Getting Started (in 30 minutes)

Asteroids in Panini

We will illustrate capsule-oriented programming and Panini's new features using a simplified version of the classic arcade game Asteroids. In this game objective of the player is to score as many points as possible by destroying asteroids. In the simplified game, the player controls a ship that can move left or right. The ship can also fire.

For our problem, the subproblems are modeling the ship, game logic, user input, controller, and UI. The user input component would listen to the keyboard, parse the input, and direct the ship to make corresponding moves. The logic component would maintain the board configuration, generate new asteroids, compute whether any previously generated asteroids have been destroyed by the ship, and compute whether the ship has collided with an asteroid. The ship would move and fire rockets as directed by player. Finally, the controller would mediate the model and the view.

The modular structure of the system is clear from the description above, and it is not difficult to define five modules with appropriate methods corresponding to this design. However, the system will not yet work. The programmer is faced with a number of nontrivial decisions related to concurrency: Which of these components needs to be associated with an execution thread of its own? Which operations must be executed asynchronously? Where is synchronization going to be needed? A human expert might reach the following conclusions.

  1. An independent thread of control is needed to read the user input
  2. The UI, as usual, has its own event-handling thread of control. The calls on the UI need to pass their data to the event handling thread via the UI event queue
  3. The game logic needs to run in a separate thread of control; otherwise, calls to update game state will "steal" the controller thread of control and cause the game to become jittery
  4. The Ship class does not need a dedicated thread of control, however, its methods need to be synchronized, since its data is accessed by both the user input thread and the controller thread

None of the conclusions above, in itself, is difficult to implement in existing programming languages. Rather, in practice it is the process of visualizing the interactions between the components, in order to reach those conclusions, that is extremely challenging for programmers.

Capsule-oriented programming paradigm and the Panini language removes most of this burden so that the programmer can focus on their application's logic.

Architecture and Design

In capsule-oriented programming better design leads to better implicit concurrency, so it is valuable to start off with the architecture and design.

The Panini programmer specifies a system as a collection of capsules, signatures, and ordinary object-oriented classes. A capsule is an abstraction for decomposing a software into its parts and a design is a mechanism for composing these parts together. So the first order of business is to come up with this capsule-oriented design. This involves creating capsules, assigning subtasks to these capsules, designing how these capsules could be connected to each other, and finally integrating them to form a complete program. Each of these steps is fairly straightforward and is done entirely in the program.

  1. Create capsules and assign responsibilities to capsules. In assigning responsibility follow the information-hiding principle. There are four design decisions that are likely to change: ship's representation, game logic, UI design, and how we get input from the player. Therefore, we must hide these responsibility behind interfaces of separate capsules. Finally, capsule Asteroids would encapsulate the design decisions related to controller logic.

         capsule Ship() { }
         capsule Game() { }
         capsule UI() { }
         capsule Input() { }
         capsule Asteroids () { }
    	

    This decision, to implement these components using the capsule abstraction, automatically handles four concurrency concerns mentioned above. Each capsule behaves as if it has an independent thread of control, which resolves issues 1-3 above. Only a single thread of control can ever access a capsule's data, which resolves the fourth issue.

    This illustrates the value proposition of the programming paradigm and the programming language: to enable greater program modularity and in doing so automatically enable greater program concurrency. Observe that Panini does not use explicit concurrency features. Instead, the programmer modularizes a program using capsules, which implicitly specify boundaries outside of which concurrency can occur. The Panini runtime will automatically enable concurrency in between the boundaries of capsules when safe to do so.

  2. Design interconnection between capsules. We do not yet know the interconnection between these five capsules, but it seems to be the case that Input ought to direct the ship to take actions, and UI might need information from Game to present it. Finally, controller Ateroids would need to talk to all of the capsules to be able to control their actions. We can use this knowledge to refine our architecture and design.

         capsule Ship() { }
         capsule Game() { }
         capsule UI(Game g) { }
         capsule Input(Ship s) { }
         capsule Asteroids () { }
    	

    The third line says that the UI capsule could be connected with an external Game capsule. Alternatively, we could read the third line as: "the UI capsule requires a Game capsule." The fourth line says that the Input capsule could be connected with an external Ship capsule, and the first, the second, and the fifth lines says that the Ship, the Game, and the Asteroids capsules may not be connected to any other external capsules.

