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220 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
220 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
# Leo RFC 003: Imports Stabilization
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## Authors
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- Max Bruce
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- Collin Chin
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- Alessandro Coglio
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- Eric McCarthy
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- Jon Pavlik
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- Damir Shamanaev
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- Damon Sicore
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- Howard Wu
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## Status
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FINAL
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# Summary
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This proposal aims to improve the import management system in Leo programs to
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make program environment more reproducible, predictable and compatible. To achieve
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that we suggest few changes to Leo CLI and Manifest:
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- add a "dependencies" section to Leo Manifest and add a command to pull those dependencies;
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- allow custom names for imports to manually resolve name conflicts;
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- add "curve" and "proving system" sections to the Manifest;
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- add "include" and "exclude" parameters for "proving system" and "curve";
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- add a lock file which would store imported dependencies and their relations;
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# Motivation
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The current design of imports does not provide any guarantees on what's stored
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in program imports and published with the program to Aleo Package Manager.
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When a dependency is "added," it is stored inside imports folder, and it is possible
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to manually edit and/or add packages in this folder.
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Also, imports are stored under the package name which makes it impossible to import
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two different packages with the same name.
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Another important detail in the scope of this proposal is that in future Leo
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programs will have the ability to be run with different proving systems
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and curves, possibly creating incompatibility between programs written
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for different proving systems or curves. To make a foundation for these features,
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imports need to be managed with include/exclude lists for allowed (compatible)
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proving systems and curves.
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# Design
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## Leo Manifest - target section
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To lay the foundation for the future of the Leo ecosystem and start integrating
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information about programs compatibility we suggest adding two new fields to
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the new `[target]` section of the Leo Manifest: `proving_system` and `curve`.
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Currently, the Leo compiler only supports `Groth16` for the proving system and `Bls12_377`
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for the curve, they are meant to be default values in Leo Manifest.
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```toml
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[project]
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name = "first"
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version = "0.1.0"
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description = "The first package"
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license = "MIT"
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[target]
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curve = "Bls12_377"
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proving_system = "Groth16"
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```
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These fields are meant to be used to determine whether imported program is
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compatible to the original when support for different curves and proving systems
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is added.
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## Leo Manifest - dependencies
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Dependencies section:
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```toml
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[dependencies]
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name = { author = "author", package = "package", version = "version" }
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# alternative way of adding dependency record
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[dependencies.name]
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author = "author"
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package = "package"
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version = "1.0"
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```
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### Parameters description
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`name` field sets the name of the dependency in Leo code. That way we allow
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developer to resolve collisions in import names manually. So, for example,
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if a developer is adding `howard/silly-sudoku` package to his program, he
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might define its in-code name as `sudoku` and import it with that name:
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```ts
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import sudoku;
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```
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`package`, `author` and `version` are package name, package author and
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version respectively. They are already used as arguments in `leo add`
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command, so these fields are already understood by the Leo developers.
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## Leo CLI
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To support updated Manifest new command should be added to Leo CLI.
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```bash
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# pull imports
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leo fetch
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```
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## Imports Restructurization
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One of the goals of proposed changes is to allow importing packages with the
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same name but different authors. This has to be solved not only on the
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language level but also on the level of storing program imports.
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We suggest using set of all 3 possible program identifiers for import
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folder name: `author-package@version`. Later it can be extended to
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include hash for version, but having the inital set already solves name
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collisions.
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So, updated imports would look like:
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```
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leo-program
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├── Leo.toml
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├── README.md
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├── imports
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│ ├── author1-program@0.1.0
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│ │ └── ...
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│ ├── author2-program2@1.0.4
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│ └── ...
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├── inputs
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│ └── ...
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└── src
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└── main.leo
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```
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This change would also affect the way imports are being processed on the ASG
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level, and we'd need to add an imports map as an argument to the Leo compiler.
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The Leo Manifest's dependencies sections needs to be parsed and passed as
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a hashmap to the compiler:
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```
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first-program => author1-program@0.1.0
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second-program => author2-program2@1.0.4
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```
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## Leo.lock
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For imports map to be generated and read by the Leo binary and then by the Leo compiler,
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a lock file needs to be created. Lock file should be generated by the `leo fetch` command,
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which will pull the dependencies, process their manifests, and put the required information
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to the file in the root directory of the program called `Leo.lock`.
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Suggested structure of this file is similar to the Cargo.lock file:
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```
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[[package]]
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name = "suit-mk2"
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version = "0.2.0"
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author = "ironman"
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import_name = "suit-mk2"
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[package.dependencies]
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garbage = "ironman-suit@0.1.0"
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[[package]]
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name = "suit"
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version = "0.1.0"
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author = "ironman"
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import_name = "garbage"
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```
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In the example above, you can see that all program dependencies are defined as an
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array called `package`. Each of the dependencies contains main information about
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it, including the `import_name` field which is the imported package's name in
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the Leo program. Also, it stores relationships between these dependencies in the
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field `dependencies`.
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The format described here allows the Leo binary to form an imports map which can be
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passed to the compiler.
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It is important to note that Leo.lock file is created only when a package has dependencies.
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For programs with no dependencies, a lock file is not required and not created.
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## Recursive Dependencies
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This improvement introduces recursive dependencies. To solve this case preemptively
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Leo CLI needs to check the dependency tree and throw an error when a recursive dependency
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is met. We suggest implementing simple dependency tree checking while fetching
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imports - if imported dependency is met on a higher level - abort the execution.
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Later this solution can be improved by building a lock file containing all the
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information on program dependencies, and the file itself will have enough data
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to track and prevent recursion.
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# Drawbacks
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This change might require the update of already published programs on Aleo PM due to
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Leo Manifest change. However it is possible to implement it in a backward-compatible
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way.
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It also introduces the danger of having recursive dependencies, this problem is addressed in the Design section above.
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# Effect on Ecosystem
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Proposed improvement provides safety inside Leo programs and should not affect
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ecosystem except for the tools which use Leo directly (such as Aleo Studio).
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It is possible that some of the proposed features will open new features on Aleo PM.
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# Alternatives
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Another approach to the stated cases is to keep everything as we have now but change
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the way programs are imported and stored and make names unique. Also, current
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implementation provides some guarantees on import stablitity and consistency.
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