Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-09424E82-4D82-48D4-AC75-4EC57BD3AEEE
Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-09424E82-4D82-48D4-AC75-4EC57BD3AEEE
Sample Programs and Traceback Information
The following sections provide sample programs that show the use of traceback to locate the cause of the error:
The hex program counters (PCs) and contents of registers displayed in these program outputs are meant as representative examples of typical output. The program counters will change over time, as the libraries and other tools used to create an image change.
Example: End-of-File Condition, Program teof
In the following example, a READ statement creates an End-Of-File error, which the application has not handled:
program teof
integer*4 i,res
i=here( )
end
integer*4 function here( )
here = we( )
end
integer*4 function we( )
we = go( )
end
integer*4 function go( )
go = again( )
end
integer*4 function again( )
integer*4 a
open(10,file='xxx.dat',form='unformatted',status='unknown')
read(10) a
again=a
end
The diagnostic output that results when this program is built with traceback enabled, optimization disabled, and linked against the shared Fortran runtime library on the Intel® 64 architecture platform is similar to the following:
forrtl: severe (24): end-of-file during read, unit 10, file E:\USERS\xxx.dat Image PC Routine Line Source libifcorert.dll 000007FED2B232D9 Unknown Unknown Unknown libifcorert.dll 000007FED2B6CEE0 Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F931193 AGAIN 17 teof.f90 teof.exe 000000013F93109B GO 12 teof.f90 teof.exe 000000013F931072 WE 9 teof.f90 teof.exe 000000013F931049 HERE 6 teof.f90 teof.exe 000000013F93101E MAIN__ 3 teof.f90 teof.exe 000000013F96ADCE Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F96B64C Unknown Unknown Unknown kernel32.dll 0000000076CC59BD Unknown Unknown Unknown ntdll.dll 0000000076EFA2E1 Unknown Unknown Unknown
If optimization is not disabled by option /Od (Windows) or option -O0 (Linux), procedure inlining may collapse the call stack and make it more difficult to locate a problem.
The first line of the output is the standard Fortran runtime error message. What follows is the result of walking the call stack in reverse order to determine where the error originated. Each line of output represents a call frame on the stack. Since the application was compiled with the traceback option, the Program Counters that fall in Fortran code are correlated to their matching routine name, line number and source module. Program Counters that are not in Fortran code are not correlated and are reported as Unknown.
The first two frames show the calls to routines in the Fortran runtime library (in reverse order). Since the application was linked against the shared version of the library, the image name reported is either libifcore.so (Linux) or libifcorert.dll (Window*). These are the runtime routines that were called to do the READ and upon detection of the EOF condition, were invoked to report the error. In the case of an unhandled I/O programming error, there will always be a few frames on the call stack down in runtime code like this.
The stack frame of real interest to the Fortran developer is the first frame in image teof.exe, which shows that the error originated in the routine named AGAIN in source module teof.f90 at line 17. Looking in the source code at line 21, you can see the Fortran READ statement that incurred the end-of-file condition.
The next four frames show the trail of calls in the Fortran user code that led to the routine that got the error (TEOF->HERE->WE->GO->AGAIN).
Finally, the bottom four frames are routines which handled the startup and initialization of the program.
If this program had been linked against the static Fortran runtime library, the output would then look like:
forrtl: severe (24): end-of-file during read, unit 10, file E:\USERS\xxx.dat Image PC Routine Line Source teof.exe 000000013F941FFB Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F9380A0 Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F931193 AGAIN 17 teof.f90 teof.exe 000000013F93109B GO 12 teof.f90 teof.exe 000000013F931072 WE 9 teof.f90 teof.exe 000000013F931049 HERE 6 teof.f90 teof.exe 000000013F93101E MAIN__ 3 teof.f90 teof.exe 000000013F96ADCE Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F96B64C Unknown Unknown Unknown kernel32.dll 0000000076CC59BD Unknown Unknown Unknown ntdll.dll 0000000076EFA2E1 Unknown Unknown Unknown
Note that the initial two stack frames now show routines in image teof.exe, not libifcore.so (Linux) or libifcorert.dll (Windows).
The routines are the same two runtime routines as previously reported for the shared library case but since the application was linked against the archive library libifcore.a (Linux) or the static Fortran runtime library libifcore.lib (Windows), the object modules containing these routines were linked into the application image (teof.exe). You can use Generating Listing and Map Files to determine the locations of uncorrelated program counters.
Now suppose the application was compiled without traceback enabled and, once again, linked against the static Fortran library. The diagnostic output would appear as follows:
forrtl: severe (24): end-of-file during read, unit 10, file E:\USERS\xxx.dat Image PC Routine Line Source teof.exe 000000013F851FFB Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F8480A0 Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F841193 Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F84109B Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F841072 Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F841049 Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F84101E Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F87ADCE Unknown Unknown Unknown teof.exe 000000013F87B64C Unknown Unknown Unknown kernel32.dll 0000000076CC59BD Unknown Unknown Unknown ntdll.dll 0000000076EFA2E1 Unknown Unknown Unknown
Without the correlation information in the image that option traceback previously supplied, the Fortran runtime system cannot correlate Program Counters to routine name, line number, and source file. You can still use the Generating Listing and Map Files to at least determine the routine names and what modules they are in.
