* hdf5: mark +fortran+shared conflict for older version
This version was only activated unintentionally by silo's conflict
statement, but `@1.8.15+shared+fortran+cxx` errors out in configure:
```
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:814 (message):
**** Shared FORTRAN libraries are unsupported ****
```
* silo: refine hdf5 conflicts to avoid building old version
Before this, `silo+hdf5` concretized to 1.10.7 or sometimes 1.8.15. Now
I've verified it works for the following configurations:
```
silo@4.10.2 patches=7b5a1dc,952d3c9
^ hdf5@1.10.7 api=default
silo@4.10.2 patches=7b5a1dc,952d3c9,eb2a3a0
^ hdf5@1.10.8 api=v18
silo@4.10.2 patches=7b5a1dc,952d3c9,eb2a3a0
^ hdf5@1.12.1 api=v110
silo@4.11-bsd patches=eb2a3a0
^ hdf5@1.12.1 api=v110
silo@4.11-bsd patches=eb2a3a0
^ hdf5@1.10.8 api=default
silo@4.11-bsd patches=eb2a3a0
^ hdf5@1.12.1 api=default
```
and verified that the following fail:
```
silo@4.10.2 ^hdf5@1.12.1 api=default
silo@4.11 ^hdf5 api=v18
silo@4.11-bsd ^hdf5@1.13.0 api=v12
silo@4.11-bsd ^hdf5@1.13.0 api=default
```
and have updated the constraints to match. Hdf5 no longer has to be
downgraded to work with Silo.
* silo: fix dependency conflicts
* py-h5py: shorten and add comments to py-h5py hdf5 dependencies
* e4s: remove slightly outdated hdf5 requirement
* e4s: remove excessive hdf5 variant constraints
These I think are holdovers from the old concretizer.
- `hdf5_compat` can be expressed as `+hdf5 ^hdf5@1.8`
- The extra variants on hdf5 shouldn't break conduit
- axom unnecessarily restricts hdf5 version
* conduit: restore hdf5_compat flag
* Add a new test to catch exit code failure
fixes#29226
This introduces a new unit test that checks the return
code of `spack unit-test` when it is supposed to fail.
This is to prevent bugs like the one introduced in #25601
in which CI didn't catch a missing return statement.
In retrospective it seems that the shell test we have right
now all go through `tty.die` or similar code paths which
call `sys.exit(a)` explicitly. This new test instead checks
`spack unit-test` which relies on the return code from
command invocation in case of errors.
We can see what is in the bootstrap store with `spack find -b`, and you can clean it with `spack
clean -b`, but we can't do much else with it, and if there are bootstrap issues they can be hard to
debug.
We already have `spack --mock`, which allows you to swap in the mock packages from the command
line. This PR introduces `spack -b` / `spack --bootstrap`, which runs all of spack with
`ensure_bootstrap_configuration()` set. This means that you can run `spack -b find`, `spack -b
install`, `spack -b spec`, etc. to see what *would* happen with bootstrap configuration, to remove
specific bootstrap packages, etc. This will hopefully make developers' lives easier as they deal
with bootstrap packages.
This PR also uses a `nullcontext` context manager. `nullcontext` has been implemented in several
other places in Spack, and this PR consolidates them to `llnl.util.lang`, with a note that we can
delete the function if we ever reqyire a new enough Python.
- [x] introduce `spack --bootstrap` option
- [x] consolidated all `nullcontext` usages to `llnl.util.lang`
See https://github.com/spack/spack/issues/25353#issuecomment-1041868116
This commit changes the default behavior of
```
$ spack external find
```
from searching all the possible packages Spack knows about to
search only for the ones tagged as being a "build-tool".
It also introduces a `--all` option to restore the old behavior.
Since Spack does not install external packages, this commit skips them by
default when running stand-alone tests. The assumption is that such packages
have likely undergone an acceptance test process.
However, the tests can be run against installed externals using
```
% spack test run --externals ...
```
`--reuse` was previously handled individually by each command that
needed it. We are growing more concretization options, and they'll
need their own section for commands that support them.
Now there are two concretization options:
* `--reuse`: Attempt to reuse packages from installs and buildcaches.
* `--fresh`: Opposite of reuse -- traditional spack install.
To handle thes, this PR adds a `ConfigSetAction` for `argparse`, so
that you can write argparse code like this:
```
subgroup.add_argument(
'--reuse', action=ConfigSetAction, dest="concretizer:reuse",
const=True, default=None,
help='reuse installed dependencies/buildcaches when possible'
)
```
With this, you don't need to add logic to pull the argument out and
handle it; the `ConfigSetAction` just does it for you. This can probably
be used to clean up some other commands later, as well.
Code that was previously passing `reuse=True` around everywhere has
been refactored to use config, and config is set from the CLI using
a new `add_concretizer_args()` function in `spack.cmd.common.arguments`.
- [x] Add `ConfigSetAction` to simplify concretizer config on the CLI
- [x] Refactor code so that it does not pass `reuse=True` to every function.
- [x] Refactor commands to use `add_concretizer_args()` and to pass
concretizer config using the config system.
