*DECK DPSORT SUBROUTINE DPSORT (DX, N, IPERM, KFLAG, IER) C***BEGIN PROLOGUE DPSORT C***PURPOSE Return the permutation vector generated by sorting a given C array and, optionally, rearrange the elements of the array. C The array may be sorted in increasing or decreasing order. C A slightly modified quicksort algorithm is used. C***LIBRARY SLATEC C***CATEGORY N6A1B, N6A2B C***TYPE DOUBLE PRECISION (SPSORT-S, DPSORT-D, IPSORT-I, HPSORT-H) C***KEYWORDS NUMBER SORTING, PASSIVE SORTING, SINGLETON QUICKSORT, SORT C***AUTHOR Jones, R. E., (SNLA) C Rhoads, G. S., (NBS) C Wisniewski, J. A., (SNLA) C***DESCRIPTION C C DPSORT returns the permutation vector IPERM generated by sorting C the array DX and, optionally, rearranges the values in DX. DX may C be sorted in increasing or decreasing order. A slightly modified C quicksort algorithm is used. C C IPERM is such that DX(IPERM(I)) is the Ith value in the C rearrangement of DX. IPERM may be applied to another array by C calling IPPERM, SPPERM, DPPERM or HPPERM. C C The main difference between DPSORT and its active sorting equivalent C DSORT is that the data are referenced indirectly rather than C directly. Therefore, DPSORT should require approximately twice as C long to execute as DSORT. However, DPSORT is more general. C C Description of Parameters C DX - input/output -- double precision array of values to be C sorted. If ABS(KFLAG) = 2, then the values in DX will be C rearranged on output; otherwise, they are unchanged. C N - input -- number of values in array DX to be sorted. C IPERM - output -- permutation array such that IPERM(I) is the C index of the value in the original order of the C DX array that is in the Ith location in the sorted C order. C KFLAG - input -- control parameter: C = 2 means return the permutation vector resulting from C sorting DX in increasing order and sort DX also. C = 1 means return the permutation vector resulting from C sorting DX in increasing order and do not sort DX. C = -1 means return the permutation vector resulting from C sorting DX in decreasing order and do not sort DX. C = -2 means return the permutation vector resulting from C sorting DX in decreasing order and sort DX also. C IER - output -- error indicator: C = 0 if no error, C = 1 if N is zero or negative, C = 2 if KFLAG is not 2, 1, -1, or -2. C***REFERENCES R. C. Singleton, Algorithm 347, An efficient algorithm C for sorting with minimal storage, Communications of C the ACM, 12, 3 (1969), pp. 185-187. C***ROUTINES CALLED XERMSG C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 761101 DATE WRITTEN C 761118 Modified by John A. Wisniewski to use the Singleton C quicksort algorithm. C 870423 Modified by Gregory S. Rhoads for passive sorting with the C option for the rearrangement of the original data. C 890619 Double precision version of SPSORT created by D. W. Lozier. C 890620 Algorithm for rearranging the data vector corrected by R. C Boisvert. C 890622 Prologue upgraded to Version 4.0 style by D. Lozier. C 891128 Error when KFLAG.LT.0 and N=1 corrected by R. Boisvert. C 920507 Modified by M. McClain to revise prologue text. C 920818 Declarations section rebuilt and code restructured to use C IF-THEN-ELSE-ENDIF. (SMR, WRB) C***END PROLOGUE DPSORT C .. Scalar Arguments .. INTEGER IER, KFLAG, N C .. Array Arguments .. DOUBLE PRECISION DX(*) INTEGER IPERM(*) C .. Local Scalars .. DOUBLE PRECISION R, TEMP INTEGER I, IJ, INDX, INDX0, ISTRT, J, K, KK, L, LM, LMT, M, NN C .. Local Arrays .. INTEGER IL(21), IU(21) C .. External Subroutines .. EXTERNAL XERMSG C .. Intrinsic Functions .. INTRINSIC ABS, INT C***FIRST EXECUTABLE STATEMENT DPSORT IER = 0 NN = N IF (NN .LT. 1) THEN IER = 1 CALL XERMSG ('SLATEC', 'DPSORT', + 'The number of values to be sorted, N, is not positive.', + IER, 1) RETURN ENDIF C KK = ABS(KFLAG) IF (KK.NE.1 .AND. KK.NE.2) THEN IER = 2 CALL XERMSG ('SLATEC', 'DPSORT', + 'The sort control parameter, KFLAG, is not 2, 1, -1, or -2.', + IER, 1) RETURN ENDIF C C Initialize permutation vector C DO 10 I=1,NN IPERM(I) = I 10 CONTINUE C C Return if only one value is to be sorted C IF (NN .EQ. 1) RETURN C C Alter array DX to get decreasing order if needed C IF (KFLAG .LE. -1) THEN DO 20 I=1,NN DX(I) = -DX(I) 20 CONTINUE ENDIF C C Sort DX only C M = 1 I = 1 J = NN R = .375D0 C 30 IF (I .EQ. J) GO TO 80 IF (R .LE. 0.5898437D0) THEN R = R+3.90625D-2 ELSE R = R-0.21875D0 ENDIF C 40 K = I C C Select a central element of the array and save it in location L C IJ = I + INT((J-I)*R) LM = IPERM(IJ) C C If first element of array is greater than LM, interchange with LM C IF (DX(IPERM(I)) .GT. DX(LM)) THEN IPERM(IJ) = IPERM(I) IPERM(I) = LM LM = IPERM(IJ) ENDIF L = J C C If last element of array is less than LM, interchange with LM C IF (DX(IPERM(J)) .LT. DX(LM)) THEN IPERM(IJ) = IPERM(J) IPERM(J) = LM LM = IPERM(IJ) C C If first element of array is greater than LM, interchange C with LM C IF (DX(IPERM(I)) .GT. DX(LM)) THEN IPERM(IJ) = IPERM(I) IPERM(I) = LM LM = IPERM(IJ) ENDIF ENDIF GO TO 60 50 LMT = IPERM(L) IPERM(L) = IPERM(K) IPERM(K) = LMT C C Find an element in the second half of the array which is smaller C than LM C 60 L = L-1 IF (DX(IPERM(L)) .GT. DX(LM)) GO TO 60 C C Find an element in the first half of the array which is greater C than LM C 70 K = K+1 IF (DX(IPERM(K)) .LT. DX(LM)) GO TO 70 C C Interchange these elements C IF (K .LE. L) GO TO 50 C C Save upper and lower subscripts of the array yet to be sorted C IF (L-I .GT. J-K) THEN IL(M) = I IU(M) = L I = K M = M+1 ELSE IL(M) = K IU(M) = J J = L M = M+1 ENDIF GO TO 90 C C Begin again on another portion of the unsorted array C 80 M = M-1 IF (M .EQ. 0) GO TO 120 I = IL(M) J = IU(M) C 90 IF (J-I .GE. 1) GO TO 40 IF (I .EQ. 1) GO TO 30 I = I-1 C 100 I = I+1 IF (I .EQ. J) GO TO 80 LM = IPERM(I+1) IF (DX(IPERM(I)) .LE. DX(LM)) GO TO 100 K = I C 110 IPERM(K+1) = IPERM(K) K = K-1 IF (DX(LM) .LT. DX(IPERM(K))) GO TO 110 IPERM(K+1) = LM GO TO 100 C C Clean up C 120 IF (KFLAG .LE. -1) THEN DO 130 I=1,NN DX(I) = -DX(I) 130 CONTINUE ENDIF C C Rearrange the values of DX if desired C IF (KK .EQ. 2) THEN C C Use the IPERM vector as a flag. C If IPERM(I) < 0, then the I-th value is in correct location C DO 150 ISTRT=1,NN IF (IPERM(ISTRT) .GE. 0) THEN INDX = ISTRT INDX0 = INDX TEMP = DX(ISTRT) 140 IF (IPERM(INDX) .GT. 0) THEN DX(INDX) = DX(IPERM(INDX)) INDX0 = INDX IPERM(INDX) = -IPERM(INDX) INDX = ABS(IPERM(INDX)) GO TO 140 ENDIF DX(INDX0) = TEMP ENDIF 150 CONTINUE C C Revert the signs of the IPERM values C DO 160 I=1,NN IPERM(I) = -IPERM(I) 160 CONTINUE C ENDIF C RETURN END *DECK FDUMP SUBROUTINE FDUMP C***BEGIN PROLOGUE FDUMP C***PURPOSE Symbolic dump (should be locally written). C***LIBRARY SLATEC (XERROR) C***CATEGORY R3 C***TYPE ALL (FDUMP-A) C***KEYWORDS ERROR, XERMSG C***AUTHOR Jones, R. E., (SNLA) C***DESCRIPTION C C ***Note*** Machine Dependent Routine C FDUMP is intended to be replaced by a locally written C version which produces a symbolic dump. Failing this, C it should be replaced by a version which prints the C subprogram nesting list. Note that this dump must be C printed on each of up to five files, as indicated by the C XGETUA routine. See XSETUA and XGETUA for details. C C Written by Ron Jones, with SLATEC Common Math Library Subcommittee C C***REFERENCES (NONE) C***ROUTINES CALLED (NONE) C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 790801 DATE WRITTEN C 861211 REVISION DATE from Version 3.2 C 891214 Prologue converted to Version 4.0 format. (BAB) C***END PROLOGUE FDUMP C***FIRST EXECUTABLE STATEMENT FDUMP RETURN END *DECK I1MACH INTEGER FUNCTION I1MACH (I) C***BEGIN PROLOGUE I1MACH C***PURPOSE Return integer machine dependent constants. C***LIBRARY