Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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* remove unhelpful comment
* Filter compiler duplicates while reading manifest
* more-specific version matching edited to use module-specific version (to avoid an issue where a user might add a compiler with the same version to the initial test configuration
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Allow `spack external find` (with no extra args) to proceed if the manifest file exists but
without sufficient permissions; in that case, print a warning. Also add a test for that behavior.
TODOs:
- [x] continue past any exception raised during manifest parsing as part of `spack external find`,
except for CTRL-C (and other errors that indicate immediate program termination)
- [x] Semi-unrelated but came up when discussing this with the user who reported this issue to
me: the manifest parser now accepts older schemas
See: https://github.com/spack/spack/issues/31191
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fixes #30965
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(#31226)
fixes #30997
Instead of giving a penalty of 30 to all nodes when preferences
are not package specific, give a penalty of 100 to all targets
of a node where we have package specific preferences, if the target
is not explicitly preferred.
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fixes #31139
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* Fixed a bug in the 'external find --all' command where the call failed
to find packages by both executable and library. The bug was that the
call `path.all_packages()` incorrectly turned the variable
`packages_to_check` into a generator rather than keeping it a list.
Thus the second call to `detection.by_library` had no work to do.
* Fixed the help message for the find external and compiler commands as
well as others that used the `scopes_metavar` field to define where
the results should be stored in configuration space. Specifically,
the fact that configuration could be added to the environment was not
mentioned in the help message.
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Tumbleweed is a rolling release that would have used a date
as a version instead.
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* Stricter compatibility rules for OS and compiler when reusing specs
* Add unit test
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fixes #31167
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* Manifest directory may not contain manifest files: exclude non-manifest files
* Manifest files use different name for rocmcc: add translation for it
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* ASP: sort and deduplicate version weights from installed specs
* Pick version weights according to provenance
* Add unit test
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solution exists (#31142)
* concretize.lp: impose a lower bound on the number of version facts if a valid version exists
fixes #30864
* Add a unit test
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* add test to verify fix works
* fix spec cflags/variants parsing test (breaking change)
* fix `spack spec` arg quoting issue
* add error report for deprecated cflags coalescing
* use .group(n) vs subscript regex group extraction for 3.5 compat
* add random test for untested functionality to pass codecov
* fix new test failure since rebase
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Fix a bug introduced in #21720. `spack_json.dump()` calls `_strify()` on dictionaries to
convert `unicode` to `str`, but it constructs `dict` objects instead of
`collections.OrderedDict` objects, so in Python 2 (or earlier versions of 3) it can
scramble dictionary order.
This can cause hashes to differ between Python 2 and Python 3, or between Python 3.7
and earlier Python 3's.
- [x] use `OrderedDict` in `_strify`
- [x] add a regression test
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* bootstrap: account for disabled sources
Fix a bug introduced in #30192, which effectively skips
any prescription on disabled bootstrapping sources.
* Add unit test to avoid regression
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Fixes compiler flags for oneapi and dpcpp
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Add instead a warning box in the documentation
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referred targets are currently the only minimization criteria for Spack for which we allow
negative values. That means Spack may be incentivized to add nodes to the DAG if they
match the preferred target.
This PR re-norms the minimization criteria so that preferred targets are weighted from 0,
and default target weights are offset by the number of preferred targets per-package to
calculate node_target_weight.
Also fixes a bug in the test for preferred targets that was making the test easier to pass
than it should be.
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This reverts commit 330832c22cfa59554f6681a570bdec24ca46e79b.
`-Werror` chagnes were unfortunately causing the `rdma-core` build to fail.
