Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Fortran Package Manager (Fpm)

Fortran Package Manager

Fortran Package Manager (fpm) is a package manager and build system for Fortran. Its key goal is to improve the user experience of Fortran programmers. It does so by making it easier to build your Fortran program or library, run the executables, tests, and examples, and distribute it as a dependency to other Fortran projects. Fpm's user interface is modeled after Rust's Cargo, so if you're familiar with that tool, you will feel at home with fpm. Fpm's long term vision is to nurture and grow the ecosystem of modern Fortran applications and libraries.

Fpm is an early prototype and is evolving rapidly. You can use it to build and package your Fortran projects, as well as to use existing fpm packages as dependencies. Fpm's behavior and user interface may change as it evolves, however as fpm matures and we enter production, we will aim to stay backwards compatible. Please follow the issues to contribute and/or stay up to date with the development. Before opening a bug report or a feature suggestion, please read our Contributor Guide. You can also discuss your ideas and queries with the community in fpm discussions, or more broadly on Fortran-Lang Discourse.

Fortran Package Manager is not to be confused with Jordan Sissel's fpm, a more general, non-Fortran related package manager.

Getting started

Setting up fpm

Binary download

x86-64 binaries are available to download for Windows, MacOS and Linux.

Note: On Linux and MacOS, you will need to enable executable permission before you can use the binary.

e.g. $ chmod u+x fpm-v0.1.0-linux-x86_64

Conda

Fpm is available on conda-forge, to add conda-forge to your channels use:

conda config --add channels conda-forge

Fpm can be installed with:

conda create -n fpm fpm
conda activate fpm

The conda package manager can be installed from miniforge or from miniconda.

Github Actions

To setup fpm within Github actions for automated testing, you can use the fortran-lang/setup-fpm action.

Bootstraping on other platforms

For other platforms and architectures have a look at the bootstrapping instructions.

Creating a new project

Creating a new fpm project is as simple as running the command fpm new project_name. This will create a new folder in your current directory with the following contents and initialized as a git repository.

  • fpm.toml – with your project’s name and some default standard meta-data
  • README.md – with your project’s name
  • .gitignore
  • src/project_name.f90 – with a simple hello world subroutine
  • app/main.f90 (if --app flag used) – a program that calls the subroutine
  • test/main.f90 (if --test flag used) – an empty test program

Building your Fortran project with fpm

fpm understands the basic commands:

  • fpm build – build your library, executables and tests
  • fpm run – run executables
  • fpm test – run tests
  • fpm install - installs the executables locally

The command fpm run can optionally accept the name of the specific executable to run, as can fpm test; like fpm run specific_executable. Command line arguments can also be passed to the executable(s) or test(s) with the option -- some arguments.

See additional instructions in the Packaging guide or the manifest reference.

Bootstrapping instructions

This guide explains the process of building fpm on a platform for the first time. To build fpm without a prior fpm version a single source file version is available at each release.

To build manually using the single source distribution, run the following code (from within the current directory)

mkdir _tmp
curl -LJ https://github.com/fortran-lang/fpm/releases/download/v0.2.0/fpm-0.2.0.f90 > _tmp/fpm.f90
gfortran -J _tmp _tmp/fpm.f90 -o _tmp/fpm
_tmp/fpm install --flag "-g -fbacktrace -O3"
rm -r _tmp

To automatically bootstrap using this appoach run the install script

./install.sh

You can set your Fortran compiler and the compiler flags with the FC and FFLAGS environment variables.



from Hacker News https://ift.tt/2MTYAWT

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.