SLATEC C***CATEGORY R1 C***TYPE INTEGER (I1MACH-I) C***KEYWORDS MACHINE CONSTANTS C***AUTHOR Fox, P. A., (Bell Labs) C Hall, A. D., (Bell Labs) C Schryer, N. L., (Bell Labs) C***DESCRIPTION C C I1MACH can be used to obtain machine-dependent parameters for the C local machine environment. It is a function subprogram with one C (input) argument and can be referenced as follows: C C K = I1MACH(I) C C where I=1,...,16. The (output) value of K above is determined by C the (input) value of I. The results for various values of I are C discussed below. C C I/O unit numbers: C I1MACH( 1) = the standard input unit. C I1MACH( 2) = the standard output unit. C I1MACH( 3) = the standard punch unit. C I1MACH( 4) = the standard error message unit. C C Words: C I1MACH( 5) = the number of bits per integer storage unit. C I1MACH( 6) = the number of characters per integer storage unit. C C Integers: C assume integers are represented in the S-digit, base-A form C C sign ( X(S-1)*A**(S-1) + ... + X(1)*A + X(0) ) C C where 0 .LE. X(I) .LT. A for I=0,...,S-1. C I1MACH( 7) = A, the base. C I1MACH( 8) = S, the number of base-A digits. C I1MACH( 9) = A**S - 1, the largest magnitude. C C Floating-Point Numbers: C Assume floating-point numbers are represented in the T-digit, C base-B form C sign (B**E)*( (X(1)/B) + ... + (X(T)/B**T) ) C C where 0 .LE. X(I) .LT. B for I=1,...,T, C 0 .LT. X(1), and EMIN .LE. E .LE. EMAX. C I1MACH(10) = B, the base. C C Single-Precision: C I1MACH(11) = T, the number of base-B digits. C I1MACH(12) = EMIN, the smallest exponent E. C I1MACH(13) = EMAX, the largest exponent E. C C Double-Precision: C I1MACH(14) = T, the number of base-B digits. C I1MACH(15) = EMIN, the smallest exponent E. C I1MACH(16) = EMAX, the largest exponent E. C C To alter this function for a particular environment, the desired C set of DATA statements should be activated by removing the C from C column 1. Also, the values of I1MACH(1) - I1MACH(4) should be C checked for consistency with the local operating system. C C***REFERENCES P. A. Fox, A. D. Hall and N. L. Schryer, Framework for C a portable library, ACM Transactions on Mathematical C Software 4, 2 (June 1978), pp. 177-188. C***ROUTINES CALLED (NONE) C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 750101 DATE WRITTEN C 891012 Added VAX G-floating constants. (WRB) C 891012 REVISION DATE from Version 3.2 C 891214 Prologue converted to Version 4.0 format. (BAB) C 900618 Added DEC RISC constants. (WRB) C 900723 Added IBM RS 6000 constants. (WRB) C 901009 Correct I1MACH(7) for IBM Mainframes. Should be 2 not 16. C (RWC) C 910710 Added HP 730 constants. (SMR) C 911114 Added Convex IEEE constants. (WRB) C 920121 Added SUN -r8 compiler option constants. (WRB) C 920229 Added Touchstone Delta i860 constants. (WRB) C 920501 Reformatted the REFERENCES section. (WRB) C 920625 Added Convex -p8 and -pd8 compiler option constants. C (BKS, WRB) C 930201 Added DEC Alpha and SGI constants. (RWC and WRB) C 930618 Corrected I1MACH(5) for Convex -p8 and -pd8 compiler C options. (DWL, RWC and WRB). C***END PROLOGUE I1MACH C INTEGER IMACH(16),OUTPUT SAVE IMACH EQUIVALENCE (IMACH(4),OUTPUT) C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE AMIGA C ABSOFT COMPILER C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -126 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1022 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1023 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE APOLLO C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -125 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 129 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1025 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE BURROUGHS 1700 SYSTEM C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 36 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 33 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / Z1FFFFFFFF / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -256 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 255 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 60 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -256 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 255 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE BURROUGHS 5700 SYSTEM C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 48 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 39 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / O0007777777777777 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 8 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 13 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -50 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 76 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 26 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -50 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 76 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE BURROUGHS 6700/7700 SYSTEMS C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 48 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 39 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / O0007777777777777 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 8 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 13 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -50 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 76 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 26 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -32754 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 32780 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE CDC 170/180 SERIES USING NOS/VE C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 64 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 8 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 63 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 9223372036854775807 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 47 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -4095 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 4094 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 94 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -4095 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 4094 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE CDC 6000/7000 SERIES C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6LOUTPUT/ C DATA IMACH( 5) / 60 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 10 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 48 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 00007777777777777777B / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 47 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -929 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 1070 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 94 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -929 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1069 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE CELERITY C1260 C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 0 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / Z'7FFFFFFF' / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -126 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1022 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1023 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE CONVEX C USING THE -fn COMPILER OPTION C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1023 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1023 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE CONVEX C USING THE -fi COMPILER OPTION C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -125 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 