As reported, conflicts with compiler ranges were not treated
correctly. This commit adds tests to verify the expected behavior
for the new concretizer.
The new rules to enforce a correct behavior involve:
- Adding a rule to prefer the compiler selected for
the root package, if no other preference is set
- Give a strong negative weight to compiler preferences
expressed in packages.yaml
- Maximize on compiler AND compiler version match
Variant of this kind don't have a list of possible
values encoded in the ASP facts. Since all we have
is a validator the list of possible values just includes
just the default value and possibly the value passed
from packages.yaml or cli.
This is done after the builder has actually built
the specs, to respect the semantics use with the
old concretizer.
Later we could move this to the solver as
a multivalued variant.
This is done after the builder has actually built
the specs, to respect the semantics use with the
old concretizer.
A better approach is to substitute the spec
directly in concretization.
The "none" variant value cannot be combined with
other values.
The '*' wildcard matches anything, including "none".
It's thus relevant in queries, but disregarded in
concretization.
- The test on concretization of anonymous dependencies
has been fixed by raising the expected exception.
- The test on compiler bootstrap has been fixed by
updating the version of GCC used in the test.
Since gcc@2.0 does not support targets later than
x86_64, the new concretizer was looking for a
non-existing spec, i.e. it was correctly trying
to retrieve 'gcc target=x86_64' instead of
'gcc target=core2'.
- The test on gitlab CI needed an update of the target
This commit adds support for specifying rules in
packages.yaml that refer to virtual packages.
The approach is to normalize in memory each
configuration and turn it into an equivalent
configuration without rules on virtual. This
is possible if the set of packages to be handled
is considered fixed.
The weight of the target used in concretization is, in order:
1. A specific per package weight, if set in packages.yaml
2. Inherited from the parent, if possible
3. The default target weight (always set)
Generate facts on externals by inspecting
packages.yaml. Added rules in concretize.lp
Added extra logic so that external specs
disregard any conflict encoded in the
package.
In ASP this would be a simple addition to
an integrity constraint:
:- c1, c2, c3, not external(pkg)
Using the the Backend API from Python it
requires some scaffolding to obtain a default
negated statement.
Conflict rules from packages are added as integrity
constraints in the ASP formulation. Most of the code
to generate them has been reused from PyclingoDriver.rules
The new concretizer and the old concretizer solve constraints
in a different way. Here we ensure that a SpackError is raised,
instead of a specific error that made sense in the old concretizer
but probably not in the new.
Instead of python callbacks, use cardinality constraints for package
versions. This is slightly faster and has the advantage that it can be
written to an ASP program to be executed *outside* of Spack. We can use
this in the future to unify the pyclingo driver and the clingo text
driver.
This makes use of add_weight_rule() to implement cardinality constraints.
add_weight_rule() only has a lower bound parameter, but you can implement
a strict "exactly one of" constraint using it. In particular, wee want to
define:
1 {v1; v2; v3; ...} 1 :- version_satisfies(pkg, constraint).
version_satisfies(pkg, constraint) :- 1 {v1; v2; v3; ...} 1.
And we do that like this, for every version constraint:
atleast1(pkg, constr) :- 1 {version(pkg, v1); version(pkg, v2); ...}.
morethan1(pkg, constr) :- 2 {version(pkg, v1); version(pkg, v2); ...}.
version_satisfies(pkg, constr) :- atleast1, not morethan1(pkg, constr).
:- version_satisfies(pkg, constr), morethan1.
:- version_satisfies(pkg, constr), not atleast1.
v1, v2, v3, etc. are computed on the Python side by comparing every
possible package version with the constraint.
Computing things like this has the added advantage that if v1, v2, v3,
etc. comprise *all* possible versions of a package, we can just omit the
rules for the constraint under consideration. This happens pretty
frequently in the Spack mainline.
- [x] Solver now uses the Python interface to clingo
- [x] can extract unsatisfiable cores from problems when things go wrong
- [x] use Python callbacks for versions instead of choice rules (this may
ultimately hurt performance)
There are now three parts:
- `SpackSolverSetup`
- Spack-specific logic for generating constraints. Calls methods on
`AspTextGenerator` to set up the solver with a Spack problem. This
shouln't change much from solver backend to solver backend.
- ClingoDriver
- The solver driver provides methods for SolverSetup to generates an ASP
program, send it to `clingo` (run as an external tool), and parse the
output into function tuples suitable for `SpecBuilder`.
- The interface is generic and should not have to change much for a
driver for, say, the Clingo Python interface.
- SpecBuilder
- Builds Spack specs from function tuples parsed by the solver driver.
The original implementation was difficult to read, as it only had
single-letter variable names. This converts all of them to descriptive
names, e.g., P -> Package, V -> Virtual/Version/Variant, etc.
To handle unknown compilers propely in tests (and elsewhere), we need to
add unknown compilers from the spec to the list of possible compilers.
Rework how the compiler list is generated and includes compilers from
specs if the existence check is disabled.
Specs like hdf5 ^mpi were unsatisfiable because we added a requierment
for `node("mpi").`. This can't be resolved because "mpi" is not a
package.
- [x] Introduce `virtual_node()`, which says *some* provider must be in
the DAG.
This adds compiler flags to the ASP solve so that we can have conditions
based on them in the solve. But, it keeps order out of the solve to
avoid unneeded complexity and combinatorial explosions.
The solver determines which flags are on a spec, but the order is
determined by DAG precedence (childrens' flags take precedence over
parents' and are added on the right) and order (order flags were
specified on the command line is respected).
The solver is responsible for determining when to propagate flags, when
to inheit them from other nodes, when to take them from compiler
preferences, etc.
Weight microarchitectures and prefers more rercent ones. Also disallow
nodes where the compiler does not support the selected target.
We should revisit this at some point as it seems like if I play around
with the compiler support for different architectures, the solver runs
very slowly. See notes in comments -- the bad case was gcc supporting
broadwell and skylake with clang maxing out at haswell.
We didn't have a cardinality constraint for multi-valued variants, so the
solver wasn't filling them in.
- [x] add a requirement for at least one value for multi-valued variants
Variants like `cpu_target` on `openblas` don't have defineed values, but
they have a default. Ensure that the default is always a possible value
for the solver.
Spack was generating the same dependency connstraints twice in the output ASP:
```
declared_dependency("abinit", "hdf5", "link")
:- node("abinit"),
variant_value("abinit", "mpi", "True"),
variant_value("abinit", "mpi", "True").
```
This was because `AspFunction` was modifying itself when called.
- [x] fix `AspFunction` so that every call returns a new object
- [x] Add support for packages.yaml and command-line compiler preferences.
- [x] Rework compiler version propagation to use optimization rather than
hard logic constraints
Technically the ASP output order does not matter, but it's hard to diff
two different solve fomulations unless we order it.
- [x] make sure ASP output is emitted in a deterministic order (by
sorting all hash keys)
This needs more thought, as I am pretty sure the weights are not correct.
Or, at least, I'm not convinced that they do what we want in all cases.
See note in concretize.lp.
Solver now prefers newer versions like the old concretizer. Prefer
package preferences from packages.yaml, preferred=True, package
definition, and finally each version itself.
Competition output only prints out one model, so we do not have to
unnecessarily parse all the non-optimal models. We'll just look at the
best model and bring that in.
In practice, this saves a lot of JSON parsing and spec construction time.
Clingo actually has an option to output JSON -- use that instead of
parsing the raw otuput ourselves.
This also allows us to pick the best answer -- modify the parser to
*only* construct a spec for that one rather than building all of them
like we did before.
- Instead of using default logic, handle variant defaults by minimizing
the number of non-default variants in the solution.
- This actually seems to be pretty fast, and it fixes the long-standing
issue that writing this:
spack install hdf5 ^mpich
will fail if you don't specify hdf5+mpi. With optimization and
allowing enums to be enumerated, the solver seems to be able to quickly
discover that +mpi is the only way hdf5 can depend on mpich, and it
forces the switch to be thrown.
Use '1 { version(x); version(y); version(z) } 1.' instead of declaring
conflicts for non-matching versions. This keeps the sense of version
clauses positive, which will allow them to be used more easily in
conditionals later.
Also refactor `spec_clauses()` method to return clauses that can be used
in conditions, etc. instead of just printing out facts.
- This handles setting the compiler and falling back to a default
compiler, as well as providing default values for compilers/compiler
versions.
- Versions still aren't quite right -- you can't properly override
versions on compiler specs.
- Model architecture default settings and propagation off of variants
- Leverage ASP default logic to set architecture to default if it's not
set otherwise.
- Move logic out of Python and into concretize.lp as first-order rules.
We are relying on default logic in the variant handling in that we set a
default value if we never see `variant_set(P, V, X)`.
- Move the logic for this into `concretize.lp` instead of generating it
for every package.
- For programs that don't have explicit variant settings, clingo warns
that variant_set(P, V, X) doesn't appear in any rule head, because a
setting is never generated.
- Specifically suppress this warning.
- moving the dump logic into spack.solver.asp.solve() allows us to print
out useful debug info sooner
- prior approach required a successful solve to print out anyhting.
According to the documentation for spack and pkg-config,
$view/share/pkgconfig should also be a valid place to look
for package config files. This commit ensures that when
spack activate env $dir is called, the environment has this
directory in PKG_CONFIG_PATH.
As of #13100, Spack installs the dependencies of a _single_ spec in parallel.
Environments, when installed, can only get parallelism from each individual
spec, as they're installed in order. This PR makes entire environments build
in parallel by extending Spack's package installer to accept multiple root
specs. The install command and Environment class have been updated to use
the new parallel install method.
The specs and kwargs for each *uninstalled* package (when not force-replacing
installations) of an environment are collected, passed to the `PackageInstaller`,
and processed using a single build queue.
This introduces a `BuildRequest` class to track install arguments, and it
significantly cleans up the code used to track package ids during installation.
Package ids in the build queue are now just DAG hashes as you would expect,
Other tasks:
- [x] Finish updating the unit tests based on `PackageInstaller`'s use of
`BuildRequest` and the associated changes
- [x] Change `environment.py`'s `install_all` to use the `PackageInstaller` directly
- [x] Change the `install` command to leverage the new installation process for multiple specs
- [x] Change install output messages for external packages, e.g.:
`[+] /usr` -> `[+] /usr (external bzip2-1.0.8-<dag-hash>`
- [x] Fix incomplete environment install's view setup/update and not confirming all
packages are installed (?)
