6

When an exception occurs I would like to terminate abnormally my program. Right now, when an exception happens a write statement with an explanatory sentence is called, and then a stop statement is called.

I am debugging the program with idb (intel debugger), when the exception happens I get the write statement, but idb treats the program as terminated normally. I would like that when the exception happens the program is terminated abnormally and so that I can look to the memory with backtrace in the place where the exception happened.

I have tried changing stop in stop 1, so that a non zero value is returned, but this doesn't work

EDIT:

I have implemented the solution in one of the answer:

 interface
    subroutine abort() bind(C, name="abort")
    end subroutine
 end interface

 print *,1
 call abort()
 print *,2
end

with this solution I still do not get any backtrace when I am using ifort 13.0.1, but this works perfectly with ifort 14.0.2.

I have resorted to use idb instead of gdb, because often the latter cannot read the values of allocatable arrays in fortran.

2

4 Answers 4

6

There are non-standard extensions for this. Gfortran uses backtrace() to print a backtrace anywhere, for the Intel's equivalent see the wander95's answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/38905855/721644.

In ifort and gfortran you can call the abort() subroutine and you will get backtrace if you used the -traceback (Intel) or -g -fbacktrace (gfortran) compiler option.

You could also call the C abort() directly using the C interoperability. (also non-standard and may not work in all circumstances):

  interface
    subroutine abort() bind(C, name="abort")
    end subroutine
  end interface

  print *,1
  call abort()
  print *,2
end
11
  • I think I don't understand you properly: I have changed stop into call abort() but still I get program exited normally. I have compiled with -g -traceback
    – simona
    May 26, 2015 at 15:25
  • 2
    @simona Perhaps you are hitting this problem? software.intel.com/en-us/forums/topic/487091 I am getting a backtrace with ifort 14.0.1, although, strangely, it is SIGSEGV and not SIGABRT. May 26, 2015 at 15:30
  • @simona If you cannot use another version try calling the C function as I do above. May 26, 2015 at 16:12
  • the interface module to c version of abort does not traceback either
    – simona
    May 26, 2015 at 17:18
  • 1
    Which OS, compiler and gdb versions do you use? Btw, idb is now deprecated by Intel, gdb should be used. May 26, 2015 at 18:42
3

With Fortran 2008 the ERROR STOP statement has been introduced. It's mainly used for Coarray Fortran programs to initiate error termination on all images.

1
  • 3
    I asked initially whether the error stop helped (comment deleted before answered as I managed to test it myself). It appears idb doesn't treat error termination in the desired way, May 27, 2015 at 9:33
2

Found this old question by accident. If you want abnormal termination with the intel compiler, you can use the routine tracebackqq. The call sequence can be:

     call TRACEBACKQQ(string=string,user_exit_code=user_exit_code)

To quote the manual:

Provides traceback information. Uses the Intel® Fortran run-time library traceback facility to generate a stack trace showing the program call stack as it appeared at the time of the call to TRACEBACKQQ( )

0

I've never used idb, I've only used gdb, so this might not work. I just put a read statement in at the error point, so that the program stops and waits for input. Then I can CTRL-C it, which causes gdb to pause execution, from which I can get a backtrace, move up and down the stack, look at variables, etc.

1
  • the problem is solved. btw you can also put breakpoints with b <sourcefile>:<numberoftherelevantline>
    – simona
    Jun 1, 2015 at 14:56

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