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author | Raul Infante-Sainz <infantesainz@gmail.com> | 2021-01-03 19:03:49 +0000 |
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committer | Mohammad Akhlaghi <mohammad@akhlaghi.org> | 2021-01-03 20:12:45 +0000 |
commit | 2ddfb42f4655633c5bdac6b32c6fb1f52181b031 (patch) | |
tree | 34b28268a98b910c848c75bc77b2ec8a6860094d /tex/src | |
parent | 3c93f4ce89b5162362e3f855362e4164f1f8988b (diff) |
Minor corrections to the existing tools appendix
With this commit, I have corrected some minor typos of this appendix. In
addition to that, I also put empty lines to separate subsections and
subsubsections appropiately (5 lines and 1 line, respectively).
Diffstat (limited to 'tex/src')
-rw-r--r-- | tex/src/appendix-existing-tools.tex | 273 |
1 files changed, 137 insertions, 136 deletions
diff --git a/tex/src/appendix-existing-tools.tex b/tex/src/appendix-existing-tools.tex index b6068e4..5920fbd 100644 --- a/tex/src/appendix-existing-tools.tex +++ b/tex/src/appendix-existing-tools.tex @@ -4,6 +4,7 @@ %% independently. % %% Copyright (C) 2020-2021 Mohammad Akhlaghi <mohammad@akhlaghi.org> +%% Copyright (C) 2021 Raúl Infante-Sainz <infantesainz@gmail.com> % %% This file is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it %% under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the @@ -14,31 +15,38 @@ %% ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or %% FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License %% for more details. See <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. + + + + + \section{Survey of existing tools for various phases} \label{appendix:existingtools} - -Data analysis workflows (including those that aim for reproducibility) are commonly high-level frameworks which employ various lower-level components. +Data analysis workflows (including those that aim for reproducibility) are commonly high-level frameworks that employ various lower-level components. To help in reviewing existing reproducible workflow solutions in light of the proposed criteria in Appendix \ref{appendix:existingsolutions}, we first need to survey the most commonly employed lower-level tools. + + + + \subsection{Independent environment} \label{appendix:independentenvironment} - The lowest-level challenge of any reproducible solution is to avoid the differences between various run-time environments, to a desirable/certain level. -For example different hardware, operating systems, versions of existing dependencies, and etc. -Therefore any reasonable attempt at providing a reproducible workflow starts with isolating its running envionment from the host environment. -There are three general technologies that are used for this purpose and reviewed below: +For example different hardware, operating systems, versions of existing dependencies, etc. +Therefore, any reasonable attempt at providing a reproducible workflow starts with isolating its running environment from the host environment. +Three general technologies are used for this purpose and reviewed below: 1) Virtual machines, 2) Containers, -3) Independent build in host's file system. +3) Independent build in the host's file system. \subsubsection{Virtual machines} \label{appendix:virtualmachines} Virtual machines (VMs) host a binary copy of a full operating system that can be run on other operating systems. This includes the lowest-level operating system component or the kernel. -VMs thus provide the ultimate control one can have over the run-time environment of an analysis. +VMs thus provide the ultimate control one can have over the run-time environment of the analysis. However, the VM's kernel does not talk directly to the running hardware that is doing the analysis, it talks to a simulated hardware layer that is provided by the host's kernel. Therefore, a process that is run inside a virtual machine can be much slower than one that is run on a native kernel. -An advantages of VMs is that they are a single file which can be copied from one computer to another, keeping the full environment within them if the format is recognized. +An advantage of VMs is that they are a single file that can be copied from one computer to another, keeping the full environment within them if the format is recognized. VMs are used by cloud service providers, enabling fully independent operating systems on their large servers (where the customer can have root access). VMs were used in solutions like SHARE \citeappendix{vangorp11} (which was awarded second prize in the Elsevier Executable Paper Grand Challenge of 2011 \citeappendix{gabriel11}), or in suggested reproducible papers like \citeappendix{dolfi14}. @@ -47,25 +55,25 @@ The URL to the VM file \texttt{provenance\_machine.ova} that is mentioned in \ci \subsubsection{Containers} \label{appendix:containers} -Containers also host a binary copy of a running environment, but do not have their own kernel. +Containers also host a binary copy of a running environment but do not have their own kernel. Through a thin layer of low-level system libraries, programs running within a container talk directly with the host operating system kernel. Otherwise, containers have their own independent software for everything else. Therefore, they have much less overhead in hardware/CPU access. Like VMs, users often choose an operating system for the container's independent operating system (most commonly GNU/Linux distributions which are free software). -Below we review some of the most common container solutions: Docker and Singularity. +We review some of the most common container solutions: Docker, Singularity, and Podman. \begin{itemize} -\item {\bf\small Docker containers:} Docker is one of the most popular tools today for keeping an independent analysis environment. +\item {\bf\small Docker containers:} Docker is one of the most popular tools nowadays for keeping an independent analysis environment. It is primarily driven by the need of software developers for reproducing a previous environment, where they have root access mostly on the ``cloud'' (which is just a remote VM). A Docker container is composed of independent Docker ``images'' that are built with a \inlinecode{Dockerfile}. It is possible to precisely version/tag the images that are imported (to avoid downloading the latest/different version in a future build). To have a reproducible Docker image, it must be ensured that all the imported Docker images check their dependency tags down to the initial image which contains the C library. - An important drawback of Docker for high performance scientific needs is that it runs as a daemon (a program that is always running in the background) with root permissions. - This is a major security flaw that discourages many high performance computing (HPC) facilities from providing it. + An important drawback of Docker for high-performance scientific needs is that it runs as a daemon (a program that is always running in the background) with root permissions. + This is a major security flaw that discourages many high-performance computing (HPC) facilities from providing it. -\item {\bf\small Singularity:} Singularity \citeappendix{kurtzer17} is a single-image container (unlike Docker which is composed of modular/independent images). +\item {\bf\small Singularity:} Singularity \citeappendix{kurtzer17} is a single-image container (unlike Docker, which is composed of modular/independent images). Although it needs root permissions to be installed on the system (once), it does not require root permissions every time it is run. Its main program is also not a daemon, but a normal program that can be stopped. These features make it much safer for HPC administrators to install compared to Docker. @@ -77,13 +85,13 @@ Below we review some of the most common container solutions: Docker and Singular Generally, VMs or containers are good solutions to reproducibly run/repeating an analysis in the short term (a couple of years). However, their focus is to store the already-built (binary, non-human readable) software environment. -Because of this they will be large (many Gigabytes) and expensive to archive, download or access. +Because of this, they will be large (many Gigabytes) and expensive to archive, download, or access. Recall the two examples above for VMs in Section \ref{appendix:virtualmachines}. But this is also valid for Docker images, as is clear from Dockerhub's recent decision to delete images of free accounts that have not been used for more than 6 months. Meng \& Thain \citeappendix{meng17} also give similar reasons on why Docker images were not suitable in their trials. -On a more fundamental level, VMs or contains do not store \emph{how} the core environment was built. -This information is usually in a third-party repository, and not necessarily inside container or VM file, making it hard (if not impossible) to track for future users. -This is a major problem when considering reproducibility which is also highlighted as a major issue in terms of long term reproducibility in \citeappendix{oliveira18}. +On a more fundamental level, VMs or containers do not store \emph{how} the core environment was built. +This information is usually in a third-party repository, and not necessarily inside the container or VM file, making it hard (if not impossible) to track for future users. +This is a major problem when considering reproducibility, which is also highlighted as a major issue in terms of long term reproducibility in \citeappendix{oliveira18}. The example of \cite{mesnard20} was previously mentioned in \ifdefined\separatesupplement @@ -93,33 +101,34 @@ in Section \ref{criteria}. \fi Another useful example is the \href{https://github.com/benmarwick/1989-excavation-report-Madjedbebe/blob/master/Dockerfile}{\inlinecode{Dockerfile}} of \citeappendix{clarkso15} (published in June 2015) which starts with \inlinecode{FROM rocker/verse:3.3.2}. When we tried to build it (November 2020), the core downloaded image (\inlinecode{rocker/verse:3.3.2}, with image ``digest'' \inlinecode{sha256:c136fb0dbab...