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Until this commit, `fftw' was building single precission float library
because `scamp' had problem on using the default double precission
library. However,`imfit' and maybe other programs will use double
precission float libraries.
With this commit, `fftw' installation is done twice in order to build
single and double precission float libraries. It does not complain and
goes up to the end without crashing. However, more tests are needed in
order to ensure that there is not problem on having both libraries
because in principle, they share the same header file and that could
cause problems.
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`cfitsio' was recently updated and it cames up with a problem when
trying to build shared libraries (on Mac OS system laptop). This is
because the `configure' script for building `cfitsio' include by default
`rpath'.
With this commit, this issue is fixed by modifying the installation of
`cfitsio'. Using `sed', each ocurrence of `@rpath' in `configure' is
replaced by `$(ildir)'. Once it has been done, the installation of
`cfitsio' goes as normal.
In this commit, the version of the `cfitsio' has been also updated to
the most recent one.
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With this commit, I have corrected a typo in the installation of
`imfit'. In principle it is working on Mac OS system but when I tried to
install it in GNU/Linux system it crashed. It complains about a problem
with the `cfitsio' library:
/pathto/libcfitsio.a: error adding symbols: File format not recognized
As in the last commits done by Mohammad in the project, `cfitsio'
installation has been upgraded and also the installation has been
modified, I am going to try this new version. I will also check if it is
a problem about dynamic/static library.
It also seems that the installation is taking libraries and variables
from the host system, so I will check that everything used is from our
own programs/libraries.
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Until this commit, `imfit' paper was not included into the
acknowledgements.
With this commit, a bib tex file for `imfit' has been added. So, now it
is properly cited into the final paper.
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With this commit, `imfit' has been included into the project. As described
in the official webpage (http://www.mpe.mpg.de/~erwin/code/imfit/):
Imfit is a program for fitting astronomical images -- especially images
of galaxies, though it can in principle be used for fitting other
sources.
This program uses the `scons' program to build itself (not the traditional
GNU `configure' and `make' system). I have tested it by using an example
that can be found in the `examples' directory of the decompressed
tarball. It works fine without any error on my Mac OS system.
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With this commit, SCons has been included into the project. As in the
official webpage of this program says:
SCons is an Open Source software construction tool—that is, a
next-generation build tool. Think of SCons as an improved,
cross-platform substitute for the classic Make utility with integrated
functionality similar to autoconf/automake and compiler caches such as
ccache. In short, SCons is an easier, more reliable and faster way to
build software.
The motivation for including this software into the project is because
there are some software that use this system for the installation. In
particular, the necessity of installing it comes from Imfit. This is an
astronomical software that uses this system so that is why it has been
included into the project. In principle it is simple, and I have tested
it on Mac OS sytem without any problem.
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Until this commit, the name of the decompressed tarball directory of
PyYAML Python package was wrong. It has to be `PyYAML-version' instead
of `pyyaml-version'. When I run the installation on Mac OS system it
went up to the end of the installation with no error. However, when I
tried to install it on a GNU/Linux system, it complained about no
finding the `pyyaml-version' directory, which is the expected because
the name was wrong!
With this commit, I have fixed this issue by writting correctly the name
of the decompressed tarball directory.
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With this commit, PyYAML Python package has been added into the project.
It is widely used in the Python community and the goal is to have human
readable configuration files. As in the web page
(https://pypi.org/project/PyYAML/) says:
YAML is a data serialization format designed for human readability and
interaction with scripting languages. PyYAML is a YAML parser and
emitter for Python.
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With this commit, LibYAML library has been added. This library is a
prerequisite of the Python package PyYAML, which is widely used in the
Python community when configuration scripts are needed.
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By default (when you run `make' within CFITSIO), it only builds a static
library. So until now, the template would only install a static version of
this library.
To be more clear about which libraries are used during the linking of
programs that use CFITSIO, it would be helpful to have shared library
versions also. Also, if the system has problems with static libraries (like
macOS systems), then it won't go looking outside the template to link with
them (these paths are hardcoded in the linker, which we don't build on
macOS and just use the system's tools).
With this commit, we are explicity running `make shared' in the CFITSIO
installation to have shared CFITSIO also. I also removed the old `static'
element (which we don't use anymore in any of the programs and have to
remove some time later!).
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Matplotlib can optionally use LaTeX and Ghostscript as dependencies to
render text with LaTeX.
Since we already have their build rules, with this commit, they have been
added as its prerequisites.
