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Re: Deep vs Shallow trace: Removing the tradeoff?


From: Bengt Richter
Subject: Re: Deep vs Shallow trace: Removing the tradeoff?
Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2021 22:20:30 +0200
User-agent: Mutt/1.10.1 (2018-07-13)

Hi ilmu,

On +2021-03-28 23:16:23 +0000, ilmu wrote:
> First of all, thanks for engaging with me, sorry for not putting more work 
> into the initial email. Note that I have attached inline images from the 
> paper, the paper is also attached to this email.
>

An interesting paper..

I have long been wondering if reproducibility is too exclusively focused
on the source transformation chain and the tools implementing that.

E.g., for programs that execute like side-effect-free functions,
why not an early-cutoff based on a functionally well-tested upgrade
written in a different language, with a totally different source?

If you source the following in a subshell

cat ./early-cutoff.txt
--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---

export HELLO_TO=World

strace -qqxs120 -e write \
guile -c '(let* ((msg (string-append "Hello " (getenv "HELLO_TO") "\n"))) 
(display msg))' |& tr , $'\n'|grep '^ *"'

strace -qqxs120 -e write \
echo "Hello $HELLO_TO" |& tr , $'\n'|grep '^ *"'

--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---

Like,

(. early-cutoff.txt)
--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
 "Hello World\n"
 "Hello World\n"
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---

It informally shows that in a particular context,

--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
guile -c '(let* ((msg (string-append "Hello " (getenv "HELLO_TO") "\n"))) 
(display msg))'
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---

can substitute for
--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
echo "Hello $HELLO_TO"
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---

So, what kinds of build sequences could be cut off early if you ignore how
you produced the code (i.e. just compile whatever source you like with whatever
tools you like) so long as the resultant code passed the functionality tests?

> > What I understand from the above is that there is not so much of a 
> > difference between Bazel and Nix/Guix. The "shallow" tracing is a deep 
> > tracing. It just records something different.
> 
> [classification.png]
> 
> The framework they present is that a build system can be classified based on 
> how it decides whether a rebuild is necessary and how it schedules the 
> necessary rebuilds (i.e. how it sorts the work to be done). They consider 
> these orthogonal strategies a complete description of "what a build system 
> is".
> 
> [constructive_traces.png]
> 
> The constructive trace allows you to keep intermediate artifacts but creates 
> the extra overhead of managing these.
> 
> [deep_constructive_traces.png]
> 
> Since a deep constructive trace only looks at the terminal dependencies you 
> have something of a merkle-dag. What I was suggesting is to be able to do 
> "shallow builds" while still supporting "early cutoff". For reference:
> 
> [early_cutoff.png]
> 
> Early cutoff is a very desirable property that nix does not have (and I 
> assume therefore that neither does guix).
> 
> [shallow_builds.png]
> 
> Basically, if we have a proof that the immediate dependencies are complete 
> then we don't need to fetch anything deeper in the dependency tree.
> 
> > In Nix/Guix, we recursively compute the hash of packages from their inputs, 
> > receipe and other stuff. This hash is unrelated to the checksum of the 
> > result and changes as soon as one element changes. It essentially records 
> > the whole source dependency graph.
> > From what you write, Bazel records the checksum of inputs and receipe, so 
> > it essentially encodes the whole binary dependency graph. It's not 
> > "shallow", as a real change down the graph can have repercussions higher up.
> > Actually Eelco described something similar for Nix in his thesis, the 
> > intensionnal model. As you noticed, different receipes or inputs can lead 
> > to the same output (bitwise). The idea is to declare the expected checksum 
> > of the result, and use this to compute the store item name. As long as you 
> > apply changes that do not affect the output, different receipes (updates) 
> > can be used to generate the same item. So if you update a package, it might 
> > affect its output checksum, so you need to change it. Dependents might not 
> > be affected, in which case you can block update propagation there.
> > The question being how to monitor that packages need to be rebuilt or have 
> > the same hash?
> 
> I think the pictures above should clarify, I should have looked at the paper 
> again before sending my previous email, I read it quite a long time ago.. The 
> property I was trying to recover in the nix-style build systems is this idea 
> of an early cutoff. The strategy for achieving that is to use constructive 
> traces with depth 1 (what I was calling "shallow traces") and then recursive 
> succinct arguments of knowledge for retaining the shallow build property that 
> you get from the "infinitely deep traces".
> 
> > I don't really understand why it must be zero-knowledge. My understanding 
> > is that to have a zero-knowledge proof, you first need a proof of the 
> > claim, then find a clever way to proove you have the proof, without 
> > disclosing it. Not sure it's helpful here. If you have a proof that you 
> > don't need to rebuild, why not share that proof to everyone in the first 
> > place?
> 
> Sure, you only need the succinctness property. I should have been more 
> precise, what I am mainly after is resolving the tradeoff between shallow and 
> deep traces.
> 
> I hope that this discussion can at least be helpful for people that are not 
> familiar with these ideas, even if - as it seems from your response - the 
> idea does not have merit.
> 
> Kind regards,
> - ilmu

-- 
Regards,
Bengt Richter



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