As part of solving a final bullet-issue in #455, which is specifically
a case:
- with N > 2 curves, one of which is the "major" dispersion curve" and
the others are "minors",
- we can run into a scenario where some minor curve which gets pinned to
the major (due to the original "pinning technique" -> "align to
major") at some `P(t)` which is *not* the major's minimum / maximum
due to the minor having a smaller/shorter support and thus,
- requires that in order to show then max/min on the minor curve we have
to expand the range of the major curve as well but,
- that also means any previously scaled (to the major) minor curves need
to be adjusted as well or they'll not be pinned to the major the same
way!
I originally was trying to avoid doing the recursive iteration back
through all previously scaled minor curves and instead decided to try
implementing the "per side" curve dispersion detection (as was
originally attempted when first starting this work). The idea is to
decide which curve's up or down "swing in % returns" would determine the
global y-range *on that side*. Turns out I stumbled on the "align to
first" technique in the process: "for each overlay curve we align its
earliest sample (in time) to the same level of the earliest such sample
for whatever is deemed the major (directionally disperse) curve in
view".
I decided (with help) that this "pin to first" approach/style is equally
as useful and maybe often more so when wanting to view support-disjoint
time series:
- instead of compressing the y-range on "longer series which have lesser
sigma" to make whatever "shorter but larger-sigma series" pin to it at
an intersect time step, this instead will expand the price ranges
based on the earliest time step in each series.
- the output global-returns-overlay-range for any N-set of series is equal to
the same in the previous "pin to intersect time" technique.
- the only time this technique seems less useful is for overlaying
market feeds which have the same destination asset but different
source assets (eg. btceur and btcusd on the same chart since if one
of the series is shorter it will always be aligned to the earliest
datum on the longer instead of more naturally to the intersect sample
level as was in the previous approach).
As such I'm going to keep this technique as discovered and will later
add back optional support for the "align to intersect" approach from
previous (which will again require detecting the highest dispersion
curve direction-agnostic) and pin all minors to the price level at which
they start on the major.
Further details of the implementation rework in
`.interact_graphics_cycle()` include:
- add `intersect_from_longer()` to detect and deliver a common datum
from 2 series which are different in length: the first time-index
sample in the longer.
- Rewrite the drafted `OverlayT` to only compute (inversed log-returns)
transforms for a single direction and use 2 instances, one for each
direction inside the `Viz`-overlay iteration loop.
- do all dispersion-per-side major curve detection in the first pass of
all `Viz`s on a plot, instead updating the `OverlayT` instances for
each side and compensating for any length mismatch and
rescale-to-minor cases in each loop cycle.
Previously we were aligning the child's `PlotItem` to the "root" (top
most) overlays `ViewBox`..smh. This is why there was a weird gap on the
LHS next to the 'left' price axes: something weird in the implied axes
offsets was getting jammed in that rect.
Also comments out "the-skipping-of" moving axes from the overlay's
`PlotItem.layout` to the root's linear layout(s) when an overlay's axis
is read as not visible; this isn't really necessary nor useful and if we
want to remove the axes entirely we should do it explicitly and/or
provide a way through the `ComposeGridLayout` API.
Despite there being artifacts when interacting, the speedups when
cross-hair-ing are just too good to ignore. We can always play with
disabling caches when interaction takes place much like we do with feed
pausing.
When zoomed in alot, and thus a quote driven y-range resize takes place,
it makes more sense to increase the `range_margin: float` input to
`._set_yrange()` to ensure all L1 labels stay in view; generally the
more zoomed in,
- the smaller the y-range is and thus the larger the needed margin (on
that range's dispersion diff) would be,
- it's more likely to get a last datum move outside the previous range.
Also, always do overlayT style scaling on the slow chart whenever it
treads.
Since it can be desirable to dynamically adjust inputs to the y-ranging
method (such as in the display loop when a chart is very zoomed in), this
adds such support through a new `yrange_kwargs: dict[Viz, dict]` which
replaces the `yrange` tuple we were passing through prior. Also, adjusts
the y-range margin back to the original 0.09 of the diff now that we can
support dynamic control.
If there is a common `PlotItem` used for a set of `Viz`/curves (on
a given view) we don't need to do overlay scaling and thus can also
short circuit the viz iteration loop early.
Somewhat of a facepalm but, for incremental update of the auto-yrange
from quotes in the display loop obviously we only want to update the
associated `Viz`/viewbox for *that* fqsn. Further we don't need to worry
about the whole "tick margin" stuff since `._set_yrange()` already adds
margin to the yrange by default; thus we remove all of that.
When the caller passes `do_overlay_scaling=False` we skip the given
chart's `Viz` iteration loop, and set the yrange immediately, then
continue to the next chart (if `do_linked_charts` is set) instead of
a `continue` short circuit within the viz sub-loop.
Deats:
- add a `_maybe_calc_yrange()` helper which makes the `yranges`
provided-or-not case logic more terse (factored).
- add a `do_linked_charts=False` short circuit.
- drop the legacy commented swing % calcs stuff.
- use the `ChartView._viz` when `do_overlay_scaling=False` thus
presuming that we want to handle the viz mapped to *this* view box.
- add a `._yrange` "last set yrange" tracking var which keeps record of
the last ymn/ymx value set in `._set_yrange()` BEFORE doing range
margins; this will be used for incremental update in the display loop.
Since each symbol's feed is multiplexed by quote key (an fqsn), we can
avoid scaling overlay curves on any single update, presuming each quote
driven cycle will trigger **only** the specific symbol's curve.
Also disables fsp `.interact_graphics_cycle()` calls for now since it
seems they aren't really that critical to and we should be using the
same technique as above (doing incremental y-range checks/updates) for
FSPs as well.
The reason (fsp) subcharts were not linked-updating correctly was
because of the early termination of the interact update loop when only
one "overlay" (aka no other overlays then the main curve) is detected.
Obviously in this case we still need to iterate all linked charts in the
set (presuming the user doesn't disable this).
Also tweaks a few internals:
- rename `start_datums: dict` -> `overlay_table`.
- compact all "single curve" checks to one logic block.
- don't collect curve info into the `overlay_table: dict` when
`do_overlay_scaling=True`.
