2. Solaris Compilers: Cosmos
At the time of writing (2001, June) there are three versions of the
Sun Workshop Compilers available on Cosmos: 4.2, 5.0 and 6.0.
(We have had problems with the Fortran 5.0 compilers; we currently know
of no problems with the C 5.0 compilers.)
The Workshop 6.0 compilers are newly installed and have not yet been
fully tested.
2.1. Using the Workshop 6.0 Compilers and IDE (Forte Developer)
Forte Developer is Sun's new name for what would be Workshop 6.
Forte includes C and C++ compilers, Fortran 77, 90 and 95 compilers, and
the dbx debugger, as for previous versions of Workshop --- Forte
also includes an Integrated Development Environment (IDE) and
a GUI-development tool.
The simplest way to use Forte (for most people) is to execute the command
immediately after logging on --- this sets your path appropriately,
then the commands f77, f90, f95, cc and CC
access the Fortran 77, 90 and 95 compilers, and the C and C++ compilers,
respectively; the command dbx accesses the debugger,
workshop starts the IDE, and visu starts the GUI-development
tool.
Should you have trouble with the setup_forte6 command, or not wish
to use it, then pre-pending
| /software/workshop6/utils/SUNWspro/bin
|
to your environment path, and
| /software/workshop6/utils/SUNWspro/lib
|
to your environment library-path with, for example, the commands
| export PATH=/software/workshop6/utils/SUNWspro/bin:$PATH
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/software/ ... /SUNWspro/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
|
will make the above commands/applications directly accessible
(i.e., without needing to resort to using the full path) and ensure the
necessary libraries are available to you.
Since Forte has not yet been fully tested, we would welcome any feedback
regarding successes as well as any problems.
2.2. Using the Workshop 5.0 Compilers
The Workshop 5.0 compilers are picked up by default. To use the C compiler
simply type
at the command line (cc in lower case); for the C++ compiler
simply type (CC in upper case)
The full paths are /software/SUNWspro/bin/cc and
/software/SUNWspro/bin/CC, though these should not usually be
needed as /software/SUNWspro/bin will be on your path by default.
2.3. Example --- A Simple Programme
Suppose we want to compile, link and run the following simple programme
| #include <stdio.h>
main() {
printf("Hello world! \n)";
}
|
which resides in hello.c. Type
If the source code has been typed in correctly you will get no messages
from the compiler; alternatively type
for more information:
| cc -v hello.c
"hello.c", line 6: warning: Function has no return statement : main
|
An excutable binary called a.out will be produced (it is
assigned the executable file attribute automatically). To run this simply
type the file name:
The programme prints the string "Hello world!" to the screen. You may
want to change the name of the executable produced by the compiler --- use
the -o option:
will produce an executable called hellow. N.B. Using the -o
option is a good idea --- if a file called a.out already exists the
compiler will overwrite it without warning.
2.4. Full Documentation
The full documentation (Users Guides) for the C and C++ Compilers is
available on-line at
docs.sun.com:
2.5. Using the Workshop 4.2 Compilers
The full paths for the Workshop 4.2 compilers are
/software/SUNWspro_4.2/bin/cc and
/software/SUNWspro_4.2/bin/CC so that, for example, one can type
| /software/SUNWspro_4.2/bin/CC <source_file>
|
to use the 4.2 C++ compiler.
2.6. Mixing (the 4.2, 5.0 and 6.0) Compilers
As a rule, don't! All source code to be linked should be compiled with the
same compiler. Not following this rule can lead to linking and
(unpredictable) run-time problems.
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