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With this commit, ImageMagick program has been set as prerequisite of
Matplotlib Python package. Since some submodules of Matplotlib rely on
ImageMagick programs (for example, those to make image animations), and
now we have ImageMagick into the project, it is good to install
ImageMagick when Matplotlib is requested to be installed.
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With this commit, ImageMagick software has been added into the project.
This software is useful to deal and treat images from the command line.
Since it is widely used and a lot of other programs rely on it, it is
worth to have it into the project.
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In the previous commits where Metastore's recipe was updated, all the
`TAB's in the recipe were saved as spaces just before the commit (due to a
copying and pasting from the terminal, not the text editor). With this
commit, I am correcting this.
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Until now, in the recipe to build Metastore, we would store the current
directory in a `current_dir' Bash variable before running `gbuild' to build
Metastore. However, in this Makefile, we aren't using `.ONESHELL'. As a
result, each un-quoted new-line character creates a new shell and the
`current_dir' variable that we used afterwards was empty!
This happened because until recently, Metastore was being built in
`high-level.mk' (where `.ONESHELL' is activated, because we are using GNU
Make to call that Makefile). But in `basic.mk', we are using the host's
Make, which may not be GNU Make, so we can't use any GNU-only features.
Also, this error was hard to notice, because we weren't using `&&' before
writing the final target of Metastore!
With this commit, both this issues are addressed: all the lines in the
recipe are now quoted in the end with a backslash, and the steps before
making the target are separated by `&&', not `;' (which doesn't cause a
crash if the command fails).
This fixes bug #56295.
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Until this commit, Binutils was brough up as a GCC prerequisite two times:
Once as a special (`host_cc') dependency (for when we want to build GCC),
another time as a dependency in every build. The first one is now obsolete:
on MacOS systems where we don't build Binutils, we define its symbolic
links in the same recipe.
With this commit, we remove the first one, so Binutils is always a
dependency of GCC.
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There weren't any conflicts in this merge.
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Until this commit, we were installing `netpbm' without disabling the X
Windows System in GNU/Linux. That is the default option in the configure
step of `netpbm'. However, we are not installing the necessary libraries
(X11) and headers for that. As a consecuence, when testing in a system
where we don't have these libraries/headers (Ubuntu 14.04), it crashes.
With this commit, we disable the X Windows System option in `netpbm' by
giving the answer `none' to one of the last answers to that question in
the configure step.
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GCC 9.1 was just released and includes many new optimization features that
can benefit projects in this template also.
Also, the build directory of GCC has been moved inside the unpacked
directory (similar to all the other programs). As a result, while GCC is
being built, the `.build/software/build-tmp' directory will only have one
directory for GCC. Until now, there was one `gcc-build' directory and one
unpacked tarball.
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Until this commit, we were installing `cairo' without disabling the X
Windows System. That is the default option in the configure step of
`cairo'. However, we are not installing the necessaries libraries (X11)
and headers for that. As a consecuence, when testing in a system where
we don't have these libraries/headers (Ubuntu 14.04), it crashes.
With this commit, we disable the X Windows System option in `cairo'
configure step by setting the option `--with-x=no'.
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In the last imported work about fixing all backslashes, the extension of
`netpbm' tarball was not the correct one. Now we are using `.tar.gz'
instead of `.tgz'.
With this commit, we fix this typo by replacing the `.tgz' by `.tar.gz'
in the rule of `netpbm'.
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In the recent correction of backslashes, I had missed adding an `&&' before
the `rm' command of the generic CMake building rule (`cbuild' of
`build-rules.mk'). With this commit, this has been corrected.
A multi-threaded Make was also added to build OpenMPI (which takes long and
is often built alone because it takes so long and other things depend on
it) and the HDF5 library.
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The TAB character wasn't used in the second line of the recipe to build
SCAMP. This has been corrected with this commit.
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Recently, after the installation of Coreutils, we added a step to manually
run PatchELF over all the contents of the `$(ibdir)'. However, after a
fresh test, this method failed: because while PatchELF was updating `mv',
another program that was using `mv' couldn't do so and crashed.
To fix this problem, Coreutils is now installed in a dummy directory also
and the exact files that need `rpath' are identified and PatchELF is run on
them (to be clean). Also, higher-level `basic.mk' software (higher-level
than Bash), were re-organized so they depend on Coreutils. With this, we
are no sure that when Coreutils is being built, it is the only program that
is being built and PatchELF won't interfere with any other program.
Also, OpenSSL and CMake were set to be bulit in parallel to speed up their
build.
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Especially because of the new convention regarding backslashes, there were
many conflicts that are now fixed. But none were substantial.
