Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-05-26 Thread Beckerle, Mike
I think the point was to understand debugging in daffodil, one must understand, 
and potentially have to display, the data structures that the runtime maintains.

Furthermore, some of the actions the parser/unparser takes are universal, like 
invoking a parser. Others require finer detail than that - e.g., delimiter 
scanning certainly needs more detailed treatment from the debugger.

But first approximation is there should be some way to display, inspect, and 
potentially manipulate each piece of state.


From: John Wass 
Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2021 2:46 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

> Some thoughts re: data format debugger
> I suggest we enumerate

Mike, are you saying there is some ground work to lay for this in Daffodil
itself, or are these things which the debugger needs to model after
existing concepts.


On Mon, May 24, 2021 at 12:48 PM Beckerle, Mike <
mbecke...@owlcyberdefense.com> wrote:

> Some thoughts re: data format debugger
>
> I suggest we enumerate
>
>   *   every single piece of state of the parser,
>   *   every single piece of state of the unparser,
>   *   each action/step of the parser,  (every parse combinator or
> primitive, their subactions)
>   *   and of the unparser, (every unparse combinator, primitive,
> suspension,...)
>
> and wire-frame/mock-up some display for each piece of state, and how, if
> changed by a step, the change to that piece of state would be displayed.
>
> We can write down the nuances associated with these data items/actions
> that impact debugger display.
>
> Some of these states/actions will be analogous to things in conventional
> debuggers. (e.g., looking at the values of variables) Others will be
> specific to DFDL needs. (e.g., looking at layers in the data stream,
> visualizing delimiter scanning success/failure, backtracking)
>
> Core concepts a debugger needs are framing vs. content vs. value, and the
> "regions" in the data stream that make these up. The framing includes
> initiators, terminators, separators, alignment regions, prefix-length
> regions, leading/trailing skip regions, unused regions. Those surround the
> content region, and when padding/filling is involved (for simple types that
> are textual) the content region contains leading pad and trailing pad
> regions, surrounding the value region.
>
> An example of graphical nested box representation of these regions is here
> in a design note about Daffodil:
>
>
> https://daffodil.apache.org/dev/design-notes/term-sharing-in-schema-compiler/
> (see section "Details of Unique and Shared Regions")
>
> The way to start this effort is to look at the UState and PState classes.
> These are the state blocks. Every piece of these is potentially important
> to the debugger.
>
> Lastly, an important aspect of Daffodil is the streaming behavior of the
> parser and unparser. While I believe it is more important to get something
> working than for it to cover every feature, this is an area where not
> anticipating how it needs to work is likely to lock one out of a future
> scenario that accomodates it.
>
> So the parser doesn't produce an infoset. It  produces a stream of infoset
> events, or call-backs to be exact.
> Due to backtracking in the parser, these events can be hung-up for
> substantial time while the parser continues. So we can't assume that there
> is any sort of correlation between parser activity and the producing of
> events.
>
> The unparser doesn't consume an infoset, It consumes a stream of infoset
> events. Specifically, the unparser is the callback-handler for unparse
> infoset events.
>
> The infoset gets trimmed so that we needn't build up the complete infoset
> tree in memory. As parse-events are produced, no-longer necessary parts of
> the infoset are pruned away. Similarly, when unparsing, once a part of the
> infoset has been unparsed, that part of the infoset tree is pruned away if
> no longer needed.
>
>
> 
> From: Steve Lawrence 
> Sent: Thursday, April 22, 2021 9:32 AM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>
> Some thoughts related to showing the infoset as if it were a variable as
> this is prototyped
>
> 1) How do DAP/IDE's represent very large hierarchical data? Infosets can
> be huge, and most of the time a user only cares about the most recent
> infoset item. So someway to follow and show just the most recent part of
> the infoset is important. The current Daffodil debugger as an
> "infosetLines" setting so that it only shows the most recent X number of
> lines, which is most al

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-05-26 Thread John Wass
> Some thoughts re: data format debugger
> I suggest we enumerate

Mike, are you saying there is some ground work to lay for this in Daffodil
itself, or are these things which the debugger needs to model after
existing concepts.


On Mon, May 24, 2021 at 12:48 PM Beckerle, Mike <
mbecke...@owlcyberdefense.com> wrote:

> Some thoughts re: data format debugger
>
> I suggest we enumerate
>
>   *   every single piece of state of the parser,
>   *   every single piece of state of the unparser,
>   *   each action/step of the parser,  (every parse combinator or
> primitive, their subactions)
>   *   and of the unparser, (every unparse combinator, primitive,
> suspension,...)
>
> and wire-frame/mock-up some display for each piece of state, and how, if
> changed by a step, the change to that piece of state would be displayed.
>
> We can write down the nuances associated with these data items/actions
> that impact debugger display.
>
> Some of these states/actions will be analogous to things in conventional
> debuggers. (e.g., looking at the values of variables) Others will be
> specific to DFDL needs. (e.g., looking at layers in the data stream,
> visualizing delimiter scanning success/failure, backtracking)
>
> Core concepts a debugger needs are framing vs. content vs. value, and the
> "regions" in the data stream that make these up. The framing includes
> initiators, terminators, separators, alignment regions, prefix-length
> regions, leading/trailing skip regions, unused regions. Those surround the
> content region, and when padding/filling is involved (for simple types that
> are textual) the content region contains leading pad and trailing pad
> regions, surrounding the value region.
>
> An example of graphical nested box representation of these regions is here
> in a design note about Daffodil:
>
>
> https://daffodil.apache.org/dev/design-notes/term-sharing-in-schema-compiler/
> (see section "Details of Unique and Shared Regions")
>
> The way to start this effort is to look at the UState and PState classes.
> These are the state blocks. Every piece of these is potentially important
> to the debugger.
>
> Lastly, an important aspect of Daffodil is the streaming behavior of the
> parser and unparser. While I believe it is more important to get something
> working than for it to cover every feature, this is an area where not
> anticipating how it needs to work is likely to lock one out of a future
> scenario that accomodates it.
>
> So the parser doesn't produce an infoset. It  produces a stream of infoset
> events, or call-backs to be exact.
> Due to backtracking in the parser, these events can be hung-up for
> substantial time while the parser continues. So we can't assume that there
> is any sort of correlation between parser activity and the producing of
> events.
>
> The unparser doesn't consume an infoset, It consumes a stream of infoset
> events. Specifically, the unparser is the callback-handler for unparse
> infoset events.
>
> The infoset gets trimmed so that we needn't build up the complete infoset
> tree in memory. As parse-events are produced, no-longer necessary parts of
> the infoset are pruned away. Similarly, when unparsing, once a part of the
> infoset has been unparsed, that part of the infoset tree is pruned away if
> no longer needed.
>
>
> 
> From: Steve Lawrence 
> Sent: Thursday, April 22, 2021 9:32 AM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>
> Some thoughts related to showing the infoset as if it were a variable as
> this is prototyped
>
> 1) How do DAP/IDE's represent very large hierarchical data? Infosets can
> be huge, and most of the time a user only cares about the most recent
> infoset item. So someway to follow and show just the most recent part of
> the infoset is important. The current Daffodil debugger as an
> "infosetLines" setting so that it only shows the most recent X number of
> lines, which is most all a user cares about when stepping through a parse.
>
> 2) Infoset items are added and removed very frequently during a parse.
> Currently, when the Daffodil debugger shows the infoset it just converts
> the entire thing to XML and displays that. This doesn't work at all for
> large infosets since this can take a long time. I was hoping this issue
> would get resolved with this new debugging infrastructure. When the
> infoset is modified, we ideally want a way to specify via DAP that parts
> of the variable hierarchy were added/removed rather than having to send
> the entire infoset during every variable update.
>
> 3) I can imagine a feature wher

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-05-24 Thread Adam Rosien
Your message is extremely helpful! I'll spend some time working through it
and follow up.

On Mon, May 24, 2021 at 9:48 AM Beckerle, Mike <
mbecke...@owlcyberdefense.com> wrote:

> Some thoughts re: data format debugger
>
> I suggest we enumerate
>
>   *   every single piece of state of the parser,
>   *   every single piece of state of the unparser,
>   *   each action/step of the parser,  (every parse combinator or
> primitive, their subactions)
>   *   and of the unparser, (every unparse combinator, primitive,
> suspension,...)
>
> and wire-frame/mock-up some display for each piece of state, and how, if
> changed by a step, the change to that piece of state would be displayed.
>
> We can write down the nuances associated with these data items/actions
> that impact debugger display.
>
> Some of these states/actions will be analogous to things in conventional
> debuggers. (e.g., looking at the values of variables) Others will be
> specific to DFDL needs. (e.g., looking at layers in the data stream,
> visualizing delimiter scanning success/failure, backtracking)
>
> Core concepts a debugger needs are framing vs. content vs. value, and the
> "regions" in the data stream that make these up. The framing includes
> initiators, terminators, separators, alignment regions, prefix-length
> regions, leading/trailing skip regions, unused regions. Those surround the
> content region, and when padding/filling is involved (for simple types that
> are textual) the content region contains leading pad and trailing pad
> regions, surrounding the value region.
>
> An example of graphical nested box representation of these regions is here
> in a design note about Daffodil:
>
>
> https://daffodil.apache.org/dev/design-notes/term-sharing-in-schema-compiler/
> (see section "Details of Unique and Shared Regions")
>
> The way to start this effort is to look at the UState and PState classes.
> These are the state blocks. Every piece of these is potentially important
> to the debugger.
>
> Lastly, an important aspect of Daffodil is the streaming behavior of the
> parser and unparser. While I believe it is more important to get something
> working than for it to cover every feature, this is an area where not
> anticipating how it needs to work is likely to lock one out of a future
> scenario that accomodates it.
>
> So the parser doesn't produce an infoset. It  produces a stream of infoset
> events, or call-backs to be exact.
> Due to backtracking in the parser, these events can be hung-up for
> substantial time while the parser continues. So we can't assume that there
> is any sort of correlation between parser activity and the producing of
> events.
>
> The unparser doesn't consume an infoset, It consumes a stream of infoset
> events. Specifically, the unparser is the callback-handler for unparse
> infoset events.
>
> The infoset gets trimmed so that we needn't build up the complete infoset
> tree in memory. As parse-events are produced, no-longer necessary parts of
> the infoset are pruned away. Similarly, when unparsing, once a part of the
> infoset has been unparsed, that part of the infoset tree is pruned away if
> no longer needed.
>
>
> 
> From: Steve Lawrence 
> Sent: Thursday, April 22, 2021 9:32 AM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>
> Some thoughts related to showing the infoset as if it were a variable as
> this is prototyped
>
> 1) How do DAP/IDE's represent very large hierarchical data? Infosets can
> be huge, and most of the time a user only cares about the most recent
> infoset item. So someway to follow and show just the most recent part of
> the infoset is important. The current Daffodil debugger as an
> "infosetLines" setting so that it only shows the most recent X number of
> lines, which is most all a user cares about when stepping through a parse.
>
> 2) Infoset items are added and removed very frequently during a parse.
> Currently, when the Daffodil debugger shows the infoset it just converts
> the entire thing to XML and displays that. This doesn't work at all for
> large infosets since this can take a long time. I was hoping this issue
> would get resolved with this new debugging infrastructure. When the
> infoset is modified, we ideally want a way to specify via DAP that parts
> of the variable hierarchy were added/removed rather than having to send
> the entire infoset during every variable update.
>
> 3) I can imagine a feature where a user would want to select an infoset
> item and jump to the associated schema element, or query information
> about that infoset item

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-05-24 Thread Beckerle, Mike
Some thoughts re: data format debugger

I suggest we enumerate

  *   every single piece of state of the parser,
  *   every single piece of state of the unparser,
  *   each action/step of the parser,  (every parse combinator or primitive, 
their subactions)
  *   and of the unparser, (every unparse combinator, primitive, suspension,...)

and wire-frame/mock-up some display for each piece of state, and how, if 
changed by a step, the change to that piece of state would be displayed.

We can write down the nuances associated with these data items/actions that 
impact debugger display.

Some of these states/actions will be analogous to things in conventional 
debuggers. (e.g., looking at the values of variables) Others will be specific 
to DFDL needs. (e.g., looking at layers in the data stream, visualizing 
delimiter scanning success/failure, backtracking)

Core concepts a debugger needs are framing vs. content vs. value, and the 
"regions" in the data stream that make these up. The framing includes 
initiators, terminators, separators, alignment regions, prefix-length regions, 
leading/trailing skip regions, unused regions. Those surround the content 
region, and when padding/filling is involved (for simple types that are 
textual) the content region contains leading pad and trailing pad regions, 
surrounding the value region.