* trilinos: update dependencies
Use the tribits deps to clarify some dependencies, and group some together
using `with` statements, eliminating some transitive conflict duplication.
* trilinos: Restricit cuda incompatibility
* e4s: vastly reduce number of packages in trilinos-cuda build
Not clear who the customers of cuda-enabled trilinos are, or what options
they need, or which sets of options conflict...
* e4s: remove ~wrapper from trilinos+cuda
To make it easier to see how package hashes change and how they are computed, add two
commands:
* `spack pkg source <spec>`: dumps source code for a package to the terminal
* `spack pkg source --canonical <spec>`: dumps canonicalized source code for a
package to the terminal. It strips comments, directives, and known-unused
multimethods from the package. It is used to generate package hashes.
* `spack pkg hash <spec>`: This gives the package hash for a particular spec.
It is generated from the canonical source code for the spec.
- [x] `add spack pkg source` and `spack pkg hash`
- [x] add tests
- [x] fix bug in multimethod resolution with boolean `@when` values
Co-authored-by: Greg Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
* llvm: make targets a multivalued variant
* Fix the targets variant values
1. Make them lowercase and add a mapping to cmake equivalent
2. auto -> all
2. Restore composability by using a multivalued variant, so that
`targets=all` and `targets=x86` is combined to `targets=all,x86`
which is then transformed into LLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD=all.
* use targets=x86 in iwyu
* Default to nvptx/amdgpu/host arch targets
* default to none
* Update var/spack/repos/builtin/packages/zig/package.py
This command pokes the environment, Python interpreter
and bootstrap store to check if dependencies needed by
Spack are available.
If any are missing, it shows a comprehensible message.
This commit introduces the command
spack module tcl setdefault <package>
similar to the one already available for lmod
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
spack monitor now requires authentication as each build must be associated
with a user, so it does not make sense to allow the --monitor-no-auth flag
and this commit will remove it
* Fix building container images
Patchelf is bootstrapped from sources, so we cannot
disable that mechanism until a finer selection is
possible in the configuration.
* Build on changes to the Dockerfile
* Don't login to Dockerhub on PRs
This commit introduces the command
spack module tcl setdefault <package>
similar to the one already available for lmod
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
This PR is meant to move code with "business logic" from `spack.cmd.buildcache` to appropriate core modules[^1].
Modifications:
- [x] Add `spack.binary_distribution.push` to create a binary package from a spec and push it to a mirror
- [x] Add `spack.binary_distribution.install_root_node` to install only the root node of a concrete spec from a buildcache (may check the sha256 sum if it is passed in as input)
- [x] Add `spack.binary_distribution.install_single_spec` to install a single concrete spec from a buildcache
- [x] Add `spack.binary_distribution.download_single_spec` to download a single concrete spec from a buildcache to a local destination
- [x] Add `Spec.from_specfile` that construct a spec given the path of a JSON or YAML spec file
- [x] Removed logic from `spack.cmd.buildcache`
- [x] Removed calls to `spack.cmd.buildcache` in `spack.bootstrap`
- [x] Deprecate `spack buildcache copy` with a message that says it will be removed in v0.19.0
[^1]: The rationale is that commands should be lightweight wrappers of the core API, since that helps with both testing and scripting (easier mocking and no need to invoke `SpackCommand`s in a script).
* Add connection specification to mirror creation
This allows each mirror to contain information about the credentials
used to access it.
Update command and tests based on comments
Switch to only "long form" flags for the s3 connection information.
Use the "any" function instead of checking for an empty list when looking
for s3 connection information.
Split test to use the access token separately from the access id and key.
Use long flag form in test.
Add endpoint_url to available S3 options.
Extend the special parameters for an S3 mirror to accept the
endpoint_url parameter.
Add a test.
* Add connection information per URL not per mirror
Expand the mirror-based connection information to be per-URL.
This will allow a user to specify different S3 connection information
for both the fetch and the push URLs.
Add a parameter for "profile", another way of storing the id/secret pair.
* Switch from "access_profile" to "profile"
See #25249 and https://github.com/spack/spack/pull/27159#issuecomment-958163679.
This adds `spack load --list` as an alias for `spack find --loaded`. The new command is
not as powerful as `spack find --loaded`, as you can't combine it with all the queries or
formats that `spack find` provides. However, it is more intuitively located in the command
structure in that it appears in the output of `spack load --help`.
The idea here is that people can use `spack load --list` for simple stuff but fall back to
`spack find --loaded` if they need more.
- add help to `spack load --list` that references `spack find`
- factor some parts of `spack find` out to be called from `spack load`
- add shell tests
- update docs
Co-authored-by: Peter Josef Scheibel <scheibel1@llnl.gov>
Co-authored-by: Richarda Butler <39577672+RikkiButler20@users.noreply.github.com>
* GnuPG: allow bootstrapping from buildcache and sources
* Add a test to bootstrap GnuPG from binaries
* Disable bootstrapping in tests
* Add e2e test to bootstrap GnuPG from sources on Ubuntu
* Add e2e test to bootstrap GnuPG on macOS
The `--generic` argument allows printing the best generic target for the
current machine. This can be quite handy when wanting to find the
generic architecture to use when building a shared software stack for
multiple machines.
