Allows starting UI apps and passing the `pikerd` registry socket-addr
args via `--host` or `--port` such that a separate actor tree can be
started by selecting an unused port. This is handy when hacking new
features but while also wishing to run a more stable version of the code
for trading on the same host.
Drop all attempts at rewiring `ViewBox` signals, monkey-patching
relayee handlers, and generally modifying event source public
attributes. Instead take a much simpler approach where the event source
graphics object simply has it's handler dynamically overridden by
a broadcaster function which relays to all consumers using a Python
loop.
The benefits of this much simplified approach include:
- avoiding the tedious and often complex (re)connection of signals between
the source plot and the overlayed consumers.
- requiring zero modification of the public interface of any of the
publisher or consumer `ViewBox`s, no decoration, extra signal
definitions (eg. previous `mouseDragEventRelay` or the like).
- only a single dynamic method override on the event source graphics object
(`ViewBox`) which does the broadcasting work and requires no
modification to handler implementations.
Detailed `.ui._overlay` changes:
- drop `mk_relay_signal()`, `enable_relays()` which removes signal/slot
hacking methodology.
- drop unused `ComposedGridLayout.grid` and `.reverse`, change some
method names: `.insert()` -> `.insert_plotitem()`, `append()` ->
`.append_plotitem()`.
- in `PlotOverlay`, again drop all signal/slot rewiring in
`.add_plotitem()` and instead add our new closure based python-loop in
`broadcast()` routine which is used to override the event-source
object's handler.
- comment out all the auxiliary/want-to-have event source selection
methods for now.
Mainly this involves instantiating our overriden `PlotItem` in a few
places and tweaking type annots. A further detail is that inside
the fsp sub-chart creation code we hide some axes for overlays in the
flows subchart; these were previously somehow hidden implicitly?
Fork out our patch set submitted to upstream in multiple PRs (since they
aren't moving and/or aren't a priority to core) which can be seen in
full from the following diff:
https://github.com/pyqtgraph/pyqtgraph/compare/master...pikers:pyqtgraph:graphics_pin
Move these type extensions into the internal `.ui._pg_overrides` module.
The changes are related to both `pyqtgraph.PlotItem` and `.AxisItem` and
were driven for our need for multi-view overlays (overlaid charts with
optionally synced axis and interaction controls) as documented in the PR
to upstream: https://github.com/pyqtgraph/pyqtgraph/pull/2162
More specifically,
- wrt to `AxisItem` we added lru caching of tick values as per:
https://github.com/pyqtgraph/pyqtgraph/pull/2160.
- wrt to `PlotItem` we adjusted some of the axis management code, namely
adding a standalone `.removeAxis()` and modifying the `.setAxisItems()` logic
to use it in: https://github.com/pyqtgraph/pyqtgraph/pull/2162
as well as some tweaks to `.updateGrid()` to loop through all possible
axes when grid setting.
Details of the original patch to upstream are in:
https://github.com/pyqtgraph/pyqtgraph/pull/2281
Instead of trying to land this we've opted to just copy out that version
of `.debug.Profiler` into our own internals (luckily the class is
entirely self-contained) until such a time when we choose to find
a better dependency as per https://github.com/pikers/piker/issues/337
To make it easier to manually read/decipher long ledger files this adds
`dict` sorting based on record-type-specific (api vs. flex report)
datetime processing prior to ledger file write.
- break up parsers into separate routines for flex and api record
processing.
- add `parse_flex_dt()` for special handling of the weird semicolon
stamps in flex reports.
There never was any underlying db bug, it was a hardcoded timeframe in
the column series write key.. Now we always assert a matching timeframe
in results.
Not only improves startup latency but also avoids a bug where the rt
buffer was being tsdb-history prepended *before* the backfilling of
recent data from the backend was complete resulting in our of order
frames in shm.
Factor the multi-sample-rate region UI connecting into a new helper
`link_views_with_region()` which reads in the shm buffer offsets from
the `Feed` and appropriately connects the fast and slow chart handlers
for the linear region graphics. Add detailed comments writeup for the
inter-sampling transform algebra.
If a history manager raises a `DataUnavailable` just assume the sample
rate isn't supported and that no shm prepends will be done. Further seed
the shm array in such cases as before from the 1m history's last datum.
Also, fix tsdb -> shm back-loading, cancelling tsdb queries when either
no array-data is returned or a frame is delivered which has a start time
no lesser then the least last retrieved. Use strict timeframes for every
`Storage` API call.
