Difference between revisions of "Modern C Compiler, ROOT, Geant"

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m (Templon@nikhef.nl moved page Modern C Compiler to Modern C Compiler, ROOT, Geant: Renamed)
(→‎Figure out your platform: Add different options (e.g. needed for Ganymede/Visar))
 
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=== Introduction ===
 
=== Introduction ===
  
So you want a modern C compiler and/or some other tool.  As of this writing (2 November 2016) the normal desktop machines have  
+
So you want a modern C compiler and/or some other tool.  As of this writing (28 November 2017) the stoomboot interactive nodes have  
  gcc version 4.4.7 20120313 (Red Hat 4.4.7-17) (GCC)
+
  gcc (GCC) 4.4.7 20120313 (Red Hat 4.4.7-18)
 
as the default compiler.  This is not recent enough for much of the HEP code ecosystem.
 
as the default compiler.  This is not recent enough for much of the HEP code ecosystem.
  
Line 22: Line 22:
  
 
Today on one of the stoomboot worker nodes, it says
 
Today on one of the stoomboot worker nodes, it says
  Scientific Linux CERN SLC release 6.8 (Carbon)
+
  Scientific Linux CERN SLC release 6.9 (Carbon)
 
  Kernel \r on an \m
 
  Kernel \r on an \m
  
 
Remember that first line, that tells you the platform, you'll need it shortly.
 
Remember that first line, that tells you the platform, you'll need it shortly.
  
=== Poke around in SFT and find the relevant release and compiler ===
 
  
stbc-022:lcg> ls /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch/lcg
+
Other ways to find which platform you're on include
app dev  external LCG85b   lcgjenkins  mapfile.txt     mapfile.txt.05042016  mapfile.txt.16092016 nightlies  releases-javier   updatemapfile.py
+
* cat /proc/version
contrib  etc  hepsoft lcgcmake  mapfile.ts  mapfile.txt.01052016  mapfile.txt.13042016  mapfile.txt.18082016 releases  root-training-setup.sh  views
+
* lsb_release -a
Note the LCG85b ... this is generally a listing of the latest full release; when there is a new release, the tag gets updated, so you might see LCG91, LCG93c, etc instead.  Whatever it is, this is the latest release (there are many older releases available btw).
+
* uname -a
 +
* ls /etc/*release* /etc/*version*
  
You can search for gcc in that LCG85b file, but it's easier to look at the file system.  Note I've replaced below, "LCG_85b" with "LCG_XXX" in commands to help avoid mistakes made via blind copy-and-pasting.  Change the XXX to whatever you find the most recent release to be!
+
=== Poke around in SFT and find the relevant release and compiler ===
  
  stbc-022:LCG_85b> cd /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch/lcg/releases/LCG_XXX
+
  stbc-i2:lcg> . /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch/lcg/views/setupViews.sh
  stbc-022:LCG_85b> ls
+
  Usage:
  4suite       curl       GSL   jupyter_console       m4   oracle   pylint   root_numpy   urllib3
+
  setupViews <LCG_directory> <arch-os-complier>
AIDA       cx_oracle        gtest   jupyter_core       MarkupSafe   pacparser   pyminuit   rootpy   uuid
+
  where <LCG_directory> can be any of these
astroid      cycler       hepdata_converter  lapack       matplotlib   pandas   pyparsing   rpy2   valgrind
+
   