Reverting on `v0.18`; we can fix this in `develop`
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This PR supports the creation of securely signed binaries built from spack
develop as well as release branches and tags. Specifically:
- remove internal pr mirror url generation logic in favor of buildcache destination
on command line
- with a single mirror url specified in the spack.yaml, this makes it clearer where
binaries from various pipelines are pushed
- designate some tags as reserved: ['public', 'protected', 'notary']
- these tags are stripped from all jobs by default and provisioned internally
based on pipeline type
- update gitlab ci yaml to include pipelines on more protected branches than just
develop (so include releases and tags)
- binaries from all protected pipelines are pushed into mirrors including the
branch name so releases, tags, and develop binaries are kept separate
- update rebuild jobs running on protected pipelines to run on special runners
provisioned with an intermediate signing key
- protected rebuild jobs no longer use "SPACK_SIGNING_KEY" env var to
obtain signing key (in fact, final signing key is nowhere available to rebuild jobs)
- these intermediate signatures are verified at the end of each pipeline by a new
signing job to ensure binaries were produced by a protected pipeline
- optionallly schedule a signing/notary job at the end of the pipeline to sign all
packges in the mirror
- add signing-job-attributes to gitlab-ci section of spack environment to allow
configuration
- signing job runs on special runner (separate from protected rebuild runners)
provisioned with public intermediate key and secret signing key
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Old concrete specs were slipping through in `_assign_hash`, and `package_hash` was
attempting to recompute a package hash when we could not know the package a time
of concretization.
Part of this was that the logic for `_assign_hash` was hard to understand -- it was
called twice from `_finalize_concretization` and had special cases for both args it
was called with. It's much easier to understand the logic here if we just inline it.
- [x] Get rid of `_assign_hash` and just integrate it with `_finalize_concretization`
- [x] Don't call `_package_hash` at all for already-concrete specs.
- [x] Add regression test.
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This PR introduces a new build cache layout and package format, with improvements for
both efficiency and security.
## Old Format
Currently a binary package consists of a `spec.json` file at the root and a `.spack` file,
which is a `tar` archive containing a copy of the `spec.json` format, possibly a detached
signature (`.asc`) file, and a tar-gzip compressed archive containing the install tree.
```
build_cache/
# metadata (for indexing)
<arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.spec.json
<arch>/
<compiler>/
<name>-<ver>/
# tar archive
<arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.spack
# tar archive contents:
# metadata (contains sha256 of internal .tar.gz)
<arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.spec.json
# signature
<arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.spec.json.asc
# tar.gz-compressed prefix
<arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.tar.gz
```
After this change, the nesting has been removed so that the `.spack` file is the
compressed archive of the install tree. Now signed binary packages, will take the
form of a clearsigned `spec.json` file (a `spec.json.sig`) at the root, while unsigned
binary packages will contain a `spec.json` at the root.
## New Format
```
build_cache/
# metadata (for indexing, contains sha256 of .spack file)
<arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.spec.json
# clearsigned spec.json metadata
<arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.spec.json.sig
<arch>/
<compiler>/
<name>-<ver>/
# tar.gz-compressed prefix (may support more compression formats later)
<arch>-<compiler>-<name>-<ver>-24zvipcqgg2wyjpvdq2ajy5jnm564hen.spack
```
## Benefits
The major benefit of this change is that the signatures on binary packages can be
verified without:
1. Having to download the tarball, or
2. having to extract an unknown tarball.
(1) is an improvement in efficiency; (2) is a security fix: we now ensure that we trust the
binary before we try to run it through `tar`, which avoids potential attacks.
## Backward compatibility
Also after this change, spack should still be able to handle the previous buildcache
structure and binary mirrors with mixed layouts.
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This PR builds on #28392 by adding a convenience command to create a local mirror that can be used to bootstrap Spack. This is to overcome the inconvenience in setting up this mirror manually, which has been reported when trying to setup Spack on air-gapped systems.
Using this PR the user can create a bootstrapping mirror, on a machine with internet access, by:
% spack bootstrap mirror --binary-packages /opt/bootstrap
==> Adding "clingo-bootstrap@spack+python %apple-clang target=x86_64" and dependencies to the mirror at /opt/bootstrap/local-mirror
==> Adding "gnupg@2.3: %apple-clang target=x86_64" and dependencies to the mirror at /opt/bootstrap/local-mirror
==> Adding "patchelf@0.13.1:0.13.99 %apple-clang target=x86_64" and dependencies to the mirror at /opt/bootstrap/local-mirror
==> Adding binary packages from "https://github.com/alalazo/spack-bootstrap-mirrors/releases/download/v0.1-rc.2/bootstrap-buildcache.tar.gz" to the mirror at /opt/bootstrap/local-mirror
To register the mirror on the platform where it's supposed to be used run the following command(s):
% spack bootstrap add --trust local-sources /opt/bootstrap/metadata/sources
% spack bootstrap add --trust local-binaries /opt/bootstrap/metadata/binaries
The mirror has to be moved over to the air-gapped system, and registered using the commands shown at prompt. The command has options to:
1. Add pre-built binaries downloaded from Github (default is not to add them)
2. Add development dependencies for Spack (currently the Python packages needed to use spack style)
* bootstrap: refactor bootstrap.yaml to move sources metadata out
* bootstrap: allow adding/removing custom bootstrapping sources
This operation can be performed from the command line since
new subcommands have been added to `spack bootstrap`
* Add --trust argument to spack bootstrap add
* Add a command to generate a local mirror for bootstrapping
* Add a unit test for mirror creation
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Currently, environments can either be concretized fully together or fully separately. This works well for users who create environments for interoperable software and can use `concretizer:unify:true`. It does not allow environments with conflicting software to be concretized for maximal interoperability.
