2 supplied modulefiles, Table 2-1: supplied modulefiles, Section 2.2.2 – HP XC System 2.x Software User Manual

Page 29

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of shared objects. If you have multiple compilers (perhaps with incompatible shared objects)
installed, it is probably wise to set

MPI_CC

(and others) explicitly to the commands made

available by the compiler’s modulefile.

The contents of the modulefiles in the

modulefiles_hptc

RPM use the vendor-intended

location of the installed software. In many cases, this is under the

/opt

directory, but in a few

cases (for example, the PGI compilers and TotalView) this is under the

/usr

directory.

If you install a software package other than the intended place, you must create or edit an
appropriate modulefile under the

/opt/modules/modulefiles

directory.

For the packages that install by default into the

/usr

directory (currently the PGI compilers and

TotalView), their corresponding modulefiles will try their vendor-intended location under the

/usr

directory. If they do not find that directory, the packages will also search under the

/opt

directory. Therefore, no changes to the modulefiles are needed if you want to install third-party
software consistently as the vendor intended or consistently under the

/opt

directory,

If the package is the stable product intended to be used by the site, editing an existing modulefile
is appropriate. While each modulefile has its unique characteristics, they all set some variables
describing the top-level directory, and editing to adjust the string should be sufficient. You may
need to repeat the adjustment if you update the

modulefiles_hptc

RPM or otherwise

rebuild your system.

If the package is a variant, for example, a beta version of a compiler, first copy the default
modulefile to a well-named copy, then edit the copy. You need root access to modify the
modulefiles, which is generally needed to install packages in either the

/opt

or

/usr

directories.

If a user downloads a package into a private directory, the user can create a private modulefiles
directory. The user can then copy the corresponding default modulefile from under the

/opt/modules/modulefiles

directory into a private modulefiles directory, edit the file,

and then register the directory with the

module use

command.

2.2.2 Supplied Modulefiles

The HP XC system provides the Modules Package (not to be confused with Linux kernel
modules) to configure and modify the user environment. The Modules Package enables
dynamic modification of a user’s environment by means of modulefiles.

A modulefile contains information that alters or sets shell environment variables, such as

PATH

and

MANPATH

. Modulefiles provide a convenient means for users to tailor their working

environment. Modulefiles can be loaded automatically when the user logs in to the system or
any time a user needs to alter the environment.

The HP XC System Software provides a number of modulefiles. In addition, users can also
create and load their own modulefiles to modify their environment further.

The HP XC system supplies the modulefiles listed in Table 2-1.

Table 2-1: Supplied Modulefiles

Modulefile

Sets the HP XC User Environment:

icc/8.0

To use Intel C/C++ Version 8.0 compilers.

icc/8.1

To use Intel C/C++ Version 8.1 compilers.

ifort/8.0

To use Intel Fortran Version 8.0 compilers.

ifort/8.1

To use Intel Fortran Version 8.1 compilers.

intel/7.1

For Intel Version 7.1 compilers.

intel/8.0

For Intel Version 8.0 compilers.

Using the System

2-3

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