An example of graphical nested box representation of these regions is here in a 
design note about Daffodil:

https://daffodil.apache.org/dev/design-notes/term-sharing-in-schema-compiler/
(see section "Details of Unique and Shared Regions")

The way to start this effort is to look at the UState and PState classes. These 
are the state blocks. Every piece of these is potentially important to the 
debugger.

Lastly, an important aspect of Daffodil is the streaming behavior of the parser 
and unparser. While I believe it is more important to get something working 
than for it to cover every feature, this is an area where not anticipating how 
it needs to work is likely to lock one out of a future scenario that 
accomodates it.

So the parser doesn't produce an infoset. It  produces a stream of infoset 
events, or call-backs to be exact.
Due to backtracking in the parser, these events can be hung-up for substantial 
time while the parser continues. So we can't assume that there is any sort of 
correlation between parser activity and the producing of events.

The unparser doesn't consume an infoset, It consumes a stream of infoset 
events. Specifically, the unparser is the callback-handler for unparse infoset 
events.

The infoset gets trimmed so that we needn't build up the complete infoset tree 
in memory. As parse-events are produced, no-longer necessary parts of the 
infoset are pruned away. Similarly, when unparsing, once a part of the infoset 
has been unparsed, that part of the infoset tree is pruned away if no longer 
needed.



From: Steve Lawrence 
Sent: Thursday, April 22, 2021 9:32 AM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

Some thoughts related to showing the infoset as if it were a variable as
this is prototyped

1) How do DAP/IDE's represent very large hierarchical data? Infosets can
be huge, and most of the time a user only cares about the most recent
infoset item. So someway to follow and show just the most recent part of
the infoset is important. The current Daffodil debugger as an
"infosetLines" setting so that it only shows the most recent X number of
lines, which is most all a user cares about when stepping through a parse.

2) Infoset items are added and removed very frequently during a parse.
Currently, when the Daffodil debugger shows the infoset it just converts
the entire thing to XML and displays that. This doesn't work at all for
large infosets since this can take a long time. I was hoping this issue
would get resolved with this new debugging infrastructure. When the
infoset is modified, we ideally want a way to specify via DAP that parts
of the variable hierarchy were added/removed rather than having to send
the entire infoset during every variable update.

3) I can imagine a feature where a user would want to select an infoset
item and jump to the associated schema element, or query information
about that infoset item (e.g.. what bit position did it start at, what
was the length). We don't have this right now, but would be really nice
to have. This suggests that we need metadata associated with each of the
variables. Does DAP have a concept of that and do IDE's have a way to
show it?

On 4/21/21 7:52 PM, Adam Rosien wrote:
> I've been reading up on DAP and wanted to share...
>
>> There are many areas though that are unique to Daffodil that have no
> representation in the spec.  These things (like InputStream, Infoset, PoU,
> different variable types, backtracking, etc) will need

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-05-04 Thread Adam Rosien
> It looks like some of the code from java-debug can be reused without
involving JDI. The java-debug project could be viewed as an implementation
of the DAP communication protocol, coupled with JDI to provide
request/response values to DAP. For example, the `ProtocolServer` [3]
hard-codes the JDI, but there's an `AbstractProtocolServer` which only
handles the DAP communication (as a rough guess).

Update: I've successfully used the java-debug project from Microsoft to
speak DAP without requiring any JDI dependencies, for use in integrating
with the Daffodil Debugger interface.

On Mon, Apr 26, 2021 at 10:23 AM Adam Rosien  wrote:

> I'm currently seeing what it takes to get a minimal VS Code extension
> talking DAP over stdin/stdout to an external Scala process.
>
> On Fri, Apr 23, 2021 at 11:01 AM Adam Rosien  wrote:
>
>> I've looked at scala-debug-adapter a bit now, and it doesn't do very
>> much: there's some socket stuff and state management, but otherwise it
>> delegates to the underflying java-debug library which manages the DAP
>> protocol [1]. *That* library does assume use of JDI and supplies JVM-level
>> stuff to DAP (threads, etc.).
>>
>> So I think we don't want to rely on the code directly, but could extract
>> the outer "skeleton" of `DebugServer` [2] to use with Daffodil.
>>
>> It looks like some of the code from java-debug can be reused without
>> involving JDI. The java-debug project could be viewed as an implementation
>> of the DAP communication protocol, coupled with JDI to provide
>> request/response values to DAP. For example, the `ProtocolServer` [3]
>> hard-codes the JDI, but there's an `AbstractProtocolServer` which only
>> handles the DAP communication (as a rough guess).
>>
>> I think the next step is to play with the library in the prototype repo
>> to see what is really needed.
>>
>> .. Adam
>>
>> [1]
>> https://github.com/scalacenter/scala-debug-adapter/blob/main/core/src/main/scala/ch/epfl/scala/debugadapter/internal/DebugSession.scala#L35
>> extends java-debug `ProtocolServer`.
>> [2]
>> https://github.com/scalacenter/scala-debug-adapter/blob/main/core/src/main/scala/ch/epfl/scala/debugadapter/DebugServer.scala
>> [3]
>> https://github.com/microsoft/java-debug/blob/master/com.microsoft.java.debug.core/src/main/java/com/microsoft/java/debug/core/adapter/ProtocolServer.java#L52
>>
>> On Thu, Apr 22, 2021 at 1:31 PM John Wass  wrote:
>>
>>> > dig a bit to see if the DAP-only hooks can be reused without JDI coming
>>> along for the ride
>>>
>>> Cool, that would be good to dig at.  Big win if we can reuse it.
>>>
>>


Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-26 Thread Adam Rosien
I'm currently seeing what it takes to get a minimal VS Code extension
talking DAP over stdin/stdout to an external Scala process.

On Fri, Apr 23, 2021 at 11:01 AM Adam Rosien  wrote:

> I've looked at scala-debug-adapter a bit now, and it doesn't do very much:
> there's some socket stuff and state management, but otherwise it delegates
> to the underflying java-debug library which manages the DAP protocol [1].
> *That* library does assume use of JDI and supplies JVM-level stuff to DAP
> (threads, etc.).
>
> So I think we don't want to rely on the code directly, but could extract
> the outer "skeleton" of `DebugServer` [2] to use with Daffodil.
>
> It looks like some of the code from java-debug can be reused without
> involving JDI. The java-debug project could be viewed as an implementation
> of the DAP communication protocol, coupled with JDI to provide
> request/response values to DAP. For example, the `ProtocolServer` [3]
> hard-codes the JDI, but there's an `AbstractProtocolServer` which only
> handles the DAP communication (as a rough guess).
>
> I think the next step is to play with the library in the prototype repo to
> see what is really needed.
>
> .. Adam
>
> [1]
> https://github.com/scalacenter/scala-debug-adapter/blob/main/core/src/main/scala/ch/epfl/scala/debugadapter/internal/DebugSession.scala#L35
> extends java-debug `ProtocolServer`.
> [2]
> https://github.com/scalacenter/scala-debug-adapter/blob/main/core/src/main/scala/ch/epfl/scala/debugadapter/DebugServer.scala
> [3]
> https://github.com/microsoft/java-debug/blob/master/com.microsoft.java.debug.core/src/main/java/com/microsoft/java/debug/core/adapter/ProtocolServer.java#L52
>
> On Thu, Apr 22, 2021 at 1:31 PM John Wass  wrote:
>
>> > dig a bit to see if the DAP-only hooks can be reused without JDI coming
>> along for the ride
>>
>> Cool, that would be good to dig at.  Big win if we can reuse it.
>>
>


Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-23 Thread Adam Rosien
I've looked at scala-debug-adapter a bit now, and it doesn't do very much:
there's some socket stuff and state management, but otherwise it delegates
to the underflying java-debug library which manages the DAP protocol [1].
*That* library does assume use of JDI and supplies JVM-level stuff to DAP
(threads, etc.).

So I think we don't want to rely on the code directly, but could extract
the outer "skeleton" of `DebugServer` [2] to use with Daffodil.

It looks like some of the code from java-debug can be reused without
involving JDI. The java-debug project could be viewed as an implementation
of the DAP communication protocol, coupled with JDI to provide
request/response values to DAP. For example, the `ProtocolServer` [3]
hard-codes the JDI, but there's an `AbstractProtocolServer` which only
handles the DAP communication (as a rough guess).

I think the next step is to play with the library in the prototype repo to
see what is really needed.

.. Adam

[1]
https://github.com/scalacenter/scala-debug-adapter/blob/main/core/src/main/scala/ch/epfl/scala/debugadapter/internal/DebugSession.scala#L35
extends java-debug `ProtocolServer`.
[2]
https://github.com/scalacenter/scala-debug-adapter/blob/main/core/src/main/scala/ch/epfl/scala/debugadapter/DebugServer.scala
[3]
https://github.com/microsoft/java-debug/blob/master/com.microsoft.java.debug.core/src/main/java/com/microsoft/java/debug/core/adapter/ProtocolServer.java#L52

On Thu, Apr 22, 2021 at 1:31 PM John Wass  wrote:

> > dig a bit to see if the DAP-only hooks can be reused without JDI coming
> along for the ride
>
> Cool, that would be good to dig at.  Big win if we can reuse it.
>


Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-22 Thread John Wass
> dig a bit to see if the DAP-only hooks can be reused without JDI coming
along for the ride

Cool, that would be good to dig at.  Big win if we can reuse it.


Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-22 Thread Adam Rosien
decreases
>> >>>>> usability.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> And I think the only reason we are trying to spend effort elliding
>> >>>>> things is because we're limited to this gdb-like interface where you
>> >> can
>> >>>>> only print out a little information at a time.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> I think what would really is to dump this gdb interface and instead
>> use
>> >>>>> multiple windows/views. As a really close example to what I
>> imagine, I
>> >>>>> recently came across this hex editor:
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> https://www.synalysis.net/
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> The screenshots are a bit small so it's not super clear, but this
>> tool
>> >>>>> has one view for the data in hex, and one view for a tree of parsed
>> >>>>> results (which is very similar to our infoset). The "infoset" view
>> has
>> >>>>> information like offset/length/value, and can be related back to the
>> >>>>> data view to find the actual bits.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> I imagine the "next generation daffodil debugger" to look much like
>> >>>>> this. As data is parsed, the infoset view fills up. This view could
>> act
>> >>>>> like a standard GUI tree so you could collapse sections or scroll
>> >> around
>> >>>>> to show just the parts you care about, and have search capabilities
>> to
>> >>>>> quickly jump around. The advantage here is you no longer really need
>> >>>>> automated eliding or heuristics for what the user *might* care
>> about.
>> >>>>> You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As
>> daffodil
>> >>>>> parses and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view,
>> so
>> >> as
>> >>>>> daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting
>> >>>>> integers), one could update this data view to show what daffodil is
>> >>>>> doing and where it is.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a
>> schema
>> >>>>> view to show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove
>> >>>>> breakpoints. And an information view for things like variables,
>> >> in-scope
>> >>>>> delimiters, PoU's, etc.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this
>> GUI
>> >>>>> to be more easily written in something other that Java/Scala to take
>> >>>>> advantage of other GUI toolkits. It's been a long while since I've
>> done
>> >>>>> anything with Java guis, but they seems pretty poor that last I
>> looked
>> >>>>> at them. Would even allow for a TUI, which Java has little/no
>> support
>> >>>>> for. Also enables things like remote deubgging if an socket IPC was
>> >>>>> used. Though I'm not sure all of that is necessary. Just thinking
>> what
>> >>>>> would be ideal, and it can always be pared back.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
>> >>>>>> I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a
>> >>>>> separation of concerns between display of information and the
>> >> behaviors of
>> >>>>> parse/unparse that need to be points where users can pause, and data
>> >>>>> structures available to display.
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is
>> >>>>> clumsy, too big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor
>> >> state, and
>> >>>>> one can examine the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s),
>> >>>>> following sibling(s), etc. One can elide contents that are too big
>> for
>> >>>>> hexBinary, etc.
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> I think this problem, how to di