Such that we still y-range auto-sort inside
`ChartView.interact_graphics_cycle()` still runs on the unit vlm axis
and we always size such that the y-label stays in view.
Since we pretty much always want the 'bottom' and any side that is not
declared by the caller move the axis hides into this method. Lets us
drop the same calls in `.ui._fsp` and `._display`.
This also disables the auto-ranging back-linking for now since it
doesn't seem to be working quite yet?
In situations where clients are (dynamically) subscribing *while*
broadcasts are starting to taking place we need to handle the
`set`-modified-during-iteration case. This scenario seems to be more
common during races on concurrent startup of multiple symbols. The
solution here is to use another set to take note of subscribers which
are successfully sent-to and then skipping them on re-try.
This also contains an attempt to exception-handle throttled stream
overruns caused by higher frequency feeds (like binance) pushing more
quotes then can be handled during (UI) client startup.
This was a subtle logic error when building the `plots: dict` we weren't
adding the "main (ohlc or other source) chart" from the `LinkedSplits`
set when interacting with some sub-chart from `.subplots`..
Further this tries out bypassing `numpy.median()` altogether by just
using `median = (ymx - ymn) / 2` which should be nearly the same?
In the (incrementally updated) display loop we have range logic that is
incrementally updated in real-time by streams, as such we don't really
need to update all linked chart's (for any given, currently updated
chart) y-ranges on calls of each separate (sub-)chart's
`ChartView.interact_graphics_cycle()`. In practise there are plenty of
cases where resizing in one chart (say the vlm fsps sub-plot) requires
a y-range re-calc but not in the OHLC price chart. Therefore
we always avoid doing more resizing then necessary despite it resulting
in potentially more method call overhead (which will later be justified
by better leveraging incrementally updated `Viz.maxmin()` and
`media_from_range()` calcs).
A super snappy `numpy.median()` calculator (per input range) which we
slap an `lru_cache` on thanks to handy dunder method hacks for such
things on mutable types XD
use the new `do_overlay_scaling: bool` since we know each feed will have
its own updates (cuz multiplexed by feed..) and we can avoid
ranging/scaling overlays that will make their own calls.
Also, pass in the last datum "brighter" color for ohlc curves as it was
originally (and now that we can pass that styling bit through).
Facepalm, obviously absolute array indexes are not going to necessarily
align vs. time over multiple feeds/history. Instead use
`np.searchsorted()` on whatever curve has the smallest support and find
the appropriate index of intersection in time so that alignment always
starts at a sensible reference.
Also adds a `debug_print: bool` input arg which can enable all the
prints when working on this.
We can determine the major curve (in view) in the first pass of all
`Viz`s so drop the 2nd loop and thus the `mxmn_groups: dict`. Also
simplifies logic for the case of only one (the major) curve in view.
Turns out this is a limitation of the `ViewBox.setYRange()` api: you
can't call it more then once and expect anything but the first call to
be applied without letting a render cycle run. As such, we wait until
the end of the log-linear scaling loop to finally apply the major curves
y-mx/mn after all minor curves have been evaluated.
This also drops all the debug prints (for now) to get a feel for latency
in production mode.
We ended up doing groups maxmin sorting at the interaction layer (new
the view box) and thus this method is no longer needed, though it was
the reference for the code now in `ChartView.interact_graphics_cycle()`.
Further this adds a `remove_axes: bool` arg to `.insert_plotitem()`
which can be used to drop axis entries from the inserted pi (though it
doesn't seem like we really ever need that?) and does the removal in
a separate loop to avoid removing axes before they are registered in
`ComposedGridLayout._pi2axes`.
When there are `N`-curves we need to consider the smallest
x-data-support subset when figuring out for each major-minor pair such
that the "shorter" series is always returns aligned to the longer one.
This makes the var naming more explicit with `major/minor_i_start` as
well as clarifies more stringently a bunch of other variables and
explicitly uses the `minor_y_intersect` y value in the scaling transform
calcs. Also fixes some debug prints.
In very close manner to the original (gut instinct) attempt, this
properly (y-axis-vertically) aligns and scales overlaid curves according
to what we are calling a "log-linearized y-range multi-plot" B)
The basic idea is that a simple returns measure (eg. `R = (p1 - p0)
/ p0`) applied to all curves gives a constant output `R` no matter the
price co-domain in use and thus gives a constant returns over all assets
in view styled scaling; a intuitive visual of returns correlation. The
reference point is for now the left-most point in view (or highest
common index available to all curves), though we can make this
a parameter based on user needs.
A slew of debug `print()`s are left in for now until we iron out the
remaining edge cases to do with re-scaling a major (dispersion) curve
based on a minor now requiring a larger log-linear y-range from that
previous major' range.
In the dispersion swing calcs, use the series median from the in-view
data to determine swing proportions to apply on each "minor curve"
(series with lesser dispersion the one with the greatest). Track the
major `Viz` as before by max dispersion. Apply the dispersion swing
proportions to each minor curve-series in a third loop/pass of all
overlay groups: this ensures all overlays are dispersion normalized in
their ranges but, minor curves are currently (vertically) centered (vs.
the major) via their medians.
There is a ton of commented code from attempts to try and vertically
align minor curves to the major via the "first datum" in-view/available.
This still needs work and we may want to offer it as optional.
Also adds logic to allow skipping margin adjustments in `._set_yrange()`
if you pass `range_margin=None`.
On overlaid ohlc vizs we compute the largest max/min spread and
apply that maxmimum "up and down swing" proportion to each `Viz`'s
viewbox in the group.
We obviously still need to clip to the shortest x-range so that
it doesn't look exactly the same as before XD
We were hacking this before using the whole `ChartView._maxmin()`
setting stuff since in some cases you might want similarly ranged paths
on the same view, but of course you need to max/min them together..
This adds that group sorting by using a table of `dict[PlotItem,
tuple[float, float]` and taking the abs highest/lowest value for each
plot in the viz interaction update loop.
Also removes the now commented signal registry calls and thus
`._yranger`, drops the `set_range: bool` from `._set_yrange` and adds
and extra `.maybe_downsample_graphics()` to the mouse wheel handler to
avoid a weird slow debounce where ds-ing is delayed until a further
interaction.
