docs: packages config on separate page, demote bootstrapping (#41085)
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@ -99,547 +99,3 @@ while `py-numpy` still needs an older version:
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Up to Spack v0.20 ``duplicates:strategy:none`` was the default (and only) behavior. From Spack v0.21 the
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default behavior is ``duplicates:strategy:minimal``.
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.. _build-settings:
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================================
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Package Settings (packages.yaml)
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================================
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Spack allows you to customize how your software is built through the
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``packages.yaml`` file. Using it, you can make Spack prefer particular
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implementations of virtual dependencies (e.g., MPI or BLAS/LAPACK),
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or you can make it prefer to build with particular compilers. You can
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also tell Spack to use *external* software installations already
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present on your system.
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At a high level, the ``packages.yaml`` file is structured like this:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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package1:
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# settings for package1
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package2:
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# settings for package2
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# ...
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all:
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# settings that apply to all packages.
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So you can either set build preferences specifically for *one* package,
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or you can specify that certain settings should apply to *all* packages.
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The types of settings you can customize are described in detail below.
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Spack's build defaults are in the default
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``etc/spack/defaults/packages.yaml`` file. You can override them in
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``~/.spack/packages.yaml`` or ``etc/spack/packages.yaml``. For more
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details on how this works, see :ref:`configuration-scopes`.
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.. _sec-external-packages:
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-----------------
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External Packages
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-----------------
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Spack can be configured to use externally-installed
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packages rather than building its own packages. This may be desirable
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if machines ship with system packages, such as a customized MPI
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that should be used instead of Spack building its own MPI.
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External packages are configured through the ``packages.yaml`` file.
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Here's an example of an external configuration:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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openmpi:
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externals:
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- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3
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- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64+debug"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3-debug
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- spec: "openmpi@1.6.5%intel@10.1 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.6.5-intel
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This example lists three installations of OpenMPI, one built with GCC,
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one built with GCC and debug information, and another built with Intel.
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If Spack is asked to build a package that uses one of these MPIs as a
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dependency, it will use the pre-installed OpenMPI in
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the given directory. Note that the specified path is the top-level
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install prefix, not the ``bin`` subdirectory.
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``packages.yaml`` can also be used to specify modules to load instead
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of the installation prefixes. The following example says that module
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``CMake/3.7.2`` provides cmake version 3.7.2.
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.. code-block:: yaml
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cmake:
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externals:
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- spec: cmake@3.7.2
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modules:
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- CMake/3.7.2
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Each ``packages.yaml`` begins with a ``packages:`` attribute, followed
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by a list of package names. To specify externals, add an ``externals:``
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attribute under the package name, which lists externals.
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Each external should specify a ``spec:`` string that should be as
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well-defined as reasonably possible. If a
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package lacks a spec component, such as missing a compiler or
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package version, then Spack will guess the missing component based
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on its most-favored packages, and it may guess incorrectly.
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Each package version and compiler listed in an external should
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have entries in Spack's packages and compiler configuration, even
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though the package and compiler may not ever be built.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Prevent packages from being built from sources
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Adding an external spec in ``packages.yaml`` allows Spack to use an external location,
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but it does not prevent Spack from building packages from sources. In the above example,
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Spack might choose for many valid reasons to start building and linking with the
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latest version of OpenMPI rather than continue using the pre-installed OpenMPI versions.
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To prevent this, the ``packages.yaml`` configuration also allows packages
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to be flagged as non-buildable. The previous example could be modified to
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be:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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openmpi:
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externals:
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- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3
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- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64+debug"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3-debug
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- spec: "openmpi@1.6.5%intel@10.1 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.6.5-intel
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buildable: False
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The addition of the ``buildable`` flag tells Spack that it should never build
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its own version of OpenMPI from sources, and it will instead always rely on a pre-built
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OpenMPI.
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.. note::
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If ``concretizer:reuse`` is on (see :ref:`concretizer-options` for more information on that flag)
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pre-built specs include specs already available from a local store, an upstream store, a registered
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buildcache or specs marked as externals in ``packages.yaml``. If ``concretizer:reuse`` is off, only
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external specs in ``packages.yaml`` are included in the list of pre-built specs.
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If an external module is specified as not buildable, then Spack will load the
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external module into the build environment which can be used for linking.
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The ``buildable`` does not need to be paired with external packages.
