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blog/olin 1: update based on feedback
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@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ date: 2018-09-01
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# [Olin][olin]: 1: Why
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[Olin][olin] is an attempt at defining a radically new primitive to make it
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[Olin][olin] is an attempt at defining a radically new operating primitive to make it
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easier to reason about, deploy and operate event-driven services that are
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independent of the OS or CPU of the computer they are running on. It will have
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components that take care of the message queue offsetting, retry logic,
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@ -26,12 +26,14 @@ message UserLoginEvent {
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}
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```
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and when matching data is written to the queue for the event type `example.UserLoginEvent`,
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When matching data is written to the queue for the event type `example.UserLoginEvent`,
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all of the handlers registered to that data type will run with serialized protocol
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buffer bytes as its standard input. If the handlers return a nonzero exit status,
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they are retried up to three times, exponentially backing off.
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Handlers need to deal with the fact they can be run out of order.
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Consider an Olin handler equivalent to a Unix process.
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## Background
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Very frequently, I end up needing to write applications that basically end up
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@ -79,6 +81,17 @@ random readers, everything is done via filesystem system calls.
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Consider this the first draft of Dagger, everything here is subject to change.
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This is going to be the experimental phase.
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Consider Dagger at the level _below_ libc in most Linux environements. Dagger
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is the kind of API that libc would be implemented on top of.
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### VM
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Dagger processes will use [WebAssembly][wasm] as a platform-independent virtual
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machine format. WebAssembly is used here due to the large number of
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implemetnations and compilers targeting it for the use in web programming. We can
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also benefit from the amazing work that has gone into the use of WebAssembly in
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front-end browser programming without having to need a browser!
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### Base Environment
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When a dagger process is opened, the following files are open:
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@ -87,9 +100,6 @@ When a dagger process is opened, the following files are open:
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- 1: standard output: the standard output of the program.
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- 2: standard error: error output for the program.
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Any memory address above byte 4096 is free for implementing applications to use.
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Memory addresses below byte 4096 are reserved for future internal-only use.
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### File Handlers
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In the open call (defined later), a file URL is specified instead of a file name.
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@ -110,6 +120,10 @@ I'd like to add the following handlers in the future:
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- rand - cryptographically secure random data good for use in crypto keys `rand://`
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- time - unix timestamp in a little-endian encoded int64 on every read() - `time://utc`
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In the future, users should be able to define arbitrary other protocol handlers
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with custom webassembly modules. More information about this feature will be
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posted if we choose to do this.
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### Handler Function
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Each Dagger module can only handle one data type. This is intentional. This
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@ -128,9 +142,11 @@ In clang in C mode, you could define the entrypoint for a handler module like th
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```c
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// handle_nothing.c
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#include <dagger.h>
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__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))
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int handle() {
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// read all of standard input to memory and handle it
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// read standard input as necessary and handle it
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return 0; // success
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}
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```
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@ -138,12 +154,15 @@ int handle() {
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### System Calls
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A [system call][syscall] is how computer programs interface with the outside
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world. When a dagger program makes a system call, the amount of time the program
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world. When a Dagger program makes a system call, the amount of time the program
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spends waiting for that system call is collected and recorded based on what
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underlying resource took care of the call. This means, in theory, users of olin
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could alert on HTTP requests from one service to another taking longer amounts
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of time very trivially.
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Future mechanisms will allow for introspection and checking the status of
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handlers, as well as arbitrarily killing handlers that get stuck in a weird way.
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Dagger uses the following system calls:
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- open
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@ -265,3 +284,4 @@ a very long-term project that radically redesigns how software should be written
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[olin]: https://github.com/Xe/olin
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[goslack]: https://invite.slack.golangbridge.org
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[wasmgo]: https://github.com/Xe/olin/tree/master/internal/abi/wasmgo
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[wasm]: https://webassembly.org
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