* acts-dd4hep: new package, separated from new acts@19.1.0
* acts-dd4hep: improved versioning
* acts-dd4hep: don't use curl | sha256sum
* acts: new variant `odd` for Open Data Detector
* acts-dd4hep: style changes
Add spack stacks targeted at Spack + AWS + ARM HPC User Group hackathon. Includes
a list of miniapps and full-apps that are ready to run on both x86_64 and aarch64.
Co-authored-by: Scott Wittenburg <scott.wittenburg@kitware.com>
Add two new stacks targeted at x86_64 and arm, representing an initial list of packages
used by current and planned AWS Workshops, and built in conjunction with the ISC22
announcement of the spack public binary cache.
Co-authored-by: Scott Wittenburg <scott.wittenburg@kitware.com>
Explicitly import package utilities in all packages, and corresponding fallout.
This includes:
* rename `spack.package` to `spack.package_base`
* rename `spack.pkgkit` to `spack.package`
* update all packages in builtin, builtin_mock and tutorials to include `from spack.package import *`
* update spack style
* ensure packages include the import
* automatically add the new import and remove any/all imports of `spack` and `spack.pkgkit`
from packages when using `--fix`
* add support for type-checking packages with mypy when SPACK_MYPY_CHECK_PACKAGES
is set in the environment
* fix all type checking errors in packages in spack upstream
* update spack create to include the new imports
* update spack repo to inject the new import, injection persists to allow for a deprecation period
Original message below:
As requested @adamjstewart, update all packages to use pkgkit. I ended up using isort to do this,
so repro is easy:
```console
$ isort -a 'from spack.pkgkit import *' --rm 'spack' ./var/spack/repos/builtin/packages/*/package.py
$ spack style --fix
```
There were several line spacing fixups caused either by space manipulation in isort or by packages
that haven't been touched since we added requirements, but there are no functional changes in here.
* [x] add config to isort to make sure this is maintained going forward
referred targets are currently the only minimization criteria for Spack for which we allow
negative values. That means Spack may be incentivized to add nodes to the DAG if they
match the preferred target.
This PR re-norms the minimization criteria so that preferred targets are weighted from 0,
and default target weights are offset by the number of preferred targets per-package to
calculate node_target_weight.
Also fixes a bug in the test for preferred targets that was making the test easier to pass
than it should be.
* Call Numpy package's set_blas_lapack() and setup_build_environment() in Scipy package
* Remove broken link from comment
* Use .package attribute of spec to avoid import
This PR fixes several issues I noticed while trying to get Spack working on Apple M1.
- [x] `build_environment.py` attempts to add `spec['foo'].libs` and `spec['foo'].headers` to our compiler wrappers for all dependencies using a try-except that ignores `NoLibrariesError` and `NoHeadersError` respectively. However, The `libs` and `headers` attributes of the Python package were erroneously using `RuntimeError` instead.
- [x] `spack external find python` (used during bootstrapping) currently has no way to determine whether or not an installation is `+shared`, so previously we would only search for static Python libs. However, most distributions including XCode/Conda/Intel ship shared Python libs. I updated `libs` to search for both shared and static (order based on variant) as a fallback.
- [x] The `headers` attribute was recursively searching in `prefix.include` for `pyconfig.h`, but this could lead to non-deterministic behavior if multiple versions of Python are installed and `pyconfig.h` files exist in multiple `<prefix>/include/pythonX.Y` locations. It's safer to search in `sysconfig.get_path('include')` instead.
- [x] The Python installation that comes with XCode is broken, and `sysconfig.get_paths` is hard-coded to return specific directories. This meant that our logic for `platlib`/`purelib`/`include` where we replace `platbase`/`base`/`installed_base` with `prefix` wasn't working and the `mkdirp` in `setup_dependent_package` was trying to create a directory in root, giving permissions issues. Even if you commented out those `mkdirp` calls, Spack would add the wrong directories to `PYTHONPATH`. Added a fallback hard-coded to `lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages` if sysconfig is broken (this is what distutils always did).
* Adding new package bricks for x86, cuda
* Fixed complaints from "spack style" that CI found
* add license comment at top
Co-authored-by: drhansj <drhansj@berkeley.edu>
Co-authored-by: eugeneswalker <38933153+eugeneswalker@users.noreply.github.com>
This PR supports the creation of securely signed binaries built from spack
develop as well as release branches and tags. Specifically:
- remove internal pr mirror url generation logic in favor of buildcache destination
on command line
- with a single mirror url specified in the spack.yaml, this makes it clearer where
binaries from various pipelines are pushed
- designate some tags as reserved: ['public', 'protected', 'notary']
- these tags are stripped from all jobs by default and provisioned internally
based on pipeline type
- update gitlab ci yaml to include pipelines on more protected branches than just
develop (so include releases and tags)
- binaries from all protected pipelines are pushed into mirrors including the
branch name so releases, tags, and develop binaries are kept separate
- update rebuild jobs running on protected pipelines to run on special runners
provisioned with an intermediate signing key
- protected rebuild jobs no longer use "SPACK_SIGNING_KEY" env var to
obtain signing key (in fact, final signing key is nowhere available to rebuild jobs)
- these intermediate signatures are verified at the end of each pipeline by a new
signing job to ensure binaries were produced by a protected pipeline
- optionallly schedule a signing/notary job at the end of the pipeline to sign all
packges in the mirror
- add signing-job-attributes to gitlab-ci section of spack environment to allow
configuration
- signing job runs on special runner (separate from protected rebuild runners)
provisioned with public intermediate key and secret signing key
Old concrete specs were slipping through in `_assign_hash`, and `package_hash` was
attempting to recompute a package hash when we could not know the package a time
of concretization.
Part of this was that the logic for `_assign_hash` was hard to understand -- it was
called twice from `_finalize_concretization` and had special cases for both args it
was called with. It's much easier to understand the logic here if we just inline it.
- [x] Get rid of `_assign_hash` and just integrate it with `_finalize_concretization`
- [x] Don't call `_package_hash` at all for already-concrete specs.
- [x] Add regression test.
Use `spack build` as build dir to avoid recursive link error.
```
config.status: linking /var/folders/fy/x2xtwh1n7fn0_0q2kk29xkv9vvmbqb/T/s3j/spack-stage/spack-stage-sed-4.8-wraqsot6ofzvr3vrgusx4mj4mya5xfux/spack-src/GNUmakefile to GNUmakefile
config.status: executing depfiles commands
config.status: executing po-directories commands
config.status: creating po/POTFILES
config.status: creating po/Makefile
==> sed: Executing phase: 'build'
==> [2022-05-25-14:15:51.310333] 'make' '-j8' 'V=1'
make: GNUmakefile: Too many levels of symbolic links
make: stat: GNUmakefile: Too many levels of symbolic links
make: *** No rule to make target `GNUmakefile'. Stop.
```