  3. Integrate capsules to form a complete program. We now know that this program would require one Ship, one UI, one Game, and an Input. These will be co-ordinated by a controller. At this time, we can choose between two alternative designs: have the controller capsule Astroid contain other capsules, or create a new Capsule for that responsibility. We choose to assign this responsibility to the Astroid example, but the other choice is certainly feasible.

    The listing below shows this design of the Asteroids program.

         capsule Ship() { }
         capsule Game() { }
         capsule UI(Game g) { }
         capsule Input(Ship s) { }
         capsule Asteroids () { 
          design {
    		Ship s; UI ui; Game g; Input i;
    		ui(g); i(s);
          }
         }
    	

    Lines six to nine are the new parts of the design for this system. They define the internal design for the Asteroids capsule. This declarative design says that this capsule would have four internal components, one of each kind defined previously. In other word, one capsule instance s of kind Ship, another instance ui of kind UI, an instance g of kind Game, and another instance i of kind Input.

    Unlike object instances, capsules instances do not need to be created using a new expression. It is sufficient to just declare them like line seven above.

    Line eight defines interconnections between capsule instances. Line eight says that the capsule instance ui would be connected with the capsule instance g and capsule instance i would be connected with the capsule instance s.

  4. Check the design. A nice property of Panini is that once you have written the high-level design above, you can check it using the Panini compiler to find out whether you got the capsule definitions and their interconnections right. Copy and paste the code above in a file Asteroids.java and compile it using the Panini compiler. See below for instructions on how to compile and run a Panini program.

Implementation

  1. Capsule Ship. We can now start specifying behavior of each of these capsules. The behavior of capsule ship is fairly straightforward, it should provide facilities to move left and right, to fire, to kill itself, and to check its position and state.

    The behavior of the capsule Ship requires keeping track of its position and its condition. In Panini, a capsule can declare states to keep track of such pieces of information. A state declaration is syntactically the same as a field declaration in object-oriented languages, however, it differs semantically in two ways: first, a state is private to a capsule (there are no public, protected, or static modifiers.), second, all the memory locations that can be reached via this state are uniquely owned by the containing capsule instance. Other capsule instances may not directly access it.

    	 capsule Ship {
    		short state = 0;
    		int x = 5; 
    	 } 
    	

    The listing above shows two states on lines 2 and 3. You could also write state initializers to give them initial values or you could write a capsule initializer as shown in the listing below.

    	 capsule Ship {
    		short state = 0;
    		int x = 5; 
    	 } 
    	

    To allow other capsules to change its state, a capsule can provide capsule procedures, procedures for short. A capsule procedure is syntactically similar to methods in object-oriented languages, however, they are different semantically in two ways: first, a capsule procedures is by default public (although private helper procedures can be declared using the private keyword), and second a procedure invocation is guaranteed to be logically synchronous. In some cases, Panini may be able to run procedures in parallel to improve concurrency in Panini programs. Several example procedures of the capsule Ship are shown below.

    	 capsule Ship {
    		short state = 0;
    		void die() { state = 2; }
    		void fire() { state = 1; }
    		boolean alive() { return state != 2; }
    		boolean isFiring() { 
    			if(state == 1) { state = 0; return true; }
    			return false;
    		}
    		
    		int x = 5; 
    		int getPos() { return x; }
    		void moveLeft() { if (x>0) x--; }
    		void moveRight() { if (x<10) x++; }
    	 } 
    	

    Concurrency concerns in Ship's Design. Recall from our previous discussion that a ship's data is accessed by both the user input component and the controller component. Therefore, in an object-oriented design a human expert may conclude that all of its procedures need to be synchronized. A capsule's semantics gives this behavior by default: it ensures that the ship's data is accessed only by a single thread of control, ever. Thus, this concurrency concern is automatically addressed.

