The orderly changelog
From version 0.6.0, orderly
supports the concept of a
“changelog”. This turns out to be somewhat more complicated than
expected, so the details are explained here.
User’s perspective
From the user perspective, the changelog functionality should be
fairly simple. Alongside any orderly.yml
file, one can have
a changelog.txt
file, which will contain description of
changes. This file will look like:
[public]
Started working with new version of the data. This includes
everything sent up to 2018-10-10
[internal]
Fixed incorrect plotting
The short strings within [
and ]
are a
label - everything between a label and the next label or the
end of file is a value (these can span multiple lines, contain
blank lines, etc).
Over time, the changelog is prepended, i.e., new information is added to the top of the changelog. Existing entries must be left unaltered.
Messages can be provided to orderly_run
(or
orderly run
on the command line) and these are required to
be in the format [label] value
.
Once a report is run (via orderly1::orderly_run()
, or
via orderly run
on the command line), the given changelog,
along with any message, is compared with the last committed version of
this report, and entries that are introduced on this round are
identified. We add the report id to the entries, and a randomly
generated unique id to each new entry. This is saved in
orderly_run.rds
along with other report metadata.
Details
Dear intrepid reader, you can stop reading now unless you are interested in the details of how we have implemented the changelog - this turned out to be a bit fiddly and this section documents some of the issues.
There are a few complications here
- we need to accept changelog entries that are not present in a file
(e.g., from the
message
argument) - we don’t know the id until after running a report so we can’t easily structure a changelog file in the conventional sense. Instead we have to detect “old” and “new” entries
- detecting “old” entries is complicated by the fact that there might be multiple places that reports are run (development machine, staging environment, production environment) but ultimately one source of truth
This section documents the logic involved in making this work.
When preparing to run an orderly report:
- we read in the plaintext changelog if it exists
- parse all messages provided and add as if they were a changelog
entry
from_file
ofFALSE
- we look for the “latest” archived version of this report and read
the changelog from that report’s
orderly_run.rds
file. Alternatively we can use a remote copy of orderly via the interface here (not implemented yet). - filter the previous changelog to remove any
from_file = FALSE
entries and confirm that our new changelog can be prepended to the previous - add the
id
to the “new” entries and prepend this - save the resulting data into the new report’sorderly_run.yml
For checking against the API, we will use
GET reports/:name/versions/version/latest/changelog/
with
the current report name as :name
.