128 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1024 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE CONVEX C USING THE -p8 COMPILER OPTION C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 64 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 63 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 9223372036854775807 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -1023 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 1023 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 113 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -16383 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 16383 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE CONVEX C USING THE -pd8 COMPILER OPTION C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 64 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 63 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 9223372036854775807 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -1023 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 1023 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1023 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1023 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE CRAY C USING THE 46 BIT INTEGER COMPILER OPTION C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 100 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 101 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 102 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 101 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 64 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 8 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 46 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 1777777777777777B / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 47 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -8189 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 8190 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 94 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -8099 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 8190 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE CRAY C USING THE 64 BIT INTEGER COMPILER OPTION C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 100 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 101 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 102 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 101 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 64 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 8 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 63 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 777777777777777777777B / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 47 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -8189 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 8190 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 94 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -8099 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 8190 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE DATA GENERAL ECLIPSE S/200 C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 11 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 12 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 8 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 10 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 16 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 15 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 32767 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 16 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 6 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -64 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 63 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 14 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -64 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 63 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE DEC ALPHA C USING G_FLOAT C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1023 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1023 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE DEC ALPHA C USING IEEE_FLOAT C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -125 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 128 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1024 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE DEC RISC C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -125 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 128 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1024 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE DEC VAX C USING D_FLOATING C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 56 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 127 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE DEC VAX C USING G_FLOATING C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1023 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1023 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE ELXSI 6400 C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -126 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1022 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1023 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE HARRIS 220 C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 0 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 24 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 3 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 23 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 8388607 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 23 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 38 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 127 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE HONEYWELL 600/6000 SERIES C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 43 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 36 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 35 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / O377777777777 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 27 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 63 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 127 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE HP 730 C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -125 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 128 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1024 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE HP 2100 C 3 WORD DOUBLE PRECISION OPTION WITH FTN4 C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 1 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 16 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 15 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 32767 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 23 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -128 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 39 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -128 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 127 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE HP 2100 C 4 WORD DOUBLE PRECISION OPTION WITH FTN4 C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 1 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 16 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 15 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 32767 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 23 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -128 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 55 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -128 