.. _developer_guide: Developer Guide ===================== This guide is intended for people who want to work on Spack itself. If you just want to develop packages, see the :ref:`packaging-guide`. It is assumed that you've read the :ref:`basic-usage` and :ref:`packaging-guide` sections, and that you're familiar with the concepts discussed there. If you're not, we recommend reading those first. Overview ----------------------- Spack is designed with three separate roles in mind: #. **Users**, who need to install software *without* knowing all the details about how it is built. #. **Packagers** who know how a particular software package is built and encode this information in package files. #. **Developers** who work on Spack, add new features, and try to make the jobs of packagers and users easier. Users could be end users installing software in their home directory, or administrators installing software to a shared directory on a shared machine. Packagers could be administrators who want to automate software builds, or application developers who want to make their software more accessible to users. As you might expect, there are many types of users with different levels of sophistication, and Spack is designed to accommodate both simple and complex use cases for packages. A user who only knows that he needs a certain package should be able to type something simple, like ``spack install ``, and get the package that he wants. If a user wants to ask for a specific version, use particular compilers, or build several versions with different configurations, then that should be possible with a minimal amount of additional specification. This gets us to the two key concepts in Spack's software design: #. **Specs**: expressions for describing builds of software, and #. **Packages**: Python modules that build software according to a spec. A package is a template for building particular software, and a spec as a descriptor for one or more instances of that template. Users express the configuration they want using a spec, and a package turns the spec into a complete build. The obvious difficulty with this design is that users under-specify what they want. To build a software package, the package object needs a *complete* specification. In Spack, if a spec describes only one instance of a package, then we say it is **concrete**. If a spec could describes many instances, (i.e. it is under-specified in one way or another), then we say it is **abstract**. Spack's job is to take an *abstract* spec from the user, find a *concrete* spec that satisfies the constraints, and hand the task of building the software off to the package object. The rest of this document describes all the pieces that come together to make that happen. Directory Structure ------------------------- So that you can familiarize yourself with the project, we'll start with a high level view of Spack's directory structure:: spack/ <- installation root bin/ spack <- main spack executable etc/ spack/ <- Spack config files. Can be overridden by files in ~/.spack. var/ spack/ <- build & stage directories repos/ <- contains package repositories builtin/ <- pkg repository that comes with Spack repo.yaml <- descriptor for the builtin repository packages/ <- directories under here contain packages opt/ spack/ <- packages are installed here lib/ spack/ docs/ <- source for this documentation env/ <- compiler wrappers for build environment external/ <- external libs included in Spack distro llnl/ <- some general-use libraries spack/ <- spack module; contains Python code cmd/ <- each file in here is a spack subcommand compilers/ <- compiler description files test/ <- unit test modules util/ <- common code Spack is designed so that it could live within a `standard UNIX directory hierarchy `_, so ``lib``, ``var``, and ``opt`` all contain a ``spack`` subdirectory in case Spack is installed alongside other software. Most of the interesting parts of Spack live in ``lib/spack``. Files under ``var`` are created as needed, so there is no ``var`` directory when you initially clone Spack from the repository. Spack has *one* directory layout and there is no install process. version and the source code. Most Python programs don't look like this (they use distutils, ``setup.py``, etc.) but we wanted to make Spack *very* easy to use. The simple layout spares users from the need to install Spack into a Python environment. Many users don't have write access to a Python installation, and installing an entire new instance of Python to bootstrap Spack would be very complicated. Users should not have to install install a big, complicated package to use the thing that's supposed to spare them from the details of big, complicated packages. The end result is that Spack works out of the box: clone it and add ``bin`` to your PATH and you're ready to go. Code Structure ------------------------- This section gives an overview of the various Python modules in Spack, grouped by functionality. Package-related modules ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :mod:`spack.package` Contains the :class:`Package ` class, which is the superclass for all packages in Spack. Methods on ``Package`` implement all phases of the :ref:`package lifecycle ` and manage the build process. :mod:`spack.packages` Contains all of the packages in Spack and methods for managing them. Functions like :func:`packages.get ` and :func:`class_name_for_package_name ` handle mapping package module names to class names and dynamically instantiating packages by name from module files. :mod:`spack.relations` *Relations* are relationships between packages, like :func:`depends_on ` and :func:`provides `. See :ref:`dependencies` and :ref:`virtual-dependencies`. :mod:`spack.multimethod` Implementation of the :func:`@when ` decorator, which allows :ref:`multimethods ` in packages. Spec-related modules ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :mod:`spack.spec` Contains :class:`Spec ` and :class:`SpecParser `. Also implements most of the logic for normalization and concretization of specs. :mod:`spack.parse` Contains some base classes for implementing simple recursive descent parsers: :class:`Parser ` and :class:`Lexer `. Used by :class:`SpecParser `. :mod:`spack.concretize` Contains :class:`DefaultConcretizer ` implementation, which allows site administrators to change Spack's :ref:`concretization-policies`. :mod:`spack.version` Implements a simple :class:`Version ` class with simple comparison semantics. Also implements :class:`VersionRange ` and :class:`VersionList `. All three are comparable with each other and offer union and intersection operations. Spack uses these classes to compare versions and to manage version constraints on specs. Comparison semantics are similar to the ``LooseVersion`` class in ``distutils`` and to the way RPM compares version strings. :mod:`spack.compilers` Submodules contains descriptors for all valid compilers in Spack. This is used by the build system to set up the build environment. .. warning:: Not yet implemented. Currently has two compiler descriptions, but compilers aren't fully integrated with the build process yet. :mod:`spack.architecture` :func:`architecture.sys_type ` is used to determine the host architecture while building. .. warning:: Not yet implemented. Should eventually have architecture descriptions for cross-compiling. Build environment ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :mod:`spack.stage` Handles creating temporary directories for builds. :mod:`spack.compilation` This contains utility functions used by the compiler wrapper script, ``cc``. :mod:`spack.directory_layout` Classes that control the way an installation directory is laid out. Create more implementations of this to change the hierarchy and naming scheme in ``$spack_prefix/opt`` Spack Subcommands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :mod:`spack.cmd` Each module in this package implements a Spack subcommand. See :ref:`writing commands ` for details. Unit tests ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :mod:`spack.test` Implements Spack's test suite. Add a module and put its name in the test suite in ``__init__.py`` to add more unit tests. :mod:`spack.test.mock_packages` This is a fake package hierarchy used to mock up packages for Spack's test suite. Other Modules ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :mod:`spack.globals` Includes global settings for Spack. the default policy classes for things like :ref:`temporary space ` and :ref:`concretization `. :mod:`spack.tty` Basic output functions for all of the messages Spack writes to the terminal. :mod:`spack.color` Implements a color formatting syntax used by ``spack.tty``. :mod:`spack.url` URL parsing, for deducing names and versions of packages from tarball URLs. :mod:`spack.util` In this package are a number of utility modules for the rest of Spack. :mod:`spack.error` :class:`SpackError `, the base class for Spack's exception hierarchy. Spec objects ------------------------- Package objects ------------------------- Most spack commands look something like this: #. Parse an abstract spec (or specs) from the command line, #. *Normalize* the spec based on information in package files, #. *Concretize* the spec according to some customizable policies, #. Instantiate a package based on the spec, and #. Call methods (e.g., ``install()``) on the package object. The information in Package files is used at all stages in this process. Conceptually, packages are overloaded. They contain Stage objects ------------------------- .. _writing-commands: Writing commands ------------------------- Unit tests ------------------------- Unit testing ------------------------- Developer commands ------------------------- ``spack doc`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ``spack test`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~