- [x] Ensure externally installed package dependencies are properly accounted for in
remaining build tasks
- [x] Add tests for coverage (if insufficient and can identity the appropriate, uncovered non-comment lines)
- [x] Add documentation
- [x] Resolve multi-compiler environment install issues
- [x] Fix issue with environment installation reporting (restore CDash/JUnit reports)
This change makes improvements to the `spack ci rebuild` command
which supports running gitlab pipelines on PRs from forks. Much
of this has to do with making sure we can run without the secrets
previously required for running gitlab pipelines (e.g signing key,
aws credentials, etc). Specific improvements in this PR:
Check if spack has precisely one signing key, and use that information
as an additional constraint on whether or not we should attempt to sign
the binary package we create.
Also, if spack does not have at least one public key, add the install
option "--no-check-signature"
If we are running a pipeline without any profile or environment
variables allowing us to push to S3, the pipeline could still
successfully create a buildcache in the artifacts and move on. So
just print a message and move on if pushing either the buildcache
entry or cdash id file to the remote mirror fails.
When we attempt to generate a pacakge or gpg key index on an S3
mirror, and there is nothing to index, just print a warning and
exit gracefully rather than throw an exception.
Support the use of PR-specific mirrors for temporary binary pkg
storage. This will allow quality-of-life improvement for developers,
providing a place to store binaries over the lifetime of a PR, so
that they must only wait for packages to rebuild from source when
they push a new commit that causes it to be necessary.
Replace two-pass install with a single pass and the new option:
--require-full-hash-match. Doing this also removes the need to
save a copy of the spack.yaml to be copied over the one spack
rewrites in between the two spack install passes.
Work around a mirror configuration issue caused by using
spack.util.executable to do the package installation.
* Update pipeline trigger jobs for PRs from forks
Moving to PRs from forks relies on external synchronization script
pushing special branch names. Also secrets will only live on the
spack mirror project, and must be propagated to the E4S project via
variables on the trigger jobs.
When this change is merged, pipelines will not run until we update
the "Custom CI configuration path" in the Gitlab CI Settings, as the
name of the file has changed to better reflect its purpose.
* Arg to MirrorCollection is used exclusively, so add main remote mirror to it
* Compute full hash less frequently
* Add tests covering index generation error handling code
Since #11598 sbang has been installed within the install_tree. This doesn’t play
nicely with install_tree padding, since sbang can’t do its job if it is installed in a
long path (this is the whole point of sbang).
This PR changes the padding specification. Instead of $padding inside paths,
we now have a separate `padding:` field in the `install_tree` configuration.
Previously, the `install_tree` looked like this:
```
/path/to/opt/spack_padding_padding_padding_padding_padding/
bin/
sbang
.spack-db/
...
linux-rhel7-x86_64/
...
```
```
This PR updates things to look like this:
/path/to/opt/
bin/
sbang
spack_padding_padding_padding_padding_padding/
.spack-db/
...
linux-rhel7-x86_64/
...
So padding is added at the start of all install prefixes *within* the unpadded
root. The database and all installations still go under the padded root.
This ensures that `sbang` is in the shorted possible path while also allowing
us to make long paths for relocatable binaries.
As of #18205, all packages must be pickle-able to be installed by
Spack.
This adds a test to check that each package can be pickled. If any
package fails to pickle, the test keeps going and collects the names
of all failed packages; it then takes the first one that failed and
attempts to re-pickle it, generating the full stack trace for the
failed pickle attempt.
Spack creates a separate process to do package installation. Different
operating systems and Python versions use different methods to create
it but up until Python 3.8 both Linux and Mac OS used "fork" (which
duplicates process memory, file descriptor table, etc.).
Python >= 3.8 on Mac OS prefers creating an entirely new process
(referred to as the "spawn" start method) because "fork" was found to
cause issues (in other words "spawn" is the default start method used
by multiprocessing.Process). Spack was dependent on the particular
behavior of fork to replicate process memory and transmit file
descriptors.
This PR refactors the Spack internals to support starting a child
process with the "spawn" method. To achieve this, it makes the
following changes:
- ensure that the package repository and other global state are
transmitted to the child process
- ensure that file descriptors are transmitted to the child process in
a way that works with multiprocessing and spawn
- make all the state needed for the build process and tests picklable
(package, stage, etc.)
- move a number of locally-defined functions into global scope so that
they can be pickled
- rework tests where needed to avoid using local functions
This PR also reworks sbang tests to work on macOS, where temporary
directories are deeper than the Linux sbang limit. We make the limit
platform-dependent (macOS supports 512-character shebangs)
See: #14102
In compiler bootstrapping pipelines, we add an artificial dependency
between jobs for packages to be built with a bootstrapped compiler
and the job building the compiler. To find the right bootstrapped
compiler for each spec, we compared not only the compiler spec to
that required by the package spec, but also the architectures of
the compiler and package spec.
But this prevented us from finding the bootstrapped compiler for a
spec in cases where the architecture of the compiler wasn't exactly
the same as the spec. For example, a gcc@4.8.5 might have
bootstrapped a compiler with haswell as the architecture, while the
spec had broadwell. By comparing the families instead of the architecture
itself, we know that we can build the zlib for broadwell with the gcc for
haswell.
Currently, full JSON output is the only machine readable option for `spack find`
in an environment.
`spack find --format` is also designed to be machine readable, but we print extra
headers in environments.
-[x] don't print headers in `spack find` output when in an environment
When invoking "buildcache list" multiple times, the command was
reporting no specs in the cache the second time around. The
presence of an up-to-date index was causing the internal
representation to be left un-initialized.
Added a command to set up Spack for our tutorial at
https://spack-tutorial.readthedocs.io.
The command does some common operations we need first-time users to do.
Specifically:
- checks out a particular branch of Spack
- deletes spurious configuration in `~/.spack` that might be
left over from prior parts of the tutorial
- adds a mirror and trusts its public key
Previously, we hardcoded a list of Spack versions which could be used by the containerize command.
This PR removes that list. It's a maintenance burden when cutting a release, and prevents older versions of Spack from creating containers to be used by newer versions.
There was an error introduced in #19209 where `full_hash()` and
`build_hash()` are called on older specs that we've read in from the DB;
older specs may not be able to compute these hashes (e.g. if they have
removed patches used in computing the full_hash).
When serializing a Spec, we want to generate the full/build hash when
possible, but we need a mechanism to skip it for Specs that have
themselves been read from YAML (and may not support this).
To get around this ambiguity and to fix the issue, we:
- Add an attribute to the spec called `_hashes_final`, that is `True`
if we can't lazily compute `build_hash` and `full_hash`.
- Set `_hashes_final` to `False` for new specs (i.e., lazily
computing hashes is ok)
- Set `_hashes_final` to `True` for concrete specs read in via
`from_node_dict`, as it may be too late to recompute hashes.
- Compute and write out all hashes in `node_dict_with_hashes` *if
possible*.
Effectively what this means is that we can round-trip specs that are
missing `_build_hash` and `_full_hash` without recomputing them, but for
all new specs, we'll compute them and store them. So Spack should work
fine with old DBs now.
This fixes sbang relocation when using old binary packages, and updates
code in `relocate.py`.
There are really two places where we would want to handle an `sbang`
relocation:
1. Installing an old package that uses `sbang` with shebang lines like
`#!/bin/bash $spack_prefix/sbang`
2. Installing a *new* package that uses `sbang` with shebang lines like
`#!/bin/sh $install_tree/sbang`
The second case is actually handled automatically by our text relocation;
we don't need any special relocation logic for new shebangs, as our
relocation logic already changes references to the build-time
`install_tree` to point to the `install_tree` at intall-time.
Case 1 was not properly handled -- we would not take an old binary
package and point its shebangs at the new `sbang` location. This PR fixes
that and updates the code in `relocation.py` with some notes.
There is one more case we don't currently handle: if a binary package is
created from an installation in a short prefix that does *not* need
`sbang` and is installed to a long prefix that *does* need `sbang`, we
won't do anything. We should just patch the file as we would for a normal
install. In some upcoming PR we should probably change *all* `sbang`
relocation logic to be idempotent and to apply to any sort of shebang'd
file. Then we'd only have to worry about which files to `sbang`-ify at
install time and wouldn't need to care about these special cases.
fixes#15183
- Moved the container related content from
workflows.rst into containers.rst
- Deleted the docker_for_developers.rst file,
since it describes an outdated procedure
Co-authored-by: Axel Huebl <a.huebl@hzdr.de>
Co-authored-by: Omar Padron <omar.padron@kitware.com>
`config.get_config` now caches the results and returns the same
configuration if called multiple times with the same arguments
(i.e. the same section and scope).
As a consequence, it is expected that users will always call
update methods provided in the `config` module after changing
the configuration (even if manipulating it as a Python nested
dictionary). The following two examples should cover most
scenarios:
* Most configuration update logic in the core (e.g. relating to
adding new compiler) should call `Configuration.update_config`
* Tests that need to change the global configuration should use the
newly-provided `config.replace_config` function.
(if neither of these methods apply, then the essential requirement
is to use a method marked as `_config_mutator`)
Failure to call such a function after modifying the configuration
will lead to unexpected results (e.g. calling `get_config` after
changing the configuration will not reflect the changes since the
first call to get_config).
* "spack install" now has a "--require-full-hash-match" option, which
forces Spack to skip an available binary package when the full hash
doesn't match. Normally only a DAG-hash match is required, which
ensures equivalent Specs, but does not account for changing logic
inside the associated package.
* Add a local binary cache index which tracks specs that have a binary
install available in a remote binary cache. It is updated with
"spack buildcache list" or for a given spec when a binary package
is retrieved for that Spec.
Spack has a fallback for hash checking with m55sums that may not be
supported in earlier versions of Python 3.x. The comments in the
Spack code acknowledge that this is best effort and may fail, but
recent vermin checks (running as part of our CI) reject this. This
disables vermin checks for that fallback.
* enable flatcc to be built with gcc/9.X.X
* add static option for building libyogrt
* cleanup
* Initial working version
* rework new oneapi wrappers
* tested and removed my initials from source
* cleanup
* Update __init__.py
* remove whitespace
* working now with mods for testing, detection. Detection for oneapi is working, but entry needs to be modified to add link path for libimf.so. Cleared cruft for old Intel versions
* fixed some formatting
* cleanup
* flake8 cleanup
* flake8
* fixed syntax of compiler version detection tests
* fixed syntax of compiler version detection tests
modified: detection.py
* fix typo
* fixes for compilers tests
* remove erroneous tests for outdated -std= flags, remove ifx version check (output won't parse)
Co-authored-by: Frank Willmore <willmore@anl.gov>
`sbang` now lives at https://github.com/spack/sbang, and it has its own
test suite that's more extensive than what's in Spack. We'll leave sbang
tests to sbang from now on, and just vendor `bin/sbang` directly.