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-22 Thread Adam Rosien
> > > >> On Wed, Jan 6, 2021 at 1:42 PM Steve Lawrence  >
> > > >> wrote:
> > > >>
> > > >>> Yep, something like that seems very reasonable for dealing with
> large
> > > >>> infosets. But it still feels like we still run into usability
> issues.
> > > >>> For example, what if a user wants to see more? We need some
> > > >>> configuration options to increase what we've ellided. It's not big,
> > but
> > > >>> every new thing that needs configuration adds complexity and
> > decreases
> > > >>> usability.
> > > >>>
> > > >>> And I think the only reason we are trying to spend effort elliding
> > > >>> things is because we're limited to this gdb-like interface where
> you
> > > can
> > > >>> only print out a little information at a time.
> > > >>>
> > > >>> I think what would really is to dump this gdb interface and instead
> > use
> > > >>> multiple windows/views. As a really close example to what I
> imagine,
> > I
> > > >>> recently came across this hex editor:
> > > >>>
> > > >>> https://www.synalysis.net/
> > > >>>
> > > >>> The screenshots are a bit small so it's not super clear, but this
> > tool
> > > >>> has one view for the data in hex, and one view for a tree of parsed
> > > >>> results (which is very similar to our infoset). The "infoset" view
> > has
> > > >>> information like offset/length/value, and can be related back to
> the
> > > >>> data view to find the actual bits.
> > > >>>
> > > >>> I imagine the "next generation daffodil debugger" to look much like
> > > >>> this. As data is parsed, the infoset view fills up. This view could
> > act
> > > >>> like a standard GUI tree so you could collapse sections or scroll
> > > around
> > > >>> to show just the parts you care about, and have search capabilities
> > to
> > > >>> quickly jump around. The advantage here is you no longer really
> need
> > > >>> automated eliding or heuristics for what the user *might* care
> about.
> > > >>> You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As
> daffodil
> > > >>> parses and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.
> > > >>>
> > > >>> I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view,
> so
> > > as
> > > >>> daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting
> > > >>> integers), one could update this data view to show what daffodil is
> > > >>> doing and where it is.
> > > >>>
> > > >>> I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a
> > schema
> > > >>> view to show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove
> > > >>> breakpoints. And an information view for things like variables,
> > > in-scope
> > > >>> delimiters, PoU's, etc.
> > > >>>
> > > >>> The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this
> > GUI
> > > >>> to be more easily written in something other that Java/Scala to
> take
> > > >>> advantage of other GUI toolkits. It's been a long while since I've
> > done
> > > >>> anything with Java guis, but they seems pretty poor that last I
> > looked
> > > >>> at them. Would even allow for a TUI, which Java has little/no
> support
> > > >>> for. Also enables things like remote deubgging if an socket IPC was
> > > >>> used. Though I'm not sure all of that is necessary. Just thinking
> > what
> > > >>> would be ideal, and it can always be pared back.
> > > >>>
> > > >>>
> > > >>> On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
> > > >>> > I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a
> > > >>> separation of concerns between display of information and the
> > > behaviors of
> > > >>> parse/unparse that need to be points where users can pause, and
> data
> > > >>> structures available to display.
> > > >>> >
> > > >

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-22 Thread Adam Rosien
er really need
> >>>>> automated eliding or heuristics for what the user *might* care about.
> >>>>> You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As daffodil
> >>>>> parses and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view, so
> >> as
> >>>>> daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting
> >>>>> integers), one could update this data view to show what daffodil is
> >>>>> doing and where it is.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a
> schema
> >>>>> view to show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove
> >>>>> breakpoints. And an information view for things like variables,
> >> in-scope
> >>>>> delimiters, PoU's, etc.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this
> GUI
> >>>>> to be more easily written in something other that Java/Scala to take
> >>>>> advantage of other GUI toolkits. It's been a long while since I've
> done
> >>>>> anything with Java guis, but they seems pretty poor that last I
> looked
> >>>>> at them. Would even allow for a TUI, which Java has little/no support
> >>>>> for. Also enables things like remote deubgging if an socket IPC was
> >>>>> used. Though I'm not sure all of that is necessary. Just thinking
> what
> >>>>> would be ideal, and it can always be pared back.
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>> On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
> >>>>>> I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a
> >>>>> separation of concerns between display of information and the
> >> behaviors of
> >>>>> parse/unparse that need to be points where users can pause, and data
> >>>>> structures available to display.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is
> >>>>> clumsy, too big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor
> >> state, and
> >>>>> one can examine the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s),
> >>>>> following sibling(s), etc. One can elide contents that are too big
> for
> >>>>> hexBinary, etc.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I think this problem, how to display the infoset with sensible
> limits
> >>>>> on sizing, is fairly easy to come up with some design for, that will
> at
> >>>>> least be (1) always fairly small (2) much more useful in more cases.
> It
> >>>>> won't be perfect but can be much better than what we do now.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> One sensible display "mode" should be that displaying the context
> >>>>> surrounding the current element (when parsing or unparsing) displays
> at
> >>>>> most N-lines. (N/2 before, N/2 after) with a maximum length of L
> >> characters
> >>>>> (settable within reason ?)
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Sibling and enclosing nodes would be displayed eliding their
> contents
> >>>>> to at most 1 line.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Here's an example of what I mean. Displaying up to M=10 lines total:
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> ...
> >>>>>> 
> >>>>>>...
> >>>>>>89ab782 ...
> >>>>>>some text is here and some more text
> >>>>>>value might be some big thing which needs to be
> >> elided
> >>>>> ...
> >>>>>> ... 
> >>>>>>???
> >>>>>> 
> >>>>>> ???
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> The  is just an idea to reduce XML matching end-tag clutter.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> The ... on a line alone or where element content would appear
> >>>>> generally means 1 or more other siblings. The way the display above
> >> starts
> >>>>> with ... means that this is a relative inner nest, not starting from
> >> the
> >>>>> absolute roo

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-22 Thread Steve Lawrence
>>
>>>>> The screenshots are a bit small so it's not super clear, but this tool
>>>>> has one view for the data in hex, and one view for a tree of parsed
>>>>> results (which is very similar to our infoset). The "infoset" view has
>>>>> information like offset/length/value, and can be related back to the
>>>>> data view to find the actual bits.
>>>>>
>>>>> I imagine the "next generation daffodil debugger" to look much like
>>>>> this. As data is parsed, the infoset view fills up. This view could act
>>>>> like a standard GUI tree so you could collapse sections or scroll
>> around
>>>>> to show just the parts you care about, and have search capabilities to
>>>>> quickly jump around. The advantage here is you no longer really need
>>>>> automated eliding or heuristics for what the user *might* care about.
>>>>> You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As daffodil
>>>>> parses and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.
>>>>>
>>>>> I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view, so
>> as
>>>>> daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting
>>>>> integers), one could update this data view to show what daffodil is
>>>>> doing and where it is.
>>>>>
>>>>> I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a schema
>>>>> view to show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove
>>>>> breakpoints. And an information view for things like variables,
>> in-scope
>>>>> delimiters, PoU's, etc.
>>>>>
>>>>> The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this GUI
>>>>> to be more easily written in something other that Java/Scala to take
>>>>> advantage of other GUI toolkits. It's been a long while since I've done
>>>>> anything with Java guis, but they seems pretty poor that last I looked
>>>>> at them. Would even allow for a TUI, which Java has little/no support
>>>>> for. Also enables things like remote deubgging if an socket IPC was
>>>>> used. Though I'm not sure all of that is necessary. Just thinking what
>>>>> would be ideal, and it can always be pared back.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
>>>>>> I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a
>>>>> separation of concerns between display of information and the
>> behaviors of
>>>>> parse/unparse that need to be points where users can pause, and data
>>>>> structures available to display.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is
>>>>> clumsy, too big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor
>> state, and
>>>>> one can examine the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s),
>>>>> following sibling(s), etc. One can elide contents that are too big for
>>>>> hexBinary, etc.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I think this problem, how to display the infoset with sensible limits
>>>>> on sizing, is fairly easy to come up with some design for, that will at
>>>>> least be (1) always fairly small (2) much more useful in more cases. It
>>>>> won't be perfect but can be much better than what we do now.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> One sensible display "mode" should be that displaying the context
>>>>> surrounding the current element (when parsing or unparsing) displays at
>>>>> most N-lines. (N/2 before, N/2 after) with a maximum length of L
>> characters
>>>>> (settable within reason ?)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sibling and enclosing nodes would be displayed eliding their contents
>>>>> to at most 1 line.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Here's an example of what I mean. Displaying up to M=10 lines total:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ...
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>...
>>>>>>89ab782 ...
>>>>>>some text is here and some more text
>>>>>>value might be some big thing which needs to be
>> elided
>>>>> ...
>>>>>> ... 
>>>>>>???
>>>>>> 
>

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-21 Thread John Wass
gt; >>> I imagine the "next generation daffodil debugger" to look much like
> > >>> this. As data is parsed, the infoset view fills up. This view could
> act
> > >>> like a standard GUI tree so you could collapse sections or scroll
> > around
> > >>> to show just the parts you care about, and have search capabilities
> to
> > >>> quickly jump around. The advantage here is you no longer really need
> > >>> automated eliding or heuristics for what the user *might* care about.
> > >>> You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As daffodil
> > >>> parses and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.
> > >>>
> > >>> I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view, so
> > as
> > >>> daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting
> > >>> integers), one could update this data view to show what daffodil is
> > >>> doing and where it is.
> > >>>
> > >>> I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a
> schema
> > >>> view to show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove
> > >>> breakpoints. And an information view for things like variables,
> > in-scope
> > >>> delimiters, PoU's, etc.
> > >>>
> > >>> The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this
> GUI
> > >>> to be more easily written in something other that Java/Scala to take
> > >>> advantage of other GUI toolkits. It's been a long while since I've
> done
> > >>> anything with Java guis, but they seems pretty poor that last I
> looked
> > >>> at them. Would even allow for a TUI, which Java has little/no support
> > >>> for. Also enables things like remote deubgging if an socket IPC was
> > >>> used. Though I'm not sure all of that is necessary. Just thinking
> what
> > >>> would be ideal, and it can always be pared back.
> > >>>
> > >>>
> > >>> On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
> > >>> > I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a
> > >>> separation of concerns between display of information and the
> > behaviors of
> > >>> parse/unparse that need to be points where users can pause, and data
> > >>> structures available to display.
> > >>> >
> > >>> > E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is
> > >>> clumsy, too big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor
> > state, and
> > >>> one can examine the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s),
> > >>> following sibling(s), etc. One can elide contents that are too big
> for
> > >>> hexBinary, etc.
> > >>> >
> > >>> > I think this problem, how to display the infoset with sensible
> limits
> > >>> on sizing, is fairly easy to come up with some design for, that will
> at
> > >>> least be (1) always fairly small (2) much more useful in more cases.
> It
> > >>> won't be perfect but can be much better than what we do now.
> > >>> >
> > >>> > One sensible display "mode" should be that displaying the context
> > >>> surrounding the current element (when parsing or unparsing) displays
> at
> > >>> most N-lines. (N/2 before, N/2 after) with a maximum length of L
> > characters
> > >>> (settable within reason ?)
> > >>> >
> > >>> > Sibling and enclosing nodes would be displayed eliding their
> contents
> > >>> to at most 1 line.
> > >>> >
> > >>> > Here's an example of what I mean. Displaying up to M=10 lines
> total:
> > >>> >
> > >>> > ...
> > >>> > 
> > >>> >...
> > >>> >89ab782 ...
> > >>> >some text is here and some more text
> > >>> >value might be some big thing which needs to be
> > elided
> > >>> ...
> > >>> > ... 
> > >>> >???
> > >>> > 
> > >>> > ???
> > >>> >
> > >>> > The  is just an idea to reduce XML matching end-tag clutter.
> > >>> >
> > >>> > The ... on a line alone or where elemen

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-21 Thread Adam Rosien
 always be pared back.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
> >>> > I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a
> >>> separation of concerns between display of information and the
> behaviors of
> >>> parse/unparse that need to be points where users can pause, and data
> >>> structures available to display.
> >>> >
> >>> > E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is
> >>> clumsy, too big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor
> state, and
> >>> one can examine the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s),
> >>> following sibling(s), etc. One can elide contents that are too big for
> >>> hexBinary, etc.
> >>> >
> >>> > I think this problem, how to display the infoset with sensible limits
> >>> on sizing, is fairly easy to come up with some design for, that will at
> >>> least be (1) always fairly small (2) much more useful in more cases. It
> >>> won't be perfect but can be much better than what we do now.
> >>> >
> >>> > One sensible display "mode" should be that displaying the context
> >>> surrounding the current element (when parsing or unparsing) displays at
> >>> most N-lines. (N/2 before, N/2 after) with a maximum length of L
> characters
> >>> (settable within reason ?)
> >>> >
> >>> > Sibling and enclosing nodes would be displayed eliding their contents
> >>> to at most 1 line.
> >>> >
> >>> > Here's an example of what I mean. Displaying up to M=10 lines total:
> >>> >
> >>> > ...
> >>> > 
> >>> >...
> >>> >89ab782 ...
> >>> >some text is here and some more text
> >>> >    value might be some big thing which needs to be
> elided
> >>> ...
> >>> > ... 
> >>> >???
> >>> > 
> >>> > ???
> >>> >
> >>> > The  is just an idea to reduce XML matching end-tag clutter.
> >>> >
> >>> > The ... on a line alone or where element content would appear
> >>> generally means 1 or more other siblings. The way the display above
> starts
> >>> with ... means that this is a relative inner nest, not starting from
> the
> >>> absolute root.
> >>> >
> >>> > The ... within simple content means that content is elided to fit on
> >>> one line. Always follows some text characters to differentiate from the
> >>> child-element context.
> >>> >
> >>> > The ??? means zero or more other siblings.
> >>> >
> >>> > I used bold italic above to point out that the current node would be
> >>> highlighted somehow. Probably a way to do this that doesn't require
> display
> >>> modes would be useful. E.g., a text marker like ">>>" as in:
> >>> >
> >>> >>>> value  
> >>> >
> >>> > might be better, particularly for a trace output being dumped to a
> >>> text file.
> >>> >
> >>> > I made the above example an unparser kind of example by showing a
> >>> following sibling that exists that is after the current node.
> >>> >
> >>> > I think the key concept is that any sibling node is displayed in a
> way
> >>> that fits on one line.
> >>> > E.g., even if the element name was really long, I'd suggest:
> >>> >
> >>> >   abcd ... 
> >>> >
> >>> > Where the element name itself gets elided because it is too long.
> >>> >
> >>> > A thought. Note that the above presentation is shown as quasi-XML,
> but
> >>> there's nothing XML-specific about it. A JSON-friendly equivalent
> could be
> >>> done as well:
> >>> >
> >>> > enclosingParent1 = {
> >>> >...
> >>> >priorSibling2 = "89ab782..."
> >>> >priorSibling1 = "some text is here and some more text"
> >>> >currentNode = "value might be some big thing which needs to be
> >>> elided ..."
> >>> >followingSibling1 = { ... }
> >>> >???
> >>> > }
> >>> >
> 

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-20 Thread Beckerle, Mike
Welcome Adam,

Here's the link to Adam's book, which looks very useful.

