This moves our `mypy` configuration from `.mypy.ini` to `.pyproject.toml`
and increases the minimum `mypy` version in the tests.
- [x] move `mypy` configuration to `pyproject.toml`
- [x] remove `.mypy.ini`
- [x] ensure that `mypy` version .900 or higher is used in tests
Ideally a test-only dependency won't be in the build, but until then
mark the requirement of gtest up to 1.10.
See e4s job failure at https://gitlab.spack.io/spack/spack/-/jobs/349959 .
Looks like 1.11 introduces some breaking incompatibilities, so perhaps
we should transition later.
* fix remaining flake8 errors
* imports: sort imports everywhere in Spack
We enabled import order checking in #23947, but fixing things manually drives
people crazy. This used `spack style --fix --all` from #24071 to automatically
sort everything in Spack so PR submitters won't have to deal with it.
This should go in after #24071, as it assumes we're using `isort`, not
`flake8-import-order` to order things. `isort` seems to be more flexible and
allows `llnl` mports to be in their own group before `spack` ones, so this
seems like a good switch.
* Fix compiler test
Use `self.spec.satisfies` on compiler to determine if a flag should be
applied or not. This approach avoids issues with the strings `gcc`
or `clang` appearing in the full path to the compiler executables, as
happens with spack-installed compilers (e.g. `nvhpc%gcc`).
* Limit compiler name search to last path component
@skosukhin pointed out that the cflag modification should happen for any
clang or gcc compiler, regardless of what compiler spec provides them.
This commit reverts to searching for a compiler name containing "gcc"
or "clang", but limits the search to the last path component, which
avoids matching spack-installed compilers built with gcc (e.g.
`nvhpc%gcc`), which will have "gcc" in the compiler path.
* Use `os.path` rather than `pathlib`
Co-authored-by: Paul Henning <phenning@lanl.gov>
`dateutil.parser` was an optional dependency for CVS tests. It was failing on macOS
beacuse the dateutil types were not being installed, and mypy was failing *even when the
CVS tests were skipped*. This seems like it was an oversight on macOS --
`types-dateutil-parser` was not installed there, though it was on Linux unit tests.
It takes 6 lines of YAML and some weird test-skipping logic to get `python-dateutil` and
`types-python-dateutil` installed in all the tests where we need them, but it only takes
4 lines of code to write the date parser we need for CVS, so I just did that instead.
Note that CVS date format can vary from system to system, but it seems like it's always
pretty similar for the parts we care about.
- [x] Replace dateutil.parser with a simpler date regex
- [x] Lose the dependency on `dateutil.parser`
Previous tests of `spack style` didn't really run the tools --
they just ensure that the commands worked enough to get coverage.
This adds several real tests and ensures that we hit the corner
cases in `spack style`. This also tests sucess as well as failure
cases.
This consolidates code across tools in `spack style` so that each
`run_<tool>` function can be called indirecty through a dictionary
of handlers, and os that checks like finding the executable for the
tool can be shared across commands.
- [x] rework `spack style` to use decorators to register tools
- [x] define tool order in one place in `spack style`
- [x] fix python 2/3 issues to Get `isort` checks working
- [x] make isort error regex more robust across versions
- [x] remove unused output option
- [x] change vestigial `TRAVIS_BRANCH` to `GITHUB_BASE_REF`
- [x] update completion
This PR configures the spack docbook packages
- docbook-xsl
- docbook-xml
The public entities are now mapped to the locally installed files of the
respective packages. The example catalogs are left in place and
XML_CATALOG_FILES points to the newly created catalogs.
Perl keeps copies of the bzip2 and zlib source code in its own source
tree and by default uses them in favor of outside libraries. Instead,
put these dependencies under control of spack and tell perl to use the
spack-built versions.