Commit Graph

23 Commits (087ef4515341bd241bb9e56e9838a5756dbebdb5)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mike Gerwitz e3094e0bad tamer: asg::graph::visit::topo: Introduce topological sort
This is an initial implementation that does not yet produce errors on
cycles.  Documentation is not yet complete.

The implementation is fairly basic, and similar to Petgraph's DFS.

A terminology note: the DFS will be ontology-aware (or at least aware of
edge metadata) to avoid traversing edges that would introduce cycles in
situations where they are permitted, which effectively performs a
topological sort on an implicitly _filtered_ graph.

This will end up replacing ld::xmle::lower::sort.

DEV-13162
2023-04-26 09:51:45 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 055ff4a9d9 tamer: Remove graphml target
This was originally created to populate Neo4J for querying, but it has not
been utilized.  It's become a maintenance burden as I try to change the API
of and encapsulate the graph, which is important for upholding its
invariants.

This feature, or one like it, will return in the future.  I have other
related plans; we'll see if they materialize.

The graph can't be encapsulated fully just yet because of the linker; those
commits will come in the following days.

DEV-13597
2023-01-26 14:45:17 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 9276d00456 tamer: Cargo.toml: Remove lazy_static
This is not longer needed after the previous commit, with static spans
having been replaced by `const` spans.

This used to be required before Rust acquired better const features, and
before I had preinterned symbols.

DEV-7145
2022-06-24 14:18:04 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 5b1f0ab6c6 tamer: diagnostic: Column resolution
Determining the column number is not as simple as performing byte
arithmetic, because certain characters have different widths.  Even if we
only accepted ASCII, control characters aren't visible to the user.

This uses the unicode-width crate as an alternative to POSIX wcwidth, to
determine (hopefully) the number of fixed-width cells that a unicode
character will take up on a terminal.  For example, control characters are
zero-width, while an emoji is likely double-width.  See test cases for more
information on that.

There is also the unicode-segmentation crate, which can handle extended
grapheme clusters and such, but (a) we'll be outputting the line to the
terminal and (b) there's no guarantee that the user's editor displays
grapheme clusters as a single column.  LSP measures in UTF-16,
apparently.  I use both Emacs and Vim from a terminal, so unicode-width
applies to me.  There's too much variation to try to solve that right now.

The columns can be considered a visual span---this gives us enough
information to draw line annotations, which will happen soon.

Here are some useful links:

  - https://hsivonen.fi/string-length/
  - https://unicode.org/reports/tr29/
  - https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rowan/issues/17
  - https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/gpw2ra/how_is_the_rust_compiler_able_to_tell_the_visible/

DEV-10935
2022-04-21 14:27:36 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 18cb5e7b39 tamer: Update dependencies
Petgraph was previously held back due to petgraph-graphml.  I'd like to
transition away from that at some point, given that it's tied to petgraph
and also pulls in xmlns, on top of quick-xml and our XIR, but that can come
down the line.
2022-03-11 10:51:51 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz fd1b1527d6 tamer: Remove tests invoking cargo and associated libs
There are a number of reasons for this, where the benefits do not make up
for the losses.

First: this is actually invoking cargo.  Not only is this not necessary, but
it's not desirable: cargo by default hits the network and does all sorts of
other stuff, when all we want to do is invoke the executable.  So the tests
aren't really testing the right thing in that sense.  See the previous
commit for more information.

The way it invokes cargo is different than the way the Makefile invokes
cargo, so on my system, it's actually invoking a _different cargo_!  This is
causing problems, in particular with lock files, which causes my tests to
fail.

Importantly, this also removes a _lot_ of dependencies, which removes a lot
of supplier chain risk and a lot of code to audit.  This provides
significant security benefits, especially given that what was being tested
was rather small, and could be done in a shell script.

TAMER will receive significant system testing later on.  But for now, none
of this was worth it.

Further audits of dependencies will come later on.  I've always been fairly
insistent on keeping the dependency graph small and auditable, but recent
supply chain attacks have given me a better way to rationalize the security
risk.  Further, I'm the only one on this project right now.
2021-12-02 12:38:06 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz b1c0783c75 tamer: xir::XirString: WIP implementation (likely going away)
I'm not fond of this implementation, which is why it's not fully
completed.  I wanted to commit this for future reference, and take the
opportunity to explain why I don't like it.

First: this task started as an idea to implement a third variant to
AttrValue and friends that indicates that a value is fixed, in the sense of
a fixed-point function: escaped or unescaped, its value is the same.  This
would allow us to skip wasteful escape/unescape operations.

