Previously we were dropping events that used old
wires that lacked a rift in them. This seems a
bad behavior because we don't want to destroy a
flow that has not been processed by both ends.
Note: pending a fix to test-old-ames-wire
This converts the blob store from having deltas, directs, and
tombstones, to just having direct pages. This simplifies a lot of code,
since we don't have to constantly ensure that deltas always have their
parent available.
This removes the hardcoded text diff logic from clay, which was
previously required for bootstrapping.
Over the wire, we handle both old and new requests and responses
transparently, so communication is normal in both directions across
ships which do or do not have this change.
We had trie operations independently implemented in +de in arvo,
+an:cloy in zuse, +zu in clay, lib/trie, and app/spider. This unifies
them all into +de in arvo, aggregating the used operations.
This crashed at runtime when `a` is null because it tried to instantiate
`meg`, and that means bunting its argument, and that calls `node`, where
the assert failed.
Wet gates use the bunt of their formal argument, so we use that.
This fixes a space leak where the entire ford/clay core would be
included in the ford cache. Heavily reduces memory usage by clay,
reducing total usage from 100-200MB to around 10MB.
Instead of reporting a single memory size for built files, marks and
conversions, we now report memory size per path, mark name and mark
pair, respectively.
Too often when dealing with big types the compiler traces and other such
outputs become hard to read. Wrapping a type as $+(shorthand big-type)
will now print #shorthand in place of the type.
instead make it a rolling 128-bit integer. 128 bits is the same size as
the +sham space, so is one natural choice for "big enough to never have
to think about this." 64, 32, 16, even 8 bits would probably be fine.
Threads should eventually take and produce $cage instead of $vase. Since
%khan is likely to be used by third parties, we write to the eventual
intended API. We ignore the mark on the input $cage (it is safe to
always specify %noun), and we always use %noun as the output mark.
%fyrd now makes more sense. It was previously discarding the type of the
output %arow and re-encoding the raw noun as a vase of the output mark;
it is now performing mark conversion from the mark of the output $cage
to the originally requested output mark.
tid was accidentally getting set to the name of the output mark. As we
don't currently support cancelling threads, there is no reason to
maintain the originally-intended correspondence between tid and conn
request-id.
Take the opportunity to clean up indentation somewhat.
Also strips out `$` from khan top-level comment.
There are arguments for keeping $crag in lull, and on the other side for
moving $cast to arvo. This seemed like the most reasonable approach.
%fyrd is now implemented in terms of %fard, and likewise %avow in terms
of %arow. State is tracked via wire rather than in a global map.
Unit tests adjusted to match.
These take and produce vases, and assign random tids (rather than
deducing them from the input duct.)
Since %fard does not require mark conversion, we make the mark/beak on
$thread-state optional (and use this to decide whether to send %avow or
%arow.) Provide a state adapter since it's possible that people have
been experimenting with this vane.
This makes the negative case of %avow/%arow kind of clunky, since there
is no content difference, but the following does not seem possible
within the Hoon type system:
=/ gif
?~ p.tad
%arow %avow
[hen %give gif %| p.cag tang]~
- use desk parameter instead of %base everywhere
- formatting clean up
- make |story-remove take a case instead of an aeon
- make desk param optional for story-set and story-log
+sign:schnorr crashes on `=(0 sk)`, so the bounds checking code is not
exercised for sk=0. It also crashes on `(gte sk n.domain.c)`, which is
redundant with the size check on sk, so we remove that.
- only store metadata in the persistent map. just enough to support
(eventual) thread cancellation and output mark lookup.
- try to delete thread state at other failure points not covered by
%kick.
- reflect back the passed output mark rather than form.dais. not sure
about this one yet.
This change greatly improves the ergonomics of working with channel JSON
in statically typed languages, as the polymorphism is moved out of the
actual diff and into the event framing.
de-xml parser fails when xml content node contains doublequotes (`doq` rule), this PR proposes to remove this restriction as high-level javascript APIs that operate on DOM don't entitize/encode doublequotes by default.
+wake had accumulated several layers of abstractions which were later
rendered unnecessary. This removes those abstractions and should have
no semantic effect.