This PR adds a "spack tags" command to output package tags or
(available) packages with those tags. It also ensures each package
is listed in the tag cache ONLY ONCE per tag.
* ci: Enable more packages in the DVSDK CI pipeline
* doxygen: Add conflicts for gcc bugs
* dray: Add version constraints for api breakage with newer deps
If you don't format `spack.yaml` correctly, `spack config edit` still fails and
you have to edit your `spack.yaml` manually.
- [x] Add some code to `_main()` to defer `ConfigFormatError` when loading the
environment, until we know what command is being run.
- [x] Make `spack config edit` use `SPACK_ENV` instead of the config scope
object to find `spack.yaml`, so it can work even if the environment is bad.
Co-authored-by: scheibelp <scheibel1@llnl.gov>
* Deactivate previous env before activating new one
Currently on develop you can run `spack env activate` multiple times to switch
between environments, but they leave traces, even though Spack only supports
one active environment at a time.
Currently:
```console
$ spack env create a
$ spack env create b
$ spack env activate -p a
[a] $ spack env activate -p b
[b] [a] $ spack env activate -p b
[a] [b] [a] $ spack env activate -p a
[a] [b] [c] $ echo $MANPATH | tr ":" "\n"
/path/to/environments/a/.spack-env/view/share/man
/path/to/environments/a/.spack-env/view/man
/path/to/environments/b/.spack-env/view/share/man
/path/to/environments/b/.spack-env/view/man
```
This PR fixes that:
```console
$ spack env activate -p a
[a] $ spack env activate -p b
[b] $ spack env activate -p a
[a] $ echo $MANPATH | tr ":" "\n"
/path/to/environments/a/.spack-env/view/share/man
/path/to/environments/a/.spack-env/view/man
```
Currently spack is a bit of a bad actor as a zsh plugin, and it was my
fault. The autoload and compinit should really be handled by the user,
as was made abundantly clear when I found spack was doing completion
initialization for *all* of my plugins due to a deferred setup that was
getting messed up by it.
Making this conditional took spack load time from 1.5 seconds (with
module loading disabled) to 0.029 seconds. I can actually afford to load
spack by default with this change in.
Hopefully someday we'll do proper zsh completion support, but for now
this helps a lot.
* use zsh hist expansion in place of dirname
* only run (bash)compinit if compdef/complete missing
* add zsh compiled files to .gitignore
* move changes to .in file, because spack
This PR permits to specify the `url` and `ref` of the Spack instance used in a container recipe simply by expanding the YAML schema as outlined in #20442:
```yaml
container:
images:
os: amazonlinux:2
spack:
ref: develop
resolve_sha: true
```
The `resolve_sha` option, if true, verifies the `ref` by cloning the Spack repository in a temporary directory and transforming any tag or branch name to a commit sha. When this new ability is leveraged an additional "bootstrap" stage is added, which builds an image with Spack setup and ready to install software. The Spack repository to be used can be customized with the `url` keyword under `spack`.
Modifications:
- [x] Permit to pin the version of Spack, either by branch or tag or sha
- [x] Added a few new OSes (centos:8, amazonlinux:2, ubuntu:20.04, alpine:3, cuda:11.2.1)
- [x] Permit to print the bootstrap image as a standalone
- [x] Add documentation on the new part of the schema
- [x] Add unit tests for different use cases
Creates an environment in a temporary directory and activates it, which
is useful for a quick ephemeral environment:
```
$ spack env activate -p --temp
[spack-1a203lyg] $ spack add zlib
==> Adding zlib to environment /tmp/spack-1a203lyg
==> Updating view at /tmp/spack-1a203lyg/.spack-env/view
```
Modifications:
- Modify the workflow to build container images without pushing when the workflow file itself is modified
- Strip the leading ghcr.io/spack/ from env.container env.versioned to prepare pushing to multiple registries
- Fixed CentOS 7 and Amazon Linux builds
- Login and push to Docker Hub as well as Github Action
- Add a badge to README.md with the status of docker images
Modifications:
- [x] Change `defaults/config.yaml`
- [x] Add a fix for bootstrapping patchelf from sources if `compilers.yaml` is empty
- [x] Make `SPACK_TEST_SOLVER=clingo` the default for unit-tests
- [x] Fix package failures in the e4s pipeline
Caveats:
1. CentOS 6 still uses the original concretizer as it can't connect to the buildcache due to issues with `ssl` (bootstrapping from sources requires a C++14 capable compiler)
1. I had to update the image tag for GitlabCI in e699f14.
1. libtool v2.4.2 has been deprecated and other packages received some update
This is a major rework of Spack's core core `spec.yaml` metadata format. It moves from `spec.yaml` to `spec.json` for speed, and it changes the format in several ways. Specifically:
1. The spec format now has a `_meta` section with a version (now set to version `2`). This will simplify major changes like this one in the future.
2. The node list in spec dictionaries is no longer keyed by name. Instead, it is a list of records with no required key. The name, hash, etc. are fields in the dictionary records like any other.
