Conman was the configuration manager built on the core ChangeSafe code. The master catalog in conman holds the highest level objects being managed.
(defclass master-catalog () ;; subsystems and products (PC's) in this repository ((products :initform nil :version-technique :composite-set :accessor master-catalog/products) (subsystems :initform nil :version-technique :composite-set :accessor master-catalog/subsystems) ;; All satellite repositories known to this master. We don't allow ;; satellite repository names to change, though the projects they ;; contain may be renamed. **WARNING** BE CAREFUL IF YOU OPERATE ;; in non-latest metaversion views of this list or you might try to ;; create a satellite which already exists. Only update this list ;; using the latest metaversion. (satellite-repositories :initform nil :version-technique :composite-set) ;; Projects (a.k.a. ChangeSafe "classes") contained in satellite ;; repositories. The descriptors contain the key mapping from a ;; project name to a satellite-repository-name. We could almost ;; make this just a (project-name . satellite-name) mapping, but we ;; need to version project-name, and we also want to cache in the ;; master some information in the satellites so that we don't ;; always have to examine the satellites for often accessed ;; information. (classes :accessor master-catalog/classes :initform nil :version-technique :composite-set) ;; Cset-relationship-tuples is conceptually a list of sublists, ;; where each sublist is a tuple. For every master cid which ;; results in the creation of satellite cids, a tuple is added ;; which enumerates the master cid and the satellite cids which it ;; caused to be created. e.g. '((master.cid.1 satellite-1.cid.1 ;; satellite-2.cid.1)) Because we want portable references, blah ;; blah blah, we actually reference DIDS of CHANGE-SET objects ;; rather than the cids. We may instead wish to store CID-OBJECT ;; references. TBD. ;; Right now, this information is maintained only for change ;; transactions which arise from WITH-CM-MASTER-TXN and ;; WITH-CM-SATELLITE-TXN. This is ok, since those are the ;; interesting txns which manipulate satellite databases. ;; Note that because of the high volume of csets we expect to ;; track, we actually represent this information as a vector of ;; vectors to achieve space compaction. (cset-relationship-tuples :initform (make-instance 'persistent-vector :initial-element nil :size 1) :version-technique :nonversioned) (cset-rel-tuples-index :initform (make-instance 'persistent-vector :initial-element -1 :size 1) :version-technique :nonversioned) ;; BOTH these slots are updated ONLY by vm-txn-note-change-set, ;; except for schema upgrading. ;; The cset-rel-tuples-index slot is a conceptual hash table into the ;; cset-relationship-tuples slot. This is used by ;; master-catalog-lookup-cset-relationship ;; to avoid an extremely costly linear search of cset-relationship-tuples. ;; This is very important for cset_add, cset_remove, and csets_from_file. ;; The idea is that the did-string of the master-cid's did is hashed. ;; Reducing that hash modulo the number of entries in cset-rel-tuples-index, ;; finds a "home" index of cset-rel-tuples-index. Using the sb32 value ;; in that element, we either have a -1 (so the entry is not in the ;; hash table) or we get an index into cset_relationship_tuples. ;; If there is no hash collision, that element of cset_relationship_tuples ;; will contain the desired master-cid did we are looking for. If it ;; isn't the one we want, we have had a hash collision, and we resolve it ;; by linear probing in the next-door (circularly) element of ;; cset-rel-tuples-index. ;; The number of elements of cset-rel-tuples-index is always a prime number, ;; and is also maintained to be more than twice as large as the number of ;; entries in cset-relationship-tuples. That is important, to prevent ;; clustering and slow searching. So when it grows, cset-rel-tuples-index ;; grows by a reasonable factor (about 2) so that it always contains ;; at least half "holes", that is, -1. Further, we want to avoid frequent ;; growth, because growing requires computing every entry in the hash table ;; again. That makes for a big transaction, as every element of the ;; cid-relationship-tuple vector has to be mapped in, and rehashed with ;; the new size of cset-rel-tuples-index. ;; Space considerations: In Jack's db, there are roughly 40,000 elements ;; currently in the cset-relationship-tuples. Suppose we had 100,000 ;; elements. In Jack's db, it appears that the tuples are about 2 elements ;; each, average. Suppose it were 9. Then the tuples would take 4*(1+9)=40 ;; bytes each, so 40*100,000 = 4Mb total (plus another 400,000 for the ;; cset-relationship-tuples vector itself). This is large, but not likely ;; to be a cause of breakage anytime soon. ;; The cset-name-hashtable maps cset names to csets. While the HP ;; model of ChangeSafe doesn't allow changing the name of a cset, ;; we allow this in general. So this hash table is keyed by cset ;; name, and valued by all csets which EVER bore that name in their ;; versioned name component. The hash value is therefore a list. ;; In the case of system augmented names (by ;; change_create/master_change), there shouldn't be any collisions. ;; We also use this slot to hash unaugmented user names to csets, ;; and those are far more likely to have collisions (one key -> ;; multiple csets). In the case of un-augmented names, this is ;; expected. In the case of augmented names, this is an error. (cset-name-hashtable :version-technique nil :initform (make-instance 'persistent-hash-table :size 1023) :reader master-catalog/cset-name-hashtable) ) (:documentation "Catalog/hierarchy-root of versioned information maintained in the master repository.") (:metaclass versioned-standard-class) (:schema-version 0))Pretty straightforward, no? No? Let's list the products in the master catalog:
(defun cmctl/list-products (conman-request) "cheesy hack to list the products" (let ((master-repository-name (conman-request/repository-dbpath conman-request)) (reason "list products") (userid (conman-request/user-name conman-request))) (call-with-master-catalog-transaction master-repository-name userid :master-metaversion :latest-metaversion :version :latest-version :reason reason :transaction-type :read-only :receiver (lambda (master-repository master-transaction master-catalog) (declare (ignore master-repository master-transaction)) (collect 'list (map-fn 't (lambda (product) (list (distributed-object-identifier product) (named-object/name product) (described-object/description product))) (master-catalog/scan-products master-catalog)))))))That isn't very edifying.
