Optional dependencies

Sometimes, we want the ability to express that some functionalities are optional. Since those functionalities may depend on other packages, we also want the ability to mark those dependencies optional.

Let's imagine a simple scenario in which we are developing package "A" and depending on package "B", itself depending on "C". Now "B" just added new functionalities, very convenient but also very heavy. For architectural reasons, they decided to release them as optional features of the same package instead of in a new package. To enable those features, one has to activate the "heavy" option of package "B", bringing a new dependency to package "H". We will mark optional features in dependencies with a slash separator "/". So we have now "A" depends on "B/heavy" instead of previously "A" depends on "B". And the complete dependency resolution is thus now ["A", "B/heavy", "C", "H"].

But what happens if our package "A" start depending on another package "D", which depends on "B" without the "heavy" option? We would now have ["A", "B", "B/heavy", "C", "D", "H"]. Is this problematic? Can we conciliate the fact that both "B" and "B/heavy" are in the dependencies?

Strictly additive optional dependencies

The most logical solution to this situation is to require that optional features and dependencies are strictly additive. Meaning "B/heavy" is entirely compatible with "B" and only brings new functions and dependencies. "B/heavy" cannot change dependencies of "B" only adding new ones. Once this hypothesis is valid for our dependency system, we can model "B/heavy" as a different package entirely, depending on both "B" and "H", leading to the solution ["A", "B", "B/heavy", "C", "D", "H"]. Whatever new optional features that get added to "B" can similarly be modeled by a new package "B/new-feat", also depending on "B" and on its own new dependencies. When dependency resolution ends, we can gather all features of "B" that were added to the solution and compile "B" with those.

Dealing with versions

In the above example, we eluded versions and only talked about packages. Adding versions to the mix actually does not change anything, and solves the optional dependencies problem very elegantly. The key point is that an optional feature package, such as "B/heavy", would depend on its base package, "B", exactly at the same version. So if the "heavy" option of package "B" at version v = 3 brings a dependency to "H" at v >= 2, then we can model dependencies of "B/heavy" at v = 3 by ["B" @ v = 3, "H" @ v >= 2].

Example implementation

A complete example implementation is available in the optional-deps crate of the advanced_dependency_providers repository. Let's give an explanation of that implementation. For the sake of simplicity, we will consider packages of type String and versions of type NumberVersion, which is just a newtype around u32 implementing the Version trait.

Defining an index of packages

We define an Index, storing all dependencies (Deps) of every package version in a double map, first indexed by package, then by version.


#![allow(unused)]
fn main() {
// Use NumberVersion, which are simple u32 for the versions.
use pubgrub::version::NumberVersion as Version;
/// Each package is identified by its name.
pub type PackageName = String;

/// Global registry of known packages.
pub struct Index {
    /// Specify dependencies of each package version.
    pub packages: Map<PackageName, BTreeMap<Version, Deps>>,
}
}

Dependencies listed in the Index include both mandatory and optional dependencies. Optional dependencies are identified, grouped, and gated by an option called a "feature".


#![allow(unused)]
fn main() {
pub type Feature = String;

pub struct Deps {
    /// The regular, mandatory dependencies.
    pub mandatory: Map<PackageName, Dep>,
    /// The optional, feature-gated dependencies.
    pub optional: Map<Feature, Map<PackageName, Dep>>,
}
}

Finally, each dependency is specified with a version range, and with a set of activated features.


#![allow(unused)]
fn main() {
pub struct Dep {
    /// The range dependended upon.
    pub range: Range<Version>,
    /// The activated features for that dependency.
    pub features: Set<Feature>,
}
}

For convenience, we added the add_deps and add_feature functions to help building an index in the tests.


#![allow(unused)]
fn main() {
let mut index = Index::new();
// Add package "a" to the index at version 0 with no dependency.
index.add_deps("a", 0, &[]);
// Add package "a" at version 1 with a dependency to "b" at version "v >= 1".
index.add_deps("a", 1, &[("b", 1.., &[])]);
// Add package "c" at version 1 with a dependency to "d" at version "v < 4" with the feature "feat".
index.add_deps("c", 1, &[("d", ..4, &["feat"])]);
// Add feature "feat" to package "d" at version 1 with the optional dependency to "f" at version "v >= 1".
// If "d" at version 1 does not exist yet in the index, this also adds it with no mandatory dependency,
// as if we had called index.add_deps("d", 1, &[]).
index.add_feature("d", 1, "feat", &[("f", 1.., &[])]);
}

Implementing a dependency provider for the index

Now that our Index is ready, let's implement the DependencyProvider trait on it. As we explained before, we'll need to differenciate optional features from base packages, so we define a new Package type.


