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669 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
ed18e1161c WIP: code organisation - double layered architecture 2016-07-31 00:33:19 +02:00
4a2340ca5e solution for access to "tree mutator building closure"
- default recommendation is to implement DiffMutable interface
- ability to pick up similar non-virtual method on target
- for anything else client shall provide free function mutatorBinding(subject)


PERSONAL NOTE: this is the first commit after an extended leave,
where I was in hospital to get an abdominal cancer removed.
Right now it looks like surgery was successful.
2016-07-21 19:29:16 +02:00
5744244f73 considerations how to access the "tree mutator building closure"
this is at the core of the integration problem: how do we expose
the ability of some opaque data structure to create a TreeMutator?

The idea is
 - to use a marker/capability interface
 - to use template specialisation to fabricate an instance of that interface
   based on the given access point to the opaque data structure
2016-06-14 02:33:28 +02:00
61627b26a0 WIP: first attempt to use a TreeMutator based binding
but unfortunately this runs straight into a tough problem,
which I tried to avoid and circumvent all the time:
At some point, we're bound to reveal the concrete type
of the Mutator -- at least to such an extent that we're
able to determine the size of an allocator buffer.

Moreover, by the design chosen thus far, the active
TreeMutator instance (subclass) is assumed to live within
the top-level of a Stack, which means that we need to
place-construct it into that location. Thus, either
we know the type, or we need to move it into place.
2016-06-11 19:40:53 +02:00
115f03b092 draft idea for the next (integration) test
the plan is to put together an integration test
of diff application to opaque data through the TreeMutator,
using the now roughly finished binding primitives.

moreover, the idea is to apply precisely the same diff sequence,
as was used in the detail test (TreeMutatorBinding_test).


NOTE: right now, the existing placehoder code applies this sequence
onto a Rec<GenNode>. This should work already -- and it does,
BUT the result of the third step is wrong. Really have to
investigate this accidental finding, because this highlights
a conceptual mismatch in the handling of mixed scopes.
2016-06-09 02:15:50 +02:00
ef27c09fa2 round-up and document the attribute binding and test 2016-06-09 01:10:52 +02:00
b5ab5df929 supply implementation, basically working already
so this test case is more or less finished,
just needs some more polishing and documentation
2016-06-05 17:26:48 +02:00
1ae3c1991d second round of this test implemented
...which mostly just is either ignoring the
operations or indicating failure on attempt to
'reorder' attributes (which don't have any notion of 'ordering')
2016-06-04 15:08:10 +02:00
76b898b602 amend the design and then implement the two concrete setter/mutator cases
overall, the structure of this implementation is still rather confusing,
yet any alternatives seem even less convincing

- if we want to avoid the delegation to base-class, we'd have
  to duplicate several functions and the combined class would
  handle two distinct concerns.
- any attempt to handle the IDs more "symmetrically" seems to
  create additional problems on one side or the other
2016-06-04 14:20:59 +02:00
ee99c405fd Reorganise implementation into base class + overlay
...as preparation for implementing the two flavours of
binding attributes either via  a setter lambda or via
creation of a nested mutator.
2016-05-29 03:01:27 +02:00
e5bbcb27d8 identify attributes through an EntryID (including type hash)
this also supersedes and removes the initial implementation
draft for attribute binding with the 'setAttribute' API
The elementary part of diff application incl. setting
new attribute values works by now.
2016-05-28 03:41:03 +02:00
201b6542f2 API change to allow to detect missing attribute binding
The way we build this attribute binding, there is no single
entity to handle all attribute bindings. Thus the only way
to detect a missing binding is when none of the binding layers
was able to handle a given INS verb
2016-05-28 01:17:45 +02:00
34f6d38919 WIP: implant outline of the implementation
...again by overriding all TreeMutator operations
2016-05-27 02:08:29 +02:00
b4c91fd968 start next tree mutator test case: settle outline of the implementation
the idea is again to perform the same sequence of primitives,
this time with a binding to some local variables within the test function
here to enact the role of "object fields"

together with drafting the first segment of the test code,
I've settled down onto an implementation approach
2016-05-26 04:05:37 +02:00
dcad50ef1b test diff: codify and document the diff sequence
the plan is to use this specific diff sequence
both in the individual binding tests, and in a
more high level integration test. Hopefully this
helps to make these quite technical tests more readable
2016-05-26 01:56:13 +02:00
b47b4c3f94 flip logic of emptySrc -> hasSrc
..as concluded from the preceding analysis.
NOTE this entails a semantical change, since this
predicate is now only meant to be indicative, not conclusive

