Part 1: Intro

All posts from the series can be found here

Once I decided to sit down and write a perfect blog client for me. Since it was not just about the result but also about the process I chose a language I enjoyed the most and this is how it ended up being written in Common Lisp. I didn’t think I’d get that far and I’d like to share my experience in the process along with all little details that I had to go through during the implementation.

Disclaimer Please treat this post as an experience report more than anything else because this is what it is. As a consequence, there can be a lot of things real lisp wizards will raise an eyebrow on.

Note 1 I’m glad to hear any feedback. If you have any suggestions on the text, want to fix a typo or correct my explanation, please consider opening an issue in the blog repo. If you think that client code doesn’t do what it has to do, please make a pull request or open an issue in client repo.

Note 2 I decided to make all links to the code against fixed sha1 so that future changes do not invalidate them. I’m not sure if I will frequently revisit this document and I hope that the post will remain relevant with this approach.

Below you will read a story about writing a blog client for livejournal.com web service in Common Lisp. As one may note, it sounds like using a very niche language for a near dead web service. To make you a bit more surprised I can add that I’ve been working on it on and off for a couple of years now.

It used to be very simple but now cl-journal is quite powerful. For example, it handles:

Any Livejournal compatible service (like Dreamwidth)

Publishing new posts and updating changed ones

Post text is written in markdown, many Livejournal fields are supported, such as visibility, location or music.

Fetching posts from remove server and transforming them into markdown format.

Lot’s of smaller stuff like links to local files being transformed to actual post urls, drafts, pre-commit hooks, password management etc.

And a lot more!

I’ve been using Livejournal since 2005 and never had a reason to switch to anything else. I almost never write on political topics and don’t really care where it’s hosted. I don’t even need many connections but do value some and the fact that Livejournal provides near zero ways to discover other blogs sometimes works more as a benefit than a drawback, because with the current state of things when majority of users migrated to Facebook or Instagram, there is not that much to read there. It’s not as engaging as Facebook, and that’s good. The other benefit of the service is that it’s a very good site to write long posts like this one and people actually do that and there is a ton of beautiful content there, if you’re lucky to find it of course.

My main problem with Livejournal always was that I didn’t really own the content in a sense of storage. The blog is mine, ok, but if web service goes down or account gets blocked I’ll lose all my ~1400 posts written to date without any good way to get them.

From time to time I tried to use other blog platforms or static site generators (like this site) and my real dream was to combine them and have sources in markdown locally, so that I can edit them in my favorite editor and still publish them on a platform that has at least some social flavor. Blog on Github + Disqus is not social for sure.

I had this idea for some time and somewhere around 2016 got really burned out by trying to ship yet another web service in my spare time in addition to those that I ship for my company. To recover I decided to go in the direction that absolutely excluded any interest except my own and didn’t have any money or fame in sight. You see now, Common Lisp and idea about better blogging at the time where blogging is already out of fashion is almost a perfect match! And this is where it all started.

Idea

What does perfect blogging experience look like? It’s when you write the text in your favorite editor, save it, push it to git and it’s published. And it’s when you can just grep your posts to remember something from the past or when you can do bulk updates to all the posts with system tools that you’re used to and get all changes published at once.

This was my thought process and this is what became a base of requirements. A client should be able to:

See new markdown files and publish them

See modified markdown files and submit changes

See deleted markdown files and delete them in the service

Bonus points if it all happens automagically on git commit/push

That’s a simple version of the client that implies that a folder with markdown files acts as a master database that gets replicated to a slave which in this case is web service. An obvious drawback here is that I lose any other ways to update content, be it via service web interface or it’s mobile app. So an even more perfect client should be able to:

Fetch any updates from the service

Transform them into markdown format so that all synced posts can be later edited in a usual manner.

One final thought was that since all editing happens in an ordinary editor, an obvious way to implement client is to make a cli tool for that. And if you check requirement you’ll spot that they resemble typical git operations a lot and it makes sense to mimic git whenever it makes sense.

Common Lisp nontrivialities

When you start working on a really big task, the only thing that can be said for sure is that there are a lot of unknowns. And if in a familiar language most of the unknowns lie in the business domain, in my case a pile of unknowns also waited to be found on the language and ecosystem side. Some of the things that I thought to be trivial and that were doable in many languages appeared to be not trivial at all in Common Lisp and that required a lot of time to grasp to get a full picture.

Let me go through some of the topics that appeared to be nontrivial.

Current working directory

This is one such case. It’s just one parameter, what can go wrong? Well, it’s two, at least in sbcl. It appears that there is a distinction between cwd of external commands run by uiop/run-program and internal lisp facilities. Let’s make a following experiment:

# preparation $ mkdir -p ~/test_cwd/second_folder && cd ~/test_cwd $ touch test.file $ touch second_folder/nested.file $ sbcl

and lisp session:

* (ql:quickload :uiop) To load "uiop": Load 1 ASDF system: uiop ; Loading "uiop" (:UIOP) * (probe-file "test.file") #P"/home/can3p/test_cwd/test.file" * (uiop/run-program:run-program "ls" :input :interactive :output :string)) "second_folder test.file " NIL 0

So far so good!

* (uiop/os::chdir "second_folder") 0 * (uiop/run-program:run-program "ls" :input :interactive :output :string) "nested.file " NIL 0 * (probe-file "nested.file") NIL

Oops. Yes, probe-file expects something else.

* (setf *default-pathname-defaults* #P"second_folder") #P"second_folder" * (probe-file "nested.file") #P"/home/can3p/test_cwd/second_folder/nested.file"

And to double check.

