'spack install' can now reinstall a spec even if it has dependents, via
the --overwrite option. This option moves the current installation in a
temporary directory. If the reinstallation is successful the temporary
is removed, otherwise a rollback is performed.
- When you don't use wildcards, flake8 will find places where you used an
undefined name.
- This commit has all the bugfixes resulting from this static check.
I'm tracking down a problem with the perl package that's been
generating this error:
```
OSError: OSError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/blah/blah/blah/lib/5.24.1/x86_64-linux/Config.pm~'
```
The real problem is upstream, but it's being masked by an exception
raised in `filter_file`s finally block.
In my case, `backup` is `False`.
The backup is created around line 127, the `re.sub()` calls
fails (working on that), the `except` block fires and moves the backup
file back, then the finally block tries to remove the non-existent
backup file.
This change just avoids trying to remove the non-existent file.
`spack blame` prints out the contributors to a package.
By modification time:
```
$ spack blame --time llvm
LAST_COMMIT LINES % AUTHOR EMAIL
3 days ago 2 0.6 Andrey Prokopenko <andrey.prok@gmail.com>
3 weeks ago 125 34.7 Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@epfl.ch>
3 weeks ago 3 0.8 Peter Scheibel <scheibel1@llnl.gov>
2 months ago 21 5.8 Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
2 months ago 1 0.3 Gregory Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
3 months ago 116 32.2 Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
5 months ago 2 0.6 Jimmy Tang <jcftang@gmail.com>
5 months ago 6 1.7 Jean-Paul Pelteret <jppelteret@gmail.com>
7 months ago 65 18.1 Tom Scogland <tscogland@llnl.gov>
11 months ago 13 3.6 Kelly (KT) Thompson <kgt@lanl.gov>
a year ago 1 0.3 Scott Pakin <pakin@lanl.gov>
a year ago 3 0.8 Erik Schnetter <schnetter@gmail.com>
3 years ago 2 0.6 David Beckingsale <davidbeckingsale@gmail.com>
3 days ago 360 100.0
```
Or by percent contribution:
```
$ spack blame --percent llvm
LAST_COMMIT LINES % AUTHOR EMAIL
3 weeks ago 125 34.7 Massimiliano Culpo <massimiliano.culpo@epfl.ch>
3 months ago 116 32.2 Todd Gamblin <tgamblin@llnl.gov>
7 months ago 65 18.1 Tom Scogland <tscogland@llnl.gov>
2 months ago 21 5.8 Adam J. Stewart <ajstewart426@gmail.com>
11 months ago 13 3.6 Kelly (KT) Thompson <kgt@lanl.gov>
5 months ago 6 1.7 Jean-Paul Pelteret <jppelteret@gmail.com>
3 weeks ago 3 0.8 Peter Scheibel <scheibel1@llnl.gov>
a year ago 3 0.8 Erik Schnetter <schnetter@gmail.com>
3 years ago 2 0.6 David Beckingsale <davidbeckingsale@gmail.com>
3 days ago 2 0.6 Andrey Prokopenko <andrey.prok@gmail.com>
5 months ago 2 0.6 Jimmy Tang <jcftang@gmail.com>
2 months ago 1 0.3 Gregory Becker <becker33@llnl.gov>
a year ago 1 0.3 Scott Pakin <pakin@lanl.gov>
3 days ago 360 100.0
```
- Python I/O would not properly interleave (or appear) with output from
subcommands.
- Add a flusing wrapper around sys.stdout and sys.stderr when
redirecting, so that Python output is synchronous with that of
subcommands.
- 'v' toggle was previously only good for the current install.
- subsequent installs needed user to press 'v' again.
- 'v' state is now preserved across dependency installs.
- Simplify interface to log_output. New interface requires only one
context handler instead of two. Before:
with log_output('logfile.txt') as log_redirection:
with log_redirection:
# do things ... output will be logged
After:
with log_output('logfile.txt'):
# do things ... output will be logged
If you also want the output to be echoed to ``stdout``, use the
`echo` parameter::
with log_output('logfile.txt', echo=True):
# do things ... output will be logged and printed out
And, if you just want to echo *some* stuff from the parent, use
``force_echo``:
with log_output('logfile.txt', echo=False) as logger:
# do things ... output will be logged
with logger.force_echo():
# things here will be echoed *and* logged
A key difference between this and the previous implementation is that
*everything* in the context handler is logged. Previously, things like
`Executing phase 'configure'` would not be logged, only output to the
screen, so understanding phases in the build log was difficult.
