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Diffstat (limited to 'tex')
-rw-r--r-- | tex/src/appendix-existing-solutions.tex | 17 |
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/tex/src/appendix-existing-solutions.tex b/tex/src/appendix-existing-solutions.tex index 75285eb..9710df8 100644 --- a/tex/src/appendix-existing-solutions.tex +++ b/tex/src/appendix-existing-solutions.tex @@ -422,18 +422,25 @@ We could not find a URL to the source software of Umbrella (no source code repos \subsection{ReproZip (2016)} -ReproZip\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://www.reprozip.org}}}\citeappendix{chirigati16} is a Python package that is designed to automatically track all the necessary data files, libraries, and environment variables into a single bundle. +ReproZip\footnote{\inlinecode{\url{https://www.reprozip.org}}}\citeappendix{chirigati16} is a Python package that is designed to automatically track all the necessary data files, libraries, and environment variables of a process into a single bundle. The tracking is done at the kernel system-call level, so any file that is accessed during the running of the project is identified. The tracked files can be packaged into a \inlinecode{.rpz} bundle that can then be unpacked into another system. -ReproZip is therefore very good to take a ``snapshot'' of the running environment into a single file. +ReproZip is therefore very good to take a ``snapshot'' of the running environment, at one moment into a single file. However, the bundle can become very large when many/large datasets are involved, or if the software environment is complex (many dependencies). -Since it copies the binary software libraries, it can only be run on systems with a similar CPU architecture to the original. -Furthermore, ReproZip copies the binary/compiled files used in a project, without a way of knowing how the software was built. -As mentioned in this paper, and also Oliveira et al. \citeappendix{oliveira18} the question of ``how'' the environment was built is critical for understanding the results, and simply having the binaries cannot necessarily be useful. +Furthermore, since the binary software libraries are directly copied, it can only be re-run on a systems with a similar CPU architecture. +Furthermore, ReproZip copies all files used in a project, without a way of knowing how the software was built (its provenance). + +As mentioned in this paper, and also Oliveira et al. \citeappendix{oliveira18} the question of ``how'' the environment was built is critical for understanding the results; simply having the binaries cannot necessarily be useful in many contexts. +It is possible to include the build instructions of the used software within the project to be ReproZip'd, but that will again simply bloat the bundle due to the many temporary files that are created during the build of a software, add complexity and slow down the project's running time. For the data, it is similarly not possible to extract which data server they came from. Hence two projects that each use a 1-terabyte dataset will need a full copy of that same 1-terabyte file in their bundle, making long-term preservation extremely expensive. +Such files can be excluded from the bundle through modifications in the configuration file. +But this will only add complexity since a higher-level script over ReproZip needs to be written to make sure that the data and bundle are used together or check the integrity of the data. + +Finally, because it is only a snapshot of one moment in a project's history, preserving the connection between the ReproZip'd bundles of various points in a project's history is not easily possible (for example when software or data are updated, or new analysis methods are used). +In other words, a ReproZip user will have to define their own subjective archival method to preserve the various black-boxs of their project as it evolves, and tracking what has changed between them is not trivial. |