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authorTodd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>2015-02-24 02:33:29 -0800
committerTodd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>2015-02-24 02:45:07 -0800
commitdaa38d2ff4acd75b3b592bac5abd9ef642ee801f (patch)
tree369368123c4d82a55dd25da7d2b2474b19221bb7
parent049808a34fca6ede43e5c460740b55bb43f1cc27 (diff)
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SPACK-59: Documentation updates, bugfix in fetching.
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/.gitignore1
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/Makefile16
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/basic_usage.rst37
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/command_index.in10
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/features.rst2
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/index.rst2
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/mirrors.rst217
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/packaging_guide.rst312
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/site_configuration.rst193
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/spack/mirror.py2
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/spack/package.py5
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/spack/test/git_fetch.py4
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/spack/test/hg_fetch.py4
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/spack/test/svn_fetch.py4
14 files changed, 585 insertions, 224 deletions
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/.gitignore b/lib/spack/docs/.gitignore
index 7701dd9f12..26c343d3eb 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/.gitignore
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/.gitignore
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
package_list.rst
+command_index.rst
spack*.rst
_build
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/Makefile b/lib/spack/docs/Makefile
index a660e1255d..00203b5b61 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/Makefile
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/Makefile
@@ -28,6 +28,18 @@ package_list:
spack package-list > package_list.rst
#
+# Generate a command index
+#
+command_index:
+ cp command_index.in command_index.rst
+ echo >> command_index.rst
+ grep -ho '.. _spack-.*:' *rst \
+ | perl -pe 's/.. _([^:]*):/ * :ref:`\1`/' \
+ | sort >> command_index.rst
+
+custom_targets: package_list command_index
+
+#
# This creates a git repository and commits generated html docs.
# It them pushes the new branch into THIS repository as gh-pages.
#
@@ -77,10 +89,10 @@ help:
@echo " doctest to run all doctests embedded in the documentation (if enabled)"
clean:
- -rm -f package_list.rst
+ -rm -f package_list.rst command_index.rst
-rm -rf $(BUILDDIR)/* $(APIDOC_FILES)
-html: apidoc package_list
+html: apidoc custom_targets
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b html $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/html
@echo
@echo "Build finished. The HTML pages are in $(BUILDDIR)/html."
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/basic_usage.rst b/lib/spack/docs/basic_usage.rst
index bd25d739ea..3d808708e1 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/basic_usage.rst
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/basic_usage.rst
@@ -16,6 +16,8 @@ software. Before that, you need to know what's available. You can
see avaialble package names either using the :ref:`package-list`, or
using the commands below.
+.. _spack-list:
+
``spack list``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -31,6 +33,7 @@ do wildcard searches using ``*``:
.. command-output:: spack list *util*
+.. _spack-info:
``spack info``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -47,6 +50,8 @@ attacks. :ref:`Dependencies <sec-specs>` and :ref:`virtual
dependencies <sec-virtual-dependencies>`, are described in more detail
later.
+.. _spack-versions:
+
``spack versions``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -69,6 +74,8 @@ Installing and uninstalling
Now that you know how to list avaiable packages and versions, you're
ready to start installing things.
+.. _spack-install:
+
``spack install``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -138,6 +145,7 @@ configuration a **spec**. In the command lines above, both
``mpileaks`` and ``mpileaks@3.0.4`` are specs. Specs are described in
detail in :ref:`sec-specs`.
+.. _spack-uninstall:
``spack uninstall``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -170,6 +178,7 @@ Seeing installed packages
We know that ``spack list`` shows you the names of available packages,
but how do you figure out which are installed?
+.. _spack-find:
``spack find``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -303,7 +312,7 @@ of libelf would look like this:
The full spec syntax is discussed in detail in :ref:`sec-specs`.
-Compiler Configuration
+Compiler configuration
-----------------------------------
Spack has the ability to build packages with multiple compilers and
@@ -311,6 +320,8 @@ compiler versions. Spack searches for compilers on your machine
automatically the first time it is run. It does this by inspecting
your path.
+.. _spack-compilers:
+
``spack compilers``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -337,6 +348,8 @@ compilers`` or ``spack compiler list``::
Any of these compilers can be used to build Spack packages. More on
how this is done is in :ref:`sec-specs`.
+.. _spack-compiler-add:
+
``spack compiler add``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -361,6 +374,7 @@ installed, but you know that new compilers have been added to your
This loads the environment module for gcc-4.9.0 to get it into the
``PATH``, and then it adds the compiler to Spack.
+.. _spack-compiler-info:
``spack compiler info``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -382,7 +396,7 @@ matching Intel compiler was displayed.
Manual compiler configuration
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If autodetection fails, you can manually conigure a compiler by
editing your ``~/.spackconfig`` file. You can do this by running
@@ -413,7 +427,7 @@ list displayed by ``spack compilers``.
.. _sec-specs:
-Specs & Dependencies
+Specs & dependencies
-------------------------
We know that ``spack install``, ``spack uninstall``, and other
@@ -720,6 +734,8 @@ any MPI implementation will do. If another package depends on
error. Likewise, if you try to plug in some package that doesn't
provide MPI, Spack will raise an error.
