Note

Compiling GCHP and creating a run directory are independent steps, and their order doesn’t matter. A small exception is the RUNDIR build option, which controls the behaviour of make install; however, this setting can be reconfigured at any time (e.g., after compiling and creating a run directory).

Here in the User Guide, we describe compiling GCHP before we describe creating a run directory. This is so that conceptually the instructions have a linear flow. The Quickstart Guide uses the opposite ordering to minimize the number of commands.

Note

Another resource for GCHP build instructions is our YouTube tutorial.

Compiling GCHP

There are two steps to building GCHP. The first is configuring your build, which is done with cmake; the second step is compiling, which is done with make.

In the first step (build configuration), cmake finds GCHP’s software dependencies on your system, and you can set build options like enabling/disabling components, setting paths to run directories, picking between debug or speed-optimizing compiler flags, etc. The second step (running make) compiles GCHP according your build configuration.

Important

These instructions assume you have loaded a computing environment that satisfies GCHP’s software requirements You can find instructions for building GCHP’s dependencies yourself in the Spack instructions.

Create a build directory

A build directory is the working directory for a “build”. Conceptually, a “build” is a case/instance of you compiling GCHP. A build directory stores configuration files and intermediate files related to the build. These files and generated and used by CMake, Make, and compilers. You can think a build directory like the blueprints for a construction project.

Create a new directory and initialize it as a build directory by running CMake. When you initialize a build directory, the path to the source code is a required argument:

gcuser:~$ cd ~/Code.GCHP
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP$ mkdir build              # create a new directory
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP$ cd build
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ cmake ~/Code.GCHP  # initialize the current dir as a build dir
-- The Fortran compiler identification is GNU 9.2.1
-- The CXX compiler identification is GNU 9.2.1
-- The C compiler identification is GNU 9.2.1
-- Check for working Fortran compiler: /usr/bin/f95
-- Check for working Fortran compiler: /usr/bin/f95  -- works
...
-- Configuring done
-- Generating done
-- Build files have been written to: /src/build
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$

If your cmake output is similar to the snippet above, and it says configuring & generating done, then your configuration was successful and you can move on to compiling or modifying build settings. If you got an error, don’t worry, that just means the automatic configuration failed. To fix the error you might need to tweak settings with more cmake commands, or you might need to modify your environment and run cmake again to retry the automatic configuration.

If you want to restart configuring your build from scratch, delete your build directory. Note that the name and location of your build directory doesn’t matter, but a good name is build/, and a good place for it is the top-level of your source code.

Resolving initialization errors

If your last step was successful, skip this section.

Even if you got a cmake error, your build directory was initialized. This means from now on, you can check if the configuration is fixed by running

gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ cmake .    # "." because the cwd is the build dir

To resolve your errors, you might need to modify your environment (e.g., load different software modules), or give CMake a hint about where some software is installed. Once you identify the problem and make the appropriate update, run cmake . to see if the error is fixed.

To start troubleshooting, read the cmake output in full. It is human-readable, and includes important information about how the build was set up on your system, and specifically what error is preventing a successful configuration (e.g., a dependency that wasn’t found, or a compiler that is broken). To begin troubleshooting you should check that:

  • check that the compilers are what you expect (e.g., GNU 9.2, Intel 19.1, etc.)

  • check that dependencies like MPI, HDF5, NetCDF, and ESMF were found

  • check for obvious errors/incompatibilities in the paths to “Found” dependencies

Note

F2PY and ImageMagick are not required. You can safely ignore warnings about them not being found.

Most errors are caused by one or more of the following issues:

  • The wrong compilers were chosen. Fix this by explicitly setting the compilers.

  • The compiler’s version is too old. Fix this by using newer compilers.

  • A software dependency is missing. Fix this by loading the appropriate software. Some hints:

    • If HDF5 is missing, does h5cc -show or h5pcc -show work?

    • If NetCDF is missing, do nc-config --all and nf-config --all work?

    • If MPI is missing, does mpiexec --help work?

  • A software dependency is loaded but it wasn’t found automatically. Fix this by pointing CMake to the missing software/files with cmake . -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/path/to/missing/files.

    • If ESMF is missing, point CMake to your ESMF install with -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH

  • Software modules that are not compatible. Fix this by loading compatible modules/dependencies/compilers. Some hints:

    • This often shows as an error message saying a compiler is “broken” or “doesn’t work”

    • E.g. incompatibility #1: you’re using GNU compilers but HDF5 is built for Intel compilers

    • E.g. incompatibility #2: ESMF was compiled for a different compiler, MPI, or HDF5

If you are stumped, don’t hesitate to open an issue on GitHub. Your system administrators might also be able to help. Be sure to include CMakeCache.txt from your build directory, as it contains useful information for troubleshooting.

Note

If you get a CMake error saying “Could not find XXXX” (where XXXX is a dependency like ESMF, NetCDF, HDF5, etc.), the problem is that CMake can’t automatically find where that library is installed. You can add custom paths to CMake’s default search list by setting the CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH variable.