autoconf      Davix       hepdata_validator  LCGCMT       MCGenerators   pathlib2   pyqt   scikitlearn   vdt
+
  LCG_71
automake      decorator        HepMC   lcgenv       messaging   pathos   pyqt5   scipy   vectorclass
+
  LCG_71root6
backports    distribute      hepmc3   LCG_externals_x86_64-centos7-gcc49-dbg.txt   metakernel   pcre   pytest   setuptools   wcwidth
+
  LCG_72a
blas       doxygen       HepPDT   LCG_externals_x86_64-centos7-gcc49-opt.txt   mistune   pexpect   Python   simplegeneric   wheel
+
  LCG_79
Boost       eigen       igprof   LCG_externals_x86_64-slc6-gcc49-dbg.txt      mock   pickleshare   python_dateutil  singledispatch  widgetsnbextension
+
  LCG_81c
castor       elasticsearch    ipykernel   LCG_externals_x86_64-slc6-gcc49-opt.txt      mpich2   pip   pytimber   sip   xapian
+
   LCG_81d
ccache       entrypoints      ipython   LCG_generators_x86_64-centos7-gcc49-dbg.txt  multiprocessing   pkg_config   pytools   six   XercesC
+
  LCG_81e
certifi      expat       ipython_genutils   LCG_generators_x86_64-centos7-gcc49-opt.txt  mysql   prettytable   pytz   soqt   xqilla
+
  LCG_81f
clhep       fastjet       ipywidgets   LCG_generators_x86_64-slc6-gcc49-dbg.txt    mysql_python   processing   pyxml   spark   xrootd
+
  LCG_82rootaas2
CMake       fftw3       java   LCG_generators_x86_64-slc6-gcc49-opt.txt    nbconvert   prompt_toolkit  pyyaml   sqlalchemy   xrootd_python
+
  LCG_82rootaas3
cmaketools    fjcontrib        jemalloc   lcov       nbformat   ptyprocess   pyzmq   sqlite   yamlcpp
+
  LCG_82rootaas4
cmmnbuild    freetype       Jinja2   lhapdfsets       networkx   py   QMtest   stomppy   zeromq
+
  LCG_82rootaas5
cmt       frontier_client  joblib   libaio       neurobayes   py2neo   qt   storm   zlib
+
  LCG_82rootaas6
coin3d       gcc       jpype   libsvm       neurobayes_expert  py4j   qt5   subprocess32
+
  LCG_83
configparser  Geant4       json   libtool       ninja   pyanalysis   qtconsole   swig
+
  LCG_84
COOL       genshi       jsonc   libunwind       nose   pyapigitlab   qwt   sympy
+
   LCG_84swan1
CORAL       gmp       jsoncpp   libxml2       notebook   pydot   R   tbb
+
   LCG_84swan2
CouchDB      gperftools      jsonschema   libxslt       numexpr   pygments   RELAX   terminado
+
   LCG_84swan3
coverage      graphviz       jupyter   logilabcommon       numpy   pygraphics   requests   tornado
+
   LCG_84swan4
CppUnit      Grid       jupyter_client   lxml       openssl   pygsi   ROOT   traitlets
+
   LCG_85
 +
   LCG_85a
 +
   LCG_85b
 +
   LCG_85swan1
 +
   LCG_85swan2
 +
   LCG_85swan3
 +
   LCG_86
 +
   LCG_87
 +
   LCG_88
 +
   LCG_88Py3
 +
   LCG_89
 +
   LCG_89python3
 +
   LCG_90
 +
   LCG_90a
 +
   LCG_90python3
 +
   LCG_91
 +
   LCG_91python3
 +
   LCG_gaudiext20170622
 +
   LCG_latest
 +
   LCG_rootext20161010
 +
  LCG_rootext20161129
 +
   LCG_rootext20170508
 +
   LCG_rootext20170929
 +
  LCG_rootext20171122
 +
   dev3
 +
   dev3arch
 +
  dev3python3
 +
   dev4
 +
   devgeantv
 +
   geantv
 +
   ml/1.0
 
   
 
   
There is a lot of stuff in here that might be interesting to you (eg ROOT and Geant4). See that gcc is also listed, list that directory to see the options:
+
  and <arch-os-complier> depends on what is available in <LCG_directory>
  stbc-022:LCG_85b> ls gcc
+
  4.9.3
+
  stbc-i2:lcg>
stbc-022:LCG_85b> ls gcc/4.9.3
+
Each of these LCG_* tags is a release of a bunch of software such as Tensorflow, Python, ROOT, scikitlearn, etc. To find out what is available inside each release (including versions) you can take a look at
x86_64-centos7 x86_64-slc6
+
[http://lcginfo.cern.ch/ this page].
  
