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A lightweight CLI tool for versioning data alongside source code and building data pipelines.

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Dud

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Dud is a lightweight tool for versioning data alongside source code and building data pipelines. In practice, Dud extends many of the benefits of source control to large binary data.

With Dud, you can commit, checkout, fetch, and push large files and directories with a simple command line interface. Dud stores recipes (a.k.a. stages) for retrieving your data in small YAML files. These stages can be stored in source control to link your data to your code. On top of that, stages can run the commands to generate the data, sort of like Make. Stages can be chained together to create data pipelines. See the Getting Started guide for a hands-on overview.

Dud is pronounced "duhd", not "dood". Dud is not an acronym.

Motivation

Dud is heavily inspired by DVC. DVC addresses the need for data versioning and reproducibility, but its implementation is not without problems. My criticisms of DVC boil down to two things: speed and simplicity. By speed, I mean throughput and responsiveness. By simplicity, I mean doing less--both in project scope and amount of abstraction.

In terms of speed, Dud is generally much faster than DVC. In terms of simplicity, Dud has a smaller, more focused scope, and it is distributed as a standalone executable.

To summarize with an analogy: Dud is to DVC what Flask is to Django. Both Dud and DVC have their strengths. If you want a "batteries included" suite of tools for managing machine learning projects, DVC may be a good fit for you. If data management is your main area of need and you want something lightweight and fast, Dud may be a better fit.

To get down to brass tacks, read on.

Concrete differences with DVC

Dud does not manage experiments and/or metrics.

Dud is solely focused on versioning and reproducing data alongside source code. DVC's scope has grown to encompass a large portion of a traditional machine learning workflow. While an integrated suite of tools has its benefits, if UNIX is any guide, the composition of smaller, more focused tools generally yield more productivity than their monolithic counterparts. For example, there's no reason you couldn't use MLflow or Aim alongside Dud to track your experiments. Dud does not prescribe any solution for experiment tracking, and it doesn't try to enter the new, yet already crowded, marketplace for such tools.

Secondly, versioning data alongside source code is an incredibly useful concept in its own right. Domains beyond machine learning and data science (e.g. game development and digital design) may greatly benefit from this approach to data management without being burdened by extra baggage carried by a specific domain.

Dud commits must always be explicitly invoked; they are never side effects.

For both Dud and DVC, committing data to the cache is one of the most expensive operations that each tool undertakes (in terms of both run-time and I/O). Because of this, Dud puts the user in absolute control of when to commit data. In Dud, commits only happen when you run dud commit.

In contrast, DVC often commits automatically on your behalf as a side effect of other commands (for example, during dvc add and dvc repro). While DVC is trying to be helpful, these implicit commits are often accidental commits. For example, if you're rapidly iterating on a pipeline, you're likely running dvc repro or dvc run repeatedly as you develop. However, DVC will automatically commit the results each time you run dvc repro or dvc run--even if you are just debugging something or tweaking your code. Such accidental commits have a high cost; they turn "rapid development" into "development", and they bloat your cache. (You can disable DVC's implicit commits using the --no-commit flag, but you have to remember to type it each time, and DVC does not support enabling this flag by default, e.g. via configuration file.)

Dud checks out files as symbolic links by default.

When Dud checks out cached files into the workspace, it uses symbolic links (a.k.a. symlinks) by default. Symlinks have a number of benefits that make them an excellent choice for checkouts. First, symlinks require very little I/O to create, so dud checkout usually completes almost instantaneously. Second, symlinks transparently redirect to the cached files themselves, so data isn't duplicated between the workspace and the cache, and your storage space is used efficiently. Last but not least, symlinks make it trivial to check if a file is up-to-date (by checking the link target), so dud status can also be extremely fast.

By default, DVC checks out files as hard copies. (Technically, DVC tries to use reflinks before copies, but very few filesystems support reflinks, so copies are far more likely to be the default.) With hard copies, efficiencies listed above are not possible, so checkouts and status checks are inefficient by default. To its credit, DVC's cache can be configured to use symlinks, but arguably DVC's default cache configuration is not sensible for projects of any significant size.

Running a Dud pipeline never implicitly alters a stage's artifacts.

When you run a pipeline in DVC, DVC will remove all pipeline outputs before running the pipeline's command(s). While this can help ensure reproducible pipelines, it is another implicit behavior the user must consider, and it prevents the user from deciding when stage outputs can safely be reused.

If you don't want DVC to automatically remove outputs for you, you need to explicitly tell it each output you'd like to persist. However, by telling DVC to persist an output, DVC may perform a new and different automatic behavior. If you're using symbolic links (or hard links) for checkouts (which is generally a good idea; see above), DVC will "unprotect" all output links by replacing them with hard copies from the cache. Not only is this behavior surprising, it's also very costly in both runtime and storage.

The result of these two behaviors in DVC means that, in a sensible configuration, stages simply cannot reuse outputs efficiently; the user has little choice but to accept DVC's limitations.

When you run a pipeline Dud, Dud doesn't do any implicit modification of existing files. Dud defers all modification of workspace files to the user. If you want a specific behavior, you should code it into your stage's command. For example, if you want to clear all outputs of a stage prior to it running, you can delete any outputs at the beginning of your command's script. If you want to reuse outputs, you can check for preexisting outputs in your script and choose not to recreate them. Dud's minimalist approach results in a stage's command entirely owning it's own reproducibility; the responsibility is not awkwardly shared between the stage and the tool.

Dud delegates remote cache management to Rclone.

Rclone is a very popular command-line tool which describes itself as "The Swiss army knife of cloud storage." At the time of writing, Rclone has more than 28,000 stars on Github. Rclone supports just about any cloud storage provider you've possibly heard of. (S3, GCS, Dropbox, Backblaze, to name a few.) This is all to say: Rclone is a top-tier choice for moving data around the internet.

Dud internally calls Rclone for all of its remote cache functionality, such as dud fetch and dud push. But Dud doesn't hide the Rclone abstraction entirely. Dud exposes its Rclone configuration file, and it's expected and encouraged that users will use Rclone directly to configure remote storage or interact with their remote data. By using Rclone, Dud's remote cache interface immediately gains the benefit of years of open-source development and a rich, well-documented CLI. This is an example of how Dud embraces the UNIX philosophy and the composition of single-focus tools, as stated above.

In contrast, DVC stiches together various Python packages to support a modest assortment of cloud storage options. At the time of writing, DVC 2.6 supports eleven cloud storage providers, and Rclone 1.56 supports more than fifty. But the amount of cloud storage options isn't the critical disadvantage of DVC's approach. (Both Dud and DVC support the biggest players, such as S3 and GCS.) DVC's critical disadvantage is that they must develop and maintain most of their remote data management stack themselves. If Rclone is any indication, cloud data transfer is a very hard problem, and DVC has their work cut out for them.

In summary, Dud leverages the deep knowledge and effort of the Rclone developers to provide a robust and familiar remote cache experience. DVC plots their own course, and in doing so incurs a steep development cost.

Dud does not use analytics. (And it never will.)

By default, DVC enables embedded analytics. I strongly disagree with this practice, especially in free and open-source software. I will never embed analytics in Dud.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md.

License

BSD-3-Clause. See LICENSE.

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A lightweight CLI tool for versioning data alongside source code and building data pipelines.

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