The release action we are working conditionally executes based on the
version of `automerge-wasm` in the previous commit. We need to trigger
it even though the version has not changed so we roll back the version
in this commit and the commit immediately following this will bump it
again.
The wasm codebase assumed that clients want to represent text as a
string of characters. This is faster, but in order to enable backwards
compatibility we add a `TextRepresentation` argument to
`automerge_wasm::Automerge::new` to allow clients to choose between a
`string` or `Array<any>` representation. The `automerge_wasm::Observer`
will consult this setting to determine what kind of diffs to generate.
The tsconfig.json was setup to not include the JS tests. Update the
config to include the tests when checking typescript and fix all the
consequent errors. None of this is semantically meaningful _except_ for
a few incorrect usages of the API which were leading to flaky tests.
Hooray for types!
The error messages produced by various conversions in `automerge-wasm`
were quite uninformative - often consisting of just returning the
offending value with no description of the problem. The logic of these
error messages was often hard to trace due to the use of `JsValue` to
represent both error conditions and valid values - evidenced by most of
the public functions of `automerge-wasm` having return types of
`Result<JsValue, JsValue>`. Change these return types to mention
specific errors, thus enlisting the compilers help in ensuring that
specific error messages are emitted.
Transactions with no ops in them are generally undesirable. They take up
space in the change log but do nothing else. They are not useless
though, it may occasionally be necessary to create an empty change in
order to list all the current heads of the document as dependents of the
empty change.
The current API makes no distinction between empty changes and non-empty
changes. If the user calls `Transaction::commit` a change is created
regardless of whether there are ops to commit. To provide a more useful
API modify `commit` so that if there is a no-op transaction then no
changes are created, but provide explicit methods to create an empty
change via `Transaction::empty_change`, `Automerge::empty_change` and
`Autocommit::empty_change`. Also make these APIs available in Javascript
and C.
The API of Automerge::generate_sync_message requires that the user keep
track of in flight messages themselves if they want to avoid sending
duplicate messages. To avoid this add a flag to `automerge::sync::State`
to track if there are any in flight messages and return `None` from
`generate_sync_message` if there are.
Generating patches to text objects (a la the edit-trace benchmark) was
very slow due to appending to the back of a Vec. Use the SequenceTree
(effectively a B-tree) instead so as to speed up sequence patch
generation.
Sometimes you need a cheap copy of a document at a given set of heads
just so you can see what has changed. Cloning the document to do this is
quite expensive when you don't need a writable copy. Add automerge.view
to allow a cheap read only copy of a document at a given set of heads
and add an additional heads argument to clone for when you do want a
writable copy.
After some discussion with PVH I realise that the repo structure in the
last reorg was very rust-centric. In an attempt to put each language on
a level footing move the rust code and project files into ./rust