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| author | Gregor Kleen <gkleen@yggdrasil.li> | 2015-08-04 15:35:21 +0200 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Gregor Kleen <gkleen@yggdrasil.li> | 2015-08-04 15:35:21 +0200 |
| commit | 46cf2aa1fb307b194660ba3b2bcd8fe400a49704 (patch) | |
| tree | 6519d458624f07ef0ade66ff736f267b5e5a48d6 /provider | |
| parent | f30a3a6ba39127cfd6b071d40c90170eacf62426 (diff) | |
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beuteltier-1
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| 1 | --- | ||
| 2 | title: On the Design of Overly Complicated Feedreaders | ||
| 3 | published: 2015-08-04 | ||
| 4 | --- | ||
| 5 | |||
| 6 | I like feedreaders. | ||
| 7 | Thus, of course, I had to implement my own, because, as always, all existing software does | ||
| 8 | not fullfill my exceedingly unrealistic expectations with respect to customizability and | ||
| 9 | extendability. | ||
| 10 | |||
| 11 | This post marks the start of a series describing and documenting the design of the current | ||
| 12 | iteration of `Beuteltier` (a derivation of [Newsbeuter](https://newsbeuter.org) and the | ||
| 13 | german `Beutel`, meaning bag, to mean in conjunction: | ||
| 14 | [Marsupial](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsupial)). | ||
| 15 | |||
| 16 | It should be noted that the library described here is not finished or ready for use in any | ||
| 17 | sense of the word (at the time of writing a "trivial" implementation of a `Beutel` shipped | ||
| 18 | with the library supports only `run`, `search`, and `delete`). Searching a way to | ||
| 19 | procrastinate implementing the more arduous `insert` (it requires nubbing—deduplication in | ||
| 20 | the backstore) I decided to, instead, start this series of posts and put the thought that | ||
| 21 | went into the library so far in a form that I can read again for later reference. | ||
| 22 | |||
| 23 | We begin, as is to be expected for a haskell project, with type definitions and, thus, | ||
| 24 | design philosophy. | ||
| 25 | |||
| 26 | This post in particular reproduces the file `beuteltier/Beuteltier/Types.hs` from the | ||
| 27 | [git repo](git://git.yggdrasil.li/beuteltier) with annotiations to provide some | ||
| 28 | motivation. | ||
| 29 | |||
| 30 | The `Beuteltier` library itself only provides primitives for (and a default implementation | ||
| 31 | of) access to what we call a backstore. A backstore is, to us, an instance of the | ||
| 32 | typeclass `Beutel` which contains the most primitive of primitives for storing, searching | ||
| 33 | for and deleting representations of the objects we care about from the store. | ||
| 34 | |||
| 35 | It is recommended that reader not try to follow the rest of this post linearly but start | ||
| 36 | at the end with the definition of the `Beutel` class and work their way backwards. | ||
| 37 | |||
| 38 | > {-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances, StandaloneDeriving, KindSignatures, MultiParamTypeClasses, TypeFamilies #-} | ||
| 39 | > | ||
| 40 | > module Beuteltier.Types | ||
| 41 | > ( -- * Types | ||
| 42 | > Object | ||
| 43 | > , ObjectGen(..) | ||
| 44 | > , SubObject(..) | ||
| 45 | > , MetaData(..) | ||
| 46 | > , Thunk(..) | ||
| 47 | > , ThunkState(..) | ||
| 48 | > , ThunkResult(..) | ||
| 49 | > , Tag | ||
| 50 | > , Flag(..) | ||
| 51 | > , SubObjectName | ||
| 52 | > , ThunkName | ||
| 53 | > , SearchQuery | ||
| 54 | > , Predicate | ||
| 55 | > , Beutel(..) | ||
| 56 | > ) where | ||
| 57 | |||
| 58 | `Flag` ends up being a [sum type](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sum_type) holding values | ||
| 59 | such as `Seen`, `Old`, or `Hidden`. | ||
| 60 | We define it externally. | ||
| 61 | |||
| 62 | > import Beuteltier.Types.Flags | ||
| 63 | |||
| 64 | The `Identity` functor serves as basis for many a Monadtransformer-stack. | ||
| 65 | |||
| 66 | > import Data.Functor.Identity | ||
| 67 | > import Data.Functor.Classes () | ||
| 68 | |||
| 69 | Binary contents are encoded as `ByteStrings` | ||
| 70 | |||
| 71 | > import qualified Data.ByteString.Lazy as Lazy (ByteString) | ||
| 72 | > import qualified Data.ByteString.Lazy as LBS | ||