3. Dependencies can be keyed by any hash (`hash`, `full_hash`, `build_hash`).
4. `build_spec` provenance from #20262 is included in the spec format. This means that, for spliced specs, we preserve the *full* provenance of how to build, and we can reproduce a spliced spec from the original builds that produced it.
**NOTE**: Because we have switched the spec format, this PR changes Spack's hashing algorithm. This means that after this commit, Spack will think a lot of things need rebuilds.
There are two major benefits this PR provides:
* The switch to JSON format speeds up Spack significantly, as Python's builtin JSON implementation is orders of magnitude faster than YAML.
* The new Spec format will soon allow us to represent DAGs with potentially multiple versions of the same dependency -- e.g., for build dependencies or for compilers-as-dependencies. This PR lays the necessary groundwork for those features.
The old `spec.yaml` format continues to be supported, but is now considered a legacy format, and Spack will opportunistically convert these to the new `spec.json` format.
* tests: make `spack url [stats|summary]` work on mock packages
Mock packages have historically had mock hashes, but this means they're also invalid
as far as Spack's hash detection is concerned.
- [x] convert all hashes in mock package to md5 or sha256
- [x] ensure that all mock packages have a URL
- [x] ignore some special cases with multiple VCS fetchers
* url stats: add `--show-issues` option
`spack url stats` tells us how many URLs are using what protocol, type of checksum,
etc., but it previously did not tell us which packages and URLs had the issues. This
adds a `--show-issues` option to show URLs with insecure (`http`) URLs or `md5` hashes
(which are now deprecated by NIST).
This PR will add a new audit, specifically for spack package homepage urls (and eventually
other kinds I suspect) to see if there is an http address that can be changed to https.
Usage is as follows:
```bash
$ spack audit packages-https <package>
```
And in list view:
```bash
$ spack audit list
generic:
Generic checks relying on global variables
configs:
Sanity checks on compilers.yaml
Sanity checks on packages.yaml
packages:
Sanity checks on specs used in directives
packages-https:
Sanity checks on https checks of package urls, etc.
```
I think it would be unwise to include with packages, because when run for all, since we do requests it takes a long time. I also like the idea of more well scoped checks - likely there will be other addresses for http/https within a package that we eventually check. For now, there are two error cases - one is when an https url is tried but there is some SSL error (or other error that means we cannot update to https):
```bash
$ spack audit packages-https zoltan
PKG-HTTPS-DIRECTIVES: 1 issue found
1. Error with attempting https for "zoltan":
<urlopen error [SSL: CERTIFICATE_VERIFY_FAILED] certificate verify failed: Hostname mismatch, certificate is not valid for 'www.cs.sandia.gov'. (_ssl.c:1125)>
```
This is either not fixable, or could be fixed with a change to the url or (better) contacting the site owners to ask about some certificate or similar.
The second case is when there is an http that needs to be https, which is a huge issue now, but hopefully not after this spack PR.
```bash
$ spack audit packages-https xman
Package "xman" uses http but has a valid https endpoint.
```
And then when a package is fixed:
```bash
$ spack audit packages-https zlib
PKG-HTTPS-DIRECTIVES: 0 issues found.
```
And that's mostly it. :)
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
* Bootstrap clingo from binaries
* Move information on clingo binaries to a JSON file
* Add support to bootstrap on Cray
Bootstrapping on Cray requires, at the moment, to
swap the platform when looking for binaries - due
to #22800.
* Add SHA256 verification for bootstrapped software
Use sha256 verification for binaries necessary to bootstrap
the concretizer and gpg for signature verification
* patchelf: use Spec._old_concretize() to bootstrap
As noted in #24450 we may happen to need the
concretizer when bootstrapping clingo. In that case
only the old concretizer is available.
* Add a schema for bootstrapping methods
Two fields have been added to bootstrap.yaml:
"sources" which lists the methods available for
bootstrapping software
"trusted" which records if a source is trusted or not
A subcommand has been added to "spack bootstrap" to list
the sources currently available.
* Methods used for bootstrapping are configurable from bootstrap:sources
The function that tries to ensure a given Python module
is importable now tries bootstrapping methods in the same
order as they are defined in `bootstrap.yaml`
* Permit to trust/untrust bootstrapping methods
* Add binary tests for MacOS, Ubuntu
* Add documentation
* Add a note on bash
This pull request adds a new workflow to build and deploy Spack Docker containers
from GitHub Actions. In comparison with our current system where we use Dockerhub's
CI to build our Docker containers, this workflow will allow us to now build for multiple
architectures and deploy to multiple registries. (At the moment x86_64 and Arm64 because
ppc64le is throwing an error within archspec.)
As currently set up, the PR will build all of the current containers (minus Centos6 because
those yum repositories are no longer available?) as both x86_64 and Arm64 variants. The
workflow is currently setup to build and deploy containers nightly from develop as well as
on tagged releases. The workflow will also build, but NOT deploy containers on a pull request
for the purposes of testing this PR. At the moment it is setup to deploy the built containers to
GitHub's Container Registry although, support for also uploading to Dockerhub/Quay can be
included easily if we decide to keep releasing on Dockerhub/want to begin releasing on Quay.