Turns out querying for a high freq timeframe (like 1sec) will still
return a lower freq timeframe (like 1Min) SMH, and no idea if it's the
server or the client's fault, so we have to explicitly check the sample
step size and discard lower freq series-results. Do this inside
`Storage.read_ohlcv()` and return an empty `dict` when the wrong time
step is detected from the query result.
Further enforcements,
- both `.load()` and `read_ohlcv()` now require an explicit `timeframe:
int` input to guarantee the time step of the output array.
- drop all calls `.load()` with non-timeframe specific input.
Our default sample periods are 60s (1m) for the history chart and 1s for
the fast chart. This patch adds concurrent loading of both (or more)
different sample period data sets using the existing loading code but
with new support for looping through a passed "timeframe" table which
points to each shm instance.
More detailed adjustments include:
- breaking the "basic" and tsdb loading into 2 new funcs:
`basic_backfill()` and `tsdb_backfill()` the latter of which is run
when the tsdb daemon is discovered.
- adjust the fast shm buffer to offset with one day's worth of 1s so
that only up to a day is backfilled as history in the fast chart.
- adjust bus task starting in `manage_history()` to deliver back the
offset indices for both fast and slow shms and set them on the
`Feed` object as `.izero_hist/rt: int` values:
- allows the chart-UI linked view region handlers to use the offsets
in the view-linking-transform math to index-align the history and
fast chart.
Allows keeping mutex state around data reset requests which (if more
then one are sent) can cause a throttling condition where ib's servers
will get slower and slower to conduct a reconnect. With this you can
have multiple ongoing contract requests without hitting that issue and
we can go back to having a nice 3s timeout on the history queries before
activating the hack.
When a network outage or data feed connection is reset often the
`ib_insync` task will hang until some kind of (internal?) timeout takes
place or, in some (worst) cases it never re-establishes (the event
stream) and thus the backend needs to restart or the live feed will
never resume..
In order to avoid this issue once and for all this patch implements an
additional (extremely simple) task that is started with the real-time
feed and simply waits for any market data reset events; when detected
restarts the `open_aio_quote_stream()` call in a loop using
a surrounding cancel scope.
Been meaning to implement this for ages and it's finally working!
Allows for easier restarts of certain `trio` side tasks without killing
the `asyncio`-side clients; support via flag.
Also fix a bug in `Client.bars()`: we need to return the duration on the
empty bars case..
This allows the history manager to know the decrement size for
`end_dt: datetime` on the next query if a no-data / gap case was
encountered; subtract this in `get_bars()` in such cases. Define the
expected `pendulum.Duration`s in the `.api._samplings` table.
Also add a bit of query latency profiling that we may use later to more
dynamically determine timeout driven data feed resets. Factor the `162`
error cases into a common exception handler block.
When we get a timeout or a `NoData` condition still return a tuple of
empty sequences instead of `None` from `Client.bars()`. Move the
sampling period-duration table to module level.
It doesn't seem to be any slower on our least throttled backend
(binance) and it removes a bunch of hard to get correct frame
re-ordering logic that i'm not sure really ever fully worked XD
Commented some issues we still need to resolve as well.
Manual tinker-testing demonstrated that triggering data resets
completely independent of the frame request gets more throughput and
further, that repeated requests (for the same frame after cancelling on
the `trio`-side) can yield duplicate frame responses. Re-work the
dual-task structure to instead have one task wait indefinitely on the
frame response (and thus not trigger duplicate frames) and the 2nd data
reset task poll for the first task to complete in a poll loop which
terminates when the frame arrives via an event.
Dirty deatz:
- make `get_bars()` take an optional timeout (which will eventually be
dynamically passed from the history mgmt machinery) and move request
logic inside a new `query()` closure meant to be spawned in a task
which sets an event on frame arrival, add data reset poll loop in the
main/parent task, deliver result on nursery completion.
- handle frame request cancelled event case without crash.
- on no-frame result (due to real history gap) hack in a 1 day decrement
case which we need to eventually allow the caller to control likely
based on measured frame rx latency.
- make `wait_on_data_reset()` a predicate without output indicating
reset success as well as `trio.Nursery.start()` compat so that it can
be started in a new task with the started values yielded being
a cancel scope and completion event.
- drop the legacy `backfill_bars()`, not longer used.
Adjust all history query machinery to pass a `timeframe: int` in seconds
and set default of 60 (aka 1m) such that history views from here forward
will be 1m sampled OHLCV. Further when the tsdb is detected as up load
a full 10 years of data if possible on the 1m - backends will eventually
get a config section (`brokers.toml`) that allow user's to tune this.
