Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
James Shubin
14ddd7c196 golint: Fix ineffassign mistakes 2018-02-21 22:52:41 -05:00
James Shubin
b19583e7d3 lang: Initial implementation of the mgmt language
This is an initial implementation of the mgmt language. It is a
declarative (immutable) functional, reactive, domain specific
programming language. It is intended to be a language that is:

* safe
* powerful
* easy to reason about

With these properties, we hope this language, and the mgmt engine will
allow you to model the real-time systems that you'd like to automate.

This also includes a number of other associated changes. Sorry for the
large size of this patch.
2018-01-20 08:09:29 -05:00
James Shubin
12fce52cd7 legal: Happy 2018 everyone...
Done with:

ack '2017+' -l | xargs sed -i -e 's/2017+/2018+/g'

Checked manually with:

git add -p

Hello to future James from 2019, and Happy Hacking!
2018-01-03 21:22:07 -05:00
James Shubin
46be83f8f7 legal: Re-license to GPLv3 2017-09-11 18:07:47 -04:00
James Shubin
b1e035f96a pgraph: Move get/set state methods out to resource package 2017-05-29 15:43:50 -04:00
James Shubin
70e7ee2d46 pgraph: Remove use of Flags struct in favour of Value API
One small step to completely cleaning up the pgraph package so that we
can eventually fix the code that would otherwise create a cycle!
2017-05-13 13:28:41 -04:00
James Shubin
018399cb1f semaphore, pgraph: Add semaphore grouping and tests
If two resources are grouped, then the result should contain the
semaphores of both resources. This is because the user is expecting
(independently) resource A and resource B to have a limiting choke
point. If when combined those choke points aren't preserved, then we
have broken an important promise to the user.
2017-02-28 16:40:53 -05:00
James Shubin
d8e19cd79a semaphore: Create a semaphore metaparam
This adds a P/V style semaphore mechanism to the resource graph. This
enables the user to specify a number of "id:count" tags associated with
each resource which will reduce the parallelism of the CheckApply
operation to that maximum count.

This is particularly interesting because (assuming I'm not mistaken) the
implementation is dead-lock free assuming that no individual resource
permanently ever blocks during execution! I don't have a formal proof of
this, but I was able to convince myself on paper that it was the case.

An actual proof that N P/V counting semaphores in a DAG won't ever
dead-lock would be particularly welcome! Hint: the trick is to acquire
them in alphabetical order while respecting the DAG flow. Disclaimer,
this assumes that the lock count is always > 0 of course.
2017-02-27 02:57:06 -05:00
James Shubin
a981cfa053 legal: Oh yeah, it is 2017 2017-02-16 01:34:32 -05:00
James Shubin
63f21952f4 golang: Split things into packages
This makes this logically more separate! :) As an aside...

I really hate the way golang does dependencies and packages. Yes, some
people insist on nesting their code deep into a $GOPATH, which is fine
if you're a google dev and are forced to work this way, but annoying for
the rest of the world. Your code shouldn't need a git commit to switch
to a a different vcs host! Gah I hate this so much.
2016-09-26 12:30:28 -04:00