fixes#7705
Package.provides now checks constraints to ensure that a spec provides
a given virtual package. Note that 'strict=True' is not passed to
satisfies as this function is also used during concretization.
Fixes#7548
This updates the "spack view" command to use the same parsing logic
as "spack install" on the user-provided specs. For example you can
provide a DAG hash to refer to an exact installed spec instead of
specifying name, compiler, etc.
This fixes a check that decides when to skip buildcache relocation.
Originally the check was flawed in two ways: it would skip if the
source prefix matched the destination prefix, which no longer
matters since the source prefix is replaced with a placeholder
(so it always needs to be updated); it also would skip relocation
if the rpaths were not relative, when in fact it should be the
opposite (binaries without relative rpaths *should* be relocated,
and those without don't need it).
- FastPackageChecker was being called at startup every time Spack runs,
which takes a long time on networked filesystems. Startup was taking
5-7 seconds due to this call.
- The checker was intended to avaoid importing all packages (which is
really expensive) when all it needs is to stat them. So it's only
"fast" for parts of the code that *need* it.
- This commit makes repositories instantiate the checker lazily, so it's
only constructed when needed.
- This was needed when we transitioned to all lowercase packages because
git didn't handle case changes well on case-insensitive filesystems.
- Now it just adds extra stat calls to startup, and we check for
all-lowercase package names in tests, so we'll remove it.
- people using really old versions of Spack can re-clone.
* Create unload_module method
Extract code from load_module into unload_module.
* Unload modules to create a clean env on Cray
removes cray-libsci, cray-mpich and darshan to prevent any silent
linking with those packages.
* Add format to separate target and os for path
spec format can now handle separations of target and os for setting
up the path.
* Added ${PLATFORM} et al to spec.format()
${PLATFORM}, ${OS}, ${TARGET}
* Update tests
Updated tests and got rid of unnecessary code.
* Also update documentation to reflect this new ability.
* Add default path scheme to config.yaml
Added default path scheme to config.yaml. Users can overwrite this
section if they want.
* Speedup the default 'libs' property search - important for external
packages.
* As advised by @alalazo, use tuples instead of lists inside
_libs_default_handler.
* Added installation date and time to the database
Information on the date and time of installation of a spec is recorded
into the database. The information is retained on reindexing.
* Expose the possibility to query for installation date
The DB can now be queried for specs that have been installed in a given
time window. This query possibility is exposed to command line via two
new options of the `find` command.
* Extended docstring for Database._add
* Use timestamps since the epoch instead of formatted date in the DB
* Allow 'pretty date' formats from command line
* Substituted kwargs with explicit arguments
* Simplified regex for pretty date strings. Added unit tests.
This updates architecture concretization to
* Search for the nearest parent in the DAG for architecture information
rather than defaulting to the root of the DAG
* Propagate architecture settings transitively, such that if for
example the target is set at the root of the dag it will set the
same target on indirect dependencies (assuming no intermediate
dependency specifies a separate target). Previously this occurred
in general but under some conditions did not, for example if an
intermediate dependency specified some subset of architecture
properties.
* Create mirror for system with different compilers
Spack concretizes the spec provided by the user in
"spack mirror create" to ensure downloading the right
dependencies. Under normal circumstances concretization
requires that the chosen compiler exists on the system,
but this is not required when creating download mirrors
for other systems, so this requirement is removed in that
case.
* Add test for disabling compiler existence check
* Update compiler existence checking logic
* improve test for disabling compiler existence check
* make py-setuptools a run-time-only dep for py-basemap and patch python package to only apply setuptools flag for build deps
* py-qtconsole does not require setuptools
* This allows Spack to work with MD5 hashes on machines with openssl in FIPS mode.
* We are still using MD5 for validation in many places, and a later PR will replace all uses of MD5 with SHA256.
* This is a quick fix until that happens.
- transitive dependencies were not being handled correctly
- restructure code to do recursion and mark visited packages properly
- add `-V` option to *not* expand virtuals in spack dependencies
This re-adds the option to create and install unsigned tarballs, now
with the -u option (--unsigned) rather than the -y option.
This also changes the "keys" command, replacing the -y/--yes-to-all
option with the -t/--trust option (which has the same effect but is
more-clearly named).
Fixes#7130
shutil.move expects a source path like "/x/y/" to be a directory and
fails if "/x/y" is a symlink. This invokes realpath on the source
path to avoid the issue.
Fixes#7356
In some cases OperatingSystem (e.g. LinuxDistro) was getting
instantiated with a version that contains dashes. This breaks because
the concretizer later converts this value to a string and re-parses
it, and the '-' character is used to separate architecture components.
This adds a guard in the initializer to convert '-' to '_'.
Fixes#7237Fixes#6404Fixes#6418Fixes#6369
Identify when binary relocation fails to remove all instances of the
source prefix (and report an error to the user unless they specify
-a to allow the old root to appear). This check occurs at two stages:
during "bincache create" all instances of the root are replaced with
a special placeholder string ("@@@@..."), and a failure occurs if the
root is detected at this point; when the binary package is extracted
there is a second check. This addresses #7237 and #6418.
This is intended to be compatible with previously-created binary
packages.
This also adds:
* Better error messages for "spack install --use-cache" (#6404)
* Faster relocation on Mac OS (using a single call to
install_name_tool for all files rather than a call for each file)
* Clean up when "buildcache create" fails (addresses #6369)
* Explicit error message when the spack instance extracting the binary
package uses a different install layout than the spack instance that
created the binary package (since this is currently not supported)
* Remove the option to create unsigned binary packages with -y
This updates Cray.setup_platform_environment to use cray-specific
pkgconfig paths so that all providers of 'pkgconfig' have access
to them (previously the 'pkg-config' provider had this but the
'pkgconf' provider did not).
* [SPACK/spec.py] When a query through ForwardQueryToPackage returns
'None', treat that as query failure and raise RuntimeError with
suitable message. This overrides the current behavior to raise an
AttributeError which is now triggered only when no suitable query
property is found and there is no default handler.
* [spack/spec.py] Fix style.
* [SPACK/spec.py] In case of query failure, i.e. property returning
'None', raise AttributeError instead of RuntimeError in order to
pass the unit test. Also, small update in the logic distinguishing
query failure and lack of relevant property/attribute handling.
This updates the fix_darwin_install_name function to use the Spack
Executable object to run install_name_tool, which ensures that
process output is formatted as a 'str' for python2 and python3.
Originally fix_darwin_install_name was invoking subprocess.Popen
directly.