* (setf *default-pathname-defaults* #P"/home/can3p/test_cwd/") #P"/home/can3p/test_cwd/" * (probe-file "test.file") #P"/home/can3p/test_cwd/test.file" * (uiop/run-program:run-program "ls" :input :interactive :output :string) "nested.file " NIL 0

And that trailing forward slash in pathname is important, don’t lose it. As you see, *default-pathname-defaults* and uiop/os::chdir are independent and influence different things and to keep it consistent for both standard library and external calls it’s necessary to call them both.

It’s worth saying that this distinction is of particular importance for repl based development, because when the image starts these two values are most probably aligned.

Another note is that the behaviour described belongs totally so sbcl, other implementations may behave differently.

Since I mentioned uiop/run-program , let’s see how I used it.

User input

User input is hard in a sense that it’s not only about Common Lisp versus the world it’s also about different operating systems, and it’ll be nice if all user input works in emacs repl too.

The simplest ever way exists for yes/no questions and it’s as simple as

( when ( y-or-n-p "Do the thing?" ) ( do-the-thing ))

But let’s say that you want to read an actual input. There is a read-line function that can help. One complication is a prompt message that you may want to display. Simply formatting it to STDOUT will result in bad results in emacs in a sense that prompt text will be shown after actual input. To solve this I found that it’s necessary to force output on a used stream and now prompt function looks like this for me:

( defun prompt-read ( x ) ( format *query-io* "~a: " x ) ( force-output *query-io* ) ( read-line *query-io* ))

And that’s not all, because there is another possible user input which is passwords. Why is it unique? You probably will not want to enter it clear text. Unfortunately, I didn’t find a proper way of doing this magic inside of lisp and in the end the solution was to use stty to manipulate input visibility and run-program and internal bash read function to get user input:

( defun prompt-read-password ( x ) ( format *query-io* "~a: " x ) ( force-output *query-io* ) ( let (( password ( run-program "stty -echo; read val; stty echo; echo $val" :output :string :input :interactive ))) ( string-trim ' ( #\Newline #\Space ) password ) ))

Unfortunately this workaround doesn’t behave well in Emacs slime session.

Storing passwords

Next two are not Common Lisp specific but might be of interest for the curious ones. Since I read the password I wanted to store it to avoid asking for it again and again. However, I wasn’t fond of storing it in clear text and decided to explore system-specific solutions.

Mac os is perfect in this case because of built-in program security that allows to store and retrieve passwords. For Linux (Ubuntu in particular) there are no built-ins, however, after some search I found secret tools that provided similar functionality:

( defun get-password-cmd ( login url ) #- LINUX ( format nil "security find-internet-password -a ~a -s ~a -w" login url ) #+ LINUX ( format nil "secret-tool lookup '~a:login' ~a" url login )) #- LINUX ( defun set-password-cmd ( login url password ) ( format nil "security add-internet-password -a ~a -s ~a -w '~A'" login url password )) #+ LINUX ( defun set-password-cmd ( login url ) ( format nil "secret-tool store --label='~a' '~a:login' '~a'" url url login ))

Why is set-password-cwd signature different? secret-tool will read the password for you and security expects it as an input.

Packaging and running

Since the client is a cli tool, it’s really desired to compile the client system somehow. It’s not difficult by itself but I decided to place an additional restriction there and make it easy to run and install it both in a dev environment and as an easily installable package.

A task of running the system as a script is perfectly solved by roswell script and compilation is done with a buildapp. Since script cannot be used by buildapp to build a system and roswell and buildapp pass slightly different parameters to the entry point I ended up moving entry point logic into a separate package.

Buildapp itself works amazingly well in case lisp and quicklisp are set up on the computer, however, I wanted to make it really easy installable and attaching a binary file to Github release doesn’t sound user friendly for cli tool. The usual way to install a program on Mac OS nowadays is via Homebrew. A specific requirement for homebrew formulas is not to use any kind of additional package manager to build a program, hence quicklisp could not be used as is and I looked for a workaround.

The result was cl-brewer system that generates a Homebrew formula with urls pointing to all the dependencies so that formula can download them all and then use quicklisp and buildapp to make a binary without any additional downloads.

For Linux distributions I didn’t bother to create a package, however making a deb-package or a snap or whatever looks easy enough. It just waits for a hero that will do it.

A little note about arguments parsing. There are libraries for this task in the ecosystem but I ended up using none of them. I wanted to have a command based cli with some interactivity and the only things important in this case were first and maybe the second argument.

Editing

One last bit of user input! What I wanted to do is to allow to invoke a user editor (set by $EDITOR environment variable in case it’s necessary from the cli tool. That also appeared to be not so trivial, because actual implementation differs by Common Lisp implementation used.

Fortunately, I found magic-ed on Github and it magically did the right thing (again, not from inside of emacs, which is unfortunate). Quicklisp didn’t have it and I ended up including it in my code to simplify the build process.

Pre-commit hook

This one is not really Common Lisp specific, but it turned out to be pretty useful. What I really wanted to do is to use the client with git to have all my posts under version control. In this case the best ever flow looks like this:

$ cl-journal new post-slug $ # thanks to magic-ed, an editor opens and you can write your beautiful post $ git add . && git commit -m "another post"

After that new post file along with all the generated metadata should be included in the commit. A trick here is to include all changes in the pre-commit hook. Apparently, git allows that. Here is how current cl-journal pre-commit hook looks like:

#!/usr/bin/env bash cl-journal push git add posts.lisp

Of course, I didn’t figure everything out beforehand, but it took long enough to be worth sharing. Now let’s get to the client internals.