- The implementation of `log_output()` is different in two major ways:
1. This implementation avoids race cases by using only one pipe (before
we had a multiprocessing pipe and a unix pipe). The logger daemon
stops naturally when the input stream is closed, which avoids a race
in the previous implementation where we'd miss some lines of output
because the parent would shut the daemon down before it was done
with all output.
2. Instead of turning output redirection on and off, which prevented
some things from being logged, this version uses control characters
in the output stream to enable/disable forced echoing. We're using
the time-honored xon and xoff codes, which tell the daemon to echo
anything between them AND write it to the log. This is how
`logger.force_echo()` works.
- Fix places where output could get stuck in buffers by flushing more
aggressively. This makes the output printed to the terminal the same
as that which would be printed through a pipe to `cat` or to a file.
Previously these could be weirdly different, and some output would be
missing when redirecting Spack to a file or pipe.
- Simplify input and color handling in both `build_environment.fork()`
and `llnl.util.tty.log.log_output()`. Neither requires an input_stream
parameter anymore; we assume stdin will be forwarded if possible.
- remove `llnl.util.lang.duplicate_stream()` and remove associated
monkey-patching in tests, as these aren't needed if you just check
whether stdin is a tty and has a fileno attribute.
* Disable spec colorization when redirecting stdout and add command line flag to re-enable
* Add command line `--color` flag to control output colorization
* Add options to `llnl.util.tty.color` to allow color to be auto/always/never
* Add `Spec.cformat()` function to be used when `format()` should have auto-coloring
- Lock test can be run either as a node-local test or as an MPI test.
- Lock test is now parametrized by filesystem, so you can test the
locking capabilities of your NFS, Lustre, or GPFS filesystem. See docs
for details.
PR #3367 inadvertently changed the semantics of _find_recursive and
_find_non_recursive so that the returned list are not ordered as the
input search list. This commit restores the original semantic, and adds
tests to verify it.
Modifications:
- added support for multi-valued variants
- refactored code related to variants into variant.py
- added new generic features to AutotoolsPackage that leverage multi-valued variants
- modified openmpi to use new features
- added unit tests for the new semantics
## Motivation
Python installations are both important and unfortunately inconsistent. Depending on the Python version, OS, and the strength of the Earth's magnetic field when it was installed, the name of the Python executable, directory containing its libraries, library names, and the directory containing its headers can vary drastically.
I originally got into this mess with #3274, where I discovered that Boost could not be built with Python 3 because the executable is called `python3` and we were telling it to use `python`. I got deeper into this mess when I started hacking on #3140, where I discovered just how difficult it is to find the location and name of the Python libraries and headers.
Currently, half of the packages that depend on Python and need to know this information jump through hoops to determine the correct information. The other half are hard-coded to use `python`, `spec['python'].prefix.lib`, and `spec['python'].prefix.include`. Obviously, none of these packages would work for Python 3, and there's no reason to duplicate the effort. The Python package itself should contain all of the information necessary to use it properly. This is in line with the recent work by @alalazo and @davydden with respect to `spec['blas'].libs` and friends.
## Prefix
For most packages in Spack, we assume that the installation directory is `spec['python'].prefix`. This generally works for anything installed with Spack, but gets complicated when we include external packages. Python is a commonly used external package (it needs to be installed just to run Spack). If it was installed with Homebrew, `which python` would return `/usr/local/bin/python`, and most users would erroneously assume that `/usr/local` is the installation directory. If you peruse through #2173, you'll immediately see why this is not the case. Homebrew actually installs Python in `/usr/local/Cellar/python/2.7.12_2` and symlinks the executable to `/usr/local/bin/python`. `PYTHONHOME` (and presumably most things that need to know where Python is installed) needs to be set to the actual installation directory, not `/usr/local`.
Normally I would say, "sounds like user error, make sure to use the real installation directory in your `packages.yaml`". But I think we can make a special case for Python. That's what we decided in #2173 anyway. If we change our minds, I would be more than happy to simplify things.