+.. _spack-providers:
+
``spack providers``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -739,7 +755,7 @@ versions are now filtered out.
.. _shell-support:
-Environment Modules
+Environment modules
-------------------------------
.. note::
@@ -787,6 +803,7 @@ The directories are automatically added to your ``MODULEPATH`` and
``DK_NODE`` environment variables when you enable Spack's `shell
support <shell-support_>`_.
+
Using Modules & Dotkits
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -934,6 +951,8 @@ if newer, fancier module support is added to Spack at some later date,
you may want to regenerate all the modules to take advantage of these
new features.
+.. _spack-module:
+
``spack module refresh``
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
@@ -950,7 +969,7 @@ regenerate all module and dotkit files from scratch:
.. _extensions:
-Extensions & Python Support
+Extensions & Python support
------------------------------------
Spack's installation model assumes that each package will live in its
@@ -971,6 +990,8 @@ an *extension*. Suppose you have Python installed like so:
-- chaos_5_x86_64_ib / gcc@4.4.7 --------------------------------
python@2.7.8
+.. _spack-extensions:
+
``spack extensions``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1004,6 +1025,7 @@ they are packages like any ohter. They are installed into their own
prefixes, and you can see this with ``spack find -p``:
.. code-block:: sh
+
$ spack find -p py-numpy
==> 1 installed packages.
-- chaos_5_x86_64_ib / gcc@4.4.7 --------------------------------
@@ -1060,6 +1082,8 @@ for this case. Instead of requiring users to load particular
environment modules, you can *activate* the package within the Python
installation:
+.. _spack-activate:
+
``spack activate``
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
@@ -1133,6 +1157,7 @@ dependencies, you can use ``spack activate -f``:
$ spack activate -f py-numpy
==> Activated extension py-numpy@1.9.1%gcc@4.4.7=chaos_5_x86_64_ib-66733244 for python@2.7.8%gcc@4.4.7.
+.. _spack-deactivate:
``spack deactivate``
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
@@ -1159,6 +1184,8 @@ several variants:
Getting Help
-----------------------
+.. _spack-help:
+
``spack help``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/command_index.in b/lib/spack/docs/command_index.in
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..94cdf38109
--- /dev/null
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/command_index.in
@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
+.. _command_index:
+
+Command index
+=================
+
+This is an alphabetical list of commands with links to the places they
+appear in the documentation.
+
+.. hlist::
+ :columns: 3
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/features.rst b/lib/spack/docs/features.rst
index b39dcd3390..fcb810086d 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/features.rst
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/features.rst
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-Feature Overview
+Feature overview
==================
This is a high-level overview of features that make Spack different
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/index.rst b/lib/spack/docs/index.rst
index 73eff43ab7..2382678cc3 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/index.rst
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/index.rst
@@ -46,8 +46,10 @@ Table of Contents
getting_started
basic_usage
packaging_guide
+ mirrors
site_configuration
developer_guide
+ command_index
package_list
API Docs <spack>
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/mirrors.rst b/lib/spack/docs/mirrors.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..57ca1af068
--- /dev/null
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/mirrors.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,217 @@
+.. _mirrors:
+
+Mirrors
+============================
+
+Some sites may not have access to the internet for fetching packages.
+These sites will need a local repository of tarballs from which they
+can get their files. Spack has support for this with *mirrors*. A
+mirror is a URL that points to a directory, either on the local
+filesystem or on some server, containing tarballs for all of Spack's
+packages.
+
+Here's an example of a mirror's directory structure::
+
+ mirror/
+ cmake/
+ cmake-2.8.10.2.tar.gz
+ dyninst/
+ dyninst-8.1.1.tgz
+ dyninst-8.1.2.tgz
+ libdwarf/
+ libdwarf-20130126.tar.gz
+ libdwarf-20130207.tar.gz
+ libdwarf-20130729.tar.gz
+ libelf/
+ libelf-0.8.12.tar.gz
+ libelf-0.8.13.tar.gz
+ libunwind/
+ libunwind-1.1.tar.gz
+ mpich/
+ mpich-3.0.4.tar.gz
+ mvapich2/
+ mvapich2-1.9.tgz
+
+The structure is very simple. There is a top-level directory. The
+second level directories are named after packages, and the third level
+contains tarballs for each package, named after each package.
+
+.. note::
+
+ Archives are **not** named exactly they were in the package's fetch
+ URL. They have the form ``<name>-<version>.<extension>``, where
+ ``<name>`` is Spack's name for the package, ``<version>`` is the
+ version of the tarball, and ``<extension>`` is whatever format the
+ package's fetch URL contains.
+
+ In order to make mirror creation reasonably fast, we copy the
+ tarball in its original format to the mirror directory, but we do
+ not standardize on a particular compression algorithm, because this
+ would potentially require expanding and recompressing each archive.
+
+.. _spack-mirror:
+
+``spack mirror``
+----------------------------
+
+Mirrors are managed with the ``spack mirror`` command. The help for
+``spack mirror`` looks like this::
+
+ $ spack mirror -h
+ usage: spack mirror [-h] SUBCOMMAND ...
