Writing Modules In Python

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Revision as of 04:42, 16 April 2007 by Smong (talk | contribs) (Moving Balls)
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Basic python module

I have tried to comment what is going on in the source. This module demonstrates callbacks, commands and using interfaces.

# demo asss python module
# dec 28 2004 smong

# nearly always use this
from asss import *


# get some interfaces
# see chat.h for where I_CHAT comes from, see other .h files for more (fx:
#  game.h)
chat = get_interface(I_CHAT)


# a callback
# this function is called when a player enters/leaves, see core.h for PA_???
#  constants
def paction(p, action, arena):
    # start indenting
    if action == PA_ENTERARENA:
        # see chat.h for the names of more functions like SendMessage
        chat.SendMessage(p, "hello " + p.name)

# tell asss to call 'paction' when CB_PLAYERACTION is signalled
# see .h files for CB_??? names
cb1 = reg_callback(CB_PLAYERACTION, paction)


# a command
# see cmdman.h for what each parameter does
def c_moo(cmd, params, p, targ):
# help text (?help moo)
    """\
Module: <py> demo
Targets: none
a sample command.
"""
    chat.SendMessage(p, "moo cows")

# tell asss to call 'c_moo' when a player types ?moo
# note: add cmd_moo to conf/groupdef.dir/default so players have permission to
#  use this command.
cmd1 = add_command("moo", c_moo)

# setting chat (or other interfaces), cb* or cmd* to None is equivalent to
#  unregistering that item.

Save this in bin/demo.py. Then ingame make sure pymod is loaded by using ?lsmod and ?insmod. Then add this module with the following command: ?insmod <py> demo. Re-entering the arena and typing ?moo should do some stuff.

Code snippets

The bread and butter of most custom modules.

Callbacks

from asss import *

chat = get_interface(I_CHAT)

def goal(arena, p, bid, x, y):
    chat.SendArenaMessage(arena, "goal.")

cb1 = reg_callback(CB_GOAL, goal) 

Commands

Useful for controlling events, fx: ?elim start. In this case the command is ?t1.

from asss import *

chat = get_interface(I_CHAT)

# cmd = the name of the command, fx: elim
# params = any parameters, fx: start
# p = who sent the command
# targ = player or arena
def c_mycmd(cmd, params, p, targ):
    """\
some help text
"""
    if isinstance(targ, ArenaType):
        chat.SendMessage(p, "command sent to public chat")
    elif isinstance(targ, PlayerType):
        chat.SendMessage(p, "command sent as priv msg to %s" % targ.name)

cmd1 = add_command("t1", c_mycmd)
#where the "t1" is located would be the name of the command, ex: ?t1

You can parse integers from the params using the following code:

try:
    val = int(params)
except ValueError:
    # here the conversion of params from a string to an int failed.
    # change the next line to 'pass' to silently ignore the conversion error,
    # 'return' to exit the function, or 'val = 0' to set a default value to val.
    chat.SendMessage(p, "Integer parameter required.")

Manipulating built-in stats (such as kills/points)

This example makes it so team kills don't effect the wins/losses of both players involved.

stats = get_interface(I_STATS)

def kill(arena, killer, killed, bty, flags, pts, green):
    # This checks to see if the killer killed someone on the same team.
    # If so then it will take away a kill from the killer and take away a death from the killed player.
    # The scores are updated right away and the stats appear as if you never died.

    if killer.freq == killed.freq:
        # stats can be incremented...
        stats.IncrementStat(killer, STAT_KILLS, -1)

        # ...or set to an absolute value
        deaths = stats.GetStat(killed, STAT_DEATHS, INTERVAL_RESET)
        stats.SetStat(killed, STAT_DEATHS, INTERVAL_RESET, deaths - 1)

        # SendUpdates must be called so everyone's F2 box shows the correct values
        stats.SendUpdates()
    
    return pts, green

cb1 = reg_callback(CB_KILL, kill)

More STAT_* types can be found in statcodes.h. If you look at stats.h you can see there is also an IncrementStat function

Per-player/arena data

Use this to store game state, player score, etc.

def shipchange(p, newship, newfreq):
    # prefix mymod_ an abbreviation of your module name to the variable
    #  so that it doesn't clash with other modules. per arena data works
    #  in exactly the same way.
    p.mymod_lastship = p.ship

cb1 = reg_callback(CB_SHIPCHANGE, shipchange)

Persistent per-player data

Note this has changed since 1.4.2. See bin/fg_turf.py for the latest implementation. Or the example at: http://forums.minegoboom.com/viewtopic.php?p=63321#63321

ASSS has built in mechanisms for saving data per player and per arena across sessions (users logging off or server restarting).

You need to provide three functions that will be called by ASSS to save, restore and clear the data. The example below is a complete module.

