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Globalization Size #225
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Globalization Size #225
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@marek-safar @lewing @steveisok @jkotas @stephentoub @danmoseley @ericstj @safern @eerhardt @richlander @terrajobst I hope you can review and comment on this document so we can form the plan about the issues we need to address. Thanks! |
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In .NET 5.0/6.0 we have introduced the ICU app-local feature which allowed the applications to publish any ICU package as part of the app. To solve the size issue of mobile apps and WebAssembly clients, Marek's team has worked to create size-trimmed ICU packages targeting different mobile platforms and WebAssembly clients. Although this was helpful to move forward, it still takes a lot of effort and needs more to be done. It became clear trimming ICU4C is not easy. It is not as simple as just trimming the data but the ICU code size was big and needs trimming too. Trimming ICU code is not a simple task. The code that thought is isolated and trimmed, caused some problems later as it was used for other parts. Looks full code analysis needed to ensure whatever we trim would be safe and not needed for other parts. | ||
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One of the suggested thoughts is to try to enhance the Globalization Invariant mode and try to make it providing better globalization support. We already tracking doing some of this work in .NET 6.0 in the [issue](https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/issues/43774). Looking at the scenarios we want to enhance/support, I am not convinced enhancing the globalization mode is the path we need to pursue. The reason is, to address all concerned scenarios, we need to offer a range of different trimmed data and functionality options. For example, we need to offer packages for one or a group of cultures. Something like European-only cultures, CJK cultures, Bidi Cultures, full list of cultures...etc. Also, we need to provide functionality options e.g. Cultural collation support, Normalization support, IDN support, casing support...etc. If we can do that, the users can have the freedom to select the level of the functionality they want and would be clear the size cost for every choice. The users will have full control over the functionality level and the size cost. To support that, would make sense we follow the same ICU app-local idea and not just try to add more functionality to the Invariant mode. It would be better too to keep the definition of Globalization Invariant Mode clear and not confusing. This mode is for the applications that don't need globalization support and not for anything else. |
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How does one tell whether or not the app and its dependencies need the different functionality options, like normalization support, etc.? It is nice to give full control to users; but we also need to have a guidance how to take advantage of this support with confidence.
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This is the key. It's not obvious to developers when the various ICU components are used, so I think we will want some idea of how to actually go about changing that.
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How does one tell whether or not the app and its dependencies need the different functionality options, like normalization support, etc.? It is nice to give full control to users; but we also need to have a guidance how to take advantage of this support with confidence.
That is make sense:
- The easy one would be the collation. If the user does not care about linguistic operation and ordinal operation is good enough then can exclude collation all together.
- Normalization would be needed in advanced scenarios like transformation engines (e.g. text to speech, advanced DB searches, semantic string comparisons...etc.). Also, normalization is important part for IDN too.
- IDN support, which need normalization too for advanced scenario (to fully support non-ASCII URLs).
I'll add this info to the doc
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The problem are nuget packages. How does the user knows what the nuget package needs?
For example, Uri parsing needs FormC normalization and I believe that it is slightly broken with invariant mode today. How does one discovers situations like this without trial and error?
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Another simple case to answer: Does Maui need collation? If basic Maui does not need collation, are there Maui controls that do need collation?
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The only way to do that is documenting what could bebroken when excluding any functionality. Maybe in the NuGet spec files itself.
The other idea would have only 2 types of packages. One with the full functionality and the other without. i.e. the second would be missing collation, normalization...etc. That would be closer to Invariant mode except the package will carry some locale data.
Unfortunately, I don't have solid data. so, we may delay support cutting functionality till we get concrete requests for that.
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Another simple case to answer: Does Maui need collation? If basic Maui does not need collation, are there Maui controls that do need collation?
I believe the UI apps in general will need globalization support. Usually, apps have a user facing controls which has a list sorted in the user language. formatting and displaying dates and numbers is common too there. In general, I think Maui would be the first-class platform need globalization.