}) was created in October 2018 (long after the publication of that paper). -In principle, it is possible to investigate the difference between this new image and the old one that the authors used, but that would require a lot of effort and may not be possible where the changes are not available in a third public repository or not under version control. -In Docker, it is possible to retrieve the precise Docker image with its digest for example \inlinecode{FROM ubuntu:16.04@sha256:XXXXXXX} (where \inlinecode{XXXXXXX} is the digest, uniquely identifying the core image to be used), but we have not seen this often done in existing examples of ``reproducible'' \inlinecode{Dockerfiles}. +In principle, it is possible to investigate the difference between this new image and the old one that the authors used, but that would require a lot of effort and may not be possible when the changes are not available in a third public repository or not under version control. +In Docker, it is possible to retrieve the precise Docker image with its digest, for example, \inlinecode{FROM ubuntu:16.04@sha256:XXXXXXX} (where \inlinecode{XXXXXXX} is the digest, uniquely identifying the core image to be used), but we have not seen this often done in existing examples of ``reproducible'' \inlinecode{Dockerfiles}. The ``digest'' is specific to Docker repositories. -A more generic/longterm approach to ensure identical core OS components at a later time is to construct the containers or VMs with fixed/archived versions of the operating system ISO files. -ISO files are pre-built binary files with volumes of hundreds of megabytes and not containing their build instructions). -For example the archives of Debian\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://cdimage.debian.org/mirror/cdimage/archive/}}} or Ubuntu\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{http://old-releases.ubuntu.com/releases}}} provide older ISO files. +A more generic/long-term approach to ensure identical core OS components at a later time is to construct the containers or VMs with fixed/archived versions of the operating system ISO files. +ISO files are pre-built binary files with volumes of hundreds of megabytes and not containing their build instructions. +For example, the archives of Debian\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://cdimage.debian.org/mirror/cdimage/archive/}}} or Ubuntu\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{http://old-releases.ubuntu.com/releases}}} provide older ISO files. The concept of containers (and the independent images that build them) can also be extended beyond just the software environment. -For example \citeappendix{lofstead19} propose a ``data pallet'' concept to containerize access to data and thus allow tracing data back wards to the application that produced them. +For example, \citeappendix{lofstead19} propose a ``data pallet'' concept to containerize access to data and thus allow tracing data back to the application that produced them. In summary, containers or VMs are just a built product themselves. -If they are built properly (for example building a Maneage'd project inside a Docker container), they can be useful for immediate usage and fast moving of the project from one system to another. -With robust building, the container or VM can also be exactly reproduced later. +If they are built properly (for example building a Maneage'd project inside a Docker container), they can be useful for immediate usage and fast-moving of the project from one system to another. +With a robust building, the container or VM can also be exactly reproduced later. However, attempting to archive the actual binary container or VM files as a black box (not knowing the precise versions of the software in them, and \emph{how} they were built) is expensive, and will not be able to answer the most fundamental questions. \subsubsection{Independent build in host's file system} \label{appendix:independentbuild} The virtual machine and container solutions mentioned above, have their own independent file system. -Another approach to having an isolated analysis environment is to use the same filesystem as the host, but installing the project's software in a non-standrard, project-specific directory that does not interfere with the host. +Another approach to having an isolated analysis environment is to use the same filesystem as the host, but installing the project's software in a non-standard, project-specific directory that does not interfere with the host. Because the environment in this approach can be built in any custom location on the host, this solution generally does not require root permissions or extra low-level layers like containers or VMs. However, ``moving'' the built product of such solutions from one computer to another is not generally as trivial as containers or VMs. -Examples of such third-party package managers (that are detached from the host OS's package manager) include Nix, GNU Guix, Python's Virtualenv package and Conda, among others. -Because it is highly intertwined with the way software are built and installed, third party package managers are described in more detail as part of Section \ref{appendix:packagemanagement}. +Examples of such third-party package managers (that are detached from the host OS's package manager) include Nix, GNU Guix, Python's Virtualenv package, and Conda, among others. +Because it is highly intertwined with the way software is built and installed, third party package managers are described in more detail as part of Section \ref{appendix:packagemanagement}. -Maneage (the solution proposed in this paper) also follows a similar approach of building and installing its own software environment within the the host's file system but without depending on it beyond the kernel. -However, unlike the third party package maneager mentioned above, based on the Completeness criteria above Maneage's package management is not detached from the specific research/analysis project: the instructions to build the full isolated software environment is maintained with the high-level analysis steps of the project, and the narrative paper/report of the project. +Maneage (the solution proposed in this paper) also follows a similar approach of building and installing its own software environment within the host's file system, but without depending on it beyond the kernel. +However, unlike the third-party package manager mentioned above, Maneage'd software management is not detached from the specific research/analysis project: the instructions to build the full isolated software environment is maintained with the high-level analysis steps of the project, and the narrative paper/report of the project. +This is fundamental to achieve the Completeness criteria. @@ -127,40 +136,37 @@ However, unlike the third party package maneager mentioned above, based on the C \subsection{Package management} \label{appendix:packagemanagement} - Package management is the process of automating the build and installation of a software environment. A package manager thus contains the following information on each software package that can be run automatically: the URL of the software's tarball, the other software that it possibly depends on, and how to configure and build it. Package managers can be tied to specific operating systems at a very low level (like \inlinecode{apt} in Debian-based OSs). -Alternatively, there are third-party package managers which ca be installed on many OSs. -Both are discussed in more detail below. +Alternatively, there are third-party package managers that can be installed on many OSs. +Both are discussed in more detail in what follows. Package managers are the second component in any workflow that relies on containers or VMs for an independent environment, and the starting point in others that use the host's file system (as discussed above