Remaining `sbang` tests have to do with patching files, not with
`sbang`'s functionality.
This update also fixes a bug with `sbang` and multiple command line
arguments that was introduced in #19529. See:
* https://github.com/spack/sbang/pull/1
* https://github.com/spack/sbang/pull/2
- [x] include latest `sbang` from https://github.com/spack/sbang
- [x] remove old `sbang` tests from Spack
- [x] update `COPYRIGHT` and `cmd/license.py`
`sbang` was previously a bash script but did not need to be. This
converts it to a plain old POSIX shell script and adds some options. This
also allows us to simplify sbang shebangs to `#!/bin/sh /path/to/sbang`
instead of `#!/bin/bash /path/to/sbang`.
The new script passes shellcheck (with a few exceptions noted in the file)
- [x] `SBANG_DEBUG` env var enables printing what *would* be executed
- [x] `sbang` checks whether it has been passed an option and fails gracefully
- [x] `sbang` will now fail if it can't find a second shebang line, or if
the second line happens to be sbang (avoid infinite loops)
- [x] add more rigorous tests for `sbang` behavior using `SBANG_DEBUG`
PHP supports an initial shebang, but its comment syntax can't handle our 2-line
shebangs. So, we need to embed the 2nd-line shebang comment to look like a
PHP comment:
<?php #!/path/to/php ?>
This adds patching support to the sbang hook and support for
instrumenting php shebangs.
This also patches `phar`, which is a tool used to create php packages.
`phar` itself has to add sbangs to those packages (as phar archives
apparently contain UTF-8, as well as binary blobs), and `phar` sets a
checksum based on the contents of the package.
Co-authored-by: Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
`sbang` is not always accessible to users of packages, e.g., if Spack
is installed in someone's home directory and they deploy software
for others. Avoid this by:
1. Always installing the `sbang` script in the `install_tree`
2. Relocating binaries to point to the copy in the `install_tree`
and not the one in the Spack installation.
This PR also:
- ensures that `sbang` is reinstalled if it is modified in Spack
- adds tests
- updates the way `gobject-introspection` patches Makefiles
to support `sbang`
Co-authored-by: Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
The logic in `config.py` merges lists correctly so that list elements
from higher-precedence config files come first, but the way we merge
`dict` elements reverses the precedence.
Since `mirrors.yaml` relies on `OrderedDict` for precedence, this bug
causes mirrors in lower-precedence config scopes to be checked before
higher-precedence scopes.
We should probably convert `mirrors.yaml` to use a list at some point,
but in the meantie here's a fix for `OrderedDict`.
- [x] ensuring that keys are ordered correctly in `OrderedDict` by
re-inserting keys from the destination `dict` after adding the keys from
the source `dict`.
- [x] also simplify the logic in `merge_yaml` by always reinserting
common keys -- this preserves mark information without all the special
cases, and makes it simpler to preserve insertion order.
Assuming a default spack configuration, if we run this:
```console
$ spack mirror add foo https://bar.com
```
Results before this change:
```console
$ spack config blame mirrors
--- mirrors:
/Users/gamblin2/src/spack/etc/spack/defaults/mirrors.yaml:2 spack-public: https://spack-llnl-mirror.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/
/Users/gamblin2/.spack/mirrors.yaml:2 foo: https://bar.com
```
Results after:
```console
$ spack config blame mirrors
--- mirrors:
/Users/gamblin2/.spack/mirrors.yaml:2 foo: https://bar.com
/Users/gamblin2/src/spack/etc/spack/defaults/mirrors.yaml:2 spack-public: https://spack-llnl-mirror.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/
```
Shell integration no longer requires setting `SPACK_ROOT`, so we can
simplify the documentation on it. The docs on shell support and using
packages are getting a bit old, and information on `spack load` (which
seems to be everyone's most common way of using packages) is hard to
find.
This PR simplifies the shell documentation to remove SPACK_ROOT, and also
moves some sections around for clearer organization.
- [x] make docs on sourcing setup scripts clearer and simpler
- [x] introduce `spack load` early in the basic usage guide instead of
burying it in the module docs
- [x] clean up module docs so that spack module tcl loads comes later
- [x] be clear about the different ways to use packages so that the users
can find the docs better.
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
fixes#19476
Module file content is written to file in a
temporary location and read back to be analyzed
by unit tests.
The approach to patch "open" and write to a
StringIO in memory has been abandoned, since
over time other operations insisting on the
filesystem have been added to the module file
generator.
Synchronization on GitHub macOS runners seems to be very slow, and
frequently the foreground/background tests fail due to the race this
causes. This increases the tolerance for slowness a bit more, to allow up
to 4 spurious output lines in the tests.
This should hopefully result in no more false negatives on these tests
for macOS on GitHub.
* Add recipe for qgraf
* Revert "Add recipe for qgraf"
This reverts commit 76783f73867a32b4a96e980e31a433ed3c0037fd.
* Add qgraf
* Update package.py
Changes from review
* Changes from MR
* Fix for URLs containing @ symbol
Co-authored-by: Ivan Razumov <ivan.razumov@cern.ch>
Co-authored-by: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
* Adding AOCC compiler to SPACK community
The AOCC compiler system offers a high level of advanced optimizations, multi-threading and processor support that includes global optimization, vectorization, inter-procedural analyses, loop transformations, and code generation. AMD also provides highly optimized libraries, which extract the optimal performance from each x86 processor core when utilized. The AOCC Compiler Suite simplifies and accelerates development and tuning for x86 applications.
* Added unit tests for detection and flags for AOCC
* Addressed reviewers comments w.r.t version checks and url,checksum related line lengths
Co-authored-by: Test User <spack@example.com>
* ADD: testing to dev-build command
* RM: mutally exclusive group for testing in parser
* FIX: test option to subparser and not testing
* ADD: spack-completion.bash
* RM: local devbuildcosmo cmd
* FIX: bad merge --drop-in -b --before options forgotten
* FIX: --test place in spack-completion.bash
* FIX: typo
* FIX: blank line removing
* FIX: trailing white space
Co-authored-by: Elsa Germann <egermann@tsa-ln002.cm.cluster>
The package list at https://spack.readthedocs.io/en/latest/package_list.html claims "it is automatically generated based on the packages in the latest Spack release" but it is actually based on the develop branch. This leads to confusion when users find that e.g. herwigpp is included in the list, but it cannot be found when they install the latest release. That latest release has a package list at https://spack.readthedocs.io/en/stable/package_list.html which does indeed not include herwigpp.
Changing the language from "the latest Spack release" to "this Spack version" might make that clearer. Maybe.
* Add nvhpc compiler definition: "spack compiler add" will now look
for instances of the NVIDIA HPC SDK compiler executables
(nvc, nvc++, nvfortran) in supplied paths
* Add the nvhpc package which installs the nvhpc compiler
* Add testing for nvhpc detection and C++-standard/pic flags
Co-authored-by: Scott McMillan <smcmillan@nvidia.com>
Output was, e.g. `Executables in /bin and /,u,s,r,/,b,i,n are both associated with the same spec xz@5.2.2`, will be `Executables in /bin and /usr/bin are both associated with the same spec xz@5.2.2`.
Previously config.guess and config.sub were patched only
in the root of the source path.
This modification extend the previous behavior to patch every
config.guess or config.sub file even in subfolders, if need be.
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
* allow environments to specify dev-build packages
* spack develop and spack undevelop commands
* never pull dev-build packges from bincache
* reinstall dev_specs when code has changed; reinstall dependents too
* preserve dev info paths and versions in concretization as special variant
* move install overwrite transaction into installer
* move dev-build argument handling to package.do_install
now that specs are dev-aware, package.do_install can add
necessary args (keep_stage=True, use_cache=False) to dev
builds. This simplifies driving logic in cmd and env._install
* allow 'any' as wildcard for variants
* spec: allow anonymous dependencies
raise an error when constraining by or normalizing an anonymous dep
refactor concretize_develop to remove dev_build variant
refactor tests to check for ^dev_path=any instead of +dev_build
* fix variant class hierarchy
* autotools: add attribute to delete libtool archives .la files
According to Autotools Mythbuster (https://autotools.io/libtool/lafiles.html)
libtool archive files are mostly vestigial, but they might create issues
when relocating binary packages as shown in #18694.
For GCC specifically, most distributions remove these files with
explicit commands:
https://git.stg.centos.org/rpms/gcc/blob/master/f/gcc.spec#_1303
Considered all of that, this commit adds an easy way for each
AutotoolsPackage to remove every .la file that has been installed.
The default, for the time being, is to maintain them - to be consistent
with what Spack was doing previously.
* autotools: delete libtool archive files by default
Following review this commit changes the default for
libtool archive files deletion and adds test to verify
the behavior.
This commit refactors the computation of the search path
for aclocal in its own method, so that it's easier to reuse
for packages that need to have a custom autoreconf phase.
Co-authored-by: Toyohisa Kameyama <kameyama@riken.jp>
This reverts #18359 and follow-on PRs intended to address issues with
#18359 because that PR changes the hash of all specs. A future PR will
reintroduce the changes.
* Revert "Fix location in spec.yaml where we look for full_hash (#19132)"
* Revert "Fix fetch of spec.yaml files from buildcache (#19101)"
* Revert "Merge pull request #18359 from scottwittenburg/add-binary-distribution-cache-manager"
When we attempt to determine whether a remote spec (in a binary mirror)
is up-to-date or needs to be rebuilt, we compare the full_hash stored in
the remote spec.yaml file against the full_hash computed from the local
concrete spec. Since the full_hash moved into the spec (and is no longer
at the top level of the spec.yaml), we need to look there for it. This
oversight from #18359 was causing all specs to get rebuilt when the
full_hash wasn't fouhd at the expected location.
This changes makes sure that when we run the pipeline job that updates
the buildcache package index on the remote mirror, we also update the
key index. The public keys corresponding to the signing keys used to
sign the package was pushed to the mirror as a part of creating the
buildcache index, so this is just ensuring those keys are reflected
in the key index.