(Not shameless self promotion if someone else sends the link 🙂)

https://essentialeffects.dev/

-mikeb



From: Adam Rosien 
Sent: Monday, April 19, 2021 11:21 AM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

Hi everybody, I've recently started working on Daffodil with some other
folks and will be helping where I can with the debugger.

I've been writing Scala since ~2011 and recently wrote a book about Cats
Effect, which has a similar scope to ZIO (effects, concurrency, etc.). If
anybody has any questions about the approach and techniques, I'm happy to
help.

.. Adam




Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-20 Thread John Wass
https://www.synalysis.net/
>>>>
>>>> The screenshots are a bit small so it's not super clear, but this tool
>>>> has one view for the data in hex, and one view for a tree of parsed
>>>> results (which is very similar to our infoset). The "infoset" view has
>>>> information like offset/length/value, and can be related back to the
>>>> data view to find the actual bits.
>>>>
>>>> I imagine the "next generation daffodil debugger" to look much like
>>>> this. As data is parsed, the infoset view fills up. This view could act
>>>> like a standard GUI tree so you could collapse sections or scroll around
>>>> to show just the parts you care about, and have search capabilities to
>>>> quickly jump around. The advantage here is you no longer really need
>>>> automated eliding or heuristics for what the user *might* care about.
>>>> You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As daffodil
>>>> parses and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.
>>>>
>>>> I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view, so as
>>>> daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting
>>>> integers), one could update this data view to show what daffodil is
>>>> doing and where it is.
>>>>
>>>> I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a schema
>>>> view to show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove
>>>> breakpoints. And an information view for things like variables, in-scope
>>>> delimiters, PoU's, etc.
>>>>
>>>> The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this GUI
>>>> to be more easily written in something other that Java/Scala to take
>>>> advantage of other GUI toolkits. It's been a long while since I've done
>>>> anything with Java guis, but they seems pretty poor that last I looked
>>>> at them. Would even allow for a TUI, which Java has little/no support
>>>> for. Also enables things like remote deubgging if an socket IPC was
>>>> used. Though I'm not sure all of that is necessary. Just thinking what
>>>> would be ideal, and it can always be pared back.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
>>>> > I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a
>>>> separation of concerns between display of information and the behaviors of
>>>> parse/unparse that need to be points where users can pause, and data
>>>> structures available to display.
>>>> >
>>>> > E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is
>>>> clumsy, too big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor state, and
>>>> one can examine the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s),
>>>> following sibling(s), etc. One can elide contents that are too big for
>>>> hexBinary, etc.
>>>> >
>>>> > I think this problem, how to display the infoset with sensible limits
>>>> on sizing, is fairly easy to come up with some design for, that will at
>>>> least be (1) always fairly small (2) much more useful in more cases. It
>>>> won't be perfect but can be much better than what we do now.
>>>> >
>>>> > One sensible display "mode" should be that displaying the context
>>>> surrounding the current element (when parsing or unparsing) displays at
>>>> most N-lines. (N/2 before, N/2 after) with a maximum length of L characters
>>>> (settable within reason ?)
>>>> >
>>>> > Sibling and enclosing nodes would be displayed eliding their contents
>>>> to at most 1 line.
>>>> >
>>>> > Here's an example of what I mean. Displaying up to M=10 lines total:
>>>> >
>>>> > ...
>>>> > 
>>>> >...
>>>> >89ab782 ...
>>>> >some text is here and some more text
>>>> >    value might be some big thing which needs to be
>>>> elided ...
>>>> > ... 
>>>> >???
>>>> > 
>>>> > ???
>>>> >
>>>> > The  is just an idea to reduce XML matching end-tag clutter.
>>>> >
>>>> > The ... on a line alone or where element content would appear
>>>> generally means 1 or more other siblings. The w

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-20 Thread John Wass
 let user scroll around. As daffodil
>>> parses and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.
>>>
>>> I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view, so as
>>> daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting
>>> integers), one could update this data view to show what daffodil is
>>> doing and where it is.
>>>
>>> I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a schema
>>> view to show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove
>>> breakpoints. And an information view for things like variables, in-scope
>>> delimiters, PoU's, etc.
>>>
>>> The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this GUI
>>> to be more easily written in something other that Java/Scala to take
>>> advantage of other GUI toolkits. It's been a long while since I've done
>>> anything with Java guis, but they seems pretty poor that last I looked
>>> at them. Would even allow for a TUI, which Java has little/no support
>>> for. Also enables things like remote deubgging if an socket IPC was
>>> used. Though I'm not sure all of that is necessary. Just thinking what
>>> would be ideal, and it can always be pared back.
>>>
>>>
>>> On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
>>> > I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a
>>> separation of concerns between display of information and the behaviors of
>>> parse/unparse that need to be points where users can pause, and data
>>> structures available to display.
>>> >
>>> > E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is
>>> clumsy, too big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor state, and
>>> one can examine the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s),
>>> following sibling(s), etc. One can elide contents that are too big for
>>> hexBinary, etc.
>>> >
>>> > I think this problem, how to display the infoset with sensible limits
>>> on sizing, is fairly easy to come up with some design for, that will at
>>> least be (1) always fairly small (2) much more useful in more cases. It
>>> won't be perfect but can be much better than what we do now.
>>> >
>>> > One sensible display "mode" should be that displaying the context
>>> surrounding the current element (when parsing or unparsing) displays at
>>> most N-lines. (N/2 before, N/2 after) with a maximum length of L characters
>>> (settable within reason ?)
>>> >
>>> > Sibling and enclosing nodes would be displayed eliding their contents
>>> to at most 1 line.
>>> >
>>> > Here's an example of what I mean. Displaying up to M=10 lines total:
>>> >
>>> > ...
>>> > 
>>> >...
>>> >89ab782 ...
>>> >some text is here and some more text
>>> >value might be some big thing which needs to be elided
>>> ...
>>> > ... 
>>> >???
>>> > 
>>> > ???
>>> >
>>> > The  is just an idea to reduce XML matching end-tag clutter.
>>> >
>>> > The ... on a line alone or where element content would appear
>>> generally means 1 or more other siblings. The way the display above starts
>>> with ... means that this is a relative inner nest, not starting from the
>>> absolute root.
>>> >
>>> > The ... within simple content means that content is elided to fit on
>>> one line. Always follows some text characters to differentiate from the
>>> child-element context.
>>> >
>>> > The ??? means zero or more other siblings.
>>> >
>>> > I used bold italic above to point out that the current node would be
>>> highlighted somehow. Probably a way to do this that doesn't require display
>>> modes would be useful. E.g., a text marker like ">>>" as in:
>>> >
>>> >>>> value  
>>> >
>>> > might be better, particularly for a trace output being dumped to a
>>> text file.
>>> >
>>> > I made the above example an unparser kind of example by showing a
>>> following sibling that exists that is after the current node.
>>> >
>>> > I think the key concept is that any sibling node is displayed in a way
>>> that fits on one line.
>>> > E.g., even if the element name was really long, I'd 

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-19 Thread Adam Rosien
Hi everybody, I've recently started working on Daffodil with some other
folks and will be helping where I can with the debugger.

I've been writing Scala since ~2011 and recently wrote a book about Cats
Effect, which has a similar scope to ZIO (effects, concurrency, etc.). If
anybody has any questions about the approach and techniques, I'm happy to
help.

.. Adam

On Fri, Apr 16, 2021 at 2:49 PM Beckerle, Mike <
mbecke...@owlcyberdefense.com> wrote:

> This is actually very cool using ZIO for this. I have to learn more about
> ZIO.
>
>
> 
> From: John Wass 
> Sent: Monday, April 12, 2021 9:58 AM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>
> > the code is here https://github.com/jw3/example-daffodil-debug
>
> There is now a complete console based example for Zio that demonstrates
> controlling the debug flow while distributing the current state to three
> "displays".
> 1. infoset at current step
> 2. diff of infoset against previous step
> 3. bit position and value of data.
>
> These displays are very rudimentary but demonstrate the ability to
> asynchronously populate multiple views while synchronously controlling the
> debug loop.
>
> > - The new protocol being informed by existing debugger and DAPis key
>
> Going to look deeper into how DAP might fit with Daffodil, and depending on
> how it shakes out will update the example to show integration.
>
> Some interesting links to start with
> - https://github.com/scalacenter/scala-debug-adapter
> -
> https://scalameta.org/metals/docs/integrations/debug-adapter-protocol.html
> - https://github.com/microsoft/java-debug
>
> Also looking into the Java Debug Interface (JDI) for comparison.
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 8, 2021 at 12:36 PM John Wass  wrote:
>
> > Revisiting this post after doing some debugger related work and thinking
> > about debug protocol/adapters to connect external tooling to the debug
> > process.
> >
> > This comment is good
> >
> > > This allo makes me wonder if an approach worth taking for the future of
> > Daffodil schema debugging is developing a sort of "Daffodil Debug
> Protocol".
> > I imagine it would be loosely based on DAP (which is  essentially JSON
> > message based) but could be targeted to the things that a DFDL schema
> > debugger would really need. An added benefit with some  sort of protocol
> > is the debugger interface can be uncoupled from Daffodil itself, so we
> > could implement a TUI/GUI/whatever in any  language/GUI framework and
> just
> > have it communicate the protocol over some form of IPC. Another benefit
> > is that any future backends could implement this protocol and so a single
> > debugger could hook into different backends without much issue.
> > Unfortunately, defining such a protocol might be a large task, but we do
> > have our existing debug infrastructure and things like DAP to guide its
> > development/design.
> >
> > Some thoughts on this
> > - Defining the protocol will be a large task, but a minimal version
> should
> > get up and round tripping quickly with a minimal subset of the protocol.
> > - The new protocol being informed by existing debugger and DAPis key
> > - Uncoupling from Daffodil is key
> > - Adapt the Daffodil protocol to produce DAP after the fact so as not to
> > constrain Daffodil debugging capability
> > - We dont need to tie the protocol or adapters to a single framework,
> > implementations of the IO layer should be simple enough to support
> multiple
> > things (eg Akka, Zio, "basic" ...)
> > - The current debugger lives in runtime1, but can we make an abstract API
> > that any runtime would implement?
> >
> > Maybe a solution is structured like this
> > - daffodil-debug-api:
> >   - protocol model
> >   - interfaces: debugger / IO adapter / etc
> >   - lives in daffodil repo (new subproject?)
> > - daffodil-debug-io-NAME
> >   - provides implementation of a specific IO adapter
> >   - multiple projects possible (daffodil-debugger-akka,
> > daffodil-debugger-zio, etc)
> >   - supported ones live in their own subprojects, but other can be
> plugged
> > in from external sources
> >   - ability to support multiple implementations reduces risk of lock-in
> > - debugger applications
> >   - maintained in external repositories
> >   - depending on the IO implementation these could execute be in separate
> > process or on separate machine
> >   - like Steve said, could be any language / framework
> >
> > Three 

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-16 Thread Beckerle, Mike
This is actually very cool using ZIO for this. I have to learn more about ZIO.



