v0.13.0 "Flowing Foliation"
Foliation in geology refers to repetitive layering in metamorphic rocks. Each layer can be as thin as a sheet of paper, or over a meter in thickness. The word comes from the Latin word folium, meaning "leaf", and refers to its sheet-like planar structure. It is caused by shearing forces (pressures pushing different sections of the rock in different directions), or differential pressure (higher pressure from one direction than in others). The layers form parallel to the direction of the shear, or perpendicular to the direction of higher pressure. Nonfoliated metamorphic rocks are typically formed in the absence of significant differential pressure or shear. Foliation is common in rocks affected by the regional metamorphic compression typical of areas of mountain belt formation (orogenic belts).
Machine summary:
Subduction v0.13.0 "Flowing Foliation" reshapes commit identity around a user-supplied opaque CommitId (#119), removes the vestigial MAX_STRATA_DEPTH in favor of pure DepthMetric-driven boundaries (#122), and fixes head-of-line blocking in the handler request/response loop (#120). Also ships a new DWARF-preserving [profile.wasm-debug] + bodge:debug command for Chrome DevTools source-level stepping through the @automerge/*/debug subpath exports, plus toolchain bumps (wasm-bindgen 0.2.118, wasm-bodge main) and the WebSocket max-frame-size fix (#123).