It's kind of hard to understand with the C++ fan-out to multiple views
(imo a cluster-f#$*&) and seems honestly just plain faster to loop (in
python) through all the linked view handlers XD
Core adjustments:
- make the panning and wheel-scroll handlers just call
`.maybe_downsample_graphics()` directly; drop all signal emissions.
- make `.maybe_downsample_graphics()` loop through all vizs per subchart
and use the new pipeline-style call sequence of:
- `Viz.update_graphics() -> <read_slc>: tuple`
- `Viz.maxmin(i_read_range=<read_slc>) -> yrange: tuple`
- `Viz.plot.vb._set_yrange(yrange=yrange)`
which inlines all the necessary calls in the most efficient way whilst
leveraging `.maxmin()` caching and ymxmn-from-m4-during-render to
boot.
- drop registering `._set_yrange()` for handling `.sigRangeChangedManually`.
Computes the maxmin values for each underlying plot's in-view range as
well as the max up/down swing (in percentage terms) from the plot with
most dispersion and returns a all these values plus a `dict` of plots to
their ranges as part of output.
This broke non-disti-mode actor tree spawn / runtime, seemingly because
the cli entrypoint for a `piker chart` also sends these values down
through the call stack independently? Pretty sure we don't need to send
the `enable_modules` from the chart actor anyway.
Needed to move the startup sequence inside the `try:` block to guarantee
we always do the (now shielded) `.cancel()` call if we get a cancel
during startup.
Also, support an optional `started_afunc` field in the config if
backends want to just provide a one-off blocking async func to sync
container startup. Add a `drop_root_perms: bool` to allow persisting
sudo perms for testing or dyanmic container spawning purposes.
Provides a more correct solution (particularly for distributed testing)
to override the `piker` configuration directory by reading the path from
a specific `tractor._state._runtime_vars` entry that can be provided by
the test harness.
Also fix some typing and comments.
Not really sure there's much we can do besides dump Grpc stuff when we
detect an "error" `str` for the moment..
Either way leave a buncha complaints (como siempre) and do linting
fixups..
Previously we would make the `ahabd` supervisor-actor sync to docker
container startup using pseudo-blocking log message processing.
This has issues,
- we're forced to do a hacky "yield back to `trio`" in order to be
"fake async" when reading the log stream and further,
- blocking on a message is fragile and often slow.
Instead, run the log processor in a background task and in the parent
task poll for the container to be in the client list using a similar
pseudo-async poll pattern. This allows the super to `Context.started()`
sooner (when the container is actually registered as "up") and thus
unblock its (remote) caller faster whilst still doing full log msg
proxying!
Deatz:
- adds `Container.cuid: str` a unique container id for logging.
- correctly proxy through the `loglevel: str` from `pikerd` caller task.
- shield around `Container.cancel()` in the teardown block and use
cancel level logging in that method.
With the addition of a new `elastixsearch` docker support in
https://github.com/pikers/piker/pull/464, adjustments were made
to container startup sync logic (particularly the `trio` checkpoint
sleep period - which itself is a hack around a sync client api) which
caused a regression in upstream startup logic wherein container error
logs were not being bubbled up correctly causing a silent failure mode:
- `marketstore` container started with corrupt input config
- `ahabd` super code timed out on startup phase due to a larger log
polling period, skipped processing startup logs from the container,
and continued on as though the container was started
- history client fails on grpc connection with no clear error on why the
connection failed.
Here we revert to the old poll period (1ms) to avoid any more silent
failures and further extend supervisor control through a configuration
override mechanism. To address the underlying design issue, this patch
adds support for container-endpoint-callbacks to override supervisor
startup configuration parameters via the 2nd value in their returned
tuple: the already delivered configuration `dict` value.
The current exposed values include:
{
'startup_timeout': 1.0,
'startup_query_period': 0.001,
'log_msg_key': 'msg',
},
This allows for container specific control over the startup-sync query
period (the hack mentioned above) as well as the expected log msg key
and of course the startup timeout.
Adds a `piker storage` subcmd with a `-d` flag to wipe a particular
fqsn's time series (both 1s and 60s). Obviously this needs to be
extended much more but provides a start point.
Since apparently the container we were using is totally borked on new
kernels and/or latest jvm, this move our old manual local-X-desktop script
back for use in `brokerd` backend code.
Adds a new `.brokers.ib._util` which contains the 2 methods and fails
over to this one when we can't connect to a VNC server. Also adjusts the
original in `scripts/ib_data_reset.py` to import and run the module code
as a script-program.
Also includes a retyping of `Client._pair: dict[str, Pair]` to look up
pair structs and map all alt-key-name-sets to each for easy precision
info lookup to set the `.sym` field for each transaction including for
on-chain transfers which kraken provides as an "asset decimals" field,
presumably pulled from the particular block-token's limitation info.
In order to support existing `pps.toml` files in the wild which don't
have the `asset_type, price_tick_size, lot_tick_size` fields, we need to
only optionally read them and instead expect that backends will write
the fields going forward (coming in follow patches).
Further this makes some small asset-size (vlm accounting) quantization
related adjustments:
- rename `Symbol.decimal_quant()` -> `.quantize_size()` since that is
explicitly what this method is doing.
- and expect an input `size: float` which we cast to decimal instead of
doing it inside the `.calc_size()` caller code.
- drop `Symbol.iterfqsns()` which wasn't being used anywhere at all..
Additionally, this drafts out a new replacement market-trading-pair data
type to eventually replace `.data._source.Symbol` -> `MktPair` which we
aren't using yet, but serves as the documentation-driven motivator ;)
and, it relates to https://github.com/pikers/piker/issues/467.
Add decimal quantize API to Symbol to simplify by-broker truncation
Add symbol info to `pps.toml`
Move _assert call to outside the _async_main context manager
Minor indentation and styling changes, also convert a few prints to log calls
Fix multi write / race condition on open_pps call
Switch open_pps to not write by default
Fix integer math kraken syminfo _tick_size initialization
ensure not to write pp header on startup
Comment out pytest settings
Add comments explaining delete_testing_dir fixture
use nonlocal instead of global for test state
Add unpacking get_fqsn method
Format test_paper
Add comments explaining sync/async book.send calls
Curve-path colouring and cache mode settings are used (and can thus be
factored out of) all child types; this moves them into the parent type's
`.__init__()` and adjusts all sub-types match:
- the bulk was moved out of the `Curve.__init__()` including all
previous commentary around cache settings.