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It could also be used alone to forbid packages that may be
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buggy or otherwise undesirable.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Non-buildable virtual packages
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Virtual packages in Spack can also be specified as not buildable, and
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external implementations can be provided. In the example above,
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OpenMPI is configured as not buildable, but Spack will often prefer
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other MPI implementations over the externally available OpenMPI. Spack
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can be configured with every MPI provider not buildable individually,
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but more conveniently:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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mpi:
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buildable: False
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openmpi:
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externals:
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- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3
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- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64+debug"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3-debug
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- spec: "openmpi@1.6.5%intel@10.1 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.6.5-intel
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Spack can then use any of the listed external implementations of MPI
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to satisfy a dependency, and will choose depending on the compiler and
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architecture.
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In cases where the concretizer is configured to reuse specs, and other ``mpi`` providers
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(available via stores or buildcaches) are not wanted, Spack can be configured to require
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specs matching only the available externals:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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mpi:
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buildable: False
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require:
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- one_of: [
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"openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64",
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"openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64+debug",
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"openmpi@1.6.5%intel@10.1 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
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]
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openmpi:
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externals:
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- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3
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- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64+debug"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3-debug
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- spec: "openmpi@1.6.5%intel@10.1 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
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prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.6.5-intel
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This configuration prevents any spec using MPI and originating from stores or buildcaches to be reused,
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unless it matches the requirements under ``packages:mpi:require``. For more information on requirements see
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:ref:`package-requirements`.
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.. _cmd-spack-external-find:
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Automatically Find External Packages
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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You can run the :ref:`spack external find <spack-external-find>` command
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to search for system-provided packages and add them to ``packages.yaml``.
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After running this command your ``packages.yaml`` may include new entries:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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cmake:
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externals:
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- spec: cmake@3.17.2
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prefix: /usr
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Generally this is useful for detecting a small set of commonly-used packages;
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for now this is generally limited to finding build-only dependencies.
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Specific limitations include:
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* Packages are not discoverable by default: For a package to be
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discoverable with ``spack external find``, it needs to add special
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logic. See :ref:`here <make-package-findable>` for more details.
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* The logic does not search through module files, it can only detect
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packages with executables defined in ``PATH``; you can help Spack locate
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externals which use module files by loading any associated modules for
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packages that you want Spack to know about before running
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``spack external find``.
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* Spack does not overwrite existing entries in the package configuration:
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If there is an external defined for a spec at any configuration scope,
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then Spack will not add a new external entry (``spack config blame packages``
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can help locate all external entries).
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.. _package-requirements:
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--------------------
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Package Requirements
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--------------------
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Spack can be configured to always use certain compilers, package
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versions, and variants during concretization through package
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requirements.
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Package requirements are useful when you find yourself repeatedly
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specifying the same constraints on the command line, and wish that
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Spack respects these constraints whether you mention them explicitly
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or not. Another use case is specifying constraints that should apply
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to all root specs in an environment, without having to repeat the
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constraint everywhere.
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Apart from that, requirements config is more flexible than constraints
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on the command line, because it can specify constraints on packages
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*when they occur* as a dependency. In contrast, on the command line it
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is not possible to specify constraints on dependencies while also keeping
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those dependencies optional.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Requirements syntax
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The package requirements configuration is specified in ``packages.yaml``,
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keyed by package name and expressed using the Spec syntax. In the simplest
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case you can specify attributes that you always want the package to have
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by providing a single spec string to ``require``:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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libfabric:
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require: "@1.13.2"
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In the above example, ``libfabric`` will always build with version 1.13.2. If you
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need to compose multiple configuration scopes ``require`` accepts a list of
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strings:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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libfabric:
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require:
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- "@1.13.2"
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- "%gcc"
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In this case ``libfabric`` will always build with version 1.13.2 **and** using GCC
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as a compiler.
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For more complex use cases, require accepts also a list of objects. These objects
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must have either a ``any_of`` or a ``one_of`` field, containing a list of spec strings,
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and they can optionally have a ``when`` and a ``message`` attribute:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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openmpi:
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require:
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- any_of: ["@4.1.5", "%gcc"]
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message: "in this example only 4.1.5 can build with other compilers"
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``any_of`` is a list of specs. One of those specs must be satisfied
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and it is also allowed for the concretized spec to match more than one.
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In the above example, that means you could build ``openmpi@4.1.5%gcc``,
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``openmpi@4.1.5%clang`` or ``openmpi@3.9%gcc``, but
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not ``openmpi@3.9%clang``.
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If a custom message is provided, and the requirement is not satisfiable,
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Spack will print the custom error message:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ spack spec openmpi@3.9%clang
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==> Error: in this example only 4.1.5 can build with other compilers
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We could express a similar requirement using the ``when`` attribute:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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openmpi:
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require:
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- any_of: ["%gcc"]
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when: "@:4.1.4"
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message: "in this example only 4.1.5 can build with other compilers"
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In the example above, if the version turns out to be 4.1.4 or less, we require the compiler to be GCC.