To solve this problem, I created a `spec['python'].home` attribute that works the same way as `spec['python'].prefix` but queries Python to figure out where it was actually installed. @tgamblin Is there any way to overwrite `spec['python'].prefix`? I think it's currently immutable.
## Command
In general, Python 2 comes with both `python` and `python2` commands, while Python 3 only comes with a `python3` command. But this is up to the OS developers. For example, `/usr/bin/python` on Gentoo is actually Python 3. Worse yet, if someone is using an externally installed Python, all 3 commands may exist in the same directory! Here's what I'm thinking:
If the spec is for Python 3, try searching for the `python3` command.
If the spec is for Python 2, try searching for the `python2` command.
If neither are found, try searching for the `python` command.
## Libraries
Spack installs Python libraries in `spec['python'].prefix.lib`. Except on openSUSE 13, where it installs to `spec['python'].prefix.lib64` (see #2295 and #2253). On my CentOS 6 machine, the Python libraries are installed in `/usr/lib64`. Both need to work.
The libraries themselves change name depending on OS and Python version. For Python 2.7 on macOS, I'm seeing:
```
lib/libpython2.7.dylib
```
For Python 3.6 on CentOS 6, I'm seeing:
```
lib/libpython3.so
lib/libpython3.6m.so.1.0
lib/libpython3.6m.so -> lib/libpython3.6m.so.1.0
```
Notice the `m` after the version number. Yeah, that's a thing.
## Headers
In Python 2.7, I'm seeing:
```
include/python2.7/pyconfig.h
```
In Python 3.6, I'm seeing:
```
include/python3.6m/pyconfig.h
```
It looks like all Python 3 installations have this `m`. Tested with Python 3.2 and 3.6 on macOS and CentOS 6
Spack has really nice support for libraries (`find_libraries` and `LibraryList`), but nothing for headers. Fixed.
`set_executable` now checks if a user/group.other had read permission
on a file and if it does then it sets the corresponding executable
bit.
See #1483.
- Get rid of pkgsort() usage for preferred variants.
- Concretization is now entirely based on key-based sorting.
- Remove PreferredPackages class and various spec cmp() methods.
- Replace with PackagePrefs class that implements a key function for
sorting according to packages.yaml.
- Clear package pref caches on config test.
- Explicit compare methods instead of total_ordering in Version.
- Our total_ordering backport wasn't making Python 3 happy for some
reason.
- Python 3's functools.total_ordering and spelling the operators out
fixes the problem.
- Fix unicode issues with spec hashes, json, & YAML
- Try to use str everywhere and avoid unicode objects in python 2.
- convert print, StringIO, except as, octals, izip
- convert print statement to print function
- convert StringIO to six.StringIO
- remove usage of csv reader in Spec, in favor of simple regex
- csv reader only does byte strings
- convert 0755 octal literals to 0o755
- convert `except Foo, e` to `except Foo as e`
- fix a few places `str` is used.
- may need to switch everything to str later.
- convert iteritems usages to use six.iteritems
- fix urllib and HTMLParser
- port metaclasses to use six.with_metaclass
- More octal literal conversions for Python 2/3
- Fix a new octal literal.
- Convert `basestring` to `six.string_types`
- Convert xrange -> range
- Fix various issues with encoding, iteritems, and Python3 semantics.
- Convert contextlib.nested to explicitly nexted context managers.
- Convert use of filter() to list comprehensions.
- Replace reduce() with list comprehensions.
- Clean up composite: replace inspect.ismethod() with callable()
- Python 3 doesn't have "method" objects; inspect.ismethod returns False.
- Need to use callable in Composite to make it work.
- Update colify to use future division.
- Fix zip() usages that need to be lists.
- Python3: Use line-buffered logging instead of unbuffered.
- Python3 raises an error with unbuffered I/O
- See https://bugs.python.org/issue17404
- Added a new interface for Specs to pass build information
- Calls forwarded from Spec to Package are now explicit
- Added descriptor within Spec to manage forwarding
- Added state in Spec to maintain query information
- Modified a few packages (the one involved in spack install pexsi) to showcase changes
- This uses an object wrapper to `spec` to implement the `libs` sub-calls.
