* asciidoc: current sourceforge a2x needs python2, new github release python3
* asciidoc: current sourceforge a2x needs python2, new github release python3
* asciidoc: making python 2.3 to 2.7 able to cope with asciidoc
* asciidoc: current sourceforge a2x needs python2, new github release python3
* asciidoc: current sourceforge a2x needs python2, new github release python3
* asciidoc: current sourceforge a2x needs python2, new github release python3
* asciidoc: current sourceforge a2x needs python2, new github release python3
* Fix sensei@develop
Should work with all options but libsim.
Current releases don't work with ~catalyst
See
https://gitlab.kitware.com/sensei/sensei/-/merge_requests/240
for the fix for develop.
Current releases work only with paraview 5.7 and 5.6
See
https://gitlab.kitware.com/sensei/sensei/-/merge_requests/239
for the fix for develop (which works with 5.9)
* Fix libsim.
* Fix warnings.
* Fix python runtime.
* Many changes:
* Reworked cmake options top use the CMakePackage option helpers
* Simplified and consolidated options
* Replaced adios with adios2 variant
* Added vtkm variant (not yet working)
* paraview: Fix downstream consumers getting the wrong FindMPI
* vtk: Fix downstream consumers getting the wrong FindMPI
* Add +ascent, +adios2; remove +adios; variants off by default
* Fix catalyst python logic
* sensei: cleanup formatting
Co-authored-by: Chuck Atkins <chuck.atkins@kitware.com>
When using an external package with the old concretizer, all
dependencies of that external package were severed. This was not
performed bidirectionally though, so for an external package W with
a dependency on Z, if some other package Y depended on Z, Z could
still pull properties (e.g. compiler) from W since it was not
severed as a parent dependency.
This performs the severing bidirectionally, and adds tests to
confirm expected behavior when using config from DAG-adjacent
packages during concretization.
Allow libfuse to build without setuid binary and bump versions of both
libfuse and fuse-overlayfs.
Still doesn't solve the issue where this package tries to install things
into /etc/init.d though.