Start from the end:
(master-catalog/scan-products master-catalog)defined as
(defun master-catalog/scan-products (master-catalog) (declare (optimizable-series-function)) (versioned-object/scan-composite-versioned-slot master-catalog 'products))The
optimizable-series-function
declaration indicates that we are using Richard Waters's series package. This allows us to write functions that can be assembled into an efficient pipeline for iterating over a collection of objects. This code:(collect 'list (map-fn 't (lambda (product) (list (distributed-object-identifier product) (named-object/name product) (described-object/description product))) (master-catalog/scan-products master-catalog)))takes each product in turn, creates a three element list of the identifier, the project name, and the product description, and finally collects the three-tuples in a list to be returned to the caller. Here is what it looks like macroexpanded:
(COMMON-LISP:LET* ((#:OUT-917 MASTER-CATALOG)) (COMMON-LISP:LET (#:OUT-914) (SETQ #:OUT-914 'PRODUCTS) (COMMON-LISP:LET (#:OUT-913 #:OUT-912) (SETQ #:OUT-913 (SLOT-VALUE-UNVERSIONED #:OUT-917 #:OUT-914)) (SETQ #:OUT-912 (IF *VERSIONED-VALUE-CID-SET-OVERRIDE* (PROGN (DEBUG-MESSAGE 4 "Using override cid-set to scan slot ~s" #:OUT-914) *VERSIONED-VALUE-CID-SET-OVERRIDE*) (TRANSACTION/CID-SET *TRANSACTION*))) (COMMON-LISP:LET (#:OUT-911 #:OUT-910 #:OUT-909) (MULTIPLE-VALUE-SETQ (#:OUT-911 #:OUT-910 #:OUT-909) (CVI-GET-ION-VECTOR-AND-INDEX #:OUT-913 #:OUT-912)) (IF #:OUT-911 NIL (PROGN (IF (COMMON-LISP:LET ((#:G717-902 #:OUT-910)) (IF #:G717-902 #:G717-902 (THE T (CVI/DEFAULT-ALLOWED #:OUT-913)))) NIL (PROGN (SLOT-UNBOUND (CLASS-OF #:OUT-917) #:OUT-917 #:OUT-914))))) (DEBUG-MESSAGE 5 "Active ion vector for retrieval: ~s" #:OUT-911) (COMMON-LISP:LET (#:OUT-908) (SETQ #:OUT-908 (IF #:OUT-911 #:OUT-911 (THE T #()))) (COMMON-LISP:LET (#:ELEMENTS-907 (#:LIMIT-905 (ARRAY-TOTAL-SIZE #:OUT-908)) (#:INDEX-904 -1) (#:INDEX-903 (- -1 1)) #:ITEMS-915 #:ITEMS-900 (#:LASTCONS-897 (LIST NIL)) #:LST-898) (DECLARE (TYPE SERIES::VECTOR-INDEX+ #:LIMIT-905) (TYPE SERIES::-VECTOR-INDEX+ #:INDEX-904) (TYPE INTEGER #:INDEX-903) (TYPE CONS #:LASTCONS-897) (TYPE LIST #:LST-898)) (SETQ #:LST-898 #:LASTCONS-897) (TAGBODY #:LL-918 (INCF #:INDEX-904) (LOCALLY (DECLARE (TYPE SERIES::VECTOR-INDEX+ #:INDEX-904)) (IF (= #:INDEX-904 #:LIMIT-905) (GO SERIES::END)) (SETQ #:ELEMENTS-907 (ROW-MAJOR-AREF #:OUT-908 (THE SERIES::VECTOR-INDEX #:INDEX-904)))) (INCF #:INDEX-903) (IF (MINUSP #:INDEX-903) (GO #:LL-918)) (SETQ #:ITEMS-915 ((LAMBDA (ION-SOUGHT) (CVI-INSERTION-RECORD/GET-VALUE-FOR-ION (SVREF #:OUT-909 ION-SOUGHT) ION-SOUGHT)) #:ELEMENTS-907)) (SETQ #:ITEMS-900 ((LAMBDA (PRODUCT) (LIST (DISTRIBUTED-OBJECT-IDENTIFIER PRODUCT) (NAMED-OBJECT/NAME PRODUCT) (DESCRIBED-OBJECT/DESCRIPTION PRODUCT))) #:ITEMS-915)) (SETQ #:LASTCONS-897 (SETF (CDR #:LASTCONS-897) (CONS #:ITEMS-900 NIL))) (GO #:LL-918) SERIES::END) (CDR #:LST-898)))))))To be continued...
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