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manual: Put the JSON guideline on its own page
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3 changed files with 82 additions and 82 deletions
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@ -121,6 +121,7 @@
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- [Documentation](contributing/documentation.md)
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- [Experimental Features](contributing/experimental-features.md)
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- [CLI guideline](contributing/cli-guideline.md)
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- [JSON guideline](contributing/json-guideline.md)
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- [C++ style guide](contributing/cxx.md)
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- [Releases](release-notes/index.md)
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{{#include ./SUMMARY-rl-next.md}}
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@ -389,88 +389,6 @@ colors, no emojis and using ASCII instead of Unicode symbols). The same should
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happen when TTY is not detected on STDERR. We should not display progress /
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status section, but only print warnings and errors.
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## Returning future proof JSON
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The schema of JSON output should allow for backwards compatible extension. This section explains how to achieve this.
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Two definitions are helpful here, because while JSON only defines one "key-value"
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object type, we use it to cover two use cases:
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- **dictionary**: a map from names to value that all have the same type. In
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C++ this would be a `std::map` with string keys.
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- **record**: a fixed set of attributes each with their own type. In C++, this
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would be represented by a `struct`.
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It is best not to mix these use cases, as that may lead to incompatibilities when the schema changes. For example, adding a record field to a dictionary breaks consumers that assume all JSON object fields to have the same meaning and type.
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This leads to the following guidelines:
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- The top-level (root) value must be a record.
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Otherwise, one can not change the structure of a command's output.
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- The value of a dictionary item must be a record.
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Otherwise, the item type can not be extended.
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- List items should be records.
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Otherwise, one can not change the structure of the list items.
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If the order of the items does not matter, and each item has a unique key that is a string, consider representing the list as a dictionary instead. If the order of the items needs to be preserved, return a list of records.
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- Streaming JSON should return records.
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An example of a streaming JSON format is [JSON lines](https://jsonlines.org/), where each line represents a JSON value. These JSON values can be considered top-level values or list items, and they must be records.
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### Examples
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This is bad, because all keys must be assumed to be store types:
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```json
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{
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"local": { ... },
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"remote": { ... },
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"http": { ... }
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}
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```
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This is good, because the it is extensible at the root, and is somewhat self-documenting:
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```json
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{
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"storeTypes": { "local": { ... }, ... },
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"pluginSupport": true
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}
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```
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While the dictionary of store types seems like a very complete response at first, a use case may arise that warrants returning additional information.
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For example, the presence of plugin support may be crucial information for a client to proceed when their desired store type is missing.
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The following representation is bad because it is not extensible:
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```json
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{ "outputs": [ "out" "bin" ] }
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```
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However, simply converting everything to records is not enough, because the order of outputs must be preserved:
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```json
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{ "outputs": { "bin": {}, "out": {} } }
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```
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The first item is the default output. Deriving this information from the outputs ordering is not great, but this is how Nix currently happens to work.
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While it is possible for a JSON parser to preserve the order of fields, we can not rely on this capability to be present in all JSON libraries.
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This representation is extensible and preserves the ordering:
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```json
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{ "outputs": [ { "outputName": "out" }, { "outputName": "bin" } ] }
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```
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## Dialog with the user
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CLIs don't always make it clear when an action has taken place. For every
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81
doc/manual/src/contributing/json-guideline.md
Normal file
81
doc/manual/src/contributing/json-guideline.md
Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,81 @@
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## Returning future proof JSON
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The schema of JSON output should allow for backwards compatible extension. This section explains how to achieve this.
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Two definitions are helpful here, because while JSON only defines one "key-value"
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object type, we use it to cover two use cases:
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- **dictionary**: a map from names to value that all have the same type. In
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C++ this would be a `std::map` with string keys.
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- **record**: a fixed set of attributes each with their own type. In C++, this
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would be represented by a `struct`.
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It is best not to mix these use cases, as that may lead to incompatibilities when the schema changes. For example, adding a record field to a dictionary breaks consumers that assume all JSON object fields to have the same meaning and type.
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This leads to the following guidelines:
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- The top-level (root) value must be a record.
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Otherwise, one can not change the structure of a command's output.
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- The value of a dictionary item must be a record.
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Otherwise, the item type can not be extended.
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- List items should be records.
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Otherwise, one can not change the structure of the list items.
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If the order of the items does not matter, and each item has a unique key that is a string, consider representing the list as a dictionary instead. If the order of the items needs to be preserved, return a list of records.
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- Streaming JSON should return records.
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An example of a streaming JSON format is [JSON lines](https://jsonlines.org/), where each line represents a JSON value. These JSON values can be considered top-level values or list items, and they must be records.
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### Examples
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This is bad, because all keys must be assumed to be store types:
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```json
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{
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"local": { ... },
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"remote": { ... },
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"http": { ... }
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}
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```
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This is good, because the it is extensible at the root, and is somewhat self-documenting:
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```json
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{
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"storeTypes": { "local": { ... }, ... },
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"pluginSupport": true
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}
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```
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While the dictionary of store types seems like a very complete response at first, a use case may arise that warrants returning additional information.
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For example, the presence of plugin support may be crucial information for a client to proceed when their desired store type is missing.
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The following representation is bad because it is not extensible:
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```json
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{ "outputs": [ "out" "bin" ] }
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```
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However, simply converting everything to records is not enough, because the order of outputs must be preserved:
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```json
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{ "outputs": { "bin": {}, "out": {} } }
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```
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The first item is the default output. Deriving this information from the outputs ordering is not great, but this is how Nix currently happens to work.
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While it is possible for a JSON parser to preserve the order of fields, we can not rely on this capability to be present in all JSON libraries.
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This representation is extensible and preserves the ordering:
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```json
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{ "outputs": [ { "outputName": "out" }, { "outputName": "bin" } ] }
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```
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