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From: "Thomas S. Dye" <tsd@tsdye.online>
To: Matt <matt@excalamus.com>
Cc: emacs-orgmode <emacs-orgmode@gnu.org>, Timothy <tecosaur@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] ob-shell-test, test-ob-shell and introduction
Date: Sun, 02 Jan 2022 08:57:25 -1000	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <87tuemge3u.fsf@tsdye.online> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <17e190f0110.dffbf4bc1032.6816869643164380190@excalamus.com>

Aloha all,

FWIW, as a user actively pursuing reproducible research with Org 
and a contributor to documentation about Org and Babel intended 
for other users (rather than Org mode elisp coders) I'd be pleased 
if Org's code custodians look favorably on this proposal.

+1

All the best,
Tom

Matt <matt@excalamus.com> writes:

> Apologies for the book.  I've been sitting on this stuff for two 
> months and am wondering how to proceed.
>
> IANAL but AFAIK/CT, my contract contains an exception for making 
> contributions to projects like Org. I've gotten confirmation 
> from my manager and by HR.  However, until the CEO signs the FSF 
> disclaimer, I can't officially contribute.  I'm confident that I 
> can publish changes (e.g. to a personal website); the FSF just 
> can't accept my changes (yet).
>
> I could start working on ob-shell.el separately now and publish 
> that myself. It's not clear how I would then contribute those 
> changes back once I'm cleared by the FSF.  I'm inclined towards 
> some refactoring and I'm not sure how I could break that down in 
> such a way that if it took two more months to get the copyright 
> stuff worked out that anyone could make sense of the changes.  I 
> would much prefer to gradually submit patches, discuss them, and 
> then eventually have them merged in turn.  If I have a heap of 
> changes elsewhere, I feel like it would be harder to have a 
> conversion about them.
>
> Regardless, I think I should define test cases first.  If those 
> are considered valid, then any refactoring would be moot if they 
> pass, right?  With (agreed upon) test cases, it shouldn't matter 
> if I refactor as long as functionality remains the same?
>
> Overall, what advice do you have?
>
> It looks to me like ob-shell.el could use some love in other 
> respects besides async evaluation.  I've detailed where below, 
> partly for my own organization and partly for posterity, but 
> mainly because this isn't my house, so to speak, and I don't 
> want to barge in and start rearranging the furniture and eating 
> whatever's in the fridge.  Or, is it like Worg in that once I 
> have the keys I can drive where I like, so long as there're no 
> crashes?
>
> I'm interested in people's thoughts on these notes on 
> ob-shell.el:
>
> * Tests
> There are several code paths, like shebang, cmdline, and basic 
> execution, which don't always have something to do with one 
> another in the code.  Having tests would be really helpful to 
> make sure everything jives.  Before doing anything with the code 
> base, I intend to create tests for all the functionality.
>
> * 2D-array
> I documented two options for the =:var= header[fn:1]. The 
> ob-shell.el code actually defines a third option for 2D-arrays. 
> I couldn't get it to work.  It was one of several things not 
> documented anywhere, at least as far as I could find, and which 
> I had to figure out straight from the code.  Between not being 
> great at shell scripting and having a hard time deciphering that 
> ob-shell.el code, I'm not sure 2D-arrays are actually fully or 
> correctly implemented.
>
> * M-up behavior <<M-up>>
> The =org-babel-load-session:shell= code path only works when 
> M-up is used on a code block[fn:2]. Is M-up actually documented 
> anywhere?  Furthermore, the =org-babel-load-session:shell= only 
> works for the "shell" language, which is not actually a "proper" 
> shell (i.e. it's not listed in =org-babel-shell-names=). The 
> M-up defaults to using $ESHELL or shell-file-name through the 
> =shell= command.
>
> For example, try calling M-up on these:
>
> #+comment: (opaquely) calls the system shell
