I was suggested to look at the web site "www.polyhedron.com" for a Fortran compiler. Actually what is available at that web site is a rigorous comparison of different Fortran compilers. This is good to know but does not solve my problem ... which is... I have to port a Kinetic Monte Carlo code, written in FOrtran 95 (I ignore the platform), to my DELL SusE computer. I know already it will NOT compile with fcc (the GNU compiler) as somone else has already struggled with it and eventually has given up. The ideal situation would be to have a Fortran 95 compiler that runs on SuSE 8.0 . The suggested web site does not tell me if such a compiler does exists for my platform and who sells it (as a Physics graduate student the cheaper the better ... of course). Mauede
Maura Edelweiss Monville schrieb:
[...] The ideal situation would be to have a Fortran 95 compiler that runs on SuSE 8.0 . The suggested web site does not tell me if such a compiler does exists for my platform and who sells it (as a Physics graduate student the cheaper the better ... of course).
Intel has a Fortran Compiler (and, by the way, also a C++ compiler) for Linux systems which supports Fortran95 and also OpenMP. It is free for private use and may be downloaded at Intel's web site http://www.intel.com/software/products/global/eval.htm. You have to select the "non-commercial unsupported version". After registration, I license will be mailed to you and you are also able to use the Intel Premier Support (I have already used it, they react really fast). Performance of the C++ compiler is great, even on AMD CPUs ;-) Unfortunately, I have no expercience with the Fortran compiler but I suggest, the performance will also be OK. With best regards, Thomson -- Thomas Hertweck, Geophysicist Geophysical Institute, Karlsruhe University (TH)
I am running SuSE 8.0 Professional on an Iwill XP333-R with an AMD Athlon 1700+ cpu. To get full access to all the IDE controllers I must use the HPT37x2 module from High Point's web site. I also wanted to rebuild 2.4.18 (or later) to access the packet generator kernel features. I wanted to build a complete set of modules from the source code and build /lib/modules/2.4.18-4GB from scratch. My efforts created a different directory structure in /lib/modules. In particular the sound drivers did not show up in correct "SuSE" locations. How do I (re)build the lib/modules/<kernel> directory structure to SuSE standards ??? Yours, Charles E. Brooks /ceb\
Charles Edward Brooks writes:
I am running SuSE 8.0 Professional on an Iwill XP333-R with an AMD Athlon 1700+ cpu.
To get full access to all the IDE controllers I must use the HPT37x2 module from High Point's web site. I also wanted to rebuild 2.4.18 (or later) to access the packet generator kernel features.
I wanted to build a complete set of modules from the source code and build /lib/modules/2.4.18-4GB from scratch. My efforts created a different directory structure in /lib/modules. In particular the sound drivers did not show up in correct "SuSE" locations.
How do I (re)build the lib/modules/<kernel> directory structure to SuSE standards ???
There is a variable in /usr/src/linux/Makefile called EXTRAVERSION which I think you can set with in this case 4GB. Which gets concatenated to the version string. You might want to experiment with it. I have never used it.
Yours,
Charles E. Brooks
/ceb\
-- To unsubscribe, email: suse-programming-e-unsubscribe@suse.com For additional commands, email: suse-programming-e-help@suse.com Archives can be found at: http://lists/archive/suse-programming-e
participants (4)
-
Charles Edward Brooks
-
Jesse Marlin <Jesse Marlin
-
Maura Edelweiss Monville
-
Thomas Hertweck