in Section \ref{appendix:independentenvironment}). In this section, some common package managers are reviewed, in particular those that are most used by the reviewed reproducibility solutions of Appendix \ref{appendix:existingsolutions}. For a more comprehensive list of existing package managers, see \href{https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_software_package_management_systems}{Wikipedia}. Note that we are not including package managers that are specific to one language, for example \inlinecode{pip} (for Python) or \inlinecode{tlmgr} (for \LaTeX). - - \subsubsection{Operating system's package manager} -The most commonly used package managers are those of the host operating system, for example \inlinecode{apt} or \inlinecode{yum} respectively on Debian-based, or RedHat-based GNU/Linux operating systems, \inlinecode{pkg} in FreeBSD, among many others in other OSes. +The most commonly used package managers are those of the host operating system, for example, \inlinecode{apt} or \inlinecode{yum} respectively on Debian-based, or RedHat-based GNU/Linux operating systems, \inlinecode{pkg} in FreeBSD, among many others in other OSes. These package managers are tightly intertwined with the operating system: they also include the building and updating of the core kernel and the C library. Because they are part of the OS, they also commonly require root permissions. -Also, it is usually only possible to have one version/configuration of a software at any moment and downgrading versions for one project, may conflict with other projects, or even cause problems in the OS. -Hence if two projects need different versions of a software, it is not possible to work on them at the same time in the OS. +Also, it is usually only possible to have one version/configuration of the software at any moment and downgrading versions for one project, may conflict with other projects, or even cause problems in the OS. +Hence if two projects need different versions of the software, it is not possible to work on them at the same time in the OS. When a container or virtual machine (see Appendix \ref{appendix:independentenvironment}) is used for each project, it is common for projects to use the containerized operating system's package manager. -However, it is important to remember that operating system package managers are not static: software are updated on their servers. +However, it is important to remember that operating system package managers are not static: software is updated on their servers. Hence, simply running \inlinecode{apt install gcc}, will install different versions of the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) based on the version of the OS and when it has been run. Requesting a special version of that special software does not fully address the problem because the package managers also download and install its dependencies. Hence a fixed version of the dependencies must also be specified. -In robust package managers like Debian's \inlinecode{apt} it is possible to fully control (and later reproduce) the build environment of a high-level software. +In robust package managers like Debian's \inlinecode{apt} it is possible to fully control (and later reproduce) the built environment of a high-level software. Debian also archives all packaged high-level software in its Snapshot\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://snapshot.debian.org/}}} service since 2005 which can be used to build the higher-level software environment on an older OS \citeappendix{aissi20}. -Hence it is indeed theoretically possible to reproduce the software environment only using archived operating systems and their own package managers, but unfortunately we have not seen it practiced in scientific papers/projects. +Therefore it is indeed theoretically possible to reproduce the software environment only using archived operating systems and their own package managers, but unfortunately, we have not seen it practiced in scientific papers/projects. In summary, the host OS package managers are primarily meant for the operating system components or very low-level components. -Hence, many robust reproducible analysis solutions (reviewed in Appendix \ref{appendix:existingsolutions}) do not use the host's package manager, but an independent package manager, like the ones below discussed below. +Hence, many robust reproducible analysis solutions (reviewed in Appendix \ref{appendix:existingsolutions}) do not use the host's package manager, but an independent package manager, like the ones discussed below. \subsubsection{Packaging with Linux containerization} Once a software is packaged as an AppImage\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://appimage.org}}}, Flatpak\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://flatpak.org}}} or Snap\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://snapcraft.io}}} the software's binary product and all its dependencies (not including the core C library) are packaged into one file. @@ -172,21 +178,21 @@ Moreover, these are designed for the Linux kernel (using its containerization fe \label{appendix:nixguix} Nix \citeappendix{dolstra04} and GNU Guix \citeappendix{courtes15} are independent package managers that can be installed and used on GNU/Linux operating systems, and macOS (only for Nix, prior to macOS Catalina). Both also have a fully functioning operating system based on their packages: NixOS and ``Guix System''. -GNU Guix is based on the same principles of Nix but implemented differencely, so we focus the review here on Nix. +GNU Guix is based on the same principles of Nix but implemented differently, so we focus the review here on Nix. -The Nix approach to package management is unique in that it allows exact dependency tracking of all the dependencies, and allows for multiple versions of a software, for more details see \citeappendix{dolstra04}. +The Nix approach to package management is unique in that it allows exact dependency tracking of all the dependencies, and allows for multiple versions of software, for more details see \citeappendix{dolstra04}. In summary, a unique hash is created from all the components that go into the building of the package. That hash is then prefixed to the software's installation directory. -As an example from \citeappendix{dolstra04}: if a certain build of GNU C Library 2.3.2 has a hash of \inlinecode{8d013ea878d0}, then it is installed under \inlinecode{/nix/store/8d013ea878d0-glibc-2.3.2} and all software that are compiled with it (and thus need it to run) will link to this unique address. +As an example from \citeappendix{dolstra04}: if a certain build of GNU C Library 2.3.2 has a hash of \inlinecode{8d013ea878d0}, then it is installed under \inlinecode{/nix/store/8d013ea878d0-glibc-2.3.2} and all software that is compiled with it (and thus need it to run) will link to this unique address. This allows for multiple versions of the software to co-exist on the system, while keeping an accurate dependency tree. As mentioned in \citeappendix{courtes15}, one major caveat with using these package managers is that they require a daemon with root privileges. This is necessary ``to use the Linux kernel container facilities that allow it to isolate build processes and maximize build reproducibility''. -This is because the focus in Nix or Guix is to create bit-wise reproducible software binaries and this is necessary in the security or development perspectives. -However, in a non-computer-science analysis (for example natural sciences), the main aim is reproducibile \emph{results} that can also be created with the same software version that may not be bitwise identical (for example when they are installed in other locations, because the installation location is hardcoded in the software binary). +This is because the focus in Nix or Guix is to create bit-wise reproducible software binaries and this is necessary for the security or development perspectives. +However, in a non-computer-science analysis (for example natural sciences), the main aim is reproducible \emph{results} that can also be created with the same software version that may not be bitwise identical (for example when they are installed in other locations, because the installation location is hardcoded in the software binary). -Finally, while Guix and Nix do allow preciesly reproducible environments, it requires extra effort. -For example simply running \inlinecode{guix install gcc} will install the most recent version of GCC that can be different at different times. +Finally, while Guix and Nix do allow precisely reproducible environments, it requires extra effort. +For example, simply running \inlinecode{guix install gcc} will install the most recent version of GCC that can be different at different times. Hence, similar to the discussion in host operating system package managers, it is up to the user to ensure that their created environment is recorded properly for reproducibility in