> #+begin_src shell :session my-shell
> echo "hello, world!"  #+end_src
>
> #+comment: fails
> #+begin_src sh :session my-sh
> echo "hello, world!"  #+end_src
>
> #+comment: fails
> #+begin_src bash :session my-bash
> echo "hello, world!"  #+end_src
>
> To fix this, there needs to be an 
> =org-babel-load-session:<lang>= for each language in 
> =org-babel-shell-names=.  This would probably make the most 
> sense in =org-babel-shell-initialize=.  However, that function 
> [[org-babel-shell-initialize][needs attention]].
>
> * Refactoring <<refactoring>>
> The ob-shell.el code appears inconsistent to me.  Clearly, this 
> is somewhat subjective.  I've tried to give a rationale for each 
> point to make it less so.  My goal is to be maintainer of 
> ob-shell.el, but that's not forever.  These things were an 
> obstacle for me and my aim is to remove them for the next 
> person.
>
> ** =org-babel-shell-initialize= <<org-babel-shell-initialize>>
> As alluded to elsewhere, =org-babel-shell-initialize= doesn't 
> appear to adhere to the (elisp) Coding Conventions,
>
> #+begin_quote
>    • Constructs that define a function or variable should be 
>    macros, not functions, and their names should start with 
>    ‘define-’.  The macro should receive the name to be defined 
>    as the first argument.  That will help various tools find the 
>    definition automatically.  Avoid constructing the names in 
>    the macro itself, since that would confuse these tools. 
>    #+end_quote
>
> The =org-babel-shell-initialize= function defines 
> =org-babel-execute:<lang>=, 
> =org-babel-variable-assignments:<lang>=, and 
> =org-babel-default-header-args:<lang>= for the "languages" in 
> =org-babel-shell-names=.  As it stands, that 
> =org-babel-shell-initialize= is a function does no harm (aside 
> from being confusing by way of straying from convention). 
> However, if the [[M-up][M-up]] issue is to be resolved, it seems 
> to me that =org-babel-shell-initialize= should be updated to 
> match the convention (i.e. be a macro).
>
> ** Organization
> Definitions are introduced in different orders.  For example, 
> the =org-babel-shell-initialize= function whose sole purpose is 
> to work with =org-babel-shell-names= is defined before the 
> reader knows what =org-babel-shell-names= is.  Later, this 
> pattern of defining the component pieces after they're used is 
> reversed. For example, =org-babel-load-session:shell= relies on 
> =org-babel-prep-session:shell= which is defined first.  I find 
> defining terms before they're used makes a document more easy to 
> comprehend than otherwise.  I want to reorder the definitions.
>
> Similarly, some functions could use breaking out.  The most 
> important is probably =org-babel-sh-evaluate= which handles the 
> various header arguments.  There are various paths of execution 
> each requiring separate logic, yet all live in the one large 
> function.  Breaking these out would allow them to have separate 
> docstrings and, I expect, be easier to understand since the 
> logic of one would be (lexically) separated from the rest.
>
> Other functionality might be better served by consolidating 
> functions. There's a lot of fiddly code dedicated to variable 
> assignment. Actually, much of the ob-shell.el file is related to 
> variable assignment. The assignments are done using separate 
> functions, yet all apply to the same task. They'll never be used 
> for anything else.  Do they need to be split out?  Is there a 
> technical reason? I don't see one.  Does it help comprehension? 
> When split out as they are, I found it hard to make sense of the 
> context they're used in since they're defined apart from the 
> logic that uses them (i.e. what header uses them, what form does 
> the header take, etc.).  I think it's worth seeing if there's a 
> better way to present that part of the code base.
>
> ** Naming
> The following apply to all shells, not just "sh" and should be 
> updated to be "shell". This looks like cruft from when 
> ob-shell.el was called ob-sh.el AFAICT.
>
> - =org-babel-sh-evaluate=
> - =org-babel-sh-eoe-indicator=
> - =org-babel-sh-eoe-output=