The `Store.load()`, `.read_ohlcv()` and `.write_ohlcv()` and
`.delete_ts()` now can take a `timeframe: Optional[float]` param which
is used to look up the appropriate sampling period table-key from
`marketstore`.
Allow data feed sub-system to specify the timeframe (aka OHLC sample
period) to the `open_history_client()` delivered history fetching API.
Factor the data keycombo hack into a new routine to be used also from
the history backfiller code when request latency increases; there is
a first draft at trying to use the feed reset to speed up 1m frame
throttling by timing out on the history frame response, but it needs
a lot of fine tuning.
This is a simpler (and oddly more `trio`-nic and/or SC) way to handle
the cancelled-before-acked race for order dialogs. Will allow keeping
the `.req` field as solely an `Order` msg.
When the client is faster then a `brokerd` at submitting and cancelling
an order we run into the case where we need to specify that the EMS
cancels the order-flow as soon as the brokerd's ack arrives. Previously
we were stashing a `BrokerdCancel` msg as the `Status.req` msg (to be
both tested for as a "already cancelled" and sent immediately on ack arrival to
the broker), but for such
cases we can't use that msg to find the fqsn (since only the client side
msgs have it defined) which is required by the new
`Router.client_broadcast()`.
So, Since `Status.req` is supposed to be a client-side flow msg anyway,
and we need the fqsn for client broadcasting, we change this `.req`
value to the client's submitted `Cancel` msg (thus rectifying the
missing `Router.client_broadcast()` fqsn input issue) and build the
`BrokerdCancel` request from that `Cancel` inline in the relay loop
from the `.req: Cancel` status msg lookup.
Further we allow `Cancel` msgs to define an `.account` and adjust the
order mode loop to expect `Cancel` source requests in cancelled status
updates.
Except for paper accounts (in which case we need a trades dialog and
paper engine per symbol to enable simulated clearing) we can rely on the
instrument feed (symbol name) to be the caching key. Utilize
`tractor.trionics.maybe_open_context()` and the new key-as-callable
support in the paper case to ensure we have separate paper clearing
loops per symbol.
Requires https://github.com/goodboy/tractor/pull/329
With the refactor of the dark loop into a daemon task already-open order
relaying from a `brokerd` was broken since no subscribed clients were
registered prior to the relay loop sending status msgs for such existing
live orders. Repair that by adding one more synchronization phase to the
`Router.open_trade_relays()` task: deliver a `client_ready: trio.Event`
which is set by the client task once the client stream has been
established and don't start the `brokerd` order dialog relay loop until
this event is ready.
Further implementation deats:
- factor the `brokerd` relay caching back into it's own `@acm` method:
`maybe_open_brokerd_dialog()` since we do want (but only this) stream
singleton-cached per broker backend.
- spawn all relay tasks on every entry for the moment until we figure
out what we're caching against (any client pre-existing right, which
would mean there's an entry in the `.subscribers` table?)
- rename `_DarkBook` -> `DarkBook` and `DarkBook.orders` -> `.triggers`
This enables "headless" dark order matching and clearing where an `emsd`
daemon subactor can be left running with active dark (or other
algorithmic) orders which will still trigger despite to attached-controlling
ems-client.
Impl details:
- rename/add `Router.maybe_open_trade_relays()` which now does all work
of starting up ems-side long living clearing and relay tasks and the
associated data feed; make is a `Nursery.start()`-able task instead of
an `@acm`.
- drop `open_brokerd_trades_dialog()` and move/factor contents into the
above method.
- add support for a `router.client_broadcast('all', msg)` to wholesale
fan out a msg to all clients.
Establishes a more formalized subscription based fan out pattern to ems
clients who subscribe for order flow for a particular symbol (the fqsn
is the default subscription key for now).
Make `Router.client_broadcast()` take a `sub_key: str` value which
determines the set of clients to forward a message to and drop all such
manually defined broadcast loops from task (func) code. Also add
`.get_subs()` which (hackily) allows getting the set of clients for
a given sub key where any stream that is detected as "closed" is
discarded in the output. Further we simplify to `Router.dialogs:
defaultdict[str, set[tractor.MsgStream]]` and `.subscriptions` as maps
to sets of streams for much easier broadcast management/logic using set
operations inside `.client_broadcast()`.