Fixes#5189
When working with non-normalized paths containing ".." on some
file systems, Spack was found to encounter a permission error when
writing to the path. This normalizes a path written by the
intel-parallel-studio package and also normalizes all paths
written by the license install hook (for all packages) to avoid
this issue for intel-parallel-studio.
Following the discussion with Todd and Adam, find has been modified to
accept glob expressions. This should not affect performance as every
glob implementation I inspected has 3 cases (no wildcard, wildcard but
no directories involved, wildcard and directories involved) and uses
fnmatch underneath.
Mixins have been changed to do by default a non-recursive search (but
a recursive search can still be triggered using the recursive keyword).
Following a comment from Todd, the search path for the files listed in
`filter_compiler_wrappers` can now be narrowed. Anyhow, the function
implementation still makes use of `find`, the rationale being that we
have already seen packages that install artifacts in e.g. architecture
dependent folders. The possibility to have a relative search path might
be a good compromise between the previous approach and the one suggested
in the review.
Also: 'ignore_absent' and 'backup' keyword arguments can be optionally
forwarded to `filter_file`.
Following comments from Todd:
- the call to tty.debug has been moved deeper, to log the filtering of each file
- the shadowing on the name "kwargs" is avoided
Implemented a declarative syntax for the additional behavior that can
get attached to classes. Implemented a function to filter compiler
wrappers that uses the mechanism above.
- command reference now includes usage for all Spack commands as output
by `spack help`. Each command usage links to any related section in
the docs.
- added `spack commands` command which can list command names,
subcommands, and generate RST docs for commands.
- added `llnl.util.argparsewriter`, which analyzes an argparse parser and
calls hooks for description, usage, options, and subcommands
- Shorten Spack command usage for short options. Short options are now
shown as [-abc] instead of as [-a] [-b] [-c]
- fix bug that mixed long and short options for top-level `spack help`
- Add proper help for `spack buildcache` subcommands
- Reorganize the help categories of Spack commands so that buildcache is
in packaging and diy and setup are now in build.
- previously commands with this argument showed a long list of choices
that were platform specific.
- use a better metavar: {defaults,system,site,user}[/PLATFORM]
Fixes#7159
When activating extensions in external views, the --ignore-conflicts
option was being ignored. In this particular issue the conflict was
for the duplicate __init__ file for multiple python packages in the
same namespace, but in general any conflict for extensions would
cause an error whether or not --ignore-conflicts was set.
This also renames the 'force' option of do_activate to
'with_dependencies' and updates views to call do_activate with this
set to False (since it traverses the dependency dag anyway). This
isn't strictly required, it just avoids redundant calls.
This reorganizes most sections and rewords a significant portion of
the content (including all introductions) but keeps all the examples.
* Remove section 'What happens at subscript time' from tutorial:
it is too detailed for a tutorial
* Move the 'Extra query parameters' and 'Attach attributes to other
packages' sections into a separate grouping 'Other packaging topics'
* move the 'Set variables at build time yourself' section after
'Set environment variables in dependents' section since the latter
is more motivating
* start the 'set environment variables at build-time for yourself'
section with qt as an example
* renamed section 'specs build interface' to 'retrieving library
information' and updated section introduction
* renamed section 'a motivating example' to 'accessing library
dependencies'; split out the material which deals with implementing
.libs for netlib-lapack into a separate section called 'providing
libraries to dependents'. consolidated in material from the section
'single package providing multiple virtual specs' since
netlib-lapack is an example of this (this removes the material
about intel-parallel studio)
* Allow dashes in command names and fix command name handling
- Command should allow dashes in their names like the reest of spack,
e.g. `spack log-parse`
- It might be too late for `spack build-cache` (since it is already
called `spack buildcache`), but we should try a bit to avoid
inconsistencies in naming conventions
- The code was inconsistent about where commands should be called by
their python module name (e.g. `log_parse`) and where the actual
command name should be used (e.g. `log-parse`).
- This made it hard to make a command with a dash in the name, and it
made `SpackCommand` fail to recognize commands with dashes.
- The code now uses the user-facing name with dashes for function
parameters, then converts that the module name when needed.
* Improve performance of log parsing
- A number of regular expressions from ctest_log_parser have really poor
performance, most due to untethered expressions with * or + (i.e., they
don't start with ^, so the repetition has to be checked for every
position in the string with Python's backtracking regex implementation)
- I can't verify that CTest's regexes work with an added ^, so I don't
really want to touch them. I tried adding this and found that it
caused some tests to break.
- Instead of using only "efficient" regular expressions, Added a
prefilter() class that allows the parser to quickly check a
precondition before evaluating any of the expensive regexes.
- Preconditions do things like check whether the string contains "error"
or "warning" (linear time things) before evaluating regexes that would
require them. It's sad that Python doesn't use Thompson string
matching (see https://swtch.com/~rsc/regexp/regexp1.html)
- Even with Python's slow implementation, this makes the parser ~200x
faster on the input we tried it on.
* Add `spack log-parse` command and improve the display of parsed logs
- Add better coloring and line wrapping to the log parse output. This
makes nasty build output look better with the line numbers.
- `spack log-parse` allows the log parsing logic used at the end of
builds to be executed on arbitrary files, which is handy even outside
of spack.
- Also provides a profile option -- we can profile arbitrary files and
show which regular expressions in the magic CTest parser take the most
time.
* Parallelize log parsing
- Log parsing now uses multiple threads for long logs
- Lines from logs are divided into chnks and farmed out to <ncpus>
- Add -j option to `spack log-parse`
* Marking database tests as slow
* Marking url command tests as slow
* Marking every test that uses database as slow
* Marking tests that import files as slow
* Marking gpg tests as slow
* Marking all versions and one list tests as slow
* Added more markers to unit tests + cli option to skip slow tests
Following a discussion with Axel, the generic 'slowtest' marker has been
split into 'db', 'network' and 'maybeslow'. A brief description of the
meaning of each marker has been added to pytest.ini.
A command line option to run only fast tests has been added to
'spack test'
* Don't use classes to group tests together
Reverted grouping tests under a class, as required in the review
* Minor style changes
This attempts to address one of the complaints at #5996 (comment):
> Repo currently caches package instances by Spec, and those Package instances have a Spec.
> This is unnecessary and causes confusion. I think I thought that we'd need to cache instances
> after loading package classes, but really just caching the classes is fine.
With this update, Repo's package cache is removed and Specs cache the package reference themselves. One consequence is that Specs which compare as equal will store separate instances of a Package class (not doing this creates issues for #4595 (comment)).