the future. Generally, this is a major limitation of projects that rely on detached package managers for building their software, including the other tools mentioned below. @@ -198,9 +204,9 @@ Conda is able to maintain an approximately independent environment on an operati Conda tracks the dependencies of a package/environment through a YAML formatted file, where the necessary software and their acceptable versions are listed. However, it is not possible to fix the versions of the dependencies through the YAML files alone. This is thoroughly discussed under issue 787 (in May 2019) of \inlinecode{conda-forge}\footnote{\url{https://github.com/conda-forge/conda-forge.github.io/issues/787}}. -In that discussion, the authors of \citeappendix{uhse19} report that the half-life of their environment (defined in a YAML file) is 3 months, and that at least one of their their dependencies breaks shortly after this period. +In that discussion, the authors of \citeappendix{uhse19} report that the half-life of their environment (defined in a YAML file) is 3 months, and that at least one of their dependencies breaks shortly after this period. The main reply they got in the discussion is to build the Conda environment in a container, which is also the suggested solution by \citeappendix{gruning18}. -However, as described in Appendix \ref{appendix:independentenvironment} containers just hide the reproducibility problem, they do not fix it: containers are not static and need to evolve (i.e., re-built) with the project. +However, as described in Appendix \ref{appendix:independentenvironment}, containers just hide the reproducibility problem, they do not fix it: containers are not static and need to evolve (i.e., re-built) with the project. Given these limitations, \citeappendix{uhse19} are forced to host their conda-packaged software as tarballs on a separate repository. Conda installs with a shell script that contains a binary-blob (+500 megabytes, embedded in the shell script). @@ -210,13 +216,13 @@ However, the resulting environment is not fully independent of the host operatin \begin{itemize} \item The Conda installation directory is present at the start of environment variables like \inlinecode{PATH} (which is used to find programs to run) and other such environment variables. - However, the host operating system's directories are also appended afterwards. - Therefore, a user, or script may not notice that a software that is being used is actually coming from the operating system, not the controlled Conda installation. + However, the host operating system's directories are also appended afterward. + Therefore, a user or script may not notice that the software that is being used is actually coming from the operating system, and not from the controlled Conda installation. -\item Generally, by default Conda relies heavily on the operating system and does not include core analysis components like \inlinecode{mkdir}, \inlinecode{ls} or \inlinecode{cp}. +\item Generally, by default, Conda relies heavily on the operating system and does not include core analysis components like \inlinecode{mkdir}, \inlinecode{ls} or \inlinecode{cp}. Although they are generally the same between different Unix-like operating systems, they have their differences. - For example \inlinecode{mkdir -p} is a common way to build directories, but this option is only available with GNU Coreutils (default on GNU/Linux systems). - Running the same command within a Conda environment on a macOS for example, will crash. + For example, \inlinecode{mkdir -p} is a common way to build directories, but this option is only available with GNU Coreutils (default on GNU/Linux systems). + Running the same command within a Conda environment on a macOS would crash. Important packages like GNU Coreutils are available in channels like conda-forge, but they are not the default. Therefore, many users may not recognize this, and failing to account for it, will cause unexpected crashes. @@ -234,65 +240,66 @@ However, the resulting environment is not fully independent of the host operatin \end{itemize} As reviewed above, the low-level dependence of Conda on the host operating system's components and build-time conditions, is the primary reason that it is very fast to install (thus making it an attractive tool to software developers who just need to reproduce a bug in a few minutes). -However, these same factors are major caveats in a scientific scenario, where long-term archivability, readability or usability are important. % alternative to `archivability`? - +However, these same factors are major caveats in a scientific scenario, where long-term archivability, readability, or usability are important. % alternative to `archivability`? \subsubsection{Spack} Spack is a package manager that is also influenced by Nix (similar to GNU Guix), see \citeappendix{gamblin15}. - But unlike Nix or GNU Guix, it does not aim for full, bit-wise reproducibility and can be built without root access in any generic location. - It relies on the host operating system for the C library. +But unlike Nix or GNU Guix, it does not aim for full, bit-wise reproducibility and can be built without root access in any generic location. +It relies on the host operating system for the C library. - Spack is fully written in Python, where each software package is an instance of a class, which defines how it should be downloaded, configured, built and installed. - Therefore if the proper version of Python is not present, Spack cannot be used and when incompatibilities arise in future versions of Python (similar to how Python 3 is not compatible with Python 2), software building recipes, or the whole system, have to be upgraded. - Because of such bootstrapping problems (for example how Spack needs Python to build Python and other software), it is generally a good practice to use simpler, lower-level languages/systems for a low-level operation like package management. +Spack is fully written in Python, where each software package is an instance of a class, which defines how it should be downloaded, configured, built, and installed. +Therefore if the proper version of Python is not present, Spack cannot be used and when incompatibilities arise in future versions of Python (similar to how Python 3 is not compatible with Python 2), software building recipes, or the whole system, have to be upgraded. +Because of such bootstrapping problems (for example how Spack needs Python to build Python and other software), it is generally a good practice to use simpler, lower-level languages/systems for a low-level operation like package management. +In conclusion for all package managers, there are two common issues regarding generic package managers that hinder their usage for high-level scientific projects: -In conclusion for all package managers, there are two common issues regarding generic package managers that hinders their usage for high-level scientific projects, as listed below: \begin{itemize} \item {\bf\small Pre-compiled/binary downloads:} Most package managers (excluding Nix or its derivatives) only download the software in a binary (pre-compiled) format. This allows users to download it very fast and almost instantaneously be able to run it. However, to provide for this, servers need to keep binary files for each build of the software on different operating systems (for example Conda needs to keep binaries for Windows, macOS and GNU/Linux operating systems). It is also necessary for them to store binaries for each build, which includes different versions of its dependencies. - Maintaining such a large binary library is expensive, therefore once the shelf-life of a binary has expired, it will be removed, causing problems for projects that depends on them. + Maintaining such a large binary library is expensive, therefore once the shelf-life of a binary has expired, it will be removed, causing problems for projects that depend on them. \item {\bf\small Adding high-level software:} Packaging new software is not trivial and needs a good level of knowledge/experience with that package manager. -For example each has its own special syntax/standards/languages, with pre-defined variables that must already be known before someone can packaging new software for them. - -However, in many research projects, the most high-level analysis software are written by the team that is doing the research, and they are its primary users, even when the software are distributed with free licenses on open repositories. -Although active package manager members are commonly very supportive in helping to package new software, many teams may not be able to make that extra effort/time investment. -As a result, they manually install their high-level software in an uncontrolled, or non-standard way, thus jeopardizing the reproducibility of the whole work. -This is another consequence of detachment of the package manager from the project doing the analysis. + For example, each one