This patch was originally to fix a bug where new clients who
re-connected to an `emsd` that was running a paper engine were not
getting updates from new fills and/or cancels. It turns out the solution
is more general: now, any client that creates a order dialog will be
subscribing to receive updates on the order flow set mapped for that
symbol/instrument as long as the client has registered for that
particular fqsn with the EMS. This means re-connecting clients as well
as "monitoring" clients can see the same orders, alerts, fills and
clears.
Impl details:
- change all var names spelled as `dialogues` -> `dialogs` to be
murican.
- make `Router.dialogs: dict[str, defaultdict[str, list]]` so that each
dialog id (oid) maps to a set of potential subscribing ems clients.
- add `Router.fqsn2dialogs: dict[str, list[str]]` a map of fqsn entries to
sets of oids.
- adjust all core task code to make appropriate lookups into these 2 new
tables instead of being handed specific client streams as input.
- start the `translate_and_relay_brokerd_events` task as a daemon task
that lives with the particular `TradesRelay` such that dialogs cleared
while no client is connected are still processed.
- rename `TradesRelay.brokerd_dialogue` -> `.brokerd_stream`
- broadcast all status msgs to all subscribed clients in the relay loop.
- always de-reg each client stream from the `Router.dialogs` table on close.
Not sure what exactly happened but it seemed clears weren't working in
some cases without this, also there's no point in spinning the simulated
clearing loop if we're handling a non-clearing tick type.
We haven't been using it for a while and the supposed (remembered)
latency issue on interaction doesn't seem existing after applying the
cache mode. This allows dropping some internal state-logic and generally
simplifying the show-on-hover checks.
Further add `.show_markers()` and `.hide_markers()` as explicit methods
that can be called externally by UI business logic.
Bit of a face palm but obviously `LevelLine.delete()` also removes any
`._marker` from the view which makes it disappear permanently when
moving from non-zero to zero to non-zero positions.. We don't really
need to delete the line since it can be re-used so just remove that
code.
Further this patch removes marker style setting logic from within the
`pp_line()` factory and instead expects the caller to set the correct
"direction" (for long / short) afterward.
- Every time a symbol is switched on chart we need to wait until the
search bar sidepane has been added beside the slow chart before
determining the offset for the pp line's arrow/labels; trigger this in
`GodWidget.load_symbol()` -> required monkeypatching on a
`.mode: OrderMode` to the `.rt_linked` for now..
- Drop the search pane widget removal from the current linked chart,
seems faster?
- On the slow chart override the `LevelMarker.scene_x()` callback to
adjust for the case where no L1 labels are shown beside the y-axis.
Also adds a `GodWidget.resize_all()` helper method which resizes all
sub-widgets and charts to their default ratios and/or parent-widget
dependent defaults using the detected available space on screen. This is
a "default layout" config method that eventually we'll probably want
allow users to customize.
In other words instead of some static view size previously determined by
the accompanying (slow) chart's height, (recursively) calculate the
number of displayed rows and compute the minimal height needed. This
still caps the view at the height of the chart such that the view will
switch to scroll bar mode when too many results are shown and can't all
be fit in the vertical space.
Deats:
- add a ``CompleterView.iter_df_rows()`` which recursively iterates all
rows in depth-first order making it simple to compute the absolute
number of result rows in view and thus the minimal number of pixels to
show all results.
- always pass the height in the `.on_resize()` handler to ensure
triggering the height logic when new results are generated in the
search loop.
Scales the "view" instance that holds search results to the size of the
accompanying "slow chart" for which the search pane is a "sidepane".
A lot of mucking about was required due to resizing of the view
seemingly feeding back into window resizing and further implementing the
sizing logic such that the parent `QSplitter` can be resized as the
user's whim as well.
Details,
- add a `CompleterView._init: bool` which is set once (and only once)
after startup where the first display of the current symbol/feed is
shown allowing and a single *width* padding applied once at startup
to ensure we don't have an awkward line to the right of the longest
result.
- in `.resize_to_results()` only apply a minimum height to the view
using `.setMinimumHeight()` with a down-scaled (`0.91` for now) height
value from input.
- re-implement `CompleterView.show_matches()` to accept and optional
width, heigh tuple and when not supplied pull the slow chart's
dimensions and pass as input to the resize method.
- Make `SearchWidget` x dim sizing policy "fixed".
- register the `SearchWidget` for resize events with god.
- add `.show_only_cache_entries()` for easy results clearing.
- add `.space_dims()` to retrieve slow linked-charts dimensions.
- implement `SearchWidget.on_resize()` which is the caller of all the
previously mentioned resizing routines.
- do resizing and cache entry showing on search loop startup and be sure
to clear to cache when the user selects a symbol-feed with Enter.