# each player can save a note that only they can see

from asss import *

chat = get_interface(I_CHAT)

# show and store a note
def c_note(cmd, params, p, targ):
    if params:
        p.note = params
    if p.note:
        chat.SendMessage(p, "note: %s" % p.note)
    else:
        chat.SendMessage(p, "no note set")

cmd1 = add_command("note", c_note)

# return the data to save for player p
# returning None means "don't store a record in the database,
# and delete any record that's there already".
def getpd(p):
    return p.note

# restore the data for player p
def setpd(p, d):
    p.note = d

# reset/clear the data for player p
def clearpd(p):
    p.note = None

mypd = reg_player_persistent(
	7890, INTERVAL_FOREVER, PERSIST_GLOBAL,
	getpd, setpd, clearpd)

Ideally you should load the module when the server starts. Alternatively if you load it dynamically you can kick everyone (not desirable) or alter the code to catch AttributeError when it attempts to read from the per player data .note.

Taking a look at reg_player_persistent the number 7890 is arbitrary, but must be unique for every module using persistent data. Low numbers are reserved for the core modules. INTERVAL_FOREVER is how long this data will be kept for. Interestingly the INTERVAL_* constants are defined in statcodes.h, not persist.h. PERSIST_GLOBAL is defined in persist.h. Here are the respective code extracts (as of Feb 7 2005).

/* these are the possible intervals */
enum interval_t
{
	/* pyconst: enum, "INTERVAL_*" */

	/* these are shared between arenas with the same arenagrp */
	INTERVAL_FOREVER = 0,
	INTERVAL_RESET,
	INTERVAL_MAPROTATION,
	/* these are not shared between arenas */
	INTERVAL_GAME = 5,
	INTERVAL_FOREVER_NONSHARED
};
typedef enum persist_scope_t
{
	/* pyconst: enum, "PERSIST_*" */

	PERSIST_ALLARENAS,
	/* using this for scope means per-player data in every arena */
	/* using this for scope means per-arena data will be stored
	 * per-arena */

	PERSIST_GLOBAL
	/* using this for scope means per-player data shared among all arenas */
	/* using this for scope means per-arena data will be shared among
	 * all arenas (so it will effectively be global data). */
} persist_scope_t;

Note: ASSS must be compiled with the berkeleydb option for persistent data to be available.

Attach/Detach

Attaching and detaching is similar to load/unload in a C module except it is arena specific. So you can use it to initialise per-arena data.

def mm_attach(arena):
    # do stuff with arena
def mm_detach(arena):
    # undo stuff

Looping over all players

This example counts the number of players in an arena.

def count_players(arena):
    # a list must be used as all other variables are immutable to
    #  nested functions.
    players = [0]
    def cb_count(p):
        if p.arena == arena:
            players[0] = players[0] + 1
    for_each_player(cb_count)
    return players[0]

Timers

Good for checking if a game is over yet. A reference to the timer is returned and must be retained (you can use per-arena data to store it). Losing the reference will cancel the timer.

initial is the time in 1/100th's of a second before the nested function timer() will be called, you can cancel the timer before it is called. interval is the time gap, again in 1/100th's of a second between all future calls of timer(). So make_hello_timer(100, 200, arena) will make it send the arena message "hello" every 2 seconds starting from 1 second after make_hello_timer() was called.

The third argument to set_timer (interval) can be omitted and it will be assumed to be the same as initial.

The parameter arena is needed in this case because SendArenaMessage() requires an arena parameter.

def make_hello_timer(initial, interval, arena):
    def timer():
        # announce
        chat.SendArenaMessage(arena, "hello")
        # non-repeating timer. return 1 for it to be called after the next interval
        return 0
    return set_timer(timer, initial, interval)

def somefunc(arena):
    # create a hello timer that will execute after 1 second, and then every
    #  2 seconds until cancelled. timers can cancel themselves, see above.
    myref = make_hello_timer(100, 200, arena)

    # cancel the timer by losing the reference to it
    myref = None

Regions

This is untested but it should go something like this:

mapdata = get_interface(I_MAPDATA)

# regionname is a string, x and y are map tile coords.
def region_contains(arena, regionname, x, y):
    success = 0

    rgn = mapdata.FindRegionByName(arena, regionname)

    if rgn != None and mapdata.Contains(rgn, x, y):
        success = 1

    return success

It is a good idea to cache rgn within per-arena data so you don't add unecessary load to the server looking it up everytime.

You might come across a region callback when browsing the .h files. This is currently (1.4.2) not available in python.

Moving Balls

This is untested but it should go something like this:

balls = get_interface(I_BALLS)

# xy are in tiles
# bid is ball id (0-7, depends how many balls are in the arena)
def move_ball(arena, bid, x, y):
    bd = balldata()
    bd.state = BALL_ONMAP
    bd.x = x * 16
    bd.y = y * 16
    bd.xspeed = bd.yspeed = 0
    bd.carrier = None
    bd.freq = -1
    bd.time = current_ticks()
    balls.PlaceBall(arena, bid, bd)

Targets

Many of the module interfaces use Targets to specifiy which players should be affected by a function call.

# entire arena
tgt = arena

# specific player
tgt = p

# specific freq
tgt = (arena, freq)

# entire zone
tgt = "zone"

# example interface function that requires a tgt
game.WarpTo(tgt, x, y)

Currently (asss 1.4.3) list targets are not supported.

Trouble shooting

Look at the asss console for execution errors (at the time of writing not all errors are relayed to logged in staff), and if that doesn't help, add some chat.SendArenaMessage(ALLARENAS, "i'm at line ...") type messages to locate the buggy piece of code.