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Status: DEV

Sourcemint.Genesis

Sourcemint.Genesis is a 100% open and hackable software dependency management system that can be used for collaborative realtime distributed system development.

Overview

Sourcemint.Genesis is based on PINF.Genesis and elevates the Semantic Web and your local filesystem to be a distributed, non-conflicting package registry and repository.

The diagram below illustrates the Package Installation and Distribution Aspects of Sourcemint.Genesis by showing the:

  • Stages of the package management lifecycle
  • Data and interaction spaces managed by system
  • Codebase-wide Event Loop capturing ALL modifications to source code

Sourcemint.Genesis Overview Diagram

TODO: Illustrate the Package Dependency Management Aspect of Sourcemint.Genesis using a Diagram showing the sm components.

Discussion

While the overall design of Sourcemint.Genesis as well as various specific implementation details have been validated in past work, the exact plan for Sourcemint.Genesis is still evolving. I am keeping a loose definition as to what will be covered by Sourcemint.Genesis as I am not yet completely sure about all the final pieces and their arrangement in this new PINF.Genesis based implementation.

One major lesson is the identification of aspects and forms for each dependency. A dependency has one or more aspects and each aspect has a set of common forms.

Aspects

The only required aspect for any dependency is called source. Sourcemint is used to work on the source code of a system. Thus you are typically working with code dependencies in source form and thus the term source in its typical usage. However, even if you are using a third party library, and you only have the compiled distribution, it still falls under the source aspect as it encompasses the source logic that you are embedding within your system.

Think of source as THE UNIQUE LOGIC YOU WANT TO EMBED where unique is scoped to your system. i.e. The same logic only exists in the one place. It exists in the logic source you have an instance of and have embedded in your system. Following this reasoning, Sourcemint, mints (composes) a system out of many source logic pieces.

An example of a secondary aspect could be sourcemap. The sourcemap aspect contains code that covers all entities in the source aspect (i.e. module files) and adds something new, in this case a mapping of obfuscated names to original names and more. Any additional aspect to source is OPTIONAL but often desired at various stages of the software lifecycle.

Other examples of additional aspects are Documentation, Specification, API Reference. Mailing List, Live Support, Issues, etc... all scoped to the source aspect. While a list of common aspects will be compiled and specified in time, the addition of any new aspect must be supported generically by any implementation.

Forms

The form of an aspect describes a specific arrangement/format/manifestation of the logic contained within the aspect. The set of forms supported by a system is tied to the composition needs of the system throughout its development, distribution and operational lifecycles. Sourcemint.Genesis targets modern web software and specifically JavaScript and PHP based implementations and its supported forms have been validated within this context. The chosen forms seem to be sufficiently generic to support a large variety of complex composition scenarios and ultimatly can be used to model, for dynamic composition, most software systems.

Sourcemint.Genesis implements the following forms and it is expected that only very few forms will be added in the future. Each aspect must exist in most forms before a system may boot and thus a dependency is considered provisioned as soon as it is present in all essential forms. Sourcemint.Genesis will derive each form (if it does not already exist) based on very specific rules that transform the aspect from one form to another by embuing it with more detail or stripping detail away. Not all forms may be derived from or recovered from other forms and the possibilities of this actually represent very important transparency and security boundaries.

  • sync - The optional form of the aspect that contains ad-hock changes made by a developer while working on the system. If, for example, a developer has included jQuery in their project and needs to make a change to the implementation they would do so in some editing environment which would sync the changed file (or a patch) to this container. It is termed sync as it is designed to stay in sync with all your source logic changes as fast as you can type them in your chosen editing environment.

  • vcs - The form of the aspect that contains the entire history of the code of the aspect using a version control system. By default this holds a git repository of the aspect with the latest frozen commit checked out. If this form is missing it cannot be derived from other forms as no other form captures the history of the code for an aspect.

  • snapshot - The form of the aspect that contains an export of the latest frozen commit. It may also optionally include a shallow clone of the vcs form. This form is used to obtain a snapshot of the aspect at a given commit and is typically distributed in the form of a release archive as github generates it for download for any given commit or branch. This form may be symlinked from the vcs form if it is available.

  • prepared - The form of the aspect that contains a copy of the snapshot form without any vcs info and with optional patches applied to adapt the aspect to a given system environment. It must contain only code that is consistent across the entire system. i.e. one must be able to create an unlimited number of instances of this code in the various nodes of the system without needing to modify it further than what happend in this container.

  • built - The form of the aspect that contains a generic build of the prepared form and all its dependencies. All dependencies are installed and source code is compiled to binary form in this container if applicable. The compiled binaries must be shared libraries that just like the parpared form may be used in any part of the system without modification. The built form represents the most optimized stage of all pre-built assets that a system may draw upon to provision itself most optimally and speedily.

  • configured - The form of the aspect that contains built forms configured for a specific instance or node of a system. This is the container that holds any modifications to the built form needed to load the built aspects into a specific runtime. Most typically this includes configuration information for the aspect to allow it to slot into a container in a running system. If the binary built assets must be modified using binary patches because they are not clean sharable libraries this must happen in this container. If the prepared form must be re-compiled because the built form is not generic the re-build happens in this container. This latter use-case is less than optimal as the sourcemint design calls for superficial config-based modifications only by the time this form is reached.

  • installed - The form of the aspect that holds a symlink to the latest configured form that is live as far as the runtime is concerned.

The forms above flow from one to the next and instances of each aspect + form are generated by Sourcemint.Genesis on the fly as commit references and filechecksums, capturing latest state of modifications, change. e.g. The configured form revision is determined by a checksum across all files comntained within the built form + configured form changeset. This ensures that the same input data will lead to the same revision allowing form instances of each aspect to be cached in the REST web.

Implementation

TODO: Outline the exact rules used to derive each form instance for each aspect.

Usage

TODO

License

UNLICENSE

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