Thery Mac OS
Thery Mac OS
I’ve been playing around with the new Mac OS X Lion “file versioning” facility. Ars Technica as usual provides an insightful and detailed explanation of this new feature; Krypted.com provides further low-level details (but, see below).
Purchasing power parity is an economic theory which states that exchange rates over time should move in the direction of equality across national borders in the price charged for an identical.
- This entry was posted on Friday, June 2nd, 2006 at 5:47 pm and is filed under Hardware, Mac OS, Software. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
- Showing posts with label Mac OS X Snow Leopard. Showing posts with label Mac OS X Snow Leopard. Wednesday, November 9, 2016. MacBook 2,1 (2007): Mac OS X Snow Leopard: Installing rEFInd. Analytic number theory (1) Anamorphic format (1) Anatomy (1).
- Mac OS, operating system (OS) developed by the American computer company Apple Inc. The OS was introduced in 1984 to run the company’s Macintosh line of personal computers (PCs). The Macintosh heralded the era of graphical user interface (GUI) systems, and it inspired Microsoft Corporation to develop its own GUI, the Windows OS.
File versioning is, essentially, a consumer-level and user-friendly version control system. Coupled with Lion’s new autosaving functionality, it aims to change and hopefully simplify the way users think about documents. For example, as you type your Pages or TextEdit document, you don’t need to worry about explicitly saving your work: Lion does this for you every once in a while, when you quit the app, or when some other event occurs that requires the system to preserve your work so far. For instance, you can email the document you are working on without first saving it, because Lion does it for you (so what you are sending is exactly what you have written so far). The bottom line is that, ideally, the user should never worry about losing her work. Saving is now a logically distinct operation: it means that the document is currently in a state that the user wants to preserve for possible future reference, even though she may want to continue editing it. Hence, the semantic change in the corresponding entry in the File menu: “Save a version.” If you use a version control system, consider this: “saving” a file just preserves the changes you’ve made, whereas “commiting” a file to a repository makes sure that, should further edits introduce bugs, you can always roll back to working code. In Lion, “saving-as-preserving” happens automatically, whereas “saving-as-committing” requires explicit user intervention, as it should.
Both autosaving and versioning are application-level, not system-level features: that is, they must be supported by each individual applications. This is similar to other Lion features, such as full-screen mode. As you will see, I think this is a very good thing, because—in my opinion—these features do not necessarily make sense for all applications, or in all circumstances. On the other hand, this raises an important question: how do these features interact with traditional file access, be it command-line or Finder-based, or simply via non-versioning apps? If you use Dropbox, this question is relevant: what exactly gets synchronized? Indeed, Dropbox is essentially a fancy front-end to the rsync utility, which I use directly for my work backups (in addition to Dropbox); again, how do versioning and autosaving interact with it?
Autosaving does not present any problems in this respect: once a file is named, further changes are saved just as if the user was a compulsive CMD-S hitter (that is, me). So, rsync and friends work just fine; there are some subtleties related to accessing a file with both a versioning and a non-versioning app, but nothing that interferes with usage: see below for details. The situation for file versioning is a bit more complicated. To investigate possible adverse effects, I had to explore the implementation of this feature. There is some information on the Internet (again, see the aforelinked articles), but a lot of details are missing, and I should warn you that I myself did not go very far—although I did uncover a few interesting tidbits. In case you are wondering, the publicly accessible Apple developer documentation has essentially zero implementation information about file versioning. For all practical purposes, Apple wants you to treat this feature as a black box.
First, the bottom line: file-level access is not hindered in any way by file versioning either. You can continue using Dropbox, rsync, or more generally any non-versioning app, and you will get pretty much the same functionality in Lion as you did in Snow Leopard. This is excellent news. On the other hand, changes made to a file using any non-versioning app will not be versioned by the operating system: again, versioning is an application-level feature, not something that is enforced by the OS. This is probably good, although it does mean that, as far as I can tell, there is no easy way to, for instance, back up versions of a file using rsync (except in a rather inefficient way). Now for the details. This post describes how accessing files with both versioning and non-versioning apps might work from a user, or app perspective; in the next, I turn to some low-level details I was able to uncover, and that I haven’t seen explained elsewhere (but, feel free to provide references if you find them).
Interacting with non-versioning apps: UI considerations
Again, the basic thing to keep in mind is that versioning is application-specific (although possibly, different apps may access the same file and keep a consistent versioning). At the same time, there is no problem accessing files from non-versioning apps. It is best to describe some concrete use cases. The TextEdit (TE) app saves RTF files, which can be opened and edited in any text editor; I used Sublime Text 2 (ST2) as an example.
Here’s a typical, fully-versioned workflow:
Mac Os Mojave
- Create a file in TE
- Add some text, then “save” or “save a version” in TE
- Now add more text in TE, and quit without saving
- Reopen the file with TE
In this case, the window title shows “Edited” next to the document name. Instead, consider the following:
- Create a file in TE
- Add some text, then “save” or “save a version” in TE
- Quit TE
- Now open ST2 and add more text, then save and quit
- Reopen the file with TE
The newly added text will show up in TE; however, the window title will not show “Edited” next to the document name. Also, the cursor will be where it was when you quit TE. Importantly, no new versions are created. In other words, versioning must be implemented along the following lines. First, upon quitting in step 3, TE saves the state of the document under consideration: that is, it records that no editing occurred after the last explicit save. Second, the next time you run TE in Step 5, it reloads the document and the configuration file where its status is saved. The latter configuration file indicates that the user did not edit the document after explicitly saving it, so, as far as TE is concerned, the document is exactly as it was when the user quit TE in step 3, even though it is not.
Again, the way to make sense of this behavior is to think that it is the application (i.e., TE), not the OS, that provides the versioning feature. If you modify a file outside TE, clearly TE knows nothing about it: you shouldn’t expect TE to keep track of such changes. On the other hand, there is one downside with this approach. Consider this sequence of events:
- Create a file in TE
- Add some text, then “save” or “save a version” in TE
- Add some more text in TE, so the file is now marked as “Edited”
- Quit TE
- Now open ST2 and add more text, or delete existing text, then save and quit
- Reopen the file with TE
Upon reopening the file in TE, the document will be marked “Edited.” However, the state of the document will of course reflect the edits done in ST2: the document state at the time you quit TE in step 4 will be lost. In the previous scenario, this was not the case, because we did an explicit save before quitting TE; thus, any change we did in ST2 could be undone by rolling back to the previously saved version. However, this option is no longer available to us in the present scenario. Again, this cannot be helped: TE knows nothing of the modifications in step 5, so when it opens the file in step 6, it just knows that some changes were made since the last save—not which changes.
Theory Mac Os Catalina
The bottom line is that, if you know you will be editing a file using some non-versioning app, as well as a native, versioning app, it is a good idea to explicitly save before quitting. This is, after all, what you have been doing all along—save your documents before quitting, or sharing. The only difference is that Lion-native apps feature autosaving, and hence don’t force you to save upon quitting: you have to remind yourself to do so.
Thery Mac OS