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 127 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE HP 9000 C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -126 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1015 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1017 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE IBM 360/370 SERIES, C THE XEROX SIGMA 5/7/9, THE SEL SYSTEMS 85/86, AND C THE PERKIN ELMER (INTERDATA) 7/32. C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 7 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / Z7FFFFFFF / C DATA IMACH(10) / 16 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 6 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -64 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 63 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 14 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -64 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 63 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE IBM PC C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 0 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 0 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -125 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1023 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE IBM RS 6000 C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 0 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -125 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 128 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1024 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE INTEL i860 C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -125 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 128 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1024 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE PDP-10 (KA PROCESSOR) C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 36 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 35 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / "377777777777 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 27 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -128 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 54 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -101 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 127 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE PDP-10 (KI PROCESSOR) C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 36 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 35 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / "377777777777 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 27 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -128 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 62 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -128 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 127 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR PDP-11 FORTRAN SUPPORTING C 32-BIT INTEGER ARITHMETIC. C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 56 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 127 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR PDP-11 FORTRAN SUPPORTING C 16-BIT INTEGER ARITHMETIC. C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 16 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 15 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 32767 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 56 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 127 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE SILICON GRAPHICS C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -125 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 128 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1024 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE SUN C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -125 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 128 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1024 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE SUN C USING THE -r8 COMPILER OPTION C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 32 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 31 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 2147483647 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 53 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -1021 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 1024 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 113 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -16381 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 16384 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE UNIVAC 1100 SERIES FTN COMPILER C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 5 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 1 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 6 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 36 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 4 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 35 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / O377777777777 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 27 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -128 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 60 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -1024 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 1023 / C C MACHINE CONSTANTS FOR THE Z80 MICROPROCESSOR C C DATA IMACH( 1) / 1 / C DATA IMACH( 2) / 1 / C DATA IMACH( 3) / 0 / C DATA IMACH( 4) / 1 / C DATA IMACH( 5) / 16 / C DATA IMACH( 6) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 7) / 2 / C DATA IMACH( 8) / 15 / C DATA IMACH( 9) / 32767 / C DATA IMACH(10) / 2 / C DATA IMACH(11) / 24 / C DATA IMACH(12) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(13) / 127 / C DATA IMACH(14) / 56 / C DATA IMACH(15) / -127 / C DATA IMACH(16) / 127 / C C***FIRST EXECUTABLE STATEMENT I1MACH IF (I .LT. 1 .OR. I .GT. 16) GO TO 10 C I1MACH = IMACH(I) RETURN C 10 CONTINUE WRITE (UNIT = OUTPUT, FMT = 9000) 9000 FORMAT ('1ERROR 1 IN I1MACH - I OUT OF BOUNDS') C C CALL FDUMP C STOP END *DECK J4SAVE FUNCTION J4SAVE (IWHICH, IVALUE, ISET) C***BEGIN PROLOGUE J4SAVE C***SUBSIDIARY C***PURPOSE Save or recall global variables needed by error C handling routines. C***LIBRARY SLATEC (XERROR) C***TYPE INTEGER (J4SAVE-I) C***KEYWORDS ERROR MESSAGES, ERROR NUMBER, RECALL, SAVE, XERROR C***AUTHOR Jones, R. E., (SNLA) C***DESCRIPTION C C Abstract C J4SAVE saves and recalls several global variables needed C by the library error handling routines. C C Description of Parameters C --Input-- C IWHICH - Index of item desired. C = 1 Refers to current error number. C = 2 Refers to current error control flag. C = 3 Refers to current unit number to which error C messages are to be sent. (0 means use standard.) C = 4 Refers to the maximum number of times any C message is to be printed (as set by XERMAX). C = 5 Refers to the total number of units to which C each error message is to be written. C = 6 Refers to the 2nd unit for error messages C = 7 Refers to the 3rd unit for error messages C = 8 Refers to the 4th unit for error messages C = 9 Refers to the 5th unit for error messages C IVALUE - The value to be set for the IWHICH-th parameter, C if ISET is .TRUE. . C ISET - If ISET=.TRUE., the IWHICH-th parameter will BE C given the value, IVALUE. If ISET=.FALSE., the C IWHICH-th parameter will be unchanged, and IVALUE C is a dummy parameter. C --Output-- C The (old) value of the IWHICH-th parameter will be returned C in the function value, J4SAVE. C C***SEE ALSO XERMSG C***REFERENCES R. E. Jones and D. K. Kahaner, XERROR, the SLATEC C Error-handling Package, SAND82-0800, Sandia