remarks: the actual implementation of the diff application process
as bound via the TreeMutator remains yet to be written...
2016-05-24 21:34:08 +02:00
f72e50bd3c Analysis finished: decision regarding support of optional fields 2016-05-24 20:51:11 +02:00
021db98b98 Analysis contd.: even defaultable fields turn out to be problematic
not sure if we're able to maintain the simple line
other than mentioning every field explicitly right away
2016-05-21 19:06:13 +02:00
72f9b4edb1 Analysis continued: inner contradictions of object field vs attribute
...after re-reading my own documentation, it occured to me that
we need to draw a border line and thus decide, what not to support
2016-05-21 17:55:48 +02:00
d3869d2280 Design/Analysis: Attribute TreeMutator binding
how can ordinary object fields be treated as "Attributes"
and thus tied into the Diff framework defined thus far.
This turns out to be really tricky, even questionable
2016-04-30 00:26:19 +02:00
7467e6da2a extend test to cover nested mutation of another disjoint sub-scope
which also verifies the object ownership and lifecycle handling
of the opaque buffer used to place the nested mutator.
2016-04-18 01:41:41 +02:00
835c43027d add support for Ref::THIS (questionable, #996)
while simple to add into the implementation, this whole feature
seems rather qestionable to me now, thus I've added a Ticket
to be revisited later.

In a nutshell, right here, when implementing the binding layer
for STL collections, it is easy to enable the framework to treat
Ref::THIS properly, but the *actual implementation* will necessarily
be offloaded onto each and every concrete binding implementation.
Thus client code would have to add support for an rather obscure
shortcut within the Diff language. The only way to avoid this
would be to change the semantics of the "match"-lambda: if this
binding would rather be a back-translation of implementation data
into GenNode::ID values, then we'd be able to implement Ref::THIS
natively. But such an approach looks like a way inferiour deisgn
to me; having delegated the meaning of a "match" to the client
seems like an asset, since it is both natural and opens a lot
of flexibility, without adding complexity.

For that reason I tend to avoid that shortcut now, in the hope
to be able to drop it entirely from the language
2016-04-18 01:21:38 +02:00
69c63045e6 DOC: constituting elements of the TreeMutator
write down a first draft for a definiton section,
to describe the fundamental parts involved, when
applying a diff message onto implementation defined
data structures

After a break of tree weeks, I found it difficult to find may way
amidst all those various levels of abstraction. In addition to this
definition, we'll probably also need a high level overview of the
whole diff system operation.
2016-04-17 03:53:10 +02:00
8167fbff77 implement fast-forward and assignment to value
...all of this implementation boils down to slightly adjusting
the code written for the test-mutation-target. Insofar it pays off now
having implemented this diagnostic and demonstration first.

Moreover I'm implementing this basic scheme of "diff application"
roughly the fourth time, thus things kindof fall into place now.
What's really hard is all those layers of abstraction in between.

Lesson learned (after being off for three weeks, due to LAC and
other obligations): I really need to document the meaning of the
closures, and I need to document the "abstract operational semantics"
of diff application, otherwise no one will be able to provide
the correct closures.
2016-04-17 01:07:07 +02:00
7f42b9b7e7 draft third round of mutation operations to be implemented
...now about opening a sub mutator within a nested scope
2016-04-16 02:20:23 +02:00
54fb335a9c allow to "peek" into an embedded Record's type field
while I still keep my stance not to allow reflection and
switch-on-type, access to the internal / semantic type of
an embedded record seems a valid compromise to allow
to deal with collections of object-like children
of mixed kind.

Indirectly (and quite intentional) this also opens a loophole
to detect if a given GenNode might constitute a nested scope,
but with the for the actual nested element indeed to cary
a type symbol. Effectively this limits the use of this shortcut
to situations where the handling context does have some pre-established
knowledge about what types *might* be expected. This is precisely
the kind of constraint I intend to uphold: I do not want the
false notion of "total flexibility", as is conveyed by introspection.
2016-04-16 00:48:15 +02:00
e18d973a96 pick up the design work where I left before my trip to LAC Berlin 2016-04-16 00:18:09 +02:00
fb1857423e implement mutation start and lifecycle
the whole implementation will very much be based on
my experiences with the TestMutationTarget and TestWireTap.
Insofar it was a good idea to implement this test dummy first,
as a prototype. Basically what emerges here is a standard pattern
how to implement a tree mutator:

- the TreeMutator will be a one-way-off "throwaway" object.
- its lifecylce starts with sucking away the previous contents
- consuming the diff moves contents back in place
- thus the mutator always attaches onto a target by reference
  and needs the ability to manipulate the target
2016-03-25 20:46:48 +01:00
e698a3800b verify signatures of binding lambdas
the collection binding can be configured with various
lambdas to supply the basic building blocks of the generated binding.

Since we allow picking up basically anything (functors,
function pointers, function objects, lamdas), and since
we speculate on inlining optimisation of lambdas, we can not
enforce a specific signature in the builder functions.