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In .NET 5.0/6.0 we have introduced the ICU app-local feature which allowed the applications to publish any ICU package as part of the app. To solve the size issue of mobile apps and WebAssembly clients, Marek's team has worked to create size-trimmed ICU packages targeting different mobile platforms and WebAssembly clients. Although this was helpful to move forward, it still takes a lot of effort and needs more to be done. It became clear trimming ICU4C is not easy. It is not as simple as just trimming the data but the ICU code size was big and needs trimming too. Trimming ICU code is not a simple task. The code that thought is isolated and trimmed, caused some problems later as it was used for other parts. Looks full code analysis needed to ensure whatever we trim would be safe and not needed for other parts. | ||
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One of the suggested thoughts is to try to enhance the Globalization Invariant mode and try to make it providing better globalization support. We already tracking doing some of this work in .NET 6.0 in the [issue](https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/issues/43774). Looking at the scenarios we want to enhance/support, I am not convinced enhancing the globalization mode is the path we need to pursue. The reason is, to address all concerned scenarios, we need to offer a range of different trimmed data and functionality options. For example, we need to offer packages for one or a group of cultures. Something like European-only cultures, CJK cultures, Bidi Cultures, full list of cultures...etc. Also, we need to provide functionality options e.g. Cultural collation support, Normalization support, IDN support, casing support...etc. If we can do that, the users can have the freedom to select the level of the functionality they want and would be clear the size cost for every choice. The users will have full control over the functionality level and the size cost. To support that, would make sense we follow the same ICU app-local idea and not just try to add more functionality to the Invariant mode. It would be better too to keep the definition of Globalization Invariant Mode clear and not confusing. This mode is for the applications that don't need globalization support and not for anything else. |
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European-only cultures, CJK cultures, Bidi Cultures
These options have been available in Xamarin for a while. Do we have any data about how often app developers choose the leverage them? How common is it for Xamarin app developers to ship different builds of the app for different regions?
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@marek-safar do we have such data? or do you know if anyone collected such data before.
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libicudata.so.68.2.0.6 28,320,992 | ||
libicui18n.so.68.2.0.6 4,220,936 | ||
libicuuc.so.68.2.0.6 2,479,488 |
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What are the sizes of ICU globalization support for Xamarin apps and Wasm?
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iOS arm64
icudt.dat 1,713,152
icudt_CJK.dat 1,006,224
icudt_EFIGS.dat 602,096
icudt_no_CJK.dat 1,271,296
libicudata.a 720
libicui18n.a 3,536,472
libicuuc.a 2,286,376
Android arm64
icudt.dat 1,512,896
icudt_CJK.dat 966,080
icudt_EFIGS.dat 559,568
icudt_no_CJK.dat 1,082,128
libicudata.a 1,116
libicui18n.a 7,105,274
libicuuc.a 4,267,870
Browser WASM
icudt.dat 1,512,896
icudt_CJK.dat 966,080
icudt_EFIGS.dat 559,568
icudt_no_CJK.dat 1,082,128
libicui18n.a 4,077,896
libicuuc.a 2,510,674
The other architectures have similar sizes so I am omitting them for clarity. Only one of the icudt*.dat
files is linked to the app. They are user selectable through .csproj property and contain differently trimmed configurations (full; Chinese/Japanese/Korean, English/French/Italian/German/Spanish, full without Chinese/Japanese/Korean). Notably it's weird that the iOS data file is bigger and it leads me to believe it's some build configuration error (cc @akoeplinger @directhex).
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I am also not quite sure why the Android libraries would be twice as big on iOS. That would warranty some explanation too.
UPD: Looks like the Android ones may have debug symbols and the iOS ones don't. This is not 100% confirmed but stripping the Android ones reduces the size by around 50% and file
output on the original files in libicu18n.a
shows something like
> lib % file ios-arm64/native/lib/smpdtfmt.ao
ios-arm64/native/lib/smpdtfmt.ao: Mach-O 64-bit object arm64
> lib % file android-arm64/native/lib/smpdtfmt.ao
android-arm64/native/lib/smpdtfmt.ao: ELF 64-bit LSB relocatable, ARM aarch64, version 1 (SYSV), not stripped
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Also, .a files is not what actually ships in the app. It would be more interesting to look at the size contribution after the .a files get statically linked into the app.