Gitlab truncates job trace output (even the complete raw output) at 4MB,
so this change captures it to a file under "user_data" artifacts as well,
to make sure we can debug output from the end of the rebuild job.
A `spack diff` will take two specs, and then use the spack.solver.asp.SpackSolverSetup to generate
lists of facts about each (e.g., nodes, variants, etc.) and then take a set difference between the
two to show the user the differences.
Example output:
$ spack diff python@2.7.8 python@3.8.11
==> Warning: This interface is subject to change.
--- python@2.7.8/tsxdi6gl4lihp25qrm4d6nys3nypufbf
+++ python@3.8.11/yjtseru4nbpllbaxb46q7wfkyxbuvzxx
@@ variant_value @@
- python patches a8c52415a8b03c0e5f28b5d52ae498f7a7e602007db2b9554df28cd5685839b8
+ python patches 0d98e93189bc278fbc37a50ed7f183bd8aaf249a8e1670a465f0db6bb4f8cf87
@@ version @@
- openssl Version(1.0.2u)
+ openssl Version(1.1.1k)
- python Version(2.7.8)
+ python Version(3.8.11)
Currently this uses diff-like output but we will attempt to improve on this in the future.
One use case for `spack diff` is whenever a user has a disambiguate situation and cannot
remember how two different installs are different. The command can also output `--json` in
the case of a more analysis type use case where we want to save complete data with all
diffs and the intersection. However, the command is really more intended for a command
line use case, and we likely will have an analyzer more suited to saving data
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tamara Dahlgren <35777542+tldahlgren@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
Modifications:
- Remove the "build tests" workflow from GitHub Actions
- Setup a similar e2e test on Gitlab
In this way we'll reduce load on GitHub Actions workflows and for e2e tests will
benefit from the buildcache reuse granted by pipelines.
`spack style` previously used a Travis CI variable to figure out
what the base branch of a PR was, and this was apparently also set
on `develop`. We switched to `GITHUB_BASE_REF` to support GitHub
Actions, but it looks like this is set to `""` in pushes to develop,
so `spack style` breaks there.
This PR does two things:
- [x] Remove `GITHUB_BASE_REF` knowledge from `spack style` entirely
- [x] Handle `GITHUB_BASE_REF` in style scripts instead, and explicitly
pass the base ref if it is present, but don't otherwise.
This makes `spack style` *not* dependent on the environment and fixes
handling of the base branch in the right place.
This adds a `--root` option so that `spack style` can check style for
a spack instance other than its own.
We also change the inner workings of `spack style` so that `--config FILE`
(and similar options for the various tools) options are used. This ensures
that when `spack style` runs, it always uses the config from the running spack,
and does *not* pick up configuration from the external root.
- [x] add `--root` option to `spack style`
- [x] add `--config` (or similar) option when invoking style tools
- [x] add a test that verifies we can check an external instance
This uses our bootstrapping logic to automatically install dependencies for
`spack style`. Users should no longer have to pre-install all of the tools
(`isort`, `mypy`, `black`, `flake8`). The command will do it for them.
- [x] add logic to bootstrap specs with specific version requirements in `spack style`
- [x] remove style tools from CI requirements (to ensure we test bootstrapping)
- [x] rework dependencies for `mypy` and `py-typed-ast`
- `py-typed-ast` needs to be a link dependency
- it needs to be at 1.4.1 or higher to work with python 3.9
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
* trilinos: rename basker variant
The Basker solver is part of amesos2 but is clearer without the extra
scoping.
* trilinos: automatically enable teuchos and remove variant
Basically everything in trilinos needs teuchos
* trilinos: group top-level dependencies
* trilinos: update dependencies, removing unused
- GLM, X11 are unused (x11 lacks dependency specs too)
- Python variant is more like a TPL so rearrange that
- Gtest internal package shouldn't be compiled or exported
- Add MPI4PY requirement for pytrilinos
* trilinos: remove package meta-options
- XSDK settings and "all opt packages" are not used anywhere
- all optional packages are dangerous
* trilinos: Use hwloc iff kokkos
See #19119, also the HWLOC tpl name was misspelled so this was being ignored before.
* Flake
* Fix trilinos +netcdf~mpi
* trilinos: default to disabling external dependencies
* Remove teuchos from downstream dependencies
* fixup! trilinos: Use hwloc iff kokkos
* Add netcdf requirements to packages with ^trilinos+exodus
* trilinos: disable exodus by default
* fixup! Add netcdf requirements to packages with ^trilinos+exodus
* trilinos: only enable hwloc when @13: +kokkos
* xyce: propagate trilinos dependencies more simply
* dtk: fix missing boost dependency
* trilinos: remove explicit metis dependency
* trilinos: require metis/parmetis for zoltan
Disable zoltan by default to minimize default dependencies
* trilinos: mark mesquite disabled and fix kokkos arch
* xsdk: fix trilinos to also list zoltan [with zoltan2]
* ci: remove nonexistent variant from trilinos
* trilinos: add missing boost dependency
Co-authored-by: Satish Balay <balay@mcs.anl.gov>
* Permit to enable/disable bootstrapping and customize store location
This PR adds configuration handles to allow enabling
and disabling bootstrapping, and to customize the store
location.
