Spinach 1.0.0-alpha.6
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Spinach --version 1.0.0-alpha.6
NuGet\Install-Package Spinach -Version 1.0.0-alpha.6
<PackageReference Include="Spinach" Version="1.0.0-alpha.6" />
paket add Spinach --version 1.0.0-alpha.6
#r "nuget: Spinach, 1.0.0-alpha.6"
// Install Spinach as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=Spinach&version=1.0.0-alpha.6&prerelease // Install Spinach as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=Spinach&version=1.0.0-alpha.6&prerelease
Project Status
THIS PROJECT IS NEW AND NOT YET READY TO BE USED.
About Spinach
Spinach is a text/code search indexing library for .NET projects. It is inspired by the open source code search tool Zoekt, and is optimized for performing high-speed regular expression based searching across large code repositories.
Being delivered as a library rather than an end-user product means that you have the flexibility to embed code searching capabilities into your own projects. If you're looking for an actual code search engine that you can install and run, check out our other project, Popeye.
You might think of Spinach as being a little bit like Lucene.NET, except it is a much smaller, lighter-weight solution that is specialized for performing regular expression searches. It aims to provide ultra high speed code searching on par with Zoekt, in a package that is easily consumable by .NET developers.
Why might you need a regular expression indexing / code search library in your project? We can think of lots of interesting projects that might be interested in these capabilities.
- Internal Developer Portals / Platforms - With the rise of platform engineering, everyone is realizing that high quality developer portals can help improve developer happiness and productivity. Tools like these are highly diverse in functionality, which leads to a "build vs. buy" decision. For those organizations that don't have time to build their own portal, we think OpenSquiggly can be a great solution for them. But for other companies that want to build their own portal for whatever reasons, they might like to incorporate code searching into their portals.
- Text Editors / IDEs - Anyone building text editors or IDEs, either client-side or cloud-based, may be interested. Tools like these usually have regex search built it. By indexing the source files, regex searches can be run much faster.
- Software Cataloging - Software catalogs are a subset of developer portals. Any time you are ingesting resources from around the organization with the hopes of cataloging them, it makes sense to index the data it for fast searching.
- Other Developer Productivity Tools - There are undoubtedly countless other developer-oriented productivity tools that we haven't even thought of that could benefit greatly from integrated code searching.
- Non-Developer Usages - Although we're primarily thinking of Spinach for building code search tools for developers, there's no reason why other types of users might not also find fast regex searching useful.
Sister Projects
Spinach is one part of a series of projects designed to deliver high speed code searching capabilities.
- Eugene - Eugene is a Nuget package that provides general purpose persistent data structures
- Spinach - Spinach, this package, is a Nuget packages that builds on top of Eugene and provides an API and indexing file format for performing regular expression text searching
- Popeye - Popeye is an installable code searching engine that can be installed in various ways, including Docker, Kubernetes, etc. Essentially, Popeye aims to be a C# version of Zoekt that uses similar approaches to indexing the text repositories as does Zoekt. Popeye is not a direct, line-for-line port of Zoekt, but is based on similar ideas.
Popeye uses the Spinach package, which in turn uses Eugene.
Motivation
To understand the motivation for Spinach, one should start by understanding what Zoekt is.
Zoekt is an open source code searching engine written in Go. Being written in Go, it wasn't overly useful for our projects here at OpenSquiggly, being that our codebase is written in C#. We wanted a C# version of Zoekt, and so we went about reading the Zoekt codebase to consider how we might access it from C# or perhaps port it to C# line-by-line.
Unfortunately, due to the many philosophical differences between Go and C#, directly porting a Go project to C# seemed quite difficult.
We thought about using Zoekt in a separate container and accessing it using its REST API, but that just seemed like a gigantic hassle. We really wanted a pure C# solution that could be tightly and properly integrated with OpenSquiggly.
Next, we thought about whether we should port our entire product to Go, but we decided not to do that.
Finally, we wondered if we could write a new C# project from scratch that would follow the same ideas as Zoekt.
Let's take the time to understand at a very high level what Zoekt does. Suppose we are running a regular expression search for:
quickly.*browning.*foxhound
Admittedly this is a bit of a contrived example, but it's useful to illustrate the point.
First, Zoekt extracts the three known literals from the string, getting:
- quickly
- browning
- foxhound
and then goes about finding all the files in the corpus that contain these three literals. Once it finds a file with all three of these string literals, it runs a regex search over the file to see if it matches the full regex.
Okay, but how does it quickly find those matching files? Aha! Now we're getting to the heart of the matter with this problem.
In a nutshell, Zoekt builds up an index of trigrams that it can quickly read off of disk to search for string literals using their trigrams. Zoekt doesn't document their file format in very much detail - their design document describes it in broad brush strokes, but the details are sketchy.
What we needed was a way to do the same thing in C#, and it the process we thought it would be nice if we abstracted away the reusable components into libraries that can be embedded into projects using Nuget. Thus Eugene and Spianch were born.
More About How Zoekt Works
Zoekt looks for literals using trigrams. Trigrams are sequences of three letters.
- The trigrams for "quickly" are: qui, uic, ick, ckl, kly
- The trigrams for "browning" are: bro, row, own, wni, nin, ing
- The trigrams for "foxhound" are: fox, oxh, xho, hou, oun, und
Suppose we're looking for all documents that contain the string literal "quickly".
First we get a list of all the documents that contain the leading trigram, "qui". Then we get another list of all the documents containing the trailing trigram, "kly" and see if the trigram "kly" exists at position qui + 4. Then we perform the interesection of these two lists. Finally, we check the document to see if it truly contains the full literal "quickly" at position qui.
