`Bump` library uses parser combinators behind the scenes which are known to be good at expressing grammars but are not performance-oriented.
This change ditches the dependency in favour of an existing Java implementation. `jsemver` implements the full specification, which is probably an overkill in our case, but proved to be an almost drop-in replacement for the previous library.
Closes#8692
# Important Notes
Peformance improvements:
- roughly 50ms compared to the previous approach (from 80ms to 20-40ms)
I don't see any time spent in the new implementation during startup so it could be potentially aggressively inlined.
Further more, we could use a facade and offer our own strip down version of semver.
There are two projects transitively required by `runtime`, that have akka dependencies:
- `downloader`
- `connected-lock-manager`
This PR replaces the `akka-http` dependency in `downloader` by HttpClient from JDK, and splits `connected-lock-manager` into two projects such that there are no akka classes in `runtime.jar`.
# Important Notes
- Simplify the `downloader` project - remove akka.
- Add HTTP tests to the `downloader` project that uses our `http-test-helper` that is normally used for stdlib tests.
- It required few tweaks so that we can embed that server in a unit test.
- Split `connected-lock-manager` project into two projects - remove akka from `runtime`.
- **Native image build fixes and quality of life improvements:**
- Output of `native-image` is captured 743e167aa4
- The output will no longer be intertwined with the output from other commands on the CI.
- Arguments to the `native-image` are passed via an argument file, not via command line - ba0a69de6e
- This resolves an issue on Windows with "Command line too long", for example in https://github.com/enso-org/enso/actions/runs/7934447148/job/21665456738?pr=8953#step:8:2269
Upgrade to GraalVM JDK 21.
```
> java -version
openjdk version "21" 2023-09-19
OpenJDK Runtime Environment GraalVM CE 21+35.1 (build 21+35-jvmci-23.1-b15)
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM GraalVM CE 21+35.1 (build 21+35-jvmci-23.1-b15, mixed mode, sharing)
```
With SDKMan, download with `sdk install java 21-graalce`.
# Important Notes
- After this PR, one can theoretically run enso with any JRE with version at least 21.
- Removed `sbt bootstrap` hack and all the other build time related hacks related to the handling of GraalVM distribution.
- `project-manager` remains backward compatible - it can open older engines with runtimes. New engines now do no longer require a separate runtime to be downloaded.
- sbt does not support compilation of `module-info.java` files in mixed projects - https://github.com/sbt/sbt/issues/3368
- Which means that we can have `module-info.java` files only for Java-only projects.
- Anyway, we need just a single `module-info.class` in the resulting `runtime.jar` fat jar.
- `runtime.jar` is assembled in `runtime-with-instruments` with a custom merge strategy (`sbt-assembly` plugin). Caching is disabled for custom merge strategies, which means that re-assembly of `runtime.jar` will be more frequent.
- Engine distribution contains multiple JAR archives (modules) in `component` directory, along with `runner/runner.jar` that is hidden inside a nested directory.
- The new entry point to the engine runner is [EngineRunnerBootLoader](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/pull/7991/files#diff-9ab172d0566c18456472aeb95c4345f47e2db3965e77e29c11694d3a9333a2aa) that contains a custom ClassLoader - to make sure that everything that does not have to be loaded from a module is loaded from `runner.jar`, which is not a module.
- The new command line for launching the engine runner is in [distribution/bin/enso](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/pull/7991/files#diff-0b66983403b2c329febc7381cd23d45871d4d555ce98dd040d4d1e879c8f3725)
- [Newest version of Frgaal](https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/org/frgaal/compiler/20.0.1/) (20.0.1) does not recognize `--source 21` option, only `--source 20`.
* Reduce extra output in compilation and tests
I couldn't stand the amount of extra output that we got when compiling
a clean project and when executing regular tests. We should strive to
keep output clean and not print anything additional to stdout/stderr.
* Getting rid of explicit setup by service loading
In order for SL4J to use service loading correctly had to upgrade to
latest slf4j. Unfortunately `TestLogProvider` which essentially
delegates to `logback` provider will lead to spurious ambiguous warnings
on multiple providers. In order to dictate which one to use and
therefore eliminate the warnings we can use the `slf4j.provider` env
var, which is only available in slf4j 2.x.
Now, there is no need to explicitly call `LoggerSetup.get().setup()` as
that is being called during service setup.
* legal review
* linter
* Ensure ConsoleHandler uses the default level
ConsoleHandler's constructor uses `Level.INFO` which is unnecessary for
tests.
* report warnings
Implement new Enso documentation parser; remove old Scala Enso parser.
Performance: Total time parsing documentation is now ~2ms.
# Important Notes
- Doc parsing is now done only in the frontend.
- Some engine tests had never been switched to the new parser. We should investigate tests that don't pass after the switch: #5894.
- The option to run the old searcher has been removed, as it is obsolete and was already broken before this (see #5909).
- Some interfaces used only by the old searcher have been removed.
* Initial integration with Frgaal in sbt
Half-working since it chokes on generated classes from annotation
processor.
* Replace AutoService with ServiceProvider
For reasons unknown AutoService would fail to initialize and fail to
generate required builtin method classes.
Hidden error message is not particularly revealing on the reason for
that:
```
[error] error: Bad service configuration file, or exception thrown while constructing Processor object: javax.annotation.processing.Processor: Provider com.google.auto.service.processor.AutoServiceProcessor could not be instantiated
```
The sample records is only to demonstrate that we can now use newer Java
features.
* Cleanup + fix benchmark compilation
Bench requires jmh classes which are not available because we obviously
had to limit `java.base` modules to get Frgaal to work nicely.
For now, we default to good ol' javac for Benchmarks.
Limiting Frgaal to runtime for now, if it plays nicely, we can expand it
to other projects.
* Update CHANGELOG
* Remove dummy record class
* Update licenses
* New line
* PR review
* Update legal review
Co-authored-by: Radosław Waśko <radoslaw.wasko@enso.org>