+
+ positional arguments:
+ SUBCOMMAND
+ create Create a directory to be used as a spack mirror, and fill
+ it with package archives.
+ add Add a mirror to Spack.
+ remove Remove a mirror by name.
+ list Print out available mirrors to the console.
+
+ optional arguments:
+ -h, --help show this help message and exit
+
+The ``create`` command actually builds a mirror by fetching all of its
+packages from the internet and checksumming them.
+
+The other three commands are for managing mirror configuration. They
+control the URL(s) from which Spack downloads its packages.
+
+.. _spack-mirror-create:
+
+``spack mirror create``
+----------------------------
+
+You can create a mirror using the ``spack mirror create`` command, assuming
+you're on a machine where you can access the internet.
+
+The command will iterate through all of Spack's packages and download
+the safe ones into a directory structure like the one above. Here is
+what it looks like:
+
+
+.. code-block:: bash
+
+ $ spack mirror create libelf libdwarf
+ ==> Created new mirror in spack-mirror-2014-06-24
+ ==> Trying to fetch from http://www.mr511.de/software/libelf-0.8.13.tar.gz
+ ########################################################## 81.6%
+ ==> Checksum passed for libelf@0.8.13
+ ==> Added libelf@0.8.13
+ ==> Trying to fetch from http://www.mr511.de/software/libelf-0.8.12.tar.gz
+ ###################################################################### 98.6%
+ ==> Checksum passed for libelf@0.8.12
+ ==> Added libelf@0.8.12
+ ==> Trying to fetch from http://www.prevanders.net/libdwarf-20130207.tar.gz
+ ###################################################################### 97.3%
+ ==> Checksum passed for libdwarf@20130207
+ ==> Added libdwarf@20130207
+ ==> Trying to fetch from http://www.prevanders.net/libdwarf-20130126.tar.gz
+ ######################################################## 78.9%
+ ==> Checksum passed for libdwarf@20130126
+ ==> Added libdwarf@20130126
+ ==> Trying to fetch from http://www.prevanders.net/libdwarf-20130729.tar.gz
+ ############################################################# 84.7%
+ ==> Added libdwarf@20130729
+ ==> Added spack-mirror-2014-06-24/libdwarf/libdwarf-20130729.tar.gz to mirror
+ ==> Added python@2.7.8.
+ ==> Successfully updated mirror in spack-mirror-2015-02-24.
+ Archive stats:
+ 0 already present
+ 5 added
+ 0 failed to fetch.
+
+Once this is done, you can tar up the ``spack-mirror-2014-06-24`` directory and
+copy it over to the machine you want it hosted on.
+
+Custom package sets
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Normally, ``spack mirror create`` downloads all the archives it has
+checksums for. If you want to only create a mirror for a subset of
+packages, you can do that by supplying a list of package specs on the
+command line after ``spack mirror create``. For example, this
+command::
+
+ $ spack mirror create libelf@0.8.12: boost@1.44:
+
+Will create a mirror for libelf versions greater than or equal to
+0.8.12 and boost versions greater than or equal to 1.44.
+
+Mirror files
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+If you have a *very* large number of packages you want to mirror, you
+can supply a file with specs in it, one per line::
+
+ $ cat specs.txt
+ libdwarf
+ libelf@0.8.12:
+ boost@1.44:
+ boost@1.39.0
+ ...
+ $ spack mirror create -f specs.txt
+ ...
+
+This is useful if there is a specific suite of software managed by
+your site.
+
+.. _spack-mirror-add:
+
+``spack mirror add``
+----------------------------
+
+Once you have a mirrror, you need to let spack know about it. This is
+relatively simple. First, figure out the URL for the mirror. If it's
+a file, you can use a file URL like this one::
+
+ file:///Users/gamblin2/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
+
+That points to the directory on the local filesystem. If it were on a
+web server, you could use a URL like this one:
+
+ https://example.com/some/web-hosted/directory/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
+
+Spack will use the URL as the root for all of the packages it fetches.
+You can tell your Spack installation to use that mirror like this:
+
+.. code-block:: bash
+
+ $ spack mirror add local_filesystem file:///Users/gamblin2/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
+
+Each mirror has a name so that you can refer to it again later.
+
+.. _spack-mirror-list:
+
+``spack mirror list``
+----------------------------
+
+If you want to see all the mirrors Spack knows about you can run ``spack mirror list``::
+
+ $ spack mirror list
+ local_filesystem file:///Users/gamblin2/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
+
+.. _spack-mirror-remove:
+
+``spack mirror remove``
+----------------------------
+
+And, if you want to remove a mirror, just remove it by name::
+
+ $ spack mirror remove local_filesystem
+ $ spack mirror list
+ ==> No mirrors configured.
+
+Mirror precedence
+----------------------------
+
+Adding a mirror really just adds a section in ``~/.spackconfig``::
+
+ [mirror "local_filesystem"]
+ url = file:///Users/gamblin2/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
+ [mirror "remote_server"]
+ url = https://example.com/some/web-hosted/directory/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
+
+If you want to change the order in which mirrors are searched for
+packages, you can edit this file and reorder the sections. Spack will
+search the topmost mirror first and the bottom-most mirror last.
