CMake Fortran Issues
Introduction to this wikipage
CMake has a number of Fortran issues that have been discussed many different times on list and duplicated a fair number of times in the bug tracker as well.
Maik Beckmann is trying to make sense of all the confusion by collecting information on all Fortran issues at http://www.cmake.org/Bug/view.php?id=5809
Please join the work there by
- Contributing patches.
- Testing the patches that already exist there.
- Reporting things that don't work.
- Sending simplified examples of things which don't work.
- Sharing your expert knowledge of CMake.
Introduction to the problem
Hello CMake developers,
I pushed myself during the last weekends to get more familiar with CMakes codebase. Not for fun only ;), but make me smart enough to sketch an approach for handling fortrans module dependencies.
I will try to write down what I'm thinking about
To give you (and me) some orientation here are the steps which are done by cmake so far and what I'm going to plan.
CMakes atom of dependency is a sourcefile. It knows the language of the sourcefile and handles it by the related class
cmDepends**
When CMake processes foo/.c/.cxx/.java/.f/.f90 it doesn't know anything about the CONTENT! of any other sourcefile. This is ok for include dependencies, since the included file is almost somewhere at the disk.
Anyway, this is not sufficient for fortran. If a fortran source foo.f90 contains something like
module bar
...
end module
the compiler will generate a file called foo.mod. A .mod file can be considered as a __dynamically generated header file__. Every fortran source can potentially create a .mod file! So if cmake processes a fortran sourcefile which needs bar.mod it know that foo.f90 provides this module.
Abstract solution
The Plan is to scan all fortran source in the sourcetree before the per file dependency generation is done. The extracted information are serialized. When cmake processes a fortran source it know if a required module is provided by
- a source of the current target - a source of another target in the source tree - if none of both it must be part of an prebuild library
Concrete solution
Current CMake does: After cmake ran once of the source tree (i.e cmake -G"Unix Makefiles" /path/to/sourcetree)
1. check build system ... k : $(MAKE) -f ../foo.dir/build.make ../foo.dir/depend k+1: $(MAKE) -f ../foo.dir/build.make ../foo.dir/requires k+2: $(MAKE) -f ../foo.dir/build.make ../foo.dir/build ... l : $(MAKE) -f ../bar.dir/build.make ../bar.dir/depend l+1: $(MAKE) -f ../bar.dir/build.make ../bar.dir/requires l+1: $(MAKE) -f ../bar.dir/build.make ../bar.dir/build
It would be cool if it will do:
1 : check build system ... # maybe only for targets which have fortran sources j : $(MAKE) -f ../foo.dir/build.make ../foo.dir/fortran_module_scan j+1: $(MAKE) -f ../bar.dir/build.make ../bar.dir/fortran_module_scan ... k : $(MAKE) -f ../foo.dir/build.make ../foo.dir/depend k+1: $(MAKE) -f ../foo.dir/build.make ../foo.dir/build ... l : $(MAKE) -f ../bar.dir/build.make ../bar.dir/depend l+1: $(MAKE) -f ../bar.dir/build.make ../bar.dir/build
OUTDATED: Concepts expressed using Makefiles
This section is intended to discuss the Makefile rules which CMake has to generate. All examples are fully working. You can download them as tarball examples_using_Makefiles.tar.gz at http://www.cmake.org/Bug/view.php?id=5809. To build an example, change into the corresponding build directory and run the
- $ make
command. After this initial build, check dependencies by touching source files of your choice and running the
- $ make
command again.
Note: For examples which show how an external library providing modules is handled, the external library which resides at directory extLib for each of these examples has to be built and installed by changing into the corresponding extLib directory and running the
- $ make install && make clean
command.
A simple program
A f9x program which is build by compiling in linking two source files a.f90 and main.f90. The tree structure is:
- example_simpleProgram
- build
- Makefile
- prog.dir
- build.make
- main.f90
- a.f90
- build
a.f90:
SUBROUTINE printHello WRITE(*,*) "Hello f9x world" END SUBROUTINE
main.f90:
PROGRAM hello CALL printHello END PROGRAM
Makefile:
all: prog.dir/all prog.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all clean: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/clean
build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o: ../a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../a.f90 prog.dir/main.o: ../main.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../main.f90 prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog
The rules generated by the current CMake covers all dependencies which can occur as long as no modules are used.