There were several references to Spec.package that could be replaced with Spec.package_class without any additional modifications. There are still a couple remaining references to Spec.package in Spec that would require adding functionality before replacing (e.g. calling Package.provides and Package.installed).
Note this makes it difficult to mock fetchers for tests which invokes code that reconstructs specs. test_packaging was one example of this where the updates caused a failure (in that case the error was avoided by not making an unnecessary call).
Details:
* Replace instances of spec.package with spec.package_class where a class method is being called
* Remove instances of Repo.get where Spec.package_class can be used in its place
* remove Repo.get caching instances of Package class for specs
* remove redundant check (which is also incorrect now that each spec stores its own copy of its package)
* avoid creating mirror with specs because it copies specs and those copies dont refer to the mocked fetcher (and it is also not required for the test)
* remove checks that are no longer necessary since repo doesn't cache specs
* Cleaned up JUnit report generation on install
The generation of a JUnit report was previously part of the install
command. This commit factors the logic into its own module, and uses
a template for the generation of the report.
It also improves report generation, that now can deal with multiple
specs installed at once. Finally, extending the list of supported
formats is much easier than before, as it entails just writing a
new template.
* Polished report generation + added tests for failures and errors
The generation of a JUnit report has been polished, so that the
stacktrace is correctly displayed with Jenkins JUnit plugin. Standard
error is still not used.
Added unit tests to cover for installation failures and installation
errors.
Avoid adding an "outside" (local home's) python user site directory
during python package installs.
Implements #6611
Fixes packages with auto-find side effects such as `py-setuptools`
that cause `py-matplotlib` to fail to build #6558
The flag_handlers method was being set as a bound method, but when
reset in the package.py file it was being set as an unbound method
(all python2 issues). This gets the underlying function information,
which is the same in either case.
The bug was uncovered for parmetis in #6858. This is a partial fix.
Included are changes to the parmetis package.py file to make use of
flag_handlers.
The feature added in #4611 is currently broken. This commit fixes the
behavior of the command and adds unit tests to ensure the basic semantic
is maintained.
It also changes slightly the behavior of Spec.concretized to avoid
copying caches before the concretization (as this may result in a
wrong hash computation for the DAG).
- Generating the HTML from for >2300 packages from RST in Sphinx seems to
take forever.
- Add an option to `spack list` to generate straight HTML instead.
- This reduces the doc build time to about a minute (from 5 minutes on a mac laptop).
* Vendor ordereddict for python2.6 only
This commit substitutes the custom module 'ordereddict_backport' with
the more known 'ordereddict' and vendors it only for python 2.6. Other
supported versions of python will use 'collections.OrderedDict'.
* Use absolute imports also for python 2.6
See PEP-328 for more information on the subject
* Added provenance of vendored ordereddict
See #6794
This fixes cases where test-only dependencies were omitted from
consideration when modifying the environment at build time. This
includes an update to the python package definition to add
testing-related python extensions to its specialized environment
setup.
This updates the conflict-checking logic to require that the conflict
spec matches exactly and that all fields mentioned in the conflict
spec are present in the concretized spec in order to report a
conflict. This will automatically skip all conflict checks for
dependencies of externals (since externals strip dependencies). This
will not affect non-external packages since all fields and
dependencies are fully specified for such packages.
* Keep track of source and versions for external libraries
* Note source of more obscure libraries
* We aren't upgrading jsonschema after all
* Add note on modifications made to pytest
* add OctavePackage
1. remove import CudaPackage which is not needed anymore
2. mention CudaPackage and OctavePackage in packaging guide
3. adjust OctavePackageTemplate
4. add clue file for Octave build
5. sanity check on self.prefix
* use setup_environment
* Only specify a file as needing relocation if it contains the spack
root as a text string (this constraint also applies to binaries)
* Don't fail if there is an error retrieving RPATH information from a
binary (even if it is specified as requiring relocation)
This adds the ability for packages to apply compiler flags in one of
three ways: by injecting them into the compiler wrapper calls (the
default in this PR and previously the only automated choice);
exporting environment variable definitions for variables with
corresponding names (e.g. CPPFLAGS=...); providing them as arguments
to the build system (e.g. configure).
When applying compiler flags using build system arguments, a package
must implement the 'flags_to_build_system_args" function. This is
provided for CMake and autotools packages, so for packages which
subclass those build systems, they need only update their flag
handler method specify which compiler flags should be specified as
arguments to the build system.
Convenience methods are provided to specify that all flags be applied
in one of the 3 available ways, so a custom implementation is only
required if more than one method of applying compiler flags is
needed.
This also removes redundant build system definitions from tutorial
examples
Fixes#5940
This PR changes the option '--restage' of 'spack install' to
'--dont-restage', inverting its meaning and the default behavior
of the command.
Fixes#6200
For compilers that successfully run a version detection script but
don't actually return a version, Spack was keeping track of the
empty version and then failing when attempting to construct a
compiler spec. This skips any attempt to add a compiler entry when
no version is reported (but logs when a compiler fails to report
a version).
* Support pruning of vars with Env from_sourcing_file (issue #6501)
- Blacklist string literals or regular expressions of environment
variables that are to be removed from consideration as being affect
by the sourcing of the file. Conversely, whitelist modifications
that should not ignored. Whitelisted variables have priority over
blacklisting.
Eg,
EnvironmentModifications.from_sourcing_file
(
bashrc
blacklist=['JUNK_ENV', 'OPTIONAL_.*'],
whitelist=['OPTIONAL_REQUIRED.*']
)
This modification can be used to eliminate environment variables that
are not generalized for modules (eg, user-specific variables).
* BUG: module prepend-path in wrong order (fixes#6501)
* STYLE: module variables in sorted order (issue #6501)
- looks nicer and also helps when comparing the contents of different
module files.
* ENH: remove duplicates from env paths when creating modules (issue #6501)
- this makes for a cleaner module environment and helps avoid some
unnecessary changes to the environment that are only provoked by
redundancies in the PATH.
eg,
before PATH=/usr/bin
after PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/bin:/my/application/bin
should only result in /my/application/bin being added to the PATH
and not /usr/bin:/my/application/bin
Activate via the 'clean' flag (default: False):
EnvironmentModifications.from_sourcing_file(bashrc, clean=True,..
Fixes#2440
The "Getting started" guide should be short and sweet. This commit
simplifies the "Environment-Modules" section pruning:
- outdated / wrong suggestions as noted in #2440
- uncommon setups that are better treated in a reference guide
According to the documentation here:
http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/ext/autodoc.html
"For module data members and class attributes, documentation can either
be put into a comment with special formatting (using a #: to start the
comment instead of just #), or in a docstring after the definition."
