Development/General compiler usage: Difference between revisions

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<pre>$ icc ex.c -o ex</pre>
<pre>$ icc ex.c -o ex</pre>
to produce an executable named ex.
to produce an executable named ex.
<br>
<br>
<br>
This process can be divided into two steps:
This process can be divided into two steps:

Revision as of 12:57, 18 December 2015

Description Content
module load compiler/gnu|intel|pgi|...
Availability bwUniCluster | BwForCluster_Chemistry | bwGRiD_tu
License Intel: Commercial | GNU: GPL | PGI: Commercial


Description

The basic operations can be performed with the same commands for all available compilers. For advanced usage such as optimization and profiling you should consult the best practice guide of the compiler you intend to use (GCC, Intel Suite).

Versions and Availability

A list of versions currently available compilers on the bwHPC-C5-Clusters can be obtained from the

Cluster Information System CIS

GNU

{{#widget:Iframe |url=https://cis-hpc.uni-konstanz.de/prod.cis/bwUniCluster/compiler/gnu |width=99% |height=470 }}

Intel

{{#widget:Iframe |url=https://cis-hpc.uni-konstanz.de/prod.cis/bwUniCluster/compiler/intel |width=99% |height=430 }}

PGI

{{#widget:Iframe |url=https://cis-hpc.uni-konstanz.de/prod.cis/bwUniCluster/compiler/pgi |width=99% |height=200 }} On the command line interface of any bwHPC cluster you'll get a list of available versions by using the command
'module avail compiler'.

$ : bwUniCluster
$ module avail compiler
------------------------ /opt/bwhpc/common/modulefiles -------------------------
compiler/gnu/4.5             compiler/intel/12.1
compiler/gnu/4.7(default)    compiler/intel/13.1
compiler/gnu/4.8             compiler/intel/14.0
compiler/gnu/4.9             compiler/intel/15.0(default)
compiler/gnu/5.2
$ : bwForCluster (Justus)
$ module avail compiler
------------------------ /opt/bwhpc/common/modulefiles -------------------------
compiler/gnu/4.5             compiler/intel/15.0(default)
compiler/gnu/4.7(default)    compiler/pgi/12.10(default)
compiler/gnu/4.8             compiler/pgi/12.10_static
compiler/gnu/4.9             compiler/pgi/13.7
compiler/gnu/5.2             compiler/pgi/13.7_static
compiler/intel/12.1          compiler/pgi/14.10
compiler/intel/13.1          compiler/pgi/14.10_static
compiler/intel/14.0


Loading the module

Default Version

You can load the default version of the a compiler with the command
module load compiler/name-of-the-compiler-suite.
Example with Intel on bwUniCluster

$ module avail compiler/intel
------------------------ /opt/bwhpc/common/modulefiles -------------------------
compiler/intel/12.1          compiler/intel/14.0
compiler/intel/13.1          compiler/intel/15.0(default)
$ module load compiler/intel
$ module list
Currently Loaded Modulefiles:
  1) compiler/intel/15.0(default)

Here, we got the "default" version 15.0 (example).
The module will try to load modules it needs to function. If loading the module fails, check if you have already loaded the module with 'module list'.

Specific (newer or older) Version

If you wish to load a specific compiler version and release (if available), you can do so using
module load compiler/name-of-the-compiler-suite/version-of-the-compiler-suite
to load the version you desires.
Example with Intel compiler, version 14.0 on bwUniCluster

$ module avail compiler/intel
------------------------ /opt/bwhpc/common/modulefiles -------------------------
compiler/intel/12.1          compiler/intel/14.0
compiler/intel/13.1          compiler/intel/15.0(default)
$ module load compiler/intel/14.0
$ module list
Currently Loaded Modulefiles:
  1) compiler/intel/14.0

Intel C-Compiler "version 14.0" is loaded now (example).

All Intel, GCC and PGI have compilers for different languages which will be available after the module is loaded.

Linux Original Compiler

The original Compiler installed on all compute nodes is GNU.

  • Don't get distracted with the available compiler modules.
  • Only the modules are loading the complete environments needed.

Example

$ module clear                     # unload all modules
Are you sure you want to clear all loaded modules!? [n] y
$ module list                      # control
No Modulefiles Currently Loaded.
$ gcc --version                    # see version of default Linux GNU compiler
gcc (GCC) 4.4.7 20120313 (Red Hat 4.4.7-16)
[...]
$ module load compiler/gnu         # load default GNU compiler module
$ module list                      # control
Currently Loaded Modulefiles:
  1) compiler/gnu/4.7(default)
$ gcc --version                    # now, check the current (loaded) module
gcc (GCC) 4.7.3 
[...]


Synoptical Tables

Compiler Suite Language Command
Intel Composer

• Best Practice Guides on Intel Compiler Software
C icc
C++ icpc
Fortran ifort
GCC

• Best Practice Guides on GNU Compiler Software
C gcc
C++ g++
Fortran gfortran
PGI C pgcc
C++ pgCC
Fortran 77/90 pgf77 or pgf90


How to use

The following compiler commands work for all the compilers in the list above even though the examples will be for icc only.

Commands

When ex.c is a C source code file such as

#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
    printf("Hello world\n");
    return 0;
}

it can be compiled and linked with the single command

$ icc ex.c -o ex

to produce an executable named ex.

This process can be divided into two steps:

$ icc -c ex.c
$ icc ex.o -o ex

When using libraries you must sometimes specify where the

  • include files are (option -I) and where the
  • library files are (option -L).

In addition you have to tell the compiler which

  • library you want to use (option -l).

For example after loading the module numlib/fftw you can compile code for fftw using

$ icc -c ex.c -I$FFTW_INC_DIR
$ icc ex.o -o ex -L$FFTW_LIB_DIR -lfftw3

When the program crashes or doesn't produce the expected output the compiler can help you by printing warning messages:

$ icc -Wall ex.c -o ex

Debugger

If the problem can't be solved this way you can inspect what exactly your program does using a debugger.
To use the debugger properly with your program you have to compile it with debug information (option -g):
Example

$ icc -g ex.c -o ex

Although -Wall should always be set, the -g option should only be stated when you want to find bugs, since it may slow down execution and enlarges the binary due to debugging symbols.

Optimization

The usual and common way to compile your source is to apply compiler optimization.
Since there are many optimization options, as a start for now the optimization level -O2 is recommended:

$ icc -O2 ex.c -o ex

Beware: The optimization-flag used is a capital-O (like Otto) and not a 0 (Zero)!

Both compilers offer a multitude of options (with regard to the above and others), one may check the complete list of options with short explanation on both GCC and Intel Suite using option -v --help:

$ icc -v --help ex.c -o ex