It ended up being what'd you expect, races on the accessing shm buffer
data by the UI during the whole "mega-async-startup-everything" phase XD
So we add the following list of ad-hoc startup steps:
- do `.default_view()` on the slow chart after the fast chart is mostly
fully spawned with the intention being to capture the state where the
historical buffer is mostly loaded before sizing the view to the
graphical form of the data.
- resize slow chart sidepanes from the fast chart just before sleeping
forever (and after order mode has booted).
Turns out god widget resizes aren't triggered implicitly by window
resizes, so instead, hook into the window by moving what was our useless
method to that class. Further we explicitly define and declare that our
window has a `.godwidget: GodWidget` and set it up in the bootstrap
phase - in `run_qutractor()` during `trio` guest mode configuration.
Further deatz:
- retype the runtime/bootstrap routines to take a qwidget "type" not an
instance, and drop the whole implicit `.main_widget` stuff.
- delegate into the `GodWidget.on_win_resize()` for any window resize
which then triggers all the custom resize callbacks we already had in
place.
- privatize `ChartnPane.sidepane` so that it can't be mutated willy
nilly without calling `.set_sidepane()`.
- always adjust splitter sizes inside `LinkeSplits.add_plot()`.
More or less moves all the UI related position "nav" logic and graphics
item management into a new `._position.Nav` composite type + api for
high level mgmt of position graphics indicators across multiple charts
(fast and slow).
The slow (history) chart requires it's own y-range checker logic which
needs to be run in 2 cases:
- the last datum is in view and goes outside the previous mx/mn in view
- the chart is incremented a step
Since we need this duplicate logic this patch also factors the incremental
graphics update info "reading" into a new `DisplayState.incr_info()`
method that can be configured to a chart and input state and returns all
relevant "graphics update measure" in a tuple (for now).
Use this method throughout the rest of the display loop for both fast
and slow chart checks and in the `increment_history_view()` slow chart
task.
Use the new `Feed.get_ds_info()` method in a poll loop to definitively
get the inter-chart sampling info and avoid races with shm buffer
backfilling.
Also, factor the history increment closure-task into
`graphics_update_loop()` which will make it clearer how to factor
all the "should we update" logic into some `DisplayState` API.
If you spawn a brokerd set and no `ib` data feed was started (via our
`.data.feed.Feed` api) then there will be no active client loaded and
thus wont' be connected. So in these cases just return nothing, and
I guess we'll figure out real connection failures later?
Add an update call to the display loop to consistently update the last
datum in the history view chart. Compute the inter-chart sampling ratio
and use it to sync the linear region.
Add a first draft of a working `pyqtgraph.LinearRegionItem` link between
a history view chart (+ data set) and the normal real-time "HFT" chart
set.
Add the history view (aka more downsampled data view) chart set to the
rt/hft set's splitter as it's "first widget". Hook up linear region
callbacks to enable syncing between charts including compenstating for
the downsampling rate ration (in this case hardcoded 60 since 1s to 1M,
but we'll actually compute it going forward obvs).
More to come dawgys..
Adds an additional `GodWidget.hist_linked: LinkedSplits` alongside the
renamed `.rt_linked` to enable 2 sets of linked charts with different
sampled data sets/flows. The history set is added without "all the
fixins" for now (i.e. no order mode sidepane or search integration) such
that it is merely a top level chart which shows a much longer term
history and can be added to the UI via embedding the entire history
linked-splits instance into the real-time linked set's splitter.
Further impl deats:
- adjust the `GodWidget._chart_cache: dict[str, tuple]]` to store both
linked split chart sets per symbol so that symbol switching will
continue to work with the added history chart (set).
- rework `.load_symbol()` to operate on both the real-time (HFT) chart
set and the history set.
- rework `LinkedSplits.set_split_sizes()` to compensate for the history
chart and do more detailed height calcs arithmetic to make it appear
by default as a minor sub-chart.
- adjust `LinkedSplits.add_plot()` and `ChartPlotWidget` internals to allow
adding a plot without a sidepane and/or container `ChartnPane`
composite widget by checking for a `sidepane == False` input.
- make `.default_view()` accept a manual y-axis offset kwarg.
- adjust search mode to provide history linked splits to
`.set_chart_symbol()` call.
