spack/var/spack/repos/builtin/packages/qtkeychain/package.py
Harmen Stoppels fa7719a031
Improve version, version range, and version list syntax and behavior (#36273)
## Version types, parsing and printing

- The version classes have changed: `VersionBase` is removed, there is now a
  `ConcreteVersion` base class. `StandardVersion` and `GitVersion` both inherit
  from this.

- The public api (`Version`, `VersionRange`, `ver`) has changed a bit:
  1. `Version` produces either `StandardVersion` or `GitVersion` instances.
  2. `VersionRange` produces a `ClosedOpenRange`, but this shouldn't affect the user.
  3. `ver` produces any of `VersionList`, `ClosedOpenRange`, `StandardVersion`
     or `GitVersion`.

- No unexpected type promotion, so that the following is no longer an identity:
  `Version(x) != VersionRange(x, x)`.

- `VersionList.concrete` now returns a version if it contains only a single element
  subtyping `ConcreteVersion` (i.e. `StandardVersion(...)` or `GitVersion(...)`)

- In version lists, the parser turns `@x` into `VersionRange(x, x)` instead
  of `Version(x)`.

- The above also means that `ver("x")` produces a range, whereas
  `ver("=x")` produces a `StandardVersion`. The `=` is part of _VersionList_
  syntax.

- `VersionList.__str__` now outputs `=x.y.z` for specific version entries,
  and `x.y.z` as a short-hand for ranges `x.y.z:x.y.z`.

- `Spec.format` no longer aliases `{version}` to `{versions}`, but pulls the
  concrete version out of the list and prints that -- except when the list is
  is not concrete, then is falls back to `{versions}` to avoid a pedantic error.
  For projections of concrete specs, `{version}` should be used to render
  `1.2.3` instead of `=1.2.3` (which you would get with `{versions}`).
  The default `Spec` format string used in `Spec.__str__` now uses
  `{versions}` so that `str(Spec(string)) == string` holds.

## Changes to `GitVersion`

- `GitVersion` is a small wrapper around `StandardVersion` which enriches it
   with a git ref. It no longer inherits from it.

- `GitVersion` _always_ needs to be able to look up an associated Spack version
  if it was not assigned (yet). It throws a `VersionLookupError` whenever `ref_version`
  is accessed but it has no means to look up the ref; in the past Spack would
  not error and use the commit sha as a literal version, which was incorrect.
   
- `GitVersion` is never equal to `StandardVersion`, nor is satisfied by it. This
  is such that we don't lose transitivity. This fixes the following bug on `develop`
  where `git_version_a == standard_version == git_version_b` does not imply
  `git_version_a == git_version_b`. It also ensures equality always implies equal
  hash, which is also currently broken on develop; inclusion tests of a set of
  versions + git versions would behave differently from inclusion tests of a
  list of the same objects.

- The above means `ver("ref=1.2.3) != ver("=1.2.3")` could break packages that branch
  on specific versions, but that was brittle already, since the same happens with
  externals: `pkg@1.2.3-external` suffixes wouldn't be exactly equal either. Instead,
  those checks should be `x.satisfies("@1.2.3")` which works both for git versions and
  custom version suffixes.

- `GitVersion` from commit will now print as `<hash>=<version>` once the
  git ref is resolved to a spack version. This is for reliability -- version is frozen
  when added to the database and queried later. It also improves performance
  since there is no need to clone all repos of all git versions after `spack clean -m`
  is run and something queries the database, triggering version comparison, such
  as potentially reuse concretization.

- The "empty VerstionStrComponent trick" for `GitVerison` is dropped since it wasn't
  representable as a version string (by design). Instead, it's replaced by `git`,
  so you get `1.2.3.git.4` (which reads 4 commits after a tag 1.2.3). This means
  that there's an edge case for version schemes `1.1.1`, `1.1.1a`, since the
  generated git version `1.1.1.git.1` (1 commit after `1.1.1`) compares larger
  than `1.1.1a`, since `a < git` are compared as strings. This is currently a
  wont-fix edge case, but if really required, could be fixed by special casing
  the `git` string.

- Saved, concrete specs (database, lock file, ...) that only had a git sha as their
  version, but have no means to look the effective Spack version anymore, will
  now see their version mapped to `hash=develop`. Previously these specs
  would always have their sha literally interpreted as a version string (even when
  it _could_ be looked up). This only applies to databases, lock files and spec.json
  files created before Spack 0.20; after this PR, we always have a Spack version
  associated to the relevant GitVersion).

- Fixes a bug where previously `to_dict` / `from_dict` (de)serialization would not
  reattach the repo to the GitVersion, causing the git hash to be used as a literal
  (bogus) version instead of the resolved version. This was in particularly breaking
  version comparison in the build process on macOS/Windows.


## Installing or matching specific versions

- In the past, `spack install pkg@3.2` would install `pkg@=3.2` if it was a
  known specific version defined in the package, even when newer patch releases
  `3.2.1`, `3.2.2`, `...` were available. This behavior was only there because
  there was no syntax to distinguish between `3.2` and `3.2.1`. Since there is
  syntax for this now through `pkg@=3.2`, the old exact matching behavior is
  removed. This means that `spack install pkg@3.2` constrains the `pkg` version
  to the range `3.2`, and `spack install pkg@=3.2` constrains it to the specific
  version `3.2`.

- Also in directives such as `depends_on("pkg@2.3")` and their when
  conditions `conflicts("...", when="@2.3")` ranges are ranges, and specific
  version matches require `@=2.3.`.

- No matching version: in the case `pkg@3.2` matches nothing, concretization
  errors. However, if you run `spack install pkg@=3.2` and this version
  doesn't exist, Spack will define it; this allows you to install non-registered
  versions.

- For consistency, you can now do `%gcc@10` and let it match a configured
  `10.x.y` compiler. It errors when there is no matching compiler.
  In the past it was interpreted like a specific `gcc@=10` version, which
  would get bootstrapped.

- When compiler _bootstrapping_ is enabled, `%gcc@=10.2.0` can be used to
  bootstrap a specific compiler version.

## Other changes

- Externals, compilers, and develop spec definitions are backwards compatible.
  They are typically defined as `pkg@3.2.1` even though they should be
  saying `pkg@=3.2.1`. Spack now transforms `pkg@3` into `pkg@=3` in those cases.

- Finally, fix strictness of `version(...)` directive/declaration. It just does a simple
  type check, and now requires strings/integers. Floats are not allowed because
  they are ambiguous `str(3.10) == "3.1"`.
2023-05-05 22:04:41 -06:00

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Python

# Copyright 2013-2023 Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC and other
# Spack Project Developers. See the top-level COPYRIGHT file for details.
#
# SPDX-License-Identifier: (Apache-2.0 OR MIT)
from spack.package import *
class Qtkeychain(CMakePackage):
"""Platform-independent Qt API for storing passwords securely."""
homepage = "https://github.com/frankosterfeld/qtkeychain"
url = "https://github.com/frankosterfeld/qtkeychain/archive/v0.9.1.tar.gz"
version("0.9.1", sha256="9c2762d9d0759a65cdb80106d547db83c6e9fdea66f1973c6e9014f867c6f28e")
depends_on("qt+dbus")
depends_on("libsecret")
def cmake_args(self):
args = []
if self.spec["qt"].version.up_to(1) == Version("4"):
args.append("-DBUILD_WITH_QT4=ON")
return args