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authorAdam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>2018-11-11 12:57:46 -0600
committerPeter Scheibel <scheibel1@llnl.gov>2018-11-11 10:57:46 -0800
commitd366e642e48b178ba021b3f19bfe3df87939029c (patch)
treea49f0fc86ab2479f81ddd7e603916b85203564a9 /lib
parent6141ae49fd1b418416649399d2dff99400681499 (diff)
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Updates to Configuration Files docs for SC18 (#9801)
Scopes added with -C are now referred to as "custom scopes" rather than "command line scopes". "command line scope" now refers to specific config options that are set on the command line (like "--insecure")
Diffstat (limited to 'lib')
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/configuration.rst275
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/spack/main.py2
2 files changed, 138 insertions, 139 deletions
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/configuration.rst b/lib/spack/docs/configuration.rst
index af4fd2d5a8..2ff1987ba8 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/configuration.rst
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/configuration.rst
@@ -5,9 +5,9 @@
.. _configuration:
-==============================
-Configuration Files in Spack
-==============================
+===================
+Configuration Files
+===================
Spack has many configuration files. Here is a quick list of them, in
case you want to skip directly to specific docs:
@@ -19,9 +19,9 @@ case you want to skip directly to specific docs:
* :ref:`packages.yaml <build-settings>`
* :ref:`repos.yaml <repositories>`
--------------------------
+-----------
YAML Format
--------------------------
+-----------
Spack configuration files are written in YAML. We chose YAML because
it's human readable, but also versatile in that it supports dictionaries,
@@ -34,50 +34,52 @@ Here is an example ``config.yaml`` file:
config:
install_tree: $spack/opt/spack
module_roots:
- lmod: $spack/share/spack/lmod
+ lmod: $spack/share/spack/lmod
build_stage:
- $tempdir
- /nfs/tmp2/$user
-Each spack configuration files is nested under a top-level section
+Each Spack configuration file is nested under a top-level section
corresponding to its name. So, ``config.yaml`` starts with ``config:``,
-and ``mirrors.yaml`` starts with ``mirrors:``, etc.
+``mirrors.yaml`` starts with ``mirrors:``, etc.
.. _configuration-scopes:
--------------------------
+--------------------
Configuration Scopes
--------------------------
+--------------------
Spack pulls configuration data from files in several directories. There
-are four configuration scopes. From lowest to highest:
+are six configuration scopes. From lowest to highest:
#. **defaults**: Stored in ``$(prefix)/etc/spack/defaults/``. These are
the "factory" settings. Users should generally not modify the settings
here, but should override them in other configuration scopes. The
defaults here will change from version to version of Spack.
-#. **system**: Stored in ``/etc/spack``. These are settings for this
+#. **system**: Stored in ``/etc/spack/``. These are settings for this
machine, or for all machines on which this file system is
mounted. The site scope can be used for settings idiosyncratic to a
particular machine, such as the locations of compilers or external
packages. These settings are presumably controlled by someone with
- root access on the machine.
+ root access on the machine. They override the defaults scope.
+
+#. **site**: Stored in ``$(prefix)/etc/spack/``. Settings here affect
+ only *this instance* of Spack, and they override the defaults and system
+ scopes. The site scope can can be used for per-project settings (one
+ Spack instance per project) or for site-wide settings on a multi-user
+ machine (e.g., for a common Spack instance).
-#. **site**: Stored in ``$(prefix)/etc/spack/``. Settings here affect
- only *this instance* of Spack, and they override defaults. The site
- scope can can be used for per-project settings (one spack instance per
- project) or for site-wide settings on a multi-user machine (e.g., for
- a common spack instance).
+#. **user**: Stored in the home directory: ``~/.spack/``. These settings
+ affect all instances of Spack and take higher precedence than site,
+ system, or defaults scopes.
-3. **user**: Stored in the home directory: ``~/.spack/``. These settings
- affect all instances of Spack and take higher precedence than site or
- default scopes.
