From: Peter Zotov <whitequark@whitequark.org>
To: Malcolm Matalka <mmatalka@gmail.com>
Cc: caml-list <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] [ANN] ppx_protobuf
Date: Sun, 04 May 2014 12:55:24 +0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <3d5dc7368c12c92ab9cb1a45f1210360@whitequark.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <87iopm2lnk.fsf@gmail.com>
On 2014-05-04 08:49, Malcolm Matalka wrote:
> Not exactly. I don't mean I want a functor, I just used that style to
> express that I think it would be best if these sort of things worked on
> a module-to-module level rather than type. That way I can separate out
> the data type and it's business logic from its encoding/decoding logic.
> I want to decouple a type definition from all of the transformations
> that can be done on the type. Everything an still happen at a
> preprocessor point, but I just want it to happen on a module level.
Still not a good idea. Consider the annotations like @key and @encoding:
where would you specify them? If right on the type signature, then what
is the point of separation?
>
>
> Peter Zotov <whitequark@whitequark.org> writes:
>
>> On 2014-05-03 22:46, Malcolm Matalka wrote:
>>> The idea I mean is more to do this at the module level than the type
>>> level, like a functor. So rather than defining protobuf for a type
>>> definition, define it for a module, and have some convention for how
>>> to
>>> pick out setter/getter functions. Then create a new module from
>>> that.
>>
>> Oh! You want a functor which would be able to examine the structure
>> of the module that was passed to it.
>>
>> It's probably technically feasible (you need a syntactic extension
>> which would essentially serialize the module that will be passed), but
>> it is a really horrible solution:
>>
>> * You won't be able to report some interesting errors (such as
>> incorrect annotations... [@key -1] until runtime.
>> * It will be really slow, because the implementation of the functor
>> will have to traverse the lists of fields dynamically and invoke
>> accessors one by one. My current implementation directly pattern
>> matches the input.
>> * It is just really complicated and does too much at runtime.
>>
>>>
>>> For example of the top of my head:
>>>
>>> module Foo = sig
>>> type t
>>> val set_x : t -> int -> t
>>> val get_x : t -> int
>>> end
>>>
>>> Then I can do:
>>>
>>> module Foo_protobuf = Protobuf.Make(Foo)
>>>
>>> In this case I stole how most people to functors to make it clear the
>>> translation is actually module to module.
>>>
>>> The reason I prefer this is because I can also do:
>>>
>>> module Foo_xml = Xml.Make(Foo)
>>> module Foo_json = Json.Make(Foo)
>>>
>>> By separating the mechanism for creating the decoders from the type
>>> definition, I can add decoders for any type I want without disturbing
>>> the original definition. This feels more right to me. But I have no
>>> idea how to do it.
>>>
>>>
>>> Peter Zotov <whitequark@whitequark.org> writes:
>>>
>>>> On 2014-05-03 20:08, Malcolm Matalka wrote:
>>>>> Nice, great work!
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm not actually a huge fan of mixing type definitions and the
>>>>> protocols
>>>>> they can be encoded/decoded from. How hard would it be to take a
>>>>> module
>>>>> definition accessors on a type and produce a new module with
>>>>> encode/decode functions? That way I could create JSON, XML,
>>>>> Protobufs,
>>>>> etc modules from one module.
>>>>
>>>> Do you suggest generating the following signature instead of the
>>>> current
>>>> one?
>>>>
>>>> type t = ... [@@protobuf]
>>>> module Protobuf_t : sig
>>>> val decode : Protobuf.Decoder.t -> t
>>>> val encode : Protobuf.Encoder.t -> t -> unit
>>>> end
>>>>
>>>> This would be similar to what deriving currently does.
>>>>
>>>> In principle, this is not a complex change. It would add just a few
>>>> lines
>>>> to ppx_protobuf.
>>>>
>>>> However, I don't like it conceptually. I think the flat signature is
>>>> more natural, it mimics what one would usually write by hand without
>>>> introducing too much deep nesting of modules. You may notice how
>>>> ppx_protobuf doesn't generate the signature items for you; this is
>>>> because ppx_protobuf is a mere implementation detail, a convenient
>>>> way to generate the serializer/deserializer.
>>>>
>>>> I'm not going to oppose addition of such a mode for two reasons:
>>>> * I don't like fighting over minute details.
>>>> * More importantly, deriving, when rewritten with ppx in mind,
>>>> will surely contain this mode for compatibility. ppx_protobuf
>>>> will be (ideally) rewritten over deriving some day.
>>>>
>>>> I will happily merge a PR adding such a mode to ppx_protobuf.
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Just an idea!
>>>>>
>>>>> Peter Zotov <whitequark@whitequark.org> writes:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Greetings.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I have just released the first version of ppx_protobuf, a complete
>>>>>> Protocol Buffers implementation. Unlike Google's implementation,
>>>>>> ppx_protobuf derives the message structure directly from OCaml
>>>>>> type
>>>>>> definitions, which allows a much more seamless integration with
>>>>>> OCaml's types. In particular, ppx_protobuf natively supports
>>>>>> sum types, while maintaining full backwards compatibility with
>>>>>> protoc.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ppx_protobuf uses the extension points API, and thus requires
>>>>>> a recent (>= 2014-04-29) 4.02 (trunk) compiler. It also requires
>>>>>> an unreleased version of ppx_tools. It is probably easiest
>>>>>> to install both from the source repositories[1][2].
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The API is extensively documented at [3].
>>>>>>
>>>>>> [1]: https://github.com/whitequark/ocaml-ppx_protobuf.git
>>>>>> [2]: https://github.com/alainfrisch/ppx_tools.git
>>>>>> [3]:
>>>>>> https://github.com/whitequark/ocaml-ppx_protobuf/blob/master/README.md
>>>>>>
>>>>>> --
>>>>>> WBR, Peter Zotov.
--
Peter Zotov
sip:whitequark@sipnet.ru
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2014-05-04 8:55 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 15+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2014-05-02 14:29 Peter Zotov
2014-05-03 16:08 ` Malcolm Matalka
2014-05-03 16:24 ` Peter Zotov
2014-05-03 18:46 ` Malcolm Matalka
2014-05-03 18:52 ` Peter Zotov
2014-05-04 4:49 ` Malcolm Matalka
2014-05-04 8:55 ` Peter Zotov [this message]
2014-05-04 15:18 ` Malcolm Matalka
2014-05-04 22:21 ` Peter Zotov
2014-05-04 22:38 ` Daniel Bünzli
2014-05-04 20:34 ` Gerd Stolpmann
2014-05-06 4:29 ` Alain Frisch
2014-05-06 4:59 ` Peter Zotov
2014-05-06 7:33 ` Alain Frisch
2014-05-06 10:42 ` Malcolm Matalka
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