106 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
106 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
# Project Mentat
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Project Mentat is a persistent, embedded knowledge base. It draws heavily on [DataScript](https://github.com/tonsky/datascript) and [Datomic](http://datomic.com).
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The first version of Project Mentat, named Datomish, [was written in ClojureScript](https://github.com/mozilla/mentat/tree/master), targeting both Node (on top of `promise_sqlite`) and Firefox (on top of `Sqlite.jsm`). It also works in pure Clojure on the JVM on top of `jdbc-sqlite`. The name was changed to avoid confusion with [Datomic](http://datomic.com).
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This branch is for rewriting Mentat in Rust, giving us a smaller compiled output, better performance, more type safety, better tooling, and easier deployment into Firefox and mobile platforms.
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## Motivation
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Mentat is intended to be a flexible relational (not key-value, not document-oriented) store that doesn't leak its storage schema to users, and doesn't make it hard to grow its domain schema and run arbitrary queries.
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Our short-term goal is to build a system that, as the basis for a User Agent Service, can support multiple [Tofino](https://github.com/mozilla/tofino) UX experiments without having a storage engineer do significant data migration, schema work, or revving of special-purpose endpoints.
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By abstracting away the storage schema, and by exposing change listeners outside the database (not via triggers), we hope to allow both the data store itself and embedding applications to use better architectures, meeting performance goals in a way that allows future evolution.
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## Comparison to DataScript
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DataScript asks the question: "What if creating a database would be as cheap as creating a Hashmap?"
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Mentat is not interested in that. Instead, it's strongly interested in persistence and performance, with very little interest in immutable databases/databases as values or throwaway use.
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One might say that Mentat's question is: "What if an SQLite database could store arbitrary relations, for arbitrary consumers, without them having to coordinate an up-front storage-level schema?"
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(Note that [domain-level schemas are very valuable](http://martinfowler.com/articles/schemaless/).)
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Another possible question would be: "What if we could bake some of the concepts of CQRS and event sourcing into a persistent relational store, such that the transaction log itself were of value to queries?"
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Some thought has been given to how databases as values — long-term references to a snapshot of the store at an instant in time — could work in this model. It's not impossible; it simply has different performance characteristics.
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Just like DataScript, Mentat speaks Datalog for querying and takes additions and retractions as input to a transaction. Unlike DataScript, Mentat's API is asynchronous.
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Unlike DataScript, Mentat exposes free-text indexing, thanks to SQLite.
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## Comparison to Datomic
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Datomic is a server-side, enterprise-grade data storage system. Datomic has a beautiful conceptual model. It's intended to be backed by a storage cluster, in which it keeps index chunks forever. Index chunks are replicated to peers, allowing it to run queries at the edges. Writes are serialized through a transactor.
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Many of these design decisions are inapplicable to deployed desktop software; indeed, the use of multiple JVM processes makes Datomic's use in a small desktop app, or a mobile device, prohibitive.
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Mentat is designed for embedding, initially in an Electron app ([Tofino](https://github.com/mozilla/tofino)). It is less concerned with exposing consistent database states outside transaction boundaries, because that's less important here, and dropping some of these requirements allows us to leverage SQLite itself.
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## Comparison to SQLite
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SQLite is a traditional SQL database in most respects: schemas conflate semantic, structural, and datatype concerns; the main interface with the database is human-first textual queries; sparse and graph-structured data are 'unnatural', if not always inefficient; experimenting with and evolving data models are error-prone and complicated activities; and so on.
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Mentat aims to offer many of the advantages of SQLite — single-file use, embeddability, and good performance — while building a more relaxed and expressive data model on top.
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## Contributing
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Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct.
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By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.
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See [CONTRIBUTING.md](/CONTRIBUTING.md) for further notes.
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This project is very new, so we'll probably revise these guidelines. Please
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comment on an issue before putting significant effort in if you'd like to
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contribute.
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## Building
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Right now this code is located on a branch, so you first need to `git checkout rust`. To build and test the project, we are using [Cargo](https://crates.io/install).
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To build all of the crates in the project use:
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````
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cargo build
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````
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To run tests use:
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````
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# Run tests for the core code (src/)
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cargo test
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# Run tests for the query-parser folder
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cargo test -p mentat_query_parser
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````
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To start the server use:
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````
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cargo run serve
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````
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To pass in custom arguments to the cli through Cargo, you'll need to pass `--` after the command to ensure they get passed properly. For example:
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````
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cargo run serve -- --help
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````
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For most `cargo` commands you can pass the `-p` argument to run the command just on that package. So, `cargo build -p mentat_query_parser` will build just the "query-parser" folder.
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## License
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Project Mentat is currently licensed under the Apache License v2.0. See the `LICENSE` file for details.
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## SQLite dependencies
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Mentat uses partial indices, which are available in SQLite 3.8.0 and higher.
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It also uses FTS4, which is [a compile time option](http://www.sqlite.org/fts3.html#section_2).
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