But at least we can static_assert on the effective signature
at the point where we're generating the actual binding configuration
2016-03-25 02:51:56 +01:00
2098e69981 move metafunction to GenNode
because this is something of wider usage potential.
It allows us to detect if a type in question can be
placed within a GenNode
2016-03-24 21:32:56 +01:00
4a0ad73ade WIP: verify and confirm design
re-evaluated the decision to build on lambdas, not virtual functions:
- it leads for sure to clearer code at the usag site
- it /might/ offer better, but certainly not worse potential for compiler optimisation
2016-03-24 17:33:24 +01:00
1b24453f5b set up the full builder definition chain 2016-03-18 19:35:48 +01:00
5579e9c86f draft a way to configure the binding to a STL collection
this is the most relevant binding layer for TreeMutator,
enabling to transform and mutate child elements managed
within a STL collection.
2016-03-18 00:31:04 +01:00
67054aa06c design the properties of the selector within TreeMutator
...and write down some insights about the architecure
and design of tree binding and tree description related
to the TreeMutator.

When reading my notes from last year, it became clear
to me that the design of the TreeMutator has evolved
significantly, and became quite something different
than I'd imagined at start
2016-03-16 04:49:29 +01:00
6404106f1a what's next... 2016-03-16 03:40:34 +01:00
75a6b4c05d specify and stub the test thus far to complete API design
now the full API for the "mutation primitives" is shaped.
Of course the actual implementation is missing, but that
should be low hanging fuit by now.

What still requires some thinking though is how to implement
the selector, so we'll actually get a onion shaped decorator
2016-03-06 03:55:31 +01:00
d2e7e1e06d idea how to crack the (daunting) problem regarding mutator storage
basically we'll establish a collaboration where both sides
know only the interface (contract) of the partner; a safe margin
for allocation size has to be established through metaprogramming (TODO)
2016-03-06 02:26:42 +01:00
7b73aa6950 add some further checks and coverage to the test
...basically we've now the list mutation primitives working,
albeit in a test/dummy implementation only. Next steps will
be to integrate the assignment and sub scope primitives,
and then to re-do the same implementation respectively
for the case of mutating a standard collection of arbitrary type
2016-03-04 23:56:53 +01:00
7d63167276 WIP: define usage of the reordering part of the mutation primitives
...this kind of settles the problem with the "opaque" position
2016-03-04 20:55:52 +01:00
af50e84737 first partial implementation unit test PASS
that is, the dummy/diagnostic-implementation
of the first "mutation primitive", namely injectNew(elm)
2016-03-04 00:25:36 +01:00
d8fe9bce94 baseline of test-dummy implementation or a mutation target binding
- we're using the source / target buffer paradigm to implement the mutation
 - we're using Record<string> to account for "the current content"
2016-03-03 23:11:36 +01:00
48f519e785 align naming of mutation primitives
...convinced myself to retain an uniform naming scheme,
even while the implementation spans several onion-like layers
2016-03-03 22:02:01 +01:00
8bcd37df0a stub first round of mutation primitives to pass compiler again
now this feels like making progress again,
even when just writing stubs ;-)

Moreover, it became clear that the "typing" of typed child collections
will always be ad hoc, and thus needs to be ensured on a case by case
base. As a consequence, all mutation primitives must carry the
necessary information for the internal selector to decide if this
primitive is applicable to a given decorator layer. Because
otherwise it is not possible to uphold the concept of a single,
abstracted "source position", where in fact each typed sub-collection
of children (and thus each "onion layer" in the decorator chain)
maintains its own private position
2016-02-27 01:47:33 +01:00
5d230aa7ac WIP: start defining the inner API systematically
...trying to get ahead step by step
2016-02-27 00:18:06 +01:00
bdf48e1b7b WIP: desperate attempt to get out of the design deadlock
Arrrrgh.
I go round in circles since hours now.
Whatever I attempt, it again relies on
yet further unsecured suppositions
2016-02-26 22:57:49 +01:00
a10db41d91 WIP: shaping a solution approach 2016-02-26 17:50:44 +01:00
49d451b134 WIP: reflection about the situation
where we are, what the essential problems are,
if we're doomed, and what can be done about that
2016-02-25 21:04:59 +01:00
2a037f49ee WIP: daft top layer of generic diff applicator
BUT the daunting question is how to deal with
the allocation of recursive mutator objects
2016-02-21 00:49:13 +01:00
dd1afef970 WIP: consider what kind of changes to support and how
especially the nagging question is:
- do we need to support children of mixed type
- and how can we support those, wihtout massively indirected calls
2016-02-20 00:19:01 +01:00
afbba968b5 WIP: decide how to target the task of mutating "unspecific" data structures 2016-02-19 20:25:30 +01:00