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FDat, meaning "Functions as Data" (and nothing else)

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Compatible with Clojurescript.

Code is data, this axiom holds true until one has to serialize some functions. To further complicate the issue, sometimes data is a function in disguise. Notoriously, sequences are indeed "logical lists". How could one save an infinite sequence to a file, or send a closure over the wire?

If a function is a black box one cannot open and readily share, them one can at least describe "what" this black box do instead of unsuccessfully focusing on "how" it does it.

For instance, using the plugin for the excellent Nippy serializer:

(require '[dvlopt.fdat               :as fdat :refer [?]]
         '[dvlopt.fdat.plugins.nippy :as fdat.plugins.nippy])
         '[taoensso.nippy            :as nippy])


(fdat.plugins.nippy/init)


(?
 (defn hello
   [x]
   (str "Hello " x)))


(fdat/register [hello])


(def ba
     (nippy/freeze hello))


(def hello-2
     (nippy/thaw ba))


(println (hello "world"))

This small excerpt introduces two important notions: discreetly keeping track of "what" a function is by using the ? macro, this information being data that we can easily serialize, and maintaining a registry that we use in order to know what to do with that knowledge at deserialization.

This must sound quite abstract, so let us explore all that.

Feel free to clone this repo and start a REPL, all examples are in ./dev/user.clj :

$ clj -A:test:dev:nrepl

Supported serializers

For the Nippy plugin, go here.

For the Transit plugin, go here.

However, main concepts are described here only.

Common usage

The omniscient ? macro

Functions are IMetas, meaning they can hold metadata. Actually, everything we will discuss applies to all IMetas. Sequences are one other useful example. Later, we will even see how all of this is useful for any data structure.

The ? macro is capable of analyzing a form producing an IMeta and annotating it in its metadata.

The first information it extracts is the key:

(?
 (defn foo []))


(= (meta foo)
   {::fdat/key 'user/foo})

In order to benefit from our scheme, an IMeta must have a key which will hold a special meaning when we will discuss registries. The macro derives the key from the name in defn. A key must be always qualified. The automatic extraction is particularly convenient. In rare cases, we may find it useful to explicitly provide a key:

(? ^{::fdat/key :some.namespace/my-key}
   (def bar
        (fn [])))


(= (meta bar)
   {::fdat/key :some.namespace/my-key})

We provided our own key by adding metadata to the form using the metadata reader. Furthermore, besides a symbol, we notice it can also be a keyword, qualified nonetheless.

Besides definitions, the ? macro also understands function calls, trusting they produce an IMeta:

(= (meta
     (? (range 1000000)))
   {::fdat/key  'clojure.core/range
    ::fdat/args [1000000]})

Interesting, the macro keeps track of arguments as well. Heck, it even understands partial application and treats it specially:

(= (meta
     (? (partial range
                 10)))
   {::fdat/key  'dvlopt.fdat/partial-1
    ::fdat/args [range 10]})

You might begin to understand where this is going. If I gave you a specific key and, if needed, some arguments, maybe you could make your own IMeta instead of the one I cannot send you.

Maintaining a registry

A registry is simply a map of key -> (fn [args] imeta). In other words, a key unlocks the secret to producing an IMeta given arguments. We did not mention one up until now because we were using the global registry. We shall see later it is often useful to maintain your own.

Remember that first hello function? After capturing it using ?, we added it to the global registry:

(fdat/register [hello])

The dvlopt.fdat/register function looks for a key in the metadata and also for an indication on how to apply arguments. Being a simple function, hello does not need any arguments to exist, it has been defined once and simply exists by itself. However, a fair share of our programs is about producing IMetas, sequences, functions returning functions.

(? ^{::fdat/apply 1}
   (defn curried-add
     ([x]
      (fn curry [y]
        (curried-add x
                     y)))
     ([x y]
      (+ x
         y))))


(fdat/register [curried-add])

By adding ::fdat/apply 1 to the metadata, we are saying that the IMeta we are interested in is the result of applying 1 argument to curried-add rather than curried-add itself. We did not simply add curried-add to the registry, we added a function that takes a vector of one argument and applies it to curried-add.

::fdat/apply can optimize for arities 0 to 8. Specifying :variadic can apply any arity (but is slower) and :none meaning no application is the default.

Remember that ? can capture function calls and keep track of arguments.

(def plus-3
     (? (curried-add 3)))


(= (meta plus-3)
   {::fdat/key  'user/curried-add
    ::fdat/args [3]})

Note that what needs to be in the registry in not plus-3 but the key it refers to, which is user/curried-add and which we already added indeed.

For instance, and this is generally what any plugin does, the Nippy plugin extends Nippy so that IMetas with a key receive special treatment: they are discarded, only their metadata, being a simple map, is serialized. At deserialization, this metadata map containing a key and (if needed) arguments is automatically used against a registry (defaulting to the global one) in order to produce (or rather "reproduce") the intended IMeta.

