> On Aug 11, 2020, at 10:45, Martin Björklund <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> "Joe Clarke \(jclarke\)" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> At the IETF 108 virtual meeting, Lada asked about what would happen if
>> he converted a YANG module to YIN syntax (or vice versa, or to some
>> other format).  This was during the discussion of the issue of what
>> should happen if a module changes and the only changes are
>> insignificant whitespaces (e.g., strip trailing spaces, change line
>> length of descriptions, etc.).
>> 
>> The authors/contributors discussed on this on our weekly calls, and we
>> propose:
>> 
>> If a module changes and those changes are only insignificant
>> whitespace changes and the syntax of the module remains the same
>> (i.e., YANG to YANG, YIN, YIN, etc.), a new revision of the module
>> MUST be created.  If you are using YANG semver as your revision
>> scheme, you MUST apply a PATCH version bump to that new module
>> revision to indicate an editorial change.
>> 
>> The reasoning behind this decision is that it makes it very clear and
>> unambiguous to consumers that this module has been consciously
>> changed, and those changes are only editorial.  This way one won’t be
>> concerned if they note that a module of a given syntax with the same
>> version but different checksums and diffs wasn’t otherwise
>> manipulated.
> 
> I think this is the wrong way to go.  I clean up formatting issues all
> the time, including IETF modules.  I am pretty sure that if you
> retrieve modules like "ietf-interfaces" or "ietf-yang-types" from
> different vendors' products, you will get modules with differences in
> whitespace - and this is not a problem AFAIK.
> 
> I think it is ok that a simple "diff" show whitespace changes in this
> case.  I don't think it leads to any real problems.

We discussed this on the call.  The thinking was that a long diff output would 
essentially be unwieldy for some modules and important changes might be lost.  
If the versions were the same, it would be ambiguous to the consume as to 
whether or not the module was only changed in trivial (i.e., 
less-than-editorial) or if more substantive changes happened.  If you trust the 
producer, maybe you assume they regenerated the module without trailing 
whitespace (or the like).  We felt there should be a more explicit signal.

> 
>> That said, if a module changes format from one syntax to another but
>> maintains semantic equivalency, then the revision and YANG semver MUST
>> be the same.  In that case, one will use the extension to realize that
>> this module file cannot be directly compared to one of another syntax
>> without looking at compiled or semantic representation.
> 
> This seems a bit inconsistent.  Suppose I round-trip from YANG to YIN
> to YANG, and the result is different whitespace in the two YANG
> modules.  The revision is the same, as explained above.  How is this
> different from changing the whitespace in YANG directly?

We didn’t discuss this directly, but we did discuss auto-generators that could 
do this type of round-tripping.  The general consensus was that you would use 
the same post-processing tool (e.g., pyang -f yang) on the result to ensure 
consistency.  And a consumer would look to a canonical source (like IANA, the 
IETF document, or the vendor) to ensure a consistent module.

In terms of alternate sources, I would think that if one wanted to trust an 
IETF module downloaded from some other site, they could.  If that site did some 
additional formatting, that would be up to the consumer to resolve compared to 
what might be required by a package.  But if the publisher (IETF in this case) 
were to republish a module with these stripped whitespace line endings, then 
that would be a different revision.

Joe

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