has its own special syntax/standards/languages, with pre-defined variables that must already be known before someone can package new software for them. + However, in many research projects, the most high-level analysis software is written by the team that is doing the research, and they are its primary users, even when the software is distributed with free licenses on open repositories. + Although active package manager members are commonly very supportive in helping to package new software, many teams may not be able to make that extra effort/time investment. + As a result, they manually install their high-level software in an uncontrolled, or non-standard way, thus jeopardizing the reproducibility of the whole work. + This is another consequence of the detachment of the package manager from the project doing the analysis. \end{itemize} -Addressing these issues has been the basic reason d'\^etre of the proposed criteria: based on the completeness criteria, instructions to download and build the packages are included within the actual science project and no special/new syntax/language is used: software download, building and installation is done with the same language/syntax that researchers manage their research: using the shell (by default GNU Bash in Maneage) and Make (by default, GNU Make in Maneage). +Addressing these issues has been the basic reason behind the proposed solution: based on the completeness criteria, instructions to download and build the packages are included within the actual science project, and no special/new syntax/language is used. +Software download, built and installation is done with the same language/syntax that researchers manage their research: using the shell (by default GNU Bash in Maneage) and Make (by default, GNU Make in Maneage). + + \subsection{Version control} \label{appendix:versioncontrol} A scientific project is not written in a day; it usually takes more than a year. -During this time, the project evolves significantly from its first starting date and components are added or updated constantly as it approaches completion. +During this time, the project evolves significantly from its first starting date, and components are added or updated constantly as it approaches completion. Added with the complexity of modern computational projects, is not trivial to manually track this evolution, and the evolution's affect of on the final output: files produced in one stage of the project can mistakenly be used by an evolved analysis environment in later stages (where the project has evolved). Furthermore, scientific projects do not progress linearly: earlier stages of the analysis are often modified after later stages are written. This is a natural consequence of the scientific method; where progress is defined by experimentation and modification of hypotheses (results from earlier phases). It is thus very important for the integrity of a scientific project that the state/version of its processing is recorded as the project evolves. -For example better methods are found or more data arrive. +For example, better methods are found or more data arrive. Any intermediate dataset that is produced should also be tagged with the version of the project at the time it was created. In this way, later processing stages can make sure that they can safely be used, i.e., no change has been made in their processing steps. Solutions to keep track of a project's history have existed since the early days of software engineering in the 1970s and they have constantly improved over the last decades. Today the distributed model of ``version control'' is the most common, where the full history of the project is stored locally on different systems and can easily be integrated. -There are many existing version control solutions, for example CVS, SVN, Mercurial, GNU Bazaar, or GNU Arch. +There are many existing version control solutions, for example, CVS, SVN, Mercurial, GNU Bazaar, or GNU Arch. However, currently, Git is by far the most commonly used in individual projects. -Git is also the foundation on which this paper's proof of concept (Maneage) is built upon. +Git is also the foundation upon which this paper's proof of concept (Maneage) is built. Archival systems aiming for long term preservation of software like Software Heritage \citeappendix{dicosmo18} are also modeled on Git. Hence we will just review Git here, but the general concept of version control is the same in all implementations. \subsubsection{Git} With Git, changes in a project's contents are accurately identified by comparing them with their previous version in the archived Git repository. -When the user decides the changes are significant compared to the archived state, they can ``commit'' the changes into the history/repository. +When the user decides the changes are significant compared to the archived state, they can be ``committed'' into the history/repository. The commit involves copying the changed files into the repository and calculating a 40 character checksum/hash that is calculated from the files, an accompanying ``message'' (a narrative description of the purpose/goals of the changes), and the previous commit (thus creating a ``chain'' of commits that are strongly connected to each other like \ifdefined\separatesupplement the figure on Git in the main body of the paper. @@ -300,19 +307,17 @@ the figure on Git in the main body of the paper. Figure \ref{fig:branching}). \fi For example \inlinecode{f4953cc\-f1ca8a\-33616ad\-602ddf\-4cd189\-c2eff97b} is a commit identifier in the Git history of this project. -Commits are is commonly summarized by the checksum's first few characters, for example \inlinecode{f4953cc}. +Commits are is commonly summarized by the checksum's first few characters, for example, \inlinecode{f4953cc}. With Git, making parallel ``branches'' (in the project's history) is very easy and its distributed nature greatly helps in the parallel development of a project by a team. The team can host the Git history on a webpage and collaborate through that. There are several Git hosting services for example \href{http://codeberg.org}{codeberg.org}, \href{http://gitlab.com}{gitlab.com}, \href{http://bitbucket.org}{bitbucket.org} or \href{http://github.com}{github.com} (among many others). Storing the changes in binary files is also possible in Git, however it is most useful for human-readable plain-text sources. - - \subsection{Job management} \label{appendix:jobmanagement} Any analysis will involve more than one logical step. -For example it is first necessary to download a dataset and do some preparations on it before applying the research software on it, and finally to make visualizations/tables that can be imported into the final report. +For example, it is first necessary to download a dataset and do some preparations on it before applying the research software on it, and finally to make visualizations/tables that can be imported into the final report. Each one of these is a logically independent step, which needs to be run before/after the others in a specific order. Hence job management is a critical component of a research project. @@ -320,10 +325,10 @@ There are many tools for managing the sequence of jobs, below we review the most \subsubsection{Manual operation with narrative} \label{appendix:manual} -The most commonly used workflow system for many researchers is to run the commands, experiment on them and keep the output when they are happy with it. -As an improvement, some also keep a narrative description of what they ran. -Atleast in our personal experience with colleagues, this method is still being heavily practiced by many researchers. -Given that many researchers do not get trained well in computational methods, this is not surprizing and as discussed in +The most commonly used workflow system for many researchers is to run the commands, experiment on them, and keep the output when they are happy with it. +As an improvement, some researchers also keep a narrative description of what they ran. +At least in our personal experience with colleagues, this method is still being heavily practiced by many researchers. +Given that many researchers do not get trained well in computational methods, this is not surprising and as discussed in \ifdefined\separatesupplement the discussion section of the main paper, \else @@ -337,15 +342,14 @@ Scripts (in any language, for example GNU Bash, or Python) are the most common w They are primarily designed to execute each step sequentially (one after another), making them also very intuitive. However, as the series of operations become complex and large, managing the workflow in a script will become highly complex. -For example if 90\% of a long project is already done and a researcher wants to add a followup step, a script will go through all the previous steps (which can take significant time). -In other scenarios, when a small step in the middle of an analysis has to be changed, the full