| 73 | |||
| 74 | Unicode text as `Text` | ||
| 75 | |||
| 76 | > import Data.Text (Text) | ||
| 77 | |||
| 78 | Long unicode text as lazy `Text` | ||
| 79 | |||
| 80 | > import qualified Data.Text.Lazy as Lazy (Text) | ||
| 81 | > import qualified Data.Text.Lazy as LT | ||
| 82 | > | ||
| 83 | > import Data.Set (Set) | ||
| 84 | > | ||
| 85 | > import Data.Map (Map) | ||
| 86 | > | ||
| 87 | > import Data.Time (UTCTime) | ||
| 88 | > | ||
| 89 | > import Data.Function (on) | ||
| 90 | > import Data.Ord (comparing) | ||
| 91 | > import Control.Applicative | ||
| 92 | |||
| 93 | `Data.Default` provides some convenience when constructing extensive record structures. | ||
| 94 | |||
| 95 | > import Data.Default | ||
| 96 | |||
| 97 | The `boolexpr` package provides us with a structure for representing boolean expressions | ||
| 98 | supporting functor operations and evaluation. | ||
| 99 | |||
| 100 | > import Data.BoolExpr | ||
| 101 | |||
| 102 | Previous iterations of Beuteltier acted on Objects that were kept completely in RAM during | ||
| 103 | all operations. | ||
| 104 | This proved to be unsustainable, not only because nubbing (deduplication in the store of | ||
| 105 | all objects) tended to exceed all RAM constraints (>4GiB for a few hundred objects), but | ||
| 106 | also because cheaper operations on objects, like presentation to the user, got painfully | ||
| 107 | slow once large `SubObject`s (like videos) were introduced into the store. | ||
| 108 | |||
| 109 | The straight forward solution was to enrich the `Object` structure with provisions for | ||
| 110 | explicit lazyness and partial construction. | ||
| 111 | |||
| 112 | > -- | We deal in, at runtime, partially retrieved Objects | ||
| 113 | > data ObjectGen (f :: * -> *) = ObjectGen | ||
| 114 | > { _oMeta :: f MetaData | ||
| 115 | > -- ^ An undetermined set of Metainformation | ||
| 116 | > , _oContent :: f (Map SubObjectName (f SubObject)) | ||
| 117 | > -- ^ A list of undetermined length of undetermined | ||
| 118 | > 'SubObject's with guaranteed unique 'SubObjectName's | ||
| 119 | > , _oThunks :: f [f Thunk] | ||
| 120 | > -- ^ A list of undetermined length of undetermined Thunks. | ||
| 121 | > -- There is such a thing as thunk colissions (i.e.: two | ||
| 122 | > -- thunks promise or even create 'SubObject's with the | ||
| 123 | > -- same name). | ||
| 124 | > -- Precedence in such a case is to be as suggested by | ||
| 125 | > -- the list structure (later thunks override earlier ones). | ||
| 126 | > } | ||
| 127 | > | ||
| 128 | > instance Monad f => Default (ObjectGen f) where | ||
| 129 | > def = ObjectGen { _oContent = return def | ||
| 130 | > , _oThunks = return def | ||
| 131 | > , _oMeta = return def | ||
| 132 | > } | ||
| 133 | |||
| 134 | It is straight forward to collapse the more advanced representation of `Object`s back to | ||
| 135 | the old behaviour by parametrising over the Identity functor, which is simply a newtype | ||
| 136 | wrapper over the contained structure. | ||
| 137 | |||
| 138 | > -- | An entirely retrieved Object | ||
| 139 | > type Object = ObjectGen Identity | ||
| 140 | > | ||
| 141 | > -- -- | The default 'Object' is empty except for metadata | ||
| 142 | > -- instance Default Object where | ||
| 143 | > -- def = ObjectGen { _oContent = return def | ||
| 144 | > -- , _oThunks = return def | ||
| 145 | > -- , _oMeta = return def | ||
| 146 | > -- } | ||
| 147 | > | ||
| 148 | > -- | Equality simply gets deferred to all subcomponents | ||
| 149 | > deriving instance Eq Object | ||
| 150 | > | ||
| 151 | > -- | 'Object's compare as their 'MetaData' | ||
| 152 | > instance Ord Object where | ||
| 153 | > compare = comparing _oMeta | ||
| 154 | |||
| 155 | We would like to associate some set of meta information with all objects. | ||
| 156 | Therefore, we do. | ||
| 157 | |||
| 158 | > -- | Metadata associated with an Object | ||
| 159 | > data MetaData = MetaData | ||
| 160 | > { _mRetrieved :: UTCTime -- ^ Time of creation | ||
| 161 | > , _mTags :: Set Tag -- ^ Tags such as the name of the author, | ||
| 162 | > -- the title of the work represented in | ||
| 163 | > -- the 'Object', …. | ||
| 164 | > -- We use something like @show . _mTags@ | ||