You can download this example as tarball example_simpleProgram.tar.gz at http://www.cmake.org/Bug/view.php?id=5809
A simple program with module
The same as before, but now a.f90 provides a module which main.f90 uses. The tree structure is:
- example_simpleProgram_withModule
- build
- Makefile
- prog.dir
- build.make
- main.f90
- a.f90
- build
a.f90:
MODULE localMod ! CONTAINS SUBROUTINE printHello WRITE(*,*) "Hello f9x world" END SUBROUTINE END MODULE
main.f90:
PROGRAM hello USE localMod CALL printHello END PROGRAM
Rules like those generated by current CMake
Makefile:
all: prog.dir/all prog.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/requires $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all clean: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/clean
build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o: ../a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../a.f90 -M prog.dir prog.dir/localmod.mod: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o: ../main.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../main.f90 -I prog.dir prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/localmod.mod prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog localmod.mod.proxy: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o.requires: localmod.mod.proxy prog.dir/requires: prog.dir/main.o.requires
After you build prog using this set of Makefiles do (you're at the build directory)
$ touch ../a.f90
and enter
$ make
You'll see that a.f90 is recompiled and prog.dir/prog is linked again. But main.f90 has to recompiled too, since a module dependency is a compile time dependency like an include.
Rules like those that should be generated by CMake
Makefile:
all: prog.dir/all prog.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all clean: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/clean
build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o: ../a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../a.f90 -M prog.dir prog.dir/localmod.mod: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o: ../main.f90 prog.dir/localmod.mod gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../main.f90 -I prog.dir prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/localmod.mod prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog
After you build prog using this set of Makefiles do (you're at the build directory)
$ touch ../a.f90
and enter
$ make
You'll see that a.f90 is recompiled, like the current CMake does, but main.f90 is recompiled too, as it should be.
Executable depending on external lib
This example build a executable target which
- provides a module
- uses the provided module
- uses a module of a external library
structure:
- example_dependingOn_externalLib
- extLib
- include
- externalmod.mod
- lib
- libmyextlib.a
- include
- myproject
- build
- Makefile
- prog.dir
- build.make
- a.f90
- main.f90
- build
- extLib
Contents of myproject...
a.f90:
MODULE localMod ! CONTAINS SUBROUTINE printLocalModGreeting WRITE(*,*) "Greetings from Module localMod" END SUBROUTINE END MODULE
main.f90:
PROGRAM hello USE localMod USE externalMod CALL printLocalModGreeting CALL printExtModGreeting END PROGRAM
Rules like those generated by current CMake
Makefile:
all: prog.dir/all prog.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/requires $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all clean: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/clean
build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: ../../extLib/lib/libmyextlib.a prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o ../../extLib/lib/libmyextlib.a prog.dir/a.o: ../a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../a.f90 -M prog.dir prog.dir/main.o: ../main.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../main.f90 -I prog.dir -I ../../extLib/include prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/localmod.mod prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog externalmod.mod.proxy: # dummy localmod.mod.proxy: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o.requires: localmod.mod.proxy externalmod.mod.proxy prog.dir/requires: prog.dir/main.o.requires
This rules got the same problem as the example above (simple Program with module) plus it doesn't recognizes if the external modules got updated.
Rules like those that should be generated by CMake
Makefile:
all: prog.dir/all prog.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all clean: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/clean
build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: ../../extLib/lib/libmyextlib.a prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o ../../extLib/lib/libmyextlib.a prog.dir/a.o: ../a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../a.f90 -M prog.dir prog.dir/localmod.mod: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o: ../main.f90 prog.dir/localmod.mod gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../main.f90 -I prog.dir -I ../../extLib/include prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/localmod.mod prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog
These rules build everything in proper order and consider the timestamp of externalmod.mod.