C Laboratories, 1982. C***ROUTINES CALLED (NONE) C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 790801 DATE WRITTEN C 891214 Prologue converted to Version 4.0 format. (BAB) C 900205 Minor modifications to prologue. (WRB) C 900402 Added TYPE section. (WRB) C 910411 Added KEYWORDS section. (WRB) C 920501 Reformatted the REFERENCES section. (WRB) C***END PROLOGUE J4SAVE LOGICAL ISET INTEGER IPARAM(9) SAVE IPARAM DATA IPARAM(1),IPARAM(2),IPARAM(3),IPARAM(4)/0,2,0,10/ DATA IPARAM(5)/1/ DATA IPARAM(6),IPARAM(7),IPARAM(8),IPARAM(9)/0,0,0,0/ C***FIRST EXECUTABLE STATEMENT J4SAVE J4SAVE = IPARAM(IWHICH) IF (ISET) IPARAM(IWHICH) = IVALUE RETURN END *DECK XERCNT SUBROUTINE XERCNT (LIBRAR, SUBROU, MESSG, NERR, LEVEL, KONTRL) C***BEGIN PROLOGUE XERCNT C***SUBSIDIARY C***PURPOSE Allow user control over handling of errors. C***LIBRARY SLATEC (XERROR) C***CATEGORY R3C C***TYPE ALL (XERCNT-A) C***KEYWORDS ERROR, XERROR C***AUTHOR Jones, R. E., (SNLA) C***DESCRIPTION C C Abstract C Allows user control over handling of individual errors. C Just after each message is recorded, but before it is C processed any further (i.e., before it is printed or C a decision to abort is made), a call is made to XERCNT. C If the user has provided his own version of XERCNT, he C can then override the value of KONTROL used in processing C this message by redefining its value. C KONTRL may be set to any value from -2 to 2. C The meanings for KONTRL are the same as in XSETF, except C that the value of KONTRL changes only for this message. C If KONTRL is set to a value outside the range from -2 to 2, C it will be moved back into that range. C C Description of Parameters C C --Input-- C LIBRAR - the library that the routine is in. C SUBROU - the subroutine that XERMSG is being called from C MESSG - the first 20 characters of the error message. C NERR - same as in the call to XERMSG. C LEVEL - same as in the call to XERMSG. C KONTRL - the current value of the control flag as set C by a call to XSETF. C C --Output-- C KONTRL - the new value of KONTRL. If KONTRL is not C defined, it will remain at its original value. C This changed value of control affects only C the current occurrence of the current message. C C***REFERENCES R. E. Jones and D. K. Kahaner, XERROR, the SLATEC C Error-handling Package, SAND82-0800, Sandia C Laboratories, 1982. C***ROUTINES CALLED (NONE) C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 790801 DATE WRITTEN C 861211 REVISION DATE from Version 3.2 C 891214 Prologue converted to Version 4.0 format. (BAB) C 900206 Routine changed from user-callable to subsidiary. (WRB) C 900510 Changed calling sequence to include LIBRARY and SUBROUTINE C names, changed routine name from XERCTL to XERCNT. (RWC) C 920501 Reformatted the REFERENCES section. (WRB) C***END PROLOGUE XERCNT CHARACTER*(*) LIBRAR, SUBROU, MESSG C***FIRST EXECUTABLE STATEMENT XERCNT RETURN END *DECK XERHLT SUBROUTINE XERHLT (MESSG) C***BEGIN PROLOGUE XERHLT C***SUBSIDIARY C***PURPOSE Abort program execution and print error message. C***LIBRARY SLATEC (XERROR) C***CATEGORY R3C C***TYPE ALL (XERHLT-A) C***KEYWORDS ABORT PROGRAM EXECUTION, ERROR, XERROR C***AUTHOR Jones, R. E., (SNLA) C***DESCRIPTION C C Abstract C ***Note*** machine dependent routine C XERHLT aborts the execution of the program. C The error message causing the abort is given in the calling C sequence, in case one needs it for printing on a dayfile, C for example. C C Description of Parameters C MESSG is as in XERMSG. C C***REFERENCES R. E. Jones and D. K. Kahaner, XERROR, the SLATEC C Error-handling Package, SAND82-0800, Sandia C Laboratories, 1982. C***ROUTINES CALLED (NONE) C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 790801 DATE WRITTEN C 861211 REVISION DATE from Version 3.2 C 891214 Prologue converted to Version 4.0 format. (BAB) C 900206 Routine changed from user-callable to subsidiary. (WRB) C 900510 Changed calling sequence to delete length of character C and changed routine name from XERABT to XERHLT. (RWC) C 920501 Reformatted the REFERENCES section. (WRB) C***END PROLOGUE XERHLT CHARACTER*(*) MESSG C***FIRST EXECUTABLE STATEMENT XERHLT STOP END *DECK XERMSG SUBROUTINE XERMSG (LIBRAR, SUBROU, MESSG, NERR, LEVEL) C***BEGIN PROLOGUE XERMSG C***PURPOSE Process error messages for SLATEC and other libraries. C***LIBRARY SLATEC (XERROR) C***CATEGORY R3C C***TYPE ALL (XERMSG-A) C***KEYWORDS ERROR MESSAGE, XERROR C***AUTHOR Fong, Kirby, (NMFECC at LLNL) C***DESCRIPTION C C XERMSG processes a diagnostic message in a manner determined by the C value of LEVEL and the current value of the library error control C flag, KONTRL. See subroutine XSETF for details. C C LIBRAR A character constant (or character variable) with the name C of the library. This will be 'SLATEC' for the SLATEC C Common Math Library. The error handling package is C general enough to be used by many libraries C simultaneously, so it is desirable for the routine that C detects and reports an error to identify the library name C as well as the routine name. C C SUBROU A character constant (or character variable) with the name C of the routine that detected the error. Usually it is the C name of the routine that is calling XERMSG. There are C some instances where a user callable library routine calls C lower level subsidiary routines where the error is C detected. In such cases it may be more informative to C supply the name of the routine the user called rather than C the name of the subsidiary routine that detected the C error. C C MESSG A character constant (or character variable) with the text C of the error or warning message. In the example below, C the message is a character constant that contains a C generic message. C C CALL XERMSG ('SLATEC', 'MMPY', C *'THE ORDER OF THE MATRIX EXCEEDS THE ROW DIMENSION', C *3, 1) C C It is possible (and is sometimes desirable) to generate a C specific message--e.g., one that contains actual numeric C values. Specific numeric values can be converted into C character strings using formatted WRITE statements into C character variables. This is called standard Fortran C internal file I/O and is exemplified in the first three C lines of the following example. You can also catenate C substrings of characters to construct the error message. C Here is an example showing the use of both writing to C an internal file and catenating character strings. C C CHARACTER*5 CHARN, CHARL C WRITE (CHARN,10) N C WRITE (CHARL,10) LDA C 10 FORMAT(I5) C CALL XERMSG ('SLATEC', 'MMPY', 'THE ORDER'//CHARN// C * ' OF THE MATRIX EXCEEDS ITS ROW DIMENSION OF'// C * CHARL, 3, 1) C C There are two subtleties worth mentioning. One is that C the // for character catenation is used to construct the C error message so that no single character constant is C continued to the next line. This avoids confusion as to C whether there are trailing blanks at the end of the line. C The second is that by catenating the parts of the message C as an actual argument rather than encoding the entire C message into one large character variable, we avoid C having to know how long the message will be in order to C declare an adequate length for that large character C variable. XERMSG calls XERPRN to print the message using C multiple lines if necessary. If the message is very long, C XERPRN will break it into pieces of 72 characters (as C requested by XERMSG) for printing on multiple lines. C Also, XERMSG asks XERPRN to prefix each line with ' * ' C so that the total line length could be 76 characters. C Note also that XERPRN scans the error message backwards C to ignore trailing blanks. Another feature is that C the substring '$$' is treated as a new line sentinel C by