analysis needs to be re-run from the start. -Scripts have no concept of dependencies, forcing authors to ``temporarily'' comment parts of that they do not want to be re-run (forgetting to un-comment such parts are the most common cause of frustration for the authors and others attempting to reproduce the result). +For example, if 90\% of a long project is already done and a researcher wants to add a followup step, a script will go through all the previous steps (which can take significant time). +In other scenarios, when a small step in the middle of the analysis has to be changed, the full analysis needs to be re-run from the start. +Scripts have no concept of dependencies, forcing authors to ``temporarily'' comment parts that they do not want to be re-run (forgetting to un-comment such parts are the most common cause of frustration for the authors and others attempting to reproduce the result). Such factors discourage experimentation, which is a critical component of the scientific method. -It is possible to manually add conditionals all over the script to add dependencies or only run certain steps at certain times, but they just make it harder to read, and introduce many bugs themselves. +It is possible to manually add conditionals all over the script to add dependencies or only run certain steps at certain times, but they just make it harder to read and introduce many bugs themselves. Parallelization is another drawback of using scripts. -While its not impossible, because of the high-level nature of scripts, it is not trivial and parallelization can also be very inefficient or buggy. - +While it is not impossible, because of the high-level nature of scripts, it is not trivial and parallelization can also be very inefficient or buggy. \subsubsection{Make} \label{appendix:make} @@ -366,34 +370,34 @@ Rules define \emph{recipes} to build \emph{targets} from \emph{pre-requisites}. In \new{Unix-like operating systems}, everything is a file, even directories and devices. Therefore all three components in a rule must be files on the running filesystem. -To decide which operation should be re-done when executed, Make compares the time stamp of the targets and prerequisites. +To decide which operation should be re-done when executed, Make compares the timestamp of the targets and prerequisites. When any of the prerequisite(s) is newer than a target, the recipe is re-run to re-build the target. When all the prerequisites are older than the target, that target does not need to be rebuilt. The recipe can contain any number of commands, they should just all start with a \inlinecode{TAB}. Going deeper into the syntax of Make is beyond the scope of this paper, but we recommend interested readers to consult the GNU Make manual for a nice introduction\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{http://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/make.pdf}}}. \subsubsection{Snakemake} -is a Python-based workflow management system, inspired by GNU Make (which is the job organizer in Maneage), that is aimed at reproducible and scalable data analysis \citeappendix{koster12}\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://snakemake.readthedocs.io/en/stable}}}. -It defines its own language to implement the ``rule'' concept in Make within Python. -Currently it requires Python 3.5 (released in September 2015) and above, while Snakemake was originally introduced in 2012. +Snakemake is a Python-based workflow management system, inspired by GNU Make (which is the job organizer in Maneage), that is aimed at reproducible and scalable data analysis \citeappendix{koster12}\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://snakemake.readthedocs.io/en/stable}}}. +It defines its own language to implement the ``rule'' concept of Make within Python. +Currently, it requires Python 3.5 (released in September 2015) and above, while Snakemake was originally introduced in 2012. Hence it is not clear if older Snakemake source files can be executed today. -This as reviewed in many tools here, this is a major longevity problem when using highlevel tools as the skeleton of the workflow. -Technically, calling commond-line programs within Python is very slow and using complex shell scripts in each step will involve a lot quotations that make the code hard to read. +As reviewed in many tools here, this is a major longevity problem when using high-level tools as the skeleton of the workflow. +Technically, calling command-line programs within Python is very slow, and using complex shell scripts in each step will involve a lot of quotations that make the code hard to read. \subsubsection{Bazel} -Bazel\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://bazel.build}}} is a high-level job organizer that depends on Java and Python and is primarily tailored to software developers (with features like facilitating linking of libraries through its high level constructs). +Bazel\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://bazel.build}}} is a high-level job organizer that depends on Java and Python and is primarily tailored to software developers (with features like facilitating linking of libraries through its high-level constructs). \subsubsection{SCons} \label{appendix:scons} Scons is a Python package for managing operations outside of Python (in contrast to CGAT-core, discussed below, which only organizes Python functions). -In many aspects it is similar to Make, for example it is managed through a `SConstruct' file. +In many aspects it is similar to Make, for example, it is managed through a `SConstruct' file. Like a Makefile, SConstruct is also declarative: the running order is not necessarily the top-to-bottom order of the written operations within the file (unlike the imperative paradigm which is common in languages like C, Python, or FORTRAN). However, unlike Make, SCons does not use the file modification date to decide if it should be remade. SCons keeps the MD5 hash of all the files (in a hidden binary file) to check if the contents have changed. SCons thus attempts to work on a declarative file with an imperative language (Python). It also goes beyond raw job management and attempts to extract information from within the files (for example to identify the libraries that must be linked while compiling a program). -SCons is therefore more complex than Make and its manual is almost double that of GNU Make. +SCons is, therefore, more complex than Make and its manual is almost double that of GNU Make. Besides added complexity, all these ``smart'' features decrease its performance, especially as files get larger and more numerous: on every call, every file's checksum has to be calculated, and a Python system call has to be made (which is computationally expensive). Finally, it has the same drawback as any other tool that uses high-level languages, see Section \ref{appendix:highlevelinworkflow}. @@ -406,8 +410,8 @@ This can also be problematic when a Python analysis library, may require a Pytho \subsubsection{CGAT-core} CGAT-Core is a Python package for managing workflows, see \citeappendix{cribbs19}. It wraps analysis steps in Python functions and uses Python decorators to track the dependencies between tasks. -It is used papers like \citeappendix{jones19}, but as mentioned in \citeappendix{jones19} it is good for managing individual outputs (for example separate figures/tables in the paper, when they are fully created within Python). -Because it is primarily designed for Python tasks, managing a full workflow (which includes many more components, written in other languages) is not trivial in it. +It is used in papers like \citeappendix{jones19}, but as mentioned in \citeappendix{jones19} it is good for managing individual outputs (for example separate figures/tables in the paper, when they are fully created within Python). +Because it is primarily designed for Python tasks, managing a full workflow (which includes many more components, written in other languages) is not trivial. Another drawback with this workflow manager is that Python is a very high-level language where future versions of the language may no longer be compatible with Python 3, that CGAT-core is implemented in (similar to how Python 2 programs are not compatible with Python 3). \subsubsection{Guix Workflow Language (GWL)} @@ -419,7 +423,7 @@ GWL has two high-level concepts called ``processes'' and ``workflows'' where the In conclusion, shell scripts and Make are very common and extensively used by users of Unix-based OSs (which are most commonly used for computations). They have also existed for several decades and are robust and mature. Many researchers are also already familiar with them and have already used them. -As we see in this appendix, the list of necessary tools for the various stages of a research project (an independent environment, package managers, job organizers, analysis languages, writing formats, editors and etc) is already very large. +As we see in this