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For readability, Spack also allows a ``spec`` key accepting a string when there is only a single
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constraint:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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openmpi:
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require:
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- spec: "%gcc"
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when: "@:4.1.4"
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message: "in this example only 4.1.5 can build with other compilers"
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This code snippet and the one before it are semantically equivalent.
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Finally, instead of ``any_of`` you can use ``one_of`` which also takes a list of specs. The final
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concretized spec must match one and only one of them:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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mpich:
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require:
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- one_of: ["+cuda", "+rocm"]
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In the example above, that means you could build ``mpich+cuda`` or ``mpich+rocm`` but not ``mpich+cuda+rocm``.
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.. note::
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For ``any_of`` and ``one_of``, the order of specs indicates a
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preference: items that appear earlier in the list are preferred
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(note that these preferences can be ignored in favor of others).
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.. note::
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When using a conditional requirement, Spack is allowed to actively avoid the triggering
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condition (the ``when=...`` spec) if that leads to a concrete spec with better scores in
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the optimization criteria. To check the current optimization criteria and their
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priorities you can run ``spack solve zlib``.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Setting default requirements
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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You can also set default requirements for all packages under ``all``
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like this:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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all:
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require: '%clang'
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which means every spec will be required to use ``clang`` as a compiler.
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Note that in this case ``all`` represents a *default set of requirements* -
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if there are specific package requirements, then the default requirements
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under ``all`` are disregarded. For example, with a configuration like this:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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all:
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require: '%clang'
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cmake:
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require: '%gcc'
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Spack requires ``cmake`` to use ``gcc`` and all other nodes (including ``cmake``
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dependencies) to use ``clang``.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Setting requirements on virtual specs
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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A requirement on a virtual spec applies whenever that virtual is present in the DAG.
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This can be useful for fixing which virtual provider you want to use:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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mpi:
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require: 'mvapich2 %gcc'
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With the configuration above the only allowed ``mpi`` provider is ``mvapich2 %gcc``.
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Requirements on the virtual spec and on the specific provider are both applied, if
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present. For instance with a configuration like:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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mpi:
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require: 'mvapich2 %gcc'
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mvapich2:
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require: '~cuda'
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you will use ``mvapich2~cuda %gcc`` as an ``mpi`` provider.
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.. _package-preferences:
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-------------------
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Package Preferences
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-------------------
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In some cases package requirements can be too strong, and package
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preferences are the better option. Package preferences do not impose
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constraints on packages for particular versions or variants values,
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they rather only set defaults. The concretizer is free to change
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them if it must, due to other constraints, and also prefers reusing
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installed packages over building new ones that are a better match for
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preferences.
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Most package preferences (``compilers``, ``target`` and ``providers``)
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can only be set globally under the ``all`` section of ``packages.yaml``:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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all:
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compiler: [gcc@12.2.0, clang@12:, oneapi@2023:]
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target: [x86_64_v3]
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providers:
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mpi: [mvapich2, mpich, openmpi]
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These preferences override Spack's default and effectively reorder priorities
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when looking for the best compiler, target or virtual package provider. Each
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preference takes an ordered list of spec constraints, with earlier entries in
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the list being preferred over later entries.
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In the example above all packages prefer to be compiled with ``gcc@12.2.0``,
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to target the ``x86_64_v3`` microarchitecture and to use ``mvapich2`` if they
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depend on ``mpi``.
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The ``variants`` and ``version`` preferences can be set under
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package specific sections of the ``packages.yaml`` file:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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packages:
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opencv:
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variants: +debug
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gperftools:
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version: [2.2, 2.4, 2.3]
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In this case, the preference for ``opencv`` is to build with debug options, while
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``gperftools`` prefers version 2.2 over 2.4.
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Any preference can be overwritten on the command line if explicitly requested.
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Preferences cannot overcome explicit constraints, as they only set a preferred
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ordering among homogeneous attribute values. Going back to the example, if
|
||||
``gperftools@2.3:`` was requested, then Spack will install version 2.4
|
||||
since the most preferred version 2.2 is prohibited by the version constraint.
|
||||
|
||||
.. _package_permissions:
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------
|
||||
Package Permissions
|
||||
-------------------
|
||||
|
||||
Spack can be configured to assign permissions to the files installed
|
||||
by a package.
|
||||
|
||||
In the ``packages.yaml`` file under ``permissions``, the attributes
|
||||
``read``, ``write``, and ``group`` control the package
|
||||
permissions. These attributes can be set per-package, or for all
|
||||
packages under ``all``. If permissions are set under ``all`` and for a
|
||||
specific package, the package-specific settings take precedence.
|
||||
|
||||
The ``read`` and ``write`` attributes take one of ``user``, ``group``,
|
||||
and ``world``.