In actuality we don't have to search for specifically leading and trailing trigrams, we can search for any two trigrams of our choosing within the literal. As long as we have two lists of trigrams, we can intersect the list and hopefully wind up with a relatively small list of matching documents. This observation allows for some optimizations - we can search for the least frequently occurring trigrams to minimize the number of documents we need to search.
If we carefully arrange the documents so that they always come back ordered by sequential file ids, then intersecting the two lists can be very fast because we can skip over large numbers of unmatched documents as we perform the intersection.
This is why we need a custom file format that we have fine grained control over. We want to iterate over the indexes in very specific ways, with some strategically applied optimizations, to return results back to the user very quickly.
So that's what Zoekt does. It builds up these indexes and then does all the other necessary work to use them to look up literals and run regex searches on candidate documents.
The problem comes when we start thinking about how big these indexes might be. Suppose we are trying to index 1,000,000 repositories on GitHub. Disk space is cheap these days (well, not as cheap in the cloud, but still pretty cheap), the real problem is how long it takes to look up a trigram in a huge index, and how many disk accesses will be needed. Zoekt is aiming to provide lightning fast code searching that can return thousands of results in millisecond timeframes, so disk access times become significant on those scales.
In order to reduce disk accesses, Zoekt performs some vaguely documented magic. The documentation is a little fuzzy on whether it does or does not cache the indexes in memory, and whether it does or does not use a lot of memory. According to some documents released by Zoekt's current maintainer, memory usage in Zoekt is potentially problematic. If the Zoekt instance is not given enough memory, it may produce out-of-memory errors.
Zoekt also imposes some annoying limitations to limit its memory usage. It breaks up the index into shards, with one repo per shard, and the sets the maximum size of a shard to 1GB.
In the world of cloud providers, as of this writing in the year 2023, memory is still quite expensive and adds up quickly. If you need a VM with 4GB of memory, Azure or AWS will give that to you for around $70/month or so. But if you want a 32GB VM, that might run you $350/month.
So to run Zoekt, you have to make some calculations and some tradeoffs. Do you want to overpay by spinning up a VM with more memory than you'll probably need, or do you want to save money and run the risk of running out of memory? Running out of memory means that someone is probably waking up a 3am to go fix the problem, and no one wants to do that. We all want to sleep easy at night.
That's the problem we're trying to address with Eugene, Spinach, and Popeye.
We wanted a way to build these trigram indexes with clean, flexible, easy to modify C# code, and also have a way to put an LRU cache in front of the data structures so that the amount of memory used can be controlled more carefully. The goal is to make the indexing run very fast even on small memory VM instances, and to never produce out of memory errors.
What about ElasticSearch or Lucene.NET?
An astute reader might wonder if what we just described doesn't sound a whole lot like what ElasticSearch and Lucene.NET already do. Couldn't we use one of those to accomplish what we're describing?
Yes, in theory, ElasticSearch and Lucene.NET do similar things, and should, at least in theory, work for what we need. In practice though, it just doesn't work well. Those solutions are too heavy-weight and are not optimized enough to do the kind of high volume, large repository regex code searching that we desire.
In fact, our initial implementation for OpenSquiggly's code search was based on using ElasticSearch to build trigram indexes. It did work, but the performance was lackluster, required a lot of memory, and it was clear that the solution just wasn't going to scale as we needed it to. When it comes to code searching, customers are looking to index thousands, or perhaps even hundreds of thousands of code repositories. A more general purpose solution like ElasticSearch just can't cope with that kind of scale.
Where Did the Names Come From?
Zoekt is a Dutch word that means "seek".
The creator of Zoekt used the following tag line in his documentation:
"Zoekt, en gij zult spinazie eten" - Jan Eertink
("seek, and ye shall eat spinach" - My primary school teacher)
Here in America, everyone knows that Popeye the Sailor Man gets strong by eating spinach, and so our names are based on this theme. Eugene is named after the character Eugene the Jeep in the comic series.
We also like that the name Popeye bids a friendly salute to the now discontinued Atlassian code search tool named FishEye. We always wondered why Atlassian didn't keep investing in FishEye; perhaps it was just too far ahead of its time. In today's environment, with a resurgence of interest in internal developer portals and platforms, and the strong need to find ways to cope with the ever increasing complexity of software projects, we think good code searching engines might be poised for a comeback.
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net7.0 is compatible. net7.0-android was computed. net7.0-ios was computed. net7.0-maccatalyst was computed. net7.0-macos was computed. net7.0-tvos was computed. net7.0-windows was computed. net8.0 was computed. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
-
net7.0
- Eugene (>= 1.0.1-alpha.15)
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated |
---|---|---|
1.0.0-alpha.20 | 32 | 11/19/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.19 | 36 | 11/12/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.18 | 43 | 11/11/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.17 | 40 | 11/10/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.16 | 36 | 11/10/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.15 | 37 | 11/9/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.14 | 42 | 11/9/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.13 | 35 | 11/5/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.12 | 39 | 11/4/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.11 | 40 | 11/4/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.10 | 43 | 11/2/2024 |
1.0.0-alpha.9 | 119 | 12/5/2023 |
1.0.0-alpha.8 | 82 | 11/12/2023 |
1.0.0-alpha.7 | 113 | 7/6/2023 |
1.0.0-alpha.6 | 93 | 7/5/2023 |
1.0.0-alpha.5 | 93 | 6/29/2023 |
1.0.0-alpha.4 | 90 | 6/28/2023 |
1.0.0-alpha.3 | 90 | 6/18/2023 |
1.0.0-alpha.2 | 86 | 6/18/2023 |
1.0.0-alpha.1 | 95 | 6/18/2023 |
1.0.0-alpha.0 | 91 | 6/17/2023 |