Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-90EE7236-20A4-4B7E-B942-0E00B0AAAE78
Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-90EE7236-20A4-4B7E-B942-0E00B0AAAE78
Fortran 95 Interface Conventions for BLAS Routines
The Fortran 95 interface to BLAS and Sparse BLAS Level 1 routines is implemented through wrappers that call respective FORTRAN 77 routines. This interface uses features of Fortran 95 such as assumed-shape arrays and optional arguments to provide simplified calls to BLAS and Sparse BLAS Level 1 routines with fewer parameters.
For BLAS, Intel® oneAPI Math Kernel Library offers two types of Fortran 95 interfaces:
- using mkl_blas.fi only through include 'mkl.fi' statement. Such interfaces allow you to make use of the original BLAS routines with all their arguments
- using blas.f90 that includes improved interfaces. This file is used to generate the module files blas95.mod and f95_precision.mod. See also section "Fortran 95 interfaces and wrappers to LAPACK and BLAS" of Intel® oneAPI Math Kernel Library Developer Guide for details. The module files are used to process the FORTRAN use clauses referencing the BLAS interface: use blas95 and use f95_precision.
The main conventions used in Fortran 95 interface are as follows:
The names of parameters used in Fortran 95 interface are typically the same as those used for the respective generic (FORTRAN 77) interface. In rare cases formal argument names may be different.
Some input parameters such as array dimensions are not required in Fortran 95 and are skipped from the calling sequence. Array dimensions are reconstructed from the user data that must exactly follow the required array shape.
A parameter can be skipped if its value is completely defined by the presence or absence of another parameter in the calling sequence, and the restored value is the only meaningful value for the skipped parameter.
Parameters specifying the increment values incx and incy are skipped. In most cases their values are equal to 1. In Fortran 95 an increment with different value can be directly established in the corresponding parameter.
Some generic parameters are declared as optional in Fortran 95 interface and may or may not be present in the calling sequence. A parameter can be declared optional if it satisfies one of the following conditions:
It can take only a few possible values. The default value of such parameter typically is the first value in the list; all exceptions to this rule are explicitly stated in the routine description.
It has a natural default value.
Optional parameters are given in square brackets in Fortran 95 call syntax.
The particular rules used for reconstructing the values of omitted optional parameters are specific for each routine and are detailed in the respective "Fortran 95 Notes" subsection at the end of routine specification section. If this subsection is omitted, the Fortran 95 interface for the given routine does not differ from the corresponding FORTRAN 77 interface.
Note that this interface is not implemented in the current version of Sparse BLAS Level 2 and Level 3 routines.