close#5911
In interactive mode, perform writing IR caches in the background jobs queue. Background jobs execution is delayed until the first execution is complete.
This change downgrades hashing algorithm used in caching IR and library bindings to SHA-1. It is sufficient and significantly faster for the purpose of simple checksum we use it for.
Additionally, don't calculate the digest for serialized bytes - if we get the expected object type then we are confident about the integrity.
Don't initialize Jackson's ObjectMapper for every metadata serialization/de-serialization. Initialization is very costly.
Avoid unnecessary conversions between Scala and Java. Those back-and-forth `asScala` and `asJava` are pretty expensive.
Finally fix an SBT warning when generating library cache.
Closes https://github.com/enso-org/enso/issues/5763
# Important Notes
The change cuts roughly 0.8-1s from the overall startup.
This change will certainly lead to invalidation of existing caches. It is advised to simply start with a clean slate.
This change adds serialization and deserialization of library bindings.
In order to be functional, one needs to first generate IR and
serialize bindings using `--compiled <path-to-library>` command. The bindings
will be stored under the library with `.bindings` suffix.
Bindings are being generated during `buildEngineDistribution` task, thus not
requiring any extra steps.
When resolving import/exports the compiler will first try to load
module's bindings from cache. If successful, it will not schedule its
imports/exports for immediate compilation, as we always did, but use the
bindings info to infer the dependent modules.
The current change does not make any optimizations when it comes to
compiling the modules, yet. It only delays the actual
compilation/loading IR from cache so that it can be done in bulk.
Further optimizations will come from this opportunity such as parallel
loading of caches or lazily inferring only the necessary modules.
Part of https://github.com/enso-org/enso/issues/5568 work.
In cloud we want to allow users to create new project from the template. List of templates is a bit outdated and doesn't contain all from the https://github.com/enso-org/project-templates. This PR simply adds missing ones
This PR adds a possibility to generate native-image for engine-runner.
Note that due to on-demand loading of stdlib, programs that make use of it are currently not yet supported
(that will be resolved at a later point).
The purpose of this PR is only to make sure that we can generate a bare minimum runner because due to lack TruffleBoundaries or misconfiguration in reflection config, this can get broken very easily.
To generate a native image simply execute:
```
sbt> engine-runner-native/buildNativeImage
... (wait a few minutes)
```
The executable is called `runner` and can be tested via a simple test that is in the resources. To illustrate the benefits
see the timings difference between the non-native and native one:
```
>time built-distribution/enso-engine-0.0.0-dev-linux-amd64/enso-0.0.0-dev/bin/enso --no-ir-caches --in-project test/Tests/ --run engine/runner-native/src/test/resources/Factorial.enso 6
720
real 0m4.503s
user 0m9.248s
sys 0m1.494s
> time ./runner --run engine/runner-native/src/test/resources/Factorial.enso 6
720
real 0m0.176s
user 0m0.042s
sys 0m0.038s
```
# Important Notes
Notice that due to a [bug in GraalVM](https://github.com/oracle/graal/issues/4200), which is already fixed in 22.x, and us still being on 21.x for the time being, I had to add a workaround to our sbt build to build a different fat jar for native image. To workaround it I had to exclude sqlite jar. Hence native image task is on `engine-runner-native` and not on `engine-runner`.
Will need to add the above command to CI.
This change allows for importing modules using a qualified name and deals with any conflicts on the way.
Given a module C defined at `A/B/C.enso` with
```
type C
type C a
```
it is now possible to import it as
```
import project.A
...
val x = A.B.C 10
```
Given a module located at `A/B/C/D.enso`, we will generate
intermediate, synthetic, modules that only import and export the successor module along the path.
For example, the contents of a synthetic module B will look like
```
import <namespace>.<pkg-name>.A.B.C
export <namespace>.<pkg-name>.A.B.C
```
If module B is defined already by the developer, the compiler will _inject_ the above statements to the IR.
Also removed the last elements of some lowercase name resolution that managed to survive recent
changes (`Meta.Enso_Project` would now be ambiguous with `enso_project` method).
Finally, added a pass that detects shadowing of the synthetic module by the type defined along the path.
We print a warning in such a situation.
Related to https://www.pivotaltracker.com/n/projects/2539304
# Important Notes
There was an additional request to fix the annoying problem with `from` imports that would always bring
the module into the scope. The changes in stdlib demonstrate how it is now possible to avoid the workaround of
```
from X.Y.Z as Z_Module import A, B
```
(i.e. `as Z_Module` part is almost always unnecessary).
Result of automatic formatting with `scalafmtAll` and `javafmtAll`.
Prerequisite for https://github.com/enso-org/enso/pull/3394
### Important Notes
This touches a lot of files and might conflict with existing PRs that are in progress. If that's the case, just run
`scalafmtAll` and `javafmtAll` after merge and everything should be in order since formatters should be deterministic.
Changelog:
- add: component groups to package descriptions
- add: `executionContext/getComponentGroups` method that returns component groups of libraries that are currently loaded
- doc: cleanup unimplemented undo/redo commands
- refactor: internal component groups datatype
Changelog:
- update: execution logic to use qualified names
- update: populate runtime updates with qualified names
- update: suggestions builder to use qualified names
Names of fields `author` and `maintainer` in the `package.yaml` file
have been changed to `authors` and `maintainers` respectively, and their
format has been modified.
Projects created in older versions may not be compatible.