* Updated function which checks if a binary file needs relocation.
Previously this was incorrectly identifying ELF binaries as symbolic
links (so they were being excluded from relocation). Added test to
check that ELF binaries are not considered symlinks.
* relocate_text was not replacing paths in text files. Added test to
check that text files are relocated properly (i.e. paths in the file
are converted to the new prefix).
* Exclude backup files created by filter_file when installing from
binary cache.
* Update write_buildinfo_file method signature to distinguish between
the spec prefix and the working directory for the binary cache
package.
"spack spec" was providing helpful error information about conflicts
that was missing from "spack install", this updates "spack install"
to provide the same information.
The original docstring had confusing wording re: what is going to
symlinked and where when using the `extend` directive, and how exactly
the symlinking is performed (not automatically on install, but using
`spack activate`). See #5559.
Showing "Normalize" on output doesn't give users additional information,
as this step is essentially an implementation detail of concretization.
This PR skips it and shows just the input spec and the concretized one.
Printing partial hashes for input spec has been disabled.
* First draft for SC17 build systems portion
Added tutorial_buildsystems.rst file as well as example files under
the tutorial/ directory.
* Remove floating `
* Add requested changes, and examples of subclasses
Added in the requested changes to the documentation. Also added in
information about the subclasses and the defaults that they provide.
Also fixed some phrasing issues, formatting and punctuation.
* Flake8 fixes and new files for classes
Made flake8 fixes to pass tests and also added files to demonstrate code
in the classes.
* Minor edits
Edits in formatting and made some sentence changes
* Flake8 fixes
More flake8 fixes
* Flake8 fix
* Change section order on tutorial and minor edits
Placed the section at the appropriate section for the tutorial and then
added some minor edits that were requested.
* Add requested changes and more details
Added more details to Cmake, Makefile and Python Packages.
* Fixed formatting and minor edits
* Fix doc build error
* Allow types and 'any' in variant definitions.
- Previously variant values had to be a tuple or a callable predicate.
- This allows 'any' as shorthand for `lambda x: True` and type objects
as shorthand for "any value of this type".
- Makes variant definitions more readable, keeps lambdas out of
packages for common cases.
* Update packaging tutorial
* Fix bad file reference in packaging tutorial
* First draft of the advanced packaging tutorial
* advanced packaging tutorial: improved phrasing
Thanks Denis and Hartzell!
* Fixed typos + reworded a couple of sentences
* Reworked module file tutorial section
First draft for the SC17 update. This includes:
- adding an introduction on module files + Spack's module
generation blueprints
- adding a set-up section and provide a docker image for easy set-up
- updating all the relevant snippets
- extending a bit some of the concepts that were already touched
* Added reference to #5582 + committed Dockerfiles
Also fixed a couple of typos spotted by Denis.
* module file tutorial: added section on template customization
* module file tutorial: fixed minor typos + rephrased a sentence
* module file tutorial: made explicit that Docker image comes with software
* module file tutorial: improved phrasing and layout.
Thanks Hartzell!
* module file tutorial: added vim and nano to editors
* module file tutorial: fixed typo
* Fixed typos
Thanks Adam!
* module file tutorial: updated Dockerfile + minor changes in introduction
Fixes#6154
For compiler options which set values using the syntax "-flag value"
(with a space between the flag and the flag's value) the flag and
value were treated as separate and reordered. This updates Spack's
logic to treat the flag and value as a single unit, even if there is
a space between them. It assumes that all flags are prefixed with
"-" and that all flag values are not.
* Skip rewriting files that are links (this also avoids issues with parsing
the output of the 'file' command for symlinks)
* Fail rather than warn for several gpg signing issues (e.g. if there is no
key available to sign with)
* Installation with 'buildcache install' only retrieves link and run
dependencies (this matches 'buildcache create' which only creates tarballs
of link/run dependencies)
* Don't rewrite RPATHs for a binary if the binary cached package was created
with relative RPATHs
* Refactor relocate_binary to operate on multiple binaries (given as a
collection of paths). This was likewise done for relocate_text and
make_binary_relative
- This isn't one of those autogenerated SVGs from a drawing program!
- This is a completely re-traced, minimalist SVG file with clearly
delineated pieces so that your favorite renderer can draw a Spack logo
at whatever resolution you want.
- Included versions with text, as well.
Fixes#6126#3183 removed the print_help function from the "modules" module.
This adds it back so that if a user invokes 'spack load foo' without
having sourced an environment setup script, they will be prompted
to do so. This also improves the placeholder message to tell the
user to invoke 'spack' as shell function rather than as an executable.
Part of the resource staging process is to place downloaded/expanded
files in the root stage. This was not happening when a resource stage
was restaged.
Fixes#5778.
Spack uses 'gcc -dumpversion' to determine the full version of gcc.
'gcc -dumpversion' no longer gives the full version on gcc 7.2.0.
'gcc -dumpfullversion' is required instead. This PR detects when
'gcc -dumpversion' gives a truncated version of '7' and in that
case retrieves the full version with 'gcc -dumpfullversion'
The name of the debug log written by the cc compiler wrapper was given
by Spec.short_spec, which includes the architecture. Somewhere along
the line Spec.format started adding spaces around the architecture
property so the filename started including spaces; the cc wrapper
script appears to ignore this, so files like spack-cc-bzip2-....in.log
(which record the wrapped compiler invocations) were not being
generated. This uses a different format string from the spec to
generate the wrapper log file names (which does not include spaces).
* when a user-provided spec refers to an already-installed package, packages with patches applied were causing validation errors based on the recorded variants in the package's class
* avoid checks on all reserved variants (not just 'patches')
* basic functionality to install spec from a binary cache when it's available; this spiders each cache for each package and could likely be more efficient by caching the results of the first check
* add spec to db after installing from binary cache
* cache (in memory) spec listings retrieved from binary caches
* print a warning vs. failing when no mirrors are configured to retrieve pre-built Spack packages
* make automatic retrieval of pre-built spack packages from mirrors optional
* no code was using the links stored in the dictionary returned by get_specs, so this simplifies the logic to return only a set of specs
* print package prefix after installing from binary cache
* provide more information to user on install progress
This updates the logic for Package.extends so that if the spec
associated with the package is not concrete, it will report true if
the package *could extend* the given spec; generally speaking a
package could extend a spec as long as none of the details associated
with its extendee spec conflict with the given spec. When the spec
associated with the package is concrete, this function will only
report whether the package *does extend* the given spec. When both
the specs are concrete, the semantics are the same as before.