This adds support for tombstoned files to clay. It does not include any
way to actually tombstone them; that is left for later.
This allows tombstoning at the level of a file. Precisely, this expands
+blob:clay by adding a %dead case:
+$ blob :: fs blob
$% [%delta p=lobe q=[p=mark q=lobe] r=page] :: delta on q
[%direct p=lobe q=page] :: immediate
[%dead p=lobe ~] :: tombstone
== ::
Thus, we maintain the invariant that every lobe corresponds to a blob,
but now a blob may be an explicit tombstone.
Details:
- This has not been tested at all, except that it compiles and boots.
- This does not have a state adapter from master. The only state change
is the definition of +cach.
- Additionally, out-of-date ships may unexpectedly receive a %dead blob
from a foreign clay which would interfere with their ability to download
that desk. No code changes necessary, but sponsors should avoid
tombstoning files in %base for a while so their children can get the
update.
- A merge will only fail if the tombstoned file conflicts with another
change. Note that as written, merging from a past desk *can* bring a
tombstoned file to the head of a desk. Possibly this shouldn't be
allowed.
This also includes a couple refactors that were made possible by ford
fusion (since everything is synchronous now) but never got done. In
both cases we get to remove a monad, which simplifies the code
considerably.
- refactor +merge's error handling to use !!/mule instead of threading
through errors
- refactor all +read-* functions and related parts of +try-fill-sub to
eagerly convert lobes to cages.
We also add support reading %a/b/c/e/f/r/x from past and foreign desks,
when possible. Apologies that all of these are in one commit, it was
all a single chunk of work.
This is a draft until we have a way to tombstone. I suspect we'll want
to have a mechanism of keeping track of gc roots and trace to remove,
but this PR doesn't suggest any particular strategy.
Jael needs to be reconfigured to listen to the new aagent for azimuth
events, and the old app needs to be shut down. We do this in
/app/azimuth's +on-init.
Additionally, we make sure that jael doesn't crash when it (as expected)
loses its subscription to the old agent.
Render `@p` shorthands correctly for short moon names. Fixes#5318.
This also changes galaxy and star moons to render as `~parent^` instead of some
longer variation.
When you loaded an app with an error, then fixed the error, it would
create the main gall %mult subscription at a time in the past. Then,
clay would never fill the subscription since it couldn't get the old %a
entries for the apps.
This fixes the issue in two ways: first, don't subscribe in the past.
Second, if clay can't get the old versions, just fire the subscription
anyway.
Previously, if trying to bind to an endpoint that was already bound to,
eyre would reject it. This doesn't play very nicely in a softdist world
where uninstalled apps might not get a chance to clean up, and apps
might re-bind simply for being re-installed.
Here we change eyre to overwrite an existing binding if it conflicts
with the new one to be added.
And reject paths ending in empty segments.
The following cases were being parsed incorrectly:
- `/` represents the empty path, `~`. This was being parsed into `[~. ~]`
- `/x/` is not valid. This was being parsed into `[~.x ~. ~]`
This happens because `urs:ab` has no problem parsing the empty string.
For some supported cases, like `//x` (`[~. ~.x ~]`), this is actually desired
behavior, but it results in trailing empty segments for paths ending in `/`.
Here we apply a `+sear` on top of the existing parser, that transform the `/`
case to produce `~`, and ensures the absence of a trailing empty segment in
all other cases.
Note that we change `(more fas urs:ab)` to `(most fas urs:ab)`. Since `urs:ab`
parses the empty string, this doesn't actually make a difference, but it does
make it more obvious that the `+rear` call will never crash.
Alternative approaches I attempted all resulted in much more complicated
parser, so the dumb `+sear` seems preferable.
We do eat the performance cost of an additional list traversal (in `+rear`)
with this change, but that is probably not the end of the world.
Fixes#1501.
This reverts d96d50199 because +ad is incredibly opaque, and +ergo's
sitting right there anyway. It looks like it was intended to abstract
over +endo, +elbo, and +ergo, but only +ergo was every implemented. I
don't doubt the others could be as well, but then they would be just as
inscrutable.