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That's not trivial to measure but xamarin/xamarin-macios#10249 (comment) has some numbers. The .a files already contain heavily stripped ICU4C with disabled features.
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Right, I'm an idiot, the transport only contains .a files so we should be stripping whatever those get linked into post-hoc
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The native ICU bits end up being about 380KB compressed on wasm.
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It would be more interesting to look at the size contribution after the .a files get statically linked into the app.
For Blazor WASM - when we go from the "default/full config" to the "min config" (which sets GlobalizationMode.Invariant, plus other things), dotnet.wasm
drops from (all sizes are .br compressed) 737.0 KB
to 384.0 KB
.
@CoffeeFlux can get how much of that is just ICU, but my understanding is the majority of that size decrease is ICU getting linked out. This means the ICU library is contributing about as much code size as all of the mono runtime.
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One thing to note at least for WASM scenarios, I am seeing some people complains about some missing globalization data for their scenario. which suggest we need to have a better coverage or at least to give the option to have better coverage.
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I'll include the numbers reported here by @filipnavara and @CoffeeFlux to the doc. thanks for providing these.
- We need to be in touch with the ICU4X committee communicating our requests and understanding when such features can be available. | ||
- Need to look if we can associate some resources to help with that project especially with the missing features we need in the .NET. | ||
- Need to look at the scope of work to integrate ICU4X to .NET runtime. | ||
- Need to look if we can have a process creating different NuGet packages from the ICU4X repo with data and code customization. |
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ICU4X is written in Rust. I am sure that it will create its share of interesting toolchain problems.
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We put together a minimal proof of concept calling into icu4x from wasm, so it is at least possible (though we ran into a solvable problem with separate allocators fighting each other).
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I am sure that it will create its share of interesting toolchain problems.
It does - I can confirm that from my prototyping.
One mitigation is that we can build the pieces of ICU4X separately from dotnet/runtime
, just like how we consume ICU4C today.
For WASM - a problem I immediately hit was memory allocator differences between ICU4X and mono. We would need to solve that issue in order to use any Rust library in Blazor WASM.
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@eerhardt I recall when we talked to the ICU4X committee they mentioned we can customize the memory allocator too. If that true, so we have a way to make this work. right?
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Tarek, that's correct. Manish mentioned a way to tell it to use the global allocator, but I don't think anyone has actually spent more time on the prototype to actually validate that. I wouldn't consider it a major concern.
Other ideas would be similar to what the ICU4X is trying to do but maybe with scoped level. Here are the options we can try if we didn't go with ICU4X: | ||
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- Invest more in ICU4C trimming. That will need spending more resources doing code analysis and figuring out how we may trim the ICU code to the level that can satisfy the size requirements. | ||
- Write a code wrapper around the CLDR or ICU data. So we'll not use ICU code to access the data. This can work for locale data but I don't think that will be a good option for other functionality like collation as the code is more complicated and not easy to re-implement. |
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ICU is part of the Mac ecosystem. However we cannot directly use it, it's considered private (and using it would result in app rejections).
However it means that for macOS (including Catalyst), iOS, tvOS (and even watchOS) Apple provide their own API built on top of ICU (code and or data).
It might be possible to replace the globalization code to use those API (for the mentioned OS) instead of providing both ICU code and data.
Since most of the code (and data) is part of the OS then the resulting app size should be reduced and closer to the "legacy" numbers. E.g. xamarin/xamarin-macios#10249 (comment)
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I believe the problem with this tends to be APIs not lining up or returning different data from what we've established as the standard on other platforms?
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If the Mac APIs at the end depend on the ICU, then I expect the behavior will be close as if we use ICU directly.