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/packaging_guide.rst b/lib/spack/docs/packaging_guide.rst
index bc3bacf8f2..8b4c0a4ce1 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/packaging_guide.rst
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/packaging_guide.rst
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ ubiquitous in the scientific software community. Second, it's a modern
language and has many powerful features to help make package writing
easy.
-Creating & Editing Packages
+Creating & editing packages
----------------------------------
.. _spack-create:
@@ -254,7 +254,7 @@ This is useful when ``spack create`` cannot figure out the name and
version of your package from the archive URL.
-Naming & Directory Structure
+Naming & directory structure
--------------------------------------
.. note::
@@ -497,7 +497,7 @@ versions. See the documentation on `attribute_list_url`_ and
.. _vcs-fetch:
-Fetching from VCS Repositories
+Fetching from VCS repositories
--------------------------------------
For some packages, source code is provided in a Version Control System
@@ -774,6 +774,8 @@ to patch a package's source. For example, the ``py-pyside`` package
contains some custom code for tweaking the way the PySide build
handles ``RPATH``:
+.. _pyside-patch:
+
.. code-block:: python
:linenos:
@@ -810,14 +812,59 @@ You could put this logic in ``install()``, but putting it in a patch
function gives you some benefits. First, spack ensures that the
``patch()`` function is run once per code checkout. That means that
if you run install, hit ctrl-C, and run install again, the code in the
-patch function is only run once. Also, you can tell Spack to run only the patching part of the build using the ..
+patch function is only run once. Also, you can tell Spack to run only
+the patching part of the build using the :ref:`spack-patch` command.
+
+Handling RPATHs
+----------------------------
+
+Spack installs each package in a way that ensures that all of its
+dependencies are found when it runs. It does this using `RPATHs
+<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rpath>`_. An RPATH is a search
+path, stored in a binary (an executable or library), that tells the
+dynamic loader where to find its dependencies at runtime. You may be
+familiar with ```LD_LIBRARY_PATH``
+<http://tldp.org/HOWTO/Program-Library-HOWTO/shared-libraries.html>`_
+on Linux or ```DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH``
+<https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/Darwin/Reference/ManPages/man1/dyld.1.html>`
+on Mac OS X. RPATH is similar to these paths, in that it tells
+the loader where to find libraries. Unlike them, it is embedded in
+the binary and not set in each user's environment.
+
+RPATHs in Spack are handled in one of three ways:
+
+ 1. For most packages, RPATHs are handled automatically using Spack's
+ :ref:`compiler wrappers <compiler-wrappers>`. These wrappers are
+ set in standard variables like ``CC``, ``CXX``, and ``FC``, so
+ most build systems (autotools and many gmake systems) pick them
+ up and use them.
+ 2. CMake also respects Spack's compiler wrappers, but many CMake
+ builds have logic to overwrite RPATHs when binaries are
+ installed. Spack provides the ``std_cmake_args`` variable, which
+ includes parameters necessary for CMake build use the right
+ installation RPATH. It can be used like this when ``cmake`` is
+ invoked:
+
+ .. code-block:: python
+
+ class MyPackage(Package):
+ ...
+ def install(self, spec, prefix):
+ cmake('..', *std_cmake_args)
+ make()
+ make('install')
+ 3. If you need to modify the build to add your own RPATHs, you can
+ use the ``self.rpath`` property of your package, which will
+ return a list of all the RPATHs that Spack will use when it
+ links. You can see this how this is used in the :ref:`PySide
+ example <pyside-patch>` above.
-Finding Package Downloads
+Finding new versions
----------------------------
-We've already seen the ``homepage`` and ``url`` package attributes:
+You've already seen the ``homepage`` and ``url`` package attributes:
.. code-block:: python
:linenos:
@@ -853,7 +900,7 @@ url is:
url = "http://www.mr511.de/software/libelf-0.8.13.tar.gz"
-Spack spiders ``http://www.mr511.de/software/`` to find similar
+Here, Spack spiders ``http://www.mr511.de/software/`` to find similar
tarball links and ultimately to make a list of available versions of
``libelf``.
@@ -907,7 +954,7 @@ when spidering the page.
.. _attribute_parallel:
-Parallel Builds
+Parallel builds
------------------
By default, Spack will invoke ``make()`` with a ``-j <njobs>``
@@ -1036,6 +1083,203 @@ command line to find installed packages or to install packages with
particular constraints, and package authors can use specs to describe
relationships between packages.
+.. _setup-dependent-environment:
+
+``setup_dependent_environment()``
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Spack provides a mechanism for dependencies to provide variables that
+can be used in their dependents' build. Any package can declare a
+``setup_dependent_environment()`` function, and this function will be
+called before the ``install()`` method of any dependent packages.
+This allows dependencies to set up environment variables and other
+properties to be used by dependents.
+
+The funciton declaration should look like this:
+
+.. code-block:: python
+
+ class Qt(Package):
+ ...
+ def setup_dependent_environment(self, module, spec, dep_spec):
+ """Dependencies of Qt find it using the QTDIR environment variable."""
