Ikiwiki currently only has one type of dependency between pages
(plus wikilinks special cased in on the side). This has resulted in various
problems, and it's seemed for a long time to me that ikiwiki needs to get
smarter about what types of dependencies are supported.
unnecessary work
The current single dependency type causes the depending page to be rebuilt
whenever a matching dependency is added, removed, or modified. But a
great many things don't care about the modification case, and often cause
unnecessary page rebuilds:
- meta only cares if the pages are added or removed. Content change does
not matter (unless show=title is used).
- brokenlinks, orphans, pagecount, ditto
- inline in archive mode cares about page title, author changing, but
not content. (Ditto for meta with show=title.)
- Causes extra work when solving the [[bugs/transitive_dependencies]]
problem.
two types of dependencies needed for [[tracking_bugs_with_dependencies]]
it seems that there are two types of dependency, and ikiwiki
currently only handles one of them. The first type is "Rebuild this
page when any of these other pages changes" - ikiwiki handles this.
The second type is "rebuild this page when set of pages referred to by
this pagespec changes" - ikiwiki doesn't seem to handle this. I
suspect that named pagespecs would make that second type of dependency
more important. I'll try to come up with a good example. -- [[Will]]
Hrm, I was going to build an example of this with backlinks, but it
looks like that is handled as a special case at the moment (line 458 of
render.pm). I'll see if I can breapk
things another way. Fixing this properly would allow removal of that special case. -- [[Will]]
I can't quite understand the distinction you're trying to draw
between the two types of dependencies. Backlinks are a very special
case though and I'll be suprised if they fit well into pagespecs.
--[[Joey]]
The issue is that the existential pagespec matching allows you to build things that have similar
problems to backlinks.
e.g. the following inline:
\[[!inline pages="define(~done, link(done)) and link(~done)" archive=yes]]
includes any page that links to a page that links to done. Now imagine I add a new link to 'done' on
some random page somewhere - a page which some other page links to which didn't previously get included - the set of pages accepted by the pagespec, and hence the set of
pages inlined, will change. But, there is no dependency anywhere on the page that I altered, so
ikiwiki will not rebuild the page with the inline in it. What is happening is that the page that I altered affects
the set of pages matched by the pagespec without itself being matched by the pagespec, and hence included in the dependency list.
To make this work well, I think you need to recognise two types of dependencies for each page (and no
special cases for particular types of links, eg backlinks). The first type of dependency says, "The content of
this page depends upon the content of these other pages". The add_depends() in the shortcuts
plugin is of this form: any time the shortcuts page is edited, any page with a shortcut on it
is rebuilt. The inline plugin also needs to add dependencies of this form to detect when the inlined
content changes. By contrast, the map plugin does not need a dependency of this form, because it
doesn't actually care about the content of any pages, just which pages it needs to include (which we'll handle next).
The second type of dependency says, "The content of this page depends upon the exact set of pages matched
by this pagespec". The first type of dependency was about the content of some pages, the second type is about
which pages get matched by a pagespec. This is the type of dependency tracking that the map plugin needs.
If the set of pages matched by map pagespec changes, then the page with the map on it needs to be rebuilt to show a different list of pages.
Inline needs this type of dependency as well as the previous type - This type handles a change in which pages
are inlined, the previous type handles a change in the content of any of those pages. Shortcut does not need this type of
dependency. Most of the places that use add_depends() seem to need this type of dependency rather than the first type.
Note that inline and map currently achieve the second type of dependency by
explicitly calling add_depends for each page the displayed.
If any of those pages are removed, the regular pagespec would not
match them -- since they're gone. However, the explicit dependency
on them does cause them to match. It's an ugly corner I'd like to
get rid of. --[[Joey]]
Implementation Details: The first type of dependency can be handled very similarly to the current
dependency system. You just need to keep a list of pages that the content depends upon. You could
keep that list as a pagespec, but if you do this you might want to check that the pagespec doesn't change,
possibly by adding a dependency of the second type along with the dependency of the first type.
An example of the current system not tracking enough data is
described in [[bugs/transitive_dependencies]].
--[[Joey]]
The second type of dependency is a little more tricky. For each page, we'd need a list of pagespecs that
the page depended on, and for each pagespec you'd want to store the list of pages that currently match it.
On refresh, you'd need to check each pagespec to see if the set of pages that match it has changed, and if
that set has changed, then rebuild the dependent page(s). Oh, and for this second type of dependency, I
don't think you can merge pagespecs. If I wanted to know if either "*" or "link(done)" changes, then just checking
to see if the set of pages matched by "* or link(done)" changes doesn't work.
The current system works because even though you usually want dependencies of the second type, the set of pages
referred to by a pagespec can only change if one of those pages itself changes. i.e. A dependency check of the
first type will catch a dependency change of the second type with current pagespecs.
This doesn't work with backlinks, and it doesn't work with existential matching. Backlinks are currently special-cased. I don't know
how to special-case existential matching - I suspect you're better off just getting the dependency tracking right.
I also tried to come up with other possible solutions: e.g. can we find the dependencies for a pagespec? That
would be the set of pages where a change on one of those pages could lead to a change in the set of pages matched by the pagespec.
For old-style pagespecs without backlinks, the dependency set for a pagespec is the same as the set of pages the pagespec matches.
Unfortunately, with existential matching, the set of pages that each
pagespec depends upon can quickly become "*", which is not very useful. -- [[Will]]
proposal
I propose the following. --[[Joey]]
- Add a second type of dependency, call it an "contentless dependency".
add_depends defaults to adding a regular ("full") dependency, as
before. (So nothing breaks.)
add_depends($page, $spec, content => 0) adds an contentless dependency.
- Contentless dependencies are stored in
%depends_contentless and
%depends_contentless_simple , which are stored in the index similarly
to the existing hashes.
refresh only looks at added/removed pages when resolving contentless
dependencies.
This seems straightforwardly doable. I'd like [[Will]]'s feedback on it, if
possible. The type types of dependencies I am proposing are not identical
to the two types he talks about above, but I hope are close enough that
they can be used.
This doesn't deal with the stuff that only depend on the metadata of a
page, as collected in the scan pass, changing. But it does leave a window
open for adding such a dependency type later.
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