* When creating a tar of a package for a build cache, symlinks are
preserved (the corresponding path in the newly-created tarfile will
be a symlink rather than a copy of the file)
* Dont add external packages to a build cache
* When installing from binary cache, don't create install prefix until
verification is complete
* Fixes#5754
Previously when RepoPath.repo_for_pkg was invoked with a string,
it did not check if the string included a namespace. Any
namespace-qualified package provided as a string would not be found
(at which point the behavior was to return the highest-precedence
repository).
* handle nested namespaces for packages specified as strings in repo_for_pkg
* add preliminary repository tests
* add test which replicates #5754
* refactor repo tests with fixtures
* define repo_path equivalent at test-level scope for repo tests
* add tests for unknown namespace/package
* rename fixture function (no longer prefixed with 'test_')
Internally we work against a branch named 'llnl/develop', which
mirrors the public repository's `develop` branch.
It's useful to be able to run flake8 on our changes, using
`llnl/develop` as the base branch instead of `develop`.
Internally the flake8 subcommand generates the list of changes files
using a hardcoded range of `develop...`.
This makes the base of that range a command line option, with a
default of `develop`.
That lets us do this:
```
spack flake8 --base llnl/develop
```
which uses a range of `llnl/develop...`.
'spack install' can now reinstall a spec even if it has dependents, via
the --overwrite option. This option moves the current installation in a
temporary directory. If the reinstallation is successful the temporary
is removed, otherwise a rollback is performed.
- new E741 flake8 checks disallow 'l', 'O', and 'I' as variable names
- rework parts of the code that use this, to be compliant
- we could add exceptions for this, but we're trying to mostly keep up
with PEP8 and we already have more than a few exceptions.
- When you don't use wildcards, flake8 will find places where you used an
undefined name.
- This commit has all the bugfixes resulting from this static check.
There are now separate flake8 configs for core vs. packages:
- core has a smaller set of flake8 exceptions
- packages allow `from spack import *` and module globals
- Allows core to take advantage of static checking for undefined names
- Allows packages to keep using Spack tricks like `from spack import *`
and dependencies setting globals for dependents.
* Update Getting Started docs to clarify that full Xcode suite is required for qt
* Better error message when only the command-line tools are installed
I'm tracking down a problem with the perl package that's been
generating this error:
```
OSError: OSError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/blah/blah/blah/lib/5.24.1/x86_64-linux/Config.pm~'
```
The real problem is upstream, but it's being masked by an exception
raised in `filter_file`s finally block.
In my case, `backup` is `False`.
The backup is created around line 127, the `re.sub()` calls
fails (working on that), the `except` block fires and moves the backup
file back, then the finally block tries to remove the non-existent
backup file.
This change just avoids trying to remove the non-existent file.
- The shell script uses arrays and hence only works on sophisticated shells and not the default `sh`. For clarity the shebang `#!/bin/bash` has been used instead.
- This fakes out GitFetchStrategy to try code paths for different git
versions.
- This allows us to test code paths for old versions using a newer git
version.
- Tests use a session-scoped mock stage directory so as not to interfere
with the real install.
- Every test is forced to clean up after itself with an additional check.
We now automatically assert that no new files have been added to
`spack.stage_path` during each test.
- This means that tests that fail installs now need to clean up their
stages, but in all other cases the check is useful.
- Be explicit about stage creation during the install process.
- This avoids accidental creation of stages
- e.g., during `spack install --fake`, stages were erroneously recreated
after being destroyed
- This prevents the main spack install from being clusttered by
invocations of `spack test`.
- This uses a session-scoped stage fixture to ensure tests don't
interfere.
- Spack's core package interface was previously overly stateful, in that
calling methods like `do_stage()` could change your working directory.
- This removes Stage's `chdir` and `chdir_to_source` methods and replaces
their usages with `with working_dir(stage.path)` and `with
working_dir(stage.source_path)`, respectively. These ensure the
original working directory is preserved.
- This not only makes the API more usable, it makes the tests more
deterministic, as previously a test could leave the current working
directory in a bad state and cause subsequent tests to fail
mysteriously.
- Assertion would search for root through all possible paths.
- It's also really slow.
- This isn't needed anymore. We're pretty good at ensuring single-rooted
DAGs, and this assertion has never been thrown.
- This shaves another 6 seconds off r-rminer concretization
- This reduces concretization time for r-rminer from over 1 minute to
only 16 seconds.
- OrderedDict ends up taking a *lot* of time to compare larger specs.
- An OrderedDict isn't actually needed here. It's actually not possible
to find duplicates, and we end up sorting the contents of the
OrderedDict anyway.
- This is an optimization to the way traverse_edges iterates over
successors.
- Previous version called dependencies_dict(), which involved a lot of
redundant work (creating dicts and calling caonical_deptype)
- Spack ends up constructing compilers frequently from YAML data.
- This caches the result of parsing the compiler config
- The logic in compilers/__init__.py could use a bigger cleanup, but this
makes concretization much faster for now.
- on macOS, this also ensures that xcrun is called only twice, as opposed
to every time a new compiler object is constructed.
This adds a workflow section on how to use spack on Docker.
It provides an example on the best-practices I collected over the
last months and circumvents the common pitfalls I tapped in.
Works with MPI, CUDA, Modules, execution as root, etc.
Background: Developed initially for PIConGPU.
* Make --trusted default when running spack gpg list
Currently running `spack gpg list` with no arguments returns nothing. You must supply either the `--trusted` or the `--signing` options. The idea here is to return some initial data to the user when the command is run. The alternative is to return an error, telling the user to select one of the two options.
* Add an extra test case for the empty list command
Fixes the issue with code coverage
This isn't a rework of the concretizer but it speeds things up a LOT.
The main culprits were:
1. Variant code, `provider_index`, and `concretize.py` were calling
`spec.package` when they could use `spec.package_class`
- `spec.package` looks up a package instance by `Spec`, which requires a
(fast-ish but not that fast) DAG compare.
- `spec.package_class` just looks up the package's class by name, and you
should use this when all you need is metadata (most of the time).
- not really clear that the current way packages are looked up is
necessary -- we can consider refactoring that in the future.
2. `Repository.repo_for_pkg` parses a `str` argument into a `Spec` when
called with one, via `@_autospec`, but this is not needed.