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When we need to quote the new-line character we end the line with a
backslash (`\'). Until now, our convention has been to put all such
backslashes under each other to help in visual inspection.
But this causes a lot of confusion in version control: if only one line's
length is larger, the whole block will be marked as changed and thus makes
it hard to visually see the actual change. It also makes debuging the code
(adding some temporary lines) hard.
With this commit, I went through all the files and tried to fix all such
cases so only a single white space character is between the last command
character and the backslash. Where there was an empty line (ending with a
backslash, to help in visually separating the code into blocks), I put the
backslash right under the previous line's.
This completes task #15259.
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Until now, to test if GCC can use `sys/cdefs.h', we were building
a small test program using it. But after testing on an Ubuntu 14.04,
we noticed that the GCC test during the configure script passes, but
GCC still can't be built. After some investigation we noticed its
available in other directories, but during the build of GCC, those
directories aren't used, and it only assumes it to be under
`/usr/include'. So with this commit, we are only checking this
particular location for this header, not a test run of GCC.
After fixing this, we noticed that GCC's build crashed again because
it couldn't link with `libc.a' (or `libc.so'). So we also added a
for this library and added a new warning to inform the user what they
might be able to do.
Finally, we noticed that in one of the last steps of building GCC,
we weren't using `&&', but `;', so the GCC name file would be
built, even when the GCC build failed.
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Even though the Coreutils configure script says that it adds `rpath' to its
executables, its executables don't have it. As a result, it goes to use the
host operating system libraries, causing failures when they don't match
with the template.
Unfortunately after some tests with the configure script, I couldn't find
any way to include `rpath'! Even though `-rpath-link' is present in all
linking commands during Coreutils' build, the installed files still don't
have it!
So I was forced to use PatchELF. However, one problem is that Coreutils
installs many programs, not just one like Bash or AWK.
As a brute-force solution, with this commit, we are running PatchELF on all
the installed programs. It won't hurt those that already have it, but it
will fix all those that don't.
With this commit, I am also making the following non-related small changes:
- In `build-rules.mk', the `&&' characters were placed at the start of the
line for better readability.
- Bash, Readline and NCURSES are now built in parallel on systems that
support it (during `basic.mk').
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Until this commit, `m4' was not a prerequisite of `gmp'. However, during
a test in Ubuntu 14.04 using one single core in the configure step, it
crashed complaining about not having `m4' installed.
With this commit, we set `m4' as a prerequisite of `gmp'.
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In some rules there were some spaces when we should use TAB, and
also the other way around. We were using TAB instead using spaces.
With this commit, we fix that spaces/TAB in the necessary rules.
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Until now, we were missing `numpy' and `six' as prerequisites of `h5py'.
Because we did the configure step with all cores, `numpy' and `six'
allways were built before `h5py' with any crash. However, in a single
thread configure run we noticed that we were missing these two
dependencies.
With this commit, we fix this issue by setting `numpy' and `six' as
prerequisites of `h5py'.
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With this commit, the copyright information of some files have been
modify in order to include the work of Raul Infante-Sainz.
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Until this commit, the prerequisites of `sip_tpv' were `mpmath' and
`sympy'. However, the real prerequisites of `sip_tpv' are `astropy',
`numpy' and `sympy'.
With this commit, we fix this issue, and now `mpmath' is only a
prerequisite of `sympy'.
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Until this commit, we had a problem in the installation of
Astrometry-net in Mac OS systems. During the runing of the Makefile, it
stopped at the reporting stage because it tried to do a couple of steps
that in Mac OS are not possible:
$ cat /proc/cpuinfo
$ free
The reason is that `/proc/cpuinfo' and `free' doesn't exist in Mac OS.
With this commit, we override these two steps. Since they are only for
reporting, they are not mandatory. So, we avoid doing them by using
`sed' before running the Makefile.
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Until now, we installed `netpbm' by setting the default paths to
libraries and headers. That worked fine for GNU/Linux systems, however,
in Mac OS systems we have to explicity say to `netpbm' questions what
are the paths to the libraries and headers. We found this problem
because we tried to run `solve-field' to obtain the astrometry of some
images, and then it goes to use `pnmfile', a program that failed because
it was not properly linked with `libnetpmb'.
With this commit, we fix this problem by answering properly the
questions in the configure step of `netpbm' and setting explicity where
we want to place the libraries and headers. With this commit, we also
update `netpbm' version. To do that, we have to download the last
version, for which it doesn't exist a tarball. So, we built this tarball
and put it in the Mohammad's webpage.
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Until this commit, in Mac OS we were installing `binutils' as symbolic
links of various programs (`as', `ar', `ld', `nm',` ps' and `ranlib').
