* ParaView: add new ParaView-5.9.0-RC2 release
Signed-off-by: Vicente Adolfo Bolea Sanchez <vicente.bolea@kitware.com>
* Update var/spack/repos/builtin/packages/paraview/package.py
Indeed, I misunderstood the previous review. This looks good to me too.
Co-authored-by: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
I was keeping the old `clingo` driver code around in case we had to run
using the command line tool instad of through the Python interface.
So far, the command line is faster than running through Python, but I'm
working on fixing that. I found that if I do this:
```python
control = clingo.Control()
control.load("concretize.lp")
control.load("hdf5.lp") # code from spack solve --show asp hdf5
control.load("display.lp")
control.ground([("base", [])])
control.solve(...)
```
It's just as fast as the command line tool. So we can always generate the
code and load it manually if we need to -- we don't need two drivers for
clingo. Given that the python interface is also the only way to get unsat
cores, I think we pretty much have to use it.
So, I'm removing the old command line driver and other unused code. We
can dig it up again from the history if it is needed.
This fixes a logging error observed on macOS 11.0.1 (Big Sur).
When performing a Spack install in debugging mode (e.g.
`spack -d install py-scipy`) Spack is supposed to write a log of
compiler wrapper command line invocations to the current working
directory.
Due to a regression error introduced by #18205, these files were
no-longer generated, and Spack was printing errors such as
"No such file or directory: None/." This is because the log file
directory gets set from `spack.main.spack_working_dir`, but that
variable is not set in the spawned process.
This PR ensures that the working directory (at the time of the
"spack install" invocation) is persisted to the subprocess.
Fixed hard tab in flux-sched edit and unbound hwloc in flux-core after
testing to better support modern MPIs in spack environments
Verified that flux-core@0.17 is when hwloc@2: became viable
Track all the variant values mentioned when emitting constraints, validate them
and emit a fact that allows them as possible values.
This modification ensures that open-ended variants (variants accepting any string
or any integer) are projected to the finite set of values that are relevant for this
concretization.
2020.10.0 is the latest stable release, and the preferred version
for general use (when the user does not specify otherwise).
2020.11.0 is a prototype for the memory kinds feature that is also
available when requested.