- Add some faster code to handle strings directly and avoid parsing
This speeds up concretization 3-9x in my limited tests. Still not super
fast but much more bearable:
Before:
- `spack spec xsdk` took 33.6s
- `spack spec dealii` took 1m39s
After:
- `spack spec xsdk` takes 6.8s
- `spack spec dealii` takes 10.8s
* Do not call setup_package for fake installs
- setup package could fail if ``setup_dependent_environment`` or other
routines expected to use executables from dependencies
- xpetsc and boost try to get python config variables in
`setup_dependent_package`; this would cause them not to be
fake-installable
* Remove vestigial deptype_query argument to Spec.traverse()
- The `deptype_query` argument isn't used anymore -- it's only passed
around and causes confusion when calling traverse.
- Get rid of it and just keep the `deptypes` argument
* Don't print redundant messages when installing dependencies
- `do_install()` was originally depth-first recursive, and printed "<pkg>
already installed in ..." multiple times for packages as recursive
calls encountered them.
- For much cleaner output, use spec.traverse(order='post') to install
dependencies instead
* Add package for aspell and ass't dictionaries
Add a package definition for aspell.
Add a handful of dictionaries to convince myself that the support for
a bunch of dictionaries works.
* Flake8 cleanup
* Use six's version of urlparse
`urlparse` is not python3 friendly. This works around it (stolen from
`.../cmd/md5.py`).
* Fix incorrect trimming regexp
* Clean up dictionary build
- more parsimonious use of `which` (`make()` has already been made)
- use `sh` instead of `bash`
* Use a helper method to generate info for variants
I figured out my issues with static methods. I *think* that it this
is pythonic.
* Convert aspell to an extendable package
Convert aspell to be extendable and rework the dictionaries to be
extensions.
As it stands, there's a great deal of cut and paste in the
dictionaries, I'll abstract that out next.
The {de,}activate methods copy a great deal of code out of
package.py. Perhaps there's a better way....
* Create AspellDictPackage and use it for the dictionaries
Reduce the repeated code, pull it into a base class.
I'm confused about why 'from spack import *' wasn't more useful in the
base class.
* Oops, -de & -es should be AspellDictPackages too
* Typo: pakcage -> package
* Address some commentary
* Update copyright dates, 2016->2017
* spec and spec.package.spec can refer to different objects in the
database. When these two instances of spec differ in terms of
the value of the 'concrete' property, Spec._mark_concrete can
fail when checking Spec.package.installed (which requires
package.spec to be concrete). This skips the check for
spec.package.installed when _mark_concrete is called with
'True' (in other words, when the database is marking all specs
as being concrete).
* add test to confirm this fixes#5293
* edits to address issues where spack concretization attempts to set properties on already-installed specs
* most added checks only need to check if the spec is concrete; they dont also need to check if the package is installed
* add test to ensure that patches are not applied to an installed spec
* add test to ensure that an error is detected when a dependent requests a dependency constraint which conflicts with a requested installed dependency
Fixes#5455
All methods within setup_package use an EnvironmentModifications object
to control the environment. Those modifications are applied at the end
of setup_package. Module loads for the build environment need to be
done after the rest of the environment modifications are applied, as
otherwise Spack may unset variables set by those modules (for example
LD_LIBRARY_PATH).
closes#2884closes#4684
In #1848 we decided to use `Spec.format` to expand certain tokens in
the module file naming scheme or in the environment variable name.
Not all the tokens that are allowed in `Spec.format` make sense in
module file generation. This PR restricts the set of tokens that can
be used, and adds tests to check that the intended behavior is respected.
Additionally, the names of environment variables set/modified by module
files were, up to now, always uppercase. There are packages though that
require case sensitive variable names to honor certain behaviors (e.g.
OpenMPI). This PR restricts the uppercase transformation in variable
names to `Spec.format` tokens.
fixes#5587
In trying to preserve patch ordering, #5476 made equality inconsistent
for the added 'patches' variant. This commit maintains the original
weak ordering of patch applications while preserving consistency of
comparisons. The ordering DOES NOT enter the hashing mechanism. It's
supposed to be a hotfix, while we think of a cleaner and more-permanent
solution.
- This steals the magic regular expressions that CTest uses to parse log
files and addds them to Spack. See here:
https://github.com/Kitware/CMake/blob/master/Source/CTest/cmCTestBuildHandler.cxx
These are BSD licensed, so the port is in `externa/ctest_log_parser.py`
- We currently use these to do better filtering of errors from build
output. Plan is to use them to generate good CDash output.
`spack blame` prints out the contributors to a package.
By modification time:
```
$ spack blame --time llvm
LAST_COMMIT LINES % AUTHOR EMAIL
3 days ago 2 0.6 Andrey Prokopenko <andrey.prok@gmail.com>
3 weeks ago 125 34.7 Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@epfl.ch>
3 weeks ago 3 0.8 Peter Scheibel <scheibel1@llnl.gov>
2 months ago 21 5.8 Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
2 months ago 1 0.3 Gregory Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
3 months ago 116 32.2 Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
5 months ago 2 0.6 Jimmy Tang <jcftang@gmail.com>
5 months ago 6 1.7 Jean-Paul Pelteret <jppelteret@gmail.com>
7 months ago 65 18.1 Tom Scogland <tscogland@llnl.gov>
11 months ago 13 3.6 Kelly (KT) Thompson <kgt@lanl.gov>
a year ago 1 0.3 Scott Pakin <pakin@lanl.gov>
a year ago 3 0.8 Erik Schnetter <schnetter@gmail.com>
3 years ago 2 0.6 David Beckingsale <davidbeckingsale@gmail.com>
3 days ago 360 100.0
```
Or by percent contribution:
```
$ spack blame --percent llvm
LAST_COMMIT LINES % AUTHOR EMAIL
3 weeks ago 125 34.7 Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@epfl.ch>
3 months ago 116 32.2 Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
7 months ago 65 18.1 Tom Scogland <tscogland@llnl.gov>
2 months ago 21 5.8 Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
11 months ago 13 3.6 Kelly (KT) Thompson <kgt@lanl.gov>
5 months ago 6 1.7 Jean-Paul Pelteret <jppelteret@gmail.com>
3 weeks ago 3 0.8 Peter Scheibel <scheibel1@llnl.gov>
a year ago 3 0.8 Erik Schnetter <schnetter@gmail.com>
3 years ago 2 0.6 David Beckingsale <davidbeckingsale@gmail.com>
3 days ago 2 0.6 Andrey Prokopenko <andrey.prok@gmail.com>
5 months ago 2 0.6 Jimmy Tang <jcftang@gmail.com>
2 months ago 1 0.3 Gregory Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
a year ago 1 0.3 Scott Pakin <pakin@lanl.gov>
3 days ago 360 100.0
```
- A package can depend on a special patched version of its dependencies.