appendix, the list of necessary tools for the various stages of a research project (an independent environment, package managers, job organizers, analysis languages, writing formats, editors, etc) is already very large. Each software has its own learning curve, which is a heavy burden for a natural or social scientist for example. Most other workflow management tools are yet another language that have to be mastered. @@ -435,15 +439,18 @@ Due to the variety of custom workflows used in existing reproducibility solution These are primarily specifications/standards rather than software, so ideally translators can be written between the various workflow systems to make them more interoperable. + + + \subsection{Editing steps and viewing results} \label{appendix:editors} In order to later reproduce a project, the analysis steps must be stored in files. -For example Shell, Python or R scripts, Makefiles, Dockerfiles, or even the source files of compiled languages like C or FORTRAN. +For example Shell, Python, R scripts, Makefiles, Dockerfiles, or even the source files of compiled languages like C or FORTRAN. Given that a scientific project does not evolve linearly and many edits are needed as it evolves, it is important to be able to actively test the analysis steps while writing the project's source files. Here we review some common methods that are currently used. \subsubsection{Text editors} -The most basic way to edit text files is through simple text editors which just allow viewing and editing such files, for example \inlinecode{gedit} on the GNOME graphic user interface. +The most basic way to edit text files is through simple text editors which just allow viewing and editing such files, for example, \inlinecode{gedit} on the GNOME graphic user interface. However, working with simple plain text editors like \inlinecode{gedit} can be very frustrating since its necessary to save the file, then go to a terminal emulator and execute the source files. To solve this problem there are advanced text editors like GNU Emacs that allow direct execution of the script, or access to a terminal within the text editor. However, editors that can execute or debug the source (like GNU Emacs), just run external programs for these jobs (for example GNU GCC, or GNU GDB), just as if those programs was called from outside the editor. @@ -458,38 +465,37 @@ Also, the commonly used minimalistic containers do not include a graphic user in To facilitate the development of source files, IDEs add software building and running environments as well as debugging tools to a plain text editor. Many IDEs have their own compilers and debuggers, hence source files that are maintained in IDEs are not necessarily usable/portable on other systems. Furthermore, they usually require a graphic user interface to run. -In summary IDEs are generally very specialized tools, for special projects and are not a good solution when portability (the ability to run on different systems and at different times) is required. +In summary, IDEs are generally very specialized tools, for special projects and are not a good solution when portability (the ability to run on different systems and at different times) is required. \subsubsection{Jupyter} \label{appendix:jupyter} Jupyter (initially IPython) \citeappendix{kluyver16} is an implementation of Literate Programming \citeappendix{knuth84}. The main user interface is a web-based ``notebook'' that contains blobs of executable code and narrative. Jupyter uses the custom built \inlinecode{.ipynb} format\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://nbformat.readthedocs.io/en/latest}}}. -Jupyter's name is a combination of the three main languages it was designed for: Julia, Python and R. +Jupyter's name is a combination of the three main languages it was designed for: Julia, Python, and R. The \inlinecode{.ipynb} format, is a simple, human-readable (can be opened in a plain-text editor) file, formatted in JavaScript Object Notation (JSON). It contains various kinds of ``cells'', or blobs, that can contain narrative description, code, or multi-media visualizations (for example images/plots), that are all stored in one file. The cells can have any order, allowing the creation of a literal programming style graphical implementation, where narrative descriptions and executable patches of code can be intertwined. -For example to have a paragraph of text about a patch of code, and run that patch immediately in the same page. +For example to have a paragraph of text about a patch of code, and run that patch immediately on the same page. The \inlinecode{.ipynb} format does theoretically allow dependency tracking between cells, see IPython mailing list (discussion started by Gabriel Becker from July 2013\footnote{\url{https://mail.python.org/pipermail/ipython-dev/2013-July/010725.html}}). Defining dependencies between the cells can allow non-linear execution which is critical for large scale (thousands of files) and complex (many dependencies between the cells) operations. -It allows automation, run-time optimization (deciding not to run a cell if its not necessary) and parallelization. +It allows automation, run-time optimization (deciding not to run a cell if it is not necessary), and parallelization. However, Jupyter currently only supports a linear run of the cells: always from the start to the end. It is possible to manually execute only one cell, but the previous/next cells that may depend on it, also have to be manually run (a common source of human error, and frustration for complex operations). Integration of directional graph features (dependencies between the cells) into Jupyter has been discussed, but as of this publication, there is no plan to implement it (see Jupyter's GitHub issue 1175\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://github.com/jupyter/notebook/issues/1175}}}). -The fact that the \inlinecode{.ipynb} format stores narrative text, code and multi-media visualization of the outputs in one file, is another major hurdle: -The files can easy become very large (in volume/bytes) and hard to read. +The fact that the \inlinecode{.ipynb} format stores narrative text, code, and multi-media visualization of the outputs in one file, is another major hurdle and against the modularity criteria proposed here. +The files can easily become very large (in volume/bytes) and hard to read. Both are critical for scientific processing, especially the latter: when a web browser with proper JavaScript features is not available (can happen in a few years). This is further exacerbated by the fact that binary data (for example images) are not directly supported in JSON and have to be converted into much less memory-efficient textual encodings. -Finally, Jupyter has an extremely complex dependency graph: on a clean Debian 10 system, Pip (a Python package manager that is necessary for installing Jupyter) required 19 dependencies to install, and installing Jupyter within Pip needed 41 dependencies! +Finally, Jupyter has an extremely complex dependency graph: on a clean Debian 10 system, Pip (a Python package manager that is necessary for installing Jupyter) required 19 dependencies to install, and installing Jupyter within Pip needed 41 dependencies. \citeappendix{hinsen15} reported such conflicts when building Jupyter into the Active Papers framework (see Appendix \ref{appendix:activepapers}). However, the dependencies above are only on the server-side. Since Jupyter is a web-based system, it requires many dependencies on the viewing/running browser also (for example special JavaScript or HTML5 features, which evolve very fast). As discussed in Appendix \ref{appendix:highlevelinworkflow} having so many dependencies is a major caveat for any system regarding scientific/long-term reproducibility (as opposed to industrial/immediate reproducibility). -In summary, Jupyter is most useful in manual, interactive and graphical operations for temporary operations (for example educational tutorials). - +In summary, Jupyter is most useful in manual, interactive, and graphical operations for temporary operations (for example educational tutorials). @@ -497,10 +503,9 @@ In summary, Jupyter is most useful in manual, interactive and graphical operatio \subsection{Project management in high-level languages} \label{appendix:highlevelinworkflow} - -Currently the most popular high-level data analysis language is Python. -R is closely tracking it, and has superseded Python in some fields, while Julia \citeappendix{bezanson17} is quickly gaining ground. -These languages have themselves superseded previously popular languages for data analysis of the previous decades, for example Java, Perl or C++. +Currently, the most popular high-level data analysis language is Python. +R is closely tracking it and has superseded Python in some fields, while Julia \citeappendix{bezanson17} is quickly gaining ground. +These languages have themselves superseded previously popular