  2. Capsule Asteroids. The behavior of the capsule Asteroids is specially interesting. This capsule declares an autonomous capsule procedure run on line six. Capsule Asteroids is a closed capsule

    A capsule is considered closed, if it does not require access to external capsule instances. In our example, Asteroids is a closed capsule, whereas Input is not. A closed capsule is a complete Panini program, and if it defines autonomous behavior, it can be executed.

    	capsule Asteroids {
    		design {
    			Ship s; UI ui; Game g; Input i;
    			ui(l); i(s);
    		}
    		void run() {
    			int points = 0;
    			while(s.alive()) {
    				int shipPos = s.getPos();
    				boolean isFiring = s.isFiring(); 
    				int result = g.step(shipPos, isFiring);
    				if(result>0) points += result;
    				else if (result<0) s.die();
    				ui.repaint(shipPos, isFiring, points);
    				yield(1000);
    			}
    			ui.endGame(); 
    		}
    	}
    	

    The execution of this program begins by allocating memory for all capsule instances, and connecting them together as specified in the design declaration on lines 2-5. Recall that capsule parameters define the other capsule instances required for a capsule to function. A capsule listed in another capsule's parameter list can be sent messages from that capsule. Design declarations allow a programmer to define the connections between individual capsule instances. These connections are established before execution of any capsule instance begins.

    Next, any capsule with a run procedure begins executing independently as soon as the initialization and interconnection of all capsules is complete and may generate calls to the procedures of other capsules. For example, referring to the code above, capsule Asteroids will run code on 6-18. Capsules without a run procedure, such as Ship, perform computation only when their procedures are invoked. For example, on lines 8,9,10, and 13 procedures of the capsule Ship are invoked on the capsule instance s.

  3. Capsule Input. A simple implementation of the capsule Input is shown below.

    	capsule Input (Ship ship) {
    		void run(){
    			try {
    				while(ship.alive())
    					switch(System.in.read()) {
    						case 106: ship.moveLeft(); break; //Key j
    						case 108: ship.moveRight(); break;//Key l
    						case 105: ship.fire(); break; //Key k
    					}
    			} catch (IOException ioe) {}
    		}
    	}
    	

    This implementation continually checks for user input and directs the ship to move left, right or fire based on the key pressed.

    Concurrency concerns in Input's Design. Note that the semantics of a capsule, i.e. each capsule instance runs as if it has a logically, independent thread of control, naturally satisfies the requirements of the Input capsule.

  4. Capsules Game and UI. These capsules implement the game logic and a user interface that shows position of the ship, and the asteroids. A full implementation is available in the Panini distribution.

Analysis of Benefits

This example illustrates some of the key advantages of the capsule-oriented approach for programmers. These are:

  • They don't need to create explicit threads or specify whether a given capsule needs its own thread of execution.
  • They don't need to recognize or reason about potential data races due to shared data.
  • They work within a familiar method-call style interface with a reasonable expectation of sequential consistency.
  • All synchronization-related details are abstracted away and are fully transparent to them.

Compiling and running Asteroids!

If you haven't installed the Panini compiler yet then please go to section on installing and running the compiler.

You should have received a copy of the full Asteroids program as part of the Panini distribution. This program is located in the directory $PANC_HOME$/examples, where $PANC_HOME$ is the path to the Panini distribution. Copy and save it, say, to the file Asteroids.java in your local directory. If you have put the Panini compiler and the Panini executable in your path, you can compile the program by simply running:

panc Asteroids.java

And then you can run the panini program with:

panini Asteroids

Where Asteroids is the name of the closed capsule that contains other capsule instances.

Now that you've written your first Panini program it is time to familiarize yourself with more complex features of the language. Please continue to the section on language semantics.

Page last modified on $Date: 2013/08/02 03:58:08 $