This commit improves forward compatibility of Spack with newer build cache metadata formats.
Before this commit, invalid or unrecognized metadata would be fatal errors, now they just cause
a mirror to be skipped.
Co-authored-by: Harmen Stoppels <me@harmenstoppels.nl>
Libgit2 requires python as build dependency. I was getting an error because it was falling back to system Python which is compiled with Intel compilers and thus, `libgit2` was failing because it couldn't find `libimf.so` (which doesn't make sense).
Co-authored-by: Harmen Stoppels <harmenstoppels@gmail.com>
The libevent release tarballs ship with a `configure` script generated by an old `libtool`. The `libtool` generated by `configure` is not compatible with `MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_VERSION` > 10. Regeneration of the `configure` scripts fixes build on macOS.
Original configure contains:
```
case $host_os in
rhapsody* | darwin1.[012])
_lt_dar_allow_undefined='$wl-undefined ${wl}suppress' ;;
darwin1.*)
_lt_dar_allow_undefined='$wl-flat_namespace $wl-undefined ${wl}suppress' ;;
darwin*) # darwin 5.x on
# if running on 10.5 or later, the deployment target defaults
# to the OS version, if on x86, and 10.4, the deployment
# target defaults to 10.4. Don't you love it?
case ${MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET-10.0},$host in
10.0,*86*-darwin8*|10.0,*-darwin[91]*)
_lt_dar_allow_undefined='$wl-undefined ${wl}dynamic_lookup' ;;
10.[012][,.]*)
_lt_dar_allow_undefined='$wl-flat_namespace $wl-undefined ${wl}suppress' ;;
10.*)
_lt_dar_allow_undefined='$wl-undefined ${wl}dynamic_lookup' ;;
esac
```
After re-running `autogen.sh`:
```
case $host_os in
rhapsody* | darwin1.[012])
_lt_dar_allow_undefined='$wl-undefined ${wl}suppress' ;;
darwin1.*)
_lt_dar_allow_undefined='$wl-flat_namespace $wl-undefined ${wl}suppress' ;;
darwin*)
case $MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET,$host in
10.[012],*|,*powerpc*-darwin[5-8]*)
_lt_dar_allow_undefined='$wl-flat_namespace $wl-undefined ${wl}suppress' ;;
*)
_lt_dar_allow_undefined='$wl-undefined ${wl}dynamic_lookup' ;;
esac
```
* lcov: add version2, perl dep at build and runtime
* lcov: add runtime deps
* namespace-autoclean: new perl package
* datetime: dep on autoclean
* formatting
* abinit: add v9.10.3
Changed configure arguments for specfying how to use Wannier90 for versions
after 9.8.
When the mpi variant is requested, set the F90 environment variable to point
to the MPI Fortran wrapper when building versions after 9.8 instead of FC.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alec Scott <hi@alecbcs.com>
* exago: fix v1.5.1 tag; only allow python up to 3.10 for for @:1.5 (#40676)
* exago: fix v1.5.1 tag; only allow python up to 3.10 for for @:1.5 due to pybind error with py 3.11
* hiop@:1.0 +cuda: constrain to cuda@:11.9
* fixes syntax of maintainers
---------
Co-authored-by: eugeneswalker <38933153+eugeneswalker@users.noreply.github.com>
* intel-xed: fix git hash for mbuild, add version 2023.10.11
Fixes#40912
* Fix the git commit hash for mbuild 2022.04.17. This was broken in
commit eef9939c21 by mixing up the hashes for xed versus mbuild.
* Add versions 2023.08.21 and 2023.10.11.
* fix style
Before this PR, variant were not propagated to leaf nodes that could accept
the propagated value, if some intermediate node couldn't accept it.
This PR fixes that issue by marking nodes as "candidate" for propagation
and by setting the variant only if it can be accepted by the node.
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
Problem: the current configure arguments are added lists to a list,
and this needs to be adding strings to the same list.
Solution: ensure we add each item (string) separately.
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
* Use `major.minor.patch`, `major.minor`, `major` in tags
* Ensure `latest` is the semver largest version, and not "latest in time"
* Remove Ubuntu 18.04 from the list of images
Modify the packages.yaml schema so that soft-preferences on targets,
compilers and providers can only be specified under the "all" attribute.
This makes them effectively global preferences.
Version preferences instead can only be specified under a package
specific section.
If a preference attribute is found in a section where it should
not be, it will be ignored and a warning is printed to screen.
Most queries will end up calling `spec.satisfies(query)` on everything in the DB, which
will cause Spack to ask whether the query spec is virtual if its name doesn't match the
target spec's. This can be expensive, because it can cause Spack to check if any new
virtuals showed up in *all* the packages it knows about. That can currently trigger
thousands of `stat()` calls.