Executable target depending on lib target
structure:
- example_depending_libTarget
- build
- Makefile
- lib.dir
- build.make
- libmodx.mod.stamp
- libmody.mod.stamp
- prog.dir
- build.make
- lib
- a.f90
- b.f90
- prog
- a.f90
- main.f90
- build
contents...
lib/a.f90:
MODULE libModX USE libModY END MODULE
lib/b.f90:
MODULE libModY END MODULE
prog/a.f90:
MODULE localMod END MODULE
prog/main.f90:
PROGRAM hello USE localMod USE libModX WRITE(*,*) 'Hello, F90 world.' END PROGRAM
Rules like those generated by current CMake
build/Makefile:
all: lib.dir/all prog.dir/all lib.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f lib.dir/build.make lib.dir/requires $(MAKE) -f lib.dir/build.make lib.dir/all prog.dir/all: lib.dir/all $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/requires $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all clean: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/clean $(MAKE) -f lib.dir/build.make lib.dir/clean
build/lib.dir/build.make:
lib.dir/all: lib.dir/mylib lib.dir/mylib: lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/libmylib.a: lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o ar rc lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o ranlib lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/a.o: ../lib/a.f90 gfortran -o lib.dir/a.o -c ../lib/a.f90 -M lib.dir lib.dir/b.o: ../lib/b.f90 gfortran -o lib.dir/b.o -c ../lib/b.f90 -M lib.dir libmody.mod.proxy: lib.dir/b.o lib.dir/a.o.requires: libmody.mod.proxy lib.dir/requires: lib.dir/a.o.requires lib.dir/clean: rm lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o lib.dir/libmylib.a rm lib.dir/libmodx.mod lib.dir/libmody.mod
build/prog.dir/build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o lib.dir/libmylib.a prog.dir/a.o: ../prog/a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../prog/a.f90 -M prog.dir prog.dir/localmod.mod: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o: ../prog/main.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../prog/main.f90 -I lib.dir -I prog.dir localmod.mod.proxy: prog.dir/a.o libmodx.mod.proxy: # dummy prog.dir/main.o.requires: localmod.mod.proxy libmodx.mod.proxy prog.dir/requires: prog.dir/main.o.requires prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/localmod.mod
Again everything is build, but isn't updated proper.
Rules like those that should be generated by CMake
build/Makefile:
all: lib.dir/all prog.dir/all lib.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f lib.dir/build.make lib.dir/all prog.dir/all: lib.dir/all $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all
build/lib.dir/build.make:
lib.dir/all: lib.dir/mylib lib.dir/mylib: lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/libmylib.a: lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o ar rc lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o ranlib lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/a.o: ../lib/a.f90 lib.dir/libmody.mod gfortran -o lib.dir/a.o -c ../lib/a.f90 -M lib.dir touch lib.dir/libmodx.mod.stamp lib.dir/b.o: ../lib/b.f90 gfortran -o lib.dir/b.o -c ../lib/b.f90 -M lib.dir touch lib.dir/libmody.mod.stamp lib.dir/libmodx.mod: lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/libmody.mod: lib.dir/b.o lib.dir/clean: rm lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o lib.dir/libmylib.a rm lib.dir/libmodx.mod lib.dir/libmody.mod
build/prog.dir/build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o lib.dir/libmylib.a prog.dir/a.o: ../prog/a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../prog/a.f90 -M prog.dir prog.dir/localmod.mod: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o: lib.dir/libmodx.mod.stamp prog.dir/main.o: ../prog/main.f90 prog.dir/localmod.mod gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../prog/main.f90 -I lib.dir -I prog.dir prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/localmod.mod
Finally: Executable target depending on lib target and external lib
structure:
- example_final
- extLib
- include
- externalmod.mod
- lib
- libmyextlib.a
- include
- myproject
- build
- Makefile
- lib.dir
- build.make
- libmodx.mod.stamp
- libmody.mod.stamp
- prog.dir
- build.make
- lib
- a.f90
- b.f90
- prog
- a.f90
- main.f90
- build
- extLib
Contents...
