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-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/tutorial.rst6
-rw-r--r--lib/spack/docs/tutorial_configuration.rst848
2 files changed, 852 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/tutorial.rst b/lib/spack/docs/tutorial.rst
index 4bfc772dde..47dc17a407 100644
--- a/lib/spack/docs/tutorial.rst
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/tutorial.rst
@@ -37,13 +37,15 @@ These scripts will take you step-by-step through basic Spack tasks. They
correspond to sections in the slides above.
1. :ref:`basics-tutorial`
- 2. :ref:`packaging-tutorial`
- 3. :ref:`modules-tutorial`
+ 2. :ref:`configs-tutorial`
+ 3. :ref:`packaging-tutorial`
+ 4. :ref:`modules-tutorial`
Full contents:
.. toctree::
tutorial_basics
+ tutorial_configuration
tutorial_packaging
tutorial_advanced_packaging
tutorial_modules
diff --git a/lib/spack/docs/tutorial_configuration.rst b/lib/spack/docs/tutorial_configuration.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..e7ef5b92cd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/lib/spack/docs/tutorial_configuration.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,848 @@
+.. _configs-tutorial:
+
+======================
+Configuration Tutorial
+======================
+
+This tutorial will guide you through various configuration options
+that allow you to customize Spack's behavior with respect to
+software installation. We will first cover the configuration file
+hierarchy. Then, we will cover configuration options for compilers,
+focusing on how it can be used to extend Spack's compiler auto-detection.
+Next, we will cover the packages configuration file, focusing on
+how it can be used to override default build options as well as
+specify external package installations to use. Finally, we will
+briefly touch on the config configuration file, which manages more
+high-level Spack configuration options.
+
+For all of these features we will demonstrate how we build up a full
+configuration file. For some we will then demonstrate how the
+configuration affects the install command, and for others we will use
+the ``spack spec`` command to demonstrate how the configuration
+changes have affected Spack's concretization algorithm. The provided
+output is all from a server running Ubuntu version 16.04.
+
+.. _configs-tutorial-scopes:
+
+--------------------
+Configuration Scopes
+--------------------
+
+Depending on your use case, you may want to provide configuration
+settings common to everyone on your team, or you may want to set
+default behaviors specific to a single user account. Spack provides
+4 configuration *scopes* to handle this customization. These scopes,
+in order of decreasing priority, are:
+
+====================== ==================================
+Scope Directory
+====================== ==================================
+User configurations ``~/.spack``
+Project configurations ``$SPACK_ROOT/etc/spack``
+System configurations ``/etc/spack``
+Default configurations ``$SPACK_ROOT/etc/spack/defaults``
+====================== ==================================
+
+Spack's default configuration settings reside in
+``$SPACK_ROOT/etc/spack/defaults``. These are useful for reference,
+but should never be directly edited. To override these settings,
+create new configuration files in any of the higher-priority
+configuration scopes.
+
+A particular cluster may have multiple Spack installations associated
+with different projects. To provide settings common to all Spack
+installations, put your configuration files in ``/etc/spack``.
+To provide settings specific to a particular Spack installation,
+you can use the ``$SPACK_ROOT/etc/spack`` directory.
+
+For settings specific to a particular user, you will want to add
+configuration files to the ``~/.spack`` directory. When Spack first
+checked for compilers on your system, you may have noticed that it
+placed your compiler configuration in this directory.
+
+Some facilities manage multiple platforms from a single shared
+filesystem. In order to handle this, each of the configuration
+scopes listed above has two *sub-scopes*: platform-specific and
+platform-independent. For example, compiler settings can be stored
+in ``compilers.yaml`` configuration files in the following locations:
+
+- ``~/.spack/<platform>/compilers.yaml``
+- ``~/.spack/compilers.yaml``
+- ``$SPACK_ROOT/etc/spack/<platform>/compilers.yaml``
+- ``$SPACK_ROOT/etc/spack/compilers.yaml``
+- ``/etc/spack/<platform>/compilers.yaml``
+- ``/etc/spack/compilers.yaml``
+- ``$SPACK_ROOT/etc/defaults/<platform>/compilers.yaml``
+- ``$SPACK_ROOT/etc/defaults/compilers.yaml``
+
+These files are listed in decreasing order of precedence, so files in
+``~/.spack/<platform>`` will override settings in ``~/.spack``.