Also, this change makes sure the "spack buildcache update-index"
job runs even when there may have been pipeline failures, since we
would like the index always to reflect the true state of the mirror.
Since those files currently exist in buildcaches (in S3 buckets) with
potentially different content types, we should be less restrictive in
what content types we accept when attempting to fetch them. This PR
removes the content type constraint so any file with the matching
name will be found.
* Remove duplication of reconstructed RPATHs caused by multiple
identical entries in prefixes dictionary
* Don't rewrite RPATHs if relative RPATHs are unchanged because the
directory layout is unchanged
* Need to check the binary is not a Mach-o binary in a linux package or an ELF binary in a macOS package.
* use sys.platform
* Darwin -> darwin for sys.platform
* Rework spack.util.web.list_url()
list_url() now accepts an optional recursive argument (default: False)
for controlling whether to only return files within the prefix url or to
return all files whose path starts with the prefix url. Allows for the
most effecient implementation for the given prefix url scheme. For
example, only recursive queries are supported for S3 prefixes, so the
returned list is trimmed down if recursive == False, but the native
search is returned as-is when recursive == True. Suitable
implementations for each case are also used for file system URLs.
* Switch to using an explicit index for public keys
Switches to maintaining a build cache's keys under build_cache/_pgp.
Within this directory is an index.json file listing all the available
keys and a <fingerprint>.pub file for each such key.
- Adds spack.binary_distribution.generate_key_index()
- (re)generates a build cache's key index
- Modifies spack.binary_distribution.build_tarball()
- if tarball is signed, automatically pushes the key used for signing
along with the tarball
- if regenerate_index == True, automatically (re)generates the build
cache's key index along with the build cache's package index; as in
spack.binary_distribution.generate_key_index()
- Modifies spack.binary_distribution.get_keys()
- a build cache's key index is now used instead of programmatic
listing
- Adds spack.binary_distribution.push_keys()
- publishes keys from Spack's keyring to a given list of mirrors
- Adds new spack subcommand: spack gpg publish
- publishes keys from Spack's keyring to a given list of mirrors
- Modifies spack.util.gpg.Gpg.signing_keys()
- Accepts optional positional arguments for filtering the set of keys
returned
- Adds spack.util.gpg.Gpg.public_keys()
- As spack.util.gpg.Gpg.signing_keys(), except public keys are
returned
- Modifies spack.util.gpg.Gpg.export_keys()
- Fixes an issue where GnuPG would prompt for user input if trying to
overwrite an existing file
- Modifies spack.util.gpg.Gpg.untrust()
- Fixes an issue where GnuPG would fail for input that were not key
fingerprints
- Modifies spack.util.web.url_exists()
- Fixes an issue where url_exists() would throw instead of returning
False
* rework gpg module/fix error with very long GNUPGHOME dir
* add a shim for functools.cached_property
* handle permission denied error in gpg util
* fix tests/make gpgconf optional if no socket dir is available
Update pipelines documentation to describe how 'tags', 'variables',
'image', 'before_script', 'script', and 'after_script' can be
supplied at the top level, to be used by any of the runner mappings,
and also overridden by any of the runner mappings.
Also show an example of capturing the custom spack SHA at pipeline
generation time, so all jobs are sure to run with the same version
of spack, as a means to illustrate the $env:VARIABLE_NAME syntax.
* Use the config path instead of the basename
* Removing unused variables
Co-authored-by: Greg Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
* Test
Making sure if there are 2 include config files with the same basename they are both implemented
* Edit test assert
Co-authored-by: Greg Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
Fixes#18441
When writing an environment, there are cases where the lock file for
the environment may be removed. In this case there was a period
between removing the lock file and writing the new manifest file
where an exception could leave the manifest in its old state (in
which case the lock and manifest would be out of sync).
This adds a context manager which is used to restore the prior lock
file state in cases where the manifest file cannot be written.
This is a special case of overriding since each section is being matched with the current spec.
The trailing ':' for sections with override is now removed when parsing the configuration so the special handling for the modules configuration stopped working but it went unnoticed.
`spack install --yes-to-all` doesn't actually make the build non-interactive,
but that is why people typically use it. This documents that you must also
specify `--no-checksum` for a fully non-interactive build.
* Modules: Deduplicate suffixes but don't sort them.
The suffixes' order is defined by the order in which they appear in the configuration file.
* Modules: Modify tests to use spack_yaml.load_config.
spack_yaml.load_config ensures that the configuration is stored in an ordered manner. Without this change, the behavior of the tests did not match Spack's.
* Modules: Tweak the suffixes test to better catch ordering issues.
* spack config: default modification scope can be an environment
The previous model was that environments are the highest priority config
scope for config reading operations, but were not considered for config
writing operations. Now, the active environment is the highest priority
config scope for both reading and writing operations.
Now spack config add, spack external find and spack compiler set environment
configuration in the environment by default if an environment is active. This is a
change in default behavior for these routines, but better matches the mental
model for an environment taking precedence over the user's default config file.
* add scope argument to 'spack external find' to choose non-default scope
* Increase testing for config modifications on environments
Co-authored-by: Gregory Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
The 'external_modules' attribute on a Spec, when read from a YAML
configuration file, may contain extra formatting that is lost when
that Spec is written-to/read-from JSON format. This was resulting in
a hashing instability (when the Spec was read back, it would report a
different hash). This commit adds a function which removes the extra
formatting from 'external_modules' as it is passed to the Spec in
__init__ to ensure a consistent hash.
As detailed in https://bugs.python.org/issue33725, starting new
processes with 'fork' on Mac OS is not guaranteed to work in general.
As of Python 3.8 the default process spawning mechanism was changed
to avoid this issue.
Spack depends on the fork-based method to preserve file descriptors
transparently, to preserve global state, and to avoid pickling some
objects. An effort is underway to remove dependence on fork-based
process spawning (see #18205). In the meantime, this allows Spack to
run with Python 3.8 on Mac OS by explicitly choosing to use 'fork'.
Co-authored-by: Peter Josef Scheibel <scheibel1@llnl.gov>
Co-authored-by: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
I know that it's just an example, but I was trying to figure out what was going on and it wasn't making sense....
`tput sgr0` resets the terminal state (http://linuxcommand.org/lc3_adv_tput.php) and I can't see any reason to do it twice. Deleting the second occurrence doesn't seem to break the fancy prompt effect.
Compilers can have strange versions, as the version is provided by the user. We know the real version internally, (by querying the compiler) so expose it as a property and use it in places we don't trust the user. Eventually we'll refactor this with compilers as dependencies, but this is the best fix we've got for now.
- [x] Make `real_version` a property and cache the version returned by the compiler
- [x] Use `real_version` to make C++ language level flags work
Restores the fetching progress bar sans failure outputs; restores non-debug reporting of using fetch cache for installed packages; and adds a unit test.
* Add status bar check to test and fetch output when already installed
Some of the feature flags are named differently and clwb is missing on
my i7-1065G7. cascadelake and cannonlake might have similar problems but
I do not have access to those architectures to test.
* make_package_relative: relocate rpaths on cray
* relocate_package: relocate rpaths on cray
* platforms: add `binary_formats` property
We need to know which binary formats are supported on a platform so we
know which types of relocations to try. This adds a list of binary
formats to the platform and removes a bunch of special cases from
`binary_distribution.py`.
Co-authored-by: Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
Before this PR, packages.yaml files that contained an
empty "paths" or "modules" attribute were not updated
correctly, since the update function was not reporting
them as changed after the update.
This PR fixes that issue and adds a unit test to
avoid regression.
This commit adds output to the "spack external find"
command to inform users of the result of the operation.
It also fixes a bug introduced in #17804 due to the fact
that a function was not updated to conform to the new
packages.yaml format (_get_predefined_externals).
* Handle uninstalled rootspecs in buildcache
- Do not parse specs / find matching specs when in an environment and no
package string is provided
- Error only when a spec.yaml or spec string are not installed. In an
environment it is fine when the root spec does not exist.
- When iterating through the matched specs, simply skip uninstalled
packages
* Run Python2.6 unit tests on Github Actions
* Skip url tests on Python 2.6 to reduce waiting times
* Skip foreground background tests on Python 2.6 to reduce waiting times
* Removed references to Travis in the documentation
* Deleted install_patchelf.sh (can be installed from repo on CentOS 6)
* Buildcache:
* Try mocking an install of quux, corge and garply using prebuilt binaries
* Put patchelf install after ccache restore
* Add script to install patchelf from source so it can be used on Ubuntu:Trusty which does not have a patchelf pat package. The script will skip building on macOS
* Remove mirror at end of bindist test
* Add patchelf to Ubuntu build env
* Revert mock patchelf package to allow other tests to run.
* Remove depends_on('patchelf', type='build') relying instead on
* Test fixture to ensure patchelf is available.
* Call g++ command to build libraries directly during test build
* Flake8
* Install patchelf in before_install stage using apt unless on Trusty where a build is done.
* Add some symbolic links between packages
* Flake8
* Flake8:
* Update mock packages to write their own source files
* Create the stage because spec search does not create it any longer
* updates after change of list command arguments
* cleanup after merge
* flake8
- [x] Remove references to `master` branch
- [x] Document how release branches are structured
- [x] Document how to make a major release
- [x] Document how to make a point release
- [x] Document how to do work in our release projects
* Move flake8 tests on Github Actions
* Move shell test to Github Actions
* Moved documentation build to Github Action
* Don't run coverage on Python 2.6
Since we get connection errors consistently on Travis
when trying to upload coverage results for Python 2.6,
avoid computing coverage entirely to speed-up tests.
`spack -V` stopped working when we added the `releases/latest` tag to
track the most recent release. It started just reporting the version,
even on a `develop` checkout. We need to tell it to *only* search for
tags that start with `v`, so that it will ignore `releases/latest`.
`spack -V` also would print out unwanted git eror output on a shallow
clone.
- [x] add `--match 'v*'` to `git describe` arguments
- [x] route error output to `os.devnull`
`spack buildcache list` was trying to construct an `Arch` object and
compare it to `arch_for_spec(<spec>)`. for each spec in the buildcache.
`Arch` objects are only intended to be constructed for the machine they
describe. The `ArchSpec` object (part of the `Spec`) is the descriptor
that lets us talk about architectures anywhere.
- [x] Modify `spack buildcache list` and `spack buildcache install` to
filter with `Spec` matching instead of using `Arch`.
- [x] Make it easier to get a `Spec` with a proper `ArchSpec` from an
`Arch` object via new `Arch.to_spec()` method.