| 165 | > -- to identify an 'Object' to the user | ||
| 166 | > , _mFlags :: Set Flag -- ^ Flags such as \"Read\" or \"Spam\" | ||
| 167 | > } deriving (Show, Ord) | ||
| 168 | > -- | Tags are unicode text | ||
| 169 | > type Tag = Text | ||
| 170 | > | ||
| 171 | > -- | 'MetaData' equates as the contained tags | ||
| 172 | > instance Eq MetaData where | ||
| 173 | > (==) = (==) `on` _mTags | ||
| 174 | > | ||
| 175 | > -- | The default MetaData has no tags, no flags, and an undefined timestamp | ||
| 176 | > instance Default MetaData where | ||
| 177 | > def = MetaData { _mFlags = def | ||
| 178 | > , _mTags = def | ||
| 179 | > , _mRetrieved = undefined -- There really is no such thing as a default time | ||
| 180 | > } | ||
| 181 | |||
| 182 | Objects are no fun if they don´t contain anything of interest in the end. | ||
| 183 | |||
| 184 | Below we see a remnant of an older model of associating names to `SubObject`s. We switched | ||
| 185 | to using a `Map` for reasons of deduplication. Inserting into a `Map` carries some | ||
| 186 | guarantees that keys end up being unique. | ||
| 187 | |||
| 188 | Note below: creation of a `SubObject` is an update. It is thus expected, that `SubObject`s | ||
| 189 | created at the same time as the `Object` they are associated to contain encode an update | ||
| 190 | time that matches the `Object`s creation time. | ||
| 191 | |||
| 192 | > -- | Contents of an object | ||
| 193 | > data SubObject = SubObject | ||
| 194 | > -- { _sId :: SubObjectName | ||
| 195 | > -- ^ We associate a name to every chunk of content to determine | ||
| 196 | > -- how to present an object to the user | ||
| 197 | > { _sContent :: Lazy.ByteString | ||
| 198 | > , _sUpdates :: [UTCTime] | ||
| 199 | > -- ^ Times of witnessed updates to this 'SubObject' | ||
| 200 | > } deriving (Show) | ||
| 201 | > | ||
| 202 | > -- | No content, no witnessed updates | ||
| 203 | > instance Default SubObject where | ||
| 204 | > def = SubObject { _sContent = def | ||
| 205 | > , _sUpdates = def | ||
| 206 | > } | ||
| 207 | > | ||
| 208 | > -- | Extensionality for 'SubObject's: | ||
| 209 | > -- | ||
| 210 | > -- > (==) = (==) `on` _sContent | ||
| 211 | > instance Eq SubObject where | ||
| 212 | > (==) = (==) `on` _sContent | ||
| 213 | |||
| 214 | The distinguishing feature of Beuteltier is it´s support for `Thunk`s. They are, as the | ||
| 215 | name suggests, loosly based on the concept of lazy evaluation. They are, however, less | ||
| 216 | transparent and thus more explicit than implementations as they are used in, for example | ||
| 217 | haskell. | ||
| 218 | |||
| 219 | As far as Beuteltier is concerned `Thunk`s are executables that are expected to produce | ||
| 220 | files in the directory they are executed in in a pure manner. That is to say they do not | ||
| 221 | access external resources, where possible. A `Thunk` that downloads a video from the | ||
| 222 | internet will, of course, access the internet and can thus fail. We expect it, however, to | ||
| 223 | not to try and access the users home directory to look for e.g. credentials for | ||
| 224 | authentication it intends to use to its primary job. | ||
| 225 | |||
| 226 | When a `Thunk`s executable gets executed the files it creates (excluding itself) get | ||
| 227 | translated to `SubObject`s with the filenames (directories stripped of course) as their | ||
| 228 | `SubObjectName`s and the file contents as their… well, their contents. It is understood, | ||
| 229 | that not all possible `SubObjectName`s can be created thus (we restrict ourselves to valid | ||
| 230 | filenames on whatever system we happen to be on). We do not consider this to be a great | ||
| 231 | loss. | ||
| 232 | |||
| 233 | The advanced equality checks mentioned below are, in fact, implemented and will be explained | ||
| 234 | in more detail in a later post concerned with the file `beuteltier/Beuteltier/Types/Util.hs`. | ||
| 235 | |||
| 236 | > -- | Thunks are at runtime not yet known parts of an object | ||
| 237 | > data Thunk = Thunk | ||
| 238 | > { _tId :: ThunkName -- ^ For debugging | ||
| 239 | > , _tScript :: Lazy.ByteString | ||