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
all:
|
||||
permissions:
|
||||
write: group
|
||||
group: spack
|
||||
my_app:
|
||||
permissions:
|
||||
read: group
|
||||
group: my_team
|
||||
|
||||
The permissions settings describe the broadest level of access to
|
||||
installations of the specified packages. The execute permissions of
|
||||
the file are set to the same level as read permissions for those files
|
||||
that are executable. The default setting for ``read`` is ``world``,
|
||||
and for ``write`` is ``user``. In the example above, installations of
|
||||
``my_app`` will be installed with user and group permissions but no
|
||||
world permissions, and owned by the group ``my_team``. All other
|
||||
packages will be installed with user and group write privileges, and
|
||||
world read privileges. Those packages will be owned by the group
|
||||
``spack``.
|
||||
|
||||
The ``group`` attribute assigns a Unix-style group to a package. All
|
||||
files installed by the package will be owned by the assigned group,
|
||||
and the sticky group bit will be set on the install prefix and all
|
||||
directories inside the install prefix. This will ensure that even
|
||||
manually placed files within the install prefix are owned by the
|
||||
assigned group. If no group is assigned, Spack will allow the OS
|
||||
default behavior to go as expected.
|
||||
|
||||
----------------------------
|
||||
Assigning Package Attributes
|
||||
----------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
You can assign class-level attributes in the configuration:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
mpileaks:
|
||||
# Override existing attributes
|
||||
url: http://www.somewhereelse.com/mpileaks-1.0.tar.gz
|
||||
# ... or add new ones
|
||||
x: 1
|
||||
|
||||
Attributes set this way will be accessible to any method executed
|
||||
in the package.py file (e.g. the ``install()`` method). Values for these
|
||||
attributes may be any value parseable by yaml.
|
||||
|
||||
These can only be applied to specific packages, not "all" or
|
||||
virtual packages.
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -392,7 +392,7 @@ See section
|
|||
:ref:`Configuration Scopes <configuration-scopes>`
|
||||
for an explanation about the different files
|
||||
and section
|
||||
:ref:`Build customization <build-settings>`
|
||||
:ref:`Build customization <packages-config>`
|
||||
for specifics and examples for ``packages.yaml`` files.
|
||||
|
||||
.. If your system administrator did not provide modules for pre-installed Intel
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ case you want to skip directly to specific docs:
|
|||
* :ref:`config.yaml <config-yaml>`
|
||||
* :ref:`mirrors.yaml <mirrors>`
|
||||
* :ref:`modules.yaml <modules>`
|
||||
* :ref:`packages.yaml <build-settings>`
|
||||
* :ref:`packages.yaml <packages-config>`
|
||||
* :ref:`repos.yaml <repositories>`
|
||||
|
||||
You can also add any of these as inline configuration in the YAML
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ or refer to the full manual below.
|
|||
|
||||
configuration
|
||||
config_yaml
|
||||
bootstrapping
|
||||
packages_yaml
|
||||
build_settings
|
||||
environments
|
||||
containers
|
||||
|
@ -78,6 +78,7 @@ or refer to the full manual below.
|
|||
module_file_support
|
||||
repositories
|
||||
binary_caches
|
||||
bootstrapping
|
||||
command_index
|
||||
chain
|
||||
extensions
|
||||
|
|
549
lib/spack/docs/packages_yaml.rst
Normal file
549
lib/spack/docs/packages_yaml.rst
Normal file
|
@ -0,0 +1,549 @@
|
|||
.. Copyright 2013-2023 Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC and other
|
||||
Spack Project Developers. See the top-level COPYRIGHT file for details.
|
||||
|
||||
SPDX-License-Identifier: (Apache-2.0 OR MIT)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
.. _packages-config:
|
||||
|
||||
================================
|
||||
Package Settings (packages.yaml)
|
||||
================================
|
||||
|
||||
Spack allows you to customize how your software is built through the
|
||||
``packages.yaml`` file. Using it, you can make Spack prefer particular
|
||||
implementations of virtual dependencies (e.g., MPI or BLAS/LAPACK),
|
||||
or you can make it prefer to build with particular compilers. You can
|
||||
also tell Spack to use *external* software installations already
|
||||
present on your system.
