2015-02-18 06:03:21 +03:00
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arvo
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====
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2015-04-29 00:03:11 +03:00
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Our operating system.
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2015-02-18 06:03:21 +03:00
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arvo is composed of modules called vanes:
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<list dataPreview="true"></list>
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<hr></hr>
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At a high level `%arvo` takes a mess of unix io events and turns them
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into something clean and structured for the programmer.
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`%arvo` is designed to avoid the usual state of complex event networks:
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event spaghetti. We keep track of every event's cause so that we have a
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clear causal chain for every computation. At the bottom of every chain
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is a unix io event, such as a network request, terminal input, file
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sync, or timer event. We push every step in the path the request takes
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onto the chain until we get to the terminal cause of the computation.
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Then we use this causal stack to route results back to the caller.
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`++ducts`
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---------
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The `%arvo` causal stack is called a `++duct`. This is represented
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simply as a list of paths, where each path represents a step in the
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causal chain. The first element in the path is the first letter of
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whichever vane handled that step in the computation, or the empty span
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for unix.
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Here's a duct that was recently observed in the wild:
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~[
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/g/a/~zod/4_shell_terminal/u/time
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/g/a/~zod/shell_terminal/u/child/4/main
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/g/a/~zod/terminal/u/txt
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/d/term-mess
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//term/1
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]
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This is the duct the timer vane receives when "timer" sample app asks
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the timer vane to set a timer. This is also the duct over which the
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response is produced at the specified time. Unix sent a terminal
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keystroke event (enter), and arvo routed it to %dill(our terminal),
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which passed it on to the %gall app terminal, which sent it to shell,
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its child, which created a new child (with process id 4), which on
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startup asked the timer vane to set a timer.
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The timer vane saves this duct, so that when the specified time arrives
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and unix sends a wakeup event to the timer vane, it can produce the
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response on the same duct. This response is routed to the place we
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popped off the top of the duct, i.e. the time app. This app produces the
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text "ding", which falls down to the shell, which drops it through to
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the terminal. Terminal drops this down to dill, which converts it into
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an effect that unix will recognize as a request to print "ding" to the
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screen. When dill produces this, the last path in the duct has an
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initial element of the empty span, so this is routed to unix, which
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applies the effects.
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This is a call stack, with a crucial feature: the stack is a first-class
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citizen. You can respond over a duct zero, one, or many times. You can
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save ducts for later use. There are definitely parallels to Scheme-style
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continuations, but simpler and with more structure.
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Making Moves
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------------
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If ducts are a call stack, then how do we make calls and produce
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results? Arvo processes "moves" which are a combination of message data
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and metadata. There are two types of moves. A `%pass` move is analogous
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to a call:
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[duct %pass return-path=path vane-name=@tD data=card]
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Arvo pushes the return path (preceded by the first letter of the vane
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name) onto the duct and sends the given data, a card, to the vane we
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specified. Any response will come along the same duct with the path
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`return-path`.
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A `%give` move is analogous to a return:
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[duct %give data=card]
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Arvo pops the top path off the duct and sends the given card back to the
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caller.
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Vanes
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-----
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As shown above, we use arvo proper to route and control the flow of
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moves. However, arvo proper is rarely directly responsible for
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processing the event data that directly causes the desired outcome of a
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move. This event data is contained within a card, which is simply a
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`(pair term noun)`. Instead, arvo proper passes the card off to one of
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its vanes, which each present an interface to clients for a particular
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well-defined, stable, and general-purpose piece of functionality.
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As of this writing, we have seven vanes, which each provide the
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following services:
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- `%ames` name of both our network and the vane that communicates over
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it
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- `%clay` version-controlled, referentially- transparent, and global
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filesystem
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- `%dill` terminal driver. Unix sends keyboard events to `%dill` from
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either the console or telnet, and `%dill` produces terminal output.
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- `%eyre` http server. Unix sends http messages to `%eyre`, and
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`%eyre` produces http messages in response
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- `%ford` handles resources and publishing
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- `%gall` manages our userspace applications.. `%gall` keeps state and
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manages subscribers
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- `%time` a simple timer
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Cards
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-----
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Cards are the vane-specific portion of a move. Each vane defines a
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protocol for interacting with other vanes (via arvo) by defining four
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types of cards: kisses, gifts, notes, and signs.
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When one vane is `%pass`ed a card in its `++kiss`, arvo activates the
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`++call` gate with the card as its argument. To produce a result, the
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vane `%give`s one of the cards defined in its `++gift`. If the vane
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needs to request something of another vane, it `%pass`es it a `++note`
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card. When that other vane returns a result, arvo activates the `++take`
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gate of the initial vane with one of the cards defined in its `++sign`.
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In other words, there are only four ways of seeing a move: (1) as a
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request seen by the caller, which is a ++note. (2) that same request as
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seen by the callee, a `++kiss`. (3) the response to that first request
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as seen by the callee, a `++gift`. (4) the response to the first request
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as seen by the caller, a `++sign`.
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When a `++kiss` card is passed to a vane, arvo calls its `++call` gate,
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passing it both the card and its duct. This gate must be defined in
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every vane. It produces two things in the following order: a list of
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moves and a possibly-modified copy of its context. The moves are used to
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interact with other vanes, while the new context allows the vane to save
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its state. The next time arvo activates the vane it will have this
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context as its subject.
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This overview has detailed how to pass a card to a particular vane. To
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see the cards each vane can be `%pass`ed as a `++kiss` or return as a
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`++gift` (as well as the semantics tied to them), each vane's public
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interface is explained in detail in its respective overview.
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