* Move bootstrap related configuration into its own YAML file
* Add a bootstrap command to manage configuration
* fix remaining flake8 errors
* imports: sort imports everywhere in Spack
We enabled import order checking in #23947, but fixing things manually drives
people crazy. This used `spack style --fix --all` from #24071 to automatically
sort everything in Spack so PR submitters won't have to deal with it.
This should go in after #24071, as it assumes we're using `isort`, not
`flake8-import-order` to order things. `isort` seems to be more flexible and
allows `llnl` mports to be in their own group before `spack` ones, so this
seems like a good switch.
This consolidates code across tools in `spack style` so that each
`run_<tool>` function can be called indirecty through a dictionary
of handlers, and os that checks like finding the executable for the
tool can be shared across commands.
- [x] rework `spack style` to use decorators to register tools
- [x] define tool order in one place in `spack style`
- [x] fix python 2/3 issues to Get `isort` checks working
- [x] make isort error regex more robust across versions
- [x] remove unused output option
- [x] change vestigial `TRAVIS_BRANCH` to `GITHUB_BASE_REF`
- [x] update completion
Spack pipelines need to take specific actions internally that depend
on whether the pipeline is being run on a PR to spack or a merge to
the develop branch. Pipelines can also run in other repositories,
which represents other possible use cases than just the two mentioned
above. This PR creates a "SPACK_PIPELINE_TYPE" gitlab variable which
is propagated to rebuild jobs, and is also used internally to determine
which pipeline-specific tasks to run.
One goal of the PR is fix an issue where rebuild jobs which failed on
develop pipelines did not properly report the broken full hash to the
"broken-specs-url".
* remove blueos check on cuda variant, fix typo
* restore necessary compiler guard
* remove axom+cuda from testing because it only partially works outside ppc systems
Add a new "spack audit" command. This command can check for issues
with configuration or with packages and is intended to help a
user debug a failed Spack build.
In some cases the reported issues are always errors but are too
costly to check for (e.g. packages that specify missing variants on
dependencies). In other cases the issues may be legitimate but
uncommon usage of Spack and we want to be sure the user intended the
behavior (e.g. duplicate compiler definitions).
Audits are grouped by theme, and for now the two themes are packages
and configuration. For example you can run all available audits
on packages with "spack audit packages". It is intended that in
the future users will be able to define their own audits.
The package audits are good candidates for running in package_sanity
(i.e. they could catch bugs in user-submitted packages before they
are merged) but that is left for a later PR.
Building magma has been failing consistently and is currently
blocking PRs from being merged. Disable that spec while we
investigate the failure and work on a fix.
This should get us most of the way there to support using monitor during a spack container build, for both Singularity and Docker. Some quick notes:
### Docker
Docker works by way of BUILDKIT and being able to specify --secret. What this means is that you can prefix a line with a mount of type secret as follows:
```bash
# Install the software, remove unnecessary deps
RUN --mount=type=secret,id=su --mount=type=secret,id=st cd /opt/spack-environment && spack env activate . && export SPACKMON_USER=$(cat /run/secrets/su) && export SPACKMON_TOKEN=$(cat /run/secrets/st) && spack install --monitor --fail-fast && spack gc -y
```
Where the id for one or more secrets corresponds to the file mounted at `/run/secrets/<name>`. So, for example, to build this container with su (spackmon user) and sv (spackmon token) defined I would export them on my host and do:
```bash
$ DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 docker build --network="host" --secret id=st,env=SPACKMON_TOKEN --secret id=su,env=SPACKMON_USER -t spack/container .
```
And when we add `env` to the secret definition that tells the build to look for the secret with id "st" in the environment variable `SPACKMON_TOKEN` for example.
If the user is building locally with a local spack monitor, we also need to set the `--network` to be the host, otherwise you can't connect to it (a la isolation of course.)
## Singularity
Singularity doesn't have as nice an ability to clearly specify secrets, so (hoping this eventually gets implemented) what I'm doing now is providing the user instructions to write the credentials to a file, add it to the container to source, and remove when done.
## Tags
Note that the tags PR https://github.com/spack/spack/pull/23712 will need to be merged before `--monitor-tags` will actually work because I'm checking for the attribute (that doesn't exist yet):
```bash
"tags": getattr(args, "monitor_tags", None)
```
So when that PR is merged to update the argument group, it will work here, and I can either update the PR here to not check if the attribute is there (it will be) or open another one in the case this PR is already merged.
Finally, I added a bunch of documetation for how to use monitor with containerize. I say "mostly working" because I can't do a full test run with this new version until the container base is built with the updated spack (the request to the monitor server for an env install was missing so I had to add it here).
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
this will first support uploads for spack monitor, and eventually could be
used for other kinds of spack uploads
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update of Flecsi Spackage
Update of flecsi spackage to reconcile differences between flecsi@1:1.9
and flecsi@2: for future support purposes
* Removing Unnecessary Conditional
Removing unused conditional. Initially the plan was to switch based on
version in `cmake_args` but this was not necessary as build system
variable names remained mostly the same and conflicts prevent the rest.
