Python Library to implement Simulations, built on Crossbar.io and Django.
$ pip install simpl-modelservice
$ pip install "simpl-modelservice<0.8.0"
$ git clone git@github.com:simplworld/simpl-modelservice.git
$ cd simpl-modelservice
$ mkvirtualenv simpl-modelservice
$ pip install -r dev-requirements.txt
$ pip install -e .
$ python runtests.py
Install bumpversion
:
$ pip install bumpversion
Then, to release a new version, increment the version number with:
$ bumpversion patch
Then push to the repo:
$ git push && git push --tags
Point your browser to http://localhost:8080/monitor and open your javascript console
It's sometimes useful to run crossbar and your own model code as separate processes. By default, run_modelservice
runs crossbar configured to kick off the sub-process run_guest
. You can change this by doing these 3 simple steps:
-
Get a copy of the currently in use crossbar configuration by running
./manage.py run_modelservice --print-config
. This will print the generated configuration file and then run normally. Simply cut-n-paste the configuration which will be a large JSON blob just before the usual Crossbar log messages. -
Edit the configuration to remove the entire
{"type": "guest", ...}
stanza, saved to a file. -
Run each piece separately. If we saved our configuration into
config.json
in the current directly this would look like:./manage.py run_modelservice --config=./config.json --loglevel info --settings=simpl-calc.settings
for the crossbar service and then:
HOSTNAME=localhost PORT=8080 ./manage.py run_guest --settings=simpl-calc.settings
for the modelservice itself.
- GUEST_LOGLEVEL adjust guest process logging, defaults to info
- CROSSBAR_LOGLEVEL adjust crossbar process logging, defaults to info
The profiler will run any method that starts with profile_
one or more times against a different number of workers.
Keep in mind that, unlike unit tests, profile tasks are not isolated.
The modelservice.utils.instruments
contains classes for measuring execution times. Check the module's docstrings for details.
You can collect the result of the task by calling the .publish_stat()
method:
async def profile_random(self):
with Timer() as timer:
some_value = random.random()
self.publish_stat('<unique stat name>', timer.elapsed, fmt='Average result was {stats.mean:.3f}')
The fmt
string will receive an instruments.StatAggregator
instance called stats
.
This object will collect the value from all workers that ran the task and will provide the following properties:
.min
: The lowest collected value.max
: The highest collected value.total
: The sum of the collected values.count
: The number of collected values
Additionally, functions from the statistics
module
are aliased as properties (ie: .mean
, .stdev
, etc.).
- Run the
simpl-games-api
server. - From a model service directory, run its server.
- From the same model service directory, call
profile.sh
. You can useprofile.sh -h
for a list of options.
Some example anonymous profiling tasks are defined in modelservice/profiles
. These tasks are run
unless you use the -m
option to specify a different module path.
To run from a model service directory when logged into an AWS instance,
call aws_profile.sh
. You can use aws_profile.sh -h
for a list of options.
You can have workers that publish and call on WAMP as specific users. Using the .call()
or .publish()
methods,
it can call or publish as the user associated with that worker.
You have the profiler spawn workers as specific users by passing a file with their emails using the -u
option.
You will also need to use the -m
option to specify your task's module path (e.g my_task_module_path
).
Assuming you have a file called myusers.txt
with the following content:
s1@mysim.edu
s2@mysim.edu
s3@mysim.edu
You can then call:
$ profile.sh -m my_task_module_path -u myusers.txt
This will spawn 3 workers, each one set up to .call
and .publish
as one of those users.
To run from a model service directory when logged into an AWS instance, call:
$ aws_profile.sh -m my_task_module_path -u myusers.txt
Both profile.sh
and aws_profile.sh
invoke the profile
management command.
Copyright © 2018 The Wharton School, The University of Pennsylvania
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.