#![allow(unused)]
fn main() {
/// A package is either a base package like "a",
/// or a feature package, corresponding to a feature associated to a base package.
pub enum Package {
    Base(String),
    Feature { base: String, feature: String },
}
}

Let's implement the first function required by a dependency provider, choose_package_version. For that we defined the base_pkg() method on a Package that returns the string of the base package. And we defined the available_versions() method on an Index to list existing versions of a given package. Then we simply called the choose_package_with_fewest_versions helper function provided by pubgrub.


#![allow(unused)]
fn main() {
fn choose_package_version<T: Borrow<Package>, U: Borrow<Range<Version>>>(
    &self,
    potential_packages: impl Iterator<Item = (T, U)>,
) -> Result<(T, Option<Version>), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
    Ok(pubgrub::solver::choose_package_with_fewest_versions(
        |p| self.available_versions(p.base_pkg()).cloned(),
        potential_packages,
    ))
}
}

This was very straightforward. Implementing the second function, get_dependencies, requires just a bit more work but is also quite easy. The exact complete version is available in the code, but again, for the sake of simplicity and readability, let's just deal with the happy path.


#![allow(unused)]
fn main() {
fn get_dependencies(
    &self,
    package: &Package,
    version: &Version,
) -> Result<Dependencies<Package, Version>, ...> {
    // Retrieve the dependencies in the index.
    let deps =
        self.packages
            .get(package.base_pkg()).unwrap()
            .get(version).unwrap();

    match package {
        // If we asked for a base package, we simply return the mandatory dependencies.
        Package::Base(_) => Ok(Dependencies::Known(from_deps(&deps.mandatory))),
        // Otherwise, we concatenate the feature deps with a dependency to the base package.
        Package::Feature { base, feature } => {
            let feature_deps = deps.optional.get(feature).unwrap();
            let mut all_deps = from_deps(feature_deps);
            all_deps.insert(
                Package::Base(base.to_string()),
                Range::exact(version.clone()),
            );
            Ok(Dependencies::Known(all_deps))
        },
    }
}
}

Quite easy right? The helper function from_deps is where each dependency is transformed from its String form into its Package form. In pseudo-code (not compiling, but you get how it works) it looks like follows.


#![allow(unused)]
fn main() {
/// Helper function to convert Index deps into what is expected by the dependency provider.
fn from_deps(deps: &Map<String, Dep>) -> DependencyConstraints<Package, Version> {
    deps.iter().map(create_feature_deps)
        .flatten()
        .collect()
}

fn create_feature_deps(
    (base_pkg, dep): (&String, &Dep)
) -> impl Iterator<Item = (Package, Range<Version>)> {
    if dep.features.is_empty() {
        // If the dependency has no optional feature activated,
        // we simply add a dependency to the base package.
        std::iter::once((Package::Base(base_pkg), dep.range))
    } else {
        // Otherwise, we instead add one dependency per activated feature,
        // but not to the base package itself (we could but no need).
        dep.features.iter().map(|feat| {
            (Package::Feature { base: base_pkg, feature: feat }, dep.range)
        })
    }
}
}

We now have implemented the DependencyProvider trait. The only thing left is testing it with example dependencies. For that, we setup few helper functions and we wrote some tests, that you can run with a call to cargo test --lib. Below is one of those tests.


#![allow(unused)]
fn main() {
#[test]
fn success_when_multiple_features() {
    let mut index = Index::new();
    index.add_deps("a", 0, &[("b", .., &["feat1", "feat2"])]);
    index.add_feature("b", 0, "feat1", &[("f1", .., &[])]);
    index.add_feature("b", 0, "feat2", &[("f2", .., &[])]);
    index.add_deps::<R>("f1", 0, &[]);
    index.add_deps::<R>("f2", 0, &[]);
    assert_map_eq(
        &resolve(&index, "a", 0).unwrap(),
        &select(&[
            ("a", 0),
            ("b", 0),
            ("b/feat1", 0),
            ("b/feat2", 0),
            ("f1", 0),
            ("f2", 0),
        ]),
    );
}
}