blob: 5acd1904499bd63a7a074fa14fc27f0be977e8a3 (
plain) (
blame)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
|
########################################################################
# This is a wrapper around the spack command that forwards calls to
# 'spack use' and 'spack unuse' to shell functions. This in turn
# allows them to be used to invoke dotkit functions.
#
# 'spack use' is smarter than just 'use' because it converts its
# arguments into a unique spack spec that is then passed to dotkit
# commands. This allows the user to use packages without knowing all
# their installation details.
#
# e.g., rather than requring a full spec for libelf, the user can type:
#
# spack use libelf
#
# This will first find the available libelf dotkits and use a
# matching one. If there are two versions of libelf, the user would
# need to be more specific, e.g.:
#
# spack use libelf@0.8.13
#
# This is very similar to how regular spack commands work and it
# avoids the need to come up with a user-friendly naming scheme for
# spack dotfiles.
########################################################################
# accumulate initial flags for main spack command
set _sp_flags = ""
while ( $#_sp_args > 0 )
if ( "$_sp_args[1]" !~ "-*" ) break
set _sp_flags = "$_sp_flags $_sp_args[1]"
shift _sp_args
end
# h and V flags don't require further output parsing.
if ( "$_sp_flags" =~ *h* || "$_sp_flags" =~ *V* ) then
\spack $_sp_flags $_sp_args
goto _sp_end
endif
# Set up args -- we want a subcommand and a spec.
set _sp_subcommand=""
set _sp_spec=""
[ $#_sp_args -gt 0 ] && set _sp_subcommand = ($_sp_args[1])
[ $#_sp_args -gt 1 ] && set _sp_spec = ($_sp_args[2-])
# Figure out what type of module we're running here.
set _sp_modtype = ""
switch ($_sp_subcommand)
case cd:
shift _sp_args # get rid of 'cd'
set _sp_arg=""
[ $#_sp_args -gt 0 ] && set _sp_arg = ($_sp_args[1])
shift _sp_args
if ( "$_sp_arg" == "-h" ) then
\spack cd -h
else
cd `\spack location $_sp_arg $_sp_args`
endif
breaksw
case use:
case unuse:
case load:
case unload:
set _sp_module_args=""""
if ( "$_sp_spec" =~ "-*" ) then
set _sp_module_args = $_sp_spec[1]
shift _sp_spec
set _sp_spec = ($_sp_spec)
endif
# Here the user has run use or unuse with a spec. Find a matching
# spec using 'spack module find', then use the appropriate module
# tool's commands to add/remove the result from the environment.
switch ($_sp_subcommand)
case "use":
set _sp_full_spec = ( "`\spack $_sp_flags module find --module-type dotkit $_sp_spec`" )
if ( $? == 0 ) then
use $_sp_module_args $_sp_full_spec
endif
breaksw
case "unuse":
set _sp_full_spec = ( "`\spack $_sp_flags module find --module-type dotkit $_sp_spec`" )
if ( $? == 0 ) then
unuse $_sp_module_args $_sp_full_spec
endif
breaksw
case "load":
set _sp_full_spec = ( "`\spack $_sp_flags module find --module-type tcl $_sp_spec`" )
if ( $? == 0 ) then
module load $_sp_module_args $_sp_full_spec
endif
breaksw
case "unload":
set _sp_full_spec = ( "`\spack $_sp_flags module find --module-type tcl $_sp_spec`" )
if ( $? == 0 ) then
module unload $_sp_module_args $_sp_full_spec
endif
breaksw
endsw
breaksw
default:
\spack $_sp_flags $_sp_args
breaksw
endsw
_sp_end:
unset _sp_args _sp_full_spec _sp_modtype _sp_module_args
unset _sp_sh_cmd _sp_spec _sp_subcommand _sp_flags
|