However, there was a missing semicolon at the end of each line. As a
consecuence, the installation of `binutils' on Mac OS systems failed.
With this commit, we fix this problem by typing a semicolon at the end
of each makelink line.
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Until this commit, FFTW was installed by default, without the single
precission option. However, when installing `sextractor' in a new system
we found an error in the installation complaining about not having
single precission files of FFTW. More explicity the error was: "FFTW
single precision library files not found in [...]".
With this commit, we fix this problem by passing the option
`--enable-single' in the installation of FFTW.
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There wasn't any conflict in this merge.
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Until now, we were not citing the paper of `sip_tpv' package.
With this commit, we have been fix this issue.
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With this commit, we add `sip_tpv' Python package into the template.
This is a small package to convert SIP distorsion coefficients into PV
distorsion coefficients, and the other way around.
This package is useful in a astronomical context, specially when `swarp'
is going to be used in order to resample images. The reason is that
`swarp' only can understand PV distorsion coefficients.
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With this commit, we add `sympy' Python package into the template. This
is a package to do symbolic mathematics.
The motivation is that it is a prerequisite of `sip_tpv' Python package,
which is useful to convert SIP distorsion coefficients into PV
coefficients (in the context of astronomical images). However, the
availability of `sympy' in the template will be useful for anyone
interested in this package.
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With this commit, we add `mpmath' Python package into the template. This
package is a prerequisite of `sympy', a package to do symbolic
mathematics.
The motivation of adding this package is because it is a dependency of
`sympy', which is more widely used into the Python science community.
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Until now we were using the official tarball of GNU Bash. However, Bash is
distributed using patches, not a public version controlled history. So to
implement newer features of Bash, its necessary to apply those patches and
make the tarball ourselves.
With this commit, we have done just that: we used the 7 patches that have
been released since version 5.0.0 and made a tarball to use for this
template. The instructions on how to make the patched tarball are also
given above the Bash build rule.
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Until now, `metastore' did not depend on the necessaries programs that
we use to install it (`awk', `coreutils' and `sed'). They are not
official dependencies of `metastore', but we need them to install it.
With this commit, we put these programs as prerequisites of `metastore'
in order to be able to install it without any problem.
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Until now, to specify which high-level software you want the project to
contain, it was necessary to go into the `high-level.mk' Makefile that is
complicated and can create bugs.
With this commit, a new `reproduce/software/config/installation/TARGETS.mk'
file has been created that is easily/cleanly in charge of documenting the
final high-level software that must be built for the project.
Also, until now, FFTW was set as a dependency of Numpy while we couldn't
actually get Numpy to use it! It was just there for future reference and to
justify its build rule. But now that many software won't be built and there
is no problem with having rules even though a project might not use them,
it has been removed.
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Git and Metastore are very basic and fundamental tools for the template, so
to keep things clean (let the `high-level.mk' software only represent
optional software in the template), these two software (and their
dependencies: `cURL' and `Libbsd') will now be built in `basic.mk'.
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Until this commit, ATLAS was a prerequisite of Scamp. The documentation
says that. However, we have been able to install Scamp without having
ATLAS installed. As a consecuence, ATLAS does not have to be a
prerequisite of Scamp anymore.
With this commit, we remove ATLAS as prerequisite of Scamp. We also put
available software in the template as optional because not all people
are going to use these software.
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With this commit, we add SCAMP into the project. This program is part of
the Astromatic software and the main purpose is to make the fine
astrometry and the distorsion correction astronomical images.
In principle, SCAMP needs ATLAS library to be able to work (that is what
the documentation says). However, we had some problems with ATLAS
libraries on Mac OS system, and due to that, we set the option
`--enable-openblas' in the configure step. By doing that, we are be able
to install SCAMP with no problems.
One dependency of SCAMP is `cdsclient', it has been also added with this
commit. The `cdsclient' package is a set of C and shell routines which can
be built on Unix stations or PCs running Linux, which once compiled
allow to query some databases located at CDS or on mirrors over the
network.
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With this commit, we add SExtractor to be installed into the project. It
is a widely used program to detect object and build catalogues from
astronomical images.
We had some problems when installing it because it could not link with
some ATLAS libraries. But, since we have OpenBLAS installed, we can use
it to override the problem with ATLAS.
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SWarp resamples and co-adds together FITS images using any arbitrary
astrometric projection defined in the WCS standard. It is a very useful
program for astronomy and that is why we added it to the pipeline.
With this commit, we also cite the paper for Astrometry-net that until
now was missing.
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