Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
KtorZ 3a5f77da12 Invalidate cache using etag for deps by branch
Aiken's build system uses an internal global cache system to avoid
  downloading the same packages over and over across projects. However,
  prior to this commit, the cache key would be based of the dependency
  version which can be either:

  - A commit hash
  - A branch or tag name

  However, in the latter case, it means that the very first time we end
  up fetching a dependency will lock its version forever (or until the
  cache is cleared). This was inconvenient.

  This commit changes that so that we use not only a branch name as
  cache key, but additionally, the etag returned by the GitHub API
  server. The etag is part of the HTTP headers, so it can be fetched
  quickly using a simple HEAD request. It changes whenever the content
  behind the endpoint changes -- which happens to be exactly what we
  want. With this, we can quickly check whether an upstream package has
  been updated and download the latest version should users have
  specified a branch name as a version number.

  For example, my current cache now looks as follow:

  ```
   /Users/ktorz/Library/Caches/aiken/packages/
   ├── aiken-lang-stdlib-1cedbe85b7c7e9c4036d63d45cad4ced27b0d50b.zip
   ├── aiken-lang-stdlib-6b482fa00ec37fe936c93155e8c670f32288a686.zip
   ├── aiken-lang-stdlib-7ca9e659688ea88e1cfdc439b6c20c4c7fae9985.zip
   └── aiken-lang-stdlib-main@04eb45df3c77f6611bbdff842a0e311be2c56390f0fa01f020d69c93ff567fe5.zip
  ```
2023-01-14 11:51:18 -05:00
rvcas cbaf629645 feat: warn if no validators on build 2022-12-23 22:00:59 -05:00
KtorZ 7b9ea5dabb
Add links to the user-manual to errors, when applicable. 2022-12-23 19:50:14 +01:00
KtorZ 69f060e675
Rework all errors to provide better help text. 2022-12-23 19:27:06 +01:00
KtorZ 0682781460
Better errors when using unknown data-type constructor.
## Before

  ```
    × Checking
    ╰─▶ Unknown variable

            Finite

      ╭─[../stdlib/validators/tmp.ak:10:1]
   10 │   let now = when context.transaction.validity_range.lower_bound.bound_type is {
   11 │     Finite { t } -> t
      ·     ────────────
   12 │     NegativeInfinity -> 0
      ╰────
  ```

  ## After

  ```
    × Type-checking
    ╰─▶ Unknown data-type constructor 'Finite'

      ╭─[../stdlib/validators/tmp.ak:10:1]
   10 │   let now = when context.transaction.validity_range.lower_bound.bound_type is {
   11 │     Finite { t } -> t
      ·     ────────────
   12 │     NegativeInfinity -> 0
      ╰────
    help: Did you forget to import it?

          Data-type constructors are not automatically imported, even if their type is
          imported. So, if a module `aiken/pet` defines the following type:

           ┍━ aiken/pet.ak ━━━━━━━━
           │ pub type Pet {
           │   Cat
           │   Dog
           │ }

          You must import its constructors explicitly to use them, or prefix them
          with the module's name.

           ┍━ foo.ak ━━━━━━━━
           │ use aiken/pet.{Pet, Dog}
           │
           │ fn foo(pet : Pet) {
           │   when pet is {
           │     pet.Cat -> // ...
           │     Dog -> // ...
           │   }
           │ }
  ```
2022-12-22 19:34:50 +01:00
rvcas 42204d2d71 chore: make folder names match crate name 2022-12-21 18:11:07 -05:00