Remember that compiling with the traceback option increases the size of your application's image because of the extra Program Counter correlation information included in the image. You can see if the extra traceback information is included in an image (checking for the presence of a .trace section) by entering:
objdump -h your_app.exe ! Linux
link -dump -summary your_app.exe ! Windows
Build your application with and without traceback and compare the file size of each image. Check the file size with a simple directory command.
For this simple teof.exe example, the traceback correlation information adds about 512 bytes to the image size. In a real application, this would probably be much larger. For any application, the developer must decide if the increase in image size is worth the benefit of automatic Program Counter correlation or if manually correlating Program Counters with a map file is acceptable.
If an error occurs when traceback was requested during compilation, the runtime library will produce the correlated call stack display.
If an error occurs when traceback was disabled during compilation, the runtime library will produce the uncorrelated call stack display.
If you do not want to see the call stack information displayed, you can set the Supported Environment Variable FOR_DISABLE_STACK_TRACE to true. You will still get the Fortran runtime error message:
forrtl: severe (24): end-of-file during read, unit 10, file E:\USERS\xxx.dat
Example: Machine Exception Condition, Program ovf
The following program generates a floating-point overflow exception when compiled with the fpe option value 0:
program ovf
real*4 a
a=1e37
do i=1,10
a=hey(a)
end do
print *, 'a= ', a
end
real*4 function hey(b)
real*4 b
hey = watch(b)
end
real*4 function watch(b)
real*4 b
watch = out(b)
end
real*4 function out(b)
real*4 b
out = below(b)
end
real*4 function below(b)
real*4 b
below = b*10.0e0
end
Assume this program is compiled with the following:
Option fpe value 0
Option traceback
Option -O0 (Linux) or /Od (Windows)
On a system based on IA-32 architecture, the traceback output is similar to the following:
forrtl: error (72): floating overflow Image PC Routine Line Source ovf.exe 001211A3 _BELOW 23 ovf.f90 ovf.exe 0012116F _OUT 19 ovf.f90 ovf.exe 0012113D _WATCH 15 ovf.f90 ovf.exe 0012110B _HEY 11 ovf.f90 ovf.exe 0012104E _MAIN__ 5 ovf.f90 ovf.exe 0015B31F Unknown Unknown Unknown ovf.exe 0015BADD Unknown Unknown Unknown kernel32.dll 7515338A Unknown Unknown Unknown ntdll.dll 770E9902 Unknown Unknown Unknown ntdll.dll 770E98D5 Unknown Unknown Unknown
Notice that unlike the previous example of an unhandled I/O programming error, the stack walk can begin right at the point of the exception. There are no runtime routines on the call stack to dig through. The overflow occurs in routine BELOW at PC 001211A3, which is correlated to line 23 of the source file ovf.f90.
When the program is compiled at a higher optimization level of O2, along with option fpe value 0 and the traceback option, the traceback output appears as follows:
forrtl: error (72): floating overflow Image PC Routine Line Source ovf.exe 00AE1059 _MAIN__ 7 ovf.f90 ovf.exe 00B1B75F Unknown Unknown Unknown ovf.exe 00B1BADD Unknown Unknown Unknown kernel32.dll 7515338A Unknown Unknown Unknown ntdll.dll 770E9902 Unknown Unknown Unknown ntdll.dll 770E98D5 Unknown Unknown Unknown
With option O2 in effect, the entire program has been inlined.
The main program, OVF, no longer calls routine HEY. While the output is not quite what one might have expected intuitively, it is still entirely correct. You need to keep in mind the effects of compiler optimization when you interpret the diagnostic information reported for a failure in a release image.
If the same image were executed again, this time with the environment variable called TBK_ENABLE_VERBOSE_STACK_TRACE set to True, you would also see a dump of the exception context record at the time of the error. Here is an excerpt of how that might appear on a system using IA-32 architecture:
forrtl: error (72): floating overflow Hex Dump Of Exception Record Context Information: Exception Context: Processor Control and Status Registers. EFlags: 00010212 CS: 0000001B EIP: 00401161 SS: 00000023 ESP: 0012FE38 EBP: 0012FE60 Exception Context: Processor Integer Registers. EAX: 00444488 EBX: 00000009 ECX: 00444488 EDX: 00000002 ESI: 0012FBBC EDI: F9A70030 Exception Context: Processor Segment Registers. DS: 00000023 ES: 00000023 FS: 00000038 GS: 00000000 Exception Context: Floating Point Control and Status Registers. ControlWord: FFFF0262 ErrorOffset: 0040115E DataOffset: 0012FE5C StatusWord: FFFFF8A8 ErrorSelector: 015D001B DataSelector: FFFF0023 TagWord: FFFF3FFF Cr0NpxState: 00000000 Exception Context: Floating Point RegisterArea. RegisterArea[00]: 4080BC143F4000000000 RegisterArea[10]: F7A0FFFFFFFF77F9D860 RegisterArea[20]: 00131EF0000800060012 RegisterArea[30]: 00000012F7C002080006 RegisterArea[40]: 02080006000000000000 RegisterArea[50]: 0000000000000012F7D0 RegisterArea[60]: 00000000000000300000 RegisterArea[70]: FBBC000000300137D9EF ...