lib/a.f90:
MODULE libModX USE libModY END MODULE
lib/b.f90:
MODULE libModY END MODULE
prog/a.f90:
MODULE localMod END MODULE
prog/b.f90:
PROGRAM hello USE localMod USE libModX USE externalMod WRITE(*,*) 'Hello, F90 world.' CALL printExtModGreeting END PROGRAM
Rules like those generated by current CMake
build/Makefile:
all: lib.dir/all prog.dir/all lib.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f lib.dir/build.make lib.dir/requires $(MAKE) -f lib.dir/build.make lib.dir/all prog.dir/all: lib.dir/all $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/requires $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all clean: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/clean $(MAKE) -f lib.dir/build.make lib.dir/clean
build/lib.dir/build.make:
lib.dir/all: lib.dir/mylib lib.dir/mylib: lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/libmylib.a: lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o ar rc lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o ranlib lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/a.o: ../lib/a.f90 gfortran -o lib.dir/a.o -c ../lib/a.f90 -M lib.dir lib.dir/b.o: ../lib/b.f90 gfortran -o lib.dir/b.o -c ../lib/b.f90 -M lib.dir libmody.mod.proxy: lib.dir/b.o lib.dir/b.o.requires: libmody.mod.proxy lib.dir/requires: lib.dir/b.o.requires lib.dir/clean: rm lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o lib.dir/libmylib.a rm lib.dir/libmodx.mod lib.dir/libmody.mod
build/prog.dir/build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: ../../extLib/lib/libmyextlib.a prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o ../../extLib/lib/libmyextlib.a gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o lib.dir/libmylib.a ../../extLib/lib/libmyextlib.a prog.dir/a.o: ../prog/a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../prog/a.f90 -M prog.dir prog.dir/main.o: prog.dir/main.o: ../prog/main.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../prog/main.f90 -I lib.dir -I prog.dir -I ../../extLib/include localmod.mod.proxy: prog.dir/a.o libmodx.mod.proxy: # dummy externalmod.mod.proxy: # dummy prog.dir/main.o.requires: localmod.mod.proxy libmodx.mod.proxy externalmod.mod.proxy prog.dir/requires: prog.dir/main.o.requires prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/localmod.mod
Rules like those that should be generated by CMake
build/Makefile:
all: lib.dir/all prog.dir/all lib.dir/all: $(MAKE) -f lib.dir/build.make lib.dir/all prog.dir/all: lib.dir/all $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/all clean: $(MAKE) -f prog.dir/build.make prog.dir/clean $(MAKE) -f lib.dir/build.make lib.dir/clean
build/lib.dir/build.make:
lib.dir/all: lib.dir/mylib lib.dir/mylib: lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/libmylib.a: lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o ar rc lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o ranlib lib.dir/libmylib.a lib.dir/a.o: ../lib/a.f90 lib.dir/libmody.mod gfortran -o lib.dir/a.o -c ../lib/a.f90 -M lib.dir touch lib.dir/libmodx.mod.stamp lib.dir/b.o: ../lib/b.f90 gfortran -o lib.dir/b.o -c ../lib/b.f90 -M lib.dir touch lib.dir/libmody.mod.stamp lib.dir/libmodx.mod: lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/libmody.mod: lib.dir/b.o lib.dir/clean: rm lib.dir/a.o lib.dir/b.o lib.dir/libmylib.a rm lib.dir/libmodx.mod lib.dir/libmody.mod
build/prog.dir/build.make:
prog.dir/all: prog.dir/prog prog.dir/prog: ../../extLib/lib/libmyextlib.a prog.dir/prog: prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o ../../extLib/lib/libmyextlib.a gfortran -o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/a.o lib.dir/libmylib.a ../../extLib/lib/libmyextlib.a prog.dir/a.o: ../prog/a.f90 gfortran -o prog.dir/a.o -c ../prog/a.f90 -M prog.dir prog.dir/localmod.mod: prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o: lib.dir/libmodx.mod.stamp prog.dir/main.o: ../../extLib/include/externalmod.mod prog.dir/main.o: ../prog/main.f90 prog.dir/localmod.mod gfortran -o prog.dir/main.o -c ../prog/main.f90 -I lib.dir -I prog.dir -I ../../extLib/include prog.dir/clean: rm prog.dir/a.o prog.dir/main.o prog.dir/prog prog.dir/localmod.mod
Conclusion
What keeps CMake from doing it like could be done shown above?