XERPRN. If you want to construct a multiline C message without having to count out multiples of 72 C characters, just use '$$' as a separator. '$$' C obviously must occur within 72 characters of the C start of each line to have its intended effect since C XERPRN is asked to wrap around at 72 characters in C addition to looking for '$$'. C C NERR An integer value that is chosen by the library routine's C author. It must be in the range -99 to 999 (three C printable digits). Each distinct error should have its C own error number. These error numbers should be described C in the machine readable documentation for the routine. C The error numbers need be unique only within each routine, C so it is reasonable for each routine to start enumerating C errors from 1 and proceeding to the next integer. C C LEVEL An integer value in the range 0 to 2 that indicates the C level (severity) of the error. Their meanings are C C -1 A warning message. This is used if it is not clear C that there really is an error, but the user's attention C may be needed. An attempt is made to only print this C message once. C C 0 A warning message. This is used if it is not clear C that there really is an error, but the user's attention C may be needed. C C 1 A recoverable error. This is used even if the error is C so serious that the routine cannot return any useful C answer. If the user has told the error package to C return after recoverable errors, then XERMSG will C return to the Library routine which can then return to C the user's routine. The user may also permit the error C package to terminate the program upon encountering a C recoverable error. C C 2 A fatal error. XERMSG will not return to its caller C after it receives a fatal error. This level should C hardly ever be used; it is much better to allow the C user a chance to recover. An example of one of the few C cases in which it is permissible to declare a level 2 C error is a reverse communication Library routine that C is likely to be called repeatedly until it integrates C across some interval. If there is a serious error in C the input such that another step cannot be taken and C the Library routine is called again without the input C error having been corrected by the caller, the Library C routine will probably be called forever with improper C input. In this case, it is reasonable to declare the C error to be fatal. C C Each of the arguments to XERMSG is input; none will be modified by C XERMSG. A routine may make multiple calls to XERMSG with warning C level messages; however, after a call to XERMSG with a recoverable C error, the routine should return to the user. Do not try to call C XERMSG with a second recoverable error after the first recoverable C error because the error package saves the error number. The user C can retrieve this error number by calling another entry point in C the error handling package and then clear the error number when C recovering from the error. Calling XERMSG in succession causes the C old error number to be overwritten by the latest error number. C This is considered harmless for error numbers associated with C warning messages but must not be done for error numbers of serious C errors. After a call to XERMSG with a recoverable error, the user C must be given a chance to call NUMXER or XERCLR to retrieve or C clear the error number. C***REFERENCES R. E. Jones and D. K. Kahaner, XERROR, the SLATEC C Error-handling Package, SAND82-0800, Sandia C Laboratories, 1982. C***ROUTINES CALLED FDUMP, J4SAVE, XERCNT, XERHLT, XERPRN, XERSVE C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 880101 DATE WRITTEN C 880621 REVISED AS DIRECTED AT SLATEC CML MEETING OF FEBRUARY 1988. C THERE ARE TWO BASIC CHANGES. C 1. A NEW ROUTINE, XERPRN, IS USED INSTEAD OF XERPRT TO C PRINT MESSAGES. THIS ROUTINE WILL BREAK LONG MESSAGES C INTO PIECES FOR PRINTING ON MULTIPLE LINES. '$$' IS C ACCEPTED AS A NEW LINE SENTINEL. A PREFIX CAN BE C ADDED TO EACH LINE TO BE PRINTED. XERMSG USES EITHER C ' ***' OR ' * ' AND LONG MESSAGES ARE BROKEN EVERY C 72 CHARACTERS (AT MOST) SO THAT THE MAXIMUM LINE C LENGTH OUTPUT CAN NOW BE AS GREAT AS 76. C 2. THE TEXT OF ALL MESSAGES IS NOW IN UPPER CASE SINCE THE C FORTRAN STANDARD DOCUMENT DOES NOT ADMIT THE EXISTENCE C OF LOWER CASE. C 880708 REVISED AFTER THE SLATEC CML MEETING OF JUNE 29 AND 30. C THE PRINCIPAL CHANGES ARE C 1. CLARIFY COMMENTS IN THE PROLOGUES C 2. RENAME XRPRNT TO XERPRN C 3. REWORK HANDLING OF '$$' IN XERPRN TO HANDLE BLANK LINES C SIMILAR TO THE WAY FORMAT STATEMENTS HANDLE THE / C CHARACTER FOR NEW RECORDS. C 890706 REVISED WITH THE HELP OF FRED FRITSCH AND REG CLEMENS TO C CLEAN UP THE CODING. C 890721 REVISED TO USE NEW FEATURE IN XERPRN TO COUNT CHARACTERS IN C PREFIX. C 891013 REVISED TO CORRECT COMMENTS. C 891214 Prologue converted to Version 4.0 format. (WRB) C 900510 Changed test on NERR to be -9999999 < NERR < 99999999, but C NERR .ne. 0, and on LEVEL to be -2 < LEVEL < 3. Added C LEVEL=-1 logic, changed calls to XERSAV to XERSVE, and C XERCTL to XERCNT. (RWC) C 920501 Reformatted the REFERENCES section. (WRB) C***END PROLOGUE XERMSG CHARACTER*(*) LIBRAR, SUBROU, MESSG CHARACTER*8 XLIBR, XSUBR CHARACTER*72 TEMP CHARACTER*20 LFIRST C***FIRST EXECUTABLE STATEMENT XERMSG LKNTRL = J4SAVE (2, 0, .FALSE.) MAXMES = J4SAVE (4, 0, .FALSE.) C C LKNTRL IS A LOCAL COPY OF THE CONTROL FLAG KONTRL. C MAXMES IS THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF TIMES ANY PARTICULAR MESSAGE C SHOULD BE PRINTED. C C WE PRINT A FATAL ERROR MESSAGE AND TERMINATE FOR AN ERROR IN C CALLING XERMSG. THE ERROR NUMBER SHOULD BE POSITIVE, C AND THE LEVEL SHOULD BE BETWEEN 0 AND 2. C IF (NERR.LT.-9999999 .OR. NERR.GT.99999999 .OR. NERR.EQ.0 .OR. * LEVEL.LT.-1 .OR. LEVEL.GT.2) THEN CALL XERPRN (' ***', -1, 'FATAL ERROR IN...$$ ' // * 'XERMSG -- INVALID ERROR NUMBER OR LEVEL$$ '// * 'JOB ABORT DUE TO FATAL ERROR.', 72) CALL XERSVE (' ', ' ', ' ', 0, 0, 0, KDUMMY) CALL XERHLT (' ***XERMSG -- INVALID INPUT') RETURN ENDIF C C RECORD THE MESSAGE. C I = J4SAVE (1, NERR, .TRUE.) CALL XERSVE (LIBRAR, SUBROU, MESSG, 1, NERR, LEVEL, KOUNT) C C HANDLE PRINT-ONCE WARNING MESSAGES. C IF (LEVEL.EQ.-1 .AND. KOUNT.GT.1) RETURN C C ALLOW TEMPORARY USER OVERRIDE OF THE CONTROL FLAG. C XLIBR = LIBRAR XSUBR = SUBROU LFIRST = MESSG LERR = NERR LLEVEL = LEVEL CALL XERCNT (XLIBR, XSUBR, LFIRST, LERR, LLEVEL, LKNTRL) C LKNTRL = MAX(-2, MIN(2,LKNTRL)) MKNTRL = ABS(LKNTRL) C C SKIP PRINTING IF THE CONTROL FLAG VALUE AS RESET IN XERCNT IS C ZERO AND THE ERROR IS NOT FATAL. C IF (LEVEL.LT.2 .AND. LKNTRL.EQ.0) GO TO 30 IF (LEVEL.EQ.0 .AND. KOUNT.GT.MAXMES) GO TO 30 IF (LEVEL.EQ.1 .AND. KOUNT.GT.MAXMES .AND. MKNTRL.EQ.1) GO TO 30 IF (LEVEL.EQ.2 .AND. KOUNT.GT.MAX(1,MAXMES)) GO TO 30 C C ANNOUNCE THE NAMES OF THE LIBRARY AND SUBROUTINE BY BUILDING A C MESSAGE IN CHARACTER VARIABLE TEMP (NOT EXCEEDING 66 CHARACTERS) C AND SENDING IT OUT VIA XERPRN. PRINT ONLY IF CONTROL FLAG C IS NOT ZERO. C IF (LKNTRL .NE. 0) THEN TEMP(1:21) = 'MESSAGE FROM ROUTINE ' I = MIN(LEN(SUBROU), 16) TEMP(22:21+I) = SUBROU(1:I) TEMP(22+I:33+I) = ' IN LIBRARY ' LTEMP = 33 + I I = MIN(LEN(LIBRAR), 16) TEMP(LTEMP+1:LTEMP+I) = LIBRAR (1:I) TEMP(LTEMP+I+1:LTEMP+I+1) = '.' LTEMP = LTEMP + I + 1 CALL XERPRN (' ***', -1, TEMP(1:LTEMP), 72) ENDIF C C IF LKNTRL IS POSITIVE, PRINT AN INTRODUCTORY LINE BEFORE C PRINTING THE MESSAGE. THE INTRODUCTORY LINE TELLS THE CHOICE C FROM EACH OF THE FOLLOWING THREE OPTIONS. C 1. LEVEL OF THE MESSAGE C 'INFORMATIVE MESSAGE' C 'POTENTIALLY RECOVERABLE ERROR' C 'FATAL ERROR' C 2. WHETHER CONTROL FLAG WILL ALLOW PROGRAM TO CONTINUE C 'PROG CONTINUES' C 'PROG ABORTED' C 3. WHETHER OR NOT A TRACEBACK