@CoffeeFlux do you have more information about the differences?
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I had a very rough look at how the Cocoa API surface maps to the System.Globalization.Native API surface. It seems to be quite promising even if not a full match. The missing parts could probably be filled in with custom data.
GlobalizationNative_NormalizeString
- NSString decomposedStringWithCanonicalMapping (form D)
- NSString decomposedStringWithCompatibilityMapping (form KD)
- NSString precomposedStringWithCanonicalMapping (form C)
- NSString precomposedStringWithCompatibilityMapping (form KC)
GlobalizationNative_IsNormalized
- ?? (could be mapped to GlobalizationNative_NormalizeString but inefficient)
GlobalizationNative_WindowsIdToIanaId [Not supported on app-local iOS/WASM ICU]
GlobalizationNative_IanaIdToWindowsId [Not supported on app-local iOS/WASM ICU]
GlobalizationNative_GetTimeZoneDisplayName [Not supported on app-local iOS/WASM ICU]
- NSTimeZone name
GlobalizationNative_GetLocaleInfoString
- NSLocale
- LocaleString_LocalizedDisplayName => localizedStringForLocaleIdentifier
- LocaleString_EnglishDisplayName => localeIdentifier / localizedStringForLocaleIdentifier?
- LocaleString_NativeDisplayName => localeIdentifier / localizedStringForLocaleIdentifier?
- LocaleString_LocalizedLanguageName => localizedStringForLanguageCode
- LocaleString_EnglishLanguageName => localizedStringForLanguageCode
- LocaleString_NativeLanguageName => localizedStringForLanguageCode
- LocaleString_EnglishCountryName => localizedStringForCountryCode
- LocaleString_NativeCountryName => localizedStringForCountryCode
- LocaleString_DecimalSeparator => decimalSeparator
- LocaleString_ThousandSeparator => groupingSeparator
- LocaleString_Digits => ?
- LocaleString_MonetarySymbol => currencySymbol
- LocaleString_CurrencyEnglishName => localizedStringForCurrencyCode
- LocaleString_CurrencyNativeName => localizedStringForCurrencyCode
- LocaleString_Iso4217MonetarySymbol => currencySymbol (?)
- LocaleString_MonetaryDecimalSeparator => ?
- LocaleString_MonetaryThousandSeparator => ?
- LocaleString_AMDesignator => calendarIdentifier -> NSCalendar AMSymbol
- LocaleString_PMDesignator => calendarIdentifier -> NSCalendar PMSymbol
- LocaleString_PositiveSign => ?
- LocaleString_NegativeSign => ?
- LocaleString_Iso639LanguageTwoLetterName => languageCode
- LocaleString_Iso639LanguageThreeLetterName => ?
- LocaleString_Iso3166CountryName => countryCode (?)
- LocaleString_Iso3166CountryName2 => ?
- LocaleString_NaNSymbol => ?
- LocaleString_PositiveInfinitySymbol => ?
- LocaleString_ParentName => ?
- LocaleString_PercentSymbol => ?
- LocaleString_PerMilleSymbol => ?
GlobalizationNative_GetLocaleTimeFormat
- NSDateFormatter?
GlobalizationNative_GetLocaleInfoInt
- NSLocale
GlobalizationNative_GetLocaleInfoGroupingSizes
- ??
GlobalizationNative_GetLocales
GlobalizationNative_GetLocaleName
GlobalizationNative_GetDefaultLocaleName
GlobalizationNative_IsPredefinedLocale
- NSLocale
GlobalizationNative_ToAscii
GlobalizationNative_ToUnicode
- No equivalent API for IDN/Punycode?
GlobalizationNative_GetSortHandle
- return reference to NSLocale
GlobalizationNative_CloseSortHandle
- release reference to NSLocale
GlobalizationNative_GetSortVersion
- ??
