Gitlab truncates job trace output (even the complete raw output) at 4MB,
so this change captures it to a file under "user_data" artifacts as well,
to make sure we can debug output from the end of the rebuild job.
When a spec fails to build on `develop`, instead of storing an empty file as the entry in the broken specs list, this change stores the full spec yaml as well as links to the failing pipeline and job.
A `spack diff` will take two specs, and then use the spack.solver.asp.SpackSolverSetup to generate
lists of facts about each (e.g., nodes, variants, etc.) and then take a set difference between the
two to show the user the differences.
Example output:
$ spack diff python@2.7.8 python@3.8.11
==> Warning: This interface is subject to change.
--- python@2.7.8/tsxdi6gl4lihp25qrm4d6nys3nypufbf
+++ python@3.8.11/yjtseru4nbpllbaxb46q7wfkyxbuvzxx
@@ variant_value @@
- python patches a8c52415a8b03c0e5f28b5d52ae498f7a7e602007db2b9554df28cd5685839b8
+ python patches 0d98e93189bc278fbc37a50ed7f183bd8aaf249a8e1670a465f0db6bb4f8cf87
@@ version @@
- openssl Version(1.0.2u)
+ openssl Version(1.1.1k)
- python Version(2.7.8)
+ python Version(3.8.11)
Currently this uses diff-like output but we will attempt to improve on this in the future.
One use case for `spack diff` is whenever a user has a disambiguate situation and cannot
remember how two different installs are different. The command can also output `--json` in
the case of a more analysis type use case where we want to save complete data with all
diffs and the intersection. However, the command is really more intended for a command
line use case, and we likely will have an analyzer more suited to saving data
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tamara Dahlgren <35777542+tldahlgren@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
* Catch ConnectionError from CDash reporter
Catch ConnectionError when attempting to upload the results of `spack install`
to CDash. This follows in the spirit of #24299. We do not want `spack install`
to exit with a non-zero status when something goes wrong while attempting to
report results to CDash.
* Catch HTTP Error 400 (Bad Request) in relate_cdash_builds()
* sst-elements: add optional support for flashdimmsim, dramsim3 and
add new packages for each
* sst-dumpi: add version 7.1.0
* sst-core: autotools dependencies are required for all versions
* new package: dtc
* add error message redirect for +dumpi, otf, and otf2: these are not
currently supported
Modifications:
- Remove the "build tests" workflow from GitHub Actions
- Setup a similar e2e test on Gitlab
In this way we'll reduce load on GitHub Actions workflows and for e2e tests will
benefit from the buildcache reuse granted by pipelines.
ENABLE_SPLASH configuration has been removed entirely after 21.06 so
patch is no longer necessary after #24931. (Versions between 0.90.1 and
21.06 will likely still need a patch, and while it's not clear if this
patch is the right one, seems better to leave something in.)
- add version 9.1.2
- set a license file
- set the license environment variable
- remove the download and license information out of the description so
it does not show up in environment modules
- extend python and set python version constraints
- build gurobipy to be used in any compatible python, used for more
extensive computations than the gurobi shell
- remove preexisting PYTHONPATH from gurobi.sh as the shell uses a
built-in python, which will likely be different from "system" python
- add maintainer
`spack style` previously used a Travis CI variable to figure out
what the base branch of a PR was, and this was apparently also set
on `develop`. We switched to `GITHUB_BASE_REF` to support GitHub
Actions, but it looks like this is set to `""` in pushes to develop,
so `spack style` breaks there.
This PR does two things:
- [x] Remove `GITHUB_BASE_REF` knowledge from `spack style` entirely
- [x] Handle `GITHUB_BASE_REF` in style scripts instead, and explicitly
pass the base ref if it is present, but don't otherwise.
This makes `spack style` *not* dependent on the environment and fixes
handling of the base branch in the right place.
This adds a `--root` option so that `spack style` can check style for
a spack instance other than its own.
We also change the inner workings of `spack style` so that `--config FILE`
(and similar options for the various tools) options are used. This ensures
that when `spack style` runs, it always uses the config from the running spack,
and does *not* pick up configuration from the external root.
- [x] add `--root` option to `spack style`
- [x] add `--config` (or similar) option when invoking style tools
- [x] add a test that verifies we can check an external instance
* [py-lmfit] fixed py-asteval dependency requirements
* [py-lmfit] added version 1.0.2
* [py-lmfit] flake8
* [py-lmfit] 1.0.2 reqires python 3.6
* [py-lmfit] removed newer dependency requirements to be in line with setup.py not requirements.txt
* pbs: new virtual package
Some of our clusters have an older installation of
libtorque and tm.h that are *not* from OpenPBS. Using the current
openpbs dependency for openmpi causes concretization errors due to
restrictions on older python and hwloc requirements that don't apply,
even with an external non-buildable installation.
The new 'torque' bundle package allows users to point to that external
installation without problems.
Detailed description of torque by Sergey Kosukhin <skosukhin@gmail.com>