|
||||
|
||||
At a high level, the ``packages.yaml`` file is structured like this:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
package1:
|
||||
# settings for package1
|
||||
package2:
|
||||
# settings for package2
|
||||
# ...
|
||||
all:
|
||||
# settings that apply to all packages.
|
||||
|
||||
So you can either set build preferences specifically for *one* package,
|
||||
or you can specify that certain settings should apply to *all* packages.
|
||||
The types of settings you can customize are described in detail below.
|
||||
|
||||
Spack's build defaults are in the default
|
||||
``etc/spack/defaults/packages.yaml`` file. You can override them in
|
||||
``~/.spack/packages.yaml`` or ``etc/spack/packages.yaml``. For more
|
||||
details on how this works, see :ref:`configuration-scopes`.
|
||||
|
||||
.. _sec-external-packages:
|
||||
|
||||
-----------------
|
||||
External Packages
|
||||
-----------------
|
||||
|
||||
Spack can be configured to use externally-installed
|
||||
packages rather than building its own packages. This may be desirable
|
||||
if machines ship with system packages, such as a customized MPI
|
||||
that should be used instead of Spack building its own MPI.
|
||||
|
||||
External packages are configured through the ``packages.yaml`` file.
|
||||
Here's an example of an external configuration:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
openmpi:
|
||||
externals:
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64+debug"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3-debug
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.6.5%intel@10.1 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.6.5-intel
|
||||
|
||||
This example lists three installations of OpenMPI, one built with GCC,
|
||||
one built with GCC and debug information, and another built with Intel.
|
||||
If Spack is asked to build a package that uses one of these MPIs as a
|
||||
dependency, it will use the pre-installed OpenMPI in
|
||||
the given directory. Note that the specified path is the top-level
|
||||
install prefix, not the ``bin`` subdirectory.
|
||||
|
||||
``packages.yaml`` can also be used to specify modules to load instead
|
||||
of the installation prefixes. The following example says that module
|
||||
``CMake/3.7.2`` provides cmake version 3.7.2.
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
cmake:
|
||||
externals:
|
||||
- spec: cmake@3.7.2
|
||||
modules:
|
||||
- CMake/3.7.2
|
||||
|
||||
Each ``packages.yaml`` begins with a ``packages:`` attribute, followed
|
||||
by a list of package names. To specify externals, add an ``externals:``
|
||||
attribute under the package name, which lists externals.
|
||||
Each external should specify a ``spec:`` string that should be as
|
||||
well-defined as reasonably possible. If a
|
||||
package lacks a spec component, such as missing a compiler or
|
||||
package version, then Spack will guess the missing component based
|
||||
on its most-favored packages, and it may guess incorrectly.
|
||||
|
||||
Each package version and compiler listed in an external should
|
||||
have entries in Spack's packages and compiler configuration, even
|
||||
though the package and compiler may not ever be built.
|
||||
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
Prevent packages from being built from sources
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
|
||||
Adding an external spec in ``packages.yaml`` allows Spack to use an external location,
|
||||
but it does not prevent Spack from building packages from sources. In the above example,
|
||||
Spack might choose for many valid reasons to start building and linking with the
|
||||
latest version of OpenMPI rather than continue using the pre-installed OpenMPI versions.
|
||||
|
||||
To prevent this, the ``packages.yaml`` configuration also allows packages
|
||||
to be flagged as non-buildable. The previous example could be modified to
|
||||
be:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
openmpi:
|
||||
externals:
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64+debug"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3-debug
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.6.5%intel@10.1 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.6.5-intel
|
||||
buildable: False
|
||||
|
||||
The addition of the ``buildable`` flag tells Spack that it should never build
|
||||
its own version of OpenMPI from sources, and it will instead always rely on a pre-built
|
||||
OpenMPI.
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
|
||||
If ``concretizer:reuse`` is on (see :ref:`concretizer-options` for more information on that flag)
|
||||
pre-built specs include specs already available from a local store, an upstream store, a registered
|
||||
buildcache or specs marked as externals in ``packages.yaml``. If ``concretizer:reuse`` is off, only
|
||||
external specs in ``packages.yaml`` are included in the list of pre-built specs.
|
||||
|
||||
If an external module is specified as not buildable, then Spack will load the
|
||||
external module into the build environment which can be used for linking.
|
||||
|
||||
The ``buildable`` does not need to be paired with external packages.
|
||||
It could also be used alone to forbid packages that may be
|
||||
buggy or otherwise undesirable.