From: John Wass 
Sent: Monday, April 12, 2021 9:58 AM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

> the code is here https://github.com/jw3/example-daffodil-debug

There is now a complete console based example for Zio that demonstrates
controlling the debug flow while distributing the current state to three
"displays".
1. infoset at current step
2. diff of infoset against previous step
3. bit position and value of data.

These displays are very rudimentary but demonstrate the ability to
asynchronously populate multiple views while synchronously controlling the
debug loop.

> - The new protocol being informed by existing debugger and DAPis key

Going to look deeper into how DAP might fit with Daffodil, and depending on
how it shakes out will update the example to show integration.

Some interesting links to start with
- https://github.com/scalacenter/scala-debug-adapter
- https://scalameta.org/metals/docs/integrations/debug-adapter-protocol.html
- https://github.com/microsoft/java-debug

Also looking into the Java Debug Interface (JDI) for comparison.


On Thu, Apr 8, 2021 at 12:36 PM John Wass  wrote:

> Revisiting this post after doing some debugger related work and thinking
> about debug protocol/adapters to connect external tooling to the debug
> process.
>
> This comment is good
>
> > This allo makes me wonder if an approach worth taking for the future of
> Daffodil schema debugging is developing a sort of "Daffodil Debug Protocol".
> I imagine it would be loosely based on DAP (which is  essentially JSON
> message based) but could be targeted to the things that a DFDL schema
> debugger would really need. An added benefit with some  sort of protocol
> is the debugger interface can be uncoupled from Daffodil itself, so we
> could implement a TUI/GUI/whatever in any  language/GUI framework and just
> have it communicate the protocol over some form of IPC. Another benefit
> is that any future backends could implement this protocol and so a single
> debugger could hook into different backends without much issue.
> Unfortunately, defining such a protocol might be a large task, but we do
> have our existing debug infrastructure and things like DAP to guide its
> development/design.
>
> Some thoughts on this
> - Defining the protocol will be a large task, but a minimal version should
> get up and round tripping quickly with a minimal subset of the protocol.
> - The new protocol being informed by existing debugger and DAPis key
> - Uncoupling from Daffodil is key
> - Adapt the Daffodil protocol to produce DAP after the fact so as not to
> constrain Daffodil debugging capability
> - We dont need to tie the protocol or adapters to a single framework,
> implementations of the IO layer should be simple enough to support multiple
> things (eg Akka, Zio, "basic" ...)
> - The current debugger lives in runtime1, but can we make an abstract API
> that any runtime would implement?
>
> Maybe a solution is structured like this
> - daffodil-debug-api:
>   - protocol model
>   - interfaces: debugger / IO adapter / etc
>   - lives in daffodil repo (new subproject?)
> - daffodil-debug-io-NAME
>   - provides implementation of a specific IO adapter
>   - multiple projects possible (daffodil-debugger-akka,
> daffodil-debugger-zio, etc)
>   - supported ones live in their own subprojects, but other can be plugged
> in from external sources
>   - ability to support multiple implementations reduces risk of lock-in
> - debugger applications
>   - maintained in external repositories
>   - depending on the IO implementation these could execute be in separate
> process or on separate machine
>   - like Steve said, could be any language / framework
>
> Three types of reference implementations / sample applications could also
> guide the development of the API
>   1. a replacement for the existing TUI debugger, expected to end up with
> at minimum the same functionality as the current one.
>   2. a standalone GUI (JavaFX, Scala.js, ..) debugger
>   3. an IDE integration
>
> Thoughts?
>
> Also I'm working on some reference implementations of these concepts using
> Akka and Zio.  Not quite ready to talk through it yet, but the code is here
> https://github.com/jw3/example-daffodil-debug
>
>
>
> On Wed, Jan 6, 2021 at 1:42 PM Steve Lawrence 
> wrote:
>
>> Yep, something like that seems very reasonable for dealing with large
>> infosets. But it still feels like we still run into usability issues.
>> For example, what if a user wants to see more? We need some
>> configuration options to increase what we've ell

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-12 Thread John Wass
entiate from the
>> child-element context.
>> >
>> > The ??? means zero or more other siblings.
>> >
>> > I used bold italic above to point out that the current node would be
>> highlighted somehow. Probably a way to do this that doesn't require display
>> modes would be useful. E.g., a text marker like ">>>" as in:
>> >
>> >>>> value  
>> >
>> > might be better, particularly for a trace output being dumped to a text
>> file.
>> >
>> > I made the above example an unparser kind of example by showing a
>> following sibling that exists that is after the current node.
>> >
>> > I think the key concept is that any sibling node is displayed in a way
>> that fits on one line.
>> > E.g., even if the element name was really long, I'd suggest:
>> >
>> >   abcd ... 
>> >
>> > Where the element name itself gets elided because it is too long.
>> >
>> > A thought. Note that the above presentation is shown as quasi-XML, but
>> there's nothing XML-specific about it. A JSON-friendly equivalent could be
>> done as well:
>> >
>> > enclosingParent1 = {
>> >...
>> >priorSibling2 = "89ab782..."
>> >priorSibling1 = "some text is here and some more text"
>> >currentNode = "value might be some big thing which needs to be
>> elided ..."
>> >followingSibling1 = { ... }
>> >???
>> > }
>> >
>> > That's enough for 1 email thread on this debug topic.
>> >
>> >
>> > 
>> > From: Steve Lawrence 
>> > Sent: Tuesday, January 5, 2021 2:26 PM
>> > To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
>> > Subject: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>> >
>> >
>> > Now that we're in a new year, I'd like to start a discussion about the
>> > Daffodil DFDL Schema debugger and how it might be improved to be more
>> > useful.
>> >
>> > Note that this is not the capabilities to debug Daffodil itself in
>> > something like Eclipse/IntelliJ, but the ability for Daffodil to provide
>> > enough extra information during a parse/unparse so that a schema
>> > developer can get an idea of what Daffodil is doing. This makes it
>> > easier for users (rather than developers) to determine why a schema
>> > isn't giving the expect parse/unparse result (either because of bad data
>> > or a faulty schema.
>> >
>> > The current state of the debugger is enabled by providing the --debug or
>> > --trace flags in the CLI. More information about that here:
>> >
>> > https://daffodil.apache.org/debugger/
>> >
>> > This enables a TUI and commands somewhat similar to GDB, providing thins
>> > like breakpoints, steps, displaying the current infoset, display a dump
>> > of the data, etc.
>> >
>> > Although I find this tool pretty useful, it definitely has some glaring
>> > issues.
>> >
>> > The most glaring to me is that it really isn't useful at all for
>> > debugging unparse. The data dumps only include then main outputstream,
>> > so determine things like suspensions and buffered output is impossible.
>> >
>> > Another issue is the infoset output. When outputting the infoset, the
>> > debugger currently just walks the entire thing and converts it to XML
>> > and displays the XML. For large infosets, this is excess and can make it
>> > impossible to use, even with some configurations the limit how much of
>> > that infoset is actually printed to the screen. Also things like large
>> > hex binary blobs create excessive and unusable output.
>> >
>> > Another thing I feel is missing is a schema view. Right now it's very
>> > difficult to know where in the schema Daffodil actually is.
>> >
>> > I think these issues just need some thought improvement. One could
>> > imagine a better way to stringify our unparse buffers for debug. One
>> > could image a way to receive infoset state changes so the debugger can
>> > track things like backtracks and remove infosets. One could image a way
>> > display the schema
>> >
>> > We just need a better way to stringify the current state of the unparse
>> > data including buffers, and we need a way to for the debugger to receive
>> > state change information about infoset so it can upd

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-08 Thread John Wass
view to find the actual bits.
>>
>> I imagine the "next generation daffodil debugger" to look much like
>> this. As data is parsed, the infoset view fills up. This view could act
>> like a standard GUI tree so you could collapse sections or scroll around
>> to show just the parts you care about, and have search capabilities to
>> quickly jump around. The advantage here is you no longer really need
>> automated eliding or heuristics for what the user *might* care about.
>> You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As daffodil
>> parses and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.
>>
>> I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view, so as
>> daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting
>> integers), one could update this data view to show what daffodil is
>> doing and where it is.
>>
>> I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a schema
>> view to show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove
>> breakpoints. And an information view for things like variables, in-scope
>> delimiters, PoU's, etc.
>>
>> The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this GUI
>> to be more easily written in something other that Java/Scala to take
>> advantage of other GUI toolkits. It's been a long while since I've done
>> anything with Java guis, but they seems pretty poor that last I looked
>> at them. Would even allow for a TUI, which Java has little/no support
>> for. Also enables things like remote deubgging if an socket IPC was
>> used. Though I'm not sure all of that is necessary. Just thinking what
>> would be ideal, and it can always be pared back.
>>
>>
>> On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
>> > I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a separation
>> of concerns between display of information and the behaviors of
>> parse/unparse that need to be points where users can pause, and data
>> structures available to display.
>> >
>> > E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is
>> clumsy, too big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor state, and
>> one can examine the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s),
>> following sibling(s), etc. One can elide contents that are too big for
>> hexBinary, etc.
>> >
>> > I think this problem, how to display the infoset with sensible limits
>> on sizing, is fairly easy to come up with some design for, that will at
>> least be (1) always fairly small (2) much more useful in more cases. It
>> won't be perfect but can be much better than what we do now.
>> >
>> > One sensible display "mode" should be that displaying the context
>> surrounding the current element (when parsing or unparsing) displays at
>> most N-lines. (N/2 before, N/2 after) with a maximum length of L characters
>> (settable within reason ?)
>> >
>> > Sibling and enclosing nodes would be displayed eliding their contents
>> to at most 1 line.
>> >
>> > Here's an example of what I mean. Displaying up to M=10 lines total:
>> >
>> > ...
>> > 
>> >...
>> >89ab782 ...
>> >some text is here and some more text
>> >value might be some big thing which needs to be elided
>> ...
>> > ... 
>> >???
>> > 
>> > ???
>> >
>> > The  is just an idea to reduce XML matching end-tag clutter.
>> >
>> > The ... on a line alone or where element content would appear generally
>> means 1 or more other siblings. The way the display above starts with ...
>> means that this is a relative inner nest, not starting from the absolute
>> root.
>> >
>> > The ... within simple content means that content is elided to fit on
>> one line. Always follows some text characters to differentiate from the
>> child-element context.
>> >
>> > The ??? means zero or more other siblings.
>> >
>> > I used bold italic above to point out that the current node would be
>> highlighted somehow. Probably a way to do this that doesn't require display
>> modes would be useful. E.g., a text marker like ">>>" as in:
>> >
>> >>>> value  
>> >
>> > might be better, particularly for a trace output being dumped to a text
>> file.
>> >
>> > I made the above example an unparser kind of example by showing a
>> following sibling that exists that is after the curre

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-04-08 Thread John Wass
. scanning for delimiters, extracting
> integers), one could update this data view to show what daffodil is
> doing and where it is.
>
> I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a schema
> view to show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove
> breakpoints. And an information view for things like variables, in-scope
> delimiters, PoU's, etc.
>
> The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this GUI
> to be more easily written in something other that Java/Scala to take
> advantage of other GUI toolkits. It's been a long while since I've done
> anything with Java guis, but they seems pretty poor that last I looked
> at them. Would even allow for a TUI, which Java has little/no support
> for. Also enables things like remote deubgging if an socket IPC was
> used. Though I'm not sure all of that is necessary. Just thinking what
> would be ideal, and it can always be pared back.
>
>
> On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
> > I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a separation
> of concerns between display of information and the behaviors of
> parse/unparse that need to be points where users can pause, and data
> structures available to display.
> >
> > E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is
> clumsy, too big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor state, and
> one can examine the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s),
> following sibling(s), etc. One can elide contents that are too big for
> hexBinary, etc.
> >
> > I think this problem, how to display the infoset with sensible limits on
> sizing, is fairly easy to come up with some design for, that will at least
> be (1) always fairly small (2) much more useful in more cases. It won't be
> perfect but can be much better than what we do now.
> >
> > One sensible display "mode" should be that displaying the context
> surrounding the current element (when parsing or unparsing) displays at
> most N-lines. (N/2 before, N/2 after) with a maximum length of L characters
> (settable within reason ?)
> >
> > Sibling and enclosing nodes would be displayed eliding their contents to
> at most 1 line.
> >
> > Here's an example of what I mean. Displaying up to M=10 lines total:
> >
> > ...
> > 
> >...
> >89ab782 ...
> >some text is here and some more text
> >value might be some big thing which needs to be elided
> ...
> > ... 
> >???
> > 
> > ???
> >
> > The  is just an idea to reduce XML matching end-tag clutter.
> >
> > The ... on a line alone or where element content would appear generally
> means 1 or more other siblings. The way the display above starts with ...
> means that this is a relative inner nest, not starting from the absolute
> root.
> >
> > The ... within simple content means that content is elided to fit on one
> line. Always follows some text characters to differentiate from the
> child-element context.
> >
> > The ??? means zero or more other siblings.
> >
> > I used bold italic above to point out that the current node would be
> highlighted somehow. Probably a way to do this that doesn't require display
> modes would be useful. E.g., a text marker like ">>>" as in:
> >
> >>>> value  
> >
> > might be better, particularly for a trace output being dumped to a text
> file.
> >
> > I made the above example an unparser kind of example by showing a
> following sibling that exists that is after the current node.
> >
> > I think the key concept is that any sibling node is displayed in a way
> that fits on one line.
> > E.g., even if the element name was really long, I'd suggest:
> >
> >   abcd ... 
> >
> > Where the element name itself gets elided because it is too long.
> >
> > A thought. Note that the above presentation is shown as quasi-XML, but
> there's nothing XML-specific about it. A JSON-friendly equivalent could be
> done as well:
> >
> > enclosingParent1 = {
> >...
> >priorSibling2 = "89ab782..."
> >priorSibling1 = "some text is here and some more text"
> >currentNode = "value might be some big thing which needs to be elided
> ..."
> >followingSibling1 = { ... }
> >???
> > }
> >
> > That's enough for 1 email thread on this debug topic.
> >
> >
> > 
> > From: Steve Lawrence 
> > Sent: Tuesday, January 5, 2021 2:26 PM
> > To: d

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-01-11 Thread Steve Lawrence
This has strayed a bit from a debugger and more to improved usability in
general. I think that's definitely worth a discussion since usability is
probably one of the biggest hindrances to Daffodil acceptance.

