This is a refactor of Spack's stand-alone test process to be more spack- and pytest-like.
It is more spack-like in that test parts are no longer "hidden" in a package's run_test()
method and pytest-like in that any package method whose name starts test_
(i.e., a "test" method) is a test part. We also support the ability to embed test parts in a
test method when that makes sense.
Test methods are now implicit test parts. The docstring is the purpose for the test part.
The name of the method is the name of the test part. The working directory is the active
spec's test stage directory. You can embed test parts using the test_part context manager.
Functionality added by this commit:
* Adds support for multiple test_* stand-alone package test methods, each of which is
an implicit test_part for execution and reporting purposes;
* Deprecates package use of run_test();
* Exposes some functionality from run_test() as optional helper methods;
* Adds a SkipTest exception that can be used to flag stand-alone tests as being skipped;
* Updates the packaging guide section on stand-alone tests to provide more examples;
* Restores the ability to run tests "inherited" from provided virtual packages;
* Prints the test log path (like we currently do for build log paths);
* Times and reports the post-install process (since it can include post-install tests);
* Corrects context-related error message to distinguish test recipes from build recipes.
* hip: get_paths for hipify-clang
* fix: need to actually use get_paths now to get hipify-clang path
* set hipify-clang path differentluy for external vs spack-installed case
* [@spackbot] updating style on behalf of eugeneswalker
fixes#22341
Using double quotes creates issues with shell variable substitutions,
in particular when the manifest has "definitions:" in it. Use single
quotes instead.
Add a "require" directive to packages, which functions exactly like
requirements specified in packages.yaml (uses the same fact-generation
logic); update both to allow making the requirement conditional.
* Packages may now use "require" to add constraints. This can be useful
for something like "require(%gcc)" (where before we had to add a
conflict for every compiler except gcc).
* Requirements (in packages.yaml or in a "require" directive) can be
conditional on a spec, e.g. "require(%gcc, when=@1.0.0)" (version
1.0.0 can only build with gcc).
* Requirements may include a message which clarifies why they are needed.
The concretizer assigns a high priority to errors which generate these
messages (in particular over errors for unsatisfied requirements that
do not produce messages, but also over a number of more-generic
errors).