Clone of the official spack repository with modifications for HLRS HAWK
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Atsushi Hori 777901843f
New Package: Process-in-Process (PiP) -- 2nd trial (#20925)
* Adding PiP recipe

* pip@1 recipe (it seems working)

* change install dir hierarchy

* installing PiP man pages

* add pip-glibc & pip-gdb

* fix configure option designations, fix dependency types

* fix dependency type of pip

* use AutotoolsPackage in pip recipe

* add patch for pip-glibc & pip-gdb to enable 'disable-werror'

* change glibc install directory

* add linux distro check to pip-gdb

* create process-in-process package

* use flag_handler and join_path

* add gcc version constraint, change install-test to check-installed

* fix gcc version designations on conflicts()

* add constraint of target cpu, fix flake8 warnings

* add version constraint to resource()

* Some fixes to adapt the current version
	not to execute 'piplnlibs'
	change documentation install command

* Update
	new branch name of PiP-gdb
	adapting PiP-Testsuite

* update pip-gdb github urls

* The very first commit of Process-in-Process (PiP)
	details can be found at https://github.com/RIKEN-SysSoft/PiP

* Fix comment style issues

* New Package: Process-in-Process (PiP) -- 2nd trial

* fix style issue

* change inline comments style (required to have two spaces)

Co-authored-by: Daiki Matsunaga <daikim@axe.bz>
2021-01-18 16:50:48 -06:00
.github qa: use dependabot to update Github Actions 2021-01-06 00:00:33 -08:00
bin copyrights: update all files with license headers for 2021 2021-01-02 12:12:00 -08:00
etc/spack/defaults Use system libuuid on macOS (#20608) 2020-12-30 10:13:34 -06:00
lib/spack improve documentation for Rocm (hip amd builds) (#20812) 2021-01-14 08:54:58 -08:00
share/spack Remove ascent gitlab trigger (#20755) 2021-01-08 12:57:50 -07:00
var/spack New Package: Process-in-Process (PiP) -- 2nd trial (#20925) 2021-01-18 16:50:48 -06:00
.codecov.yml
.coveragerc
.dockerignore
.flake8 add mypy to style checks; rename spack flake8 to spack style (#20384) 2020-12-22 21:39:10 -08:00
.gitattributes linguist: update .gitattributes for better linguist parsing (#20639) 2020-12-31 16:48:50 -08:00
.gitignore
.mailmap
.mypy.ini add mypy to style checks; rename spack flake8 to spack style (#20384) 2020-12-22 21:39:10 -08:00
.readthedocs.yml
CHANGELOG.md
COPYRIGHT
LICENSE-APACHE
LICENSE-MIT
NOTICE
pytest.ini
README.md

Spack Spack

MacOS Tests Linux Tests Linux Builds macOS Builds (nightly) codecov Read the Docs Slack

Spack is a multi-platform package manager that builds and installs multiple versions and configurations of software. It works on Linux, macOS, and many supercomputers. Spack is non-destructive: installing a new version of a package does not break existing installations, so many configurations of the same package can coexist.

Spack offers a simple "spec" syntax that allows users to specify versions and configuration options. Package files are written in pure Python, and specs allow package authors to write a single script for many different builds of the same package. With Spack, you can build your software all the ways you want to.

See the Feature Overview for examples and highlights.

To install spack and your first package, make sure you have Python. Then:

$ git clone https://github.com/spack/spack.git
$ cd spack/bin
$ ./spack install zlib

Documentation

Full documentation is available, or run spack help or spack help --all.

Tutorial

We maintain a hands-on tutorial. It covers basic to advanced usage, packaging, developer features, and large HPC deployments. You can do all of the exercises on your own laptop using a Docker container.

Feel free to use these materials to teach users at your organization about Spack.

Community

Spack is an open source project. Questions, discussion, and contributions are welcome. Contributions can be anything from new packages to bugfixes, documentation, or even new core features.

Resources:

Contributing

Contributing to Spack is relatively easy. Just send us a pull request. When you send your request, make develop the destination branch on the Spack repository.

Your PR must pass Spack's unit tests and documentation tests, and must be PEP 8 compliant. We enforce these guidelines with our CI process. To run these tests locally, and for helpful tips on git, see our Contribution Guide.

Spack's develop branch has the latest contributions. Pull requests should target develop, and users who want the latest package versions, features, etc. can use develop.

Releases

For multi-user site deployments or other use cases that need very stable software installations, we recommend using Spack's stable releases.

Each Spack release series also has a corresponding branch, e.g. releases/v0.14 has 0.14.x versions of Spack, and releases/v0.13 has 0.13.x versions. We backport important bug fixes to these branches but we do not advance the package versions or make other changes that would change the way Spack concretizes dependencies within a release branch. So, you can base your Spack deployment on a release branch and git pull to get fixes, without the package churn that comes with develop.

The latest release is always available with the releases/latest tag.

See the docs on releases for more details.

Code of Conduct

Please note that Spack has a Code of Conduct. By participating in the Spack community, you agree to abide by its rules.

Authors

Many thanks go to Spack's contributors.

Spack was created by Todd Gamblin, tgamblin@llnl.gov.

Citing Spack

If you are referencing Spack in a publication, please cite the following paper:

License

Spack is distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0). Users may choose either license, at their option.

All new contributions must be made under both the MIT and Apache-2.0 licenses.

See LICENSE-MIT, LICENSE-APACHE, COPYRIGHT, and NOTICE for details.

SPDX-License-Identifier: (Apache-2.0 OR MIT)

LLNL-CODE-811652