Massive libxo-zation that breaks everything

hiren panchasara hiren at strugglingcoder.info
Tue Mar 3 17:32:32 UTC 2015


On 03/02/15 at 07:33P, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
> 
> 
> > On Mar 2, 2015, at 7:14 PM, Julian Elischer <julian at freebsd.org> wrote:
> > 
> >> On 3/2/15 5:30 PM, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
> >> 
> >>>> On Mar 2, 2015, at 4:22 PM, Andrey Chernov <ache at freebsd.org> wrote:
> >>>> 
> >>>>> On 02.03.2015 22:55, Julian Elischer wrote:
> >>>>> On 3/2/15 5:27 AM, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
> >>>>> 
> >>>>> 
> >>>>>>> On 3/2/15 4:14 AM, Julian Elischer wrote:
> >>>>>>> On 3/1/15 10:49 AM, Harrison Grundy wrote:
> >>>>>>> Thanks!
> >>>>>>> 
> >>>>>>> That does seem useful, but I'm not sure I see the reasoning behind
> >>>>>>> putting into base, over a port or package, since processing XML in base
> >>>>>>> is a pain, and it can't serve up JSON or HTML without additional
> >>>>>>> utilities anyway.
> >>>>>>> 
> >>>>>>> (If I'm reviving a long-settled thing, let me know and I'll drop it.
> >>>>>>> I'm
> >>>>>>> trying to understand the use case for this.)
> >>>>>> To me it would almost seem more useful to have a programmable filter
> >>>>>> for which you could produce
> >>>>>> parse grammars to parse the output of various programs..
> >>>>>> thus
> >>>>>> 
> >>>>>> ifconfig -a | xmlize -g ifconfig | your-favourite-xml-parser
> >>>>>> with a set of grammars in /usr/share/xmlize/
> >>>>>> then we could use it for out-of-tree programs as well if we wrote
> >>>>>> grammars for them..
> >>>>>> 
> >>>>>> The sentiment of machine-readable output is nice, but I think it's
> >>>>>> slightly off target.
> >>>>>> we shouldn't have to change all out utilities, and it isn't going to
> >>>>>> help at all with 3rd party apps,
> >>>>>> e.g. samba stuff. A generally easy to program output grammar parser
> >>>>>> would be truely useful.
> >>>>>> and not just for FreeBSD.
> >>>>>> 
> >>>>>> I've been watching with an uncomfortable feeling, but it's taken me a
> >>>>>> while to put my
> >>>>>> finger on what it was..
> >>>>> Are you sure it's not the hairs on the back of your neck standing up
> >>>>> due to NIH?
> >>>>> 
> >>>>> Juniper has been doing this for years and it's very useful for them.
> >>>> I'm not saying the ability to generate machine readable output is wrong,
> >>>> but that the 'unix way' would be to make a filter for it. It seems that
> >>>> the noisy people don't
> >>>> agree with me so I will not stand in the way of progress..
> >>> I agree. Even if someone starts with json and xml only, it will need
> >>> some 3rd format soon, and adding any new format have real possibility to
> >>> break all already existent (like adding json+xml breaks plain text in
> >>> pipes). Moreover, it violates Unix principle 'one tool == one general
> >>> function' and lots of other rules like Eric Raymond ones, making each
> >>> program looks like systemd. It makes harder to merge changes from other
> >>> BSDs too.
> >>> Proper way to do this thing is to back out all changes and write
> >>> completely separate templates-based parser - xml/json writer.
> >> 
> >> Read the library. It doesn't care what output format it needs. It is up to the translation layer to do it. You could even do a csv format or most any other structured output format without changing the userland utils.
> > As far as I can see that's not an argument either way.
> > I just think it makes more sense to spend more time writing one generic converter and grammar files than to mess up the insides of every utility in the system. If we had a tool, we could have grammar templates for 3rd party tools easily.. do YOU want to make libxo changes to 3rd party ports? of course not. so you are going off here solving a half of the problem.
> 
> Actually I want to shame third party ports into adopting libxo (or at least providing machine readable output). 
> 
> I know it's scary to try to lead the pack, after all we could be wrong, but maybe it's time to try something new and see what happens. 
> 
> And no, your idea doesn't make sense it just will lead to those files bit rotting.  
> 
> Bedsides that you don't even have a real spec other than "it should be done differently". 
> 
> Again, show the code. 

Wow. He told you want he didn't like and he moved on. I hope/wish we as
a project can take criticism more positively than this.

Answer to every criticism should not be "show me your code". We (should)
know better than that.

Hiren

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