+#. **custom**: Stored in a custom directory specified by ``--config-scope``.
+ If multiple scopes are listed on the command line, they are ordered
+ from lowest to highest precedence.
-3. **command line**: Optionally specified by the user on the command
- line. These settings take the highest precedence. If multiple
- scopes are listed on the command line, they are ordered from lowest
- to highest precedence.
+#. **command line**: Build settings specified on the command line take
+ precedence over all other scopes.
Each configuration directory may contain several configuration files,
such as ``config.yaml``, ``compilers.yaml``, or ``mirrors.yaml``. When
@@ -86,49 +88,48 @@ lower-precedence settings.
Commands that modify scopes (e.g., ``spack compilers``, ``spack repo``,
etc.) take a ``--scope=<name>`` parameter that you can use to control
-which scope is modified. By default they modify the highest-precedence
+which scope is modified. By default, they modify the highest-precedence
scope.
-.. _command-line-scopes:
+.. _custom-scopes:
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-Command-line Scopes
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Custom scopes
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-In addition to the ``system``, ``site``, and ``user`` scopes, you may add
-configuration scopes directly on the command line with the
-``--config-scope`` argument, or ``-C`` for short.
+In addition to the ``defaults``, ``system``, ``site``, and ``user``
+scopes, you may add configuration scopes directly on the command
+line with the ``--config-scope`` argument, or ``-C`` for short.
-For example, the following adds two configuration scopes, named `scopea`
-and `scopeb`, to a `spack spec` command:
+For example, the following adds two configuration scopes, named
+``scopea`` and ``scopeb``, to a ``spack spec`` command:
.. code-block:: console
$ spack -C ~/myscopes/scopea -C ~/myscopes/scopeb spec ncurses
-Command-line scopes come *after* the ``spack`` command and *before* the
+Custom scopes come *after* the ``spack`` command and *before* the
subcommand, and they specify a single path to a directory full of
configuration files. You can add the same configuration files to that
-directory that you can add to any other sope (``config.yaml``,
+directory that you can add to any other scope (``config.yaml``,
``packages.yaml``, etc.).
If multiple scopes are provided:
-1. each must be preceded with the ``--config-scope`` or ``-C`` flag.
-2. they must be ordered from lowest to highest precedence.
+#. Each must be preceded with the ``--config-scope`` or ``-C`` flag.
+#. They must be ordered from lowest to highest precedence.
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
Example: scopes for release and development
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-suppose that you need to support simultaneous building of release and
-development versions of a `mypackage`, where `mypackage` -> `A` -> `B`.
+Suppose that you need to support simultaneous building of release and
+development versions of ``mypackage``, where ``mypackage`` -> ``A`` -> ``B``.
You could create The following files:
.. code-block:: yaml
+ :caption: ~/myscopes/release/packages.yaml
- ~/myscopes/release/packages.yaml
- --------------------------------
packages:
mypackage:
version: [1.7]
@@ -138,9 +139,8 @@ You could create The following files:
version: [0.8]
.. code-block:: yaml
+ :caption: ~/myscopes/develop/packages.yaml
- ~/myscopes/develop/packages.yaml
- --------------------------------
packages:
mypackage:
version: [develop]
@@ -159,16 +159,15 @@ you want to build all of these packages at the ``develop`` version.
Example: swapping MPI providers
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-Suppose that you need to build two software packages, `packagea` and
-`packageb`. PackageA is Python2-based and PackageB is Python3-based.
-PackageA only builds with OpenMPI and PackageB only builds with MPICH.