Continuing this, I've always thought an online DFDL "playground" or
"fiddle" could be really useful for new users. A webpage that lets you
add a schema, add some data and parse/unparse it and get the result
could be useful. Let's new users playaround with Daffodil without having
to install anything.

It could also have a button to create a TDML file to create TDML to be
included in Daffodil tests. Or it could have shareable links to the
fiddle itself so others could run it online. That could be a great way
for users to start discussions and easily share DFDL snippets/examples
without having to learn TDML or set up IDEs.

And bringing this back to the debugger, I imagine the playground/fiddle
interface would be somewhat similar to a debugger (e.g. infoset view,
schema view, data view, etc.) and could additionally have
debugger/history tree views as well. It also has the benefit of being a
webserver, so you could run the core backend on any machine, and then
the display just needs a browser. So it's not dependent any one GUI toolkit.

On 1/11/21 1:11 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
> I'd like "report a bug" as an IDE-supported action that actually helps the 
> user create a TDML file, annotate it with their commentary about the issue as 
> well as just the raw schema and expected result, etc. Then upload or send it 
> to the right place.
> 
> Similar but "ask a question" that is IDE supported that helps the user create 
> a TDML file for discussion of their question would be very similar, but many 
> times people just ask for clarifications, and little tests that make the 
> context clear/concrete that are actually runnable save much time and back and 
> forth over unspecified aspects of the situation.
> 
> 
> 
> From: John Wass 
> Sent: Friday, January 8, 2021 4:45 PM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
> 
> What other features could find a nice home in an IDE integration?  Having
> single convenient entrypoint (the IDE) for such things would be nice, imo.
> 
> Things like...
> 
> - Rich set of actions for TDML
>   - Run a single test from a TDML file
>   - Debug/Run TDML
> - Run/Debug a data file with a schema from the project
>   - ie Right click on a JPG and have context menu for Run with Daffodil ->
> pick from list of dfdl.xsd
> ...
> 
> 
> 
> On Fri, Jan 8, 2021 at 2:47 PM Beckerle, Mike 
> wrote:
> 
>> Use cases or quasi-requirements. This is my summary so far.
>>
>> 1) capture a human-readable trace of parse/unparse information to a single
>> text file (might be same as 2 if machine-readable is sufficiently human
>> readable)
>>
>> 2) capture a machine-readable trace of parse/unparse information to a
>> single text file (might be same as 1 if human readable form is also machine
>> readable)
>>
>> 3) interactive debug from a command line - each display of information is
>> requested by a specific command (1 and 2 above might be using this with a
>> specific canned set of commands auto-issued to display various information,
>> and capturing all to an output stream)
>>
>> 4) interactive debug with multi-panel display where displays are
>> updated/animated automatically as debug context changes. (This is intended
>> to mean more than just opening all the schema files in different editor
>> windows - more than just gdb-style debug under Emacs.)
>>
>> 5) interactive debug time-machine - ability to backup to prior
>> parser/unparser states, move forward again, or just backup and re-check
>> something, but then jump forward to proceed from where one left off.
>>
>> 6) Non Use Case: IDE for DFDL with rich semantic model (akin to the DSOM
>> object model) of the schema.
>> This is here just to point out that it's really out of scope. There are
>> many questions about the schema (e.g., "can I add this property to this
>> element?") that are not? required for the debugger. A full and powerful IDE
>> is great, but that's really entirely different than our goals for debugging
>> that we're trying to discuss here.
>>
>>
>> 
>> From: Sloane, Brandon 
>> Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:25 PM
>> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
>> Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>>
>> We could also create a new flag for --trace that would format the

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-01-11 Thread Beckerle, Mike
I'd like "report a bug" as an IDE-supported action that actually helps the user 
create a TDML file, annotate it with their commentary about the issue as well 
as just the raw schema and expected result, etc. Then upload or send it to the 
right place.

Similar but "ask a question" that is IDE supported that helps the user create a 
TDML file for discussion of their question would be very similar, but many 
times people just ask for clarifications, and little tests that make the 
context clear/concrete that are actually runnable save much time and back and 
forth over unspecified aspects of the situation.



From: John Wass 
Sent: Friday, January 8, 2021 4:45 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

What other features could find a nice home in an IDE integration?  Having
single convenient entrypoint (the IDE) for such things would be nice, imo.

Things like...

- Rich set of actions for TDML
  - Run a single test from a TDML file
  - Debug/Run TDML
- Run/Debug a data file with a schema from the project
  - ie Right click on a JPG and have context menu for Run with Daffodil ->
pick from list of dfdl.xsd
...



On Fri, Jan 8, 2021 at 2:47 PM Beckerle, Mike 
wrote:

> Use cases or quasi-requirements. This is my summary so far.
>
> 1) capture a human-readable trace of parse/unparse information to a single
> text file (might be same as 2 if machine-readable is sufficiently human
> readable)
>
> 2) capture a machine-readable trace of parse/unparse information to a
> single text file (might be same as 1 if human readable form is also machine
> readable)
>
> 3) interactive debug from a command line - each display of information is
> requested by a specific command (1 and 2 above might be using this with a
> specific canned set of commands auto-issued to display various information,
> and capturing all to an output stream)
>
> 4) interactive debug with multi-panel display where displays are
> updated/animated automatically as debug context changes. (This is intended
> to mean more than just opening all the schema files in different editor
> windows - more than just gdb-style debug under Emacs.)
>
> 5) interactive debug time-machine - ability to backup to prior
> parser/unparser states, move forward again, or just backup and re-check
> something, but then jump forward to proceed from where one left off.
>
> 6) Non Use Case: IDE for DFDL with rich semantic model (akin to the DSOM
> object model) of the schema.
> This is here just to point out that it's really out of scope. There are
> many questions about the schema (e.g., "can I add this property to this
> element?") that are not? required for the debugger. A full and powerful IDE
> is great, but that's really entirely different than our goals for debugging
> that we're trying to discuss here.
>
>
> ________________
> From: Sloane, Brandon 
> Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:25 PM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>
> We could also create a new flag for --trace that would format the trace
> output in a more machine readable manner. This should let us accomplish
> Larry's goals, and most of mine, with relativly little effort within
> Daffodil (but still all the effort on the GUI side), and would allow for
> off-site analysis in cases where it is not practical to attach a debugger
> while Daffodil is running.
> 
> From: Sloane, Brandon 
> Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:21 PM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>
> I've been thinking about a tool along similar lines (although more
> integrated with Daffodil than post-processing the trace output).
>
> One thing to keep in mind is that, although the trace output is presented
> as a linear log (since we do not have much choice), the actual process is
> more of a tree, due to backtracking.
>
> Ideally, we would have a multi-pane window showing:
>
>
>   *   The hex/binary data
>   *   The infoset
>   *   A time-axis parse tree; with a "major" node at every point of
> uncertainty and parse error, and "minor" nodes at every parse step
>   *   A view of the DFDL schema
>   *   An interactive terminal debugger (e.g. what we currently have)
>   *   Breakpoints/variables/delimeter-stack/etc
>
> Within these panes, you ough to be able to select a given region/element,
> and highlight all the corresponding elements in the other panes.
>
> I think that exporting the nessasary information from Daffodil to
> implement all of this would be relativly straightforward. The only
>

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-01-08 Thread John Wass
What other features could find a nice home in an IDE integration?  Having
single convenient entrypoint (the IDE) for such things would be nice, imo.

Things like...

- Rich set of actions for TDML
  - Run a single test from a TDML file
  - Debug/Run TDML
- Run/Debug a data file with a schema from the project
  - ie Right click on a JPG and have context menu for Run with Daffodil ->
pick from list of dfdl.xsd
...



On Fri, Jan 8, 2021 at 2:47 PM Beckerle, Mike 
wrote:

> Use cases or quasi-requirements. This is my summary so far.
>
> 1) capture a human-readable trace of parse/unparse information to a single
> text file (might be same as 2 if machine-readable is sufficiently human
> readable)
>
> 2) capture a machine-readable trace of parse/unparse information to a
> single text file (might be same as 1 if human readable form is also machine
> readable)
>
> 3) interactive debug from a command line - each display of information is
> requested by a specific command (1 and 2 above might be using this with a
> specific canned set of commands auto-issued to display various information,
> and capturing all to an output stream)
>
> 4) interactive debug with multi-panel display where displays are
> updated/animated automatically as debug context changes. (This is intended
> to mean more than just opening all the schema files in different editor
> windows - more than just gdb-style debug under Emacs.)
>
> 5) interactive debug time-machine - ability to backup to prior
> parser/unparser states, move forward again, or just backup and re-check
> something, but then jump forward to proceed from where one left off.
>
> 6) Non Use Case: IDE for DFDL with rich semantic model (akin to the DSOM
> object model) of the schema.
> This is here just to point out that it's really out of scope. There are
> many questions about the schema (e.g., "can I add this property to this
> element?") that are not? required for the debugger. A full and powerful IDE
> is great, but that's really entirely different than our goals for debugging
> that we're trying to discuss here.
>
>
> ____________
> From: Sloane, Brandon 
> Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:25 PM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>
> We could also create a new flag for --trace that would format the trace
> output in a more machine readable manner. This should let us accomplish
> Larry's goals, and most of mine, with relativly little effort within
> Daffodil (but still all the effort on the GUI side), and would allow for
> off-site analysis in cases where it is not practical to attach a debugger
> while Daffodil is running.
> ________
> From: Sloane, Brandon 
> Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:21 PM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>
> I've been thinking about a tool along similar lines (although more
> integrated with Daffodil than post-processing the trace output).
>
> One thing to keep in mind is that, although the trace output is presented
> as a linear log (since we do not have much choice), the actual process is
> more of a tree, due to backtracking.
>
> Ideally, we would have a multi-pane window showing:
>
>
>   *   The hex/binary data
>   *   The infoset
>   *   A time-axis parse tree; with a "major" node at every point of
> uncertainty and parse error, and "minor" nodes at every parse step
>   *   A view of the DFDL schema
>   *   An interactive terminal debugger (e.g. what we currently have)
>   *   Breakpoints/variables/delimeter-stack/etc
>
> Within these panes, you ough to be able to select a given region/element,
> and highlight all the corresponding elements in the other panes.
>
> I think that exporting the nessasary information from Daffodil to
> implement all of this would be relativly straightforward. The only
> potentially problametic parts I see are:
>
>   *   The interactive debugger would require some form of time-travel to
> implement (I think most of the work for this is done to support backracking)
>   *   The memory requirements when used on large infosets
>
> 
> From: Larry Barber 
> Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:08 PM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: RE: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
>
> When I was doing strange and unusual things with DFDL and generating a lot
> of errors, I envisioned how helpful it would be to have a tool that would
> post-process the --trace output and use it to display a dual pane window
> (like the editor referenced below) with the schema on one side and hex
> version o

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-01-08 Thread Beckerle, Mike
Use cases or quasi-requirements. This is my summary so far.

1) capture a human-readable trace of parse/unparse information to a single text 
file (might be same as 2 if machine-readable is sufficiently human readable)

2) capture a machine-readable trace of parse/unparse information to a single 
text file (might be same as 1 if human readable form is also machine readable)

3) interactive debug from a command line - each display of information is 
requested by a specific command (1 and 2 above might be using this with a 
specific canned set of commands auto-issued to display various information, and 
capturing all to an output stream)

4) interactive debug with multi-panel display where displays are 
updated/animated automatically as debug context changes. (This is intended to 
mean more than just opening all the schema files in different editor windows - 
more than just gdb-style debug under Emacs.)