For example, if you got an error saying “Could not find ESMF”, and ESMF is installed to /software/ESMF, you would do

gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ cmake . -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/software/ESMF
...
-- Found ESMF: /software/ESMF/include (found version "8.1.0")
...
-- Configuring done
-- Generating done
-- Build files have been written to: /src/build
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$

See the next section for details on setting variables like CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH.

Note

You can explicitly specify compilers by setting the CC, CXX, and FC environment variables. If the auto-selected compilers are the wrong ones, create a brand new build directory, and set these variables before you initialize it. E.g.:

gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ cd ..
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP$ rm -rf build   # build dir initialized with wrong compilers
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP$ mkdir build    # make a new build directory
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP$ cd build
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ export CC=icc      # select "icc" as C compiler
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ export CXX=icpc    # select "icpc" as C++ compiler
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ export FC=icc      # select "ifort" as Fortran compiler
gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ cmake ~/Code.GCHP  # initialize new build dir
-- The Fortran compiler identification is Intel 19.1.0.20191121
-- The CXX compiler identification is Intel 19.1.0.20191121
-- The C compiler identification is Intel 19.1.0.20191121
...

Configure your build

Build settings are controlled by cmake commands like:

$ cmake . -D<NAME>="<VALUE>"

where <NAME> is the name of the setting, and <VALUE> is the value you are assigning it. These settings are persistent and saved in your build directory. You can set multiple variables in the same command, and you can run cmake as many times as needed to configure your desired settings.

Note

The . argument is important. It is the path to your build directory which is . here.

No build settings are required. You can find the complete list of GCHP’s build settings here. The most common setting is RUNDIR, which lets you specify one or more run directories to install GCHP to. Here, “install” refers to copying the compiled executable, and some supplemental files with build settings, to your run directory/directories.

Note

You can update build settings after you compile GCHP. Simply rerun make and (optionally) make install, and the build system will automatically figure out what needs to be recompiled.

Since there are no required build settings, so here, we will stick with the default settings.

You should notice that when you run cmake it ends with:

...
-- Configuring done
-- Generating done
-- Build files have been written to: /src/build

This tells you that the configuration was successful, and that you are ready to compile.

Compile GCHP

You compile GCHP with:

gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ make -j   # -j enables compiling in parallel

Note

You can add VERBOSE=1 to see all the compiler commands.

Note

If you run out of memory while compiling, restrict the number of processes that can run concurrently (e.g., use -j20 to restrict to 20 processes)

Compiling GCHP creates ./bin/gchp (the GCHP executable). You can copy this executable to your run directory manually, or if you set the RUNDIR build option, you can do

gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ make install  # Requires that RUNDIR build option is set

to copy the executable (and supplemental files) to your run directories.

Now you have compiled GCHP! You can move on to creating a run directory!


Recompiling

You need to recompile GCHP if you update a build setting or modify the source code. With CMake, you do not need to clean before recompiling. The build system automatically figures out which files need to be recompiled (it’s usually a small subset). This is known as incremental compiling.

To recompile GCHP, simply do

gcuser:~/Code.GCHP/build$ make -j   # -j enables compiling in parallel

and then optionally, make install.

Note

GNU compilers recompile GCHP faster than Intel compilers. This is because of how gfortran formats Fortran modules files (*.mod files). Therefore, if you want to be able to recompile quickly, consider using GNU compilers.


GCHP build options

These are persistent build setting that are set with cmake commands like

$ cmake . -D<NAME>="<VALUE>"

where <NAME> is the name of the build setting, and <VALUE> is the value you are assigning it. Below is the list of build settings for GCHP.

RUNDIR

Paths to run directories where make install installs GCHP. Multiple run directories can be specified by a semicolon separated list. A warning is issues if one of these directories does not look like a run directory.

These paths can be relative paths or absolute paths. Relative paths are interpreted as relative to your build directory.

CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE

The build type. Valid values are Release, Debug, and RelWithDebInfo. Set this to Debug if you want to build in debug mode.

CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH

Extra directories that CMake will search when it’s looking for dependencies. Directories in CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH have the highest precedence when CMake is searching for dependencies. Multiple directories can be specified with a semicolon-separated list.

GEOSChem_Fortran_FLAGS_<COMPILER_ID>

Compiler options for GEOS-Chem for all build types. Valid values for <COMPILER_ID> are GNU and Intel.

GEOSChem_Fortran_FLAGS_<BUILD_TYPE>_<COMPILER_ID>

Additional compiler options for GEOS-Chem for build type <BUILD_TYPE>.

HEMCO_Fortran_FLAGS_<COMPILER_ID>

Same as GEOSChem_Fortran_FLAGS_<COMPILER_ID>, but for HEMCO.

HEMCO_Fortran_FLAGS_<BUILD_TYPE>_<COMPILER_ID>

Same as GEOSChem_Fortran_FLAGS_<BUILD_TYPE>_<COMPILER_ID>, but for HEMCO.

RRTMG

Switch to enable/disable the RRTMG component.

OMP

Switch to enable/disable OpenMP multithreading. As is standard in CMake (see if documentation) valid values are ON, YES, Y, TRUE, or 1 (case-insensitive) and valid false values are their opposites.

INSTALLCOPY

Similar to RUNDIR, except the directories do not need to be run directories.