GlobalizationNative_CompareString
GlobalizationNative_IndexOf
GlobalizationNative_LastIndexOf
- same as GlobalizationNative_IndexOf w/ NSBackwardsSearch
GlobalizationNative_StartsWith
- can be implemented trough GlobalizationNative_CompareString?
GlobalizationNative_EndsWith
- can be implemented trough GlobalizationNative_CompareString?
GlobalizationNative_GetSortKey
- wcsxfrm_l?
GlobalizationNative_ChangeCase
- NSString uppercaseStringWithLocale
- NSString lowercaseStringWithLocale
GlobalizationNative_ChangeCaseInvariant
- NSString uppercaseString
- NSString lowercaseString
GlobalizationNative_ChangeCaseTurkish
- Implemented in S.G.N using u_tolower/u_toupper, so easy to replicate
GlobalizationNative_InitOrdinalCasingPage
- Implemented in S.G.N using u_toupper, so easy to replicate
GlobalizationNative_GetCalendars
GlobalizationNative_GetCalendarInfo
GlobalizationNative_EnumCalendarInfo
GlobalizationNative_GetLatestJapaneseEra
GlobalizationNative_GetJapaneseEraStartDate
- NSCalendar (TBD: details)
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That is a good input to have. This path is worth to explore more.
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Most importantly it seems to cover the collations which are hard to implement. The things I could not find at first glance seem to be simple data retrieval.
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@filipnavara I'll add some section to the doc for the option trying to use the Cocoa APIs for Apple OS's.
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It might be possible to replace the globalization code to use those API (for the mentioned OS) instead of providing both ICU code and data.
Based on Mozilla experience, one consideration I must share is that doing that will lead to your software having diverging capabilities between platforms where you use ICU4C that you vendor in, vs platforms where you rely on the OS one.
ICU API does change, and in particular active large scale software often goes through a cycle where a need for an ICU4C is identitied, requested, supplied and then if the ICU4C can be vendored in, the next release contains new code. If you rely on OS ICU, the path may be extended to many years of wait which may be a late realization of a drag factor if you were to be affected.
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@zbraniecki I agree with your consideration. What we are trying to do here is we weigh the options and see pros and cons for every option. But in general, if consistency across platforms and OS's is available option with reasonable cost for the scenarios we are targeting (e.g. mobile and WebAssembly scenarios) then that should be the option we go with.
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In .NET 5.0/6.0 we have introduced the ICU app-local feature which allowed the applications to publish any ICU package as part of the app. To solve the size issue of mobile apps and WebAssembly clients, Marek's team has worked to create size-trimmed ICU packages targeting different mobile platforms and WebAssembly clients. Although this was helpful to move forward, it still takes a lot of effort and needs more to be done. It became clear trimming ICU4C is not easy. It is not as simple as just trimming the data but the ICU code size was big and needs trimming too. Trimming ICU code is not a simple task. The code that thought is isolated and trimmed, caused some problems later as it was used for other parts. Looks full code analysis needed to ensure whatever we trim would be safe and not needed for other parts. | ||
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One of the suggested thoughts is to try to enhance the Globalization Invariant mode and try to make it providing better globalization support. We already tracking doing some of this work in .NET 6.0 in the [issue](https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/issues/43774). Looking at the scenarios we want to enhance/support, I am not convinced enhancing the globalization mode is the path we need to pursue. The reason is, to address all concerned scenarios, we need to offer a range of different trimmed data and functionality options. For example, we need to offer packages for one or a group of cultures. Something like European-only cultures, CJK cultures, Bidi Cultures, full list of cultures...etc. Also, we need to provide functionality options e.g. Cultural collation support, Normalization support, IDN support, casing support...etc. If we can do that, the users can have the freedom to select the level of the functionality they want and would be clear the size cost for every choice. The users will have full control over the functionality level and the size cost. To support that, would make sense we follow the same ICU app-local idea and not just try to add more functionality to the Invariant mode. It would be better too to keep the definition of Globalization Invariant Mode clear and not confusing. This mode is for the applications that don't need globalization support and not for anything else. |
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Looking at the scenarios we want to enhance/support, I am not convinced enhancing the globalization mode is the path we need to pursue.
