bobpaths

Name

bobpaths - Specifying paths to Bob packages

Description

Most Bob commands are working on sets of packages. They can be specified by a query language that loosely resembles Unix paths for the common case and XPath for more advanced features. In contrast to these, Bob path queries are working on general directed acyclic graphs instead of trees. Additionally alias substitution is supported to abbreviate often used paths.

Examples:

  • /foo/bar selects the bar package under the foo top level package

  • //*-unittests selects all packages that end with -unittests

  • /image//*[ "${LICENSE}" == "GPL" ] selects all GPL licensed packages that are descendants of the image top level package

When Bob parses the recipes he builds an internal package graph. The general dependency structure is derived from the recipes. Depending on the actual content one or more packages are generated from a recipe. The Bob queries are working on the package graph.

The primary constructs of Bob paths are the location path and predicate expressions. Both are evaluated with respect to a context which consists of:

  • a package,

  • a set of environment variables from the context package,

  • and a string function library.

The environment variables in the context are derived from the context package. Only variables that are explicitly consumed by the recipe (via {checkout,build,package}Vars) and metaEnvironment variables are available. References to unset variables will result in an empty string.

The string function library is populated by all built-in string functions and additional ones defined by plugins. The string functions, if evaluated during the query, will get an additional package parameter which holds the current context package. The string function library stays constant throughout the whole evaluation.

A path is parsed by first dividing the character string into tokens and then parsing the resulting sequence of tokens. Whitespaces are ignored between tokens and may be freely injected. Some tokes (e.g. *, [ or ]) collide with special characters of the shell. Care should be taken to correctly quote or escape these characters when invoking Bob from the command line.

Location path

Just like in Unix, location paths can be expressed using a straightforward syntax. Similar to XPath this is actually a syntactic abbreviation of the more verbose syntax which will be explained later. A location path selects a set of packages relative to the context package. The result of evaluating a location step is a set of contexts with packages that matched the axis, name test and predicate of the location step. Following steps in the location path are then recursively applied to the generated contexts.

Before diving into a formal definition here are some simple location path examples:

  • foo selects the foo child package of the context package

  • f* selects all children of the context package starting with f

  • / selects the virtual root package that is parent to all top level packages (i.e. packages of recipes where root is true)

  • /foo selects the foo top level package

  • /foo/bar selects the bar child of the foo top level package

All examples above are abbreviations of the verbose syntax. See the following examples for the full syntax:

  • child@foo selects the foo child package of the context package

  • chils@f* selects all children of the context package starting with f

  • /child@foo/child@bar selects the bar child of the foo top level package

  • descendant@foo selects the foo descendants of the context package

  • descendant-or-self@foo selects the foo descendants of the context package and, if the context package is named foo, the context package as well

  • self@foo selects the context package if it is named foo, and otherwise selects nothing

  • child@foo/descendant@bar selects the bar descendants of the foo child of the context package

  • child@*/child@foo selects all foo grandchildren of the context package

  • child@*["${LICENSE}" == "GPLv2"] selects all children of the context package that are licensed as GPLv2

  • child@lib*[child@libc] selects the children starting with lib of the context package that have a libc child (i.e. that have a dependency to libc)

  • descendant-or-self@lib*["${LICENSE}" == "GPLv2" && child@libc] selects the context package or any of it descendants that start with lib which are licensed as GPLv2 and have a direct dependency to libc

There are two kinds of location path: relative location paths and absolute location paths.

A relative location path consists of a sequence of one or more location steps separated by /. The steps in a relative location path are composed together from left to right. Each step in turn selects a set of packages relative to a context package. An initial sequence of steps is composed together with a following step as follows. The initial sequence of steps selects a set of packages relative to a context package. Each package in that set is used as a context package for the following step. The sets of packages identified by that step are unioned together. The set of packages identified by the composition of the steps is this union.

An absolute location path consists of / optionally followed by a relative location path. A / by itself selects the virtual root package as context package. If it is followed by a relative location path, then the location path resolution starts with the virtual root package as input for the initial step.

Location steps

A location step has three parts:

  • an axis, which specifies the graph relationship between the context package and the packages selected by the location step

  • a package name test, which filters the packages selected by the axis by their name

  • an optional predicate, which uses an arbitrary expression to further refine the set of packages that passed the package name test

The syntax for a location step is axis@name[predicate].

Axis specifier

The following axis are available:

  • the self axis contains just the context package itself,

  • the child axis contains all children of the context package,

  • the direct-child axis contains the direct children of the context package (i.e. without provided dependencies),

  • the descendant axis contains all descendants of the context package; a descendant is a child or a child of a child and so on,

  • the direct-descendant axis contains the direct descendants of the context package; a direct descendant is a direct child or a direct child of a direct child and so on,

  • the descendant-or-self axis contains the context package and the descendants of the context package

  • the direct-descendant-or-self axis contains the context package and the direct descendants of the context package.

