...no need to enclose empty sections when there are no
attributes or no children. Makes test code way more readable.
TestEventLog_test PASS as far as implemented
after looking into our various iterator tools,
it seems obvious that our filtering iterator implementation
has almost all of the required behaviour; we only need to
add a hook to rewrite and extend the filtering functor,
which can now nicely done with a lambda closure.
This means all memory management, if necessary, is
pushed into std::function and the automated memory
management for closures provided by the runtime.
...providing the standard implementation of UI-Bus connectivity.
It seems reasonable to place all of the UI-Bus implementation into
a single translation unit
some tests rely on additional diagnostics code being linked in,
which happens, when lib/format-util.hpp is included prior to
the instantiation of lib::diff::Record rsp. lib::Variant.
The reason why i opended this can of worms was to avoid includion
of this formatting and diagnostics code into such basic headers
as lib/variant.hpp or lib/diff/gen-node.hpp
Now it turns out, that on some platforms the linker will use
a later instantiation of lib::Variant::Buff<GenNode>::operator string
in spite of a complete instantiation of this virtual function
being available already in liblumierasupport.so
But the real reason is that -- with this trickery -- we're violating
the single definition rule, so we get what we deserved.
TODO (Ticket #973): at a later point in development we have to re-assess,
the precise impact of including lib/format-util.hpp into
lib/diff/gen-node.hpp
Right now I expect GenNode to be used pervasively, so I am
reluctant to make that header too heavyweight.
yet another instance of that obnoxious problem that "long"
is just 32bit on i386 platforms. Why the hell does such
a broken type get the preference of convenient notation??
Hehe...
with GenNode, we started to use these global Type-IDs to generate
unique Names for unnamed Children in a diff::Record. This means,
when running in the test-suite, the TypeID for 'short' and 'long' are
likely to be allready allocated, so our Test can not not observe the
allocateion, nor is it sensible to assume fixed numbers for these Type-IDs.
Instead, we create two local types right within the test function, to force
generation of new unique type-IDs, which we can observe
well... this was quite a piece of work
Added some documentation, but a complete documentation,
preferably to the website, would be desirable, as would
be a more complete test covering the negative corner cases
while implementing this, I've discovered a conceptual error:
we allow to accept attributes, even when we've already entered
the child scope. This means that we can not predictable get back
at the "last" (i.e. the currently touched) element, because this
might be such an attribute. So a really correct implementation
would have to memorise the "current" element, which is really
tricky, given the various ways of touching elements in our
diff language.
In the end I've decided to ignore this problem (maybe a better
solution would have been to disallow those "late" attributes?)
My reasoning is that attributes are unlikely to be full records,
rather just values, and values are never mutated. (but note
that it is definitively possible to have an record as attribute!)
...while I must admit that I'm a bit doubtful about that
language feature, but it does come in handy when manually
writing diff messages. The reason is the automatic naming
of child objects, which makes it often hard to refer to
a child after the fact, since the name can not be
reconstructed systematically.
Obviously the downside of this "anonymous pick / delete"
is that we allow to pick (accept) or even delete just
any child, which happens to sit there, without being
able to detect a synchronisation mismatch between
sender and receiver.
...so now the stage is set. We can reimplement
the handling of the list diff cases here in the context
of tree diff application. The additional twist of course
being the distinction between attribute and child scope
so basically it's time to explicate the way
our diff language will actually be written.
Similar to the list diff case, it's a linear sequence
of verb tokens, but in this case, the payload value
in each token is a GenNode. This is the very reason
why GenNode was conceived as value object with an
opaque DataCap payload
while it's still not really clear how we'll use this helper
and if we need it at all -- some weeks ago I changed its
semantics to be strictly based on the delta to a reference level.
Now this means, we could go below level zero, but this doesn't
make any sense in the context of navigating a tree. Actually,
our test case triggered this situation, which caused the
reference level to wrap around, since it is stored in an
unsigned variable.
Thus I'll add a precondition to keep the level positive,
and I'll change the test to comply.
Initially I've deliberately omitted those, to nudge towards
using time quantisation and TCode formatting for any external
representation of time values.
While this recommendation is still valid, the overloaded
string conversion turns out to be helpful for unit testing
and diagnostics in compound data structures.
See Record<GenNode>
initially the intention was to include a "bracketing construct"
into the values returned by the iterator. After considering
the various implementation and representation approaches,
it seems more appropriate just to expose a measure for the
depth-in-tree through the iterator itself, leaving any concerns
about navigation and structure reconstruction to the usage site.
As rationale we consider the full tree reconstruction as a very
specialised use case, and as such the normal "just iteration" usage
should not pay for this in terms of iterator size and implementation
complexity. Once a "level" measure is exposed, the usage site
can do precisely the same, with the help of the
HierarchyOrientationIndicator.
Whooa!
Templates are powerful.
programming this way is really fun.
under the assumption that the parts are logical,
all conceivable combinations of theses parts are bound to be correct
it passes compilation, but the test still fails, since
I've changed the expected semantics of the iteration,
in the light of the insights I've gained during
re-investigation of the IterExplorer.
What I now actually intend is rather to embed a
HierarchyOrientationIndicator into the iterator,
instead of returning a special "bracket" marker
reference to indicate return from a nested scope.
This helper was drafted for the Job / JobPlanning and Scheduler
interface in 2013, but seemingly not yet put into action. While
in the original use case, we have a genuine measuerment for the
tree depth (given by the depth of the processing stack), in other
use cases we want to use to offset embedded within the indicator
itself for keeping track of the depth. Thus I add a second
mark operation, which usess the current offset to set a new
reference level. This has the consequence that the offset
has now to reflect the new reference point immediately
remembered that some years ago I had to deal with a very similar problem
for planning the frame rendering jobs. It turned out, that the
iterator monad developed for this looks promising for our task at hand
this design is rather into the blue,
not sure what we actually need for diff generation
and object serialisation. Anyhow, I considered including
a bracketing construct a good idea, and I considered it
sensible to expose inner nodes, not only the leaf nodes.
Obviously, this is not a real monad iteration then.