The primary use-case for this is facilities providing system software. Facilities provide multiple MPI implementations, but all software built against a given MPI ought to be interoperable.
This PR adds a concretization option `concretizer:unify:when_possible`. When this option is used, Spack will concretize specs in the environment separately, but will optimize for minimal differences in overlapping packages.
* Add a level of indirection to root specs
This commit introduce the "literal" atom, which comes with
a few different "arities". The unary "literal" contains an
integer that id the ID of a spec literal. Other "literals"
contain information on the requests made by literal ID. For
instance zlib@1.2.11 generates the following facts:
literal(0,"root","zlib").
literal(0,"node","zlib").
literal(0,"node_version_satisfies","zlib","1.2.11").
This should help with solving large environments "together
where possible" since later literals can be now solved
together in batches.
* Add a mechanism to relax the number of literals being solved
* Modify spack solve to display the new criteria
Since the new criteria is above all the build criteria,
we need to modify the way we display the output.
Originally done by Greg in #27964 and cherry-picked
to this branch by the co-author of the commit.
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
* Inject reusable specs into the solve
Instead of coupling the PyclingoDriver() object with
spack.config, inject the concrete specs that can be
reused.
A method level function takes care of reading from
the store and the buildcache.
* spack solve: show output of multi-rounds
* add tests for best-effort coconcretization
* Enforce having at least a literal being solved
Co-authored-by: Greg Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
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Previously the regex was only checking for presence of quotes as a beginning
or end character and not a matching set. This erroneously identified the
following *single* argument as being quoted:
source bashenvfile &> /dev/null && python3 -c "import os, json; print(json.dumps(dict(os.environ)))"
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(#30797)
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Add a config option to strip `-Werror*` or `-Werror=*` from compile lines everywhere.
```yaml
config:
keep_werror: false
```
By default, we strip all `-Werror` arguments out of compile lines, to avoid unwanted
failures when upgrading compilers. You can re-enable `-Werror` in your builds if
you really want to, with either:
```yaml
config:
keep_werror: all
```
or to keep *just* specific `-Werror=XXX` args:
```yaml
config:
keep_werror: specific
```
This should make swapping in newer versions of compilers much smoother when
maintainers have decided to enable `-Werror` by default.
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Parse error information is kept for specs, but it doesn't seem like we propagate it
to the user when we encounter an error. This fixes that.
e.g., for this error in a package:
```python
depends_on("python@:3.8", when="0.900:")
```
Before, with no context and no clue that it's even from a particular spec:
```
==> Error: Unexpected token: ':'
```
With this PR:
```
==> Error: Unexpected token: ':'
Encountered when parsing spec:
0.900:
^
```
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Co-authored-by: Axel Huebl <axel.huebl@plasma.ninja>
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* Introduce concretizer:unify option to replace spack:concretization
* Deprecate concretization
* Make spack:concretization overrule concretize:unify for now
* Add environment update logic to move from spack:concretization to spack:concretizer:reuse
* Migrate spack:concretization to spack:concretize:unify in all locations
* For new environments make concretizer:unify explicit, so that defaults can be changed in 0.19
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The oneapi and dpcpp compilers are essentially the same except for which
binary is used foc CXX. Spack will detect them as "mixed toolchain" and
not inject compiler optimization flags. This will be needed once
archspec has entries for the oneapi and dpcpp compilers. This PR detects
when dpcpp and oneapi are in the toolchains list and explicitly sets
`is_mixed_toolchain` to `False`.