|
||||
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
Non-buildable virtual packages
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
|
||||
Virtual packages in Spack can also be specified as not buildable, and
|
||||
external implementations can be provided. In the example above,
|
||||
OpenMPI is configured as not buildable, but Spack will often prefer
|
||||
other MPI implementations over the externally available OpenMPI. Spack
|
||||
can be configured with every MPI provider not buildable individually,
|
||||
but more conveniently:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
mpi:
|
||||
buildable: False
|
||||
openmpi:
|
||||
externals:
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64+debug"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3-debug
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.6.5%intel@10.1 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.6.5-intel
|
||||
|
||||
Spack can then use any of the listed external implementations of MPI
|
||||
to satisfy a dependency, and will choose depending on the compiler and
|
||||
architecture.
|
||||
|
||||
In cases where the concretizer is configured to reuse specs, and other ``mpi`` providers
|
||||
(available via stores or buildcaches) are not wanted, Spack can be configured to require
|
||||
specs matching only the available externals:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
mpi:
|
||||
buildable: False
|
||||
require:
|
||||
- one_of: [
|
||||
"openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64",
|
||||
"openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64+debug",
|
||||
"openmpi@1.6.5%intel@10.1 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
|
||||
]
|
||||
openmpi:
|
||||
externals:
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.4.3%gcc@4.4.7 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64+debug"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.4.3-debug
|
||||
- spec: "openmpi@1.6.5%intel@10.1 arch=linux-debian7-x86_64"
|
||||
prefix: /opt/openmpi-1.6.5-intel
|
||||
|
||||
This configuration prevents any spec using MPI and originating from stores or buildcaches to be reused,
|
||||
unless it matches the requirements under ``packages:mpi:require``. For more information on requirements see
|
||||
:ref:`package-requirements`.
|
||||
|
||||
.. _cmd-spack-external-find:
|
||||
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
Automatically Find External Packages
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
|
||||
You can run the :ref:`spack external find <spack-external-find>` command
|
||||
to search for system-provided packages and add them to ``packages.yaml``.
|
||||
After running this command your ``packages.yaml`` may include new entries:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
cmake:
|
||||
externals:
|
||||
- spec: cmake@3.17.2
|
||||
prefix: /usr
|
||||
|
||||
Generally this is useful for detecting a small set of commonly-used packages;
|
||||
for now this is generally limited to finding build-only dependencies.
|
||||
Specific limitations include:
|
||||
|
||||
* Packages are not discoverable by default: For a package to be
|
||||
discoverable with ``spack external find``, it needs to add special
|
||||
logic. See :ref:`here <make-package-findable>` for more details.
|
||||
* The logic does not search through module files, it can only detect
|
||||
packages with executables defined in ``PATH``; you can help Spack locate
|
||||
externals which use module files by loading any associated modules for
|
||||
packages that you want Spack to know about before running
|
||||
``spack external find``.
|
||||
* Spack does not overwrite existing entries in the package configuration:
|
||||
If there is an external defined for a spec at any configuration scope,
|
||||
then Spack will not add a new external entry (``spack config blame packages``
|
||||
can help locate all external entries).
|
||||
|
||||
.. _package-requirements:
|
||||
|
||||
--------------------
|
||||
Package Requirements
|
||||
--------------------
|
||||
|
||||
Spack can be configured to always use certain compilers, package
|
||||
versions, and variants during concretization through package
|
||||
requirements.
|
||||
|
||||
Package requirements are useful when you find yourself repeatedly
|
||||
specifying the same constraints on the command line, and wish that
|
||||
Spack respects these constraints whether you mention them explicitly
|
||||
or not. Another use case is specifying constraints that should apply
|
||||
to all root specs in an environment, without having to repeat the
|
||||
constraint everywhere.
|
||||
|
||||
Apart from that, requirements config is more flexible than constraints
|
||||
on the command line, because it can specify constraints on packages
|
||||
*when they occur* as a dependency. In contrast, on the command line it
|
||||
is not possible to specify constraints on dependencies while also keeping
|
||||
those dependencies optional.
|
||||
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
Requirements syntax
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
|
||||
The package requirements configuration is specified in ``packages.yaml``,
|
||||
keyed by package name and expressed using the Spec syntax. In the simplest
|
||||
case you can specify attributes that you always want the package to have
|
||||
by providing a single spec string to ``require``:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
libfabric:
|
||||
require: "@1.13.2"
|
||||
|
||||
In the above example, ``libfabric`` will always build with version 1.13.2. If you
|
||||
need to compose multiple configuration scopes ``require`` accepts a list of
|
||||
strings:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
libfabric:
|
||||
require:
|
||||
- "@1.13.2"
|
||||
- "%gcc"
|
||||
|
||||
In this case ``libfabric`` will always build with version 1.13.2 **and** using GCC
|
||||
as a compiler.
