Thanks a million Jeff. That last email did the trick.
It has now compiled with Fortran bindings.
John Boccio
On May 19, 2009, at 2:37 PM, Jeff Squyres wrote:
On May 19, 2009, at 2:07 PM, John Boccio wrote:
I tired the whole thing again from scratch.
Here is g95 and xcode info.
Using openmpi-1.3
Any reason you're not using 1.3.2? (the latest release)
sudo ./configure --enable-mpi-f77 --enable-mpi-f90 F77="/usr/bin/g95"
FC="/usr/bin/g95" > config.out
sudo make clean
sudo make clean prefix=/usr/local/openmpi-1.3
sudo make > make.out
FWIW, as long as you have filesystem write permissions, you don't
need sudo for the above steps.
sudo make install prefix=/usr/local/openmpi-1.3 > make-install.out
Just to be complete: you might need sudo here because normal users
don't usually have write permissions to /usr/local.
/usr/local/openmpi-1.3/bin/mpif90
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unfortunately, this installation of Open MPI was not compiled with
Fortran 90 support. As such, the mpif90 compiler is non-functional.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
****** NEW
*******
/usr/local/openmpi-1.3/bin/ompi_info
dyld: Symbol not found: _opal_memchecker_base_components_opened
Referenced from: /usr/local/openmpi-1.3/bin/./ompi_info
Expected in: /usr/lib/libopen-pal.0.dylib
Set your LD_LIBRARY_PATH to /usr/local/openmpi-1.3/lib; this will
make it look there *first* (before /usr/lib), and therefore find the
"right" libopen-pal.*.
...ah, looking closer, I see the problem. You're specifying
prefix=<foo> to "make", not "configure". You should be doing the
following:
-----
rm -rf openmpi-1.3
tar zxf openmpi-1.3.2
cd openmpi-1.3.2
./configure --enable-mpi-f77 --enable-mpi-f90 --prefix=/usr/local/
openmpi-1.3.2 \
F77=/usr/bin/g95 FC=/usr/bin/g95 2>&1 > config.out
make -j 4 2>&1 > make.out
sudo make install 2>&1 > make-install.out
-----
If you specify "prefix=<foo>" to "make install", it'll actually
install to the <foo> free, but the compiled-in default location from
configure (i.e., defaulting to /usr/local, not <foo>) will be
wrong. Bad things will happen from there (e.g., finding the wrong
shared libraries, thinking it doesn't have Fortran support, etc.).
--
Jeff Squyres
Cisco Systems
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