> - =org-babel--variable-assignments:sh-generic=
> - =org-babel-sh-var-to-sh=
> - =org-babel-sh-var-to-string=
> - =org-babel-sh-initiate-session=
> - =org-babel-sh-evaluate=
> - =org-babel-sh-strip-weird-long-prompt=
>
> Generally speaking, I find the Org Babel code base tricky to 
> read (especially at first).  I spent a good deal of time 
> untangling what lived where and who did what. I can play along 
> fine now that I'm familiar. However, since understanding took 
> longer than I think was necessary, I want to detail the pain 
> points as they have made contributing to Babel harder.
>
> Overall, Babel somewhat breaks the (elisp) Coding Conventions 
> for naming,
>
> #+begin_quote
> You should choose a short word to distinguish your program from 
> other Lisp programs.  #+end_quote
>
> I understand the variable/function name prefix to be the file 
> name, typically.  The file name is often the package name, or 
> more precisely the feature provided by the file[fn:3]. For Org 
> Babel, there's not a solid file-to-prefix relation.  We say "Org 
> Babel", but the main functionality is in ob-core and the various 
> "ob-" files either extend or implement implied behavior (e.g. 
> =org-babel-<lang>-execute=).  Is the "program" ob-core, ob-lang, 
> or the whole suite of files?  This is a subjective question 
> which the Org Babel "program" answers with, "the whole suite of 
> files".  All components, across all "ob-" files, bear the name 
> "org-babel-". This is still something that trips me up: is the 
> current symbol core or not?  Who is responsible for what?
>
> I would expect the core API to have its own prefix. The 
> extensions would then define their code and have a different 
> prefix, "ob-<lang>-". This way, readers/contributors could open 
> the pertinent ob-* file, see the expected symbol prefix (e.g. 
> "ob-shell-") and another prefix (e.g. "org-babel-") and be able 
> to distinguish which is which.  As it stands, ob-core.el could 
> be renamed to org-babel.el or the "org-babel-" prefix could be 
> changed to "ob-core-".
>
> Another possible solution, or a stopgap, would be to have a 
> document detailing the Org Babel API[fn:4].
>
> * Process interaction
> Emacs has several different ways of interacting with processes. 
> The ob-shell.el code uses a few of them. Since async is another 
> way to interact with a process, a single process pattern could 
> be used. The goal would be to make each of the different 
> functionalities provided by ob-shell.el have a similar 
> implementation.  The expectation is that this would benefit 
> maintenance.
>
> * Footnotes
>
> [fn:1] 
> https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/babel/languages/ob-doc-shell.html#orgfa6b7c5
>
> [fn:2] M-up is bound to =org-metaup-hook= and
> =ob-core:org-babel-load-in-session= by default.
>
> [fn:3] It's not clear to me if there's a technical definition 
> for an
> Emacs package.
>
> [fn:4] I may extend my personal notes into a document detailing 
> the
> Org API. http://excalamus.com/2021-11-03-org_babel.html


-- 
Thomas S. Dye
https://tsdye.online/tsdye


  reply	other threads:[~2022-01-02 18:58 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 19+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2021-11-22 18:37 [PATCH] ob-shell-test, test-ob-shell and introduction Matt
2021-11-22 18:43 ` Timothy
2021-11-24 18:48   ` Matt
2021-12-02  9:39     ` Timothy
2021-12-06  3:50       ` Matt
2021-12-06  4:50         ` Thomas S. Dye
2021-12-18  7:03           ` Matt
2021-12-18 20:51             ` Thomas S. Dye
2021-12-31 17:04             ` Thomas S. Dye
2021-12-31 19:18               ` Matt
2021-12-31 22:11                 ` Thomas S. Dye
2022-01-02  4:32                   ` Matt
2022-01-02 18:57                     ` Thomas S. Dye [this message]
2022-01-05 17:12                 ` Max Nikulin
2022-01-06  3:47                   ` Matt
2022-01-07 16:18                     ` Max Nikulin
2021-11-22 19:08 ` Thomas S. Dye
2021-11-23  4:42   ` [PATCH] ob-doc-shell.org (was [PATCH] ob-shell-test, test-ob-shell and introduction) Matt
2021-11-23  4:59     ` Thomas S. Dye

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