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Error messages for the clingo concretizer have proven challenging. The current messages are incredibly vague and often don't help users at all. Unsat cores in clingo are not guaranteed to be minimal, and lead to cores that are either not useful or need to be post-processed for hours to reach a minimal core.
Following up on an idea from a slack conversation with kwryankrattiger on slack, this PR takes a new approach. We eliminate most integrity constraints and minima/maxima on choice rules in clingo, and instead force invalid states to imply an error predicate. The error predicate can include context on the cause of the error (Package, Version, etc). These error predicates are then heavily optimized against, to ensure that we do not include error facts in the solution when a solution with no error facts could be generated. When post-processing the clingo solution to construct specs, any error facts cause the program to raise an exception. This leads to much more legible error messages. Each error predicate includes a priority and an error message. The error message is formatted by the remaining arguments to produce the error message. The priority is used to ensure that when clingo has a choice of which rules to violate, it chooses the one which will be most informative to the user.
Performance:
"fresh" concretizations appear to suffer a ~20% performance penalty under this branch, while "reuse" concretizations see a speedup of around 33%.
Possible optimizations if users still see unhelpful messages:
There are currently 3 levels of priority of the error messages. Additional priorities are possible, and can allow us finer granularity to ensure more informative error messages are provided in lieu of less informative ones.
Future work:
Improve tests to ensure that every possible rule implying an error message is exercised
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A non-existent upstream should not be fatal: it could only mean it is
not deployed yet. In the meantime, it should not block the user to
rebuild anything it needs.
A warning is still emitted, to let the user decide if this is ok or not.
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Fixes missing chgrp on symlinks in package installations, and errors on
symlinks referencing non-existent or non-writable locations.
Note: `os.chown(.., follow_symlinks=False)` is python3 only, but
`os.lchown` exists in both versions.
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When an upstream is specified but the directory does not exist, don't
create the directory for it, it might not be yours.
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* Change license dir from hard-coded to a configurable item
* Change config item to be a string not an array
Co-authored-by: Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
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Trying to compute `dag_hash()` or `package_hash()` on a concrete spec that doesn't have
a `_package_hash` attribute would attempt to recompute the package hash.
This most commonly manifests as a failed lookup of a namespace if you attempt to uninstall
or compute the hashes of packages in exsternal repositories that aren't registered, e.g.:
```console
> spack spec --json c/htno
==> Error: Unknown namespace: myrepo
```
While it wouldn't change the already-assigned `dag_hash` value, this behavior is
incorrect, since the package file for a previously concrete spec:
1. might have changed since concretization,
2. might not exist anymore, or
3. might just not be findable by Spack.
This PR ensures that the package hash can't be computed on older concrete specs. Instead
of calling `package_hash()` from within `to_node_dict()`, we now check for the `_package_hash`
attribute and only add the package_hash to the spec record if it's there.
This PR also handles the tricky semantics of computing `package_hash()` at concretization
time. We have to compute it *before* marking the spec concrete so that `to_node_dict` can
use it. But this means that the logic for `package_hash()` can't rely on `spec.concrete`,
as it is called *during* concretization. Instead of checking for concreteness, `package_hash()`
now checks `_patches_assigned()` to determine whether it should add them to the package
hash.
- [x] Add an assert to `package_hash()` so it can't be called on specs for which it
would be wrong.
- [x] Add an `_assign_hash()` method to handle tricky semantics of `package_hash`
and `dag_hash`.
- [x] Rework concretization to call `_assign_hash()` before and after marking specs
concrete.
- [x] Rework content hash part of package hash to check for `_patches_assigned()`
instead of `spec.concrete`.
- [x] regression test
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- Better support for 164fx
- Better support for Apple M1(pro)
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* Disable globbing
* Split on bell char when dumping cmd to out.log
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Previously we sorted by hash values for `spack graph`, but changing hashes can make the
test brittle and the node order seem nondeterministic to users.
- [x] Sort nodes in `spack graph` by the default edge order, which takes into account
parent and child names as well as dependency types.
- [x] Update ASCII test output for new order.
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