# ------------------------------------------------------------------------- # This is the default spack configuration file. # # Settings here are versioned with Spack and are intended to provide # sensible defaults out of the box. Spack maintainers should edit this # file to keep it current. # # Users can override these settings by editing # `$SPACK_ROOT/etc/spack/concretizer.yaml`, `~/.spack/concretizer.yaml`, # or by adding a `concretizer:` section to an environment. # ------------------------------------------------------------------------- concretizer: # Whether to consider installed packages or packages from buildcaches when # concretizing specs. If `true`, we'll try to use as many installs/binaries # as possible, rather than building. If `false`, we'll always give you a fresh # concretization. If `dependencies`, we'll only reuse dependencies but # give you a fresh concretization for your root specs. reuse: dependencies # Options that tune which targets are considered for concretization. The # concretization process is very sensitive to the number targets, and the time # needed to reach a solution increases noticeably with the number of targets # considered. targets: # Determine whether we want to target specific or generic # microarchitectures. Valid values are: "microarchitectures" or "generic". # An example of "microarchitectures" would be "skylake" or "bulldozer", # while an example of "generic" would be "aarch64" or "x86_64_v4". granularity: microarchitectures # If "false" allow targets that are incompatible with the current host (for # instance concretize with target "icelake" while running on "haswell"). # If "true" only allow targets that are compatible with the host. host_compatible: true # When "true" concretize root specs of environments together, so that each unique # package in an environment corresponds to one concrete spec. This ensures # environments can always be activated. When "false" perform concretization separately # on each root spec, allowing different versions and variants of the same package in # an environment. unify: true