A generic framework for on-demand, incrementalized computation.
Very much a WORK IN PROGRESS at this point.
This system is heavily inspired by adapton, glimmer, and rustc's query system. So credit goes to Eduard-Mihai Burtescu, Matthew Hammer, Yehuda Katz, and Michael Woerister.
The key idea of salsa
is that you define your program as a set of
queries. Every query is used like function K -> V
that maps from
some key of type K
to a value of type V
. Queries come in two basic
varieties:
- Inputs: the base inputs to your system. You can change these whenever you like.
- Functions: pure functions (no side effects) that transform your inputs into other values. The results of queries are memoized to avoid recomputing them a lot. When you make changes to the inputs, we'll figure out (fairly intelligently) when we can re-use these memoized values and when we have to recompute them.
To learn more about Salsa, try one of the following:
- read the heavily commented examples;
- check out the Salsa book;
- watch one of our videos.
The bulk of the discussion happens in the issues and pull requests, but we have a zulip chat as well.
To create a release and publish to crates.io, follow the steps:
- Update the
version
field in Cargo.toml. - Create a Git tag. The tag name must follow the format like "v*..".
- Push. GitHub Actions will publish the crate to crates.io automatically.