For each target CMake parses the source files and writes the dependencies one by one. This is ok for includes. But doing it this way CMake cannot determine if a required module of source file a.f90 is provided by a source file b.f90 of the same target or not. This is IMHO the reason why the CMake developer droped a direct dependency of the source file to a required module. As shown in the rules like they are generated by current CMake sections an extra step called required was introduced. This works out if one want just to build, but isn't enough for developer needs (because recompilation isn't done as expected).
What kind of changes have to be done to make it happen?
- Before the actually dependency tracking starts, CMake has to parse all fortran sources and to create a corresponding file i.e. mymodule.mod.stamp for mymodule. This can be done source by source. Now CMake is able to search the build tree for a module.
- Rather than doing it one by one, all sources of a target have to be parsed before starting to write dependencies. This way CMake knows if a required modules is provided by itself or not.
- In case a required module mymod isn't provided by the same target
- search the build-tree for mymod.mod.stamp
- if not found search it at the include paths
Module dependency tracking superseeds include dependency tracking but
- Note: IMHO the code responsible for C/C++/Java dependency generation shouldn't be touched, since speed is an imporant advantage of CMake for developers!
Notes from Brad
The "provides", "requires", and "proxy" stuff is necessary for correct minimal rebuilds even within a single target.
- Maik: AFAI understand its necessary since there are no direct dependencies of target sources to the mod files, right?
However it has not been correctly implemented in the latest Makefile generator.
- Maik: I know cmake since 2.4.2, but AFAIK former versions generated one big Makefile, right?
The idea is that after recompiling a source file that provides a module, there should be a copy-if-different step to update the mod.stamp file.
- Maik: And this stamp is useless since the last Makefile generator was introduced.
- Brad: Like I said it is not correctly implemented. The .o files need to depend on the .stamp files.
Then there must be a recursive call to make for each source that requires a module to evaluate the file-level dependencies with the updated stamp file.
I do not think we can search the whole build tree for mod.stamp files. The trees can be way to big and that would take forever.
- Maik: ...(1)
- Brad: There will have to be some kind of persistent scanning results for (1) to work. We cannot scan the whole tree every time CMake runs.
Also there could be leftover stamp files from modules that were once available and are not anymore or were moved.
- Maik: good point! I didn't consider this.
Also, creating inter-target dependencies cannot be done during the dependency scanning stage, so we cannot create such dependencies based on information implicit in the source files. However, if one target is importing the modules from another target, it must link to that target in order to get the implementation. That linking should create the explicit inter-target dependency that is necessary.
- Maik: Yes, that is I have in mind. We only have to search for implicit dependencies where explicit ones are given by the user. I think this solves your concern (1) too. Additionally we only have to search in fortran projects.
This just leaves creating the dependencies on the mod.stamp files for modules provided in other targets. I'm still thinking about this one.
Maik
I will delete my notes on your notes ;) as soon as I'm sure I didn't get you wrong.
The stamp file deletion problem is indeed tricky. I think the extra step which creates them should look for existing to delete them before writing new. The question is how can CMake determine if a fortran-target source got rid of a module to trigger this extra step. I doubt this is possible, so user interaction is required (rerun-CMake).
BTW: CMake only has to create a stamp file if the source file which contains the corresponding module belongs to a lib-target.
Brad
I've updated http://www.cmake.org/Bug/view.php?id=5809 with a note at "10-12-07 09:53". A partial fix for file-level dependencies with module timestamps has been implemented. Rebuilding should now work correctly for all object files whose required modules are provided in the same directory (even if in different targets).