- The `Spec` YAML (and therefore the hash) now includes the sha256 of
the patch in the `Spec` YAML, which changes its hash.
- The special patched version will be built separately from a "vanilla"
version of the same package.
- This allows packages to maintain patches on their dependencies
without affecting either the dependency package or its dependents.
This could previously be accomplished with special variants, but
having to add variants means the hash of the dependency changes
frequently when it really doesn't need to. This commit allows the
hash to change *just* for dependencies that need patches.
- Patching dependencies shouldn't be the common case, but some packages
(qmcpack, hpctoolkit, openspeedshop) do this kind of thing and it
makes the code structure mirror maintenance responsibilities.
- Note that this commit means that adding or changing a patch on a
package will change its hash. This is probably what *should* happen,
but we haven't done it so far.
- Only applies to `patch()` directives; `package.py` files (and their
`patch()` functions) are not hashed, but we'd like to do that in the
future.
- The interface looks like this: `depends_on()` can optionally take a
patch directive or a list of them:
depends_on(<spec>,
patches=patch(..., when=<cond>),
when=<cond>)
# or
depends_on(<spec>,
patches=[patch(..., when=<cond>),
patch(..., when=<cond>)],
when=<cond>)
- Previously, the `patch()` directive only took an `md5` parameter. Now
it only takes a `sha256` parameter. We restrict this because we want
to be consistent about which hash is used in the `Spec`.
- A side effect of hashing patches is that *compressed* patches fetched
from URLs now need *two* checksums: one for the downloaded archive and
one for the content of the patch itself. Patches fetched uncompressed
only need a checksum for the patch. Rationale:
- we include the content of the *patch* in the spec hash, as that is
the checksum we can do consistently for patches included in Spack's
source and patches fetched remotely, both compressed and
uncompressed.
- we *still* need the patch of the downloaded archive, because we want
to verify the download *before* handing it off to tar, unzip, or
another decompressor. Not doing so is a security risk and leaves
users exposed to any arbitrary code execution vulnerabilities in
compression tools.
- Functions returned by directives were all called `_execute`, which made
reading stack traces hard because you couldn't tell what directive a
frame came from.
- renamed them all to `_execute_<directive>`
- Exceptions in directives were only really used in one or two places --
get rid of the boilerplate init functions and let the callsite specify
the message.
- move `spack.cmd.checksum.get_checksums` to `spack.util.web.spider_checksums`
- move `spack.error.NoNetworkError` to `spack.util.web.NoNetworkError` since
it is only used there.
- Previously, dependencies and dependency_types were stored as separate
dicts on Package.
- This means a package can only depend on another in one specific way,
which is usually but not always true.
- Prior code unioned dependency types statically across dependencies on
the same package.
- New code stores dependency relationships as their own object, with a
spec constraint and a set of dependency types per relationship.
- Dependency types are now more precise
- There is now room to add more information to dependency relationships.
- New Dependency class lives in dependency.py, along with deptype
definitions that used to live in spack.spec.
Move deptype definitions to spack.dependency
* Add '--test=all' and '--test=root' options to test either the root or the root and all dependencies.
* add a test dependency type that is only used when --test is enabled.
* test dependencies are not added to the spec, but they are provided in the test environment.
closes#5473
Prior to this PR we were not exiting early for external packages, which
caused the `configure_options` property of the contexts to fail with
e.g. a key error because the DAG gets truncated for them. More
importantly Spack configure options don't make any sense for externals.
Now we exit early, and leave a message in the module file clarifying
that this package has been installed outside of Spack.
closes#5201
Currently, if a user sets an external package to have a prefix that is
one of the system paths (like '/usr') the module files that are
generated will prepend '/usr/bin' to 'PATH', etc. This is particularly
nasty at the time when a module file is unloaded, and e.g. paths like
'/usr/bin' will be discarded from PATH.
This PR solves the issue skipping system paths when a prefix inspection
is made to generate module files.
* Module files now are generated using a template engine refers #2902#3173
jinja2 has been hooked into Spack.
The python module `modules.py` has been splitted into several modules
under the python package `spack/modules`. Unit tests stressing module
file generation have been refactored accordingly.
The module file generator for Lmod has been extended to multi-providers
and deeper hierarchies.
* Improved the support for templates in module files.
Added an entry in `config.yaml` (`template_dirs`) to list all the
directories where Spack could find templates for `jinja2`.
Module file generators have a simple override mechanism to override
template selection ('modules.yaml' beats 'package.py' beats 'default').
* Added jinja2 and MarkupSafe to vendored packages.
* Spec.concretize() sets mutual spec-package references
The correct place to set the mutual references between spec and package
objects at the end of concretization. After a call to concretize we
should now be ensured that spec is the same object as spec.package.spec.
Code in `build_environment.py` that was performing the same operation
has been turned into an assertion to be defensive on the new behavior.
* Improved code and data layout for modules and related tests.
Common fixtures related to module file generation have been extracted
in `conftest.py`. All the mock configurations for module files have been
extracted from python code and have been put into their own yaml file.
Added a `context_property` decorator for the template engine, to make
it easy to define dictionaries out of properties.
The default for `verbose` in `modules.yaml` is now False instead of True.
* Extendable module file contexts + short description from docstring
The contexts that are used in conjunction with `jinja2` templates to
generate module files can now be extended from package.py and
modules.yaml.
Module files generators now infer the short description from package.py
docstring (and as you may expect it's the first paragraph)
* 'module refresh' regenerates all modules by default
`module refresh` without `--module-type` specified tries to
regenerate all known module types. The same holds true for `module rm`
Configure options used at build time are extracted and written into the
module files where possible.
* Fixed python3 compatibility, tests for Lmod and Tcl.
Added test for exceptional paths of execution when generating Lmod
module files.
Fixed a few compatibility issues with python3.
Fixed a bug in Tcl with naming_scheme and autoload + unit tests
* Updated module file tutorial docs. Fixed a few typos in docstrings.
The reference section for module files has been reorganized. The idea is
to have only three topics at the highest level:
- shell support + spack load/unload use/unuse
- module file generation (a.k.a. APIs + modules.yaml)
- module file maintenance (spack module refresh/rm)
Module file generation will cover the entries in modules.yaml
Also:
- Licenses have been updated to include NOTICE and extended to 2017
- docstrings have been reformatted according to Google style
* Removed redundant arguments to RPackage and WafPackage.
All the callbacks in `RPackage` and `WafPackage` that are not build
phases have been modified not to accept a `spec` and a `prefix`
argument. This permits to leverage the common `configure_args` signature
to insert by default the configuration arguments into the generated
module files. I think it's preferable to handling those packages
differently than `AutotoolsPackage`. Besides only one package seems
to override one of these methods.