+
+Spack configurations are YAML dictionaries. Every configuration file
+begins with a top-level dictionary that tells Spack which
+configuration set it modifies. When Spack checks it's configuration,
+the configuration scopes are updated as dictionaries in increasing
+order of precedence, allowing higher precedence files to override
+lower. YAML dictionaries use a colon ":" to specify key-value
+pairs. Spack extends YAML syntax slightly to allow a double-colon
+"::" to specify a key-value pair. When a double-colon is used to
+specify a key-value pair, instead of adding that section Spack
+replaces what was in that section with the new value. For example, a
+user compilers configuration file as follows:
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ compilers::
+ - compiler:
+ environment: {}
+ extra_rpaths: []
+ flags: {}
+ modules: []
+ operating_system: ubuntu16.04
+ paths:
+ cc: /usr/bin/gcc
+ cxx: /usr/bin/g++
+ f77: /usr/bin/gfortran
+ fc: /usr/bin/gfortran
+ spec: gcc@5.4.0
+ target: x86_64
+
+
+ensures that no other compilers are used, as the user configuration
+scope is the last scope searched and the ``compilers::`` line replaces
+all previous configuration files information. If the same
+configuration file had a single colon instead of the double colon, it
+would add the gcc version 5.4.0 compiler to whatever other compilers
+were listed in other configuration files.
+
+.. _configs-tutorial-compilers:
+
+----------------------
+Compiler Configuration
+----------------------
+
+For most tasks, we can use Spack with the compilers auto-detected the
+first time Spack runs on a system. As we discussed in the basic
+installation section, we can also tell Spack where compilers are
+located using the ``spack compiler add`` command. However, in some
+circumstances we want even more fine-grained control over the
+compilers available. This section will teach you how to exercise that
+control using the compilers configuration file.
+
+We will start by opening the compilers configuration file
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ spack config edit compilers
+
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ compilers:
+ - compiler:
+ environment: {}
+ extra_rpaths: []
+ flags: {}
+ modules: []
+ operating_system: ubuntu16.04
+ paths:
+ cc: /usr/bin/clang
+ cxx: /usr/bin/clang++
+ f77: null
+ fc: null
+ spec: clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4
+ target: x86_64
+ - compiler:
+ environment: {}
+ extra_rpaths: []
+ flags: {}
+ modules: []
+ operating_system: ubuntu16.04
+ paths:
+ cc: /usr/bin/gcc
+ cxx: /usr/bin/g++
+ f77: /usr/bin/gfortran
+ fc: /usr/bin/gfortran
+ spec: gcc@5.4.0
+ target: x86_64
+
+
+This specifies one version of the gcc compiler and one version of the
+clang compiler with no flang compiler. Now suppose we have a code that
+we want to compile with the clang compiler for C/C++ code, but with
+gfortran for Fortran components. We can do this by adding another entry
+to the ``compilers.yaml`` file.
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ - compiler:
+ environment: {}
+ extra_rpaths: []
+ flags: {}
+ modules: []
+ operating_system: ubuntu16.04
+ paths:
+ cc: /usr/bin/clang
+ cxx: /usr/bin/clang++
+ f77: /usr/bin/gfortran
+ fc: /usr/bin/gfortran
+ spec: clang@3.8.0-gfortran
+ target: x86_64
+
+
+Let's talk about the sections of this compiler entry that we've changed.
+The biggest change we've made is to the ``paths`` section. This lists
+the paths to the compilers to use for each language/specification.
