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Tabula

Tabula. Components. GUI. Chat. Board. Log. Network. Patterns in our final design. = Strategy. Singleton. Model View Controller. Factory. Board Subsystem. Problem: A click, drag, move on the canvas means different things in different contexts: Click in erase mode, delete an object.

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Tabula

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  1. Tabula

  2. Components GUI Chat Board Log Network

  3. Patterns in our final design = Strategy Singleton Model View Controller Factory

  4. Board Subsystem • Problem: • A click, drag, move on the canvas means different things in different contexts: • Click in erase mode, delete an object. • Click and drag in ellipse mode, creates and resizes an object. • Dragging in select mode, drags a noose about the canvas. • Need an elegant way to change behavior at runtime.

  5. Solutions? Naive Approach Architectural Approach • Global ‘mode’ variable. • Switching implemented in code • If (mode = ‘draw’) then if (mode = ‘square’) then … else …else if (mode = ‘erase’)…….=select…=edit…=text…. • Use the strategy pattern, by creating Classes of Contexts. • Abstract Context • Well defined interface • Concrete Context • E.g. ContextSquare • Implements methods defined in abstract Context • BoardController • Has abstract Context* field • setContext(); getContext()

  6. Strategy Pattern & Contexts • “…to provide a means to define a family of algorithms, encapsulate each one as an object, and make them interchangeable…

  7. Version/History Solution • Problem: • Need to be able to go back to previous instances of canvas. • Solution: • Some sort of logging system. • Maintain history of all happenings and Events • Drawing, modifications, deletions by who. • Needs to be independent of Qt implementation.

  8. Internal Event Representation • Use classes to represent events. • Need to Draw, Modify, Delete shapes such as Ellipse, Line, Rect etc… • Want it to be extensible • Add new operations in the future. • Add new graphic widgets.

  9. Initial thoughts – Class Explosion • Name classes by what they do. • DrawEllipse, ModifyRect, DeleteLine etc.. • But… • E Operations. (3+); G Graphical Items. (5+) • ExG Classes, at least 15 classes today! Tommorow?! • Class Explosion. • Addition of 1 operation requires 5 classes to be written.

  10. Use the Bridge Pattern. • 3 Event classes, Draw, ModifyDelete • Each event contains a pointer to QGraphicItem. • Would send the graphical object. • Object would arrive and be instantiated. • Could be any of concrete QEllipseItem, Rect, Line, etc… • …but not independent of Qt.

  11. Final Solution • Use bridge pattern. • Instead of events containing QGraphicsItems… • Describe the objects using separate classes. • Objects are described by their (x,y) and width, height • Not by Qt’s representation when instantiated.

  12. Storing logs on disk. • Could write to a log? XML! <Event type=“draw” source=“bob” time=“…”> <Object type =“rect”> <data x=“1” y=“1” width=“10” height=“10”> </Object></Event> • Good for representing logs on disk. • Could compress in future to save space. • Logs will always be meaningful - Qt Independent.

  13. Drawing A Rectangle User clicks ‘Square’ button. ‘Click’ signal is emitted from button. Corresponding SquareButtonClicked() slot* in BoardController catches signal. BoardController‘s Context is set to SquareContext. The context is now set: The behavior of mouse event depends on the code in the SquareContext. SquareButton Board Controller

  14. Mouse Down (Release) Board Controller QGraphicsView BoardModel RectContext Network Log mouseDownEvent(Event) Desc=new Rect() mouseDownEvent(Event) Rect Event=new(Desc) true Temp SendEvent(event) Add(Event) Execute() AddItem(item) AddItem(Item) Publish()

  15. Mouse Move (Rectangle) Board Controller QGraphicsView BoardModel RectContext Network Log mouseUpEvent(Event) Desc=new Rect() mouseUpEvent(Event) Rect Event=new(Desc) true Temp SendEvent(event) Add(Event) Execute() AddItem(item) AddItem(Item) Publish()