- [x] Pull `spack.architecture.default_arch()` out of
`spack.architecture.sys_type()` so we can get an `Arch` instead of
a string.
* Loosen Axom's variants, add shared variant for axom, fix clang/xlf rpath'ing problem on blueos
* Fix flake8
* Add main branch to list of known git branches
The modifications in 193e8333fa
introduced a bug in the loading of compiler modules, since a
function that was expecting a list of string was just getting
a string.
This commit fixes the bug and adds an assertion to verify the
prerequisite of the function.
Packages can implement “detect_version” to support detection
of external instances of a package. This is generally easier
than implementing “determine_spec_details”. The API for
determine_version is similar: for example you can return
“None” to indicate that an executable is not an instance
of a package.
Users may implement a “determine_variants” method for a package.
When doing external detection, executables are grouped by version
and each group results in a single invocation of “determine_variants”
for the associated spec. The method returns a string specifying
the variants for the package. The method may additionally return
a dictionary representing extra attributes for the package.
These will be stored in the spec yaml and can be retrieved
from self.spec.extra_attributes
The Spack GCC package has been updated with an implementation
of “determine_variants” which adds the following extra
attributes to the package: c, cxx, fortran
The YAML config for paths and modules of external packages has
changed: the new format allows a single spec to load multiple
modules. Spack will automatically convert from the old format
when reading the configs (the updates do not add new essential
properties, so this change in Spack is backwards-compatible).
With this update, Spack cannot modify existing configs/environments
without updating them (e.g. “spack config add” will fail if the
configuration is in a format that predates this PR). The user is
prompted to do this explicitly and commands are provided. All
config scopes can be updated at once. Each environment must be
updated one at a time.
`spack -V` stopped working when we added the `releases/latest` tag to
track the most recent release. It started just reporting the version,
even on a `develop` checkout. We need to tell it to *only* search for
tags that start with `v`, so that it will ignore `releases/latest`.
`spack -V` also would print out unwanted git eror output on a shallow
clone.
- [x] add `--match 'v*'` to `git describe` arguments
- [x] route error output to `os.devnull`
`spack buildcache list` was trying to construct an `Arch` object and
compare it to `arch_for_spec(<spec>)`. for each spec in the buildcache.
`Arch` objects are only intended to be constructed for the machine they
describe. The `ArchSpec` object (part of the `Spec`) is the descriptor
that lets us talk about architectures anywhere.
- [x] Modify `spack buildcache list` and `spack buildcache install` to
filter with `Spec` matching instead of using `Arch`.
- [x] Make it easier to get a `Spec` with a proper `ArchSpec` from an
`Arch` object via new `Arch.to_spec()` method.
- [x] Pull `spack.architecture.default_arch()` out of
`spack.architecture.sys_type()` so we can get an `Arch` instead of
a string.
* Run Python2.6 unit tests on Github Actions
* Skip url tests on Python 2.6 to reduce waiting times
* Skip foreground background tests on Python 2.6 to reduce waiting times
* Removed references to Travis in the documentation
* Deleted install_patchelf.sh (can be installed from repo on CentOS 6)
Relative paths in views have been broken since #17608 or earlier.
- [x] Fix by passing base path of the environment into the `ViewDescriptor`.
Relative paths are calculated from this path.
Relative paths in views have been broken since #17608 or earlier.
- [x] Fix by passing base path of the environment into the `ViewDescriptor`.
Relative paths are calculated from this path.
A bug was introduced in #13100 where ChildErrors would be redundantly
printed when raised during a build. We should eventually revisit error
handling in builds and figure out what the right separation of
responsibilities is for distributed builds, but for now just skip
printing.
- [x] SpackErrors were designed to be printed by the forked process, not
by the parent, so check if they've already been printed.
- [x] update tests
A bug was introduced in #13100 where ChildErrors would be redundantly
printed when raised during a build. We should eventually revisit error
handling in builds and figure out what the right separation of
responsibilities is for distributed builds, but for now just skip
printing.
- [x] SpackErrors were designed to be printed by the forked process, not
by the parent, so check if they've already been printed.
- [x] update tests
Fixes#17299
Cray Shasta systems appear to use an unmodified Sles or other Linux operating system on the backend (like Cray "Cluster" systems and unlike Cray "XC40" systems that use CNL).
This updates the CNL version detection to properly note that this is the underlying OS instead of CNL and delegate to LinuxDistro.
* environment-views: fix bug where missing recipe/repo breaks env commands
When a recipe or a repo has been removed from Spack and an environment
is active, it causes the view activation to crash Spack before any
commands can be executed. Further, the error message it not at all clear
in explaining the issue.
This forces view regeneration to always start from scratch to avoid the
missing package recipes, and defaults add_view=False in main for views activated
by the `spack -e` option.
* add messages to env status and deactivate
Warn users that a view may be corrupt when deactivating an environment
or checking its status while active. Updated message for activate.
* tests for view checking
Co-authored-by: Gregory Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
* switch from bool to int debug levels
* Added debug options and changed lock logging to use more detailed values
* Limit installer and timestamp PIDs to standard debug output
* Reduced verbosity of fetch/stage/install output, changing most to debug level 1
* Combine lock log methods; change build process install to debug
* Changed binary cache install messages to extraction messages
* bugfix: make compiler preferences slightly saner
This fixes two issues with the way we currently select compilers.
If multiple compilers have the same "id" (os/arch/compiler/version), we
currently prefer them by picking this one with the most supported
languages. This can have some surprising effects:
* If you have no `gfortran` but you have `gfortran-8`, you can detect
`clang` that has no configured C compiler -- just `f77` and `f90`. This
happens frequently on macOS with homebrew. The bug is due to some
kludginess about the way we detect mixed `clang`/`gfortran`.
* We can prefer suffixed versions of compilers to non-suffixed versions,
which means we may select `clang-gpu` over `clang` at LLNL. But,
`clang-gpu` is not actually clang, and it can break builds. We should
prefer `clang` if it's available.
- [x] prefer compilers that have C compilers and prefer no name variation
to variation.
* tests: add test for which()
Apple's gcc is really clang. We previously ignored it by default but
there was a regression in #17110.
Originally we checked for all clang versions with this, but I know of
none other than `gcc` on macos that actually do this, so limiting to
`apple-clang` should be ok.
- [x] Fix check for `apple-clang` in `gcc.py` to use version detection
from `spack.compilers.apple_clang`
The `spack-build-env.txt` file may contains many secrets, but the obvious one is the private signing key in `SPACK_SIGNING_KEY`. This file is nonetheless uploaded as a build artifact to gitlab. For anyone running CI on a public version of Gitlab this is a major security problem. Even for private Gitlab instances it can be very problematic.
Co-authored-by: Scott Wittenburg <scott.wittenburg@kitware.com>
Fixes#17299
Cray Shasta systems appear to use an unmodified Sles or other Linux operating system on the backend (like Cray "Cluster" systems and unlike Cray "XC40" systems that use CNL).
This updates the CNL version detection to properly note that this is the underlying OS instead of CNL and delegate to LinuxDistro.
* environment-views: fix bug where missing recipe/repo breaks env commands
When a recipe or a repo has been removed from Spack and an environment
is active, it causes the view activation to crash Spack before any
commands can be executed. Further, the error message it not at all clear
in explaining the issue.
This forces view regeneration to always start from scratch to avoid the
missing package recipes, and defaults add_view=False in main for views activated
by the `spack -e` option.
* add messages to env status and deactivate
Warn users that a view may be corrupt when deactivating an environment
or checking its status while active. Updated message for activate.
* tests for view checking
Co-authored-by: Gregory Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
* switch from bool to int debug levels
* Added debug options and changed lock logging to use more detailed values
* Limit installer and timestamp PIDs to standard debug output
* Reduced verbosity of fetch/stage/install output, changing most to debug level 1
* Combine lock log methods; change build process install to debug
* Changed binary cache install messages to extraction messages
* bugfix: make compiler preferences slightly saner
This fixes two issues with the way we currently select compilers.
If multiple compilers have the same "id" (os/arch/compiler/version), we
currently prefer them by picking this one with the most supported
languages. This can have some surprising effects:
* If you have no `gfortran` but you have `gfortran-8`, you can detect
`clang` that has no configured C compiler -- just `f77` and `f90`. This
happens frequently on macOS with homebrew. The bug is due to some
kludginess about the way we detect mixed `clang`/`gfortran`.
* We can prefer suffixed versions of compilers to non-suffixed versions,
which means we may select `clang-gpu` over `clang` at LLNL. But,
`clang-gpu` is not actually clang, and it can break builds. We should
prefer `clang` if it's available.
- [x] prefer compilers that have C compilers and prefer no name variation
to variation.
* tests: add test for which()
Apple's gcc is really clang. We previously ignored it by default but
there was a regression in #17110.
Originally we checked for all clang versions with this, but I know of
none other than `gcc` on macos that actually do this, so limiting to
`apple-clang` should be ok.
- [x] Fix check for `apple-clang` in `gcc.py` to use version detection
from `spack.compilers.apple_clang`
Spack did not support usage of the `--config-scope` option in
combination with an environment: In `lib/spack/spack/main.py`,
`spack.config.command_line_scopes` is set equal to any config scopes
passed by the `--config-scope` option. However, this is done after
activating an environment. In the process of activating an environment,
the `spack.config.config` singleton is instantiated, so later setting of
`spack.config.command_line_scopes` is ignored.
This commit sets command line scopes before activating an environment to
ensure that they are included in the configuration.
Co-authored-by: Tim Fuller <tjfulle@sandia.gov>
The `spack-build-env.txt` file may contains many secrets, but the obvious one is the private signing key in `SPACK_SIGNING_KEY`. This file is nonetheless uploaded as a build artifact to gitlab. For anyone running CI on a public version of Gitlab this is a major security problem. Even for private Gitlab instances it can be very problematic.
Co-authored-by: Scott Wittenburg <scott.wittenburg@kitware.com>
For normal users, `-o` or `--no-same-owner` (GNU extension) is
the default behavior, but for the root user, `tar` attempts to preserve
the ownership from the tarball.
This makes `tar` use `-o` all the time. This should improve untarring
files owned by users not available in rootless Docker builds.
The error message was not updated when the behavior of Spack environments
was changed to not automatically activate the local environment in #17258.
The previous error message no longer makes sense.