5) interactive debug time-machine - ability to backup to prior parser/unparser 
states, move forward again, or just backup and re-check something, but then 
jump forward to proceed from where one left off.

6) Non Use Case: IDE for DFDL with rich semantic model (akin to the DSOM object 
model) of the schema.
This is here just to point out that it's really out of scope. There are many 
questions about the schema (e.g., "can I add this property to this element?") 
that are not? required for the debugger. A full and powerful IDE is great, but 
that's really entirely different than our goals for debugging that we're trying 
to discuss here.



From: Sloane, Brandon 
Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:25 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

We could also create a new flag for --trace that would format the trace output 
in a more machine readable manner. This should let us accomplish Larry's goals, 
and most of mine, with relativly little effort within Daffodil (but still all 
the effort on the GUI side), and would allow for off-site analysis in cases 
where it is not practical to attach a debugger while Daffodil is running.

From: Sloane, Brandon 
Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:21 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

I've been thinking about a tool along similar lines (although more integrated 
with Daffodil than post-processing the trace output).

One thing to keep in mind is that, although the trace output is presented as a 
linear log (since we do not have much choice), the actual process is more of a 
tree, due to backtracking.

Ideally, we would have a multi-pane window showing:


  *   The hex/binary data
  *   The infoset
  *   A time-axis parse tree; with a "major" node at every point of uncertainty 
and parse error, and "minor" nodes at every parse step
  *   A view of the DFDL schema
  *   An interactive terminal debugger (e.g. what we currently have)
  *   Breakpoints/variables/delimeter-stack/etc

Within these panes, you ough to be able to select a given region/element, and 
highlight all the corresponding elements in the other panes.

I think that exporting the nessasary information from Daffodil to implement all 
of this would be relativly straightforward. The only potentially problametic 
parts I see are:

  *   The interactive debugger would require some form of time-travel to 
implement (I think most of the work for this is done to support backracking)
  *   The memory requirements when used on large infosets


From: Larry Barber 
Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:08 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: RE: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

When I was doing strange and unusual things with DFDL and generating a lot of 
errors, I envisioned how helpful it would be to have a tool that would 
post-process the --trace output and use it to display a dual pane window (like 
the editor referenced below) with the schema on one side and hex version on the 
other, with a slider that would allow be to flow through the parsing action and 
see pointers as to where the parser was in both the schema and input files. In 
other words just convert the information from the -trace into a more useful 
graphical display.
Perhaps breakpoint like markers could be added to both files to quickly scan 
through and display what sections of the schema read which locations in the 
file, or vice versa.

-Original Message-
From: Steve Lawrence [mailto:slawre...@apache.org]
Sent: Wednesday, January 6, 2021 1:42 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

Yep, something like that seems very reasonable for dealing with large infosets. 
But it still feels like we still run into usability issues.
For example, what if a user wants to see more? We need some configuration 
options to increas

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-01-07 Thread Sloane, Brandon
We could also create a new flag for --trace that would format the trace output 
in a more machine readable manner. This should let us accomplish Larry's goals, 
and most of mine, with relativly little effort within Daffodil (but still all 
the effort on the GUI side), and would allow for off-site analysis in cases 
where it is not practical to attach a debugger while Daffodil is running.

From: Sloane, Brandon 
Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:21 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

I've been thinking about a tool along similar lines (although more integrated 
with Daffodil than post-processing the trace output).

One thing to keep in mind is that, although the trace output is presented as a 
linear log (since we do not have much choice), the actual process is more of a 
tree, due to backtracking.

Ideally, we would have a multi-pane window showing:


  *   The hex/binary data
  *   The infoset
  *   A time-axis parse tree; with a "major" node at every point of uncertainty 
and parse error, and "minor" nodes at every parse step
  *   A view of the DFDL schema
  *   An interactive terminal debugger (e.g. what we currently have)
  *   Breakpoints/variables/delimeter-stack/etc

Within these panes, you ough to be able to select a given region/element, and 
highlight all the corresponding elements in the other panes.

I think that exporting the nessasary information from Daffodil to implement all 
of this would be relativly straightforward. The only potentially problametic 
parts I see are:

  *   The interactive debugger would require some form of time-travel to 
implement (I think most of the work for this is done to support backracking)
  *   The memory requirements when used on large infosets


From: Larry Barber 
Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:08 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: RE: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

When I was doing strange and unusual things with DFDL and generating a lot of 
errors, I envisioned how helpful it would be to have a tool that would 
post-process the --trace output and use it to display a dual pane window (like 
the editor referenced below) with the schema on one side and hex version on the 
other, with a slider that would allow be to flow through the parsing action and 
see pointers as to where the parser was in both the schema and input files. In 
other words just convert the information from the -trace into a more useful 
graphical display.
Perhaps breakpoint like markers could be added to both files to quickly scan 
through and display what sections of the schema read which locations in the 
file, or vice versa.

-Original Message-
From: Steve Lawrence [mailto:slawre...@apache.org]
Sent: Wednesday, January 6, 2021 1:42 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

Yep, something like that seems very reasonable for dealing with large infosets. 
But it still feels like we still run into usability issues.
For example, what if a user wants to see more? We need some configuration 
options to increase what we've ellided. It's not big, but every new thing that 
needs configuration adds complexity and decreases usability.

And I think the only reason we are trying to spend effort elliding things is 
because we're limited to this gdb-like interface where you can only print out a 
little information at a time.

I think what would really is to dump this gdb interface and instead use 
multiple windows/views. As a really close example to what I imagine, I recently 
came across this hex editor:

https://usg02.safelinks.protection.office365.us/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.synalysis.net%2F&data=04%7C01%7Clarry.barber%40nteligen.com%7C634abf420284401f456808d8b272c812%7C379c214c5c944e86a6062d047675f02a%7C0%7C0%7C63743366581733%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=B8YS4yJYrqhZ%2BoINnNDa%2BVCe77ZNjyiAEjvhdRLA%2BZY%3D&reserved=0

The screenshots are a bit small so it's not super clear, but this tool has one 
view for the data in hex, and one view for a tree of parsed results (which is 
very similar to our infoset). The "infoset" view has information like 
offset/length/value, and can be related back to the data view to find the 
actual bits.

I imagine the "next generation daffodil debugger" to look much like this. As 
data is parsed, the infoset view fills up. This view could act like a standard 
GUI tree so you could collapse sections or scroll around to show just the parts 
you care about, and have search capabilities to quickly jump around. The 
advantage here is you no longer really need automated eliding or heuristics for 
what the user *might* care about.
You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As daffodil parses 
a

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-01-07 Thread Sloane, Brandon
I've been thinking about a tool along similar lines (although more integrated 
with Daffodil than post-processing the trace output).

One thing to keep in mind is that, although the trace output is presented as a 
linear log (since we do not have much choice), the actual process is more of a 
tree, due to backtracking.

Ideally, we would have a multi-pane window showing:


  *   The hex/binary data
  *   The infoset
  *   A time-axis parse tree; with a "major" node at every point of uncertainty 
and parse error, and "minor" nodes at every parse step
  *   A view of the DFDL schema
  *   An interactive terminal debugger (e.g. what we currently have)
  *   Breakpoints/variables/delimeter-stack/etc

Within these panes, you ough to be able to select a given region/element, and 
highlight all the corresponding elements in the other panes.

I think that exporting the nessasary information from Daffodil to implement all 
of this would be relativly straightforward. The only potentially problametic 
parts I see are:

  *   The interactive debugger would require some form of time-travel to 
implement (I think most of the work for this is done to support backracking)
  *   The memory requirements when used on large infosets


From: Larry Barber 
Sent: Thursday, January 7, 2021 1:08 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: RE: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

When I was doing strange and unusual things with DFDL and generating a lot of 
errors, I envisioned how helpful it would be to have a tool that would 
post-process the --trace output and use it to display a dual pane window (like 
the editor referenced below) with the schema on one side and hex version on the 
other, with a slider that would allow be to flow through the parsing action and 
see pointers as to where the parser was in both the schema and input files. In 
other words just convert the information from the -trace into a more useful 
graphical display.
Perhaps breakpoint like markers could be added to both files to quickly scan 
through and display what sections of the schema read which locations in the 
file, or vice versa.

-Original Message-
From: Steve Lawrence [mailto:slawre...@apache.org]
Sent: Wednesday, January 6, 2021 1:42 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

Yep, something like that seems very reasonable for dealing with large infosets. 
But it still feels like we still run into usability issues.
For example, what if a user wants to see more? We need some configuration 
options to increase what we've ellided. It's not big, but every new thing that 
needs configuration adds complexity and decreases usability.

And I think the only reason we are trying to spend effort elliding things is 
because we're limited to this gdb-like interface where you can only print out a 
little information at a time.

I think what would really is to dump this gdb interface and instead use 
multiple windows/views. As a really close example to what I imagine, I recently 
came across this hex editor:

https://usg02.safelinks.protection.office365.us/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.synalysis.net%2F&data=04%7C01%7Clarry.barber%40nteligen.com%7C634abf420284401f456808d8b272c812%7C379c214c5c944e86a6062d047675f02a%7C0%7C0%7C63743366581733%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=B8YS4yJYrqhZ%2BoINnNDa%2BVCe77ZNjyiAEjvhdRLA%2BZY%3D&reserved=0

The screenshots are a bit small so it's not super clear, but this tool has one 
view for the data in hex, and one view for a tree of parsed results (which is 
very similar to our infoset). The "infoset" view has information like 
offset/length/value, and can be related back to the data view to find the 
actual bits.

I imagine the "next generation daffodil debugger" to look much like this. As 
data is parsed, the infoset view fills up. This view could act like a standard 
GUI tree so you could collapse sections or scroll around to show just the parts 
you care about, and have search capabilities to quickly jump around. The 
advantage here is you no longer really need automated eliding or heuristics for 
what the user *might* care about.
You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As daffodil parses 
and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.

I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view, so as 
daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting integers), one 
could update this data view to show what daffodil is doing and where it is.

I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a schema view to 
show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove breakpoints. And an 
information view for things like variables, in-scope delimiters, PoU's, etc.

The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this GUI 

RE: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-01-07 Thread Larry Barber
When I was doing strange and unusual things with DFDL and generating a lot of 
errors, I envisioned how helpful it would be to have a tool that would 
post-process the --trace output and use it to display a dual pane window (like 
the editor referenced below) with the schema on one side and hex version on the 
other, with a slider that would allow be to flow through the parsing action and 
see pointers as to where the parser was in both the schema and input files. In 
other words just convert the information from the -trace into a more useful 
graphical display.
Perhaps breakpoint like markers could be added to both files to quickly scan 
through and display what sections of the schema read which locations in the 
file, or vice versa.

-Original Message-
From: Steve Lawrence [mailto:slawre...@apache.org] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 6, 2021 1:42 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

Yep, something like that seems very reasonable for dealing with large infosets. 
But it still feels like we still run into usability issues.
For example, what if a user wants to see more? We need some configuration 
options to increase what we've ellided. It's not big, but every new thing that 
needs configuration adds complexity and decreases usability.

And I think the only reason we are trying to spend effort elliding things is 
because we're limited to this gdb-like interface where you can only print out a 
little information at a time.

I think what would really is to dump this gdb interface and instead use 
multiple windows/views. As a really close example to what I imagine, I recently 
came across this hex editor:

https://usg02.safelinks.protection.office365.us/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.synalysis.net%2F&data=04%7C01%7Clarry.barber%40nteligen.com%7C634abf420284401f456808d8b272c812%7C379c214c5c944e86a6062d047675f02a%7C0%7C0%7C63743366581733%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=B8YS4yJYrqhZ%2BoINnNDa%2BVCe77ZNjyiAEjvhdRLA%2BZY%3D&reserved=0

The screenshots are a bit small so it's not super clear, but this tool has one 
view for the data in hex, and one view for a tree of parsed results (which is 
very similar to our infoset). The "infoset" view has information like 
offset/length/value, and can be related back to the data view to find the 
actual bits.

I imagine the "next generation daffodil debugger" to look much like this. As 
data is parsed, the infoset view fills up. This view could act like a standard 
GUI tree so you could collapse sections or scroll around to show just the parts 
you care about, and have search capabilities to quickly jump around. The 
advantage here is you no longer really need automated eliding or heuristics for 
what the user *might* care about.
You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As daffodil parses 
and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.

I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view, so as 
daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting integers), one 
could update this data view to show what daffodil is doing and where it is.

I also image there could be other views as well. For example, a schema view to 
show where in the schema daffodil is, and to add/remove breakpoints. And an 
information view for things like variables, in-scope delimiters, PoU's, etc.

