Conda and rubin-env¶
The Science Pipelines stack uses conda
as its primary package manager for obtaining third-party Python and C++ dependencies.
In particular, the conda-forge
distribution channel is used, as it provides a wide selection of community-maintained but rigorously verified packages.
rubin-env
¶
The list of required dependencies is maintained in a conda-forge
metapackage named rubin-env
.
Use of a metapackage rather than an environment specification allows for simple installation and environment creation by end users.
rubin-env
is intended to be the minimal set of dependencies required to build and execute all packages of lsst_distrib
in batch production.
It does not necessarily include dependencies useful for developers to modify existing packages or add new packages.
It also does not necessarily include dependencies useful for science users to analyze, visualize, or otherwise work with raw Science Pipelines inputs or output data products.
An expanded rubin-env-extras
has been created that includes additional dependencies commonly used with the Science Pipelines to ensure that compatible versions of all packages can be determined.
These additional dependencies are used in the Rubin Science Platform, in the “shared stack” deployed on the Rubin development platforms at the NCSA LDF and the SLAC USDF, and in the rubin-sim metapackage.
Note that each of these other environments is maintained separately; see below.
Requests for additions to rubin-env
should be made via RFC.
The DM-CCB must approve such requests.
Versioning rubin-env
¶
rubin-env
has a standard semantic version number with major, minor, and patch components, in addition to a conda-internal build number.
These components are updated as follows:
Build: increment when adding a
<
or!=
pin for an existing dependency, as this preserves compatibility with previous builds of the environment.Patch: increment when adding a
>
pin for an existing dependency that is compatible with old code (no major version update) or when adding a<
pin that is earlier than the previous pin.Minor: increment when adding a new dependency.
Major: increment when removing a dependency, or when removing a pin, or when changing a dependency major version
When updating rubin-env, the following procedure should be followed:
Update the dev branch in rubinenv-feedstock and ensure that it solves and builds. Add selectors to
rubin-env-extras
or pins torubin-env
if necessary to allow building.Test the current Science Pipelines stack using the dev environment (install using the
conda-forge/label/rubin-env_dev
channel).Test pip installation of RSP dependencies into the dev environment.
Create a ticket branch from dev to adjust the version number (from
dev
suffix to plain release) and build number (to 0).Rebase the new branch on main. This may involve some merge conflict resolution. Don’t forget to request rerendering. After successful checks and PR review, merge to main.
Wait for the new metapackage to be available in the conda-forge channel.
Create PRs to update the default versions in lsst, lsstsw, and jenkins-dm-jobs. GitHub Actions tests of these PRs will not succeed if the metapackage is not available.
Test Jenkins with the
stack-os-matrix
job using the new rubin-env version on at leastlsst_ci
and ideally alsoci_hsc
andci_imsim
.Merge the lsst+lsstsw+jenkins-dm-jobs PRs and announce the update on community.lsst.org.
Rubin Science Platform notebooks¶
Rubin Science Platform notebooks use a container that is built from each release.
As part of the container build process, additional packages useful in the notebook environment are added to the conda environment.
The list of packages is maintained in lsst-sqre/nublado2
; requests for additions to this list should be made via RFC.
“Exact” environments¶
The conda environments used by Jenkins to build nightly, weekly, and official release tarballs are preserved as conda list --explicit
outputs in eups.lsst.codes
.
These can be used in place of the rubin-env
metapackage to exactly reproduce a build for consistency in production or for debugging.
Both newinstall
and lsstsw
allow specification of an eups tag to retrieve the exact environment used when that tag was published.