- adjust `BarItems` to use a `NoCache` mode and instead use the
`last_step_pen: pg.Pen` and `._pen` inside it's `.pain()` instead of
defining functionally duplicate vars.
- adjust all (transitive) calls to `BarItems` to use the new kwargs
names.
Allows callers to know if they should care about a particular viz
rendering call by immediately knowing if the graphics are in view. This
turns out super useful particularly when doing dynamic y-ranging overlay
calcs.
First, we rename what was `chart_maxmin()` -> `multi_maxmin()` and don't
`partial` it in to the `DisplayState`, just call it with correct `Viz`
ref inputs.
Second, as we've done with `ChartView.maybe_downsample_graphics()` use
the output from the main `Viz.update_graphics()` and feed it to the
`.maxmin()` calls for the ohlc and vlm chart but still deliver the same
output signature as prior. Also accept and use an optional profiler
input, drop `DisplayState.maxmin()` and add `.vlm_viz`.
Further perf related tweak to do with more efficient incremental
updates:
- only call `multi_maxmin()` if the main fast chart viz does a pixel
column step.
- mask out hist viz and vlm viz and all linked fsp `._set_yrange()`
calls for now until we figure out how to best optimize these updates
when considering the new group-scaled-by-% style for multicharts.
- drop `.enable_auto_yrange()` calls during startup.
Acts as short cut when pipe-lining from `Viz.update_graphics()` (which
now returns the needed in-view array-relative-read-slice as output) such
that `Viz.read()` and `.datums_range()` doesn't need to be called
internally multiple times. In this case where `i_read_range` is provided
we of course skip doing time index translations and consequently lookup
the appropriate (epoch-time) index indices for caching.
Removes the multi-maxmin usage as well as ensures appropriate `Viz` refs
are passed into the view methods now requiring it. Also drops the "back
linking" of the vlm chart view to the source OHLC chart since we're
going to add this as a default to the charting API.
The max min for a given data range is defined on the lowest level
through the `Viz` api intermingling it with the view is a layering
issue. Instead make `._set_yrange()` call the appropriate view's viz
(since they should be one-to-one) directly and thus avoid any callback
monkey patching nonsense.
Requires that we now make `._set_yrange()` require either one of an
explicit `yrange: tuple[float, float]` min/max pair or the `Viz` ref (so
that maxmin can be called) as input. Adjust
`enable/disable_auto_yrange()` to bind in a new `._yranger()` partial
that's (solely) needed for signal reg/unreg which binds in the now
required input `Viz` to these methods.
Comment the `autoscale_overlays` block in `.maybe_downsample_graphics()`
for now until we figure out the most sane way to auto-range all linked
overlays and subplots (with their own overlays).
In an effort to ensure uniform and uppx-optimized last datum graphics
updates call this method directly instead of the equivalent graphics
object thus ensuring we only update the last pixel column according with
the appropriate max/min computed from the last uppx's worth of data.
Fixes / improvements to enable `.draw_last()` usage include,
- change `Viz._render_table` -> `._alt_r: tuple[Renderer, pg.GraphicsItem] | None`
which holds an alternative (usually downsampled) render and graphics
obj.
- extend the `.draw_last()` signature to include:
- `last_read` to allow passing in the already read data from
`.update_graphics()`, if it isn't passed then a manual read is done
internally.
- `reset_cache: bool` which is passed through to the graphics obj.
- use the new `Formatter.flat_index_ratio: float` when indexing into xy
1d data to compute the max/min for that px column.
Other,
- drop `bars_range` input from `maxmin()` since it's unused.
For the purposes of avoiding another full format call we can stash the
last rendered 1d xy pre-graphics formats as
`IncrementalFormatter.x/y_1d: np.ndarray`s and allow readers in the viz
and render machinery to use this data easily for things like "only
drawing the last uppx's worth of data as a line". Also add
a `.flat_index_ratio: float` which can be used similarly as a scalar
applied to indexes into the src array but instead when indexing
(flattened) 1d xy formatted outputs. Finally, this drops the way
overdone/noisy `.__repr__()` meth we had XD
When a new tick comes in but no new time step / bar is yet needed (to be
appended) we can simply adjust **only** the last bar datum
lines-graphic(s) to avoid a redraw of the preceding `QPainterPath` on
every tick. Do this by calling `Viz.draw_last()` on the fast and slow
chart and adjusting the guards around calls to `Viz.update_graphics()`
(which *does* update paths) to only enter when there's a `do_px_step`
condition. We can stop calling `main_viz.plot.vb._set_yrange()` on view
treading cases since the range should have already been adjusted by the
clearing-tick processing mxmn updates.
Further this changes,
- the `chart_maxmin()` helper (which we should eventually just get rid
of) to take bound in `Viz`s for the ohlc and vlm chart instead of the
chart widget handles.
- extend the guard around hist viz yranging to only enter when not in
"axis mode" - the same as for the fast viz.
Since we removed the `Viz.update_graphics()` call from the main rt loop
we have to be sure to call it in the history chart incr-loop to avoid
a gap between the last bar and prior history since startup. We only
need to update on tread since that should be the only time a full redraw
is ever necessary, ow only the last datum is needed.
Further this moves the graphics cycle func's profiler init to the top in
an effort to get more correct latency measures.
Since `ChartPlotWidget.update_graphics_from_flow()` is more or less just
a call to `Viz.update_graphics()` try to call that directly where
possible.
Changes include:
- calling the viz in the display state specific `maxmin()`.
- passing a viz instance to each `ChartView._set_yrange()` call (in prep
of explicit group auto-ranging); not that this input is unused in the
method for now.
- drop `bars_range` var passing since we don't use it.
Inside `._interaction` routines we need access to `Viz` instances.
Instead of doing `CharPlotWidget._vizs: dict` lookups this ensures each
plot can lookup it's (parent) viz without error.
Also, adjusts `Viz.maxmin()` output parsing to new signature.