+In this case, we point to the clang compiler for C/C++ and the gfortran
+compiler for both specifications of Fortran. We've also changed the
+``spec`` entry for this compiler. The ``spec`` entry is effectively the
+name of the compiler for Spack. It consists of a name and a version
+number, separated by the ``@`` sigil. The name must be one of the supported
+compiler names in Spack (gcc, intel, pgi, xl, xl_r, clang, nag, cce).
+The version number can be an arbitrary string of alphanumeric characters,
+as well as ``-``, ``.``, and ``_``. The ``target`` and ``operating_system``
+sections we leave unchanged. These sections specify when Spack can use
+different compilers, and are primarily useful for configuration files that
+will be used across multiple systems.
+
+We can verify that our new compiler works by invoking it now:
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack install zlib %clang@3.8.0-gfortran
+ ...
+
+
+This new compiler also works on Fortran codes:
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack install cfitsio %clang@3.8.0-gfortran
+ ...
+
+
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Compiler Flags
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Some compilers may require specific compiler flags to work properly in
+a particular computing environment. Spack provides configuration
+options for setting compiler flags every time a specific compiler is
+invoked. These flags become part of the package spec and therefore of
+the build provenance. As on the command line, the flags are set
+through the implicit build variables ``cflags``, ``cxxflags``, ``cppflags``,
+``fflags``, ``ldflags``, and ``ldlibs``.
+
+Let's open our compilers configuration file again and add a compiler flag.
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ - compiler:
+ environment: {}
+ extra_rpaths: []
+ flags:
+ cppflags: -g
+ modules: []
+ operating_system: ubuntu16.04
+ paths:
+ cc: /usr/bin/clang
+ cxx: /usr/bin/clang++
+ f77: /usr/bin/gfortran
+ fc: /usr/bin/gfortran
+ spec: clang@3.8.0-gfortran
+ target: x86_64
+
+
+We can test this out using the ``spack spec`` command to show how the
+spec is concretized.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack spec cfitsio %clang@3.8.0-gfortran
+ Input spec
+ --------------------------------
+ cfitsio%clang@3.8.0-gfortran
+
+ Normalized
+ --------------------------------
+ cfitsio%clang@3.8.0-gfortran
+
+ Concretized
+ --------------------------------
+ cfitsio@3.410%clang@3.8.0-gfortran cppflags="-g" +bzip2+shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^bzip2@1.0.6%clang@3.8.0-gfortran cppflags="-g" +shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+
+
+We can see that "cppflags=-g" has been added to every node in the DAG.
+
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Advanced Compiler Configuration
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+There are three fields of the compiler configuration entry that we
+have not talked about yet.
+
+The ``modules`` field of the compiler is used primarily on Cray systems,
+but can be useful on any system that has compilers that are only
+useful when a particular module is loaded. Any modules in the
+``modules`` field of the compiler configuration will be loaded as part
+of the build environment for packages using that compiler.
+
+The ``extra_rpaths`` field of the compiler configuration is used for
+compilers that do not rpath all of their dependencies by
+default. Since compilers are generally installed externally to Spack,
+Spack is unable to manage compiler dependencies and enforce
+rpath usage. This can lead to packages not finding link dependencies
+imposed by the compiler properly. For compilers that impose link
+dependencies on the resulting executables that are not rpath'ed into
+the executable automatically, the ``extra_rpath`` field of the compiler
+configuration tells Spack which dependencies to rpath into every
+executable created by that compiler. The executables will then be able
+to find the link dependencies imposed by the compiler.
+
+The ``environment`` field of the compiler configuration is used for
+compilers that require environment variables to be set during build
+time. For example, if your Intel compiler suite requires the
+``INTEL_LICENSE_FILE`` environment variable to point to the proper
+license server, you can set this in ``compilers.yaml``.
+
+-------------------------------
+Configuring Package Preferences
+-------------------------------
+
+Package preferences in Spack are managed through the ``packages.yaml``
+configuration file. First, we will look at the default
+``packages.yaml`` file.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack config --scope defaults edit packages
+
+
+.. literalinclude:: ../../../etc/spack/defaults/packages.yaml
+ :language: yaml
+
+
+This sets the default preferences for compilers and for providers of
+virtual packages. To illustrate how this works, suppose we want to
+change the preferences to prefer the clang compiler and to prefer
+mpich over openmpi. Currently, we prefer gcc and openmpi
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack spec hdf5
+ Input spec
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+
+ Normalized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+ ^zlib@1.1.2:
+
+ Concretized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5@1.10.1%gcc@5.4.0+cxx~debug+fortran+mpi+pic+shared~szip~threadsafe arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^openmpi@3.0.0%gcc@5.4.0~cuda fabrics= ~java schedulers= ~sqlite3~thread_multiple+vt arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^hwloc@1.11.7%gcc@5.4.0~cuda+libxml2~pci arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^libxml2@2.9.4%gcc@5.4.0~python arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^pkg-config@0.29.2%gcc@5.4.0+internal_glib arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^xz@5.2.3%gcc@5.4.0 arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^zlib@1.2.11%gcc@5.4.0+pic+shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+
+
+Now we will open the packages configuration file and update our
+preferences.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack config edit packages
+
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ packages:
+ all:
+ compiler: [clang, gcc, intel, pgi, xl, nag]
+ providers:
+ mpi: [mpich, openmpi]
+
+
+Because of the configuration scoping we discussed earlier, this
+overrides the default settings just for these two items.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack spec hdf5
+ Input spec
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+
+ Normalized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+ ^zlib@1.1.2:
+
+ Concretized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5@1.10.1%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+cxx~debug~fortran~hl+mpi+pic+shared~szip~threadsafe arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^mpich@3.2%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4 device=ch3 +hydra netmod=tcp +pmi+romio~verbs arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^zlib@1.2.11%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+pic+shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+
+
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Variant Preferences
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+The packages configuration file can also set variant preferences for
+package variants. For example, let's change our preferences to build all
+packages without shared libraries. We will accomplish this by turning
+off the ``shared`` variant on all packages that have one.
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ packages:
+ all:
+ compiler: [clang, gcc, intel, pgi, xl, nag]
+ providers:
+ mpi: [mpich, openmpi]
+ variants: ~shared
+
+
+We can check the effect of this command with ``spack spec hdf5`` again.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack spec hdf5
+ Input spec
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+
+ Normalized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+ ^zlib@1.1.2:
+
+ Concretized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5@1.10.1%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+cxx~debug~fortran~hl+mpi+pic~shared~szip~threadsafe arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^mpich@3.2%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4 device=ch3 +hydra netmod=tcp +pmi+romio~verbs arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^zlib@1.2.11%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+pic~shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+
+
+So far we have only made global changes to the package preferences. As
+we've seen throughout this tutorial, hdf5 builds with MPI enabled by
+default in Spack. If we were working on a project that would routinely
+need serial hdf5, that might get annoying quickly, having to type
+``hdf5~mpi`` all the time. Instead, we'll update our preferences for
+hdf5.
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ packages:
+ all:
+ compiler: [clang, gcc, intel, pgi, xl, nag]
+ providers:
+ mpi: [mpich, openmpi]
+ variants: ~shared
+ hdf5:
+ variants: ~mpi
+
+
+Now hdf5 will concretize without an MPI dependency by default.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack spec hdf5
+ Input spec
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+
+ Normalized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+ ^zlib@1.1.2:
+
+ Concretized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5@1.10.1%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+cxx~debug~fortran~hl+mpi+pic~shared~szip~threadsafe arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^zlib@1.2.11%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+pic~shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+
+
+In general, every attribute that we can set for all packages we can
+set separately for an individual package.
+
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+External Packages
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+The packages configuration file also controls when Spack will build
+against an externally installed package. On these systems we have a
+pre-installed zlib.
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ packages:
+ all:
+ compiler: [clang, gcc, intel, pgi, xl, nag]
+ providers:
+ mpi: [mpich, openmpi]
+ variants: ~shared
+ hdf5:
+ variants: ~mpi
+ zlib:
+ paths:
+ zlib@1.2.8%gcc@5.4.0 arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64: /usr
+
+
+Here, we've told Spack that zlib 1.2.8 is installed on our system.
+We've also told it the installation prefix where zlib can be found.
+We don't know exactly which variants it was built with, but that's
+okay.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack spec hdf5
+ Input spec
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+
+ Normalized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+ ^zlib@1.1.2:
+
+ Concretized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5@1.10.1%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+cxx~debug~fortran~hl+mpi+pic~shared~szip~threadsafe arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^zlib@1.2.11%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+pic~shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+
+
+You'll notice that this did not use our external zlib. Why?
+Because Spack concretized zlib to a different Spec than the
+one we provided. There are two ways we could get Spack to
+build with our external zlib. One would be to explicitly ask
+for that spec on the command line. The other is to tell Spack
+it's not allowed to build its own zlib. We'll go with the latter.
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ packages:
+ all:
+ compiler: [clang, gcc, intel, pgi, xl, nag]
+ providers:
+ mpi: [mpich, openmpi]
+ variants: ~shared
+ hdf5:
+ variants: ~mpi
+ zlib:
+ paths:
+ zlib@1.2.11%gcc@5.4.0 arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64: /usr
+ buildable: False
+
+
+Now Spack will be forced to choose the external zlib.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack spec hdf5
+ Input spec
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+
+ Normalized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5
+ ^zlib@1.1.2:
+
+ Concretized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5@1.10.1%gcc@5.4.0+cxx~debug~fortran~hl+mpi+pic~shared~szip~threadsafe arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^zlib@1.2.11%gcc@5.4.0+pic+shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+
+
+Note that Spack now concretizes the entire DAG to use the gcc
+compiler. Because we did not specify a build using the clang compiler
+(only expressed a preference) Spack used the gcc compiler specified by
+the zlib spec. If we want to use clang for the rest of the build, we
+have to specify it.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack spec hdf5 %clang
+ Input spec
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5%clang
+
+ Normalized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5%clang
+ ^zlib@1.1.2:
+
+ Concretized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5@1.10.1%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+cxx~debug~fortran~hl+mpi+pic~shared~szip~threadsafe arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^zlib@1.2.11%gcc@5.4.0+pic+shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+
+
+This gets slightly more complicated with virtual dependencies. Suppose
+we don't want to build our own MPI, but we now want a parallel version
+of hdf5? Well, fortunately we have mpich installed on these systems.
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ packages:
+ all:
+ compiler: [clang, gcc, intel, pgi, xl, nag]
+ providers:
+ mpi: [mpich, openmpi]
+ variants: ~shared
+ hdf5:
+ variants: ~mpi
+ zlib:
+ paths:
+ zlib@1.2.11%gcc@5.4.0 arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64: /usr
+ buildable: False
+ mpich:
+ paths:
+ mpich@3.2%gcc@5.4.0 device=ch3 +hydra netmod=tcp +pmi+romio~verbs arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64: /usr
+ buildable: False
+
+
+If we concretize ``hdf5+mpi`` with this configuration file, we will just
+build with an alternate MPI implementation.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack spec hdf5 %clang +mpi
+ Input spec
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5%clang+mpi
+
+ Normalized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5%clang+mpi
+ ^mpi
+ ^zlib@1.1.2:
+
+ Concretized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5@1.10.1%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4~cxx~debug~fortran~hl+mpi+pic~shared~szip~threadsafe arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^openmpi@3.0.0%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4~cuda fabrics=verbs ~java schedulers= ~sqlite3~thread_multiple+vt arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^hwloc@1.11.8%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4~cuda+libxml2+pci arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^libpciaccess@0.13.5%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4 arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^libtool@2.4.6%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4 arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^m4@1.4.18%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4 patches=3877ab548f88597ab2327a2230ee048d2d07ace1062efe81fc92e91b7f39cd00 +sigsegv arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^libsigsegv@2.11%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4 arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^pkg-config@0.29.2%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+internal_glib arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^util-macros@1.19.1%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4 arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^libxml2@2.9.4%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4~python arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^xz@5.2.3%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4 arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^zlib@1.2.11%gcc@5.4.0+optimize+pic+shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+
+
+We have only expressed a preference for mpich over other MPI
+implementations, and Spack will happily build with one we haven't
+forbid it from using. We could resolve this by requesting
+``hdf5%clang+mpi^mpich`` explicitly, or we can configure Spack not to
+use any other MPI implementation. Since we're focused on
+configurations here and the former can get tedious, we'll need to
+modify our ``packages.yaml`` file again.
+
+While we're at it, we can configure hdf5 to build with MPI by default
+again.
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ packages:
+ all:
+ compiler: [clang, gcc, intel, pgi, xl, nag]
+ providers:
+ mpi: [mpich, openmpi]
+ variants: ~shared
+ zlib:
+ paths:
+ zlib@1.2.11%gcc@5.4.0 arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64: /usr
+ buildable: False
+ mpich:
+ paths:
+ mpich@3.2%gcc@5.4.0 device=ch3 +hydra netmod=tcp +pmi+romio~verbs arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64: /usr
+ buildable: False
+ openmpi:
+ buildable: False
+ mvapich2:
+ buildable: False
+ intel-mpi:
+ buildable: False
+ spectrum-mpi:
+ buildable: False
+ intel-parallel-studio:
+ buildable: False
+
+Now that we have configured Spack not to build any of the possible
+providers for MPI we can try again.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack spec hdf5 %clang
+ Input spec
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5%clang
+
+ Normalized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5%clang
+ ^mpi
+ ^zlib@1.1.2:
+
+ Concretized
+ --------------------------------
+ hdf5@1.10.1%clang@3.8.0-2ubuntu4+cxx~debug~fortran~hl+mpi+pic~shared~szip~threadsafe arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^mpich@3.2%gcc@5.4.0 device=ch3 +hydra netmod=tcp +pmi+romio~verbs arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+ ^zlib@1.2.11%gcc@5.4.0+pic+shared arch=linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64
+
+Now that we have hdf5 configured to install exactly as we want it, we
+can install it. We've now minimized the command line effort necessary
+to get exactly the hdf5 installation we want, and we can now build
+hdf5 against our external installations of zlib and mpich.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack install hdf5 %clang
+ ...
+
+
+-----------------
+High-level Config
+-----------------
+
+In addition to compiler and package settings, Spack allows customization
+of several high-level settings. These settings are stored in the generic
+``config.yaml`` configuration file. You can see the default settings by
+running:
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack config --scope defaults edit config
+
+
+.. literalinclude:: ../../../etc/spack/defaults/config.yaml
+ :language: yaml
+
+
+As you can see, many of the directories Spack uses can be customized.
+For example, you can tell Spack to install packages to a prefix
+outside of the ``$SPACK_ROOT`` hierarchy. Module files can be
+written to a central location if you are using multiple Spack
+instances. If you have a fast scratch filesystem, you can run builds
+from this filesystem with the following ``config.yaml``:
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ config:
+ build_stage:
+ - /scratch/$user
+
+
+On systems with compilers that absolutely *require* environment variables
+like ``LD_LIBRARY_PATH``, it is possible to prevent Spack from cleaning
+the build environment with the ``dirty`` setting:
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ config:
+ dirty: true
+
+
+However, this is strongly discouraged, as it can pull unwanted libraries
+into the build.
+
+One last setting that may be of interest to users building on a shared
+login node is the ability to customize the parallelism of Spack builds.
+By default, Spack installs all packages in parallel with the number of
+jobs equal to the number of cores on the node. For example, on a node
+with 36 cores, this will look like:
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack install --verbose zlib
+ ==> Installing zlib
+ ==> Using cached archive: ~/spack/var/spack/cache/zlib/zlib-1.2.11.tar.gz
+ ==> Staging archive: ~/spack/var/spack/stage/zlib-1.2.11-5nus6knzumx4ik2yl44jxtgtsl7d54xb/zlib-1.2.11.tar.gz
+ ==> Created stage in ~/spack/var/spack/stage/zlib-1.2.11-5nus6knzumx4ik2yl44jxtgtsl7d54xb
+ ==> No patches needed for zlib
+ ==> Building zlib [Package]
+ ==> Executing phase: 'install'
+ ==> './configure' '--prefix=~/spack/opt/spack/linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64/gcc-5.4.0/zlib-1.2.11-5nus6knzumx4ik2yl44jxtgtsl7d54xb'
+ Checking for shared library support...
+ Building shared library libz.so.1.2.11 with ~/spack/lib/spack/env/gcc/gcc.
+ Checking for size_t... Yes.
+ Checking for off64_t... Yes.
+ Checking for fseeko... Yes.
+ Checking for strerror... Yes.
+ Checking for unistd.h... Yes.
+ Checking for stdarg.h... Yes.
+ Checking whether to use vs[n]printf() or s[n]printf()... using vs[n]printf().
+ Checking for vsnprintf() in stdio.h... Yes.
+ Checking for return value of vsnprintf()... Yes.
+ Checking for attribute(visibility) support... Yes.
+ ==> 'make' '-j36'
+ ...
+ ==> 'make' '-j36' 'install'
+ ...
+
+
+As you can see, we are building with all 36 cores on the node. If you are
+on a shared login node, this can slow down the system for other users. If
+you have a strict ulimit or restriction on the number of available licenses,
+you may not be able to build at all with this many cores. On nodes with 64+
+cores, you may not see a significant speedup of the build anyway. To limit
+the number of cores our build uses, set ``build_jobs`` like so:
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ config:
+ build_jobs: 4
+
+
+If we uninstall and reinstall zlib, we see that it now uses only 4 cores:
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ $ spack install -v zlib
+ ==> Installing zlib
+ ==> Using cached archive: ~/spack/var/spack/cache/zlib/zlib-1.2.11.tar.gz
+ ==> Staging archive: ~/spack/var/spack/stage/zlib-1.2.11-ezuwp4pa52e75v6iweawzwymmf4ahxxn/zlib-1.2.11.tar.gz
+ ==> Created stage in ~/spack/var/spack/stage/zlib-1.2.11-ezuwp4pa52e75v6iweawzwymmf4ahxxn
+ ==> No patches needed for zlib
+ ==> Building zlib [Package]
+ ==> Executing phase: 'install'
+ ==> './configure' '--prefix=~/spack/opt/spack/linux-ubuntu16.04-x86_64/gcc-7.2.0/zlib-1.2.11-ezuwp4pa52e75v6iweawzwymmf4ahxxn'
+ Checking for shared library support...
+ Building shared library libz.so.1.2.11 with ~/spack/lib/spack/env/gcc/gcc.
+ Checking for size_t... Yes.
+ Checking for off64_t... Yes.
+ Checking for fseeko... Yes.
+ Checking for strerror... Yes.
+ Checking for unistd.h... Yes.
+ Checking for stdarg.h... Yes.
+ Checking whether to use vs[n]printf() or s[n]printf()... using vs[n]printf().
+ Checking for vsnprintf() in stdio.h... Yes.
+ Checking for return value of vsnprintf()... Yes.
+ Checking for attribute(visibility) support... Yes.
+ ==> 'make' '-j4'
+ ...
+ ==> 'make' '-j4' 'install'
+ ...
+
+
+Obviously, if you want to build everything in serial for whatever reason,
+you would set ``build_jobs`` to 1.
+
+.. warning::
+
+ At this point, make sure you delete or move the ``packages.yaml`` and
+ ``config.yaml`` you have been editing up to this point. Otherwise, they
+ will change the hashes of your packages, leading to differences in the
+ output of later tutorial sections.
+