  16. Mouse Release (Rectangle) Board Controller QGraphicsView BoardModel RectContext Network Log mouseUpEvent(Event) Desc=new Rect() mouseUpEvent(Event) Rect Event=new(Desc) true Draw SendEvent(event) Add(Event) Execute() AddItem(item) AddItem(Item) Publish()

  17. Timestamps • Issues of a distributed system: • Compare creation time of events • Create a history • Efficiently search for events • Uniquely identify events: • Shapes to be modified • Parent and child events in the history • Solution: Vector clocks (F. Mattern)

  18. Timestamps (1,0,0) P1 (0,0,0) clock tick P2 (0,0,0) P3 (0,0,0) time

  19. Timestamps (1,0,0) P1 (0,0,0) (1,0,0) P2 (0,0,0) update (1,0,0) P3 (0,0,0) update time

  20. Timestamps (1,0,0) < (1,0,1) (1,0,0) P1 (0,0,0) (1,0,0) P2 (0,0,0) (1,0,0) P3 (0,0,0) (1,0,1) time

  21. Timestamps (2,0,0) || (1,0,1) (1,0,0) (2,0,0) (2,0,1) P1 (0,0,0) (1,0,0) P2 (0,0,0) (1,0,0) P3 (0,0,0) (1,0,1) time

  22. Timestamps (1,0,0) (2,0,0) (2,0,1) P1 (0,0,0) (1,0,0) P2 (0,0,0) (1,0,0) P3 (0,0,0) (1,0,1) • clock ticks only modify their own component • timestamps are only increasing • thus, timestamps are unique time

  23. Network • Decentralised: • New peers can connect to any peer in the network • Increases chance of a successful connect when behind a NAT • Robust: • Recovers from network splits caused by disconnected peers • Low response time: • Actions across the network get a result as quickly as possible

  24. Joining A Session • Client A: Creates a new session • Client B: Connects to client A and attempts to authenticate • Client A assigns a unique ID to client B and accepts the authentication • The Unique ID is used as the vector index in timestamps. • It is thus optimal to have low value IDs in the network. A B

  25. Simultaneous Join A B D C • Problem: How do we create a unique ID for each? • Solution: ‘Paxos’ inspired algorithm for consensus within the network • Proposers: A and B - Propose an ID to the network • Acceptors: Accept or reject this ID. • Once all responses are collected, A and B decide who gets the ID via “Conflict Resolution" • The loser of conflict resolution renegotiates with the network, proposing a different ID

  26. Message Paths • Messages are relayed across the network • Topology of the network is decided by connection order • Latency and traffic load are determined by where users connect • Flexible connections allow for NAT punch-through functionality. • Future enhancement: Automatic optimisation of topology?

  27. Reconnects A B D C E • Suppose peer B disconnects. • The network is split • E and D are separated from A and C. • Session failure?

  28. Reconnects A D C E • E attempts to connect to D • D attempts to connect to A • If connection fails another will be attempted until all options are exhausted • If B rejoins the session it will be updated with all past events • No data is lost.

  29. Tug of War • “Slow Connection” • Race condition applies when moving objects • Last to release wins • “Fast Connection” • Temp move events sent • Users continually updated on current position • Temp move events send difference from last position • Multiple movers results in vector sum of movements

  30. Dropped Features • Audio Chat • Provides a more immersive experience • Highly useful for Tablet PC users • RakNet has a VOIP plugin • Problems • Plugin unmaintained • Dependencies support outdated • Cross platform support – just for several year old OS’s • How to combine into logging

  31. Dropped Features • Line correction • Common problem for Tablet PC users • Also of benefit to mouse users • Shape detection • Too ambitious • Could be a project all of its own • Support for adding both through extensions • Hook into Preprocessor • Tabbed canvases • Clever use of versioning system • Multiple instances

  32. Optimisations • Changed from Double Precision Float to Short • Reduced size: ~ 1/4 • Also allowed for RakNet compression: ~ 1/2 • Overall reduction in network traffic: ~1/8 • Adjusted Freeform drawing to send updates • Improved log insertion from O(log n) to O(1) After optimization the majority of our packets are below 256 bytes

  33. Questions

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