parse . render == id

Credits





Details were refined in production at Inspiration for this package came from Soostone's safecopy-hunit package Details were refined in production at Formation (previously Takt).

As almost everyone with significant experience managing production software systems should know, backwards compatibility is incredibly important for any data that is persisted by an application. If you make a change to a data structure that is not backwards compatible with the existing serialized formats, your app will break as soon as it encounters the existing format. Even if you have 100% test coverage, your tests still might not catch this problem. It’s not a problem with your app at any single point in time, but a problem with how your app evolves over time.One might think that wire formats which are only used for communication between components and not persisted in any way would not be susceptible to this problem. But these too can cause issues if a message is generated and a new version of the app is deployed before the the message is consumed. The longer the message remains in a queue, redis cache, etc the higher the chances of this occurring.More subtly, if you deploy a backwards incompatible migration, your app may persist some data in the new format before it crashes when it receives the old format. This can leave your system in the horrible state where not only will it not work with the new code, but rolling back to the old code won’t work either because the old code doesn’t support the new serialized format! You have two incompatible serializations active at the same time! Proper migration systems can reduce the chances of this problem occurring, but if your system has any kind of queueing system or message bus, your migrations might not be applied to in-flight messages. Clearly we need something to help us protect against this problem. Enter the armor package Armor is a Haskell package that saves serialized versions of your data structures to the filesystem and tests that they can be correctly parsed. This alone at a single point in time verifies thatwhich is a property that you usually want your serializations to have. But in addition to that, armor tracks a version number for your data structures and uses that to accumulate historical serialization formats over time. It stores the serialized bytes in `.test` files that you check into source control. This protects against backwards-incompatible changes and at the same time avoids cluttering up your source code with old versions of the data structure.Armor does this while being completely agnostic to the choice of serialization library. In fact, it can support any number of different serialization formats simultaneously. For more information check out the literate Haskell tutorial in the test suite.