As part of supporting a "history view" chart which shows downsampled
datums alongside our 1s (or higher) sampled OHLC we need a separate
buffer to store a the slower history from broker backends. This begins
that design by allocating 2 buffers:
- `rt_shm: ShmArray` which maps to a `/dev/shm/` file with `_rt` suffix
- `hist_shm: ShmArray` which maps to a file with `_hist` suffix
Deliver both of these shms back from both `manage_history()` and load
them as `Feed.rt_shm`/`.hist_shm` on the client side.
Impl deats:
- init the rt buffer with the first datum from loaded history and
assign all OHLC values to that row's 'close' and the vlm to 0.
- pass the hist buffer to the backfiller task
- only spawn **one** global sampler array-row increment task per
`brokerd` and pass in the 1s delay which we presume is our lowest
OHLC sample rate for now.
- drop `open_sample_step_stream()` and just move its body contents into
`Feed.index_stream()`
Instead of worrying about the increment period per shm subscription,
just use the value passed as input and presume the caller knows that
only one task is necessary and that the wakeup (sampling) period should
be the shortest that is needed.
It's very unlikely we don't want at least a 1s sampling (both in terms
of task switching cost and general usage) which will eventually ship as
the default "real-time" feed "timeframe". Further, this "fast" increment
sampling task can handle all lower sampling periods (eg. 1m, 5m, 1H)
based on the current implementation just the same.
Also, add a global default sample period as `_defaul_delay_s` for use in
other internal modules.
Clearly, the linter didn't help us here.. but, just pass the
`brokerd` time for now in the `.broker_time` field; we can't get it from
the fill-case incremental updates in the `openOrders` sub. Add some
notes about this and how we might approach for backends with this
limitation.
This fixes a regression added after moving the msg parsing to later in
the order mode startup sequence. The `Allocator` needs to be configured
*to* the initial pos otherwise default settings will show in the UI..
Move the startup config logic from inside `mk_allocator()` to
`PositionTracker.update_from_pp()` and add a flag to allow setting the
`.startup_pp` from the current live one as is needed during initial
load.
In the short case (-ve size) we had a bug where the last sub-slots worth
of exit size would never be limited to zero once the allocator limit pos
size was hit (i.e. you could keep going more -ve on the pos,
exponentially per slot over the limit). It's a simple fix, just
a `max()` around the `l_sub_pp` var used in the next-step-size calc.
Resolves#392
Turns out we were putting too many brokername suffixes in the symbol
field and thus the order mode msg parser wasn't matching the current
asset to said msgs correctly and pps weren't being shown...
This repairs that plus simplifies the order mode initial pos msg loading
to just delegate into `process_trade_msg()` just as is done for
real-time msg updates.
If a setting fails to apply try to log an error msg and revert to the
previous setting by not applying the UI read-update until after the new
`SettingsPane.apply_setting()` call. This prevents crashes when the user
tries to give bad inputs on editable allocator fields.
Previously we only simulated paper engine fills when the data feed
provide L1 queue-levels matched an execution. This patch add further
support for clear-level matches when there are real live clears on the
data feed that are faster/not synced with the L1 (aka usually during
periods of HFT).
The solution was to simply iterate the interleaved paper book entries on
both sides for said tick types and instead yield side-specific predicate
per entry.
Not entirely sure why this all of a sudden became a problem but it seems
price changes on order edits were sometimes resulting in key errors when
modifying paper book entries quickly. This changes the implementation to
not care about matching the last price when keying/popping old orders
and use `bidict`s to more easily pop cleared orders in the paper loop.
When the paper engine is used it seems we can definitely hit races where
order ack msgs arrive close enough to status messages that `trio`
schedules the status processing before the acks. In such cases we want
to be tolerant and not crash but instead warn that we got an
unknown/out-of-order msg.
Quite a simple fix, we just assign the account-specific
`PositionTracker` to the level line's `._on_level_change()` handler
instead of whatever the current `OrderMode.current_pp` is set to.
Further this adds proper pane switching support such that when a user
modifies an order line from an account which is not the currently
selected one, the settings pane is changed to reflect the
account and thus corresponding position info for that account and
instrument B)
We were overwriting the existing loaded orders list in the per client
loop (lul) so move the def above all that.
Comment out the "try-to-cancel-inactive-orders-via-task-after-timeout"
stuff pertaining to https://github.com/erdewit/ib_insync/issues/363 for
now since we don't have a mechanism in place to cancel the re-cancel
task once the order is cancelled - plus who knows if this is even the
best way to do it..
Fills seems to be dual emitted from both the `status` and `fill` events
in `ib_insync` internals and more or less contain the same data nested
inside their `Trade` type. We started handling the 'fill' case to deal
with a race issue in commissions/cost report tracking but we don't
really want to leak that same race to incremental fills vs.
order-"closed" tracking.. So go back to only emitting the fill msgs
on statuses and a "closed" on `.remaining == 0`.