Package name test

For every package that is reachable by the axis the package name is matched with the package name test. Names must match exactly as given in the test. The special * wildcard character matches zero or more characters.

Predicates

The predicate expression further filters the package set that was generated by the axis and passed the package name test. For each package in the package-set to be filtered, the expression is evaluated with that package as the context package. If the expression evaluates to true for that package, the package is included in the new package-set; otherwise, it is not included.

If the result of the expression is string, the result will be converted to a boolean. The empty string, 0 and false (case insensitive) are treated as false. Any other string is converted to true.

Abbreviated Syntax

The following abbreviations are available:

  • the child axis is implicitly assumed if no axis is specified. I.e. foo is equivalent to child@foo.

  • . is a short-hand for self@*

  • // is short for /descendant-or-self@*/. For example, //foo is short for /descendant-or-self@*/child@foo and so will select any foo package in the package graph; foo//bar is short for child@foo/descendant-or-self@*/child@bar and so will select all bar descendants of foo children.

  • the above two short-cuts can be combined as .//foo which is equivalent to descendant@foo

Predicate expressions

Predicate expressions are evaluated as boolean functions that yield either true or false. The expression is executed for a context package. If the expressions yields true the package is kept as result of the associated location path, otherwise the package is filtered.

An expression may combine the following primitives to arbitrarily complex expressions. Several operators are available. Their associativity may be overruled by using parenthesis. Each primitive may be of only one of the following two types: string or boolean. Depending on the context a (partial) expression of string type may be implicitly converted to a boolean value. The empty string, 0 and false (case insensitive) are treated as false. Any other string is converted to true.

Location paths

Relative location paths are evaluated with respect to the context package of the predicate expression. Absolute location paths are evaluated independent of that. If the location path yields an empty set of packages the boolean result is false. If one or more packages are matched by the location path the result is treated as true.

Semantically this represents an exists predicate. As the location path is evaluated with respect to the current context of the expression the location path means “there exists a path from the current context package matched by the location path”. By this primitive arbitrary graph reachability relations may be expressed.

String literals

Strings consist of a sequence of zero or more characters enclosed in double quotes ("). Strings are subject to the same string substitution as in the recipes. Unset variables are expanded to empty strings and are not treated as errors. The available variables are defined by the context of the whole expression.

To include double quotes as character into the string it has to be preceded by a backslash (\). To include a backslash itself use \\. The backslash escaping is done during parsing of the expression. Any string substitution is then performed for each context independently. As such, escape backslashes intended to preserve literal meanings of other characters during variable substitution must be written as \\.

Alternatively strings may be enclosed by single quotes ('). Such strings span from the first single quote until the next. Any character in between is taken verbatim and is not subject to any string substitution.

Examples:

"foo"
"${ENABLED}"
"$(match,${LICENSE},GPL)"

String function calls

String functions may be called directly without relying on string substitution. The general syntax is the funcion name, an opening parenthesis, zero or more arguments separated by comma and a closing parenthesis.

The following two lines are semantically equivalent:

"$(match,${LICENSE},GPL)"
match("${LICENSE}", "GPL")

The primitives can be combined with a number of operators. The following table lists all operators sorted by decreasing precedence. Operator precedence may be overruled by using parenthesis. The result of all operators is always a boolean. String comparison is done character by character, based on the Unicode code point. If the end of string is reached the string lengths are compared.

Operator

Associativity

Operand type

Meaning

!

Right

String or boolean

Logical NOT.

<

Left

String

Strictly less than.

<=

Left

String

Less than or equal.

>

Left

String

Strictly greater than.

>=

Left

String

Greater than or equal.

==

Left

String

Equal.

!=

Left

String

Not equal.

&&

Left

String or boolean

Logic AND.

||

Left

String or boolean

Logic OR.

See the following examples for some complex expressions:

  • "${FOO}" == "bar" selects packages which use variable FOO an where the value is bar

  • !match("${LICENSE}", "GPL") && *[ match("${LICENSE}", "GPL") ] selects packages that are not GPL-licensed and depend on a GPL-licensed package

Alias substitution

Aliases allow a string to be substituted for the first step of a relative location path. Absolute location paths (e.g. /foo) and relative location paths in predicates (e.g. *[ foo ]) are not not subject to alias substitution. Aliases are only substituted once. It is therefore not possible to reference an alias from another alias definition.

Example definitions:

alias:
   myApp: "host/files/group/app42"
   allTests: "//*-unittest"
   myAppDeps: "myApp/*"

Given the definitions above the following substations will be performed:

Query

Substituted query

myApp

host/files/group/app42

/myApp

/myApp

myAppDeps

myApp/*

foo/myApp

foo/myApp

myApp/lib

host/files/group/app42/lib

allTests/*[myAppDeps]

//*-unittest/*[myAppDeps]