So gcc 4.9.3 is there, and there are two versions.  Now the /etc/issue business above becomes relevant: it said "Scientific Linux CERN SLC release 6.8" which corresponds to the "slc6" version here, so that's the one you want to use in this example. 
+
The release exists in several versions, each one a specific combination of unix platform (red hat, ubuntu, etc) and C compiler version, as you can only be certain that software will work together if it's all been compiled on the same platform with the same C compiler. The views script will tell you which platform is available, if you select a LCG release:
  stbc-022:LCG_85b> ls gcc/4.9.3/x86_64-slc6
+
  stbc-i2:lcg> . /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch/lcg/views/setupViews.sh LCG_91
bin  include  lib  lib64  libexec  setup.csh  setup.csh~  setup.sh  setup.sh~  share
+
Available <arch-os-complier> for LCG_91 :
 +
  x86_64-centos7-gcc62-dbg
 +
  x86_64-centos7-gcc62-opt
 +
  x86_64-centos7-gcc7-dbg
 +
  x86_64-centos7-gcc7-opt
 +
  x86_64-slc6-gcc62-dbg
 +
  x86_64-slc6-gcc62-opt
 +
  x86_64-slc6-gcc7-dbg
 +
  x86_64-slc6-gcc7-opt
 +
  x86_64-ubuntu1604-gcc54-dbg
 +
  x86_64-ubuntu1604-gcc54-opt
 +
Going back to the previous section, we had CERN SLC 6.9 so this is the "slc6" platform ... C compilers available are gcc 6.2 or 7 ... and you can either have the software compiled with debugging enabled (dbg) or with optimisation turned on (opt).
  
 
=== Run the setup script ===
 
=== Run the setup script ===
 +
The views script will set things up for you.  Note that as of this writing, it doesn't work correctly with zsh but does with bash.
  
You want that setup.sh file ..
+
$ . /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch/lcg/views/setupViews.sh LCG_91 x86_64-slc6-gcc7-opt
 
+
After running that command, you can check that things are set up:
source /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch/lcg/releases/LCG_XXX/gcc/X.Y.Z/x86_64-platform/setup.sh
+
  $ gcc --version
 
+
  gcc (GCC) 7.1.0
Change XXX to the right LCG release tag, X.Y.Z to the right gcc version you found, and "platform" to the right platform you found.
+
  Copyright (C) 2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
 
 
=== Compile your code ===
 
 
 
Now you'll have the right stuff in your path, etc to use this version of gcc:
 
  stbc-022:x86_64-slc6> gcc --version
 
  gcc (GCC) 4.9.3
 
  Copyright (C) 2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
 
 
  This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.  There is NO
 
  This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.  There is NO
 
  warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
 
  warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
 +
$ root -b
 +
  ------------------------------------------------------------
 +
  | Welcome to ROOT 6.10/06                http://root.cern.ch |
 +
  |                              (c) 1995-2017, The ROOT Team |
 +
  | Built for linuxx8664gcc                                    |
 +
  | From tag v6-10-06, 19 September 2017                      |
 +
  | Try '.help', '.demo', '.license', '.credits', '.quit'/'.q' |
 +
  ------------------------------------------------------------
 
   
 
   
  stbc-022:x86_64-slc6> g++ --version
+
  root [0] .q
  g++ (GCC) 4.9.3
+
$ python
  Copyright (C) 2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
Python 2.7.13 (default, May  9 2017, 16:41:38)
  This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
+
  [GCC 7.1.0] on linux2
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
  Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
 +
  >>>
 +
  $
 +
 
 +
=== Compile your code ===
  
 +
Now you'll have the right stuff in your path, etc to use that version of gcc.
 
Enjoy that prize.  Don't forget to mention the PDP group in your speech.
 
Enjoy that prize.  Don't forget to mention the PDP group in your speech.

Latest revision as of 11:47, 25 March 2022

Introduction

So you want a modern C compiler and/or some other tool. As of this writing (28 November 2017) the stoomboot interactive nodes have

gcc (GCC) 4.4.7 20120313 (Red Hat 4.4.7-18)

as the default compiler. This is not recent enough for much of the HEP code ecosystem.

Modern C compilers can be found in a repository called "SFT" which is maintained by CERN, and distributed via something called CVMFS which is installed on stoomboot machines and most of the desktop machines (older ones may not have it). You can check whether you have it with:

ls /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch

if you don't get an error (and it says "lcg") then you're good. What you'll need to do to set up the compiler is:

  1. figure out what kind of platform you'll be running on
  2. poke around in SFT to find out what the current release is
  3. run the setup script
  4. compile your code and win the Nobel Prize.