+ os.environ['QTDIR'] = self.prefix
+
+Here, the Qt package sets the ``QTDIR`` environment variable so that
+packages that depend on a particular Qt installation will find it.
+
+The arguments to this function are:
+
+ * **module**: the module of the dependent package, where global
+ properties can be assigned.
+ * **spec**: the spec of the *dependency package* (the one the function is called on).
+ * **dep_spec**: the spec of the dependent package (i.e. dep_spec depends on spec).
+
+A goo example of using these is in the Python packge:
+
+.. code-block:: python
+
+ def setup_dependent_environment(self, module, spec, dep_spec):
+ # Python extension builds can have a global python executable function
+ module.python = Executable(join_path(spec.prefix.bin, 'python'))
+
+ # Add variables for lib/pythonX.Y and lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages dirs.
+ module.python_lib_dir = os.path.join(dep_spec.prefix, self.python_lib_dir)
+ module.python_include_dir = os.path.join(dep_spec.prefix, self.python_include_dir)
+ module.site_packages_dir = os.path.join(dep_spec.prefix, self.site_packages_dir)
+
+ # Make the site packages directory if it does not exist already.
+ mkdirp(module.site_packages_dir)
+
+ # Set PYTHONPATH to include site-packages dir for the
+ # extension and any other python extensions it depends on.
+ python_paths = []
+ for d in dep_spec.traverse():
+ if d.package.extends(self.spec):
+ python_paths.append(os.path.join(d.prefix, self.site_packages_dir))
+ os.environ['PYTHONPATH'] = ':'.join(python_paths)
+
+The first thing that happens here is that the ``python`` command is
+inserted into module scope of the dependent. This allows most python
+packages to have a very simple install method, like this:
+
+.. code-block:: python
+
+ def install(self, spec, prefix):
+ python('setup.py', 'install', '--prefix=%s' % prefix)
+
+Python's ``setup_dependent_environment`` method also sets up smoe
+other variables, creates a directory, and sets up the ``PYTHONPATH``
+so that dependent packages can find their dependencies at build time.
+
+
+.. _packaging_extensions:
+
+Extensions
+-------------------------
+
+Spack's support for package extensions is documented extensively in
+:ref:`extensions`. This section documents how to make your own
+extendable packages and extensions.
+
+To support extensions, a package needs to set its ``extendable``
+property to ``True``, e.g.:
+
+.. code-block:: python
+
+ class Python(Package):
+ ...
+ extendable = True
+ ...
+
+To make a package into an extension, simply add simply add an
+``extends`` call in the package definition, and pass it the name of an
+extendable package:
+
+.. code-block:: python
+
+ class PyNumpy(Package):
+ ...
+ extends('python')
+ ...
+
+Now, the ``py-numpy`` package can be used as an argument to ``spack
+activate``. When it is activated, all the files in its prefix will be
+symbolically linked into the prefix of the python package.
+
+Sometimes, certain files in one package will conflict with those in
+another, which means they cannot both be activated (symlinked) at the
+same time. In this case, you can tell Spack to ignore those files
+when it does the activation:
+
+.. code-block:: python
+
+ class PyNose(Package):
+ ...
+ extends('python', ignore=r'bin/nosetests.*$')
+ ...
+
+The code above will prevent ``$prefix/bin/nosetests`` from being
+linked in at activation time.
+
+.. note::
+
+ You can call *either* ``depends_on`` or ``extends`` on any one
+ package, but not both. For example you cannot both
+ ``depends_on('python')`` and ``extends(python)`` in the same
+ package. ``extends`` implies ``depends_on``.
+
+
+
+Activation & deactivation
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Spack's ``Package`` class has default ``activate`` and ``deactivate``
+implementations that handle symbolically linking extensions' prefixes
+into the directory of the parent package. However, extendable
+packages can override these methdos to add custom activate/deactivate
+logic of their own. For example, the ``activate`` and ``deactivate``
+methods in the Python class use the symbolic linking, but they also
+handle details surrounding Python's ``.pth`` files, and other aspects
+of Python packaging.
+
+Spack's extensions mechanism is designed to be extensible, so that
+other packages (like Ruby, R, Perl, etc.) can provide their own
+custom extension management logic, as they may not handle modules the
+same way that Python does.
+
+Let's look at Python's activate function:
+
+.. code-block:: python
+
+ def activate(self, ext_pkg, **kwargs):
+ kwargs.update(ignore=self.python_ignore(ext_pkg, kwargs))
+ super(Python, self).activate(ext_pkg, **kwargs)
+
+ exts = spack.install_layout.extension_map(self.spec)
+ exts[ext_pkg.name] = ext_pkg.spec
+ self.write_easy_install_pth(exts)
+
+This function is called on the *extendee* (Python). It first calls
+``activate`` in the superclass, which handles symlinking the
+extension package's prefix into this package's prefix. It then does
+some special handling of the ``easy-install.pth`` file, part of
+Python's setuptools.