-You can create different configuration scopes for use with Package A and
-B:
+Suppose that you need to build two software packages, ``packagea`` and
+``packageb``. ``packagea`` is Python 2-based and ``packageb`` is Python
+3-based. ``packagea`` only builds with OpenMPI and ``packageb`` only builds
+with MPICH. You can create different configuration scopes for use with
+``packagea`` and ``packageb``:
.. code-block:: yaml
+ :caption: ~/myscopes/packgea/packages.yaml
- ~/myscopes/packgea/packages.yaml
- --------------------------------
packages:
python:
version: [2.7.11]
@@ -177,9 +176,8 @@ B:
mpi: [openmpi]
.. code-block:: yaml
+ :caption: ~/myscopes/packageb/packages.yaml
- ~/myscopes/packageb/packages.yaml
- --------------------------------
packages:
python:
version: [3.5.2]
@@ -188,76 +186,77 @@ B:
mpi: [mpich]
-
.. _platform-scopes:
--------------------------
-Platform-specific scopes
--------------------------
-
-For each scope above, there can *also* be platform-specific settings.
-For example, on Blue Gene/Q machines, Spack needs to know the location
-of cross-compilers for the compute nodes. This configuration is in
-``etc/spack/defaults/bgq/compilers.yaml``. It will take precedence
-over settings in the ``defaults`` scope, but can still be overridden
-by settings in ``system``, ``system/bgq``, ``site``, ``site/bgq``,
-``user``, or ``user/bgq``. So, the full scope precedence is:
-
-1. ``defaults``
-2. ``defaults/<platform>``
-3. ``system``
-4. ``system/<platform>``
-5. ``site``
-6. ``site/<platform>``
-7. ``user``
-8. ``user/<platform>``
-9. ``command-line``
-10. ``command-line/<platform>``
+------------------------
+Platform-specific Scopes
+------------------------
+
+For each scope above, there can also be platform-specific settings.
+For example, on most platforms, GCC is the preferred compiler.
+However, on macOS (darwin), Clang often works for more packages,
+and is set as the default compiler. This configuration is set in
+``$(prefix)/etc/spack/defaults/darwin/packages.yaml``. It will take
+precedence over settings in the ``defaults`` scope, but can still be
+overridden by settings in ``system``, ``system/darwin``, ``site``,
+``site/darwin``, ``user``, ``user/darwin``, ``custom``, or
+``custom/darwin``. So, the full scope precedence is:
+
+#. ``defaults``
+#. ``defaults/<platform>``
+#. ``system``
+#. ``system/<platform>``
+#. ``site``
+#. ``site/<platform>``
+#. ``user``
+#. ``user/<platform>``
+#. ``custom``
+#. ``custom/<platform>``
You can get the name to use for ``<platform>`` by running ``spack arch
--platform``. The system config scope has a ``<platform>`` section for
sites at which ``/etc`` is mounted on multiple heterogeneous machines.
--------------------------
-Scope precedence
--------------------------
+----------------
+Scope Precedence
+----------------
When spack queries for configuration parameters, it searches in
-higher-precedence scopes first. So, settings in a higher-precedence file
-can override those with the same key in a lower-precedence one. For
+higher-precedence scopes first. So, settings in a higher-precedence file
+can override those with the same key in a lower-precedence one. For
list-valued settings, Spack *prepends* higher-precedence settings to
lower-precedence settings. Completely ignoring higher-level configuration
options is supported with the ``::`` notation for keys (see
:ref:`config-overrides` below).