When Spack installs a package, it stores repository package.py files
for it and all of its dependencies - any package with a Spack metadata
directory in its installation prefix.
It turns out this was too broad: this ends up including external
packages installed by Spack (e.g. installed by another Spack instance).
Currently Spack doesn't store the namespace properly for such packages,
so even though the package file could be fetched from the external,
Spack is unable to locate it.
This commit avoids the issue by skipping any attempt to locate and copy
from the package repository of externals, regardless of whether they
have a Spack repo directory.
Spack was attempting to calculate abspath on the located config.guess
path even when it was not found (None); this commit skips the abspath
calculation when config.guess is not found.
The error message was not updated when the behavior of Spack environments
was changed to not automatically activate the local environment in #17258.
The previous error message no longer makes sense.
When Spack installs a package, it stores repository package.py files
for it and all of its dependencies - any package with a Spack metadata
directory in its installation prefix.
It turns out this was too broad: this ends up including external
packages installed by Spack (e.g. installed by another Spack instance).
Currently Spack doesn't store the namespace properly for such packages,
so even though the package file could be fetched from the external,
Spack is unable to locate it.
This commit avoids the issue by skipping any attempt to locate and copy
from the package repository of externals, regardless of whether they
have a Spack repo directory.
* Buildcache:
* Try mocking an install of quux, corge and garply using prebuilt binaries
* Put patchelf install after ccache restore
* Add script to install patchelf from source so it can be used on Ubuntu:Trusty which does not have a patchelf pat package. The script will skip building on macOS
* Remove mirror at end of bindist test
* Add patchelf to Ubuntu build env
* Revert mock patchelf package to allow other tests to run.
* Remove depends_on('patchelf', type='build') relying instead on
* Test fixture to ensure patchelf is available.
* Call g++ command to build libraries directly during test build
* Flake8
* Install patchelf in before_install stage using apt unless on Trusty where a build is done.
* Add some symbolic links between packages
* Flake8
* Flake8:
* Update mock packages to write their own source files
* Create the stage because spec search does not create it any longer
* updates after change of list command arguments
* cleanup after merge
* flake8
fixes#17396
This prevents the class attribute to be inherited and
saves current maintainers from becoming the default
maintainers of every Cuda package.
We got rid of `master` after #17377, but users still want a way to get
the latest stable release without knowing its number.
We've added a `releases/latest` tag to replace what was once `master`.
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
Fixes#16478
This allows an uninstall to proceed even when encountering pre-uninstall
hook failures if the user chooses the --force option for the uninstall.
This also prevents post-uninstall hook failures from raising an exception,
which would terminate a sequence of uninstalls. This isn't likely essential
for #16478, but I think overall it will improve the user experience: if
the post-uninstall hook fails, there isn't much point in terminating a
sequence of spec uninstalls because at the point where the post-uninstall
hook is run, the spec has already been removed from the database (so it
will never have another chance to run).
Notes:
* When doing spack uninstall -a, certain pre/post-uninstall hooks aren't
important to run, but this isn't easy to track with the current model.
For example: if you are uninstalling a package and its extension, you
do not have to do the activation check for the extension.
* This doesn't handle the uninstallation of specs that are not in the DB,
so it may leave "dangling" specs in the installation prefix
- [x] Remove references to `master` branch
- [x] Document how release branches are structured
- [x] Document how to make a major release
- [x] Document how to make a point release
- [x] Document how to do work in our release projects
Spack was attempting to calculate abspath on the located config.guess
path even when it was not found (None); this commit skips the abspath
calculation when config.guess is not found.
* Move flake8 tests on Github Actions
* Move shell test to Github Actions
* Moved documentation build to Github Action
* Don't run coverage on Python 2.6
Since we get connection errors consistently on Travis
when trying to upload coverage results for Python 2.6,
avoid computing coverage entirely to speed-up tests.
* share/spack/setup-env.fish file to setup environment in fish shell
* setup-env.fish testing script
* Update share/spack/setup-env.fish
Co-Authored-By: Elsa Gonsiorowski, PhD <gonsie@me.com>
* Update share/spack/qa/setup-env-test.fish
Co-Authored-By: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
* updates completions using `spack commands --update-completion`
* added stderr-nocaret warning
* added fish shell tests to CI system
Co-authored-by: becker33 <becker33@llnl.gov>
Co-authored-by: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Elsa Gonsiorowski, PhD <gonsie@me.com>
* cray: detect frontend compilers automatically
This commit permits to detect frontend compilers
automatically, with the exception of cce.
Co-authored-by: Gregory Becker <becker33.llnl.gov>
[george.hartzell@172-16-193-97 spack-explore-docker]$ spack containerize
Running `spack containerize` with the example `spack.yaml` file fails
with an error that ends like so:
```
[...]
File "/local_scratch/hartzell/tmp/spack-explore-docker/lib/spack/external/ruamel/yaml/scanner.py", line 165, in need_more_tokens
self.stale_possible_simple_keys()
File "/local_scratch/hartzell/tmp/spack-explore-docker/lib/spack/external/ruamel/yaml/scanner.py", line 309, in stale_possible_simple_keys
"could not find expected ':'", self.get_mark())
ruamel.yaml.scanner.ScannerError: while scanning a simple key
in "/local_scratch/hartzell/tmp/spack-explore-docker/spack.yaml", line 26, column 1
could not find expected ':'
in "/local_scratch/hartzell/tmp/spack-explore-docker/spack.yaml", line 28, column 5
```
Indenting the block string fixes the problem for me.
CentOS 7,
```
$ spack --version
0.14.2-1529-ec58f28c2
```
* env: no automatic activation
* Ensure ci rebuild jobs activate the environment (no longer automagic)
Co-authored-by: Scott Wittenburg <scott.wittenburg@kitware.com>
* Start moving toward a json buildcache index
* Add spec and database index schemas
* Add a schema for buildcache spec.yaml files
* Provide a mode for database class to generate buildcache index
* Update db and ci tests to validate object w/ new schema
* Remove unused temporary upload-s3 command
* Use database class to generate buildcache index
* Do not generate index with each buildcache creation
* Make buildcache index mode into a couple of constructor args to Database class
* Use keyword args for _createtarball
* Parse new json index when we get specs from buildcache
Now that only one index file per mirror needs to be fetched in
order to have all the concrete specs for binaries available on the
mirror, we can just fetch and refresh the cached specs every time
instead of needing to use the '-f' flag to force re-reading.
* First fix for SPACK_DEPENDENCIES problem when doing setup
* Get rid of transitive include path in setup.
* Export SPACK_INCLUDE_DIRS into spconfig.py
* add buildcache create test
* add functionality and test to create buildcache from environment
* use env.concretized_user_specs rather than env.roots to get concretized specs, as suggested in review from becker33
* Allow `spack remove -f` and `spack uninstall` to work on matrices
Allow Environment.remove(force=True) to remove the concrete spec from the environment
even when the user spec cannot be removed because it is in a matrix.
* Separate Apple Clang from LLVM Clang
Apple Clang is a compiler of its own. All places
referring to "-apple" suffix have been updated.
* Hack to use a dash in 'apple-clang'
To be able to use autodoc from Sphinx we need
a valid Python name for the module that contains
Apple's Clang code.
* Updated packages to account for the existence of apple-clang
Co-authored-by: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
* Added unit test for XCode related functions
Co-authored-by: Gregory Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
Co-authored-by: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
* short-circuit is_activated check when the extendee is installed upstream
* add test for checking activation status of packages with an extendee installed upstream
spack config add <value>: add nested value value to the configuration scope specified
spack config remove/rm: remove specified configuration from the relevant scope
* Some minor fixes to set_permissions() in file_permissions.py
The set_permissions() routine claims to prevent users from creating
world writable suid binaries. However, it seems to only be checking
for/preventing group writable suid binaries.
This patch modifies the routine to check for both world and group
writable suid binaries, and complain appropriately.
* permissions.py: Add test to check blocks world writable SUID files
The original test_chmod_rejects_group_writable_suid tested
that the set_permissions() function in
lib/spack/spack/util/file_permissions.py
would raise an exception if changed permission on a file with
both SUID and SGID plus sticky bits is chmod-ed to g+rwx and o+rwx.
I have modified so that more narrowly tests a file with SUID
(and no SGID or sticky bit) set is chmod-ed to g+w.
I have added a second test test_chmod_rejects_world_writable_suid
that checks that exception is raised if an SUID file is chmod-ed
to o+w
* file_permissions.py: Raise exception when try to make sgid file world writable
Updated set_permissions() in file_permissions.py to also raise
an exception if try to make an SGID file world writable. And
added corresponding unit test as well.
* Remove debugging prints from permissions.py
* Module index should not be unconditionally overwritten
Uncovered after we switched our CI to generate modules for packages
one-by-one rather than in bulk. This overwrote a complete module index
with an index with a single entry, and broke our downstream Spack
instances that needed the upstream module index.
* Changed the 'include' config section to use 'substitute_path_variables' to allow for Spack config variables to be used (e.g. $spack).
* Fixed a bug with 'include' section path expansion and added a test case for 'include' paths with embedded config variables.
* Cray: fix Blue Waters support
* pkg-config env vars needed on Blue Waters
* cray platform: fix support for user-build MPI on cray machines
* reintroduce cray environment cleaning behind cnl version guard
* cray platform: fix support for user-build MPI on cray machines
Co-authored-by: Gregory <becker33@llnl.gov>
Builds can be stopped before the final install phase due to user requests. Those builds
should not be registered as installed in the database.
We had code intended to handle this but:
1. It caught the wrong type of exception
2. We were catching these exceptions to suppress them at a lower level in the stack
This PR allows the StopIteration to propagate through a ChildError, and catches it
properly. Also added to an existing test to prevent regression.
This fixes a fork bomb in `spack versions`. Recursive generation of pools
to scrape URLs in `_spider` was creating large numbers of processes.
Instead of recursively creating process pools, we now use a single
`ThreadPool` with a concurrency limit.
More on the issue: having ~10 users running at the same time spack
versions on front-end nodes caused kernel lockup due to the high number
of sockets opened (sys-admin reports ~210k distributed over 3 nodes).
Users were internal, so they had ulimit -n set to ~70k.
The forking behavior could be observed by just running:
$ spack versions boost
and checking the number of processes spawned. Number of processes
per se was not the issue, but each one of them opens a socket
which can stress `iptables`.