In doing so, it became obvious that there's no need to leak this information
through the API, and indeed, no part of the system should care.  When we
read XML, it should be unescaped, and when we write, it should be
escaped.  The reason that this didn't quite happen to begin with was an
optimization: I'll be creating an echo writer in place of the current
filesystem-based copy in tamec shortly, and this would allow streaming XIR
directly from the reader to the writer without any unescaping or
re-escaping.

When we unescape, we know the value that it came from, so we could simply
store both symbols---they're 32-bit, so it results in a nicely compressed
64-bit value, so it's essentially cost-free, as long as we accept the
expense of internment.  This is `XirString`.  Then, when we want to escape
or unescape, we first check to see whether a symbol already exists and, if
so, use it.

While this works well for echoing streams, it won't work all that well in
practice: the unescaped SymbolId will be taken and the XirString discarded,
since nothing after XIR should be coupled with it.  Then, when we later
construct a XIR stream for writting, XirString will no longer be available
and our previously known escape is lost, so the writer will have to
re-escape.

Further, if we look at XirString's generic for the XirStringEscaper---it
uses phantom, which hints that maybe it's not in the best place.  Indeed,
I've already acknowledged that only a reader unescapes and only a writer
escapes, and that the rest of the system works with normal (unescaped)
values, so only readers and writers should be part of this process.  I also
already acknowledged that XirString would be lost and only the unescaped
SymbolId would be used.

So what's the point of XirString, then, if it won't be a useful optimization
beyond the temporary echo writer?

Instead, we can take the XirStringWriter and implement two caches on that:
mapping SymbolId from escaped->unescaped and vice-versa.  These can be
simple vectors, since SymbolId is a 32-bit value we will not have much
wasted space for symbols that never get read or written.  We could even
optimize for preinterned symbols using markers, though I'll probably not do
so, and I'll explain why later.

If we do _that_, we get even _better_ optimizations through caching that
_will_ apply in the general case (so, not just for echo), and we're able to
ditch XirString entirely and simply use a SymbolId.  This makes for a much
more friendly API that isn't leaking implementation details, though it
_does_ put an onus on the caller to pass the encoder to both the reader and
the writer, _if_ it wants to take advantage of a cache.  But that burden is
not significant (and is, again, optional if we don't want it).

So, that'll be the next step.
2021-11-10 12:22:10 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 6864fbc1cd tamer: Start of XIR-based xmle writer
This has been a long time coming, and has been repeatedly stashed as other
parts of the system have evolved to support it.  The introduction of the XIR
tree was to write tests for this (which are sloppy atm).

This currently writes out the `xmle` header and _most_ of the `l:dep`
section; it's missing the object-type-specific attributes.  There is,
relatively speaking, not much more work to do here.

The feature flag `wip-xir-xmle-writer` was introduced to toggle this system
in place of `XmleWriter`.  Initial benchmarks show that it will be
competitive with the quick-xml-based writer, but remember that is not the
goal: the purpose of this is to test XIR in a production system before we
continue to implement it for a frontend, and to refactor so that we do not
have multiple implementations writing XML files (once we echo the source XML
files).

I'm excited to get this done with so that I can move on.  This has been
rather exhausting.
2021-09-28 14:52:53 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 3bb6f0cf35 tamer: ir::asg::ident: AsRef impls for SymbolId types
This commit will make more sense once the broader context is committed, but
it's needed for lowering from `Sections` into a XIR stream.

This will also change once we pre-allocate symbols, like rustc, when the
interner is initialized.

This is my first use of the `paste` crate, which is used to generate
identifiers.  So this is partly an experiment, and it seems much better than
having to write a proc macro, at least at this point in time.  If this code
stays around, it'll probably be generalized further and used elsewhere, but
I'd prefer not to go this route long-term.
2021-09-20 16:50:40 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz fc235b7ecc tamer: memchr benches
This adds benchmarking for the memchr crate.  It is used primarily by
quick-xml at the moment, but the question is whether to rely on it for
certain operations for XIR.

The benchmarking on an Intel Xeon system shows that memchr and Rust's
contains() perform very similarly on small inputs, matching against a single
character, and so Rust's built-in should be preferred in that case so that
we're using APIs that are familiar to most people.

When larger inputs are compared against, there's a greater benefit (a little
under ~2x).