(= 7
   ((-> plus-3
        nippy/freeze
        nippy/thaw)   4))

If you have understood that, then you have understood the whole idea and the sky becomes the limit, although the advent of space age made that expression obsolete.

Mastering ? and its (not so) many faces

We have seen that ? understands definitions (def and defn), calls ((some-fn 1 2 3)), as well as partial application. Partial application is valuable because it often provides flexibility. Actually, we can rewrite curried-add so that it is simply add.

(?
 (defn add [x y] (+ x y)))

(= (meta add)
   {::fdat/key 'user/add})

(fdat/register [add])

(? (partial add
            3))

(= (meta *1)
   {::fdat/key  'dvlopt.fdat/partial-1
    ::fdat/args [add 3]})

A registry has several special keys such as 'dvlopt.fdat/partial-1 for optimizing partial application. Interestingly but unsurprisingly, add figures in the arguments, as a function, in this metadata map that was supposed to be serializable data. But this function itself has metadata about how to serialize it, indeed we have captured add using ?. Due to the "depth-first" manner serializers operate, this just works: add will be serialized before this outer metadata map. As long as we use ? properly, any IMeta can be an argument.

Once again, the result of that partial application is not what needs to be in the registry but rather add because it is part of the metadata that needs to be serializable. It means that once we have add in our registry, we can capture any partial application without caring further.

Do not feel discouraged if your head is spinning a little bit. It shows how a simple idea can expand.

Capturing free functions and other forms is far less common. Just in case, one can mention explicitly everything, even extra metadata that should be attached. The advantage of still using ? to do so is that we can benefit from compile time elision as described later.

(? ^{::fdat/key some.ns/foo
     ::extra    {:possible? true}}
   (fn [] 42))

Lastly, when an explicit key is an unquoted symbol (what we have done so far), it must resolve to an existing definition. some.ns/foo must indeed exist. When quoted, the namespace is resolved following aliases but the name need not to resolve to anything existing. For instance, remembering that fdat is an alias for the dvlopt.fdat namespace...

(? ^{::fdat/key `fdat/invented}
   (fn [] 42))

...will have 'dvlopt.fdat/invented as its key, although it does not refer to anything real.

!, a useful but dangerous counterpart

While ? is about capturing how IMetas are created, one might want to reuse already existing once. For instance, we do not have to write add, we can use Clojure's +.

(fdat/! +)


(= (meta +)
   {::fdat/key 'clojure.core/+})


(fdat/register [+])


(? (partial +
            3))

Although useful, it can be dangerous. For instance, two libraries might need +. All is fine if the key is extracted automatically, but the following example should be avoided:

(fdat/! ^{::fdat/key ::my-key}
        +)

It is best to create an alias and use ?, the culprit being that we have to use that alias instead of +:

(? (def add
        +))

(fdat/register [add])

(= (meta add)
   {::fdat/key 'user/add})  ;; but in reality points to `+`

Registries

At first, one might think it is cumbersome having to add all those IMetas to some registry. Actually, this is a feature.

First of all, a registry represent some context. Let us imagine an online shopping app. The frontend is built in Clojurescript while the backend is built in Clojure.

Functions are akin to verbs. They represent some action, but without a sentence providing context, they mean hardly anything. "Eat" is abstract until we conclude that "we eat an apple".

Similarly, (add-to-cart item) does not mean much by itself, but we agree it is supposed to mean something. On the client side, it would probably be implemented as sending a request to the server. On the backend, it would probably be implemented as updating the database. Same name, same argument, different implementations. Each context provides its own specific meaning to shared abstract verbs.

Furthermore, within a same context, even a same process, one can get creative by using several registries. One example would be handling authorization where a role provides access to a specific registry. Depending on the role of the user issuing a request on our backend, we would use one registry or another. Some roles would have access to some verbs, and a verb could be implemented differently depending on the role.

At deserialization, if a key is not found in a registry, an exception is thrown. Instead of providing a registry as map, one could provide a function for handling that. For instance, still relying on the global registry, handling based on the namespace of the key not-found:

(defn my-registry
  [k]
  (or (fdat/registry k)
      (fn [_args]
        (case (namespace k)
          "some.ns"    ...
          "another.ns" ...
          ...))))

Serializing ideas (what if Plato was a Clojurist)

Plato was keen about making a distinction between the physical world and the "world of Ideas". A pale copy from an inimitable perfection.

Data structures, our beloved maps and vectors, pure data, often are but a mere instance of an absolute idea. For instance, let us imagine we have a vector of random numbers, nested somewhere in the deep maps of our program. Those random numbers are used for some cryptographic purposes.

If we wanted to serialize that state of our program, it would probably be a terrible idea to serialize those random numbers and share them as such. How unsafe. What we would like to serialize is the idea of a vector of random numbers, rather than that specific vector.

