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authorbecker33 <becker33@llnl.gov>2016-11-13 08:29:32 -0800
committerTodd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>2016-11-13 09:29:32 -0700
commitb13b253ced6bf501c4b74608bc8426d51c2b2356 (patch)
tree397ea1653ea6d7234c8a86ae9fc6a6ac9dd62a6c
parent103a98a46842f6c76f55d1d4852714ed3b65f95e (diff)
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Edited/fixed basic usage tutorial (#2329)
* Colify compiler output * Edited/fixed basic usage tutorial * fix console spacing.
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/basic_usage_tutorial.rst148
1 files changed, 79 insertions, 69 deletions
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/basic_usage_tutorial.rst b/lib/spack/docs/basic_usage_tutorial.rst
index 4ec58daeba..cf8c654c0f 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/basic_usage_tutorial.rst
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/basic_usage_tutorial.rst
@@ -18,6 +18,59 @@ Enterprise Linux.
.. _basics-tutorial-install:
+----------------
+Installing Spack
+----------------
+
+Spack works out of the box. Simply clone spack and get going.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ becker33:~$ git clone https://github.com/LLNL/spack.git
+ Initialized empty Git repository in /g/g0/becker33/testclone/spack/.git/
+ remote: Counting objects: 47125, done.
+ remote: Compressing objects: 100% (68/68), done.
+ remote: Total 47125 (delta 16), reused 2 (delta 2), pack-reused 47047
+ Receiving objects: 100% (47125/47125), 12.02 MiB | 2.11 MiB/s, done.
+ Resolving deltas: 100% (23044/23044), done.
+ becker33:~$ cd spack
+
+Then add Spack to your path.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ becker33:spack$ export PATH=~/spack/bin/spack:$PATH
+
+You're good to go!
+
+-----------------
+What is in Spack?
+-----------------
+
+The ``spack list`` command shows available packages.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ becker33:spack$ spack list
+ ==> 1016 packages.
+ abinit hwloc piranha r-rjava
+ ack hydra pixman r-rjson
+ activeharmony hypre pkg-config r-rjsonio
+ ...
+
+The ``spack list`` command can also take a query string. Spack
+automatically adds wildcards to both ends of the string. For example,
+we can view all available python packages.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ becker33:spack$ spack list py
+ ==> 129 packages.
+ py-3to2 py-epydoc py-nestle py-pycparser py-six
+ py-alabaster py-flake8 py-netcdf py-pydatalog py-sncosmo
+ py-argcomplete py-funcsigs py-networkx py-pyelftools py-snowballstemmer
+ ...
+
-------------------
Installing Packages
-------------------
@@ -847,10 +900,11 @@ uses ``mpich``.
^superlu-dist@5.1.1
-The ``spack find -d`` command shows the dependency information as a
-tree. While that is often sufficient, many complicated packages cannot be
-fully represented as a tree. Again, the ``spack graph`` command shows the
-full DAG of the dependency information.
+As we discussed before, the ``spack find -d`` command shows the
+dependency information as a tree. While that is often sufficient, many
+complicated packages, including trilinos, have dependencies that
+cannot be fully represented as a tree. Again, the ``spack graph``
+command shows the full DAG of the dependency information.
.. code-block:: console
@@ -932,16 +986,13 @@ that we didn't really need.
$ spack find libelf
==> 6 installed packages.
-- linux-redhat6-x86_64 / gcc@4.4.7 -----------------------------
- libelf@0.8.12
- libelf@0.8.12
- libelf@0.8.13
+ libelf@0.8.12 libelf@0.8.12 libelf@0.8.13
-- linux-redhat6-x86_64 / intel@15.0.4 --------------------------
libelf@0.8.13
-- linux-redhat6-x86_64 / intel@16.0.3 --------------------------
- libelf@0.8.12
- libelf@0.8.13
+ libelf@0.8.12 libelf@0.8.13
We can uninstall packages by spec using the same syntax as install.
@@ -1047,11 +1098,11 @@ We will go over some additional uses for the `spack find` command not
already covered in the :ref:`basics-tutorial-install` and
:ref:`basics-tutorial-uninstall` sections.
-Spack find can accept what we call "anonymous specs." These are
-expressions in spec syntax that do not contain a package name. For
-example, `spack find %intel` will return every package built with the
-intel compiler, and ``spack find cppflags=\\"-O3\\"`` will return every
-package which was built with ``cppflags=\\"-O3\\"``.
+The ``spack find`` command can accept what we call "anonymous specs."
+These are expressions in spec syntax that do not contain a package
+name. For example, `spack find %intel` will return every package built
+with the intel compiler, and ``spack find cppflags=\\"-O3\\"`` will
+return every package which was built with ``cppflags=\\"-O3\\"``.
