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It was time to run `spack license update-copyright-year` again.
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This patch adds license information for about 5,300 packages from automated sources.
The license information was obtained from Alpine Linux and PyPI and processed
using tooling available in https://github.com/boomanaiden154/spack-license-utils.
The license field was added in after all other directives in an automated fashion.
Note that while this license information is probably fairly accurate, it is not
guaranteed to be accurate. In addition some of the license strings from Alpine Linux
might not be valid SPDX license strings. Invalid SPDX identifiers can be picked up
and fixed once we have validation/parsing infrastructure in place for the solver,
and issues can be fixed as they come up.
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* license bump year
* fix black issues of modified files
* mypy
* fix 2021 -> 2023
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Explicitly import package utilities in all packages, and corresponding fallout.
This includes:
* rename `spack.package` to `spack.package_base`
* rename `spack.pkgkit` to `spack.package`
* update all packages in builtin, builtin_mock and tutorials to include `from spack.package import *`
* update spack style
* ensure packages include the import
* automatically add the new import and remove any/all imports of `spack` and `spack.pkgkit`
from packages when using `--fix`
* add support for type-checking packages with mypy when SPACK_MYPY_CHECK_PACKAGES
is set in the environment
* fix all type checking errors in packages in spack upstream
* update spack create to include the new imports
* update spack repo to inject the new import, injection persists to allow for a deprecation period
Original message below:
As requested @adamjstewart, update all packages to use pkgkit. I ended up using isort to do this,
so repro is easy:
```console
$ isort -a 'from spack.pkgkit import *' --rm 'spack' ./var/spack/repos/builtin/packages/*/package.py
$ spack style --fix
```
There were several line spacing fixups caused either by space manipulation in isort or by packages
that haven't been touched since we added requirements, but there are no functional changes in here.
* [x] add config to isort to make sure this is maintained going forward
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This PR will add a new audit, specifically for spack package homepage urls (and eventually
other kinds I suspect) to see if there is an http address that can be changed to https.
Usage is as follows:
```bash
$ spack audit packages-https <package>
```
And in list view:
```bash
$ spack audit list
generic:
Generic checks relying on global variables
configs:
Sanity checks on compilers.yaml
Sanity checks on packages.yaml
packages:
Sanity checks on specs used in directives
packages-https:
Sanity checks on https checks of package urls, etc.
```
I think it would be unwise to include with packages, because when run for all, since we do requests it takes a long time. I also like the idea of more well scoped checks - likely there will be other addresses for http/https within a package that we eventually check. For now, there are two error cases - one is when an https url is tried but there is some SSL error (or other error that means we cannot update to https):
```bash
$ spack audit packages-https zoltan
PKG-HTTPS-DIRECTIVES: 1 issue found
1. Error with attempting https for "zoltan":
<urlopen error [SSL: CERTIFICATE_VERIFY_FAILED] certificate verify failed: Hostname mismatch, certificate is not valid for 'www.cs.sandia.gov'. (_ssl.c:1125)>
```
This is either not fixable, or could be fixed with a change to the url or (better) contacting the site owners to ask about some certificate or similar.
The second case is when there is an http that needs to be https, which is a huge issue now, but hopefully not after this spack PR.
```bash
$ spack audit packages-https xman
Package "xman" uses http but has a valid https endpoint.
```
And then when a package is fixed:
```bash
$ spack audit packages-https zlib
PKG-HTTPS-DIRECTIVES: 0 issues found.
```
And that's mostly it. :)
Signed-off-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: vsoch <vsoch@users.noreply.github.com>
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- [x] add `concretize.lp`, `spack.yaml`, etc. to licensed files
- [x] update all licensed files to say 2013-2021 using
`spack license update-copyright-year`
- [x] appease mypy with some additions to package.py that needed
for oneapi.py
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We'd like to use a consistent checksum scheme everywhere so that we can:
a) incorporate archive checksums into our specs and have a
consistent hashing algorithm across all specs.
b) index mirrors with a consistent type of checksum, and not one that
is dependent on how spack packages are written.
- [x] convert existing md5, sha224, sha512, sha1 checksums to sha256
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- remove the old LGPL license headers from all files in Spack
- add SPDX headers to all files
- core and most packages are (Apache-2.0 OR MIT)
- a very small number of remaining packages are LGPL-2.1-only
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We moved to a new GitHub org! Now make the code and docs reflect that.
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* alsa-lib: new package
* cups: new package
* icedtea: new package
* icedtea: adding JAVA_HOME variable
* alsa: removing placeholder
* icedtea: typo fix
* alsa: fixing formattting
* icedtea: formatting fixes and cleanup
* icedtea: additional cleanup
* jdk: adding provides('java') to jdk, setting jdk to default java.
* icedtea: adding jdk as a dependency
* java: changing depends_on('jdk') and similar entries to depends_on('java')
* icedtea: removing unused imports, trying to placate flake8.
* fastqc: fixing flake8 error
* bazel: fixing typo in java dependency
* jdk: changing provides java to a range
* icedtea: cleaning up. Splitting up checksums.
* icedtea: jdk dependency is build only
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There was a new release of Ant (1.9.8) which led to the v1.9.7
tarball disappearing.
This changes the URL to Ant's archive dir, which seems to contain
*everything* including the two current releases (1.9.8 and 1.10.0)
It adds a digest for 1.9.8.
It adds and comments out a digest for 1.10.0 (which requires Java 8),
as I have not tested it.
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Add a package for ant, a java build tool.
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