spack/share/spack/setup-tutorial-env.sh
Todd Gamblin a8ccb8e116 copyrights: update all files with license headers for 2021
- [x] add `concretize.lp`, `spack.yaml`, etc. to licensed files
- [x] update all licensed files to say 2013-2021 using
      `spack license update-copyright-year`
- [x] appease mypy with some additions to package.py that needed
      for oneapi.py
2021-01-02 12:12:00 -08:00

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# Copyright 2013-2021 Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC and other
# Spack Project Developers. See the top-level COPYRIGHT file for details.
#
# SPDX-License-Identifier: (Apache-2.0 OR MIT)
###############################################################################
#
# This file is part of Spack and sets up the environment for the Spack tutorial
# It is intended to be run on ubuntu-18.04 or an ubuntu-18.04 container or AWS
# cloud9 environment
#
# Components:
# 1. apt installs for packages used in the tutorial
# these include compilers and externals used by the tutorial and
# basic spack requirements like python and curl
# 2. spack configuration files
# these set the default configuration for Spack to use x86_64 and suppress
# certain gpg warnings. The gpg warnings are not relevant for the tutorial
# and the default x86_64 architecture allows us to run the same tutorial on
# any x86_64 architecture without needing new binary packages.
# 3. aws cloud9 configuration to expand available storage
# when we run on aws cloud9 we have to expand the storage from 10G to 30G
# because we install too much software for a default cloud9 instance
###############################################################################
####
# Ensure we're on Ubuntu 18.04
####
if [ -f /etc/os-release ]; then
. /etc/os-release
fi
if [ x"$UBUNTU_CODENAME" != "xbionic" ]; then
echo "The tutorial setup script must be run on Ubuntu 18.04."
return 1 &>/dev/null || exit 1 # works if sourced or run
fi
####
# Install packages needed for tutorial
####
# compilers, basic system components, externals
# There are retries around these because apt fails frequently on new instances,
# due to unattended updates running in the background and taking the lock.
until sudo apt-get update -y; do
echo "==> apt-get update failed. retrying..."
sleep 5
done
until sudo apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends \
autoconf make python3 python3-pip \
build-essential ca-certificates curl git gnupg2 iproute2 emacs \
file openssh-server tcl unzip vim wget \
clang g++ g++-6 gcc gcc-6 gfortran gfortran-6 \
zlib1g zlib1g-dev mpich; do
echo "==> apt-get install failed. retrying..."
sleep 5
done
####
# Upgrade boto3 python package on AWS systems
####
pip3 install --upgrade boto3
####
# Spack configuration settings for tutorial
####
# create spack system config
sudo mkdir -p /etc/spack
# set default arch to x86_64
sudo tee /etc/spack/packages.yaml << EOF > /dev/null
packages:
all:
target: [x86_64]
EOF
# suppress gpg warnings
sudo tee /etc/spack/config.yaml << EOF > /dev/null
config:
suppress_gpg_warnings: true
EOF
####
# AWS set volume size to at least 30G
####
# Hardcode the specified size to 30G
SIZE=30
# Get the ID of the environment host Amazon EC2 instance.
INSTANCEID=$(curl http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data//instance-id)
# Get the ID of the Amazon EBS volume associated with the instance.
VOLUMEID=$(aws ec2 describe-instances \
--instance-id $INSTANCEID \
--query "Reservations[0].Instances[0].BlockDeviceMappings[0].Ebs.VolumeId" \
--output text)
# Resize the EBS volume.
aws ec2 modify-volume --volume-id $VOLUMEID --size $SIZE
# Wait for the resize to finish.
while [ \
"$(aws ec2 describe-volumes-modifications \
--volume-id $VOLUMEID \
--filters Name=modification-state,Values="optimizing","completed" \
--query "length(VolumesModifications)"\
--output text)" != "1" ]; do
sleep 1
done
if [ -e /dev/xvda1 ]
then
# Rewrite the partition table so that the partition takes up all the space that it can.
sudo growpart /dev/xvda 1
# Expand the size of the file system.
sudo resize2fs /dev/xvda1
else
# Rewrite the partition table so that the partition takes up all the space that it can.
sudo growpart /dev/nvme0n1 1
# Expand the size of the file system.
sudo resize2fs /dev/nvme0n1p1
fi