Node: Block Data and Libraries, Next: Loops, Previous: Advantages Over f2c, Up: Collected Fortran Wisdom
To ensure that block data program units are linked, especially a concern
when they are put into libraries, give each one a name (as in
BLOCK DATA FOO) and make sure there is an EXTERNAL FOO
statement in every program unit that uses any common block
initialized by the corresponding BLOCK DATA.
g77 currently compiles a BLOCK DATA as if it were a
SUBROUTINE,
that is, it generates an actual procedure having the appropriate name.
The procedure does nothing but return immediately if it happens to be
called.
For EXTERNAL FOO, where FOO is not otherwise referenced in the
same program unit, g77 assumes there exists a BLOCK DATA FOO
in the program and ensures that by generating a
reference to it so the linker will make sure it is present.
(Specifically, g77 outputs in the data section a static pointer to the
external name FOO.)
The implementation g77 currently uses to make this work is
one of the few things not compatible with f2c as currently
shipped.
f2c currently does nothing with EXTERNAL FOO except
issue a warning that FOO is not otherwise referenced,
and, for BLOCK DATA FOO,
f2c doesn't generate a dummy procedure with the name FOO.
The upshot is that you shouldn't mix f2c and g77 in
this particular case.
If you use f2c to compile BLOCK DATA FOO,
then any g77-compiled program unit that says EXTERNAL FOO
will result in an unresolved reference when linked.
If you do the
opposite, then FOO might not be linked in under various
circumstances (such as when FOO is in a library, or you're
using a "clever" linker--so clever, it produces a broken program
with little or no warning by omitting initializations of global data
because they are contained in unreferenced procedures).
The changes you make to your code to make g77 handle this situation,
however, appear to be a widely portable way to handle it.
That is, many systems permit it (as they should, since the
FORTRAN 77 standard permits EXTERNAL FOO when FOO
is a block data program unit), and of the ones
that might not link BLOCK DATA FOO under some circumstances, most of
them appear to do so once EXTERNAL FOO is present in the appropriate
program units.
Here is the recommended approach to modifying a program containing a program unit such as the following:
BLOCK DATA FOO
COMMON /VARS/ X, Y, Z
DATA X, Y, Z / 3., 4., 5. /
END
If the above program unit might be placed in a library module, then
ensure that every program unit in every program that references that
particular COMMON area uses the EXTERNAL statement
to force the area to be initialized.
For example, change a program unit that starts with
INTEGER FUNCTION CURX()
COMMON /VARS/ X, Y, Z
CURX = X
END
so that it uses the EXTERNAL statement, as in:
INTEGER FUNCTION CURX()
COMMON /VARS/ X, Y, Z
EXTERNAL FOO
CURX = X
END
That way, CURX is compiled by g77 (and many other
compilers) so that the linker knows it must include FOO,
the BLOCK DATA program unit that sets the initial values
for the variables in VAR, in the executable program.