+
+Deactivate behaves similarly to activate, but it unlinks files:
+
+.. code-block:: python
+
+ def deactivate(self, ext_pkg, **kwargs):
+ kwargs.update(ignore=self.python_ignore(ext_pkg, kwargs))
+ super(Python, self).deactivate(ext_pkg, **kwargs)
+
+ exts = spack.install_layout.extension_map(self.spec)
+ if ext_pkg.name in exts: # Make deactivate idempotent.
+ del exts[ext_pkg.name]
+ self.write_easy_install_pth(exts)
+
+Both of these methods call some custom functions in the Python
+package. See the source for Spack's Python package for details.
+
+
+Activation arguments
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+You may have noticed that the ``activate`` function defined above
+takes keyword arguments. These are the keyword arguments from
+``extends()``, and they are passed to both activate and deactivate.
+
+This capability allows an extension to customize its own activation by
+passing arguments to the extendee. Extendees can likewise implement
+custom ``activate()`` and ``deactivate()`` functions to suit their
+needs.
+
+The only keyword argument supported by default is the ``ignore``
+argument, which can take a regex, list of regexes, or a predicate to
+determine which files *not* to symlink during activation.
+
+
.. _virtual-dependencies:
Virtual dependencies
@@ -1257,6 +1501,7 @@ explicitly. Concretization policies are discussed in more detail in
:ref:`site-configuration`. Sites using Spack can customize them to
match the preferences of their own users.
+.. _spack-spec:
``spack spec``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1354,7 +1599,7 @@ information.
.. _install-environment:
-The Install environment
+The install environment
--------------------------
In general, you should not have to do much differently in your install
@@ -1414,6 +1659,7 @@ easily:
``PATH`` Set to point to ``/bin`` directories of dpeendencies
``CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH`` Path to dependency prefixes for CMake
``PKG_CONFIG_PATH`` Path to any pkgconfig directories for dependencies
+ ``PYTHONPATH`` Path to site-packages dir of any python dependencies
======================= =============================
``PATH`` is set up to point to dependencies ``/bin`` directories so
@@ -1433,6 +1679,12 @@ dependencies using the GNU ``pkg-config`` tool. It is similar to
``CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH`` in that it allows a build to automatically
discover its dependencies.
+If you want to see the environment that a package will build with, or
+if you want to run commands in that environment to test them out, you
+can use the :ref:```spack env`` <spack-env>` command, documented
+below.
+
+.. _compiler-wrappers:
Compiler interceptors
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -1498,7 +1750,6 @@ process runs. Packages are free to change the environment or to
modify Spack internals, because each ``install()`` call has its own
dedicated process.
-
.. _prefix-objects:
Prefix objects
@@ -1970,7 +2221,7 @@ File functions
.. _pacakge-lifecycle:
-Package Workflow Commands
+Packaging workflow commands
---------------------------------
When you are building packages, you will likely not get things
@@ -2036,6 +2287,8 @@ this step if they have been. If Spack discovers that patches didn't
apply cleanly on some previous run, then it will restage the entire
package before patching.
+.. _spack-restage:
+
``spack restage``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Restores the source code to pristine state, as it was before building.
@@ -2048,6 +2301,7 @@ Does this in one of two ways:
2. If the source was checked out from a repository, this deletes the
build directory and checks it out again.
+.. _spack-clean:
``spack clean``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -2057,6 +2311,8 @@ expanded/checked out source code *and* any downloaded archive. If
build process will start from scratch.
+.. _spack-purge:
+
``spack purge``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Cleans up all of Spack's temporary files. Use this to recover disk
@@ -2102,7 +2358,7 @@ to get rid of the install prefix before you build again:
spack uninstall -f <spec>
-Graphing Dependencies
+Graphing dependencies
--------------------------
.. _spack-graph:
@@ -2181,7 +2437,7 @@ example::
This graph can be provided as input to other graphing tools, such as
those in `Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org>`_.
-Interactive Shell Support
+Interactive shell support
--------------------------
Spack provides some limited shell support to make life easier for
@@ -2197,6 +2453,7 @@ For ``csh`` and ``tcsh`` run:
``spack cd`` will then be available.
+.. _spack-cd:
``spack cd``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -2227,6 +2484,35 @@ directory, install directory, package directory) and others change to
core spack locations. For example, ``spack cd -m`` will take you to
the main python source directory of your spack install.
+.. _spack-env:
+
+``spack env``
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``spack env`` functions much like the standard unix ``env`` command,
+but it takes a spec as an argument. You can use it to see the
+environment variables that will be set when a particular build runs,
+for example:
+
+.. code-block:: sh
+
+ $ spack env mpileaks@1.1%intel
+
+This will display the entire environment that will be set when the
+``mpileaks@1.1%intel`` build runs.
+
+To run commands in a package's build environment, you can simply provided them after the spec argument to ``spack env``:
+
+.. code-block:: sh
+
+ $ spack cd mpileaks@1.1%intel
+ $ spack env mpileaks@1.1%intel ./configure
+
+This will cd to the build directory and then run ``configure`` in the
+package's build environment.
+
+
+.. _spack-location:
``spack location``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/site_configuration.rst b/lib/spack/docs/site_configuration.rst
index 4936e3052c..a3e19cc800 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/site_configuration.rst
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/site_configuration.rst
@@ -3,199 +3,6 @@
Site-specific configuration
===================================
-.. _mirrors:
-
-Mirrors
-----------------------------
-
-Some sites may not have access to the internet for fetching packages.