In the original issue the kernel watchdog was reporting:
Message from syslogd@login03 at May 19 12:01:30 ...
kernel:Watchdog CPU:110 Hard LOCKUP
Message from syslogd@login03 at May 19 12:01:31 ...
kernel:watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#110 stuck for 23s! [python3:2756]
Message from syslogd@login03 at May 19 12:01:31 ...
kernel:watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#94 stuck for 22s! [iptables:5603]
* add an --exclude-file option to 'spack mirror create' which allows a user to specify a file of specs to exclude when creating a mirror. this is anticipated to be useful especially when using the '--all' option
* allow specifying number of versions when mirroring all packages
* when mirroring all specs within an environment, include dependencies of root specs
* add '--exclude-specs' option to allow user to specify that specs should be excluded on the command line
* add test for excluding specs
fixes#12527
Mention that specs can be uninstalled by hash also in
the help message. Reference `spack gc` in case people
are looking for ways to clean the store from build time
dependencies.
Use "spec" instead of "package" to avoid ambiguity in
the error message.
* Unify tests for compiler command in the same file
Tests for the "spack compiler" command were previously
scattered among different files.
* Tests should use mutable_config, since they modify the compiler list
Because of the way abstract variants are implemented, the following
spec matrix does not work as intended:
```
matrix:
- [foo]
- [bar=a, bar=b]
exclude:
- bar=a
```
because abstract variants always satisfy any variant of the same
name, regardless of values.
This PR converts abstract variants to whatever their appropriate
type is before running satisfaction checks for the excludes clause
in a matrix.
fixes#16841
Now that the version number of GCC reached double digits, an update
to the regex is needed to recognize gcc-10 as an executable to be
inspected when searching for compilers.
* make_link_relative: added docstring
* make_elf_binaries_relative: added docstring, unit tests
* raise_if_not_relocatable: added docstring, added unit test for exceptional case
* relocate_links: removed unused arguments, added docstring and comments
Also fixed a possible bug that was issuing spurious
warning when a file was relocated successfully
* relocate_text: added docstring and comments, renamed arguments
* relocate_text_bin: added docstring and comments, renamed arguments, unit tests
Problem: when calling `static_to_shared_library` on the `cray` arch, it
produces a non-sensical compiler command with no input files. For
example, when installing lua@5.2.4, it produced:
'gcc -lm -ldl -o /big-long-spack-path/liblua.so.5.2.4'
Solution: do the same thing on `cray` that is done for `linux`
* account for schema validation errors where the associated instance doesn't have a line number
* fix unrelated flake error (but it must be fixed because this PR touches this file and the flake rules have been updated since the last edit to this file)
Allows `all` to be configured non-buildable in packages.yaml.
The following config would only allow zlib to be built by Spack, all other packages would have to be found as externals.
```
packages:
all:
buildable: False
zlib:
buildable: True
```
This change also adds a code path through the spack ci pipelines
infrastructure which supports PR testing on the Spack repository.
Gitlab pipelines run as a result of a PR (either creation or pushing
to a PR branch) will only verify that the packages in the environment
build without error. When the PR branch is merged to develop,
another pipeline will run which results in the generated binaries
getting pushed to the binary mirror.
Providing only $padding or ${padding} results in an attempt to
substitute a padding of maximum system path length, while leaving
room for the parts of the install path spack generates. Providing
$padding-<len> or ${padding-<len>} simply substitutes padding of
the specified length.
Packages built with lmod core_compiler are placed in `Core`.
Other packages may belong in `Core`. For example, python may be built with a proprietary compiler for performance, but belong on the `Core` directory.
With this PR, lmod config can include a `core_specs` list. Any package that satisfies a spec in that list is placed in `Core`, regardless of its compiler or dependencies.
This improves the documentation for `spack external find` in several ways:
* Provide a code example of implementing `determine_spec_details` for a package
* Explain how to define executables to look for (and also e.g. that they are treated as regular expressions and so can pull in unexpected files).
* Add the "why" for a couple of constraints (i.e. explain that this logic only works for build/run deps because it examines `PATH` for executables)
* Spread the docs between build customization and packaging sections
* Add cross-references
* Add a label so that `spack external find` is linked from the command reference.
* Add pmi support (required by ucx, ofi, and gni backends)
* Add support for ucx backend
* Add dependency on MPI for pmi=simplepmi, slurmpmi, or slurmpmi2
* Remove charmpp as an MPI provider since the changes in this PR can
add MPI as a dependency (mentioned previously)
* Install into transport_protocol-OS-arch subdirectory to match
default charmpp installation behavior (which helps dependents find it)
- add docstrings and make parameter names consistent in `relocate.py`
- Make `replace_prefix_*` and other functions private (as they are implementation details)
- remove unused function _replace_prefix_nullterm()
- Add unit tests for `relocate.py` functions
- add patchelf to Travis and use it during tests
- add hello_world fixture with a compiled binary, so we can test relocation
After migrating to `travis-ci.com`, we saw I/O issues in our tests --
tests that relied on `capfd` and `capsys` were failing. We've also seen
this in GitHub actions, and it's kept us from switching to them so far.
Turns out that the issue is that using streams like `sys.stdout` as
default arguments doesn't play well with `pytest` and output redirection,
as `pytest` changes the values of `sys.stdout` and `sys.stderr`. if these
values are evaluated before output redirection (as they are when used as
default arg values), output won't be captured properly later.
- [x] replace all stream default arg values with `None`, and only assign stream
values inside functions.
- [x] fix tests we didn't notice were relying on this erroneous behavior
This adds the `url` alternative `urls` to `package.all_urls`. With
this addition, one can find again new versions with
`spack versions <package>` for packages that are populated with
from mixin mirror `urls`.
Example: `util-macros` from x.org mixin.
* Non-interactive mode for spack checksum; allow passing 'package@version' to spack checksum
* Flake8 fixes
* Update checksum.py
Fix typo
* Update spack-completion script
* Automatically set non-interactive mode if more than one version passed
* Update lib/spack/spack/cmd/checksum.py
Co-Authored-By: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
* Add documentation and update spack-completion
* Flake8
* Rename option
* Update spack-completion
* Update lib/spack/spack/cmd/checksum.py
Co-Authored-By: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
* Update checksum.py
* Update stage.py
* Update create.py
Use batch mode when adding a new package
Co-authored-by: Ivan Razumov <ivan.razumov@cern.ch>
Co-authored-by: Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
This fixes some errors with setting up test configuration. These
errors do not cause current Spack tests to fail but do create
red herring issues elsewhere (see #15666). Fixing these errors
leads to more errors in tests that depended on the original
misconfigured state, so those are also addressed here.
This is an update to #16003 which accounts for some unit tests with
conflicting config/mutable_config fixtures. These conflicts were
not exposed until the mutable_config fixture was fixed. Details are
included below. The change which builds on #16003 is prefixed with
"(new)".
* For tests that use the real Spack package repository, the config
needs to avoid using MPI providers that are not intended to be
installed by Spack. Without this, it is possible that Spack tests
which concretize the MPI virtual will end up trying to use an
implementation that it shouldn't (e.g. one that is always
provided externally). See #15666 for an example.
* The mutable_config test fixture was not initializing the scope
roots to the right directories (so the resulting config was empty).
* The current_host fixture in the concretize.py tests was using the
config fixture rather than mutable_config, and was polluting the
config cache for other tests.
* One test in concretize.py was clearing a nonexistent cache
(PackagePrefs._packages_config_cache). This reference has been
removed.
* The test 'test_preferred_compilers' was was depending on cross
test config pollution to succeed. The initial spec before
concretization has been updated to updated to be explicit about
the desired result.
* (new) For tests that use install_mockery and mutable_config,
replace install_mockery with a separate install_mockery_mutable_config
fixture that is exactly the same as install_mockery but uses the
mutable_config fixture to avoid conflicts.
Fixed#15884.
Spack asks every package linked into an environment to tell us how
environment variables should be modified when a spack environment is
activated. As part of this, specs in an environment are symlinked into
the environment's view (see #13249), and the package calculates
environment modifications with *the default view as the prefix*.
All of this works nicely for pointing the user's environment at the view
*if* every package is successfully linked. Unfortunately, right now we
only track what specs "should" be in a view, not which specs actually
are. So we end up calculating environment modifications on things that
aren't linked into thee view, and the exception isn't caught, so lots of
spack commands end up failing.
This fixes the issue by ignoring and warning about specs where
calculating environment modifications fails. So we can still keep using
Spack even if the current environment is incomplete.
We should probably also just avoid computing env modifications *entirely*
for unlinked packages, but right now that is a slow operation (requires a
lot of YAML parsing). We should revisit that when we have some better
state management for views, but the fix adopted here will still be
necessary, as we want spack commands to be resilient to other types of
bugs in `setup_run_environment()` and friends. That code is in packages
and we have to assume it could be buggy when we call it outside of builds
(as it might fail more than just the build).
Add a `spack external find` command that tries to populate
`packages.yaml` with external packages from the user's `$PATH`. This
focuses on finding build dependencies. Currently, support has only been
added for `cmake`.
For a package to be discoverable with `spack external find`, it must define:
* an `executables` class attribute containing a list of
regular expressions that match executable names.
* a `determine_spec_details(prefix, specs_in_prefix)` method
Spack will call `determine_spec_details()` once for each prefix where
executables are found, passing in the path to the prefix and the path to
all found executables. The package is responsible for invoking the
executables and figuring out what type of installation(s) are in the
prefix, and returning one or more specs (each with version, variants or
whatever else the user decides to include in the spec).
The found specs and prefixes will be added to the user's `packages.yaml`
file. Providing the `--not-buildable` option will mark all generated
entries in `packages.yaml` as `buildable: False`
Cray has two machine types. "XC" machines are the larger
machines more common in HPC, but "Cluster" machines are
also cropping up at some HPC sites. Cluster machines run
a slightly different form of the CrayPE programming environment,
and often come without default modules loaded. Cluster
machines also run different versions of some software, and run
a linux distro on the backend nodes instead of running Compute
Node Linux (CNL).
Below are the changes made to support "Cluster" machines in
Spack. Some of these changes are semi-related general upkeep
of the cray platform.
* cray platform: detect properly after module purge
* cray platform: support machines running OSs other than CNL
Make Cray backend OS delegate to LinuxDistro when no cle_release file
favor backend over frontend OS when name clashes
* cray platform: target detection uses multiple strategies
This commit improves the robustness of target
detection on Cray by trying multiple strategies.
The first one that produces results wins. If
nothing is found only the generic family of the
frontend host is used as a target.