Does this mean this document is suggesting / your recommendation is that we close dotnet/runtime#43774 and not do anything around improving the invariant mode? Having read the rest of the doc, I understand the recommendation is to pursue ICU4X for .NET 7, but I can't discern whether that's instead of or in addition to work for .NET 6.
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My understanding of the plan for .NET 6 was (at a minimum) to complete this part of dotnet/runtime#43774:
Make basic lower/upper casing of non-ASCII characters work. The experience is pretty bad today if you are non-English speaking and like to use your native alphabet. The size footprint for doing this does not seem prohibitive.
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I think the meaning of "I am not convinced enhancing the globalization mode is the path we need to pursue." was about adding incremental features trying to get a hybrid between "Invariant mode" and "full globalization support". For example:
- Supporting just locale Date/Number formatting data, but not the full-blown string collation
I think if we want to pursue some of these hybrid features, we would need user data/evidence that shows they would be useful to people.
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I meant not try to add more globalization features to Invariant mode that include not adding even locale data. If we need to add locale data, we'll need to pack these in NuGet packages (as we need to avoid the servicing and maintainability of the data). If we use NuGet packages to support the data, that is mean we are really using app-locale feature and no reason to use Invariant mode in the first place.
I believe the ask in dotnet/runtime#43774 still reasonable for invariant mode. At least the first part as casing is not really core globalization more than string manipulation feature. For the second part, we will support it with a config switch which can be enabled only on the platforms that need it. That is the discussion we had.
cc @CoffeeFlux |
### Plan Suggestion | ||
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ICU4X is the promising path we should pursue to address all concerned scenarios. We can wait a little bit more to get the needed missing functionality implemented in the project and integrate it to .NET as we did with ICU4C. | ||
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This reason for doing this is performance / size. As such, this should be heavily backed by numbers. I think the priority should be to get estimates for where we may land by doing this work.
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The code size for full .NET globalization support: current stripped ICU vs. estimate for ICU4X
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The data size for full .NET globalization support: current stripped ICU vs. estimate for ICU4X
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The code modularity: pick a flagship scenario for code modularity, and show current vs. estimate for ICU4X
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The data modularity: pick a flagship scenario for data modularity, and show current vs. estimate for ICU4X
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estimate for ICU4X
Unfortunately, this is close to impossible at the current time. The features we need just aren't there. So getting any sort of size estimate is purely guessing. We would need to implement the features first.
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Do they have some interesting large chunk implemented that we can triangulate with the same chunk of classic ICU?
It is hard to tell whether ICU4X is promissing path without any numbers.
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Looking through the features on their releases, DateTime formatting might be a candidate (that's what I was trying to prototype against a few months ago), but we don't really use ICU for the formatting logic, just to get the data.
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Yeah, I think it might be possible to get numbers for something but I'm not sure they would be very meaningful at this point. The ICU4X project, given its current state, is inherently speculative.
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@jkotas is Blazor in the first category for you?
Yes, I would expect typical Blazor app to be in the first category.
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Hi, this is Shane from the ICU4X team. I'm happy to get you ballpark figures for code+data size of ICU4C vs ICU4X.
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Mozilla I18n Team is currently running an early signal performance testing of ICU4C vs ICU4X for our JS engine and internal needs. We hope to be able to provide some integration experience and performance/memory numbers within a month. If you're interested, we will be hosting a Deep Dive session in July where we plan to discuss the results (we'll also post them in ICU4X repository).
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Thanks! And, to follow up from above, I posted some ballpark code size figures here:
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@danroth27 can you share more about the globalization scenarios you expect from Blazor users? How many will care enough about size to want to have less than full globalization? And for those, how many would be satisfied with minimal/no globalization support vs configuring some custom subset if available.