-These sites will need a local repository of tarballs from which they
-can get their files. Spack has support for this with *mirrors*. A
-mirror is a URL that points to a directory, either on the local
-filesystem or on some server, containing tarballs for all of Spack's
-packages.
-
-Here's an example of a mirror's directory structure::
-
- mirror/
- cmake/
- cmake-2.8.10.2.tar.gz
- dyninst/
- DyninstAPI-8.1.1.tgz
- DyninstAPI-8.1.2.tgz
- libdwarf/
- libdwarf-20130126.tar.gz
- libdwarf-20130207.tar.gz
- libdwarf-20130729.tar.gz
- libelf/
- libelf-0.8.12.tar.gz
- libelf-0.8.13.tar.gz
- libunwind/
- libunwind-1.1.tar.gz
- mpich/
- mpich-3.0.4.tar.gz
- mvapich2/
- mvapich2-1.9.tgz
-
-The structure is very simple. There is a top-level directory. The
-second level directories are named after packages, and the third level
-contains tarballs for each package, named as they were in the
-package's fetch URL.
-
-``spack mirror``
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-Mirrors are managed with the ``spack mirror`` command. The help for
-``spack mirror`` looks like this::
-
- $ spack mirror -h
- usage: spack mirror [-h] SUBCOMMAND ...
-
- positional arguments:
- SUBCOMMAND
- create Create a directory to be used as a spack mirror, and fill
- it with package archives.
- add Add a mirror to Spack.
- remove Remove a mirror by name.
- list Print out available mirrors to the console.
-
- optional arguments:
- -h, --help show this help message and exit
-
-The ``create`` command actually builds a mirror by fetching all of its
-packages from the internet and checksumming them.
-
-The other three commands are for managing mirror configuration. They
-control the URL(s) from which Spack downloads its packages.
-
-
-``spack mirror create``
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-You can create a mirror using the ``spack mirror create`` command, assuming
-you're on a machine where you can access the internet.
-
-The command will iterate through all of Spack's packages and download
-the safe ones into a directory structure like the one above. Here is
-what it looks like:
-
-
-.. code-block:: bash
-
- $ spack mirror create libelf libdwarf
- ==> Created new mirror in spack-mirror-2014-06-24
- ==> Trying to fetch from http://www.mr511.de/software/libelf-0.8.13.tar.gz
- ########################################################## 81.6%
- ==> Checksum passed for libelf@0.8.13
- ==> Added spack-mirror-2014-06-24/libelf/libelf-0.8.13.tar.gz to mirror
- ==> Trying to fetch from http://www.mr511.de/software/libelf-0.8.12.tar.gz
- ###################################################################### 98.6%
- ==> Checksum passed for libelf@0.8.12
- ==> Added spack-mirror-2014-06-24/libelf/libelf-0.8.12.tar.gz to mirror
- ==> Trying to fetch from http://www.prevanders.net/libdwarf-20130207.tar.gz
- ###################################################################### 97.3%
- ==> Checksum passed for libdwarf@20130207
- ==> Added spack-mirror-2014-06-24/libdwarf/libdwarf-20130207.tar.gz to mirror
- ==> Trying to fetch from http://www.prevanders.net/libdwarf-20130126.tar.gz
- ######################################################## 78.9%
- ==> Checksum passed for libdwarf@20130126
- ==> Added spack-mirror-2014-06-24/libdwarf/libdwarf-20130126.tar.gz to mirror
- ==> Trying to fetch from http://www.prevanders.net/libdwarf-20130729.tar.gz
- ############################################################# 84.7%
- ==> Checksum passed for libdwarf@20130729
- ==> Added spack-mirror-2014-06-24/libdwarf/libdwarf-20130729.tar.gz to mirror
-
-Once this is done, you can tar up the ``spack-mirror-2014-06-24`` directory and
-copy it over to the machine you want it hosted on.
-
-Custom package sets
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
-Normally, ``spack mirror create`` downloads all the archives it has
-checksums for. If you want to only create a mirror for a subset of
-packages, you can do that by supplying a list of package specs on the
-command line after ``spack mirror create``. For example, this
-command::
-
- $ spack mirror create libelf@0.8.12: boost@1.44:
-
-Will create a mirror for libelf versions greater than or equal to
-0.8.12 and boost versions greater than or equal to 1.44.
-
-Mirror files
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
-If you have a *very* large number of packages you want to mirror, you
-can supply a file with specs in it, one per line::
-
- $ cat specs.txt
- libdwarf
- libelf@0.8.12:
- boost@1.44:
- boost@1.39.0
- ...
- $ spack mirror create -f specs.txt
- ...
-
-This is useful if there is a specific suite of software managed by
-your site.
-
-
-``spack mirror add``
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-Once you have a mirrror, you need to let spack know about it. This is
-relatively simple. First, figure out the URL for the mirror. If it's
-a file, you can use a file URL like this one::
-
- file:///Users/gamblin2/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
-
-That points to the directory on the local filesystem. If it were on a
-web server, you could use a URL like this one:
-
- https://example.com/some/web-hosted/directory/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
-
-Spack will use the URL as the root for all of the packages it fetches.