When comparing against two characters, they are again very close.  But look
at when we compare two characters against _multiple_ inputs:

  running 24 tests
  test large_str:1️⃣:memchr_early_match                 ... bench:       4,938 ns/iter (+/- 124)
  test large_str:1️⃣:memchr_late_match                  ... bench:      81,807 ns/iter (+/- 1,153)
  test large_str:1️⃣:memchr_non_match                   ... bench:      82,074 ns/iter (+/- 1,062)
  test large_str:1️⃣:rust_contains_one_byte_early_match ... bench:       9,425 ns/iter (+/- 167)
  test large_str:1️⃣:rust_contains_one_byte_late_match  ... bench:     123,685 ns/iter (+/- 3,728)
  test large_str:1️⃣:rust_contains_one_byte_non_match   ... bench:     123,117 ns/iter (+/- 2,200)
  test large_str:1️⃣:rust_contains_one_char_early_match ... bench:       9,561 ns/iter (+/- 507)
  test large_str:1️⃣:rust_contains_one_char_late_match  ... bench:     123,929 ns/iter (+/- 2,377)
  test large_str:1️⃣:rust_contains_one_char_non_match   ... bench:     122,989 ns/iter (+/- 2,788)
  test large_str:2️⃣:memchr2_early_match                ... bench:       5,704 ns/iter (+/- 91)
  test large_str:2️⃣:memchr2_late_match                 ... bench:      89,194 ns/iter (+/- 8,546)
  test large_str:2️⃣:memchr2_non_match                  ... bench:      85,649 ns/iter (+/- 3,879)
  test large_str:2️⃣:rust_contains_two_char_early_match ... bench:      66,785 ns/iter (+/- 3,385)
  test large_str:2️⃣:rust_contains_two_char_late_match  ... bench:   2,148,064 ns/iter (+/- 21,812)
  test large_str:2️⃣:rust_contains_two_char_non_match   ... bench:   2,322,082 ns/iter (+/- 22,947)
  test small_str:1️⃣:memchr_mid_match                   ... bench:       4,737 ns/iter (+/- 842)
  test small_str:1️⃣:memchr_non_match                   ... bench:       5,160 ns/iter (+/- 62)
  test small_str:1️⃣:rust_contains_one_byte_non_match   ... bench:       3,930 ns/iter (+/- 35)
  test small_str:1️⃣:rust_contains_one_char_mid_match   ... bench:       3,677 ns/iter (+/- 618)
  test small_str:1️⃣:rust_contains_one_char_non_match   ... bench:       5,415 ns/iter (+/- 221)
  test small_str:2️⃣:memchr2_mid_match                  ... bench:       5,488 ns/iter (+/- 888)
  test small_str:2️⃣:memchr2_non_match                  ... bench:       6,788 ns/iter (+/- 134)
  test small_str:2️⃣:rust_contains_two_char_mid_match   ... bench:       6,203 ns/iter (+/- 170)
  test small_str:2️⃣:rust_contains_two_char_non_match   ... bench:       7,853 ns/iter (+/- 713)

Yikes.

With that said, we won't be comparing against such large inputs
short-term.  The larger strings (fragments) are copied verbatim, and not
compared against---but they _were_ prior to the previous commit that stopped
unencoding and re-encoding.

So: Rust built-ins for inputs that are expected to be small.
2021-08-18 14:23:03 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 0fc8a1a4df tamer: Remove default SymbolIndex (et al) index type
Oh boy.  What a mess of a change.

This demonstrates some significant issues we have with Symbol.  I had
originally modelled the system a bit after Rustc's, but deviated in certain
regards:

  1. This has a confurable base type to enable better packing without bit
     twiddling and potentially unsafe tricks I'd rather avoid unless
     necessary; and
  2. The lifetime is not static, and there is no global, singleton interner;
     and
  3. I pass around references to a Symbol rather than passing around an
     index into an interner.

For #3---this is done because there's no singleton interner and therefore
resolving a symbol requires a direct reference to an available interner.  It
also wasn't clear to me (and still isn't, in fact) whether more than one
interner may be used for different contexts.

But, that doesn't preclude removing lifetimes and just passing around
indexes; in fact, I plan to do this in the frontend where the parser and
such will have direct interner access and can therefore just look up based
on a symbol index.  We could reserve references for situations where
exposing an interner would be undesirable.

Anyway, more to come...
2021-07-29 14:26:40 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 96ea0302cc tamer: Cargo.lock: Dependency updates
This project has been on pause for over a year.
2021-06-21 12:46:38 -04:00
Joseph Frazer 43d00a8268 [DEV-7504] Add GraphML generation
We want to be able to build a representation of the dependency graph so
we can easily inspect it.

We do not want to make GraphML by default. It is better to use a tool.
We use "petgraph-graphml".
2020-05-13 08:04:48 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 4b643385c8 TAMER: Update Cargo dependencies 2020-04-29 11:33:38 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 400d5b25a1 ir::asg::Object::Empty: Remove variant
This variant is unnecessary, as it was used only by the indexer to represent
the absence of a node, for which was can simply use `None` in the containing
`Option`.

