7e10a615240b
Docs!
author | Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com> |
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date | Thu, 21 Jul 2011 23:11:29 -0400 |
parents | d872d009f16f |
children | 59847578feae |
branches/tags | (none) |
files | docs.markdown |
Changes
--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/docs.markdown Thu Jul 21 23:11:29 2011 -0400 @@ -0,0 +1,145 @@ +Basics +====== + +When you connect to a server you get a `Bot` object back. You can connect with +`(clojurecraft.core/connect {:name "hostname" :port INT})`. + +Once you've got a bot you can query it for data about its world and tell it to +perform actions. + +Data Structures +=============== + +World data is shared between all the bots you create in a single process. This helps +keep memory usage down by not storing duplicate copies of chunk and entity +information for each bot`in the same world. + +Worlds +------ + +`World` objects have several pieces of data. + +Please read the Transactions section to learn why the data is structured the way it +is. + +`(:time world)` is a ref containing the current world time. + +`(:entities world)` is a ref containing a map of entity IDs to `Entity` refs. + +`(:chunks world)` is a ref containing a map of chunk coordinates ([x y z] vectors) +to `Entity` refs. + +Locations +--------- + +`Location` objects represent the locations of entities in the world. They have the +following pieces of data: + +* `(:x location)` +* `(:y location)` +* `(:z location)` +* `(:yaw location)` +* `(:pitch location)` +* `(:stance location)` +* `(:onground location)` + +Entities +-------- + +`Entity` objects represent a single entity in the world. One of these is your bot's +player. + +`(:eid entity)` is the ID of the entity. + +`(:loc entity)` is a `Location` object representing the location of the entity in the +world. + +`(:despawned entity)` is a boolean that indicates whether the entity has despawned. +You should never need to read this, but plase read the Transactions section for the +reason why it's included. + +Chunks +------ + +Blocks +------ + +Bots +---- + +`Bot` objects are your gateway to observing and interacting with the world. + +`(:world bot)` is a `World` object representing the bot's world. + +`(:player bot)` is a ref containing the `Entity` representing the bot. This is just +a shortcut so you don't have to pull it out of the `:entities` map in the bot's world +all the time. + +Transactions +============ + +There are two main types of data you'll want to observe with your bots: chunks and +entities. A `World` object contains two maps: one of entities and one of chunks. + +Each of these maps is a ref, and each of the entries in each map is also a ref. This +may seem excessive -- why not simply make each map a ref *or* each entry a ref? + +### Top-Level Refs + +The maps themselves clearly need to be refs so that multiple bots sharing the same +world can update them safely. + +### Entry Refs + +To understand the reason for making each entity a ref consider a bot with the +following goal: + +"Find all the hostile mobs. Pick the one with the lowest health and attack it." + +Now imagine that during the process of picking a mob to kill the bot received an +update about one of the peaceful entities. + +If the entries of the map were not themselves refs the bot would *have* to +synchronize on the entire map. This peaceful entity update would cause a retry of +the transaction even though the bot doesn't care about peaceful entities at all! + +Making each entity its own ref means we can do the following: + +* Inside of a dosync: + * Find all the hostile mobs. + * `ensure` on all of them. + * Perform our calculations. + +This lets us ignore updates to peaceful mobs, but retry when a hostile mob is updated +(perhaps someone else has killed one). Keeping the "find mobs" step inside the +dosync ensures that if a mob despawns we will be looking at an accurate list the next +time we retry. + +Note that if a new hostile mob is spawned it will not cause a retry. If you are +performing an action that needs perfectly accurate data you can always synchronize +on the maps themselves, but be aware that this will probably not be very performant. + +### Entity Despawns + +This also reveals the reason for the `:despawn` entry in an `Entity` object: if we +simply removed the entity from the map when it despawned any transactions depending +on that entity wouldn't be restarted. + +Actions +======= + +Actions are functions that take a `Bot` object and some arguments and handle writing +the packets to make the bot perform the action. + +### move + +`(clojurecraft.actions/move bot x y z)` + +The `move` action adjusts the location of the bot. This lets it move around the +world. + +At the moment it does not do any error checking, so moving too far at once or moving +into a block will simply be rejected by the server without any warning. + +This action is fairly low level. Expect to see some fun path-finding +algorithms/libraries in the future that will remove the need to call this directly.