`ib` is super good not being reliable with order event sequence order
and duplication of fill info. This adds some guards to try and avoid
popping the last status status too early if we end up receiving
a `'closed'` before the expected `'fill`' event(s). Further delete the
`status_msg` ref on each iteration to avoid stale reference lookups in
the relay task/loop.
This includes darks, lives and alerts with all connecting clients
being broadcast all existing order-flow dialog states. Obviously
for now darks and alerts only live as long as the `emsd` actor lifetime
(though we will store these in local state eventually) and "live" orders
have lifetimes managed by their respective backend broker.
The details of this change-set is extensive, so here we go..
Messaging schema:
- change the messaging `Status` status-key set to:
`resp: Literal['pending', 'open', 'dark_open', 'triggered',
'closed', 'fill', 'canceled', 'error']`
which better reflects the semantics of order lifetimes and was
partially inspired by the status keys `kraken` provides for their
order-entry API. The prior key set was based on `ib`'s horrible
semantics which sound like they're right out of the 80s..
Also, we reflect this same set in the `BrokerdStatus` msg and likely
we'll just get rid of the separate brokerd-dialog side type
eventually.
- use `Literal` type annots for statuses where applicable and as they
are supported by `msgspec`.
- add additional optional `Status` fields:
-`req: Order` to allow each status msg to optionally ref its
commanding order-request msg allowing at least a request-response
style implicit tracing in all response msgs.
-`src: str` tag string to show the source of the msg.
-`reqid: str | int` such that the ems can relay the `brokerd`
request id both to the client side and have one spot to look
up prior status msgs and
- draft a (unused/commented) `Dialog` type which can be eventually used
at all EMS endpoints to track msg-flow states
EMS engine adjustments/rework:
- use the new status key set throughout and expect `BrokerdStatus` msgs
to use the same new schema as `Status`.
- add a `_DarkBook._active: dict[str, Status]` table which is now used for
all per-leg-dialog associations and order flow state tracking
allowing for the both the brokerd-relay and client-request handler loops
to read/write the same msg-table and provides for delivering
the overall EMS-active-orders state to newly/re-connecting clients
with minimal processing; this table replaces what the `._ems_entries`
table from prior.
- add `Router.client_broadcast()` to send a msg to all currently
connected peers.
- a variety of msg handler block logic tweaks including more `case:`
blocks to be both flatter and improve explicitness:
- for the relay loop move all `Status` msg update and sending to
within each block instead of a fallthrough case plus hard-to-follow
state logic.
- add a specific case for unhandled backend status keys and just log
them.
- pop alerts from `._active` immediately once triggered.
- where possible mutate status msgs fields over instantiating new
ones.
- insert and expect `Order` instances in the dark clearing loop and
adjust `case:` blocks accordingly.
- tag `dark_open` and `triggered` statuses as sourced from the ems.
- drop all the `ChainMap` stuff for now; we're going to make our own
`Dialog` type for this purpose..
Order mode rework:
- always parse the `Status` msg and use match syntax cases with object
patterns, hackily assign the `.req` in many blocks to work around not
yet having proper on-the-wire decoding yet.
- make `.load_unknown_dialog_from_msg()` expect a `Status` with boxed
`.req: Order` as input.
- change `OrderDialog` -> `Dialog` in prep for a general purpose type
of the same name.
`ib` backend order loading support:
- do "closed" status detection inside the msg-relay loop instead
of expecting the ems to do this..
- add an attempt to cancel inactive orders by scheduling cancel
submissions continually (no idea if this works).
- add a status map to go from the 80s keys to our new set.
- deliver `Status` msgs with an embedded `Order` for existing live order
loading and make sure to try an get the source exchange info (instead
of SMART).
Paper engine ported to match:
- use new status keys in `BrokerdStatus` msgs
- use `match:` syntax in request handler loop
Ideally every client that connects to the ems can know its state
(immediately) meaning relay all the order dialogs that are currently
active. This adds full (hacky WIP) support to receive those dialog
(msgs) from the `open_ems()` startup values via the `.started()` msg
from `_emsd_main()`.
Further this adds support to the order mode chart-UI to display existing
(live) orders on the chart during startup. Details include,
- add a `OrderMode.load_unknown_dialog_from_msg()` for processing and
displaying a ``BrokerdStatus`` (for now) msg from the EMS that was not
previously created by the current ems client and registering and
displaying it on the chart.