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+^^^^^^^^^^^
Simple keys
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+^^^^^^^^^^^
-Let's look at an example of overriding a single key in a Spack file. If
+Let's look at an example of overriding a single key in a Spack file. If
your configurations look like this:
-**defaults** scope:
-
.. code-block:: yaml
+ :caption: $(prefix)/etc/spack/defaults/config.yaml
config:
install_tree: $spack/opt/spack
module_roots:
- lmod: $spack/share/spack/lmod
+ lmod: $spack/share/spack/lmod
build_stage:
- $tempdir
- /nfs/tmp2/$user
-**site** scope:
.. code-block:: yaml
+ :caption: ~/.spack/config.yaml
config:
install_tree: /some/other/directory
+
Spack will only override ``install_tree`` in the ``config`` section, and
-will take the site preferences for other settings. You can see the
+will take the site preferences for other settings. You can see the
final, combined configuration with the ``spack config get <configtype>``
command:
@@ -268,11 +267,11 @@ command:
config:
install_tree: /some/other/directory
module_roots:
- lmod: $spack/share/spack/lmod
+ lmod: $spack/share/spack/lmod
build_stage:
- $tempdir
- /nfs/tmp2/$user
- $ _
+
.. _config-overrides:
@@ -280,14 +279,14 @@ command:
Overriding entire sections
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-Above, the site ``config.yaml`` only overrides specific settings in the
-default ``config.yaml``. Sometimes, it is useful to *completely*
-override lower-precedence settings. To do this, you can use *two* colons
-at the end of a key in a configuration file. For example, if the
-**site** ``config.yaml`` above looks like this:
+Above, the user ``config.yaml`` only overrides specific settings in the
+default ``config.yaml``. Sometimes, it is useful to *completely*
+override lower-precedence settings. To do this, you can use *two* colons
+at the end of a key in a configuration file. For example:
.. code-block:: yaml
:emphasize-lines: 1
+ :caption: ~/.spack/config.yaml
config::
install_tree: /some/other/directory
@@ -301,35 +300,36 @@ Spack will ignore all lower-precedence configuration under the
config:
install_tree: /some/other/directory
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
List-valued settings
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-Let's revisit the ``config.yaml`` example one more time. The
+Let's revisit the ``config.yaml`` example one more time. The
``build_stage`` setting's value is an ordered list of directories:
-**defaults**
-
.. code-block:: yaml
+ :caption: $(prefix)/etc/spack/defaults/config.yaml
build_stage:
- $tempdir
- /nfs/tmp2/$user
+
Suppose the user configuration adds its *own* list of ``build_stage``
paths:
-**user**
-
.. code-block:: yaml
+ :caption: ~/.spack/config.yaml
build_stage:
- /lustre-scratch/$user
- ~/mystage
-Spack will first look at the paths in the site ``config.yaml``, then the
-paths in the user's ``~/.spack/config.yaml``. The list in the
-higher-precedence scope is *prepended* to the defaults. ``spack config
+
+Spack will first look at the paths in the defaults ``config.yaml``, then the
+paths in the user's ``~/.spack/config.yaml``. The list in the
+higher-precedence scope is *prepended* to the defaults. ``spack config
get config`` shows the result:
.. code-block:: console
@@ -339,27 +339,27 @@ get config`` shows the result:
config:
install_tree: /some/other/directory
module_roots:
- lmod: $spack/share/spack/lmod
+ lmod: $spack/share/spack/lmod
build_stage:
- /lustre-scratch/$user
- ~/mystage
- $tempdir
- /nfs/tmp2/$user
- $ _
+
As in :ref:`config-overrides`, the higher-precedence scope can
-*completely* override the lower-precedence scope using `::`. So if the
+*completely* override the lower-precedence scope using ``::``. So if the
user config looked like this:
-**user**
-
.. code-block:: yaml
:emphasize-lines: 1
+ :caption: ~/.spack/config.yaml
build_stage::
- /lustre-scratch/$user
- ~/mystage
+
The merged configuration would look like this:
.. code-block:: console
@@ -369,25 +369,24 @@ The merged configuration would look like this:
config:
install_tree: /some/other/directory
module_roots:
- lmod: $spack/share/spack/lmod
+ lmod: $spack/share/spack/lmod
build_stage:
- /lustre-scratch/$user
- ~/mystage
- $ _
+
.. _config-file-variables:
-------------------------------
-Config file variables
-------------------------------
+---------------------
+Config File Variables
+---------------------
Spack understands several variables which can be used in config file
-paths wherever they appear. There are three sets of these variables,
-Spack specific variables, environment variables, and user path
-variables. Spack specific variables and environment variables both are
+paths wherever they appear. There are three sets of these variables:
+Spack-specific variables, environment variables, and user path
+variables. Spack-specific variables and environment variables are both
indicated by prefixing the variable name with ``$``. User path variables
-are indicated at the start of the path with ``~`` or ``~user``. See below
-for more details.