* tamer/Cargo.toml: Add `lazy_static`.
* tamer/Cargo.lock: Update.
* tamer/src/ir/asg/base.rs (with_capacity): Use `None` in place of
    `Some(Object::Empty)`.
* tamer/src/ir/asg/object.rs: Adjust state machine graphic.
  (Empty): Remove variant.
  (Missing): Remove reference to variance.
* tamer/src/lib.rs: Import `lazy_static` for test builds.
* tamer/obj/xmle/writer/writer.rs (Section::iter): Remove `Object::Empty`
    from documentation.
  (test::): Remove references to `Object::Missing`.  `lazy_static!` used
    here.
* tamer/obj/xmle/writer/xmle.rs (test::write_section_catch_missing): Replace
    reference to `Object::Missing`.
2020-03-19 15:42:06 -04:00
Joseph Frazer e613bd8a8c [DEV-7081] Add options to tameld
We want to add an option to set the output file to the linker so we do
not need to redirect output to awk any longer.

This also adds integration tests for tameld.
2020-03-06 09:41:55 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 1f4db84f24 TAMER: Arena-based string interner
Contrary to what I said previously, this replaces the previous
implementation with an arena-backed internment system.  The motivation for
this change was investigating how Rustc performed its string interning, and
why they chose to associate integer identifiers with symbols.

The intent was originally to use Rustc's arena allocator directly, but that
create pulled in far too many dependencies and depended on nightly
Rust.  Bumpalo provides a very similar implementation to Rustc's
DroplessArena, so I went with that instead.

Rustc also relies on a global, singleton interner.  I do not do that
here.  Instead, the returned Symbol carries a lifetime of the underlying
arena, as well as a pointer to the interned string.

Now that this is put to rest, it's time to move on.
2020-02-24 14:56:28 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 176d099fb6 tamer::sym: FNV => Fx Hash
For strings of any notable length, Fx Hash outperforms FNV.  Rustc also
moved to this hash function and noticed performance
improvements.  Fortunately, as was accounted for in the design, this was a
trivial switch.

Here are some benchmarks to back up that claim:

test hash_set::fnv::with_all_new_1000                 ... bench:     133,096 ns/iter (+/- 1,430)
test hash_set::fnv::with_all_new_1000_with_capacity   ... bench:      82,591 ns/iter (+/- 592)
test hash_set::fnv::with_all_new_rc_str_1000_baseline ... bench:     162,073 ns/iter (+/- 1,277)
test hash_set::fnv::with_one_new_1000                 ... bench:      37,334 ns/iter (+/- 256)
test hash_set::fnv::with_one_new_rc_str_1000_baseline ... bench:      18,263 ns/iter (+/- 261)
test hash_set::fx::with_all_new_1000                  ... bench:      85,217 ns/iter (+/- 1,111)
test hash_set::fx::with_all_new_1000_with_capacity    ... bench:      59,383 ns/iter (+/- 752)
test hash_set::fx::with_all_new_rc_str_1000_baseline  ... bench:      98,802 ns/iter (+/- 1,117)
test hash_set::fx::with_one_new_1000                  ... bench:      42,484 ns/iter (+/- 1,239)
test hash_set::fx::with_one_new_rc_str_1000_baseline  ... bench:      15,000 ns/iter (+/- 233)
test hash_set::with_all_new_1000                      ... bench:     137,645 ns/iter (+/- 1,186)
test hash_set::with_all_new_rc_str_1000_baseline      ... bench:     163,129 ns/iter (+/- 1,725)
test hash_set::with_one_new_1000                      ... bench:      59,051 ns/iter (+/- 1,202)
test hash_set::with_one_new_rc_str_1000_baseline      ... bench:      37,986 ns/iter (+/- 771)
2020-02-24 14:56:28 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz e4e0089815 TAMER: Initial string interning abstraction
This is missing two key things that I'll add shortly: a HashMap-based one
for use in the ASG for node mapping, and an entry-based system for
manipulations.

This has been a nice start for exploring various aspects of Rust
development, as well as conventions that I'd like to implement.  In
particular:

  - Robust documentation intended to guide people through learning the
    necessary material about the compiler, as well as related work to
    rationalize design decisions;
  - Benchmarks;
  - TDD;
  - And just getting used to Rust in general.

I've beat this one to death, so I'll commit this and make smaller changes
going forward to show how easily it can evolve.

(This module was originally named `intern` but this commit and those that
follow rewrote it to `sym`.)
2020-02-24 14:56:28 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 8455a38a1d Graph-based POC
This makes use of Petgraph for representing the dependency graph and uses a
separate data structure for both string interning and indexing by symbol
name.
2019-12-02 10:05:48 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz d78d81d721 Cargo.toml: Add petgraph
This will be used to represent the dependency graph.
2019-12-02 10:00:53 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 01e3c33b58 tamer/Cargo.toml: Add quick_xml 2019-11-27 09:16:00 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz fd1a5837ba TAMER: Initial commit 2019-11-18 14:05:47 -05:00