If the OpenMPI build finds the infiniband drivers in /usr/lib64, it adds
-Wl,-rpath -Wl,/usr/lib64 to the OpenMPI wrappers. If the wrappers are using
a compiler outside of /usr, and the OpenMPI wrappers are used to build software
outside of Spack, they will rpath /usr/lib64 into the executable which then has
GLIBC, GLIBCXX runtime errors due to it picking up GCC libraries in /usr/lib64.
This adds the directories specified in "extra_rpaths" to the OpenMPI wrappers,
which allows them to use the correct compiler when invoked outside of Spack
builds.
- previously, output could be confusing when deptypes were only shown for
one dependent when a node had *multiple* dependents
- also fix default coverage of `Spec.tree()`: it previously defaulted to
cover only build and link dependencies, but this is a holdover from
when those were the only types.
* Updated llvm to version 6.0.1. The previous 6.0.0 had an incorrectly declared symbol, discussed at https://reviews.llvm.org/D44140, which, amongst other things, broke py-numba. This version works fine with py-numba.
* Flag the conflict between py-numba and llvm@6.0.0
* Removed a single trailing space to satisfy checks
* First draft of a templight recipe
* Let's be explicit for now, we can be clever later on
* The clang6 version does not work, drop it
* Reorder FIXMEs more logically
* Add patch for current templight develop branch
* Create an artificial stable release of templight
* Take some additional inspiration from llvm package
* Added the templight supporting tools
* Remove old notes from the no-url branch
* Avoid unnecessary join_path
* intel-tbb: Add variant `tm` to disable transactional memory.
Some AMD or very old Intel systems don't support transactional memory. This commit adds a variant `tm` that defaults to `True`, but can be switched off to allow running on those systems.
- Previously, Spack didn't check the arguments you put in version()
directives.
- So, you could do something like this, where there are arguments for a
URL fetcher AND for a git fetcher:
version('1.0', md5='abc123', git='https://foo.bar', commit='feda2343')
- Now, we check the arguments before constructing a fetcher, to ensure
that each package has *only* arguments for a single type of fetcher.
- Also added `test_package_version_consistency()` to the `package_sanity`
test, so that all builtin packages are required to have valid
`version()` directives.
- packagers can specify two top-level fetch URLs if one is `url`
- e.g., `url` and `git` or `url` and `svn`
- allow only one VCS fetcher so we can differentiate between URL and VCS.
- also clean up fetcher logic and class structure
- Packages can remove the top-level `url` attribute and still work
- These are now legal:
- Packages with *only* version-specific URLs (even with gaps)
- Packages with a top-level git/hg/svn attribute and `version`
directives for that.
- If a package has both a top-level hg/git/svn attribute AND a top-level
url attribute, the url attribute takes precedence.
Some packages do not have a `url` and are instead downloaded via `git`,
`hg`, or `svn`. Some packages like `spectrum-mpi` cannot be downloaded at
all, and are placeholder packages for system installations. Previously,
`__init__()` in `PackageBase` crashed if a package did not have a `url`
attribute defined.
I hacked this section of code out, but I have no idea what the
repercussions of that are.
- This hard-codes the hash lengths rather than computing them on import.
- Also cleans up the code in `spack.util.crypto` to make it easier to
understand.
Fix this output error:
```
$ spack -m module loads mpileaks
==> Error: `spack module loads -m t -m c -m l ...` has been moved. Try this instead:
$ spack module t loads mpileaks
$ spack module c loads mpileaks
$ spack module l loads mpileaks
```