsic :: ISO_C_binding,' try removing the intrinsic part so it looks like an ordinary module. However, it is likely that such a compiler will also have problems with everything else in the file as well.
If you get a segfault as soon as the lammps_open call is made, check that you compiled your program AND LAMMPS-wrapper.cpp using the same MPI headers. Using the stubs for one and the actual MPI library for the other will cause Bad Things to happen.
If you find run-time errors, please pass them along via the LAMMPS Users mailing list (please CC me as well; address above). Please provide a minimal working example along with the names and versions of the compilers you are using. Please make sure the error is repeatable and is in MY code, not yours (generating a minimal working example will usually ensure this anyway).
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--IMPLEMENTATION NOTES--
The Fortran procedures have the same names as the C procedures, and their purpose is the same, but they may take different arguments. Here are some of the important differences:
- lammps_open and lammps_open_no_mpi take a string instead of argc and argv. This is necessary because C and C++ have a very different way of treating strings than Fortran. If you want the command line to be passed to lammps_open (as it often would be from C/C++), use the GET_COMMAND intrinsic to obtain it.
- All C++ functions that accept char* pointers now accept Fortran-style strings within this interface instead.
- All of the lammps_extract_[something] functions, which return void* C-style pointers, have been replaced by generic subroutines that return Fortran variables (which may be arrays). The first argument houses the variable/pointer to be returned (pretend it's on the left-hand side); all other arguments are identical except as stipulated above. Note that it is not possible to declare generic functions that are selected based solely on the type/kind/rank (TKR) signature of the return value, only based on the TKR of the arguments.
- The SHAPE of the first argument to lammps_extract_[something] is checked against the "shape" of the C array (e.g., double vs. double* vs. double**). Calling a subroutine with arguments of inappropriate rank will result in an error at run time.
- The indices i and j in lammps_extract_fix are used the same way they are in f_ID[i][j] references in LAMMPS (i.e., starting from 1). This is different than the way library.cpp uses these numbers, but is more consistent with the way arrays are accessed in LAMMPS and in Fortran.
- The char* pointer normally returned by lammps_command is thrown away in this version; note also that lammps_command is now a subroutine instead of a function.
- The pointer to LAMMPS itself is of type(lammps_instance), which is itself a synonym for type(C_ptr), part of ISO_C_BINDING. Type (C_ptr) is C's void* data type.
- This module will almost certainly generate a compile-time warning,
such as,
subroutine lammps_open_wrapper (argc, argv, communicator, ptr) &
Variable 'communicator' at (1) is a parameter to the BIND(C)
procedure 'lammps_open_wrapper' but may not be C interoperable
This happens because lammps_open_wrapper actually takes a Fortran
INTEGER argument, whose type is defined by the MPI library itself. The
Fortran integer is converted to a C integer by the MPI library (if such
conversion is actually necessary).
- lammps_extract_global returns COPIES of the (scalar) data, as does the C version.
- lammps_extract_atom, lammps_extract_compute, and lammps_extract_fix
have a first argument that will be associated with ACTUAL LAMMPS DATA.
This means the first argument must be:
- The right rank (via the DIMENSION modifier)
- A C-interoperable POINTER type (i.e., INTEGER (C_int) or REAL (C_double)).
- lammps_extract_variable returns COPIES of the data, as the C library interface does. There is no need to deallocate using lammps_free.
- The 'data' argument to lammps_gather_atoms and lammps_scatter atoms must be ALLOCATABLE. It should be of type INTEGER or DOUBLE PRECISION. It does NOT need to be C inter-operable (and indeed should not be).
- The 'count' argument of lammps_scatter_atoms is unnecessary; the shape of the array determines the number of elements LAMMPS will read.