WAS REQUESTED. (THE TRACEBACK C MAY NOT BE IMPLEMENTED AT SOME SITES, SO THIS ONLY TELLS C WHAT WAS REQUESTED, NOT WHAT WAS DELIVERED.) C 'TRACEBACK REQUESTED' C 'TRACEBACK NOT REQUESTED' C NOTICE THAT THE LINE INCLUDING FOUR PREFIX CHARACTERS WILL NOT C EXCEED 74 CHARACTERS. C WE SKIP THE NEXT BLOCK IF THE INTRODUCTORY LINE IS NOT NEEDED. C IF (LKNTRL .GT. 0) THEN C C THE FIRST PART OF THE MESSAGE TELLS ABOUT THE LEVEL. C IF (LEVEL .LE. 0) THEN TEMP(1:20) = 'INFORMATIVE MESSAGE,' LTEMP = 20 ELSEIF (LEVEL .EQ. 1) THEN TEMP(1:30) = 'POTENTIALLY RECOVERABLE ERROR,' LTEMP = 30 ELSE TEMP(1:12) = 'FATAL ERROR,' LTEMP = 12 ENDIF C C THEN WHETHER THE PROGRAM WILL CONTINUE. C IF ((MKNTRL.EQ.2 .AND. LEVEL.GE.1) .OR. * (MKNTRL.EQ.1 .AND. LEVEL.EQ.2)) THEN TEMP(LTEMP+1:LTEMP+14) = ' PROG ABORTED,' LTEMP = LTEMP + 14 ELSE TEMP(LTEMP+1:LTEMP+16) = ' PROG CONTINUES,' LTEMP = LTEMP + 16 ENDIF C C FINALLY TELL WHETHER THERE SHOULD BE A TRACEBACK. C IF (LKNTRL .GT. 0) THEN TEMP(LTEMP+1:LTEMP+20) = ' TRACEBACK REQUESTED' LTEMP = LTEMP + 20 ELSE TEMP(LTEMP+1:LTEMP+24) = ' TRACEBACK NOT REQUESTED' LTEMP = LTEMP + 24 ENDIF CALL XERPRN (' ***', -1, TEMP(1:LTEMP), 72) ENDIF C C NOW SEND OUT THE MESSAGE. C CALL XERPRN (' * ', -1, MESSG, 72) C C IF LKNTRL IS POSITIVE, WRITE THE ERROR NUMBER AND REQUEST A C TRACEBACK. C IF (LKNTRL .GT. 0) THEN WRITE (TEMP, '(''ERROR NUMBER = '', I8)') NERR DO 10 I=16,22 IF (TEMP(I:I) .NE. ' ') GO TO 20 10 CONTINUE C 20 CALL XERPRN (' * ', -1, TEMP(1:15) // TEMP(I:23), 72) CALL FDUMP ENDIF C C IF LKNTRL IS NOT ZERO, PRINT A BLANK LINE AND AN END OF MESSAGE. C IF (LKNTRL .NE. 0) THEN CALL XERPRN (' * ', -1, ' ', 72) CALL XERPRN (' ***', -1, 'END OF MESSAGE', 72) CALL XERPRN (' ', 0, ' ', 72) ENDIF C C IF THE ERROR IS NOT FATAL OR THE ERROR IS RECOVERABLE AND THE C CONTROL FLAG IS SET FOR RECOVERY, THEN RETURN. C 30 IF (LEVEL.LE.0 .OR. (LEVEL.EQ.1 .AND. MKNTRL.LE.1)) RETURN C C THE PROGRAM WILL BE STOPPED DUE TO AN UNRECOVERED ERROR OR A C FATAL ERROR. PRINT THE REASON FOR THE ABORT AND THE ERROR C SUMMARY IF THE CONTROL FLAG AND THE MAXIMUM ERROR COUNT PERMIT. C IF (LKNTRL.GT.0 .AND. KOUNT.LT.MAX(1,MAXMES)) THEN IF (LEVEL .EQ. 1) THEN CALL XERPRN * (' ***', -1, 'JOB ABORT DUE TO UNRECOVERED ERROR.', 72) ELSE CALL XERPRN(' ***', -1, 'JOB ABORT DUE TO FATAL ERROR.', 72) ENDIF CALL XERSVE (' ', ' ', ' ', -1, 0, 0, KDUMMY) CALL XERHLT (' ') ELSE CALL XERHLT (MESSG) ENDIF RETURN END *DECK XERPRN SUBROUTINE XERPRN (PREFIX, NPREF, MESSG, NWRAP) C***BEGIN PROLOGUE XERPRN C***SUBSIDIARY C***PURPOSE Print error messages processed by XERMSG. C***LIBRARY SLATEC (XERROR) C***CATEGORY R3C C***TYPE ALL (XERPRN-A) C***KEYWORDS ERROR MESSAGES, PRINTING, XERROR C***AUTHOR Fong, Kirby, (NMFECC at LLNL) C***DESCRIPTION C C This routine sends one or more lines to each of the (up to five) C logical units to which error messages are to be sent. This routine C is called several times by XERMSG, sometimes with a single line to C print and sometimes with a (potentially very long) message that may C wrap around into multiple lines. C C PREFIX Input argument of type CHARACTER. This argument contains C characters to be put at the beginning of each line before C the body of the message. No more than 16 characters of C PREFIX will be used. C C NPREF Input argument of type INTEGER. This argument is the number C of characters to use from PREFIX. If it is negative, the C intrinsic function LEN is used to determine its length. If C it is zero, PREFIX is not used. If it exceeds 16 or if C LEN(PREFIX) exceeds 16, only the first 16 characters will be C used. If NPREF is positive and the length of PREFIX is less C than NPREF, a copy of PREFIX extended with blanks to length C NPREF will be used. C C MESSG Input argument of type CHARACTER. This is the text of a C message to be printed. If it is a long message, it will be C broken into pieces for printing on multiple lines. Each line C will start with the appropriate prefix and be followed by a C piece of the message. NWRAP is the number of characters per C piece; that is, after each NWRAP characters, we break and C start a new line. In addition the characters '$$' embedded C in MESSG are a sentinel for a new line. The counting of C characters up to NWRAP starts over for each new line. The C value of NWRAP typically used by XERMSG is 72 since many C older error messages in the SLATEC Library are laid out to C rely on wrap-around every 72 characters. C C NWRAP Input argument of type INTEGER. This gives the maximum size C piece into which to break MESSG for printing on multiple C lines. An embedded '$$' ends a line, and the count restarts C at the following character. If a line break does not occur C on a blank (it would split a word) that word is moved to the C next line. Values of NWRAP less than 16 will be treated as C 16. Values of NWRAP greater than 132 will be treated as 132. C The actual line length will be NPREF + NWRAP after NPREF has C been adjusted to fall between 0 and 16 and NWRAP has been C adjusted to fall between 16 and 132. C C***REFERENCES R. E. Jones and D. K. Kahaner, XERROR, the SLATEC C Error-handling Package, SAND82-0800, Sandia C Laboratories, 1982. C***ROUTINES CALLED I1MACH, XGETUA C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 880621 DATE WRITTEN C 880708 REVISED AFTER THE SLATEC CML SUBCOMMITTEE MEETING OF C JUNE 29 AND 30 TO CHANGE THE NAME TO XERPRN AND TO REWORK C THE HANDLING OF THE NEW LINE SENTINEL TO BEHAVE LIKE THE C SLASH CHARACTER IN FORMAT STATEMENTS. C 890706 REVISED WITH THE HELP OF FRED FRITSCH AND REG CLEMENS TO C STREAMLINE THE CODING AND FIX A BUG THAT CAUSED EXTRA BLANK C LINES TO BE PRINTED. C 890721 REVISED TO ADD A NEW FEATURE. A NEGATIVE VALUE OF NPREF C CAUSES LEN(PREFIX) TO BE USED AS THE LENGTH. C 891013 REVISED TO CORRECT ERROR IN CALCULATING PREFIX LENGTH. C 891214 Prologue converted to Version 4.0 format. (WRB) C 900510 Added code to break messages between words. (RWC) C 920501 Reformatted the REFERENCES section. (WRB) C***END PROLOGUE XERPRN CHARACTER*(*) PREFIX, MESSG INTEGER NPREF, NWRAP CHARACTER*148 CBUFF INTEGER IU(5), NUNIT CHARACTER*2 NEWLIN PARAMETER (NEWLIN = '$$') C***FIRST EXECUTABLE STATEMENT XERPRN CALL XGETUA(IU,NUNIT) C C A ZERO VALUE FOR A LOGICAL UNIT NUMBER MEANS TO USE THE STANDARD C ERROR MESSAGE UNIT INSTEAD. I1MACH(4) RETRIEVES THE STANDARD C ERROR MESSAGE UNIT. C N = I1MACH(4) DO 10 I=1,NUNIT IF (IU(I) .EQ. 0) IU(I) = N 10 CONTINUE C C LPREF IS THE LENGTH OF THE PREFIX. THE PREFIX IS PLACED AT THE C BEGINNING OF CBUFF, THE CHARACTER BUFFER, AND KEPT THERE DURING C THE REST OF THIS ROUTINE. C IF ( NPREF .LT. 0 ) THEN LPREF = LEN(PREFIX) ELSE LPREF = NPREF ENDIF LPREF = MIN(16, LPREF) IF (LPREF .NE. 0) CBUFF(1:LPREF) = PREFIX C C LWRAP IS THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF CHARACTERS WE WANT TO TAKE AT ONE C TIME FROM MESSG TO PRINT ON ONE LINE. C LWRAP = MAX(16, MIN(132, NWRAP)) C C SET LENMSG TO THE LENGTH OF MESSG, IGNORE ANY TRAILING BLANKS. C LENMSG = LEN(MESSG) N = LENMSG DO 20 I=1,N IF (MESSG(LENMSG:LENMSG) .NE. ' ') GO TO 30 LENMSG = LENMSG - 1 20 CONTINUE 30 CONTINUE C C IF THE MESSAGE IS ALL BLANKS, THEN PRINT ONE BLANK LINE. C IF (LENMSG .EQ. 0) THEN CBUFF(LPREF+1:LPREF+1) = ' ' DO 40 I=1,NUNIT WRITE(IU(I), '(A)') CBUFF(1:LPREF+1) 40 CONTINUE RETURN ENDIF C C SET NEXTC TO THE POSITION IN MESSG WHERE THE NEXT SUBSTRING C STARTS. FROM THIS POSITION WE SCAN FOR THE NEW LINE SENTINEL. C WHEN NEXTC EXCEEDS LENMSG, THERE IS NO MORE TO PRINT. C WE LOOP BACK TO LABEL 50 UNTIL ALL PIECES HAVE BEEN PRINTED. C C WE LOOK FOR THE NEXT OCCURRENCE OF THE NEW LINE SENTINEL. THE C INDEX INTRINSIC FUNCTION RETURNS ZERO IF THERE IS NO OCCURRENCE