• samuelstros 5 hours ago

    Holy moly. I just went to bed. Checking my phone for last time. Opening hackernews for "one last scroll" and see lix, my project, popping up here.

    Going through the questions now. So much for going to bed.

    • samuelstros 5 hours ago

      Learnings from the comments so far: I need to refine the positioning of lix.

      Lix is not a replacement for git. Nor does it target version controlling code as the primary use case.

      A better positioning might be "version control system as a library". The primary use case is embedding lix into applications, AI agents, etc. that need version control.

      I need to to bed now. I have a flight to catch in 6 hours.

      PS I am open to suggestions regarding the positioning!

    • gu5 11 hours ago

      Lix is also a soft fork of the official Nix package manager implementation: https://lix.systems/

      • yjftsjthsd-h 7 hours ago

        I really assumed that this was that; even calling it a universal version control system for binary files would be kind of a weird way of describing it but is plausibly a valid description for the package manager.

      • uasi 7 hours ago

        Git can display diff between binary files using custom diff drivers:

        > Put the following line in your .gitattributes file: *.docx diff=word

        > This tells Git that any file that matches this pattern (.docx) should use the “word” filter when you try to view a diff that contains changes. What is the “word” filter? You have to set it up [in .gitconfig].

        https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Customizing-Git-Git-Attribute...

        • theknarf 6 hours ago

          Would be interesting to see some tooling built around being a custom diff driver for a bunch of different standard formats!

      • ezoe an hour ago

        It seems to me that this is just an issue of diff features. Git can extended to show semantic diff of binary files and it doesn't technically need a completely new VCS.

        As git became the most popular VCS right now and it continues to do so for foreseeable future, I don't think incompatibility with git is a good design choice.

        • micw 7 hours ago

          I wonder how much room this leaves for unintended, not shown changes. E.g. Excel is a complex format that allows all sort of metadata and embeddings that would not always seem as cell changes ...

          • samuelstros 5 hours ago

            Depends on the diff you render and what the plugin tracks.

            In general, lix gives in API to track changes in any file format (via plugins). The "diff noise" thus depends on a) the plugin i.e. does it track them metadata? and b) what is rendered as the diff.

            If the user doesn't care about seeing a diff of metadata in Excel, don't render the metadata in the diff. The latter is trivial because diffing in lix is just a SQL query.

          • notachatbot123 25 minutes ago

            I look at the page and leave without any clue as to what it actually does. Agents and AI are mentioned so I assume it might just be incoherent slop?

            The person behind this boasts on Twitter, that they fired all their remote developers and used AI instead.

            Judging by tweets, this project is 2-3 years in the making.

            > Lix is a universal version control system that can diff any file format (.xlsx, .pdf, .docx, etc).

            > Unlike Git's line-based diffs, Lix understands file structure. Lix sees price: 10 → 12 or cell B4: pending → shipped, not "line 4 changed" or "binary files differ".

            How? I have a custom binary file format, how would Lix be able to interpret this?

            > Lix adds a version control system on top of SQL databases that let's you query virtual tables like file, file_history, etc. via plain SQL. These table's are version controlled.

            What does SQL have to do with everything?

            • danmeier 2 hours ago

              Great semantic diffs, but does Lix actually define a merge algebra for concurrent structured edits, or are conflicts just punted back to humans? How does its SQL engine guarantee deterministic merges vs last-write-wins?

              • thephotonsphere 4 hours ago

                name confusing it be

                https://lix.systems/

                • mog_dev 2 hours ago

                  I wonder if this could be used in conjunction with git for UT5 projects

                  • yoyohello13 8 hours ago

                    Looks cool, but seems kind of weird that it only works through an sdk. Should there be a cli or something?

                    Edit: Oh I see. Seems like their use case is embedding version control into another application.

                    • samuelstros 5 hours ago

                      Correct. Lix has been developed with the embedded use-case in mind.

                      Someone can write a CLI for it. Though, the primary use case is not code version control but embedding into applications

                    • orthoxerox 6 hours ago

                      It's nice, but it needs to support the most common file formats used in gamedev to gain enough traction.

                      • internet_points 3 hours ago

                        They should change the name while they still can https://lix.systems/

                        • anttiharju 6 hours ago

                          for office files one can also unzip and zip to store them in git as plaintext

                          • brnt 5 hours ago

                            Its a pity Word doesnt open it's own OOXml export. At least Libre office has .fodt.

