Ideas/PatchPlugins

Patch regions

This is an attempt to specify how the patch plugins proposal below might work.

The problem is that when you want to introduce a new patch type you need to specify how they commute with all other known patch types. This proposal aims to demonstrate that specifying these rules need not drive one crazy.

The idea is that patch types should be broken down into regions.

The regions are associated with a tuple

type FP_Region = (String, Int)

Let’s start with “file patches”. When commuting two primitive file patches:

  • if they touch different files, they commute
  • if their region identifiers (FP_Region) do not match, they do NOT commute
  • otherwise, see the definition of patch commutation associated with that region identifier

Examples of regions:

  • fp-core-darcs 1: hunk, replace
  • fp-core-darcs 2: hunk, replace, intra-file-hunk-move
  • fp-no-lines 1: char-hunk, replace
  • fp-xml 1: new-tree, add-node, move-node
  • fp-change-log 1: append

It should be possible to generalise this idea beyond file patches as well:

type Region = (String, Int)

  • if two patches have different region strings, they commute
  • if they have different region numbers, they do NOT commute
  • otherwise, see definition of patch commutation associated with that region identifier

More examples

  • core-darcs 1: adddir, rmdir, addfile, rmfile, fp-core-darcs 1
  • core-darcs 2: adddir, rmdir, addfile, rmfile, fp-core-darcs 2
  • pref-system 1: changepref
  • pref-system 2: awesome-changepref
  • bts 1: open-ticket

Things are a bit sketchier here, though because of doubts about how this should actually interact with the working directory

Original patch plugins commentary

Mostly verbatim from the e-mail Geoffrey Alan Washburn originally wrote on the idea.


I was curious as to whether any thought had been given to being able to design “plugins” to extend the language of “atomic” patches.

At least as I understand from looking at the manual there are a few “atomic” sorts of patches “hunks”, “binary file modifications”, “add a new file”, etc. Then there are ways to combine them into larger patches.

However, one annoyance I’ve had as of late is that most software uses a diff algorithm for text and maybe something special, like Xdelta for binary data. But quite a bit of data these days is structured, XML being the most popular example. But another good example are is just plain old ASCII text.

For example, Subversion, in a really ad-hoc way, allows users from having to deal with DOS/Unix/Mac end-of-line conversions. The thought would be to make this into a new kind of “atomic” patch that people could choose as a “plugin”.

Similarly, XML documents are meaning invariant under quite a few operations (even more if you know the DTD or schema, but it would be better to start with invariants for all valid XML documents). One could imagine a “plugin” for an XML “atomic” patch that would take these basic invariants into account.

Of course, users using these “plugins” would not necessarily be able to communicate their patches to others who don’t have the same set of plugins, but I don’t see this as especially onerous. One might even imagine requiring a kind of backwards compatibility mode with all these “plugins” such that they can be normalized to the core language of patches, but losing some of the advantages (i.e. you don’t get end of line conversion for free).

There is also the question of how to enforce that “plugin” patches obey the theory of patches. I see that there is already some investigations into using GADTs to ensure than invariants are maintained (I have to admit that was my favorite part of David’s talk at the Haskell Workshop) , but even then that might not be enough. ghc is continuing to push forward with making more and more dependent type like features available, so perhaps eventually that will be enough. A more immediate proposal, but definitely more radical, would be to start coding up the theory of patch framework in Coq, which supports Haskell code extraction.

Anyway, I would be curious to hear what people think about this idea, because this is something I’d really like to see in version control system.

Response to patch-plugins email

I have had the same wish for some time. It would be brilliant to be able to use darcs for versioning of things with more (or different) structure than plain text. For example:

  • Annotated text, e.g. a legal document with comments attached to parts of its text. One can simulate this by including the comments in the text (with some formatting), but this is not a perfect fit: the order of comments on the same piece of text shouldn’t matter, for instance.

  • A collection of notes/bookmarks/whatever, kept in a tree-like structure.

  • A large latex document, with sections, subsections and a preamble. It would be nice if you could reorder sections without conflicting with editing of those sections. Also the preamble could be kept unordered, to allow different authors to define macros independently, conflicting only when there is a name clash.

This would all be possible given something like your plugin system. In a plugin, one would define the abstract “atomic patches”, their commutation relations and their realisation (how they act on the “working directory”).

I’d imagine that darcs does not want to expand into this new area, though. It would probably be a lot of work to untangle darcs up to a point where code sharing becomes profitable.

Another option would be to encode your structured text as a directory tree, keeping commuting parts in different files. You could then build a wrapper around darcs that interprets commands about high-level patches and issues the corresponding low-level darcs commands. Not sure if this is feasible.