This patchset refactors our GitHub actions into a single top-level ci workflow that
invokes a series of reusable actions. The main goal of this is to be able to easily
control which tests run and in what order based on the success or failure of top-level
prechecks. Our previous workflows ran in three sets:
* nix tests: style and verification first, then linux and macos tests if successful
* windows tests: style and verification first, then linux and macos tests if successful
* bootstrap tests
As a result, the bootstrap tests ran even if the style failed, and style and verification
had to run on two different platforms despite running identical checks. I'm relatively
sure that's because of the limitation on dependencies between steps in the jobs.
Reusable workflows allow us to run the style, verification and now audit checks once,
then depending on the results, and the files changed, run the appropriate nix, windows
and bootstrap tests. While it saves only a few minutes by itself, this makes it easier to
refactor checks to subset tests without having to replicate tests or other workflow
components in the future.
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
This adds necessary configuration for flake8 and black to work together.
This also sets the line length to 99, per the data here:
* https://github.com/spack/spack/pull/24718#issuecomment-876933636
Given the data and the spirit of black's 88-character limit, we set the limit to 99
characters for all of Spack, because:
* 99 is one less than 100, a nice round number, and all lines will fit in a
100-character wide terminal (even when the text editor puts a \ at EOL).
* 99 is just past the knee the file size curve for packages, and it means that packages
remain readable and not significantly longer than they are now.
* It doesn't seem to hurt core -- files in core might change length by a few percent but
seem like they'll be mostly the same as before -- just a bit more roomy.
- [x] set line length to 99
- [x] remove most exceptions from `.flake8` and add the ones black cares about
- [x] add `[tool.black]` to `pyproject.toml`
- [x] make `black` run if available in `spack style --fix`
Co-Authored-By: Tom Scogland <tscogland@llnl.gov>
When installing setuptools from sources in Spack, we might
get into weird failures due to the way we use pip.
In particular, for Spack it's necessary to install in a
non-isolated pip environment to allow using PYTHONPATH as a
selection method for all the build requirements of a
Python package.
This can fail when installing setuptools since there might
be a setuptools version already installed for the Python
interpreter being used, with different entry points than
the one we want to install.
Installing from wheels both pip and setuptools should
harden our installation procedure in the context of:
- Bootstrapping Python dependencies of Spack
- Using external Python packages
* Cancel running workflows automatically on PR update
* Add the last update later to check cancellation is working
* Use github.run_number instead of github.sha
Fixup common tests
* Remove requirement for Python 2.6
* Skip new failing test
Windows: Update url util to handle Windows paths (#27959)
* update url util to handle windows paths
* Update tests to handle fixed url handling
* canonicalize path only when the path type matches the host platform
* Skip some url tests on Windows
Co-authored-by: Omar Padron <omar.padron@kitware.com>
Use threading.TIMEOUT_MAX when available (#24246)
This value was introduced in Python 3.2. Specifying a timeout greater than
this value will raise an OverflowError.
Co-authored-by: Lou Lawrence <lou.lawrence@kitware.com>
Co-authored-by: John Parent <john.parent@kitware.com>
Co-authored-by: Betsy McPhail <betsy.mcphail@kitware.com>