We can avoid the virtual check for most successful queries if we consider that if there
*is* a match by name, the query spec *can't* be virtual. This PR adds an optimization to
the query loop to save any comparisons that would trigger a virtual check for last.
- [x] Add a `deferred` list to the `query()` loop.
- [x] First run through the `query()` loop *only* checks for name matches.
- [x] Query loop now returns early if there's a name match, skipping most `satisfies()` calls.
- [x] Second run through the `deferred()` list only runs if query spec is virtual.
- [x] Fix up handling of concrete specs.
- [x] Add test for querying virtuals in DB.
- [x] Avoid allocating deferred if not necessary.
---------
Co-authored-by: Harmen Stoppels <me@harmenstoppels.nl>
Currently there's some hacky logic in the AppleClang compiler that makes
it also accept `gfortran` as a fortran compiler if `flang` is not found.
This is guarded by `if sys.platform` checks s.t. it only applies to
Darwin.
But on Linux the feature of detecting mixed toolchains is highly
requested too, cause it's rather annoying to run into a failed build of
`openblas` after dozens of minutes of compiling its dependencies, just
because clang doesn't have a fortran compiler.
In particular in CI where the system compilers may change during system
updates, it's typically impossible to fix compilers in a hand-written
compilers.yaml config file: the config will almost certainly be outdated
sooner or later, and maintaining one config file per target machine and
writing logic to select the correct config is rather undesirable too.
---
This PR introduces a flag `spack compiler find --mixed-toolchain` that
fills out missing `fc` and `f77` entries in `clang` / `apple-clang` by
picking the best matching `gcc`.
It is enabled by default on macOS, but not on Linux, matching current
behavior of `spack compiler find`.
The "best matching gcc" logic and compiler path updates are identical to
how compiler path dictionaries are currently flattened "horizontally"
(per compiler id). This just adds logic to do the same "vertically"
(across different compiler ids).
So, with this change on Ubuntu 22.04:
```
$ spack compiler find --mixed-toolchain
==> Added 6 new compilers to /home/harmen/.spack/linux/compilers.yaml
gcc@13.1.0 gcc@12.3.0 gcc@11.4.0 gcc@10.5.0 clang@16.0.0 clang@15.0.7
==> Compilers are defined in the following files:
/home/harmen/.spack/linux/compilers.yaml
```
you finally get:
```
compilers:
- compiler:
spec: clang@=15.0.7
paths:
cc: /usr/bin/clang
cxx: /usr/bin/clang++
f77: /usr/bin/gfortran
fc: /usr/bin/gfortran
flags: {}
operating_system: ubuntu23.04
target: x86_64
modules: []
environment: {}
extra_rpaths: []
- compiler:
spec: clang@=16.0.0
paths:
cc: /usr/bin/clang-16
cxx: /usr/bin/clang++-16
f77: /usr/bin/gfortran
fc: /usr/bin/gfortran
flags: {}
operating_system: ubuntu23.04
target: x86_64
modules: []
environment: {}
extra_rpaths: []
```
The "best gcc" is automatically default system gcc, since it has no
suffixes / prefixes.
Add a new config section: `config:aliases`, which is a dictionary mapping aliases
to commands.
For instance:
```yaml
config:
aliases:
sp: spec -I
```
will define a new command `sp` that will execute `spec` with the `-I`
argument.
Aliases cannot override existing commands, and this is ensured with a test.
We cannot currently alias subcommands. Spack will warn about any aliases
containing a space, but will not error, which leaves room for subcommand
aliases in the future.
---------
Co-authored-by: Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
* Test that setup_run_environment changes to CC/CXX/FC/F77 are dropped in build env
* compilers set in run env shouldn't impact build
Adds `drop` to EnvironmentModifications courtesy of @haampie, and uses
it to clear modifications of CC, CXX, F77 and FC made by
`setup_{,dependent_}run_environment` routines when producing an
environment in BUILD context.
* comment / style
* comment
---------
Co-authored-by: Tom Scogland <scogland1@llnl.gov>
This adds a rather trivial context manager that lets you deduplicate repeated
arguments in directives, e.g.
```python
depends_on("py-x@1", when="@1", type=("build", "run"))
depends_on("py-x@2", when="@2", type=("build", "run"))
depends_on("py-x@3", when="@3", type=("build", "run"))
depends_on("py-x@4", when="@4", type=("build", "run"))
```
can be condensed to
```python
with default_args(type=("build", "run")):
depends_on("py-x@1", when="@1")
depends_on("py-x@2", when="@2")
depends_on("py-x@3", when="@3")
depends_on("py-x@4", when="@4")
```
The advantage is it's clear for humans, the downside it's less clear for type checkers due to type erasure.