(? ^{::fdat/apply 1}
   (defn entropy
     [n]
     (vec (repeatedly n
                      rand))))


(fdat/register [entropy])


(def random-numbers
     (? (entropy 2)))


(= (meta random-numbers)
   {::fdat/key  'user/entropy
    ::fdat/args [2]})


(= random-numbers
   [0.54614 0.90789])


(= (-> random-numbers
       nippy/freeze
       nippy/thaw)
   [0.764213 0.19736])  ;; <!> Different numbers

That's it. As simple as that. Hope that elicited a Socratic awakening.

Besides serializing impossibles things such as infinite sequences, we see that even our finite and concrete datastructures can benefit from all this.

Going further

As a better alternative to event vectors & friends

Without all that, the typical method of sending any "action", "verb", "event" or whatnot or so, involves using an event vector or similar:

[:my-fn-or-event 1 2 :arguments]

We argue that this is intrusive and inefficient.

First of all, one has to adopt a particular style and stick to it. It often involves writing a program twice: the functions and all the translation between those functions and their data representations. It does not feel too smart.

Second, what is supposed to be a mere function call turns into vector destructuring and manipulation, if only but to access arguments.

Third, all those vector manipulations really slow down our programs. We want to pay the cost of serialization only at serialization, while things run as usual the rest of the time. We do pay a minor fee for capturing (attaching metadata to those IMetas), but those IMetas work as intended.

Fourth, serialization is not handled. Those event vectors are deserialized as vectors, we have to do some additional work in order to do anything with them.

Lastly, we want to be able to turn off capturing, either entirely or for given namespaces. That means that we can add those small annotation in our programs just in case we need serialization later without paying any cost. This is especially important for libraries so they can provide serialization without incuring any overhead if it is not needed by the user.

Compile time elision

We can control annotations by ? at compile time (and at runtime for Clojure but not Clojurescript). Pay only for what we use.

For compilation (either Clojure or Clojurescript), one can provide the following -D properties in deps.edn or, if using Shadow-CLJS for Clojurescript, in shadow-cljs.edn:

;; Turning off by default, except for the namespaces in the white list.
;; Namespaces are provided in a vector where the usual white spaces must be ",".

{:jvm-opts ["-Dfdat.track.default=false"
            "-Dfdat.track.white-list=[allowed-ns-1,allowed-ns-2]"]}


;; Otherwise, is turned on by default, but we can black list namespaces.

{:jvm-opts ["-Dfdat.track.black-list=[fobidden-ns-1,forbidden-ns-2]"]}

Alternatively, one can set environment properties, replacing dots with underscores:

env fdat_track_default=false  my_command ...

At runtime, in Clojure only, one can dynamically do the same using the dvlopt.fdat.track namespace.

Interestingly, the namespaces refers to the namespaces of the keys that ? captures, not the namespaces where the capturing happens. For instance, assuming the foo.bar namespace has been turned off, the following capturing still happens:

(in-ns 'foo.bar)

(? ^{::key whatever/foo}
   (defn foo []))


(= (meta foo)
   {::fdat/key 'whatever/foo})

Library authoring

Writing serializable programs and libraries

Thanks to compile time elision and due to the fact that the ? macro is so minimalistic, it does not hurt to write our code as if it needed to be serializable, knowing that we can turn of capturing at compile time and incur no overhead.

Instead of registering to the global registry, a library should always propose a collection of the IMetas it captures and let the user be in charge of the registering.

Adapting for a new serializer

In the unlikely event that Nippy or Transit are not enough, one can adapt this scheme to another serializer (and contribute it here). One would study how these plugins are written in the first place.

The dvlopt.fdat.plugins offers two needed utilities.

In short, serializers typically deals in concrete types. One must find a way to modify how IMetas are handled. Specifically, they should be turned into a dvlopt.fdat.Memento by using the dvlopt.fdat.plugins/memento function which either returns a Memento if it finds at least a key in the metadata, or nothing, meaning that the IMeta should be processed as usual.

Then, one must extend how a Memento record itself is serialized. It should simply extract :snapshot from it, which is the original metadata map of the IMeta, which contains at least our beloved key and (if needed) arguments, then pass it on to be serialized as a regular map.

For unpacking, the only step is to extend how a Memento is deserialized. The dvlopt.fdat.plugins/develop function must be called providing the retrieved metadata as argument.

Those steps might look slightly counterintuitive. Indeed, it was tricky to develop a way that would potentially work for any serializer, either from Clojure or Clojurescript.

Run tests

Run all tests (JVM and JS based ones):

$ ./bin/kaocha

Due to some compilation shenaningans, testing both JS environments in the same run can fail.

For Clojure only:

$ ./bin/kaocha jvm

For Clojurescript on NodeJS, ws must be installed:

$ npm i ws

Then:

$ ./bin/kaocha node

For Clojurescript in the browser (which might need to be already running):

$ ./bin/kaocha browser

License

Copyright © 2020 Adam Helinski

Distributed under the Eclipse Public License either version 1.0 or (at your option) any later version.

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