I think this test should be removed, but when it stays, it should at
least follow the symlink, cause it fails for me if I let spack build
patchelf and have a symlink in a view.
Modifications:
- [x] Removed `centos:6` unit test, adjusted vermin checks
- [x] Removed backport of `collections.OrderedDict`
- [x] Removed backport of `functools.total_ordering`
- [x] Removed Python 2.6 specific skip markers in unit tests
- [x] Fixed a few minor Python 2.6 related TODOs in code
Updating the vendored dependencies will be done in separate PRs
* Make CUDA and ROCm architecture conditional
fixes#14337
The variant to specify which architecture to use
for CUDA and ROCm are now conditional on +cuda and
+rocm respectively.
* cp2k: make all CUDA related variants conditional on +cuda
* 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"
Remove the "get_executable" function from the
spack.bootstrap module. Now "flake8", "isort",
"mypy" and "black" will use the same
bootstrapping method as GnuPG.
Currently Spack vendors `pytest` at a version which is three major
versions behind the latest (3.2.5 vs. 6.2.4). We do that since v3.2.5
is the latest version supporting Python 2.6. Remaining so much
behind the currently supported versions though might introduce
some incompatibilities and is surely a technical debt.
This PR modifies Spack to:
- Use the vendored `pytest@3.2.5` only as a fallback solution,
if the Python interpreter used for Spack doesn't provide a newer one
- Be able to parse `pytest --collect-only` in all the different output
formats from v3.2.5 to v6.2.4 and use it consistently for `spack unit-test --list-*`
- Updating the unit tests in Github Actions to use a more recent `pytest` version
This type of error is skipped:
make[1]: *** [Makefile:222: /tmp/user/spack-stage/.../spack-src/usr/lib/julia/libopenblas64_.so.so] Error 1
but it's useful to have it, especially when a package sets a variable
incorrectly in makefiles
Intel mpi comes with an installation of libfabric (which it needs as a
dependency). It can use other implementations of libfabric at runtime
though, so if you install a package that depends on `mpi` and
`libfabric`, you can specify `intel-mpi+external-libfabric` and ensure
that the Spack-built instance is used (both by `intel-mpi` and the
root).
Apply analogous change to intel-oneapi-mpi.
When running `spack install --log-format junit|cdash ...`, install
errors were ignored. This made spack continue building dependents of
failed install, ignoring `--fail-fast`, and exit 0 at the end.
* Python tests: allow importing weirdly-named modules
e.g. with dashes in name
* SIP tests: allow importing weirdly-named modules
* Skip modules with invalid names
* Changes from review
* Update from review
* Update from review
* Cleanup
* Prevent additional properties to be in the answer set when reusing specs
fixes#27237
The mechanism to reuse concrete specs relies on imposing
the set of constraints stemming from the concrete spec
being reused.
We also need to prevent that other constraints get added
to this set.
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>
Reformulate variant rules so that we minimize both
1. The number of non-default values being used
2. The number of default values not-being used
This is crucial for MV variants where we may have
more than one default value
In our tests, we use concrete specs generated from mock packages,
which *only* occur as inputs to the solver. This fixes two problems:
1. We weren't previously adding facts to encode the necessary
`depends_on()` relationships, and specs were unsatisfiable on
reachability.
2. Our hash lookup for reconstructing the DAG does not
consider that a hash may have come from the inputs.
Concrete specs that are already installed or that come from a buildcache
may have compilers and variant settings that we do not recognize, but that
shouldn't prevent reuse (at least not until we have a more detailed compiler
model).
- [x] make sure compiler and variant consistency rules only apply to
built specs
- [x] don't validate concrete specs on input, either -- they're concrete
and we shouldn't apply today's rules to yesterday's build
In switching to hash facts for concrete specs, we lost the transitive facts
from dependencies. This was fine for solves, because they were implied by
the imposed constraints from every hash. However, for `spack diff`, we want
to see what the hashes mean, so we need another mode for `spec_clauses()` to
show that.
This adds a `expand_hashes` argument to `spec_clauses()` that allows us to
output *both* the hashes and their implications on dependencies. We use
this mode in `spack diff`.
- [x] Get rid of forgotten maximize directive.
- [x] Simplify variant handling
- [x] Fix bug in treatment of defaults on externals (don't count
non-default variants on externals against them)