|
||||
|
||||
For more complex use cases, require accepts also a list of objects. These objects
|
||||
must have either a ``any_of`` or a ``one_of`` field, containing a list of spec strings,
|
||||
and they can optionally have a ``when`` and a ``message`` attribute:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
openmpi:
|
||||
require:
|
||||
- any_of: ["@4.1.5", "%gcc"]
|
||||
message: "in this example only 4.1.5 can build with other compilers"
|
||||
|
||||
``any_of`` is a list of specs. One of those specs must be satisfied
|
||||
and it is also allowed for the concretized spec to match more than one.
|
||||
In the above example, that means you could build ``openmpi@4.1.5%gcc``,
|
||||
``openmpi@4.1.5%clang`` or ``openmpi@3.9%gcc``, but
|
||||
not ``openmpi@3.9%clang``.
|
||||
|
||||
If a custom message is provided, and the requirement is not satisfiable,
|
||||
Spack will print the custom error message:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: console
|
||||
|
||||
$ spack spec openmpi@3.9%clang
|
||||
==> Error: in this example only 4.1.5 can build with other compilers
|
||||
|
||||
We could express a similar requirement using the ``when`` attribute:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
openmpi:
|
||||
require:
|
||||
- any_of: ["%gcc"]
|
||||
when: "@:4.1.4"
|
||||
message: "in this example only 4.1.5 can build with other compilers"
|
||||
|
||||
In the example above, if the version turns out to be 4.1.4 or less, we require the compiler to be GCC.
|
||||
For readability, Spack also allows a ``spec`` key accepting a string when there is only a single
|
||||
constraint:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
openmpi:
|
||||
require:
|
||||
- spec: "%gcc"
|
||||
when: "@:4.1.4"
|
||||
message: "in this example only 4.1.5 can build with other compilers"
|
||||
|
||||
This code snippet and the one before it are semantically equivalent.
|
||||
|
||||
Finally, instead of ``any_of`` you can use ``one_of`` which also takes a list of specs. The final
|
||||
concretized spec must match one and only one of them:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
mpich:
|
||||
require:
|
||||
- one_of: ["+cuda", "+rocm"]
|
||||
|
||||
In the example above, that means you could build ``mpich+cuda`` or ``mpich+rocm`` but not ``mpich+cuda+rocm``.
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
|
||||
For ``any_of`` and ``one_of``, the order of specs indicates a
|
||||
preference: items that appear earlier in the list are preferred
|
||||
(note that these preferences can be ignored in favor of others).
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
|
||||
When using a conditional requirement, Spack is allowed to actively avoid the triggering
|
||||
condition (the ``when=...`` spec) if that leads to a concrete spec with better scores in
|
||||
the optimization criteria. To check the current optimization criteria and their
|
||||
priorities you can run ``spack solve zlib``.
|
||||
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
Setting default requirements
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
|
||||
You can also set default requirements for all packages under ``all``
|
||||
like this:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
all:
|
||||
require: '%clang'
|
||||
|
||||
which means every spec will be required to use ``clang`` as a compiler.
|
||||
|
||||
Note that in this case ``all`` represents a *default set of requirements* -
|
||||
if there are specific package requirements, then the default requirements
|
||||
under ``all`` are disregarded. For example, with a configuration like this:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
all:
|
||||
require: '%clang'
|
||||
cmake:
|
||||
require: '%gcc'
|
||||
|
||||
Spack requires ``cmake`` to use ``gcc`` and all other nodes (including ``cmake``
|
||||
dependencies) to use ``clang``.
|
||||
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
Setting requirements on virtual specs
|
||||
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
|
||||
A requirement on a virtual spec applies whenever that virtual is present in the DAG.
|
||||
This can be useful for fixing which virtual provider you want to use:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
mpi:
|
||||
require: 'mvapich2 %gcc'
|
||||
|
||||
With the configuration above the only allowed ``mpi`` provider is ``mvapich2 %gcc``.
|
||||
|
||||
Requirements on the virtual spec and on the specific provider are both applied, if
|
||||
present. For instance with a configuration like:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
mpi:
|
||||
require: 'mvapich2 %gcc'
|
||||
mvapich2:
|
||||
require: '~cuda'
|
||||
|
||||
you will use ``mvapich2~cuda %gcc`` as an ``mpi`` provider.