C OR IF THE LENGTH OF THE FIRST ARGUMENT IS LESS THAN THE LENGTH C OF THE SECOND ARGUMENT. C C THERE ARE SEVERAL CASES WHICH SHOULD BE CHECKED FOR IN THE C FOLLOWING ORDER. WE ARE ATTEMPTING TO SET LPIECE TO THE NUMBER C OF CHARACTERS THAT SHOULD BE TAKEN FROM MESSG STARTING AT C POSITION NEXTC. C C LPIECE .EQ. 0 THE NEW LINE SENTINEL DOES NOT OCCUR IN THE C REMAINDER OF THE CHARACTER STRING. LPIECE C SHOULD BE SET TO LWRAP OR LENMSG+1-NEXTC, C WHICHEVER IS LESS. C C LPIECE .EQ. 1 THE NEW LINE SENTINEL STARTS AT MESSG(NEXTC: C NEXTC). LPIECE IS EFFECTIVELY ZERO, AND WE C PRINT NOTHING TO AVOID PRODUCING UNNECESSARY C BLANK LINES. THIS TAKES CARE OF THE SITUATION C WHERE THE LIBRARY ROUTINE HAS A MESSAGE OF C EXACTLY 72 CHARACTERS FOLLOWED BY A NEW LINE C SENTINEL FOLLOWED BY MORE CHARACTERS. NEXTC C SHOULD BE INCREMENTED BY 2. C C LPIECE .GT. LWRAP+1 REDUCE LPIECE TO LWRAP. C C ELSE THIS LAST CASE MEANS 2 .LE. LPIECE .LE. LWRAP+1 C RESET LPIECE = LPIECE-1. NOTE THAT THIS C PROPERLY HANDLES THE END CASE WHERE LPIECE .EQ. C LWRAP+1. THAT IS, THE SENTINEL FALLS EXACTLY C AT THE END OF A LINE. C NEXTC = 1 50 LPIECE = INDEX(MESSG(NEXTC:LENMSG), NEWLIN) IF (LPIECE .EQ. 0) THEN C C THERE WAS NO NEW LINE SENTINEL FOUND. C IDELTA = 0 LPIECE = MIN(LWRAP, LENMSG+1-NEXTC) IF (LPIECE .LT. LENMSG+1-NEXTC) THEN DO 52 I=LPIECE+1,2,-1 IF (MESSG(NEXTC+I-1:NEXTC+I-1) .EQ. ' ') THEN LPIECE = I-1 IDELTA = 1 GOTO 54 ENDIF 52 CONTINUE ENDIF 54 CBUFF(LPREF+1:LPREF+LPIECE) = MESSG(NEXTC:NEXTC+LPIECE-1) NEXTC = NEXTC + LPIECE + IDELTA ELSEIF (LPIECE .EQ. 1) THEN C C WE HAVE A NEW LINE SENTINEL AT MESSG(NEXTC:NEXTC+1). C DON'T PRINT A BLANK LINE. C NEXTC = NEXTC + 2 GO TO 50 ELSEIF (LPIECE .GT. LWRAP+1) THEN C C LPIECE SHOULD BE SET DOWN TO LWRAP. C IDELTA = 0 LPIECE = LWRAP DO 56 I=LPIECE+1,2,-1 IF (MESSG(NEXTC+I-1:NEXTC+I-1) .EQ. ' ') THEN LPIECE = I-1 IDELTA = 1 GOTO 58 ENDIF 56 CONTINUE 58 CBUFF(LPREF+1:LPREF+LPIECE) = MESSG(NEXTC:NEXTC+LPIECE-1) NEXTC = NEXTC + LPIECE + IDELTA ELSE C C IF WE ARRIVE HERE, IT MEANS 2 .LE. LPIECE .LE. LWRAP+1. C WE SHOULD DECREMENT LPIECE BY ONE. C LPIECE = LPIECE - 1 CBUFF(LPREF+1:LPREF+LPIECE) = MESSG(NEXTC:NEXTC+LPIECE-1) NEXTC = NEXTC + LPIECE + 2 ENDIF C C PRINT C DO 60 I=1,NUNIT WRITE(IU(I), '(A)') CBUFF(1:LPREF+LPIECE) 60 CONTINUE C IF (NEXTC .LE. LENMSG) GO TO 50 RETURN END *DECK XERSVE SUBROUTINE XERSVE (LIBRAR, SUBROU, MESSG, KFLAG, NERR, LEVEL, + ICOUNT) C***BEGIN PROLOGUE XERSVE C***SUBSIDIARY C***PURPOSE Record that an error has occurred. C***LIBRARY SLATEC (XERROR) C***CATEGORY R3 C***TYPE ALL (XERSVE-A) C***KEYWORDS ERROR, XERROR C***AUTHOR Jones, R. E., (SNLA) C***DESCRIPTION C C *Usage: C C INTEGER KFLAG, NERR, LEVEL, ICOUNT C CHARACTER * (len) LIBRAR, SUBROU, MESSG C C CALL XERSVE (LIBRAR, SUBROU, MESSG, KFLAG, NERR, LEVEL, ICOUNT) C C *Arguments: C C LIBRAR :IN is the library that the message is from. C SUBROU :IN is the subroutine that the message is from. C MESSG :IN is the message to be saved. C KFLAG :IN indicates the action to be performed. C when KFLAG > 0, the message in MESSG is saved. C when KFLAG=0 the tables will be dumped and C cleared. C when KFLAG < 0, the tables will be dumped and C not cleared. C NERR :IN is the error number. C LEVEL :IN is the error severity. C ICOUNT :OUT the number of times this message has been seen, C or zero if the table has overflowed and does not C contain this message specifically. When KFLAG=0, C ICOUNT will not be altered. C C *Description: C C Record that this error occurred and possibly dump and clear the C tables. C C***REFERENCES R. E. Jones and D. K. Kahaner, XERROR, the SLATEC C Error-handling Package, SAND82-0800, Sandia C Laboratories, 1982. C***ROUTINES CALLED I1MACH, XGETUA C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 800319 DATE WRITTEN C 861211 REVISION DATE from Version 3.2 C 891214 Prologue converted to Version 4.0 format. (BAB) C 900413 Routine modified to remove reference to KFLAG. (WRB) C 900510 Changed to add LIBRARY NAME and SUBROUTINE to calling C sequence, use IF-THEN-ELSE, make number of saved entries C easily changeable, changed routine name from XERSAV to C XERSVE. (RWC) C 910626 Added LIBTAB and SUBTAB to SAVE statement. (BKS) C 920501 Reformatted the REFERENCES section. (WRB) C***END PROLOGUE XERSVE PARAMETER (LENTAB=10) INTEGER LUN(5) CHARACTER*(*) LIBRAR, SUBROU, MESSG CHARACTER*8 LIBTAB(LENTAB), SUBTAB(LENTAB), LIB, SUB CHARACTER*20 MESTAB(LENTAB), MES DIMENSION NERTAB(LENTAB), LEVTAB(LENTAB), KOUNT(LENTAB) SAVE LIBTAB, SUBTAB, MESTAB, NERTAB, LEVTAB, KOUNT, KOUNTX, NMSG DATA KOUNTX/0/, NMSG/0/ C***FIRST EXECUTABLE STATEMENT XERSVE C IF (KFLAG.LE.0) THEN C C Dump the table. C IF (NMSG.EQ.0) RETURN C C Print to each unit. C CALL XGETUA (LUN, NUNIT) DO 20 KUNIT = 1,NUNIT IUNIT = LUN(KUNIT) IF (IUNIT.EQ.0) IUNIT = I1MACH(4) C C Print the table header. C WRITE (IUNIT,9000) C C Print body of table. C DO 10 I = 1,NMSG WRITE (IUNIT,9010) LIBTAB(I), SUBTAB(I), MESTAB(I), * NERTAB(I),LEVTAB(I),KOUNT(I) 10 CONTINUE C C Print number of other errors. C IF (KOUNTX.NE.0) WRITE (IUNIT,9020) KOUNTX WRITE (IUNIT,9030) 20 CONTINUE C C Clear the error tables. C IF (KFLAG.EQ.0) THEN NMSG = 0 KOUNTX = 0 ENDIF ELSE C C PROCESS A MESSAGE... C SEARCH FOR THIS MESSG, OR ELSE AN EMPTY SLOT FOR THIS MESSG, C OR ELSE DETERMINE THAT THE ERROR TABLE IS FULL. C LIB = LIBRAR SUB = SUBROU MES = MESSG DO 30 I = 1,NMSG IF (LIB.EQ.LIBTAB(I) .AND. SUB.EQ.SUBTAB(I) .AND. * MES.EQ.MESTAB(I) .AND. NERR.EQ.NERTAB(I) .AND. * LEVEL.EQ.LEVTAB(I)) THEN KOUNT(I) = KOUNT(I) + 1 ICOUNT = KOUNT(I) RETURN ENDIF 30 CONTINUE C IF (NMSG.LT.LENTAB) THEN C C Empty slot found for new message. C NMSG = NMSG + 1 LIBTAB(I) = LIB SUBTAB(I) = SUB MESTAB(I) = MES NERTAB(I) = NERR LEVTAB(I) = LEVEL KOUNT (I) = 1 ICOUNT = 1 ELSE C C Table is full. C KOUNTX = KOUNTX+1 ICOUNT = 0 ENDIF ENDIF RETURN C C Formats. C 9000 FORMAT ('0 ERROR MESSAGE SUMMARY' / + ' LIBRARY SUBROUTINE MESSAGE START NERR', + ' LEVEL COUNT') 9010 FORMAT (1X,A,3X,A,3X,A,3I10) 9020 FORMAT ('0OTHER ERRORS NOT INDIVIDUALLY TABULATED = ', I10) 9030 FORMAT (1X) END *DECK XGETUA SUBROUTINE XGETUA (IUNITA, N) C***BEGIN PROLOGUE XGETUA C***PURPOSE Return unit number(s) to which error messages are being C sent. C***LIBRARY SLATEC (XERROR) C***CATEGORY R3C C***TYPE ALL (XGETUA-A) C***KEYWORDS ERROR, XERROR C***AUTHOR Jones, R. E., (SNLA) C***DESCRIPTION C C Abstract C XGETUA may be called to determine the unit number or numbers C to which error messages are being sent. C These unit numbers may have been set by a call to XSETUN, C or a call to XSETUA, or may be a default value. C C Description of Parameters C --Output-- C IUNIT - an array of one to five unit numbers, depending C on the value of N. A value of zero refers to the C default unit, as defined by the I1MACH machine C constant routine. Only IUNIT(1),...,IUNIT(N) are C defined by XGETUA. The values of IUNIT(N+1),..., C IUNIT(5) are not defined (for N .LT. 5) or altered C in any way by XGETUA. C N - the number of units to which copies of the C error messages are being sent. N will be in the C range from 1 to 5. C C***REFERENCES R. E. Jones and D. K. Kahaner, XERROR, the SLATEC C Error-handling Package, SAND82-0800, Sandia C Laboratories, 1982. C***ROUTINES CALLED J4SAVE C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 790801 DATE WRITTEN C 861211 REVISION DATE from Version 3.2 C 891214 Prologue converted to Version 4.0 format. (BAB) C 920501 Reformatted the REFERENCES section. (WRB) C***END PROLOGUE XGETUA DIMENSION IUNITA(5) C***FIRST EXECUTABLE STATEMENT XGETUA N = J4SAVE(5,0,.FALSE.) DO 30 I=1,N INDEX = I+4 IF (I.EQ.1) INDEX = 3 IUNITA(I) = J4SAVE(INDEX,0,.FALSE.) 30 CONTINUE RETURN END