-You can tell your Spack installation to use that mirror like this:
-
-.. code-block:: bash
-
- $ spack mirror add local_filesystem file:///Users/gamblin2/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
-
-Each mirror has a name so that you can refer to it again later.
-
-``spack mirror list``
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-If you want to see all the mirrors Spack knows about you can run ``spack mirror list``::
-
- $ spack mirror list
- local_filesystem file:///Users/gamblin2/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
-
-``spack mirror remove``
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-And, if you want to remove a mirror, just remove it by name::
-
- $ spack mirror remove local_filesystem
- $ spack mirror list
- ==> No mirrors configured.
-
-Mirror precedence
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-Adding a mirror really just adds a section in ``~/.spackconfig``::
-
- [mirror "local_filesystem"]
- url = file:///Users/gamblin2/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
- [mirror "remote_server"]
- url = https://example.com/some/web-hosted/directory/spack-mirror-2014-06-24
-
-If you want to change the order in which mirrors are searched for
-packages, you can edit this file and reorder the sections. Spack will
-search the topmost mirror first and the bottom-most mirror last.
-
-
.. _temp-space:
Temporary space
diff --git a/lib/spack/spack/mirror.py b/lib/spack/spack/mirror.py
index 114c7b6a35..306c8085aa 100644
--- a/lib/spack/spack/mirror.py
+++ b/lib/spack/spack/mirror.py
@@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ def create(path, specs, **kwargs):
stage = None
try:
# create a subdirectory for the current package@version
- archive_path = join_path(path, mirror_archive_path(spec))
+ archive_path = os.path.abspath(join_path(path, mirror_archive_path(spec)))
subdir = os.path.dirname(archive_path)
mkdirp(subdir)
diff --git a/lib/spack/spack/package.py b/lib/spack/spack/package.py
index 137e8f8837..75e6142a9d 100644
--- a/lib/spack/spack/package.py
+++ b/lib/spack/spack/package.py
@@ -287,10 +287,9 @@ class Package(object):
.. code-block:: python
- p.do_clean() # runs make clean
- p.do_clean_work() # removes the build directory and
+ p.do_clean() # removes the stage directory entirely
+ p.do_restage() # removes the build directory and
# re-expands the archive.
- p.do_clean_dist() # removes the stage directory entirely
The convention used here is that a do_* function is intended to be called
internally by Spack commands (in spack.cmd). These aren't for package
diff --git a/lib/spack/spack/test/git_fetch.py b/lib/spack/spack/test/git_fetch.py
index f6d9bfcf05..04422adb57 100644
--- a/lib/spack/spack/test/git_fetch.py
+++ b/lib/spack/spack/test/git_fetch.py
@@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ class GitFetchTest(MockPackagesTest):
if self.repo.stage is not None:
self.repo.stage.destroy()
- self.pkg.do_clean_dist()
+ self.pkg.do_clean()
def assert_rev(self, rev):
@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ class GitFetchTest(MockPackagesTest):
untracked_file = 'foobarbaz'
touch(untracked_file)
self.assertTrue(os.path.isfile(untracked_file))
- self.pkg.do_clean_work()
+ self.pkg.do_restage()
self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile(untracked_file))
self.assertTrue(os.path.isdir(self.pkg.stage.source_path))
diff --git a/lib/spack/spack/test/hg_fetch.py b/lib/spack/spack/test/hg_fetch.py
index 97c5b665e7..e1ab2cffe6 100644
--- a/lib/spack/spack/test/hg_fetch.py
+++ b/lib/spack/spack/test/hg_fetch.py
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ class HgFetchTest(MockPackagesTest):
if self.repo.stage is not None:
self.repo.stage.destroy()
- self.pkg.do_clean_dist()
+ self.pkg.do_clean()
def try_fetch(self, rev, test_file, args):
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ class HgFetchTest(MockPackagesTest):
untracked = 'foobarbaz'
touch(untracked)
self.assertTrue(os.path.isfile(untracked))
- self.pkg.do_clean_work()
+ self.pkg.do_restage()
self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile(untracked))
self.assertTrue(os.path.isdir(self.pkg.stage.source_path))
diff --git a/lib/spack/spack/test/svn_fetch.py b/lib/spack/spack/test/svn_fetch.py
index a48a86dcc3..0159fb087f 100644
--- a/lib/spack/spack/test/svn_fetch.py
+++ b/lib/spack/spack/test/svn_fetch.py
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ class SvnFetchTest(MockPackagesTest):
if self.repo.stage is not None:
self.repo.stage.destroy()
- self.pkg.do_clean_dist()
+ self.pkg.do_clean()
def assert_rev(self, rev):
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ class SvnFetchTest(MockPackagesTest):
untracked = 'foobarbaz'
touch(untracked)
self.assertTrue(os.path.isfile(untracked))
- self.pkg.do_clean_work()
+ self.pkg.do_restage()
self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile(untracked))
self.assertTrue(os.path.isdir(self.pkg.stage.source_path))