- wrapper is returned from `__getitem__` only if spec is concrete
- allows packagers to access build information easily
Previously, fix_darwin_install_name would only handle dependencies that have no path set, and it ignore dependencies that have the build directory as path baked in. Catch this, and replace it by the install directory.
* Porting: substitute nose with ytest
This huge commit substitutes nose with pytest as a testing system. Things done here:
* deleted external/nose as it is no longer used
* moved mock resources in their own directory 'test/mock/'
* ported two tests (cmd/find, build_system) to pytest native syntax as an example
* build_environment, log: used monkeypatch instead of try/catch
* moved global mocking of fetch_cache to an auto-used fixture
* moved global mocking from test/__init__.py to conftest.py
* made `spack test` a wrapper around pytest
* run-unit-tests: avoid running python 2.6 tests under coverage to speed them up
* use `pytest --cov` instead of coverage run to cut down testing time
* mock/packages_test: moved mock yaml configuration to files instead of leaving it in the code as string literals
* concretize.py: ported tests to native pytest, reverted multiprocessing in pytest.ini as it was creating the wrong report for coveralls
* conftest.py, fixtures: added docstrings
* concretize_preferences.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* directory_layout.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* install.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* optional_deps.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
optional_deps.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* packages.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* provider_index.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* spec_yaml.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* multimethod.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* install.py: now uses mock_archive_url
* git_fetch.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* hg_fetch.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* svn_fetch.py, mirror.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
repo.py: deleted
* test_compiler_cmd.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* cmd/module.py, cmd/uninstall.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockDatabase
* database.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockDatabase, removed mock/database
* pytest: uncluttering fixture implementations
* database: changing the scope to 'module'
* config.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* spec_dag.py, spec_semantics.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest
* stage.py: uses fixtures instead of subclassing MockPackagesTest. Removed mock directory
* pytest: added docstrings to all the fixtures
* pytest: final cleanup
* build_system_guess.py: fixed naming and docstrings as suggested by @scheibelp
* spec_syntax.py: added expected failure on parsing multiple specs closes#1976
* Add pytest and pytest-cov to Spack externals.
* Make `spack flake8` ignore externals.
* run-unit-tests runs spack test and not pytest.
* Remove all the special stuff for `spack test`
- Remove `conftest.py` magic and all the special case stuff in `bin/spack`
- Spack commands can optionally take unknown arguments, if they want to
handle them.
- `spack test` is now a command like the others.
- `spack test` now just delegates its arguments to `pytest`, but it does
it by receiving unknown arguments and NOT taking an explicit
help argument.
* Fix error in fixtures.
* Improve `spack test` command a bit.
- Now supports an approximation of the old simple interface
- Also supports full pytest options if you want them.
* Use external coverage instead of pytest-cov
* Make coverage use parallel-mode.
* change __init__.py docs to include pytest
* inheritance of directives: using meta-classes to inject attributes coming from directives into packages + lazy directives
* _dep_types -> dependency_types
* using a meta-class to inject directives into packages
* directives are lazy
fixes#2466
* directives.py: allows for multiple inheritance. Added blank lines as suggested by @tgamblin
* directives.py: added a test for simple inheritance of directives
* Minor improvement requested by @tgamblin
CMakePackage: importing names from spack.directives
directives: wrap __new__ to respect pep8
* Refactoring requested by @tgamblin
directives: removed global variables in favor of class variables. Simplified the interface for directives (they return a callable on a package or a list of them).
The option -s now causes file and line number information to be printed
along with any invocation of msg, info, etc...
This will greatly ease debugging.
* spack install: forward sys.stdin to child processes fixes#2140
- [ ] redirection process is spawned in __enter__ instead of __init__
- [ ] sys.stdin is forwarded to child processes
* log: wrapped __init__ definition
- Closing and re-opening to upgrade to write will lose all existing read
locks on this process.
- If we didn't allow ranges, sleeping until no reads would work.
- With ranges, we may never be able to take some legal write locks
without invalidating all reads. e.g., if a write lock has distinct
range from all reads, it should just work, but we'd have to close the
file, reopen, and re-take reads.
- It's easier to just check whether the file is writable in the first
place and open for writing from the start.
- Lock now only opens files read-only if we *can't* write them.