|
||||
|
||||
.. _package-preferences:
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------
|
||||
Package Preferences
|
||||
-------------------
|
||||
|
||||
In some cases package requirements can be too strong, and package
|
||||
preferences are the better option. Package preferences do not impose
|
||||
constraints on packages for particular versions or variants values,
|
||||
they rather only set defaults. The concretizer is free to change
|
||||
them if it must, due to other constraints, and also prefers reusing
|
||||
installed packages over building new ones that are a better match for
|
||||
preferences.
|
||||
|
||||
Most package preferences (``compilers``, ``target`` and ``providers``)
|
||||
can only be set globally under the ``all`` section of ``packages.yaml``:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
all:
|
||||
compiler: [gcc@12.2.0, clang@12:, oneapi@2023:]
|
||||
target: [x86_64_v3]
|
||||
providers:
|
||||
mpi: [mvapich2, mpich, openmpi]
|
||||
|
||||
These preferences override Spack's default and effectively reorder priorities
|
||||
when looking for the best compiler, target or virtual package provider. Each
|
||||
preference takes an ordered list of spec constraints, with earlier entries in
|
||||
the list being preferred over later entries.
|
||||
|
||||
In the example above all packages prefer to be compiled with ``gcc@12.2.0``,
|
||||
to target the ``x86_64_v3`` microarchitecture and to use ``mvapich2`` if they
|
||||
depend on ``mpi``.
|
||||
|
||||
The ``variants`` and ``version`` preferences can be set under
|
||||
package specific sections of the ``packages.yaml`` file:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
opencv:
|
||||
variants: +debug
|
||||
gperftools:
|
||||
version: [2.2, 2.4, 2.3]
|
||||
|
||||
In this case, the preference for ``opencv`` is to build with debug options, while
|
||||
``gperftools`` prefers version 2.2 over 2.4.
|
||||
|
||||
Any preference can be overwritten on the command line if explicitly requested.
|
||||
|
||||
Preferences cannot overcome explicit constraints, as they only set a preferred
|
||||
ordering among homogeneous attribute values. Going back to the example, if
|
||||
``gperftools@2.3:`` was requested, then Spack will install version 2.4
|
||||
since the most preferred version 2.2 is prohibited by the version constraint.
|
||||
|
||||
.. _package_permissions:
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------
|
||||
Package Permissions
|
||||
-------------------
|
||||
|
||||
Spack can be configured to assign permissions to the files installed
|
||||
by a package.
|
||||
|
||||
In the ``packages.yaml`` file under ``permissions``, the attributes
|
||||
``read``, ``write``, and ``group`` control the package
|
||||
permissions. These attributes can be set per-package, or for all
|
||||
packages under ``all``. If permissions are set under ``all`` and for a
|
||||
specific package, the package-specific settings take precedence.
|
||||
|
||||
The ``read`` and ``write`` attributes take one of ``user``, ``group``,
|
||||
and ``world``.
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
all:
|
||||
permissions:
|
||||
write: group
|
||||
group: spack
|
||||
my_app:
|
||||
permissions:
|
||||
read: group
|
||||
group: my_team
|
||||
|
||||
The permissions settings describe the broadest level of access to
|
||||
installations of the specified packages. The execute permissions of
|
||||
the file are set to the same level as read permissions for those files
|
||||
that are executable. The default setting for ``read`` is ``world``,
|
||||
and for ``write`` is ``user``. In the example above, installations of
|
||||
``my_app`` will be installed with user and group permissions but no
|
||||
world permissions, and owned by the group ``my_team``. All other
|
||||
packages will be installed with user and group write privileges, and
|
||||
world read privileges. Those packages will be owned by the group
|
||||
``spack``.
|
||||
|
||||
The ``group`` attribute assigns a Unix-style group to a package. All
|
||||
files installed by the package will be owned by the assigned group,
|
||||
and the sticky group bit will be set on the install prefix and all
|
||||
directories inside the install prefix. This will ensure that even
|
||||
manually placed files within the install prefix are owned by the
|
||||
assigned group. If no group is assigned, Spack will allow the OS
|
||||
default behavior to go as expected.
|
||||
|
||||
----------------------------
|
||||
Assigning Package Attributes
|
||||
----------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
You can assign class-level attributes in the configuration:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: yaml
|
||||
|
||||
packages:
|
||||
mpileaks:
|
||||
# Override existing attributes
|
||||
url: http://www.somewhereelse.com/mpileaks-1.0.tar.gz
|
||||
# ... or add new ones
|
||||
x: 1
|
||||
|
||||
Attributes set this way will be accessible to any method executed
|
||||
in the package.py file (e.g. the ``install()`` method). Values for these
|
||||
attributes may be any value parseable by yaml.
|
||||
|
||||
These can only be applied to specific packages, not "all" or
|
||||
virtual packages.
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue