Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
Update Tcl modulefile template to simplify generated `append-path`,
`prepend-path` and `remove-path` commands and improve their readability.
If path element delimiter is colon character, do not set the `--delim`
option as it is the default delimiter value.
|
|
* PythonPackage: nested config_settings
* flake8
|
|
|
|
Renames exclude_implicits to hide_implicits
When hide_implicits option is enabled, generate modulefile of
implicitly installed software and hide them. Even if implicit, those
modulefiles may be referred as dependency in other modulefiles thus they
should be generated to make module properly load dependent module.
A new hidden property is added to BaseConfiguration class.
To hide modulefiles, modulercs are generated along modulefiles. Such rc
files contain specific module command to indicate a module should be
hidden (for instance when using "module avail").
A modulerc property is added to TclFileLayout and LmodFileLayout classes
to get fully qualified path name of the modulerc associated to a given
modulefile.
Modulerc files will be located in each module directory, next to the
version modulefiles. This scheme is supported by both module tool
implementations.
modulerc_header and hide_cmd_format attributes are added to
TclModulefileWriter and LmodModulefileWriter. They help to know how to
generate a modulerc file with hidden commands for each module tool.
Tcl modulerc file requires an header. As we use a command introduced on
Modules 4.7 (module-hide --hidden-loaded), a version requirement is
added to header string.
For lmod, modules that open up a hierarchy are never hidden, even if
they are implicitly installed.
Modulerc is created, updated or removed when associated modulefile is
written or removed. If an implicit modulefile becomes explicit, hidden
command in modulerc for this modulefile is removed. If modulerc becomes
empty, this file is removed. Modulerc file is not rewritten when no
content change is detected.
Co-authored-by: Harmen Stoppels <me@harmenstoppels.nl>
|
|
|
|
Previously, we only searched for `patch` inside of whatever Git
installation was available because the most common installation of Git
available on Windows had `patch`. That's not true for all possible
installations of Git though, so this updates the search to also check
PATH.
|
|
GitLab's .patch URLs only provide abbreviated hashes, while .diff URLs
provide full hashes. There does not seem to be a parameter to force
.patch URLs to also return full hashes, so we should make sure to use
the .diff ones.
|
|
|
|
(#40643)
|
|
* Docs: Add version range example to conditional dependencies
* Add when context manager example
|
|
when verbose (#40634)
|
|
With the introduction of multiple build dependencies from the same package in the DAG, we need to minimize a few weights accounting for edges rather than nodes. If we don't do that we might have multiple "optimal" solutions that differ only in how the same nodes are connected together. This commit ensures optimal versions are picked per parent in case of multiple choices for a dependency.
|
|
Fix the following syntax which validates only the first array entry:
```python
"compilers": {
"type": "array",
"items": [
{
"type": ...
}
]
}
```
to
```python
"compilers": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": ...
}
}
```
which validates the entire array.
Oops...
|
|
|
|
|
|
This adds a `SetupContext` class which is responsible for setting
package.py module globals, and computing the changes to environment
variables for the build, test or run context.
The class uses `effective_deptypes` which takes a list of specs (e.g. single
item of a spec to build, or a list of environment roots) and a context
(build, run, test), and outputs a flat list of specs that affect the
environment together with a flag in what way they do so. This list is
topologically ordered from root to leaf, so that one can be assured that
dependents override variables set by dependencies, not the other way
around.
This is used to replace the logic in `modifications_from_dependencies`,
which has several issues: missing calls to `setup_run_environment`, and
the order in which operations are applied.
Further, it should improve performance a bit in certain cases, since
`effective_deptypes` run in O(v + e) time, whereas `spack env activate`
currently can take up to O(v^2 + e) time due to loops over roots. Each
edge in the DAG is visited once by calling `effective_deptypes` with
`env.concrete_roots()`.
By marking and propagating flags through the DAG, this commit also fixes
a bug where Spack wouldn't call `setup_run_environment` for runtime
dependencies of link dependencies. And this PR ensures that Spack
correctly sets up the runtime environment of direct build dependencies.
Regarding test dependencies: in a build context they are are build-time
test deps, whereas in a test context they are install-time test deps.
Since there are no means to distinguish the build/install type test deps,
they're both.
Further changes:
- all `package.py` module globals are guaranteed to be set before any of the
`setup_(dependent)_(run|build)_env` functions is called
- traversal order during setup: first the group of externals, then the group
of non-externals, with specs in each group traversed topological (dependencies
are setup before dependents)
- modules: only ever call `setup_dependent_run_environment` of *direct* link/run
type deps
- the marker in `set_module_variables_for_package` is dropped, since we should
call the method once per spec. This allows us to set only a cheap subset of
globals on the module: for example it's not necessary to compute the expensive
`cmake_args` and w/e if the spec under consideration is not the root node to be
built.
- `spack load`'s `--only` is deprecated (it has no effect now), and `spack load x`
now means: do everything that's required for `x` to work at runtime, which
requires runtime deps to be setup -- just like `spack env activate`.
- `spack load` no longer loads build deps (of build deps) ...
- `spack env activate` on partially installed or broken environments: this is all
or nothing now. If some spec errors during setup of its runtime env, you'll only
get the unconditional variables + a warning that says the runtime changes for
specs couldn't be applied.
- Remove traversal in upward direction from `setup_dependent_*` in packages.
Upward traversal may iterate to specs that aren't children of the roots
(e.g. zlib / python have hundreds of dependents, only a small fraction is
reachable from the roots. Packages should only modify the direct dependent
they receive as an argument)
|
|
The ability to select the top N versions got removed in the checksum overhaul,
cause initially numbers were used for commands.
Now that we settled on characters for commands, let's make numbers pick the top
N again.
|
|
Improve how mirrors are used in gitlab ci, where we have until now thought
of them as only a string.
By configuring ci mirrors ahead of time using the proposed mirror templates,
and by taking advantage of the expressiveness that spack now has for mirrors,
this PR will allow us to easily switch the protocol/url we use for fetching
binary dependencies.
This change also deprecates some gitlab functionality and marks it for
removal in Spack 0.23:
- arguments to "spack ci generate":
* --buildcache-destination
* --copy-to
- gitlab configuration options:
* enable-artifacts-buildcache
* temporary-storage-url-prefix
|
|
Reused specs used to be referenced directly into the built spec.
This might cause issues like in issue 39570 where two objects in
memory represent the same node, because two reused specs were
loaded from different sources but referred to the same spec
by DAG hash.
The issue is solved by copying concrete specs to a dictionary keyed
by dag hash.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
`spack dev-build` would incorrectly set `keep_stage=True` for the
entire DAG, including for non-dev specs, even though the dev specs
have a DIYStage which never deletes sources.
|
|
This patch adds in a license directive to get the ball rolling on adding in license
information about packages to spack. I'm primarily interested in just adding
license into spack, but this would also help with other efforts that people are
interested in such as adding license information to the ASP solve for
concretization to make sure licenses are compatible.
Usage:
Specifying the specific license that a package is released under in a project's
`package.py` is good practice. To specify a license, find the SPDX identifier for
a project and then add it using the license directive:
```python
license("<SPDX Identifier HERE>")
```
For example, for Apache 2.0, you might write:
```python
license("Apache-2.0")
```
Note that specifying a license without a when clause makes it apply to all
versions and variants of the package, which might not actually be the case.
For example, a project might have switched licenses at some point or have
certain build configurations that include files that are licensed differently.
To account for this, you can specify when licenses should be applied. For
example, to specify that a specific license identifier should only apply
to versionup to and including 1.5, you could write the following directive:
```python
license("MIT", when="@:1.5")
```
|
|
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
|
|
This commit allows version specifiers to refer to git branches that contain
forward slashes. For example, the following is valid syntax now:
pkg@git.releases/1.0
It also adds a new method `Spec.format_path(fmt)` which is like `Spec.format`,
but also maps unsafe characters to `_` after interpolation. The difference is
as follows:
>>> Spec("pkg@git.releases/1.0").format("{name}/{version}")
'pkg/git.releases/1.0'
>>> Spec("pkg@git.releases/1.0").format_path("{name}/{version}")
'pkg/git.releases_1.0'
The `format_path` method is used in all projections. Notice that this method
also maps `=` to `_`
>>> Spec("pkg@git.main=1.0").format_path("{name}/{version}")
'pkg/git.main_1.0'
which should avoid syntax issues when `Spec.prefix` is literally copied into a
Makefile as sometimes happens in AutotoolsPackage or MakefilePackage
|
|
Currently `spack env activate --with-view` exists, but is a no-op.
So, it is not too much of a breaking change to make this redundant flag
accept a value `spack env activate --with-view <name>` which activates
a particular view by name.
The view name is stored in `SPACK_ENV_VIEW`.
This also fixes an issue where deactivating a view that was activated
with `--without-view` possibly removes entries from PATH, since now we
keep track of whether the default view was "enabled" or not.
|
|
|
|
* spack checksum: fix error when all versions are dropped
* add test
|
|
* spack checksum: improve interactive filtering
* fix signature of executable
* Fix restart when using editor
* Don't show [x version(s) are new] when no known versions (e.g. in spack create <url>)
* Test ^D in test_checksum_interactive_quit_from_ask_each
* formatting
* colorize / skip header on invalid command
* show original total, not modified total
* use colify for command list
* Warn about possible URL changes
* show possible URL change as comment
* make mypy happy
* drop numbers
* [o]pen editor -> [e]dit
|
|
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
|
|
fixes #40299
|
|
(#40493)
|
|
Currently
```
modules:
prefix_inspections:: {}
```
gives you the builtin defaults instead of no mapping.
|
|
Bumps [python-levenshtein](https://github.com/maxbachmann/python-Levenshtein) from 0.22.0 to 0.23.0.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/maxbachmann/python-Levenshtein/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/maxbachmann/python-Levenshtein/blob/main/HISTORY.md)
- [Commits](https://github.com/maxbachmann/python-Levenshtein/compare/v0.22.0...v0.23.0)
---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: python-levenshtein
dependency-type: direct:production
update-type: version-update:semver-minor
...
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
|
|
|
|
|
|
Because those end up being passed to ar which does not understand linker
arguments. This was making ldflags largely unusuable for statically
linked cmake packages.
|
|
* Add support for Python 3.12
* Use optimized build of clingo
|
|
|
|
Bumps [mypy](https://github.com/python/mypy) from 1.5.1 to 1.6.0.
- [Commits](https://github.com/python/mypy/compare/v1.5.1...v1.6.0)
---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: mypy
dependency-type: direct:production
update-type: version-update:semver-minor
...
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
|
|
|
|
fixes #40415
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bumps [python-levenshtein](https://github.com/maxbachmann/python-Levenshtein) from 0.21.1 to 0.22.0.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/maxbachmann/python-Levenshtein/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/maxbachmann/python-Levenshtein/blob/main/HISTORY.md)
- [Commits](https://github.com/maxbachmann/python-Levenshtein/compare/v0.21.1...v0.22.0)
---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: python-levenshtein
dependency-type: direct:production
update-type: version-update:semver-minor
...
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
|
|
|
|
|
|
(#40358)
The warning was added in v0.20 and was slated for removal in v0.21
|