Redistribution packages allow applicaitons built with the Intel compilers to be run on client systems that do not have the Intel compilers installed (i.e. end-user systems). These are ONLY needed on systems without the Intel compilers installed. A redistribution package has all the Intel dynamic libraries possibly needed for a dynamically linked application. Alternatively, you can explore to -static-intel compiler switch to statically link all required Intel libraries into an application. Redistribution packages were officially supported with the 11.0 release. These will again be supported for the 11.1 release.
Hello I installed visual studio community 2015 version 14.0 update 3 and then Intel parallel studio cluster 17.0. when I tried to compile a program using Intel visual fortran 17.0 I get the following message
Intel Visual Fortran Compiler 9.1 License.lic
Basically, I want to use intel fortran for computational fluid dynamics probelms. Could you please, explaine in a simple steps how to up and run with intel fortran? Is there any additional installation I should do?
I'm planning to purchase fortran compiler and now are using trial version.(download full install package of Intel Parallel Studio XE 2015 from through registration procedure.)Problem is that there is no any version of Visual Studio in my system so I can't integrate fortran compiler into it.I skim some pages in here and realize that free express version of VS doesn't support work with fortran compiler. Well, I uninstall it, after that fortran wizard notes that VS 2010 shell can be installed, but that option is unactive because valid license is not found. I suppose that reason is trial version of Parallel Studio, only after buying license installation of VS Shell becomes possible. But in that case it doesn't make any sense to use trial version, I just can't start working to evaluate this.
This is an example Composer XE 2015 rpm directory. This directory listing is for the initial Composer XE 2015 C++ release, your version strings will vary by compiler versions: -us/articles/intel-compiler-and-composer-update-version-numbers-to-compiler-version-number-mapping NOTE: this is not intended to be a comprehensive list for every compiler. RPMs vary by compiler edition, components, and may vary by release. Please list your 'rpm' directory for a list specific to your compiler. The following is intended as a representative list:
Redistribution packages allow applicaitons built with the Intel compilers to be run on client systems that do not have the Intel compilers installed (i.e. end-user systems). These are ONLY needed on systems without the Intel compilers installed. A redistribution package has all the Intel dynamic libraries possibly needed for a dynamically linked application. Alternatively, you can explore to -static-intel compiler switch to statically link all required Intel libraries into an application. Redistribution packages were officially supported with the 11.0 release and beyond.
This may sound a bit complex, but here is my problem. I am in the process of building a project that needs to use netcdf. I'm using an older build (3.6.3), which, when I build it with Fortran bindings requires the compiler switch '/iface:mixed_str_len_arg' to work correctly. I'm building them into static libraries so I can then include these in another project where I build a fortran DLL that. I then call this new DLL from a C# program. Passed variables all work now, except for arrays. They get passed into the C# program at the correct length, but the elements in the array are all 'Undefined address'. If I leave off the '/iface:mixed_str_len_arg' compiler switch, the NETCDF libraries won't work, and the string then get clobbered in the pass. And none of these problems existed until I added in these NETCDF libraries...without them everything works fine - except I need them for my project. Any thoughts? Am I going about this totally backwards? I am using Visual Fortran Composer XE 2011 with Visual Studio 2010.
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