Move the `Viz.datums_range()` call into `Viz.maxmin()` itself thus
minimizing the chart `.maxmin()` method to an ultra light wrapper around
the viz call. Also move all profiling into the `Viz` method.
Adjust `Viz.maxmin()` to return both the (rounded) x-range values which
correspond to the range containing the y-domain min and max so that
it can be used for up and coming overlay group maxmin calcs.
We obviously don't want to be debugging a sample-index issue if/when the
market for the asset is closed (since we'll be guaranteed to have
a mismatch, lul). Pass in the `feed_is_live: trio.Event` throughout the
backfilling routines to allow first checking for the live feed being active
so as to avoid breakpointing on false +ves. Also, add a detailed warning
log message for when *actually* investigating a mismatch.
This should never really happen but when it does it appears to be a race
with writing startup pre-graphics-formatter array data where we get
`x_end` epoch value subtracting some really small offset value (like
`-/+0.5`) or the opposite where the `x_start` is epoch and `x_end` is
small.
This adds a warning msg and `breakpoint()` as well as guards around the
entire code downsampling code path so that when resumed the downsampling
cycle should just be skipped and avoid a crash.
This attempt was unsuccessful since trying to (re)select the last
highlighted item on both an "enter" or "click" of that item causes
a hang and then segfault in `Qt`; no clue why..
Adds a `keep_current_item_selected: bool` flag to
`CompleterView.show_cache_entries()` but using it seems to always cause
a hang and crash; we keep all potential use spots commented for now
obviously to avoid this. Also included is a bunch of tidying to logic
blocks in the kb-control loop for readability.
Whenever the last datum is in view `slice_from_time()` need to always
spec the final array index (i.e. the len - 1 value we set as
`read_i_max`) to avoid a uniform-step arithmetic error where gaps in the
underlying time series causes an index that's too low to be returned.
- adjust zoom focal to be min of the view-right coord or the right-most
point on the flow graphic in view and drop all the legacy l1-in-view
focal point cruft.
- flip to not auto-scaling overlays by default.
- change the `._set_yrange()` margin to `0.09`.
- drop `use_vr: bool` usage.
Before this axes were being stacked from the outside in (for `'right'`
and 'bottom'` axes) which is somewhat non-intuitive for an `.append()`
operation. As such this change makes a symbol list stack a set of
`'right'` axes from left-to-right.
Details:
- rename `ComposeGridLayout.items` -> `.pitems`
- return `(int, list[AxisItem])` pairs from `.insert/append_plotitem()`
and the down stream `PlotItemOverlay.add_plotitem()`.
- drop `PlotItemOverlay.overlays` and add it back as `@property` around
the underlying `.layout.pitems`.
Factor and fix dst <- src pair parsing into a new func
`get_likely_pair()` and use throughout initial position loading; solves
a parsing bug for src asset balances which aren't only 3 chars long..
a terrible assumption.
Goes back to always adjusting the y-axis range to include the L1 spread
and clearing label in view whenever the last datum is also in view,
previously this was broken after reworking the display loop for
multi-feeds.
Drops a bunch of old commented tick looping cruft from before we started
using tick-type framing. Also adds more stringent guards for ignoring
but error logging quote values that are more then 25% out of range; it
seems particularly our `ib` feed has some issues with strange `price`
values that are way off here and there?
Instead of having the l1 lines be inside the view space, move them to be
inside their respective axis (with only a 16 unit portion inside the
view) such that the clear price label can overlay with them nicely
without obscuring; this is much better suited to multiple adjacent
y-axes and in general is simpler and less noisy.
Further `L1Labels` + `LevelLabel` style tweaks:
- adjust `.rect` positioning to be "right" (i.e. inside the parent
y-axis) with a slight 16 unit shift toward the viewbox (using the new
`._x_br_offset`) to allow seeing each level label's line even when the
clearing price label is positioned at that same level.
- add a newline's worth of vertical space to each of the bid/ask labels
so that L1 labels' text content isn't ever obscured by the clear price
label.
- set a low (10) z-value to ensure l1 labels are always placed
underneath the clear price label.
- always fill the label rect with the chosen background color.
- make labels fully opaque so as to always make them hide the parent
axes' `.tickStrings()` contents.
- make default color the "default" from the global scheme.
- drop the "price" part from the l1 label text contents, just show the
book-queue's amount (in dst asset's units, aka the potential clearing vlm).
In the case where the last-datum-graphic hasn't been created yet, simply
return a `None` from this method so the caller can choose to ignore the
output. Further, drop `.px_width()` since it makes more sense defined on
`Viz` as well as the previously commented `BarItems.x_uppx()` method.
Also, don't round the `.x_uppx()` output since it can then be used when
< 1 to do x-domain scaling during high zoom usage.
Factor some common methods into the parent type:
- `.x_uppx()` for reading the horizontal units-per-pixel.
- `.x_last()` for reading the "closest to y-axis" last datum coordinate
for zooming "around" during mouse interaction.
- `.px_width()` for computing the max width of any curve in view in
pixels.
Adjust all previous derived `pg.GraphicsObject` child types to now
inherit from this new parent and in particular enable proper `.x_uppx()`
support to `BarItems`.
Use proper uppx scaling when either of scaling the data to the x-domain
index-range or when the uppx is < 1 (now that we support it) such that
both the fast and slow chart always appropriately scale and offset to
the y-axis with the last datum graphic just adjacent to the order line
arrow markers.
Further this fixes the `.index_step()` calc to use the "earliest" 16
values to compute the expected sample step diff since the last set often
contained gaps due to start up race conditions and generated
unexpected/incorrect output.
Further this drops the `.curve_width_pxs()` method and replaces it with
`.px_width()`, taken from the graphics object API and instead returns
the pixel account for the whole view width instead of the
x-domain-data-range within the view.
Doesn't seem like we really need to handle the situation where the start
or stop input time stamps are outside the index range of the data since
the new binary search handling via `numpy.searchsorted()` covers this
case at minimal runtime cost and with an equally correct output. Allows
us to drop some other indexing endpoint internal variables as well.
We want the fast and slow chart to behave the same on calls to
`Viz.default_view()` so adjust the offset calc to make both work:
- just offset by the line len regardless of step / uppx
- add back the `should_line: bool` output from `render_bar_items()` (and
use it to set a new `ds_allowed: bool` guard variable) so that we can
bypass calling the m4 downsampler unless the bars have been switched
to the interpolation line graphic (which we normally required before
any downsampling of OHLC graphics data).
