artiq/doc/manual/writing_a_driver.rst

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Writing a driver
================
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These instructions cover writing a simple driver for a "slow" device, that uses the controller mechanism.
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The controller
--------------
A controller is a piece of software that receives commands from a client over the network (or the ``localhost`` interface), drives a device, and returns information about the device to the client. The mechanism used is remote procedure calls (RPCs) using :class:`artiq.protocols.pc_rpc`, which makes the network layers transparent for the driver's user.
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The controller we will develop is for a "device" that is very easy to work with: the console from which the controller is run. The operation that the driver will implement is writing a message to that console.
For using RPC, the functions that a driver provides must be the methods of a single object. We will thus define a class that provides our message-printing method: ::
class Hello:
def message(self, msg):
print("message: " + msg)
To turn it into a server, we use :class:`artiq.protocols.pc_rpc`. Import the function we will use: ::
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from artiq.protocols.pc_rpc import simple_server_loop
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and add a ``main`` function that is run when the program is executed: ::
def main():
simple_server_loop({"hello": Hello()}, "::1", 3249)
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if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
:tip: Defining the ``main`` function instead of putting its code directly in the ``if __name__ == "__main__"`` body enables the controller to be used as well as a setuptools entry point.
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The parameters ``::1`` and ``3249`` are respectively the address to bind the server to (IPv6 localhost) and the TCP port to use. Then add a line: ::
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#!/usr/bin/env python3
at the beginning of the file, save it to ``hello_controller.py`` and set its execution permissions: ::
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$ chmod 755 hello_controller.py
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Run it as: ::
$ ./hello_controller.py
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and verify that you can connect to the TCP port: ::
$ telnet ::1 3249
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Trying ::1...
Connected to ::1.
Escape character is '^]'.
:tip: Use the key combination Ctrl-AltGr-9 to get the ``telnet>`` prompt, and enter ``close`` to quit Telnet. Quit the controller with Ctrl-C.
Also verify that a target (service) named "hello" (as passed in the first argument to ``simple_server_loop``) exists using the ``artiq_rpctool.py`` program from the ARTIQ front-end tools: ::
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$ artiq_rpctool.py ::1 3249 list-targets
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Target(s): hello
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The client
----------
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Controller clients are small command-line utilities that expose certain functionalities of the drivers. They are optional, and not used very often - typically for debugging and testing.
Create a ``hello_client.py`` file with the following contents: ::
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#!/usr/bin/env python3
from artiq.protocols.pc_rpc import Client
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def main():
remote = Client("::1", 3249, "hello")
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try:
remote.message("Hello World!")
finally:
remote.close_rpc()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
Run it as before, while the controller is running. You should see the message appearing on the controller's terminal: ::
$ ./hello_controller.py
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message: Hello World!
When using the driver in an experiment, for simple cases the ``Client`` instance can be returned by the :class:`artiq.language.db.AutoDB` mechanism and used normally as a device.
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:warning: RPC servers operate on copies of objects provided by the client, and modifications to mutable types are not written back. For example, if the client passes a list as a parameter of an RPC method, and that method ``append()s`` an element to the list, the element is not appended to the client's list.
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Command-line arguments
----------------------
Use the Python ``argparse`` module to make the bind address and port configurable on the controller, and the server address, port and message configurable on the client.
We suggest naming the controller parameters ``--bind`` and ``--port`` so that those parameters stay consistent across controller, and use ``-s/--server`` and ``--port`` on the client.
The controller's code would contain something similar to this: ::
def get_argparser():
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parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Hello world controller")
parser.add_argument("--bind", default="::1",
help="hostname or IP address to bind to")
parser.add_argument("--port", default=3249, type=int,
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help="TCP port to listen to")
return parser
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def main():
args = get_argparser().parse_args()
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simple_server_loop(Hello(), args.bind, args.port)
We suggest that you define a function ``get_argparser`` that returns the argument parser, so that it can be used to document the command line parameters using sphinx-argparse.
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Logging and error handling in controllers
-----------------------------------------
Unrecoverable errors (such as the hardware being unplugged) should cause timely termination of the controller, in order to notify the controller manager which may try to restart the controller later according to its policy. Throwing an exception and letting it propagate is the preferred way of reporting an unrecoverable error.
For the debug, information and warning messages, use the ``logging`` Python module and print the log on the standard error output (the default setting). The logging level is by default "WARNING", meaning that only warning messages and more critical messages will get printed (and no debug nor information messages). By calling the ``verbosity_args()`` with the parser as argument, you add support for the ``--verbose`` (``-v``) and ``--quiet`` (``-q``) arguments in the parser. Each occurence of ``-v`` (resp. ``-q``) in the arguments will increase (resp. decrease) the log level of the logging module. For instance, if only one ``-v`` is present in the arguments, then more messages (info, warning and above) will get printed. If only one ``-q`` is present in the arguments, then only errors and critical messages will get printed. If ``-qq`` is present in the arguments, then only critical messages will get printed, but no debug/info/warning/error.
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The program below exemplifies how to use logging: ::
import argparse
import logging
from artiq.tools import verbosity_args, init_logger
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# get a logger that prints the module name
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
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def get_argparser():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Logging example")
parser.add_argument("--someargument",
help="some argument")
# [...]
verbosity_args(parser) # This adds the -q and -v handling
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return parser
def main():
args = get_argparser().parse_args()
init_logger(args) # This initializes logging system log level according to -v/-q args
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logger.debug("this is a debug message")
logger.info("this is an info message")
logger.warning("this is a warning message")
logger.error("this is an error message")
logger.critical("this is a critical message")
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if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
General guidelines
------------------
* Format your source code according to PEP8. We suggest using ``flake8`` to check for compliance.
* Use new-style formatting (``str.format``) except for logging where it is not well supported, and double quotes for strings.
* The device identification (e.g. serial number) to attach to must be passed as a command-line parameter to the controller. We suggest using ``-s`` and ``--serial`` as parameter name.
* Controllers must be able to operate in "simulation" mode, where they behave properly even if the associated hardware is not connected. For example, they can print the data to the console instead of sending it to the device, or dump it into a file.
* We suggest that the simulation mode is entered by using "sim" in place of the serial number.
* Keep command line parameters consistent across clients/controllers. When adding new command line options, look for a client/controller that does a similar thing and follow its use of ``argparse``. If the original client/controller could use ``argparse`` in a better way, improve it.
* Choose a free default TCP port and add it to the default port list in this manual.