- break out the ems msg processing into a new
`order_mode.process_trade_msg()` func so that it can be called on the
startup dialog-msg set as well as eventually used a more general low
level auto-strat API (eg. when we get to displaying auto-strat and
group trading automatically on an observing chart UI.
- hackyness around msg-processing for the dialogs delivery since we're
technically delivering `BrokerdStatus` msgs when the client-side
processing technically expects `Status` msgs.. we'll rectify this
soon!
In order to avoid missed existing order message emissions on startup we
need to be sure the client side stream is registered with the router
first. So break out the starting of the
`translate_and_relay_brokerd_events()` task until inside the client
stream block and start the task using the dark clearing loop nursery.
Also, ensure `oid` (and thus for `ib` the equivalent re-used `reqid`)
are cast to `str` before registering the dark book. Deliver the dark
book entries as part of the `_emsd_main()` context `.started()` values.
This seems to have been broken in refactoring from commit 279c899de5
which was never tested against multiple accounts/clients.
The fix is 2 part:
- position tables are now correctly loaded ahead of time and used by
account for each connected client in processing of ledgers and
existing positions.
- a task for each API client is started (as implemented prior) so that
we actually get status updates for every client used for submissions.
Further we add a bit of code using `bisect.insort()` to normalize
ledgers to a datetime sorted list records (though pretty sure the `dict`
transform ruins it?) in an effort to avoid issues with ledger
transaction processing with previously minimized `Position.clears`
tables, which should (but might not?) avoid incorporating clear events
prior to the last "net-zero" positioning state.
This firstly changes `.audit_sizing()` => `.ensure_state()` and makes it
return `None` as well as only error when split ratio denoted (via
config) positions do not size as expected.
Further refinements,
- add an `.expired()` predicate method
- always return a size of zero from `.calc_size()` on expired assets
- load each `pps.toml` entry's clear tabe into `Transaction`s and use
`.add_clear()` during from config init.
In order to avoid issues with reloading ledger and API trades after an
existing `pps.toml` exists we have to make sure we not only avoid
duplicate entries but also avoid re-adding entries that would have been
removed during a prior call to the `Position.minimize_clears()` filter.
The easiest way to do this is to sort on timestamps and avoid adding any
record that pre-existed the last net-zero position ledger event that
`.minimize_clears()` discarded. In order to implement this it means
parsing config file clears table's timestamps into datetime objects for
inequality checks and we add a `Position.first_clear_dt` attr for
storing this value when managing pps in object form but never store it
in the config (since it should be obviously from the sorted clear event
table).
The (partial) fills from this sub are most indicative of clears (also
says support) whereas the msgs in the `ownTrades` sub are only emitted
after the entire order request has completed - there is no size-vlm
remaining.
Further enhancements:
- this also includes proper subscription-syncing inside `subscribe()` with
a small pre-msg-loop which waits on ack-msgs for each sub and raises any
errors. This approach should probably be implemented for the data feed
streams as well.
- configure the `ownTrades` sub to not bother sending historical data on
startup.
- make the `openOrders` sub include rate limit counters.
- handle the rare case where the ems is trying to cancel an order which
was just edited and hasn't yet had it's new `txid` registered.
Since we figured out how to pass through ems dialog ids to the
`openOrders` sub we don't really need to do much with status updates
other then error handling. This drops `process_status()` and moves the
error handling logic into a status handler sub-block; we now just
info-log status updates for troubleshooting purposes.
Why we need so many fields to accomplish passing through a dialog key to
orders is beyond me but this is how they do it with edits..
Allows not having to handle `editOrderStatus` msgs to update the dialog
key table and instead just do it in the `openOrders` sub by checking the
canceled msg for a 'cancel_reason' of 'Order replaced', in which case we
just pop the txid and wait for the new order the kraken backend engine
will submit automatically, which will now have the correct 'userref'
value we passed in via the `newuserref`, and then we add that new `txid`
to our table.
Turns out you can pass both thus making mapping an ems `oid` to
a brokerd-side `reqid` much more simple. This allows us to avoid keeping
as much local dialog state but with still the following caveats:
- ok `editOrder` msgs must update the reqid<->txid map
- only pop `reqids2txids` entries inside the `cancelOrderStatus` handler
If we don't have a pos table built out already (in mem) we can't figure
out the likely dst asset (since there's no pair entry to guide us) that
we should use to search for withdrawal transactions; so move it later.
Further this ports to the new api changes in `piker.pp`` that will land
with #365.