Further, this drops use of the `use_vr: bool` flag from all rendering
since we pretty much always use it by default.
Previously with array-int indexing we had to map the input x-domain
"indexes" passed to `DynamicDateAxis._indexes_to_timestr()`. In the
epoch-time indexing case we obviously don't need to lookup time stamps
from the underlying shm array and can instead just cast to `int` and
relay the values verbatim.
Further, this patch includes some style adjustments to `AxisLabel` to
better enable multi-feed chart overlays by avoiding L1 label clutter
when multiple y-axes are stacked adjacent:
- adjust the `Axis` typical max string to include a couple spaces suffix
providing for a bit more margin between side-by-side y-axes.
- make the default label (fill) color the "default" from the global
color scheme and drop it's opacity to .9
- add some new label placement options and use them in the
`.boundingRect()` method:
* `._x/y_br_offset` for relatively shifting the overall label relative
to it's parent axis.
* `._y_txt_h_scaling` for increasing the bounding rect's height
without including more whitespace in the label's text content.
- ensure labels have a high z-value such that by default they are always
placed "on top" such that when we adjust the l1 labels they can be set
to a lower value and thus never obscure the last-price label.
Turns out we were updating the wrong ``Viz``/``DisplayState`` inside the
closure style `increment_history_view()`` (probably due to looping
through the flumes and dynamically closing in that task-func).. Instead
define the history incrementer at module level and pass in the
`DisplayState` explicitly. Further rework the `DisplayState` attrs to be
more focused around the `Viz` associated with the fast and slow chart
and be sure to adjust output from each `Viz.incr_info()` call to latest
update. Oh, and just tweaked the line palette for the moment.
FYI "treading" here is referring to the x-shifting of the curve when
the last datum is in view such that on new sampled appends the "last"
datum is kept in the same x-location in UI terms.
Mainly it was the global (should we )increment logic that needs to be
independent for the fast vs. slow chart such that the slow isn't
update-shifted by the fast and vice versa. We do this using a new
`'i_last_slow'` key in the `DisplayState.globalz: dict` which is
singleton for each sample-rate-specific chart and works for both time
and array indexing.
Also, we drop some old commented `graphics.draw_last_datum()` code that
never ended up being needed again inside the coordinate cache reset
bloc.
Might as well since it makes the chart look less gappy and we can easily
flip the index switch now B)
Also adds a new `'i_slow_last'` key to `DisplayState` for a singleton
across all slow charts and thus no more need for special case logic in
`viz.incr_info()`.
Define the x-domain coords "offset" (determining the curve graphics
per-datum placement) for each formatter such that there's only on place
to change it when needed. Obviously each graphics type has it's own
dimensionality and this is reflected by the array shapes on each
subtype.
Previously we were drawing with the middle of the bar on each index with
arms to either side: +/- some arm length. Instead this changes so that
each bar is drawn *after* each index/timestamp such that in graphics
coords the bar span more correctly matches the time span in the
x-domain. This makes the linked region between slow and fast chart
directly match (without any transform) for epoch-time indexing such that
the last x-coord in view on the fast chart is no more then the
next time step in (downsampled) slow view.
Deats:
- adjust in `._pathops.path_arrays_from_ohlc()` and take an `bar_w` bar
width input (normally taken from the data step size).
- change `.ui._ohlc.bar_from_ohlc_row()` and
`BarItems.draw_last_datum()` to match.
Allows easily switching between normal array `int` indexing and time
indexing by just flipping the `Viz._index_field: str`.
Also, guard all the x-data audit breakpoints with a time indexing
condition.
Turned out to be super simple to get the first draft to work since the
fast and slow chart now use the same domain, however, it seems like
maybe there's an offset issue still where the fast may be a couple
minutes ahead of the slow?
Need to dig in a bit..
Using a global "last index step" (via module var) obviously has problems
when working with multiple feed sets in a single global app instance:
any separate feed-set will be incremented according to an app-global
index-step and thus won't correctly calc per-feed-set-step update info.
Impl deatz:
- drop `DisplayState.incr_info()` (since previously moved to `Viz`) and
call that method on each appropriate `Viz` instance where necessary;
further ensure the appropriate `DisplayState` instance is passed in to
each call and make sure to pass a `state: DisplayState`.
- add `DisplayState.hist_vars: dict` for history chart (sets) to
determine the per-feed (not set) current slow chart (time) step.
- add `DisplayState.globalz: dict` to house a common per-feed-set state
and use it inside the new `Viz.incr_info()` such that
a `should_increment: bool` can be returned and used by the display
loop to determine whether to x-shift the current chart.
Read the `Viz.index_step()` directly to avoid always reading 1 on the
slow chart; this was completely broken before and resulting in not
rendering the bars graphic on the slow chart until at a true uppx of
1 which obviously doesn't work for 60 width bars XD
Further cleanups to `._render` module:
- drop `array` output from `Renderer.render()`, `read_from_key` input
and fix type annot.
- drop `should_line`, `changed_to_line` and `render_kwargs` from
`render_baritems()` outputs and instead calc `should_redraw` logic
inside the func body and return as output.
First allocation vs. first "prepend" of source data to an xy `ndarray`
format **must be mutex** in order to avoid a double prepend.
Previously when both blocks were executed we'd end up with
a `.xy_nd_start` that was decremented (at least) twice as much as it
should be on the first `.format_to_1d()` call which is obviously
incorrect (and causes problems for m4 downsampling as discussed below).
Further, since the underlying `ShmArray` buffer indexing is managed
(i.e. write-updated) completely independently from the incremental
formatter updates and internal xy indexing, we can't use
`ShmArray._first.value` and instead need to use the particular `.diff()`
output's prepend length value to decrement the `.xy_nd_start` on updates
after initial alloc.
Problems this resolves with m4:
- m4 uses a x-domain diff to calculate the number of "frames" to
downsample to, this is normally based on the ratio of pixel columns on
screen vs. the size of the input xy data.
