The section was highly outdated as it referred to old defaults, and
failed to mention `hide_implicits: true`.
This commit restructures it, moves some deeply nested sections a level
up, and promotes `hide_implicits: true` + `autoload: direct` before
talking about `exclude`.
Add support for conflict directives in Lua modulefile like done for Tcl
modulefile.
Note that conflicts are correctly honored on Lmod and Environment
Modules <4.2 only if mutually expressed on both modulefiles that
conflict with each other.
Migrate conflict code from Tcl-specific classes to the common part. Add
tests for Lmod and split the conflict test case in two.
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
Change default naming scheme for tcl modules for a more user-friendly
experience.
Change from flat projection to "per software name" projection.
Flat naming scheme restrains module selection capabilities. The
`{name}/{version}...` scheme make possible to use user-friendly
mechanisms:
* implicit defaults (`module load git`)
* extended default (`module load git/2`)
* advanced version specifiers (`module load git@2:`)
Since environment-modules has support for autoloading since 4.2,
and Spack-builds of it enable it by default, use the same autoload
default for tcl as lmod.
`LD_LIBRARY_PATH` can break system executables (e.g., when an enviornment is loaded) and isn't necessary thanks to `RPATH`s. Packages that require `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` can set this in `setup_run_environment`.
- [x] Prefix inspections no longer set `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` by default
- [x] Document changes and workarounds for people who want `LD_LIBRARY_PATH`
For a long time the module configuration has had a few settings that use
`blacklist`/`whitelist` terminology. We've been asked by some of our users to replace
this with more inclusive language. In addition to being non-inclusive, `blacklist` and
`whitelist` are inconsistent with the rest of Spack, which uses `include` and `exclude`
for the same concepts.
- [x] Deprecate `blacklist`, `whitelist`, `blacklist_implicits` and `environment_blacklist`
in favor of `exclude`, `include`, `exclude_implicits` and `exclude_env_vars` in module
configuration, to be removed in Spack v0.20.
- [x] Print deprecation warnings if any of the deprecated names are in module config.
- [x] Update tests to test old and new names.
- [x] Update docs.
- [x] Update `spack config update` to fix this automatically, and include a note in the error
that you can use this command.
* Ignore top-level module config; add auto-update
In Spack 0.17 we got module sets (modules:[name]:[prop]), and for
backwards compat modules:[prop] was short for modules:default:[prop].
But this makes it awkward to define default config for the "default"
module set.
Since 0.17 is branched off, we can now deprecate top-level module config
(that is, just ignore it with a warning).
This PR does that, and it implements `spack config update modules` to
make upgrading easy (we should have added that to 0.17 already...)
It also removes references to `dotkit` stuff which was already
deprecated in 0.13 and could have been removed in 0.14.
Prefix inspections are the only exception, since the top-level prefix inspections
used for `spack load` and `spack env activate`.
This PR removes a few outdated sections from the "Basics" part of the
documentation. It also makes a few topic under the environment section
more prominent by removing an unneeded spack.yaml subsection and
promoting everything under it.
Any spec satisfying a default will be symlinked to `default`
If multiple specs have modulefiles in the same directory and satisfy
configured module defaults, then whichever was written last will be
default.
Currently, module configurations are inconsistent because modulefiles are generated with the configs for the active environment, but are shared among all environments (and spack outside any environment).
This PR fixes that by allowing Spack environments (or other spack config scopes) to define additional sets of modules to generate. Each set of modules can enable either lmod or tcl modules, and contains all of the previously available module configuration. The user defines the name of each module set -- the set configured in Spack by default is named "default", and is the one returned by module manipulation commands in the absence of user intervention.
As part of this change, the module roots configuration moved from the config section to inside each module configuration.
Additionally, it adds a feature that the modulefiles for an environment can be configured to be relative to an environment view rather than the underlying prefix. This will not be enabled by default, as it should only be enabled within an environment and for non-default views constructed with separate projections per-spec.
* Modification to R environment
This PR modifies how the R environmnet is presented, and fixes
installing the standalone Rmath library.
- The Rmath build and install methods are combined into one
- Set parallel=False when installing Rmath
- remove the run environment that set up variables for libraries and
headers that are not really needed, and pollute the environment.
* Add setup_run_environment back
- Add back the setup_run_environment with LD_LIBRARY_PATH and
PKG_CONFIG_PATH.
- Adjust documentation to reflect the current code.
- [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
As of #18260, `spack load` and `spack env activate` now use
`prefix_inspections` from the modules configuration to decide
how to modify environment variables.
This updates the modules configuration documentation to describe
how to update environment variables with the `prefix_inspections`
section. This also updates the `spack load` and environments
documentation to refer to the new `prefix_inspections` documentation.
