Bin_shape_lib.Bin_shapeShape.t are constructed by the bin_shape syntax extension from Ocaml type definitions & expressions.
There is a direct mapping from ocaml type definition syntax to the corresponding Shape.group and from ocaml type expression syntax to the corresponding Shape.t.
val sexp_of_t : t -> Ppx_sexp_conv_lib.Sexp.tTid.t & Vid.t are identifiers for type-constructors & type-vars. i.e. Given type 'a t = ...
module Tid : sig ... endmodule Vid : sig ... endmodule Location : sig ... endLocation.t is required when constructing shapes for which evaluation might fail.
module Uuid : sig ... endUuid.t is used by basetype and annotate.
val group : Location.t -> (Tid.t * Vid.t list * t) list -> groupThis function is generative; repeated calls create distinct groups
val constr : string -> t option -> poly_variant_rowval inherit_ : Location.t -> t -> poly_variant_rowval poly_variant : Location.t -> poly_variant_row list -> tval var : Location.t -> Vid.t -> tBuilt-in types and types with custom serialization: i.e. int,list,... To avoid accidental protocol compatibility, pass a UUID as the string argument
a = annotate s t creates a shape a distinguished, but dependent on shape t. Very much as record [(s,t)] does. But with annotate the ocaml record type does not exist.
Shape.Canonical.t is the result of evaluating a shape to a canonical form, and represents the shape of Ocaml types w.r.t. bin_io serialization.
The idea is that de-serialization is safe if the canonical-shape for the type produced by de-serialization is equivalent to the canonical-shape of the serialized type.
The representation is canonical, so equivalence is structural equality.
Canonical.t also provides a useful human level description of a type.
A Canonical.t can be `digested' to a Digest.t, and except for nearly impossible hash collisions, equality of the digests implies equality of canonical-shapes and hence equivalence at the Shape.t level.
Canonical.t may also be constructed with various functions: annotate, basetype, tuple, record, variant, poly_variant, fix, recurse, .. which might be used when setting up unit tests or expected shapes.
module Digest : sig ... endmodule Canonical : sig ... endval eval : t -> Canonical.teval t returns the canonical-shape for a shape-expression Shape.t. Type aliases are expanded, so that no Tid.t or Vid.t have significance in the resulting canonical-shape. Type-recursion, including non-regular recursion, is translated to the de-bruijn representation used in canonical-shapes.
eval_to_digest t returns a hash-value direct from the Shape.t, potentially avoiding the intermediate Canonical.t from being constructed. This is important as the size of a canonical-shape might be exponential in terms of the size of the shape expression. The following holds: Digest.(eval_to_digest exp = Canonical.to_digest (eval exp))
val eval_to_digest_string : t -> stringeval_to_digest_string t == Digest.to_hex (eval_to_digest t) Convenience function useful for writing unit tests.
module For_typerep : sig ... end