- previously using an int-index (not epoch time) the max diff between
first and last index would be the size of the input buffer and thus
would never cause a large mem allocation issue (though it may have
been inefficient in terms of needed size).
- with an epoch time index this max diff could explode if you had some
near-now epoch time stamp **minus** an x-allocation value: generally
some value in `[0.5, -0.5]` which would result in a massive frames and
thus internal `np.ndarray()` allocation causing either a crash in
`numba` code or actual system mem over allocation.
Further, put in some more x value checks that trigger breakpoints if we
detect values that caused this issue - we'll remove em after this has
been tested enough.
Turns out we can't seem to avoid the artefacts when click-drag-scrolling
(results in weird repeated "smeared" curve segments) so just go back to
the original code.
Ensures that a "last datum" graphics object exists so that zooming can
read it using `.x_last()`. Also, disable the linked region stuff for now
since it's totally borked after flipping to the time indexing.
Since we don't really need it defined on the "chart widget" move it to
a viz method and rework it to hell:
- always discard the invalid view l > r case.
- use the graphic's UPPX to determine UI-to-scene coordinate scaling for
the L1-label collision detection, if there is no L1 just offset by
a few (index step scaled) datums; this allows us to drop the 2x
x-range calls as was hacked previous.
- handle no-data-in-view cases explicitly and error if we get any
ostensibly impossible cases.
- expect caller to trigger a graphics cycle if needed.
Further support this includes a rework a slew of other important
details:
- add `Viz.index_step`, an idempotent computed, index (presumably uniform)
step value which is needed for variable sample rate graphics displayed
on an epoch (second) time index.
- rework `Viz.datums_range()` to pass view x-endpoints as first and last
elements in return `tuple`; tighten up snap-to-data edge case logic
using `max()`/`min()` calls and better internal var naming.
- adjust all calls to `slice_from_time()` to not expect an "abs" slice.
- drop all `.yrange` resetting since we can just have the `Renderer` do
it when necessary.
If we presume that time indexing using a uniform step we can calculate
the exact index (using `//`) for the input time presuming the data
set has zero gaps. This gives a massive speedup over `numpy` fancy
indexing and (naive) `numba` iteration. Further in the case where time
gaps are detected, we can use `numpy.searchsorted()` to binary search
for the nearest expected index at lower latency.
Deatz,
- comment-disable the call to the naive `numba` scan impl.
- add a optional `step: int` input (calced if not provided).
- add todos for caching binary search results in the gap detection
cases.
- drop returning the "absolute buffer indexing" slice since the caller
can always just use the read-relative slice to acquire it.
When we use an epoch index and any sample rate > 1s we need to scale the
"number of bars" to that step in order to place the view correctly in
x-domain terms. For now we're calcing the step in-method but likely,
longer run, we'll pull this from elsewhere (like a ``Viz`` attr).
Gives approx a 3-4x speedup using plain old iterate-with-for-loop style
though still not really happy with this .5 to 1 ms latency..
Move the core `@njit` part to a `_slice_from_time()` with a pure python
func with orig name around it. Also, drop the output `mask` array since
we can generally just use the slices in the caller to accomplish the
same input array slicing, duh..
We need to subtract the first index in the array segment read, not the
first index value in the time-sliced output, to get the correct offset
into the non-absolute (`ShmArray.array` read) array..
Further we **do** need the `&` between the advance indexing conditions
and this adds profiling to see that it is indeed real slow (like 20ms
ish even when using `np.where()`).
Again, to make epoch indexing a flip-of-switch for testing look up the
`Viz.index_field: str` value when updating labels.
Also, drops the legacy tick-type set tracking which we no longer use
thanks to the new throttler subsys and it's framing msgs.
Planning to put the formatters into a new mod and aggregate all path
gen/op helpers into this module.
Further tweak include:
- moving `path_arrays_from_ohlc()` back to module level
- slice out the last xy datum for `OHLCBarsAsCurveFmtr` 1d formatting
- always copy the new x-value from the source to `.x_nd`
This was a major cause of error (particularly trying to get epoch
indexing working) and really isn't necessary; instead just have
`.diff()` always read from the underlying source array for current
index-step diffing and append/prepend slice construction.
Allows us to,
- drop `._last_read` state management and thus usage.
- better handle startup indexing by setting `.xy_nd_start/stop` to
`None` initially so that the first update can be done in one large
prepend.
- better understand and document the step curve "slice back to previous
level" logic which is now heavily commented B)
- drop all the `slice_to_head` stuff from and instead allow each
formatter to choose it's 1d segmenting.
In an effort to make it easy to override the indexing scheme.
Further, this repairs the `.datums_range()` special case to handle when
the view box is to-the-right-of the data set (i.e. l > datum_start).
As in make the call to `Flume.slice_from_time()` to try and convert any
time index values from the view range to array-indices; all untested
atm.
Also drop some old/unused/moved methods:
- `._set_xlimits()`
- `.bars_range()`
- `.curve_width_pxs()`
and fix some `flow` -> `viz` var naming.
Don't expect values (array + slice) to be returned and applied by
`.incr_update_xy_nd()` and instead presume this will implemented
internally in each (sub)formatter.
Attempt to simplify some incr-update routines, (particularly in the step
curve formatter, though most of it was reverted to just a simpler form
of the original implementation XD) including:
- dropping the need for the `slice_to_head: int` control.
- using the `xy_nd_start/stop` index counters over custom lookups.
Remove harcoded `'index'` field refs from all formatters in a first
attempt at moving towards epoch-time alignment (though don't actually
use it it yet).
Adjustments to the formatter interface:
- property for `.xy_nd` the x/y nd arrays.
- property for and `.xy_slice` the nd format array(s) start->stop index
slice.
Internal routine tweaks:
- drop `read_src_from_key` and always pass full source array on updates
and adjust handlers to expect to have to index the data field of
interest.
- set `.last_read` right after update calls instead of after 1d
conversion.
- drop `slice_to_head` array read slicing.
- add some debug points for testing 'time' indexing (though not used
here yet).
- add `.x_nd` array update logic for when the `.index_field` is not
'index' - i.e. when we begin to try and support epoch time.
- simplify some new y_nd updates to not require use of `np.broadcast()`
where possible.