languages for data analysis of the previous decades, for example, Java, Perl, or C++. All are part of the C-family programming languages. In many cases, this means that the tools to use that language are written in C, which is the language of modern operating systems. @@ -508,37 +513,37 @@ Scientists, or data analysts, mostly use these higher-level languages. Therefore they are naturally drawn to also apply the higher-level languages for lower-level project management, or designing the various stages of their workflow. For example Conda or Spack (Appendix \ref{appendix:packagemanagement}), CGAT-core (Appendix \ref{appendix:jobmanagement}), Jupyter (Appendix \ref{appendix:editors}) or Popper (Appendix \ref{appendix:popper}) are written in Python. The discussion below applies to both the actual analysis software and project management software. -In this context, its more focused on the latter. +In this context, it is more focused on the latter. Because of their nature, higher-level languages evolve very fast, creating incompatibilities on the way. The most prominent example is the transition from Python 2 (released in 2000) to Python 3 (released in 2008). Python 3 was incompatible with Python 2 and it was decided to abandon the former by 2015. However, due to community pressure, this was delayed to January 1st, 2020. -The end-of-life of Python 2 caused many problems for projects that had invested heavily in Python 2: all their previous work had to be translated, for example see \citeappendix{jenness17} or Appendix \ref{appendix:sciunit}. +The end-of-life of Python 2 caused many problems for projects that had invested heavily in Python 2: all their previous work had to be translated, for example, see \citeappendix{jenness17} or Appendix \ref{appendix:sciunit}. Some projects could not make this investment and their developers decided to stop maintaining it, for example VisTrails (see Appendix \ref{appendix:vistrails}). The problems were not just limited to translation. -Python 2 was still actively being actively used during the transition period (and is still being used by some, after its end-of-life). +Python 2 was still being actively used during the transition period (and is still being used by some, after its end-of-life). Therefore, developers of packages used by others had to maintain (for example fix bugs in) both versions in one package. This is not particular to Python, a similar evolution occurred in Perl: in 2000 it was decided to improve Perl 5, but the proposed Perl 6 was incompatible with it. However, the Perl community decided not to abandon Perl 5, and Perl 6 was eventually defined as a new language that is now officially called ``Raku'' (\url{https://raku.org}). It is unreasonably optimistic to assume that high-level languages will not undergo similar incompatible evolutions in the (not too distant) future. -For software developers, this is not a problem at all: non-scientific software, and the general population's usage of them, has a similarly fast evolvution. +For software developers, this is not a problem at all: non-scientific software, and the general population's usage of them, has a similarly fast evolution. Hence, it is rarely (if ever) necessary to look into codes that are more than a couple of years old. -However, in the sciences (which are commonly funded by public money) this is a major caveat for the longer-term usability of solutions that are designed in such high level languages. +However, in the sciences (which are commonly funded by public money) this is a major caveat for the longer-term usability of solutions that are designed in such high-level languages. -In summary, in this section we are discussing the bootstrapping problem as regards scientific projects: the workflow/pipeline can reproduce the analysis and its dependencies, but the dependencies of the workflow itself cannot not be ignored. +In summary, in this section we are discussing the bootstrapping problem as regards scientific projects: the workflow/pipeline can reproduce the analysis and its dependencies, but the dependencies of the workflow itself can not be ignored. Beyond technical, low-level, problems for the developers mentioned above, this causes major problems for scientific project management as listed below: \subsubsection{Dependency hell} The evolution of high-level languages is extremely fast, even within one version. -For example packages that are written in Python 3 often only work with a special interval of Python 3 versions (for example newer than Python 3.6). +For example, packages that are written in Python 3 often only work with a special interval of Python 3 versions (for example newer than Python 3.6). This is not just limited to the core language, much faster changes occur in their higher-level libraries. For example version 1.9 of Numpy (Python's numerical analysis module) discontinued support for Numpy's predecessor (called Numeric), causing many problems for scientific users \citeappendix{hinsen15}. On the other hand, the dependency graph of tools written in high-level languages is often extremely complex. -For example see Figure 1 of \cite{alliez19}, it shows the dependencies and their inter-dependencies for Matplotlib (a popular plotting module in Python). +For example, see Figure 1 of \cite{alliez19}, it shows the dependencies and their inter-dependencies for Matplotlib (a popular plotting module in Python). Acceptable version intervals between the dependencies will cause incompatibilities in a year or two, when a robust package manager is not used (see Appendix \ref{appendix:packagemanagement}). Since a domain scientist does not always have the resources/knowledge to modify the conflicting part(s), many are forced to create complex environments with different versions of Python and pass the data between them (for example just to use the work of a previous PhD student in the team). @@ -550,20 +555,16 @@ For example, merely installing the Python installer (\inlinecode{pip}) on a Debi \inlinecode{pip} is necessary to install Popper and Sciunit (Appendices \ref{appendix:popper} and \ref{appendix:sciunit}). As of this writing, the \inlinecode{pip3 install popper} and \inlinecode{pip2 install sciunit2} commands for installing each, required 17 and 26 Python modules as dependencies. It is impossible to run either of these solutions if there is a single conflict in this very complex dependency graph. -This problem actually occurred while we were testing Sciunit: even though it installed, it could not run because of conflicts (its last commit was only 1.5 years old), for more see Appendix \ref{appendix:sciunit}. +This problem actually occurred while we were testing Sciunit: even though it was installed, it could not run because of conflicts (its last commit was only 1.5 years old), for more see Appendix \ref{appendix:sciunit}. \citeappendix{hinsen15} also report a similar problem when attempting to install Jupyter (see Appendix \ref{appendix:editors}). Of course, this also applies to tools that these systems use, for example Conda (which is also written in Python, see Appendix \ref{appendix:packagemanagement}). - - - - \subsubsection{Generational gap} -This occurs primarily for domain scientists (for example astronomers, biologists or social sciences). +This occurs primarily for domain scientists (for example astronomers, biologists, or social sciences). Once they have mastered one version of a language (mostly in the early stages of their career), they tend to ignore newer versions/languages. The inertia of programming languages is very strong. -This is natural, because they have their own science field to focus on, and re-writing their high-level analysis toolkits (which they have curated over their career and is often only readable/usable by themselves) in newer languages every few years requires too much investment and time. +This is natural because they have their own science field to focus on, and re-writing their high-level analysis toolkits (which they have curated over their career and is often only readable/usable by themselves) in newer languages every few years requires too much investment and time. -When this investment is not possible, either the mentee has to use the mentor's old method (and miss out on all the new tools, which they need for the future job prospects), or the mentor has to avoid implementation details in discussions with the mentee, because they do not share a common language. +When this investment is not possible, either the mentee has to use the mentor's old method (and miss out on all the new tools, which they need for the future job prospects), or the mentor has to avoid implementation details in discussions with the mentee because they do not share a common language. The authors of this paper have personal experiences in both mentor/mentee relational scenarios. This failure to communicate in the details is a very serious problem, leading to the loss of valuable inter-generational experience. |