                            • volemo 2 hours ago

                              > Its a pity Word doesnt open it's own OOXml export

                              They can’t. It’s the only thing keeping them relevant.

                          • AmbroseBierce 8 hours ago

                            Git is a command line program so it feels strange that this doesn't seem to support that use case.

                            • samuelstros 5 hours ago

                              Hi,

                              I'm the creator of lix.

                              Lix doesn't target code version control. It can be used for it. But the primary use case is embedding version control in applications. Such an application can be an AI agent that modifies files which entails the need to show what the agent did in that file e.g. tracking the changes.

                              Git is good enough for code. I don't think there is space to gain much market share.

                              • Terretta 23 minutes ago

                                Some feedback about the primary use case.

                                Your Lix doc (LLM written but with typos?) is sort of weird, handwaving how Lix does version control over, say, Excel, to say it's about working with SQL databases:

                                How does Lix work?

                                Lix adds a version control system on top of SQL databases that let's you query virtual tables like file, file_history, etc. via plain SQL. These table's are version controlled.

                                Then it gets weirder:

                                Why this matters:

                                Lix doesn't reinvent databases — durability, ACID, and corruption recovery are handled by battle-tested SQL databases.

                                This seems like a left turn from the value prop and why the value prop matters?

                                A firm-wide audit trail of changes to typically opaque file types (M365 files in particular) could be tremendously valuable -- and additive -- compared to the versioning that's baked into the file bundles. The version control is already embedded by the app, what adds value is reporting on or managing that from outside the app.

                                As for how it works, both in the docs and in the comment I'm replying to, it's unclear how any of this interacts with the native version control embedded in M365 apps or why this tool can be trusted as effective at tracking M365 content changes.

                              • hekkle 8 hours ago

                                Based on the product description, it seems that they don't like text, and want to deal in objects. It would feel strange if they did support a terminal, rather than a GUI.

                                • lombasihir 6 hours ago

                                  because its a stupid content tracker. see man git.

                                • solidsnack9000 11 hours ago

                                  It was initially hard for me to understand how this could work but it looks like there is a plugin system?

                                  • samuelstros 5 hours ago

                                    Yes. The tracking works via plugins to keep it generic. Here is a rough illustration:

                                    File change -> Plugin (detects changes) -> Lix

                                    It works surprisingly well because most standard file formats have off the shelf parsers. Parse a file format, and et voila, it is trivial to diff. Then pass on a standard schema for changes to lix and you end up with a generic API to query changes.

                                  • forrestthewoods 8 hours ago

                                    Weird sales pitch. I think Git is super mediocre and a VCS that supports binary files would be awesome.

                                    But then the first thing it talks about is diffing files. Which honestly shouldn’t even be a feature of VCS. That’s just a separate layer.

                                    • samuelstros 5 hours ago

                                      > But then the first thing it talks about is diffing files. Which honestly shouldn’t even be a feature of VCS. That’s just a separate layer.

                                      There is nuance between git line by line diffing and what lix does.

                                      For text diffing it holds true that diffing is a separate layer. Text files are small in size which allows on the fly diffing (that's what git does) by comparing two docs.

                                      On the fly diffing doesn't work for structured file formats like xlsx, fig, dwg etc. It's too expensive. Both in terms of materializing two files at specific commits, and then diffing these two files.

                                      What lix does under the hood is tracking individual changes, _which allows rendering a diff without on the fly diffing_. So lix is kind of responsible for the diffs but only in the sense that it provides a SQL API to query changes between two states. How the diff is rendered is up to the application.

                                      • Antibabelic 7 hours ago

                                        Most version control systems that are not Git support binary. In the industry you most often see Perforce P4 and Subversion being used for that purpose.

                                        • forrestthewoods 7 hours ago

                                          Correct. Perforce is expensive AF and is also kinda meh. They got bought by private equity and haven’t meaningfully improved it for like 15 years. But they’ve got gamedevs by the balls who don’t have an alternative. It’s unfortunate.

                                      • KingMob 5 hours ago

                                        Hi, before you get too wedded to the name, you should be aware that there's already a major nix project called lix: https://lix.systems/.

                                        Before clicking, I assumed this was actually a new feature of theirs that would apply nix build principles of some sort to version control of binaries.

                                        • bibimsz 9 hours ago

                                          compelling problem statement. md and csv have their limit.