Figure out your platform

You'll generally need to compile for a specific platform; go (one of) the machine(s) on which you'll be running your code and type

cat /etc/issue

Today on one of the stoomboot worker nodes, it says

Scientific Linux CERN SLC release 6.9 (Carbon)
Kernel \r on an \m

Remember that first line, that tells you the platform, you'll need it shortly.


Other ways to find which platform you're on include

  • cat /proc/version
  • lsb_release -a
  • uname -a
  • ls /etc/*release* /etc/*version*

Poke around in SFT and find the relevant release and compiler

stbc-i2:lcg> . /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch/lcg/views/setupViews.sh
Usage:
 setupViews <LCG_directory> <arch-os-complier>
  where <LCG_directory> can be any of these

 LCG_71
 LCG_71root6
 LCG_72a
 LCG_79
 LCG_81c
 LCG_81d
 LCG_81e
 LCG_81f
 LCG_82rootaas2
 LCG_82rootaas3
 LCG_82rootaas4
 LCG_82rootaas5
 LCG_82rootaas6
 LCG_83
 LCG_84
 LCG_84swan1
 LCG_84swan2
 LCG_84swan3
 LCG_84swan4
 LCG_85
 LCG_85a
 LCG_85b
 LCG_85swan1
 LCG_85swan2
 LCG_85swan3
 LCG_86
 LCG_87
 LCG_88
 LCG_88Py3
 LCG_89
 LCG_89python3
 LCG_90
 LCG_90a
 LCG_90python3
 LCG_91
 LCG_91python3
 LCG_gaudiext20170622
 LCG_latest
 LCG_rootext20161010
 LCG_rootext20161129
 LCG_rootext20170508
 LCG_rootext20170929
 LCG_rootext20171122
 dev3
 dev3arch
 dev3python3
 dev4
 devgeantv
 geantv
 ml/1.0

 and <arch-os-complier> depends on what is available in <LCG_directory>

stbc-i2:lcg>

Each of these LCG_* tags is a release of a bunch of software such as Tensorflow, Python, ROOT, scikitlearn, etc. To find out what is available inside each release (including versions) you can take a look at this page.

The release exists in several versions, each one a specific combination of unix platform (red hat, ubuntu, etc) and C compiler version, as you can only be certain that software will work together if it's all been compiled on the same platform with the same C compiler. The views script will tell you which platform is available, if you select a LCG release:

stbc-i2:lcg> . /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch/lcg/views/setupViews.sh LCG_91
Available <arch-os-complier> for LCG_91 :
 x86_64-centos7-gcc62-dbg
 x86_64-centos7-gcc62-opt
 x86_64-centos7-gcc7-dbg
 x86_64-centos7-gcc7-opt
 x86_64-slc6-gcc62-dbg
 x86_64-slc6-gcc62-opt
 x86_64-slc6-gcc7-dbg
 x86_64-slc6-gcc7-opt
 x86_64-ubuntu1604-gcc54-dbg
 x86_64-ubuntu1604-gcc54-opt

Going back to the previous section, we had CERN SLC 6.9 so this is the "slc6" platform ... C compilers available are gcc 6.2 or 7 ... and you can either have the software compiled with debugging enabled (dbg) or with optimisation turned on (opt).

Run the setup script

The views script will set things up for you. Note that as of this writing, it doesn't work correctly with zsh but does with bash.

$ . /cvmfs/sft.cern.ch/lcg/views/setupViews.sh LCG_91 x86_64-slc6-gcc7-opt
After running that command, you can check that things are set up:
$ gcc --version
gcc (GCC) 7.1.0
Copyright (C) 2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.  There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
$ root -b
  ------------------------------------------------------------
 | Welcome to ROOT 6.10/06                http://root.cern.ch |
 |                               (c) 1995-2017, The ROOT Team |
 | Built for linuxx8664gcc                                    |
 | From tag v6-10-06, 19 September 2017                       |
 | Try '.help', '.demo', '.license', '.credits', '.quit'/'.q' |
  ------------------------------------------------------------

root [0] .q
$ python
Python 2.7.13 (default, May  9 2017, 16:41:38)
[GCC 7.1.0] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>>
$

Compile your code

Now you'll have the right stuff in your path, etc to use that version of gcc. Enjoy that prize. Don't forget to mention the PDP group in your speech.