* new package: alphafold
and related dependencies, depends on #27138
* [@spackbot] updating style on behalf of aweits
* fix
Co-authored-by: aweits <aweits@users.noreply.github.com>
On some systems the shell in login mode wipes important parts of the
environment, such as PATH. This causes the build to fail since it can't
find `spack`.
For better robustness, don't use a login shell.
In a full CI job the final spack install is run in an environment formed by scripts running in this order:
export AWS_SECRET=... # 1. Load environment from GitLab project variables
source spack/share/spack/setup-env.sh # 2. Load Spack into the environment (PATH)
spack env activate -V concrete_env # 3. Activate the concrete environment
source /etc/profile # 4. Bash login shell (from -l)
spack install ...
Whereas when a user launches their own container with (docker|podman) run -it, they end up running spack install in an environment formed in this order:
source /etc/bash.bashrc # (not 4). Bash interactive shell (default with TTY)
export AWS_SECRET=... #~1. Manually load environment from GitLab project variables
source spack/share/spack/setup-env.sh # 2. Load Spack into the environment (PATH)
spack env activate -V concrete_env # 3. Activate the concrete environment
spack install ...
The big problem being that (4) has a completely different position and content (on Leap 15 and possibly other containers).
So in context, this PR removes (4) from the CI job case, leaving us with the simpler:
export AWS_SECRET=... # 1. Load environment from GitLab project variables
source spack/share/spack/setup-env.sh # 2. Load Spack into the environment (PATH)
spack env activate -V concrete_env # 3. Activate the concrete environment
spack install ...
* database: don't sort on return from query_local
* ASP-based solver: don't build the hash-lookup dictionary twice
Building this dictionary twice and traversing all the specs
might be time-consuming for large buildcaches.
This test relied on an old version of the `flake8_package` fixture that modified
the spack repository, but it doesn't do that anymore. There are other tests for
`changed_files()` that do a better job of mocking up a git repository with
changes, so we can just delete this one.
A GitHub rebase merge seems to rewrite commits even if it would be a
fast-forward, which means that the commit merged from #24718 is wrong.
- [x] update `.git-blame-ignore-revs` with real commit from `develop`
`spack style` tests were annoyingly brittle because we could not easily be
specific about which tools to run (we had to use `--no-black`, `--no-isort`,
`--no-flake8`, and `--no-mypy`). We should be able to specify what to run OR
what to skip.
Now you can run, e.g.:
spack style --tool black,flake8
or:
spack style --skip black,isort
- [x] Remove `--no-black`, `--no-isort`, `--no-flake8`, and `--no-mypy` args.
- [x] Add `--tool TOOL` argument.
- [x] Add `--skip TOOL` argument.
- [x] Allow either `--tool black --tool flake8` or `--tool black,flake8` syntax.
- [x] remove alignment spaces from tempaltes
- [x] replace single with double quotes
- [x] Makefile template now generates parsable code
(function body is `pass` instead of just a comment)
- [x] template checks now run black to check output
Previously we'd accept any version for bootstrapping black, but we need <= 21.
- [x] modify bootstrapping code to check black version before accepting an
executable from `PATH`.
- [x] add `.git-blame-ignore-revs` to ignore black reformatting
- [x] make `spack blame` respect `.git-blame-ignore-revs`
(even if the user hasn't configured git to do so)
Some of our tests rely on single vs. double quotes, and others rely on specific
line numbers in the source. These needed fixing after the switch to Black.