Shell integration no longer requires setting `SPACK_ROOT`, so we can
simplify the documentation on it. The docs on shell support and using
packages are getting a bit old, and information on `spack load` (which
seems to be everyone's most common way of using packages) is hard to
find.
This PR simplifies the shell documentation to remove SPACK_ROOT, and also
moves some sections around for clearer organization.
- [x] make docs on sourcing setup scripts clearer and simpler
- [x] introduce `spack load` early in the basic usage guide instead of
burying it in the module docs
- [x] clean up module docs so that spack module tcl loads comes later
- [x] be clear about the different ways to use packages so that the users
can find the docs better.
Co-authored-by: Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@gmail.com>
Packages built with lmod core_compiler are placed in `Core`.
Other packages may belong in `Core`. For example, python may be built with a proprietary compiler for performance, but belong on the `Core` directory.
With this PR, lmod config can include a `core_specs` list. Any package that satisfies a spec in that list is placed in `Core`, regardless of its compiler or dependencies.
* Moved link to the right place in the docs
* Fixed a few minor issues in extensions docs
Fixed a typo, added a subsubsection for better
navigation, reworded "modules in Python" as
"Python packages"
Previously the `spack load` command was a wrapper around `module load`. This required some bootstrapping of modules to make `spack load` work properly.
With this PR, the `spack` shell function handles the environment modifications necessary to add packages to your user environment. This removes the dependence on environment modules or lmod and removes the requirement to bootstrap spack (beyond using the setup-env scripts).
Included in this PR is support for MacOS when using Apple's System Integrity Protection (SIP), which is enabled by default in modern MacOS versions. SIP clears the `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` and `DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH` variables on process startup for executables that live in `/usr` (but not '/usr/local', `/System`, `/bin`, and `/sbin` among other system locations. Spack cannot know the `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` of the calling process when executed using `/bin/sh` and `/usr/bin/python`. The `spack` shell function now manually forwards these two variables, if they are present, as `SPACK_<VAR>` and recovers those values on startup.
- [x] spack load/unload no longer delegate to modules
- [x] refactor user_environment modification calculations
- [x] update documentation for spack load/unload
Co-authored-by: Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
* Methods setting the environment now do it separately for build and run
Before this commit the `*_environment` methods were setting
modifications to both the build-time and run-time environment
simultaneously. This might cause issues as the two environments
inherently rely on different preconditions:
1. The build-time environment is set before building a package, thus
the package prefix doesn't exist and can't be inspected
2. The run-time environment instead is set assuming the target package
has been already installed
Here we split each of these functions into two: one setting the
build-time environment, one the run-time.
We also adopt a fallback strategy that inspects for old methods and
executes them as before, but prints a deprecation warning to tty. This
permits to port packages to use the new methods in a distributed way,
rather than having to modify all the packages at once.
* Added a test that fails if any package uses the old API
Marked the test xfail for now as we have a lot of packages in that
state.
* Added a test to check that a package modified by a PR is up to date
This test can be used any time we deprecate a method call to ensure
that during the first modification of the package we update also
the deprecated calls.
* Updated documentation
Dotkit is being used only at a few sites and has been deprecated on new
machines. This commit removes all the code that provide support for the
generation of dotkit module files.
A new validator named "deprecatedProperties" has been added to the
jsonschema validators. It permits to prompt a warning message or exit
with an error if a property that has been marked as deprecated is
encountered.
* Removed references to dotkit in the docs
* Removed references to dotkit in setup-env-test.sh
* Added a unit test for the 'deprecatedProperties' schema validator
- make all Spack paths relative to a `_spack_root` symlink, so that we
can easily relocate the docs build *outside* lib/spack/docs
- set some useful defaults for gettext translation variables in conf.py
- update `relativeinclude` and other references to the spack root in the
RST files to use _spack_root
* Update spec format to simpler syntax, maintain backwards compatibility
* Switch to new spec.format method throughout internals
* update package files for new format strings
* documentation and minor code cleanup. removed nonsensical variant sigils
* Note that `none` is the default for lmod autoload
Save a bit of confusion by *explicitly* pointing out that `none` is
the default value for autoload in the lmod module file generator.
* Add a tip re building software externally
Add a tip about using `autoload: all` when building packages outside
of the tree that use artifacts (e.g. libraries, includes) within the
tree.
- 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
Consolidate prefix calculation logic for intel packages into the
IntelPackage class.
Add documentation on installing Intel packages with Spack an
(alternatively) adding them as external packages in Spack.
As requested in the review all the commands meant to manage module
files have been grouped under the `spack module` command.
Unit tests have been refactored to match the new command structure.