I have inherited some legacy Fortran90 code that I do not want to edit. The file main.f90
has a module with some subroutines I'd like to use in my own program, but also has a main program. It looks like this:
module libmain
implicit none
contains
subroutine dostuff
print *,'m'
end subroutine dostuff
end module libmain
program main
use libmain
implicit none
call dostuff
end program main
I want to use the module libmain
in my own program in a file myprogram.f90
, like this:
program myprogram
use libmain
implicit none
call dostuff
end program myprogram
I've tried everything I can think of to make this work. For instance:
>gfortran -c main.f90
>gfortran -c myprogram.f90
>gfortran -o myprogram main.o myprogram.o
This fails with the error:
duplicate symbol '_main' in:
main.o
myprogram.o
ld: 1 duplicate symbol for architecture x86_64
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
I tried leaving main.o
out of the arguments to the final linking, but that also fails:
>gfortran -o myprogram myprogram.f90
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"___libmain_MOD_dostuff", referenced from:
_MAIN__ in myprogram.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Interestingly, if I delete the files main.o
and libmain.mod,
I get a different error:
>rm main.o
>rm libmain.mod
>gfortran -o myprogram myprogram.f90
myprogram.f90:2:8:
use libmain
1
Fatal Error: Can't open module file ‘libmain.mod’ for reading at (1): No such file or directory
compilation terminated.
So gfortran
knows that it should be looking for the libmain.mod
file even if I don't include anything about main
in the arguments when I try to link myprogram.
. So why then does gfortran not find the symbol dostuff
? It obviously knows where to find the file libmain.mod
, that's not the problem.
Edit: I tried a few more tricks, none of which worked.
I thought that perhaps the problem is that gfortran
expects the .o
and the .mod
files to have the same name, so I renamed:
>mv main.o libmain.o
>gfortran -o myprogram myprogram.f90
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"___libmain_MOD_dostuff", referenced from:
_MAIN__ in ccmD6cx3.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
So this doesn't work either. I also tried the other way, moving libmain.mod
to main.mod
:
>rm *.mod
>rm *.o
>gfortran -c main.f90
>gfortran -c myprogram.f90
>mv libmain.mod main.mod
>gfortran -o myprogram myprogram.o
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"___libmain_MOD_dostuff", referenced from:
_MAIN__ in myprogram.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
If I do the renaming before I compile myprogram.f90
:
>rm *.mod
>rm *.o
>gfortran -c main.f90
>mv libmain.mod main.mod
>gfortran -c myprogram.f90
myprogram.f90:2:8:
use libmain
1
Fatal Error: Can't open module file ‘libmain.mod’ for reading at (1): No such file or directory
compilation terminated.
So I changed the reference to main
inside myprogram.f90
also:
program myprogram
use main
implicit none
call dostuff
end program myprogram
while leaving main.f90
unchanged. Now I do the following steps (starting from scratch):
>rm *.mod
>rm *.o
>gfortran -c main.f90
>mv libmain.mod main.mod
>gfortran -c myprogram.f90
>gfortran -o myprogram myprogram.o
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"___libmain_MOD_dostuff", referenced from:
_MAIN__ in myprogram.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
So that fixed the file reference error, but I still don't get the symbol I need.