* Fixed broken indentation + improved resiliency of refresh
Fixed broken indentation in `spack module refresh` (probably a rebase
gone silently wrong?). Filter the writers for blacklisted specs before
searching for name clashes. An error with a single writer will not
stop regeneration, but instead will print a warning and continue
the command.
- converted `log_path` and `env_path` to properties of PackageBase.
- InstallErrors in build_environment are now annotated with the package
that caused them, in the 'pkg' attribute.
- Add `--show-log-on-error` option to `spack install` that catches
InstallErrors and prints the log to stderr if it exists.
Note that adding a reference to the Pakcage allows a lot of stuff
currently handled by do_install() and build_environment to be handled
externally.
- '\b' in regular expression needs to be in a raw string (r'\b')
- Regression test that would've caught this was unintentionally disabled
- This fixes the string and the test
The correct place to set the mutual references between spec and
package objects is at the end of concretization. After a call to
concretize we should now be ensured that spec is the same object
as spec.package.spec.
Code in `build_environment.py` that was performing the same
operation has been turned into an assertion to be defensive on
the new behavior.
- Fixes bugs where concretization would fail due to an erroneously cached
_concrete attribute.
- Ripped out a bunch of code in spec.py that isn't needed/valid anymore:
- The various concrete() methods on different types of Specs would
attempt to statically compute whether the Spec was concrete.
- This dates back to when DAGs were simpler and there were no optional
dependencies. It's actually NOT possible to compute statically
whether a Spec is concrete now. The ONLY way you know is if it goes
through concretization and is marked concrete once that completes.
- This commit removes all simple concreteness checks and relies only on
the _concrete attribute. This should make thinking about
concreteness simpler.
- Fixed a couple places where Specs need to be marked concrete explicitly.
- Specs read from files and Specs that are destructively copied from
concrete Specs now need to be marked concrete explicitly.
- These spots may previously have "worked", but they were brittle and
should be explcitly marked anyway.
- Dependencies in concrete specs did not previously have their cache
fields (_concrete, _normal, etc.) preserved.
- _dup and _dup_deps weren't passing each other enough information to
preserve concreteness properly, so only the root was properly
preserved.
- cached concreteness is now preserved properly for the entire DAG, not
just the root.
- added method docs.
Fixes#4112
This commit extends the support of the AutotoolsPackage methods
`with_or_without` and `enable_or_disable` to bool-valued variants. It
also defines for those functions a convenience short-cut if the
activation parameter is the prefix of a spec (like in
`--with-{pkg}={prefix}`).
This commit also includes:
* Updates to viennarna and adios accordingly: they have been modified to
use `enable_or_disable` and `with_or_without`
* Improved docstrings in `autotools.py`. Raise `KeyError` if name is
not a variant.
Renames the existing bootstrap command to 'clone'. Repurposes
'spack bootstrap' to install packages that are useful to the
operation of Spack (for now this is just environment-modules).
For bash and ksh users running setup-env.sh, if a Spack-installed
instance of environment-modules is detected and environment modules
and dotkit are not externally available, Spack will define the
'module' command in the user's shell to use the environment-modules
built by Spack.
First, quote the environment variable values. Second, export the
variables. sorry, this is bourn-shell syntax. Happy to consider a
shell-independent way to do this, but spack is already using sh-like
"env=value"
* Added support to query packages by tags.
- The querying commands `spack list`, `spack find` and `spack info` have
been modified to support querying by tags. Tests have been added to
check that the feature is working correctly under what should be the
most frequent use cases.
* Refactored Repo class to make insertion of new file caches easier.
- Added the class FastPackageChecker. This class is a Mapping from
package names to stat info, that gets memoized for faster access.
- Extracted the creation of a ProviderIndex to its own factory function.
* Added a cache file for tags.
- Following what was done for providers, a TagIndex class has been added.
This class can serialize and deserialize objects from json. Repo and
RepoPath have a new method 'packages_with_tags', that uses the TagIndex
to compute a list of package names that have all the tags passed as
arguments.
On Ubuntu 14.04 the effect if the cache reduces the time for spack list
from ~3sec. to ~0.3sec. after the cache has been built.
* Fixed colorization of `spack info`
This command broke after #5109. It was using the default value for the
"dirty" argument in `setup_package`. Now it adopts the same logic as
in `spack install`. Changed help for '--clean' and '--dirty'.
Improved coverage of spack env.
The private method `Spec._dup` was missing a line (when setting compiler
flags the parent spec was not set to `self`). This resulted in
an inconsistent state of the duplicated Spec. This problem has been
fixed here. The docstring of `Spec._dup` has been updated.
This change is done to avoid inconsistencies during refactoring. The rationale is that functions at different levels in the call stack all define a default for the 'dirty' argument. This PR removes the default value for all the functions except the top-level one (`PackageBase.do_install`).
In this way not defining 'dirty' will result in an error, instead of the default value being used. This will reduce the risk of having an inconsistent behavior after a refactoring.
* Respect --insecure when fetching list_url.
* Ensure support for Python 2.6, and that urlopen works for python versions prior 2.7.9 and between 3.0 and 3.4.3.
* Simplified Spec.__init__ signature by removing the *dep_like argument.
The `*dep_like` argument of `Spec.__init__` is used only for tests. This
PR removes it from the call signature and introduces an equivalent
fixture to be used in tests.
* Refactored ``spec_from_dict`` to be a static method of ``Spec``
The fixture ``spec_from_dict`` has been refactored to be a static method
of ``Spec``. Test code has been updated accordingly. Added tests for
exceptional paths.
* Renamed argument `unique` to `normal` + added LazySpecCache class
As requested in the review the argument `unique` of `Spec.from_literal`
has been renamed to `normal`. To avoid eager evaluations of
`Spec(spec_like)` expressions a subclass of `collections.defaultdict`
has been introduced.
* Spec object can be keys of the dictionary for a spec literal.
Added back the possibility use a spec directly as a key. This permits
to build DAGs that are partially normalized.
- Update handling of ChildError so that its output is capturable from a
SpackCommand
- Update cmd/install test to make sure Python and build log output is
being displayed properly.
- install and probably other commands were designed to run once, but now
we can to test them from within Spack with SpackCommand
- cmd/install.py assumed that it could modify do_install in PackageBase
and leave it that way; this makes the decorator temporary
- package.py didn't properly initialize its stage if the same package had
been built successfully before (and the stage removed).
- manage stage lifecycle better and remember when Package needs to
re-create the stage