For the most part, if a variant is there it does not need to check
against what version of the code is being built.
* Updated CI To Reconcile Flecsi Changes
Updated CI to target flecsi@1.4.2 which best matches the previous
release version and reconciled change in variant name
* e4s ci: enable full e4s
* add llvm-amdgpu to list of specs needing an xlarge tagged runner
* comment out qt and qwt because of intermittent build failures
* remove +rocm specs because rocblas job consistently fails due to infrastructure
This PR allows users to `--export`, `--export-secret`, or both to export GPG keys
from Spack. The docs are updated that include a warning that this usually does not
need to be done.
This addresses an issue brought up in slack, and also represented in #14721.
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Currently, module configurations are inconsistent because modulefiles are generated with the configs for the active environment, but are shared among all environments (and spack outside any environment).
This PR fixes that by allowing Spack environments (or other spack config scopes) to define additional sets of modules to generate. Each set of modules can enable either lmod or tcl modules, and contains all of the previously available module configuration. The user defines the name of each module set -- the set configured in Spack by default is named "default", and is the one returned by module manipulation commands in the absence of user intervention.
As part of this change, the module roots configuration moved from the config section to inside each module configuration.
Additionally, it adds a feature that the modulefiles for an environment can be configured to be relative to an environment view rather than the underlying prefix. This will not be enabled by default, as it should only be enabled within an environment and for non-default views constructed with separate projections per-spec.
### Overview
The goal of this PR is to make gitlab pipeline builds (especially build failures) more reproducible outside of the pipeline environment. The two key changes here which aim to improve reproducibility are:
1. Produce a `spack.lock` during pipeline generation which is passed to child jobs via artifacts. This concretized environment is used both by generated child jobs as well as uploaded as an artifact to be used when reproducing the build locally.
2. In the `spack ci rebuild` command, if a spec needs to be rebuilt from source, do this by generating and running an `install.sh` shell script which is then also uploaded as a job artifact to be run during local reproduction.
To make it easier to take advantage of improved build reproducibility, this PR also adds a new subcommand, `spack ci reproduce-build`, which, given a url to job artifacts:
- fetches and unzips the job artifacts to a local directory
- looks for the generated pipeline yaml and parses it to find details about the job to reproduce
- attempts to provide a copy of the same version of spack used in the ci build
- if the ci build used a docker image, the command prints a `docker run` command you can run to get an interactive shell for reproducing the build
#### Some highlights
One consequence of this change will be much smaller pipeline yaml files. By encoding the concrete environment in a `spack.lock` and passing to child jobs via artifacts, we will no longer need to encode the concrete root of each spec and write it into the job variables, greatly reducing the size of the generated pipeline yaml.
Additionally `spack ci rebuild` output (stdout/stderr) is no longer internally redirected to a log file, so job output will appear directly in the gitlab job trace. With debug logging turned on, this often results in log files getting truncated because they exceed the maximum amount of log output gitlab allows. If this is a problem, you still have the option to `tee` command output to a file in the within the artifacts directory, as now each generated job exposes a `user_data` directory as an artifact, which you can fill with whatever you want in your custom job scripts.
There are some changes to be aware of in how pipelines should be set up after this PR:
#### Pipeline generation
Because the pipeline generation job now writes a `spack.lock` artifact to be consumed by generated downstream jobs, `spack ci generate` takes a new option `--artifacts-root`, inside which it creates a `concrete_env` directory to place the lockfile. This artifacts root directory is also where the `user_data` directory will live, in case you want to generate any custom artifacts. If you do not provide `--artifacts-root`, the default is for it to create a `jobs_scratch_dir` within your `CI_PROJECT_DIR` (a gitlab predefined environment variable) or whatever is your current working directory if that variable isn't set. Here's the diff of the PR testing `.gitlab-ci.yml` taking advantage of the new option:
```
$ git diff develop..pipelines-reproducible-builds share/spack/gitlab/cloud_pipelines/.gitlab-ci.yml
diff --git a/share/spack/gitlab/cloud_pipelines/.gitlab-ci.yml b/share/spack/gitlab/cloud_pipelines/.gitlab-ci.yml
index 579d7b56f3..0247803a30 100644
--- a/share/spack/gitlab/cloud_pipelines/.gitlab-ci.yml
+++ b/share/spack/gitlab/cloud_pipelines/.gitlab-ci.yml
@@ -28,10 +28,11 @@ default:
- cd share/spack/gitlab/cloud_pipelines/stacks/${SPACK_CI_STACK_NAME}
- spack env activate --without-view .
- spack ci generate --check-index-only
+ --artifacts-root "${CI_PROJECT_DIR}/jobs_scratch_dir"
--output-file "${CI_PROJECT_DIR}/jobs_scratch_dir/cloud-ci-pipeline.yml"
artifacts:
paths:
- - "${CI_PROJECT_DIR}/jobs_scratch_dir/cloud-ci-pipeline.yml"
+ - "${CI_PROJECT_DIR}/jobs_scratch_dir"
tags: ["spack", "public", "medium", "x86_64"]
interruptible: true
```
Notice how we replaced the specific pointer to the generated pipeline file with its containing folder, the same folder we passed as `--artifacts-root`. This way anything in that directory (the generated pipeline yaml, as well as the concrete environment directory containing the `spack.lock`) will be uploaded as an artifact and available to the downstream jobs.