.. code-block:: console
@@ -1068,9 +1119,9 @@ package which was built with ``cppflags=\\"-O3\\"``.
libelf@0.8.12
-The find command can also show which packages were installed
+The ``find`` command can also show which packages were installed
explicitly (rather than pulled in as a dependency) using the ``-e``
-flag. The ``-E`` flag shows implicit installs only. The find command can
+flag. The ``-E`` flag shows implicit installs only. The ``find`` command can
also show the path to which a spack package was installed using the ``-p``
command.
@@ -1110,59 +1161,18 @@ compilers`` command is an alias for the command ``spack compiler list``.
gcc@4.4.7
-- intel --------------------------------------------------------
- intel@16.0.3
- intel@16.0.2
- intel@16.0.1
- intel@16.0.0
- intel@15.0.4
- intel@15.0.3
- intel@15.0.1
- intel@15.0.0
- intel@14.0.4
- intel@14.0.3
- intel@14.0.2
- intel@14.0.1
- intel@14.0.0
- intel@13.1.1
- intel@13.1.0
- intel@13.0.1
- intel@13.0.0
- intel@12.1.5
- intel@12.1.3
- intel@12.1.2
- intel@12.1.0
- intel@12.0.4
- intel@11.1
- intel@10.1
- intel@10.0
- intel@9.1
+ intel@16.0.3 intel@15.0.1 intel@14.0.0 intel@12.1.3 intel@10.0
+ intel@16.0.2 intel@15.0.0 intel@13.1.1 intel@12.1.2 intel@9.1
+ intel@16.0.1 intel@14.0.4 intel@13.1.0 intel@12.1.0
+ intel@16.0.0 intel@14.0.3 intel@13.0.1 intel@12.0.4
+ intel@15.0.4 intel@14.0.2 intel@13.0.0 intel@11.1
+ intel@15.0.3 intel@14.0.1 intel@12.1.5 intel@10.1
-- pgi ----------------------------------------------------------
- pgi@16.5-0
- pgi@16.3-0
- pgi@16.1-0
- pgi@15.10-0
- pgi@15.7-0
- pgi@15.5-0
- pgi@15.1-0
- pgi@14.10-0
- pgi@14.7-0
- pgi@14.3-0
- pgi@13.10-0
- pgi@13.6-0
- pgi@13.2-0
- pgi@13.1-1
- pgi@12.8-0
- pgi@12.1-0
- pgi@11.10-0
- pgi@11.1-0
- pgi@10.9-0
- pgi@10.2-0
- pgi@9.0-4
- pgi@8.0-1
- pgi@7.1-3
- pgi@7.0-6
-
+ pgi@16.5-0 pgi@15.7-0 pgi@14.7-0 pgi@13.2-0 pgi@11.10-0 pgi@9.0-4
+ pgi@16.3-0 pgi@15.5-0 pgi@14.3-0 pgi@13.1-1 pgi@11.1-0 pgi@8.0-1
+ pgi@16.1-0 pgi@15.1-0 pgi@13.10-0 pgi@12.8-0 pgi@10.9-0 pgi@7.1-3
+ pgi@15.10-0 pgi@14.10-0 pgi@13.6-0 pgi@12.1-0 pgi@10.2-0 pgi@7.0-6
The compilers are maintained in a YAML file that can be hand-edited
for special cases. Spack also has tools to add compilers, and
@@ -1231,13 +1241,13 @@ return no new compilers.
.. code-block:: console
- $ spack compiler find /g/g0/becker33/SC16-spack/spack/opt/spack/linux-redhat6-x86_64/gcc-4.4.7/gcc-6.1.0-j5576zbsot2ydljlthjzhsirsesnogvh/bin
+ $ spack compiler add /g/g0/becker33/SC16-spack/spack/opt/spack/linux-redhat6-x86_64/gcc-4.4.7/gcc-6.1.0-j5576zbsot2ydljlthjzhsirsesnogvh/bin
==> Found no new compilers
If we had done a real install, the output would have been as follows:
.. code-block:: console
- $ spack compiler find /g/g0/becker33/SC16-spack/spack/opt/spack/linux-redhat6-x86_64/gcc-4.4.7/gcc-6.1.0-j5576zbsot2ydljlthjzhsirsesnogvh/bin
+ $ spack compiler add /g/g0/becker33/SC16-spack/spack/opt/spack/linux-redhat6-x86_64/gcc-4.4.7/gcc-6.1.0-j5576zbsot2ydljlthjzhsirsesnogvh/bin
==> Added 1 new compiler to /g/g0/becker33/.spack/linux/compilers.yaml
gcc@6.1.0