Web developers are generally very sensitive to app download size and front end frameworks compete to be as small as possible. So in general I believe web devs will want just enough functionality to run their app and nothing more. There is a subset of web scenarios where app download size is less important, but it is the minority scenario. I suspect there are a significant number of web scenarios that could get by with just invariant mode and some light weight globalization helpers based on browser platform APIs, but @jkotas is probably right that the majority of web apps need broad globalization support, at least enough to handle their target audiences.
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One of the suggested thoughts is to try to enhance the Globalization Invariant mode and try to make it providing better globalization support. We already tracking doing some of this work in .NET 6.0 in the [issue](https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/issues/43774). Looking at the scenarios we want to enhance/support, I am not convinced enhancing the globalization mode is the path we need to pursue. The reason is, to address all concerned scenarios, we need to offer a range of different trimmed data and functionality options. For example, we need to offer packages for one or a group of cultures. Something like European-only cultures, CJK cultures, Bidi Cultures, full list of cultures...etc. Also, we need to provide functionality options e.g. Cultural collation support, Normalization support, IDN support, casing support...etc. If we can do that, the users can have the freedom to select the level of the functionality they want and would be clear the size cost for every choice. The users will have full control over the functionality level and the size cost. To support that, would make sense we follow the same ICU app-local idea and not just try to add more functionality to the Invariant mode. It would be better too to keep the definition of Globalization Invariant Mode clear and not confusing. This mode is for the applications that don't need globalization support and not for anything else. | ||
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### ICU4X |
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I'd love to see a paragraph about high-level goal for globalization dependencies for the future. Few ideas what could be covered
- Will ICU be always required dependency
- What pay-as-you-go schema are we shooting for
- Will we add any tooling/logic to collect used cultures
- etc.
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Would be better if we first agree on the goals. the discussion #225 (comment) is about that and I love to hear your opinion about Jan's suggestion.
- **Android**: Although Android OS comes with the ICU libraries which .NET can use, the OEMs can choose to not include such libraries in their device images. | ||
- **iOS/tvOS**: don't come with an ICU library that .NET can use. .NET had to provide an ICU package to be used in such platforms. | ||
- **Web assembly**: The clients have to be a small size and need to run inside the browser which will not allow accessing any libraries outside the browser. That means WebAssembly clients need to include an ICU package for globalization support. | ||
- Users of the **Alpine Linux containers** which enable `Globalization Invariant Mode` ask for better globalization support without increasing the image size much. |
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What about self-contained console apps, is it always desired to bundle full ICU?
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It depends on the app scenario. If doesn't need Globalization features, then can enable Invariant mode. If it does need the globalization features, then need to bundle the ICU package. This is like what we have today.
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then need to bundle the ICU package
Right, which makes even trivial self-contained Console.WriteLine app over 30MB bigger
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Why you think trivial self-contained Console.WriteLine app will need globalization in the first place?
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Because it's the default and we don't make it anyway easy for developers to move away from it.
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What would you like to see happen to make this easy?
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I can see several things we could do better
- tell the developers which APIs or code patterns in their applications are incompatible fully or partially with invariant mode (different calendars, currency names access, string normalization, etc).
- Write code fixers/suggestions to use Invariant culture or prefer APIs which are not culture-specific more aggressively.
- Consider making InvarintMode default mode with an opt-out for some project types (e.g. console apps)
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### Plan Suggestion | ||
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ICU4X is the promising path we should pursue to address all concerned scenarios. We can wait a little bit more to get the needed missing functionality implemented in the project and integrate it to .NET as we did with ICU4C. |
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I'd like to see more detailed analyzes on where ICU4X can actually help. From the current description, we are trading one generic library with different generic library.
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Isn't the ICU4X listed goals not mentioning that?