#### Rebuild jobs
Rebuild jobs now must activate the concrete environment created by `spack ci generate` and provided via artifacts. When the pipeline is generated, a directory called `concrete_environment` is created within the artifacts root directory, and this is where the `spack.lock` file is written to be passed to the generated rebuild jobs. The artifacts root directory can be specified using the `--artifacts-root` option to `spack ci generate`, otherwise, it is assumed to be `$CI_PROJECT_DIR`. The directory containing the concrete environment files (`spack.yaml` and `spack.lock`) is then passed to generated child jobs via the `SPACK_CONCRETE_ENV_DIR` variable in the generated pipeline yaml file.
When you don't provide custom `script` sections in your `mappings` within the `gitlab-ci` section of your `spack.yaml`, the default behavior of rebuild jobs is now to change into `SPACK_CONCRETE_ENV_DIR` and activate that environment. If you do provide custom rebuild scripts in your `spack.yaml`, be aware those scripts should do the same thing: assume `SPACK_CONCRETE_ENV_DIR` contains the concretized environment to activate. No other changes to existing custom rebuild scripts should be required as a result of this PR.
As mentioned above, one key change made in this PR is the generation of the `install.sh` script by the rebuild jobs, as that same script is both run by the CI rebuild job as well as exported as an artifact to aid in subsequent attempts to reproduce the build outside of CI. The generated `install.sh` script contains only a single `spack install` command with arguments computed by `spack ci rebuild`. If the install fails, the job trace in gitlab will contain instructions on how to reproduce the build locally:
```
To reproduce this build locally, run:
spack ci reproduce-build https://gitlab.next.spack.io/api/v4/projects/7/jobs/240607/artifacts [--working-dir <dir>]
If this project does not have public pipelines, you will need to first:
export GITLAB_PRIVATE_TOKEN=<generated_token>
... then follow the printed instructions.
```
When run locally, the `spack ci reproduce-build` command shown above will download and process the job artifacts from gitlab, then print out instructions you can copy-paste to run a local reproducer of the CI job.
This PR includes a few other changes to the way pipelines work, see the documentation on pipelines for more details.
This PR erelies on
~- [ ] #23194 to be able to refer to uninstalled specs by DAG hash~
EDIT: that is going to take longer to come to fruition, so for now, we will continue to install specs represented by a concrete `spec.yaml` file on disk.
- [x] #22657 to support install a single spec already present in the active, concrete environment
I would like to be able to export (and save and then load programatically)
spack blame metadata, so this commit adds a spack blame --json argument,
along with developer docs for it
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
This work will come in two phases. The first here is to allow saving of a local result
with spack monitor, and the second will add a spack monitor command so the user can
do spack monitor upload.
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Currently, module configurations are inconsistent because modulefiles are generated with the configs for the active environment, but are shared among all environments (and spack outside any environment).
This PR fixes that by allowing Spack environments (or other spack config scopes) to define additional sets of modules to generate. Each set of modules can enable either lmod or tcl modules, and contains all of the previously available module configuration. The user defines the name of each module set -- the set configured in Spack by default is named "default", and is the one returned by module manipulation commands in the absence of user intervention.
As part of this change, the module roots configuration moved from the `config` section to inside each module configuration.
Additionally, it adds a feature that the modulefiles for an environment can be configured to be relative to an environment view rather than the underlying prefix. This will not be enabled by default, as it should only be enabled within an environment and for non-default views constructed with separate projections per-spec.
TODO:
- [x] code changes to support multiple module sets
- [x] code changes to support modules relative to a view
- [x] Tests for multiple module configurations
- [x] Tests for modules relative to a view
- [x] Backwards compatibility for module roots from config section
- [x] Backwards compatibility for default module set without the name specified
- [x] Tests for backwards compatibility
In an active concretize environment, support installing one or more
cli specs only if they are already present in the environment. The
`--no-add` option is the default for root specs, but optional for
dependency specs. I.e. if you `spack install <depspec>` in an
environment, the dependency-only spec `depspec` will be added as a
root of the environment before being installed. In addition,
`spack install --no-add <spec>` fails if it does not find an
unambiguous match for `spec`.
This provides initial support for [spack monitor](https://github.com/spack/spack-monitor), a web application that stores information and analysis about Spack installations. Spack can now contact a monitor server and upload analysis -- even after a build is already done.
Specifically, this adds:
- [x] monitor options for `spack install`
- [x] `spack analyze` command
- [x] hook architecture for analyzers
- [x] separate build logs (in addition to the existing combined log)
- [x] docs for spack analyze
- [x] reworked developer docs, with hook docs
- [x] analyzers for:
- [x] config args
- [x] environment variables
- [x] installed files
- [x] libabigail
There is a lot more information in the docs contained in this PR, so consult those for full details on this feature.
Additional tests will be added in a future PR.