The only reason I mention a debug protcol is that would allow this GUI to be 
more easily written in something other that Java/Scala to take advantage of 
other GUI toolkits. It's been a long while since I've done anything with Java 
guis, but they seems pretty poor that last I looked at them. Would even allow 
for a TUI, which Java has little/no support for. Also enables things like 
remote deubgging if an socket IPC was used. Though I'm not sure all of that is 
necessary. Just thinking what would be ideal, and it can always be pared back.


On 1/6/21 12:44 PM, Beckerle, Mike wrote:
> I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a separation of 
> concerns between display of information and the behaviors of parse/unparse 
> that need to be points where users can pause, and data structures available 
> to display.
> 
> E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is clumsy, 
> too big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor state, and one can 
> examine the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s), following 
> sibling(s), etc. One can elide contents that are too big for hexBinary, etc.
> 
> I think this problem, how to display the infoset with sensible limits on 
> sizing, is fairly easy to come up with some design for, that will at least be 
> (1) always fairly small (2) much more useful in more cases. It won't be 
> perfect but can be much better than what we do now.
> 
&g

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-01-06 Thread Sloane, Brandon
I agree with Steve that "ideal" debugger would involve a rich multi-pane GUI; 
and like the idea of establishing a well defined protocol to isolate the GUI 
from the main codebase. Using a protocol would also give us scritability for 
nearly free, as users could leverage normal shell tools to script whatever 
debug automation/conveniences they need.

I'm not sure how well existing debugger protocols would work though (although 
if they do fit, it would save us a lot of effort). The type of debugging needed 
for Daffodil schema strikes me as fairly distinct from what you would typically 
expect from most debuggers.

On the subject of functionality, one feature that I would really like to see 
added is time travel. With the work we already do to support backtracking, it 
should be relatively simple to add support for fully restoring the parse state 
to a prior saved state; which would be a massive QoL improvement for the 
interactive debugger.

For the non-interactive tracer (and, to some extent the interactive debugger), 
I think we may need to support varying levels of verbosity. In addition to a 
global verbosity level, we should also have some way to flag specific "things" 
to get more or less details. Speciying exactly what a "thing" is is its own 
discussion, as even a simple type in the schema can end up having many 
different regions (prefix, suffix, padding, etc).

At a high level, I think I see 2 ways forward:

1) Mike's suggestion: make incremental improvements to our existing tooling, 
focusing primarily on reducing the volume information the user is exposed to.

2) Steve's idea: establish a debugging protocol and develop an external 
debugger.

I would add to 2 that we can develop an experimental debugger to play around 
with different design ideas much easier than we could if the debugger were 
itself part of Daffodil proper. Since I don't think we have a solid idea of 
what this debugger looks like, I think this is valuable.

Additionally, even if we use our own non-standard protocol, implementing (2) 
would still make it far easier for someone to integrate Daffodil debugging 
facilities into third party applications.

In my mind, this is entirely a question of engineering effort. If we are trying 
to improve the debugger, (1) is a must have at least in the sense of improving 
the output of --trace, as that non-interactive interface is simple enough to be 
quickly usable in almost any configuration. Having said that, if we are going 
to do (2), we should do it first, as it would probably simplify the work needed 
for (1)

If we have the resources, (2) would result in a far superior product.

Additionally, I think the work needed for (2) could have benifits beyond simply 
debugging. I have wanted for a while a tool similar to Wireshark's dissectors: 
where we could provide a schema then see the binary data and infoset 
side-by-side and see how regions of the two map to each other.

From: Steve Lawrence 
Sent: Wednesday, January 6, 2021 1:42 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

Yep, something like that seems very reasonable for dealing with large
infosets. But it still feels like we still run into usability issues.
For example, what if a user wants to see more? We need some
configuration options to increase what we've ellided. It's not big, but
every new thing that needs configuration adds complexity and decreases
usability.

And I think the only reason we are trying to spend effort elliding
things is because we're limited to this gdb-like interface where you can
only print out a little information at a time.

I think what would really is to dump this gdb interface and instead use
multiple windows/views. As a really close example to what I imagine, I
recently came across this hex editor:

https://www.synalysis.net/

The screenshots are a bit small so it's not super clear, but this tool
has one view for the data in hex, and one view for a tree of parsed
results (which is very similar to our infoset). The "infoset" view has
information like offset/length/value, and can be related back to the
data view to find the actual bits.

I imagine the "next generation daffodil debugger" to look much like
this. As data is parsed, the infoset view fills up. This view could act
like a standard GUI tree so you could collapse sections or scroll around
to show just the parts you care about, and have search capabilities to
quickly jump around. The advantage here is you no longer really need
automated eliding or heuristics for what the user *might* care about.
You just show the whole thing and let user scroll around. As daffodil
parses and backtracks, this tree grows or shrinks.

I also imagine you could have a cursor moving around the hex view, so as
daffodil moves around (e.g. scanning for delimiters, extracting
integers), one 

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-01-06 Thread Steve Lawrence
o do this that doesn't require display 
> modes would be useful. E.g., a text marker like ">>>" as in:
> 
>>>> value  
> 
> might be better, particularly for a trace output being dumped to a text file.
> 
> I made the above example an unparser kind of example by showing a following 
> sibling that exists that is after the current node.
> 
> I think the key concept is that any sibling node is displayed in a way that 
> fits on one line.
> E.g., even if the element name was really long, I'd suggest:
> 
>   abcd ... 
> 
> Where the element name itself gets elided because it is too long.
> 
> A thought. Note that the above presentation is shown as quasi-XML, but 
> there's nothing XML-specific about it. A JSON-friendly equivalent could be 
> done as well:
> 
> enclosingParent1 = {
>...
>priorSibling2 = "89ab782..."
>priorSibling1 = "some text is here and some more text"
>currentNode = "value might be some big thing which needs to be elided ..."
>followingSibling1 = { ... }
>???
> }
> 
> That's enough for 1 email thread on this debug topic.
> 
> 
> 
> From: Steve Lawrence 
> Sent: Tuesday, January 5, 2021 2:26 PM
> To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
> Subject: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?
> 
> 
> Now that we're in a new year, I'd like to start a discussion about the
> Daffodil DFDL Schema debugger and how it might be improved to be more
> useful.
> 
> Note that this is not the capabilities to debug Daffodil itself in
> something like Eclipse/IntelliJ, but the ability for Daffodil to provide
> enough extra information during a parse/unparse so that a schema
> developer can get an idea of what Daffodil is doing. This makes it
> easier for users (rather than developers) to determine why a schema
> isn't giving the expect parse/unparse result (either because of bad data
> or a faulty schema.
> 
> The current state of the debugger is enabled by providing the --debug or
> --trace flags in the CLI. More information about that here:
> 
> https://daffodil.apache.org/debugger/
> 
> This enables a TUI and commands somewhat similar to GDB, providing thins
> like breakpoints, steps, displaying the current infoset, display a dump
> of the data, etc.
> 
> Although I find this tool pretty useful, it definitely has some glaring
> issues.
> 
> The most glaring to me is that it really isn't useful at all for
> debugging unparse. The data dumps only include then main outputstream,
> so determine things like suspensions and buffered output is impossible.
> 
> Another issue is the infoset output. When outputting the infoset, the
> debugger currently just walks the entire thing and converts it to XML
> and displays the XML. For large infosets, this is excess and can make it
> impossible to use, even with some configurations the limit how much of
> that infoset is actually printed to the screen. Also things like large
> hex binary blobs create excessive and unusable output.
> 
> Another thing I feel is missing is a schema view. Right now it's very
> difficult to know where in the schema Daffodil actually is.
> 
> I think these issues just need some thought improvement. One could
> imagine a better way to stringify our unparse buffers for debug. One
> could image a way to receive infoset state changes so the debugger can
> track things like backtracks and remove infosets. One could image a way
> display the schema
> 
> We just need a better way to stringify the current state of the unparse
> data including buffers, and we need a way to for the debugger to receive
> state change information about infoset so it can update displays rather
> than just constantly printing the entire infoset.
> 
> However, I think another other big issue is just usability in general. I
> think the CLI usage is reasonable, but it's not always user friendly,
> and is difficult to view multiple things at the same time. I think
> because of this very few people even use this tool. So this this like
> perhaps something worth focus.
> 
> My first thought to improving this usability issue would be to implement
> the Debug Adapter Protocol (DAP)
> (https://microsoft.github.io/debug-adapter-protocol/) for Daffodil,
> which many IDE's implement. With this implemented, Daffodil could be
> plugged in to any IDE that supports it and essentially get debugging for
> free, without the need to worry about the GUI elements.
> 
> I do have concerns that this just wouldn't have enough functionality
> that we'd really need. For example, DAP really only has ability show
> code (Daff

Re: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?

2021-01-06 Thread Beckerle, Mike
I don't think of it as a daffodil debug protocol, but just a separation of 
concerns between display of information and the behaviors of parse/unparse that 
need to be points where users can pause, and data structures available to 
display.

E.g., it is 100% a display issue that the infoset (shown as XML) is clumsy, too 
big, etc.  The infoset is available in the processor state, and one can examine 
the current node, enclosing node, prior sibling(s), following sibling(s), etc. 
One can elide contents that are too big for hexBinary, etc.

I think this problem, how to display the infoset with sensible limits on 
sizing, is fairly easy to come up with some design for, that will at least be 
(1) always fairly small (2) much more useful in more cases. It won't be perfect 
but can be much better than what we do now.

One sensible display "mode" should be that displaying the context surrounding 
the current element (when parsing or unparsing) displays at most N-lines. (N/2 
before, N/2 after) with a maximum length of L characters (settable within 
reason ?)

Sibling and enclosing nodes would be displayed eliding their contents to at 
most 1 line.

Here's an example of what I mean. Displaying up to M=10 lines total:

...

   ...
   89ab782 ...
   some text is here and some more text
   value might be some big thing which needs to be elided ...
... 
   ???

???

The  is just an idea to reduce XML matching end-tag clutter.

The ... on a line alone or where element content would appear generally means 1 
or more other siblings. The way the display above starts with ... means that 
this is a relative inner nest, not starting from the absolute root.

The ... within simple content means that content is elided to fit on one line. 
Always follows some text characters to differentiate from the child-element 
context.

The ??? means zero or more other siblings.

I used bold italic above to point out that the current node would be 
highlighted somehow. Probably a way to do this that doesn't require display 
modes would be useful. E.g., a text marker like ">>>" as in:

>>> value  

might be better, particularly for a trace output being dumped to a text file.

I made the above example an unparser kind of example by showing a following 
sibling that exists that is after the current node.

I think the key concept is that any sibling node is displayed in a way that 
fits on one line.
E.g., even if the element name was really long, I'd suggest:

  abcd ... 

Where the element name itself gets elided because it is too long.

A thought. Note that the above presentation is shown as quasi-XML, but there's 
nothing XML-specific about it. A JSON-friendly equivalent could be done as well:

enclosingParent1 = {
   ...
   priorSibling2 = "89ab782..."
   priorSibling1 = "some text is here and some more text"
   currentNode = "value might be some big thing which needs to be elided ..."
   followingSibling1 = { ... }
   ???
}

That's enough for 1 email thread on this debug topic.


____
From: Steve Lawrence 
Sent: Tuesday, January 5, 2021 2:26 PM
To: dev@daffodil.apache.org 
Subject: The future of the daffodil DFDL schema debugger?


Now that we're in a new year, I'd like to start a discussion about the
Daffodil DFDL Schema debugger and how it might be improved to be more
useful.

Note that this is not the capabilities to debug Daffodil itself in
something like Eclipse/IntelliJ, but the ability for Daffodil to provide
enough extra information during a parse/unparse so that a schema
developer can get an idea of what Daffodil is doing. This makes it
easier for users (rather than developers) to determine why a schema
isn't giving the expect parse/unparse result (either because of bad data
or a faulty schema.

The current state of the debugger is enabled by providing the --debug or
--trace flags in the CLI. More information about that here:

https://daffodil.apache.org/debugger/

This enables a TUI and commands somewhat similar to GDB, providing thins
like breakpoints, steps, displaying the current infoset, display a dump
of the data, etc.

Although I find this tool pretty useful, it definitely has some glaring
issues.

The most glaring to me is that it really isn't useful at all for
debugging unparse. The data dumps only include then main outputstream,
so determine things like suspensions and buffered output is impossible.

Another issue is the infoset output. When outputting the infoset, the
debugger currently just walks the entire thing and converts it to XML
and displays the XML. For large infosets, this is excess and can make it
impossible to use, even with some configurations the limit how much of
that infoset is actually printed to the screen. Also things like large
hex binary blobs create excessive and unusable output.

Another thing I feel is missing is a schema view. R