* cray-libsci: add package from NERSC
* build_env: unload cray-libsci module when not explicitly needed
cray-libsci is a package in Spack. The cray PrgEnv
modules load it implicitly when we set up the compiler.
We now unload it after setting up the compiler and
only reload it when requested via external package.
* util/module_cmd: more robust module parsing
Cray modules have documentation inside the module
that is visible to the `module show` command.
Spack module parsing is now robust to documentation
inside modules.
* cce compiler: uses clang flags for versions >= 9.0
* build_env: push CRAY_LD_LIBRARY_PATH into everything
Some Cray modules add paths to CRAY_LD_LIBRARY_PATH
instead of LD_LIBRARY_PATH. This has performance benefits
at load time, but leads to Spack builds not finding their
dependencies from external modules.
Spack now prepends CRAY_LD_LIBRARY_PATH to
LD_LIBRARY_PATH before beginning the build.
* mvapich2: setup cray compilers when on cray
previously, mpich was the only mpi implementation to support
cray systems (because it is the MPI on Cray XC systems).
Cray cluster systems use mvapich2, which now supports cray
compiler wrappers.
* build_env: clean pkgconf from environment
Cray modules silently add pkgconf to the user environment
This can break builds that do not user pkgconf.
Now we remove it frmo the environment and add it again if it
is in the spec.
* cray platform: cheat modules for rome/zen2 module on naples/zen node
Cray modules for naples/zen architecture currently specify
rome/zen2. For now, we detect this and return zen for modules
named `craype-x86-rome`.
* compiler: compiler default versions
When detecting compiler default versions for target/compiler
compatibility checks, Spack previously ran the compiler without
setting up its environment. Now we setup a temporary environment
to run the compiler with its modules to detect its version.
* compilers/cce: improve logic to determine C/C++ std flags
* tests: fix existing tests to play nicely with new cray support
* tests: test new functionality
Some new functionality can only be tested on a cray system.
Add tests for what can be tested on a linux system.
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
Since #9481 Python's None is not permitted as a value for
MV variants. The string 'none' is used instead.
Add the same fix for the amgx and lammps packages
If spack is checked out in a git worktree (see [1]), all git-related
commands fail because the `spack_is_git_repo()`-check is not thorough
enough.
When developing in a feature-branch in a seperate worktree, this is
annoying as all unittests regarding git-related spack commands fail,
cluttering the test results with false-positives.
[1]: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-worktree
Change-Id: I94b573a2c0e058e9ccc169e7ee6561626fbb06fd
* For tests that use the real Spack package repository, the config
needs to avoid using MPI providers that are not intended to be
installed by Spack. Without this, it is possible that Spack tests
which concretize the MPI virtual will end up trying to use an
implementation that it shouldn't (e.g. one that is always
provided externally). See #15666 for an example.
* The mutable_config test fixture was not initializing the scope
roots to the right directories (so the resulting config was empty).
* The current_host fixture in the concretize.py tests was using the
config fixture rather than mutable_config, and was polluting the
config cache for other tests.
* One test in concretize.py was clearing a nonexistent cache
(PackagePrefs._packages_config_cache). This reference has been
removed.
* The test 'test_preferred_compilers' was was depending on cross
test config pollution to succeed. The initial spec before
concretization has been updated to updated to be explicit about
the desired result.
* dev-build: --drop-in <shell>
Add a `--drop-in <shell>` option to `spack dev-build`.
This option will automatically run a
`spack build-env <spec> -- <shell>` at the end of a `dev-build`, e.g.
to quickly drop-and-devel into a build phase of a package.
Example usage:
```
spack dev-build --before cmake --drop-in bash openpmd-api@develop
```
* build_env: drop in unit test
Co-authored-by: Greg Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
Generally speaking, errors that are encountered when attempting to load
command extensions now terminate the running Spack instance.
* Added new exceptions `spack.cmd.PythonNameError` and
`spack.cmd.CommandNameError`.
* New functions `spack.cmd.require_python_name(pname)` and
`spack.cmd.require_cmd_name(cname)` check that `pname` and `cname`
respectively meet requirements, throwing the appropriate error if not.
* `spack.cmd.get_module()` uses `require_cmd_name()` and passes through
exceptions from module load attempts.
* `spack.cmd.get_command()` uses `require_cmd_name()` and invokes
`get_module()` with the correct command-name form rather than the
previous (incorrect) Python name.
* Added New exceptions `spack.extensions.CommandNotFoundError` and
`spack.extensions.ExtensionNamingError`.
* `_extension_regexp` has a new leading underscore to indicate expected
privacy.
* `spack.extensions.extension_name()` raises an `ExtensionNamingError`
rather than using `tty.warn()`.
* `spack.extensions.load_command_extension()` checks command source
existence early and bails out if missing. Also, exceptions raised by
`load_module_from_file()` are passed through.
* `spack.extensions.get_module()` raises `CommandNotFoundError` as
appropriate.
* Spack `main()` allows `parser.add_command()` exceptions to cause
program end.
Tests:
* More common boilerplate has been pulled out into fixtures including
`sys.modules` dictionary cleanup and resource-managed creation of a
simple command extension with specified contents in the source file
for a single named command.
* "Hello, World!" test now uses a command named `hello-world` instead of
`hello` in order to verify correct handling of commands with hyphens.
* New tests for:
* Missing (or misnamed) command.
* Badly-named extension.
* Verification that errors encountered during import of a command are
propagated upward.
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
This PR introduces trivial refactoring in:
- `get_existing_elf_rpaths`
- `get_relative_elf_rpaths`
- `get_normalized_elf_rpaths`
- `set_placeholder`
mainly to be more consistent with practices used in other
parts of the code and to simplify functions locally. It also
adds or reworks unit tests for these functions and extends
their docstrings.
Co-authored-by: Patrick Gartung <gartung@fnal.gov>
Co-authored-by: Peter J. Scheibel <scheibel1@llnl.gov>
Packages in Spack are classes, and we need to be able to execute class
methods on mock packages. The previous design used instances of a single
MockPackage class; this version gives each package its own class that can
spider depenencies. This allows us to implement class methods like
`possible_dependencies()` on mock packages.
This design change moves mock package creation into the
`MockPackageMultiRepo`, and mock packages now *must* be created from a
repo. This is required for us to mock `possible_dependencies()`, which
needs to be able to get dependency packages from the package repo.
Changes include:
* `MockPackage` is now `MockPackageBase`
* `MockPackageBase` instances must now be created with
`MockPackageMultiRepo.add_package()`
* add `possible_dependencies()` method to `MockPackageBase`
* refactor tests to use new code structure
* move package mocking infrastructure into `spack.util.mock_package`,
as it's becoming a more sophisticated class and it gets lots in `conftest.py`
The variants table in `spack info` is cramped, as the *widest* it can be
is 80 columns. And that's actually only sort of true -- the padding
calculation is off, so it still wraps on terminals of size 80 because it
comes out *slightly* wider.
This change looks at the terminal size and calculates the width of the
description column based on it. On larger terminals, the output looks
much nicer, and on small terminals, the output no longer wraps.
Here's an example for `spack info qmcpack` with 110 columns.
Before:
Name [Default] Allowed values Description
==================== ==================== ==============================
afqmc [off] on, off Install with AFQMC support.
NOTE that if used in
combination with CUDA, only
AFQMC will have CUDA.
build_type [Release] Debug, Release, The build type to build
RelWithDebInfo
complex [off] on, off Build the complex (general
twist/k-point) version
cuda [off] on, off Build with CUDA
After:
Name [Default] Allowed values Description
==================== ==================== ========================================================
afqmc [off] on, off Install with AFQMC support. NOTE that if used in
combination with CUDA, only AFQMC will have CUDA.
build_type [Release] Debug, Release, The build type to build
RelWithDebInfo
complex [off] on, off Build the complex (general twist/k-point) version
cuda [off] on, off Build with CUDA
Update compiler config with bootstrapped compiler when it was already installed and added config defaults to code so mutable_config test fixture works.
To specify an environment for a comment, the user can specify
"spack -e <env>". The documentation incorrectly specified "-E" (which
is actually used to ignore any implicit use of environments).
If the Spack compiler wrapper encounters any "-isystem" option, then
when adding include directories for Spack dependencies, Spack will
use "-isystem" instead of "-I". This prevents Spack-generated "-I"
options from overriding the "-isystem" options generated by the build
system. To ensure that build-system "-isystem" directories are
searched first, Spack places all of its inserted "-isystem"
directories after.
The new ordering of -isystem includes is:
* -isystem from build system (not system directories)
* -isystem from Spack
* -isystem from build system (for directories like /usr/include)
The prior order of "-I" arguments is preserved (although as of this
commit Spack no longer generates -I if -isystem is detected):
* -I from build system (not system directories)
* -I from Spack (only if there are no "-isystem" options)
* -I from build system (for directories like /usr/include)
Since #16132, we've consolidated the setting of FORCE_UNSAFE_CONFIGURE to
`autotools.py`, so we don't need to use it in packages like `coreutils`,
in our commands, or in our container recipes.
- [x] Remove FORCE_UNSAFE_CONFIGURE from packages
- [x] Remove FORCE_UNSAFE_CONFIGURE from container recipes
- [x] Remove FORCE_UNSAFE_CONFIGURE from `spack ci` command
This commit sets the `FORCE_UNSAFE_CONFIGURE` environment variable to 1 in autotools builds.
We see a lot of builds popping up and complaining about `FORCE_UNSAFE_CONFIGURE`. This behavior is not actually part of `autoconf` per se. It comes from this patch to `mknod.m4`, which is used by a lot of autoconf builds:
* https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2010-07/msg00282.html
Which originated from this problem that someone had on AIX:
* https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2010-07/msg00279.html
The gist of the problem seems to be that they want to check whether `mknod` can do something as root, but instead of checking whether they're running as root and using `su` or something to test this, they just made it harder to run `configure` as root.
This seems very ad hoc and this is one of many checks that are run as root in `configure`. Many of them run before this check, so it's not clear that the `FORCE_UNSAFE_CONFIGURE` thing is even preventing bad things from happening.
So:
1. This only happens in `autotools` builds, so we should go ahead and put it into `autotools.py` instead of in the global build environment, and
2. The variable does too little and provides a false sense of security in the first place, so we'll just disable it and avoid the nuisance. If we really feel strongly about this we can put some warnings in Spack about running as root, but at the top level, not in the middle of an already running script like `configure`.