| 240 | > -- ^ A Thunk is, in the end, a shell script that is expected to generate | ||
| 241 | > -- 'SubObject's | ||
| 242 | > , _tPromises :: Maybe [SubObjectName] | ||
| 243 | > -- ^ Maybe we already know what our script is going to generate? | ||
| 244 | > -- This would enable us to do some more advanced equality checks under | ||
| 245 | > -- the assumption that scripts are pure | ||
| 246 | > , _tState :: ThunkState | ||
| 247 | > } | ||
| 248 | > deriving (Show) | ||
| 249 | > | ||
| 250 | > -- | Empty id, empty script, promises nothing, and with default state | ||
| 251 | > instance Default Thunk where | ||
| 252 | > def = Thunk { _tId = def | ||
| 253 | > , _tScript = def | ||
| 254 | > , _tPromises = def | ||
| 255 | > , _tState = def | ||
| 256 | > } | ||
| 257 | > | ||
| 258 | > -- | Equality on 'Thunk's ignores '_tState' and '_tId' | ||
| 259 | > instance Eq Thunk where | ||
| 260 | > a == b = and $ [ (==) `on` _tScript | ||
| 261 | > , (==) `on` _tPromises | ||
| 262 | > ] <*> pure a <*> pure b | ||
| 263 | > | ||
| 264 | > -- | The states in which a 'Thunk' can be encountered. | ||
| 265 | > data ThunkState = NotExecuted | ||
| 266 | > | Executed [SubObjectName] ThunkResult | ||
| 267 | > deriving (Show) | ||
| 268 | > | ||
| 269 | > -- | Return the default 'ThunkResult' upon forcing | ||
| 270 | > instance Default ThunkState where | ||
| 271 | > def = NotExecuted | ||
| 272 | > | ||
| 273 | > -- | Thunks generate some data during execution | ||
| 274 | > data ThunkResult = ThunkResult | ||
| 275 | > { _rOutErr, _rOutStd :: Lazy.Text | ||
| 276 | > , _rExit :: Integer -- ^ Numerical exit code (0 usually means success) | ||
| 277 | > } | ||
| 278 | > deriving (Show) | ||
| 279 | > | ||
| 280 | > -- | Empty output, and with undefined exit code (no execution took place and we can´t | ||
| 281 | > -- encode this in a numerical exit code) | ||
| 282 | > instance Default ThunkResult where | ||
| 283 | > def = ThunkResult { _rOutErr = LT.empty, _rOutStd = LT.empty | ||
| 284 | > , _rExit = undefined | ||
| 285 | > } | ||
| 286 | > | ||
| 287 | > -- | We expect identifiers for 'SubObject's to be short, thus 'String' | ||
| 288 | > type SubObjectName = String | ||
| 289 | > -- | We expect identifiers for 'Thunk's to be short, thus 'String' | ||
| 290 | > type ThunkName = String | ||
| 291 | > | ||
| 292 | > -- | @LBS.empty@ | ||
| 293 | > instance Default (Lazy.ByteString) where | ||
| 294 | > def = LBS.empty | ||
| 295 | |||
| 296 | What good is a library for managing a backstore if it does not support search operations? | ||
| 297 | We consider the answer to be "very little" and, thus, support searches. | ||
| 298 | |||
| 299 | > type SearchQuery f = BoolExpr (Predicate f) | ||
| 300 | > -- data Predicate f = Prim (ObjectGen f -> f Bool) | ||
| 301 | > -- | Meta (MetaData -> Bool) | ||
| 302 | > type Predicate f = ObjectGen f -> f Bool | ||
| 303 | |||
| 304 | The heart of the `Beuteltier` library is the typeclass reproduced below. We expect | ||
| 305 | implementations of backstores to be `Monad`s so that we may be able to construct | ||
| 306 | complicated actions that act on the backstore in question. | ||
| 307 | Once we have constructed such an action using the three primitives `search`, `insert`, and | ||
| 308 | `delete` we additionally require a way to execute that action from within the `IO` | ||
| 309 | `Monad`. | ||
| 310 | |||
| 311 | Additional primitives, such as those for "forcing" and resetting thunks, are provided in | ||
| 312 | additional libraries and, thus, later posts. | ||
| 313 | |||
| 314 | > -- | We have the user supply the functions we use to interact with whatever backstore | ||
| 315 | > -- she uses | ||
| 316 | > class Monad functor => Beutel (functor :: * -> *) where | ||
| 317 | > data Config :: * | ||
| 318 | > run :: Config -> functor a -> IO a | ||
| 319 | > -- ^ Actually run whatever action we constructed against the backstore | ||
| 320 | > search :: SearchQuery functor -> functor [ObjectGen functor] | ||
| 321 | > -- ^ Perform a search | ||
| 322 | > insert :: Object -> functor () | ||
| 323 | > -- ^ Insert an object | ||
| 324 | > delete :: SearchQuery functor -> functor () | ||
| 325 | > -- ^ Delete the results of a search | ||