+are indicated at the start of the path with ``~`` or ``~user``.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Spack-specific variables
@@ -395,12 +394,12 @@ Spack-specific variables
Spack understands several special variables. These are:
- * ``$spack``: path to the prefix of this spack installation
- * ``$tempdir``: default system temporary directory (as specified in
- Python's `tempfile.tempdir
- <https://docs.python.org/2/library/tempfile.html#tempfile.tempdir>`_
- variable.
- * ``$user``: name of the current user
+* ``$spack``: path to the prefix of this Spack installation
+* ``$tempdir``: default system temporary directory (as specified in
+ Python's `tempfile.tempdir
+ <https://docs.python.org/2/library/tempfile.html#tempfile.tempdir>`_
+ variable.
+* ``$user``: name of the current user
Note that, as with shell variables, you can write these as ``$varname``
or with braces to distinguish the variable from surrounding characters:
@@ -413,23 +412,23 @@ not be used.
Environment variables
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-After spack-specific variables are evaluated, environment variables are
-expanded. These are formatted like spack-specific variables, e.g.,
-``${varname}``. You can use this to insert environment variables in your
+After Spack-specific variables are evaluated, environment variables are
+expanded. These are formatted like Spack-specific variables, e.g.,
+``${varname}``. You can use this to insert environment variables in your
Spack configuration.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
User home directories
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-Spack performs unix-style tilde expansion on paths in configuration
-files. This means that tilde (``~``) will expand to the current user's
+Spack performs Unix-style tilde expansion on paths in configuration
+files. This means that tilde (``~``) will expand to the current user's
home directory, and ``~user`` will expand to a specified user's home
-directory. The ``~`` must appear at the beginning of the path, or Spack
+directory. The ``~`` must appear at the beginning of the path, or Spack
will not expand it.
----------------------------
-Seeing Spack's configuration
+Seeing Spack's Configuration
----------------------------
With so many scopes overriding each other, it can sometimes be difficult
@@ -445,7 +444,7 @@ configuration file: ``spack config get`` and ``spack config blame``.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
``spack config get`` shows a fully merged configuration file, taking into
-account all scopes. For example, to see the fully merged
+account all scopes. For example, to see the fully merged
``config.yaml``, you can type:
.. code-block:: console
@@ -525,8 +524,8 @@ down the problem:
/home/myuser/spack/etc/spack/defaults/config.yaml:86 locks: True
You can see above that the ``build_jobs`` and ``debug`` settings are
-built in and are not overridden by a configuration file. The
+built in and are not overridden by a configuration file. The
``verify_ssl`` setting comes from the ``--insceure`` option on the
-command line. ``dirty`` and ``install_tree`` come from the command-line
+command line. ``dirty`` and ``install_tree`` come from the custom
scopes ``./my-scope`` and ``./my-scope-2``, and all other configuration
options come from the default configuration files that ship with Spack.
diff --git a/lib/spack/spack/main.py b/lib/spack/spack/main.py
index 72fb30079b..4f77cd986d 100644
--- a/lib/spack/spack/main.py
+++ b/lib/spack/spack/main.py
@@ -325,7 +325,7 @@ def make_argument_parser(**kwargs):
help="when to colorize output (default: auto)")
parser.add_argument(
'-C', '--config-scope', dest='config_scopes', action='append',
- metavar='DIR', help="use an additional configuration scope")
+ metavar='DIR', help="add a custom configuration scope")
parser.add_argument(
'-d', '--debug', action='store_true',
help="write out debug logs during compile")