The design goals of ICU4X are:
- Small and modular code
- Pluggable locale data
- Availability and ease of use in multiple programming languages
- Written by i18n experts to encourage best practices
I'll add a paragraph describing the differences and gain we get when using ICU4X
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I'll add a paragraph describing the differences and gain we get when using ICU4X
It'd be also helpful where their goals align with ours and where don't
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It'd be also helpful where their goals align with ours and where don't
(ICU4X core team member) - our goals can be fine tuned to match the needs of the industry. The project is young and we're intentionally flexible. I'd love to see such analysis, but I'd also like to suggest that once you identify any misalignments, consider discussing them with us for potential re-alignment by extension of our goals to supply your needs.
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Other ideas would be similar to what the ICU4X is trying to do but maybe with scoped level. Here are the options we can try if we didn't go with ICU4X: | ||
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- Invest more in ICU4C trimming. That will need spending more resources doing code analysis and figuring out how we may trim the ICU code to the level that can satisfy the size requirements. |
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I think we can reject that as an alternative plan. We already spent months of work on this with no measurable improvements.
Other ideas would be similar to what the ICU4X is trying to do but maybe with scoped level. Here are the options we can try if we didn't go with ICU4X: | ||
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- Invest more in ICU4C trimming. That will need spending more resources doing code analysis and figuring out how we may trim the ICU code to the level that can satisfy the size requirements. | ||
- Write a code wrapper around the CLDR or ICU data. So we'll not use ICU code to access the data. This can work for locale data but I don't think that will be a good option for other functionality like collation as the code is more complicated and not easy to re-implement. |
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Can this be expanded beyond a one-line description with a comparison against the other plans?
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.NET 7.0 would be the best to start invest in that and try to start consuming at least the available parts of ICU4X. | ||
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### Alternative Plans |
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Are there other alternatives? What about mixing native APIs with custom code/data or using custom compression for the data as another options?
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what you mean by custom comparison? Do you mean we implement Unicode Collation Algorithm ourselves? I would strongly oppose that as it is complicated and will need a huge effort to maintain it. ICU spent long time refining it to get it to the current shape. or you have other ideas?
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"custom compression", not "custom comparison".
I was actually wondering whether the data are compressed and how. Maybe that would be an explanation for the difference in the data files size between the Andorid/iOS builds if a different compression level/library was used.
Mixing native APIs (as mentioned by @spouliot above) may actually be a way to explore. Sure, you may get slightly different behavior but likely the difference will be smaller than NLS->ICU switch since the underlying iOS API use the ICU data.
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oh, thank you. I misread it. sorry about that.
@ericstj I wonder whether any of the ICU4X folks would be willing to give this a quick look? |
I am seeing @eerhardt already notified the ICU4X folks and pointed them at this document. |
- **Mobile Platforms**: | ||
- **Android**: Although Android OS comes with the ICU libraries which .NET can use, the OEMs can choose to not include such libraries in their device images. | ||
- **iOS/MacCatalyst**: don't come with an ICU library that .NET can use. .NET had to provide an ICU package to be used in such platforms. | ||
- **Web assembly**: The clients have to be a small size and need to run inside the browser which will not allow accessing any libraries outside the browser. That means WebAssembly clients need to include an ICU package for globalization support. |
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To what extent do browsers provide globalization functionality that we could leverage without having to include it in the app?
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@lewing you may have some more info about that as you have investigated such options before. could you please share what you got during then?
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### Plan Suggestion | ||
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ICU4X is the promising path we should pursue to address all concerned scenarios. We can wait a little bit more to get the needed missing functionality implemented in the project and integrate it to .NET as we did with ICU4C. |
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If we plan to be a consumer of ICU4x, should we also plan on being on investor? Where are the resources for ICU4X coming from?
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ICU4X current effort is driven by engineers from Google and Mozilla under the umbrella of a Unicode Charter.
We're curating the project for easy onboarding and put effort to stay inclusive for new contributors.
You can find the PRD and 1.0 Roadmap and if you'd like to contribute anything else, we'd be excited to work with you and incorporate it into our planning.
Co-authored-by: Daniel Roth <daroth@microsoft.com>
This document is to discuss the Globalization size issues. The purpose is to have us all in the same page and to agree about the plan we need to proceed with.