Probably means it doesn't need to be a `Flume` method but it's
convenient to expect the caller to pass in the `np.ndarray` with
a `'time'` field instead of a `timeframe: str` arg; also, return the
slice mask instead of the sliced array as output (again allowing the
caller to do any slicing). Also, handle the slice-outside-time-range
case by just returning the entire index range with a `None` mask.
Adjust `Viz.view_data()` to instead do timeframe (for rt vs. hist shm
array) lookup and equiv array slicing with the returned mask.
Since these modules no longer contain Qt specific code we might
as well include them in the data sub-package.
Also, add `IncrementalFormatter.index_field` as single point to def the
indexing field that should be used for all x-domain graphics-data
rendering.
Was broken since the `_adhoc_futes_set` rework a while back. Removes the
cmdty symbols from that set into a new one and fixes the contract
case block to catch `Contract(secType='CMDTY')` case. Also makes
`Client.search_symbols()` return details `dict`s so that `piker search`
will work again..
Since higher level charting and fsp management need access to the
new `Flume` indexing apis this adjusts some func sigs to pass through
(and/or create) flume instances:
- `LinkedSplits.add_plot()` and dependents.
- `ChartPlotWidget.draw_curve()` and deps, and it now returns a `Flow`.
- `.ui._fsp.open_fsp_admin()` and `FspAdmin.open_fsp_ui()` related
methods => now we wrap the destination fsp shm in a flume on the admin
side and is returned from `.start_engine_method()`.
Drop a bunch of (unused) chart widget methods including some already
moved to flume methods: `.get_index()`, `.in_view()`,
`.last_bar_in_view()`, `.is_valid_index()`.
Move to expect and process new by-tick-event frames where the display
loop can now just iterate the most recent tick events by type instead of
the entire tick history sequence - thus we reduce iterations inside the
update loop.
Also, go back to use using the detected display's refresh rate (minus 6)
as the default feed requested throttle rate since we can now handle
much more bursty-ness in display updates thanks to the new framing
format B)
Factor out the chart widget creation since it's only executed once
during rendering of the first feed/flow whilst keeping plotitem overlay
creation inside the (flume oriented) init loop. Only create one vlm and
FSP chart/chain for now until we figure out if we want FSPs overlayed by
default or selected based on the "front" symbol in use. Add a default
color-palette set using shades of gray when plotting overlays. Presume
that the display loop's quote throttle rate should be uniformly
distributed over all input symbol-feeds for now. Restore feed pausing on
mouse interaction.
Initial support for real-time multi-symbol overlay charts using an
aggregate feed delivered by `Feed.open_multi_stream()`.
The setup steps for constructing the overlayed plot items is still very
very rough and will likely provide incentive for better refactoring high
level "charting APIs". For each fqsn passed into `display_symbol_data()`
we now synchronously,
- create a single call to `LinkedSplits.plot_ohlc_main() -> `ChartPlotWidget`
where we cache the chart in scope and for all other "sibling" fqsns
we,
- make a call to `ChartPlotWidget.overlay_plotitem()` -> `PlotItem`, hide its axes,
make another call with this plotitem input to
`ChartPlotWidget.draw_curve()`, set a sym-specific view box auto-yrange maxmin callback,
register the plotitem in a global `pis: dict[str, list[pgo.PlotItem, pgo.PlotItem]] = {}`
Once all plots have been created we then asynchronously for each symbol,
- maybe create a volume chart and register it in a similar task-global
table: `vlms: dict[str, ChartPlotWidget] = {}`
- start fsp displays for each symbol
Then common entrypoints are entered once for all symbols:
- a single `graphics_update_loop()` loop-task is started wherein
real-time graphics update components for each symbol are created,
* `L1Labels`
* y-axis last clearing price stickies
* `maxmin()` auto-ranger
* `DisplayState` (stored in a table `dss: dict[str, DisplayState] = {}`)
* an `increment_history_view()` task
and a single call to `Feed.open_multi_stream()` is used to create
a symbol-multiplexed quote stream which drives a single loop over all
symbols wherein for each quote the appropriate components are looked
up and passed to `graphics_update_cycle()`.
- a single call to `open_order_mode()` is made with the first symbol
provided as input, though eventually we want to support passing in the
entire list.
Further internal implementation details:
- special tweaks to the `pg.LinearRegionItem` setup wherein the region
is added with a zero opacity and *after* all plotitem overlays to
avoid and issue where overlays weren't being shown within the region
area in the history chart.
- all symbol-specific graphics oriented update calls are adjusted to
pass in the fqsn:
* `update_fsp_chart()`
* `ChartView._set_yrange()`
* ChartPlotWidget.update_graphics_from_flow()`
- avoid a double increment on sample step updates by not calling the
increment on any vlm chart since it seems the vlm-ohlc chart linking
already takes care of this now?
- use global counters for the last epoch time step to avoid incrementing
all views more then once per new time step given underlying shm array
buffers may be on different array-index values from one another.
Main "public" API change is to make `GodWidget.get/set_chart_symbol()`
accept and cache-on fqsn tuples to allow handling overlayed chart groups
and adjust method names to be plural to match.
Wrt `LinkedSplits`,
- create all chart widget axes with a `None` plotitem argument and set
the `.pi` field after axis creation (since apparently we have another
object reference causality dilemma..)
- set a monkeyed `PlotItem.chart_widget` for use in axes that still need
the widget reference.
- drop feed pause/resume for now since it's leaking feed tasks on the
`brokerd` side and we probably don't really need it any more, and if
we still do it should be done on the feed not the flume.
Wrt `ChartPlotItem`,
- drop `._add_sticky()` and use the `Axis` method instead and add some
overlay + axis sanity checks.
- refactor `.draw_ohlc()` to be a lighter wrapper around a call to
`.add_plot()`.
We have this method on our `ChartPlotWidget` but it makes more sense to
directly associate axis-labels with, well, the label's parent axis XD.
We add `._stickies: dict[str, YAxisLabel]` to replace
`ChartPlotWidget._ysticks` and pass in the `pg.PlotItem` to each axis
instance, stored as `Axis.pi` instead of handing around linked split
references (which are way out of scope for a single axis).
More work needs to be done to remove dependence on `.chart:
ChartPlotWidget` references in the date axis type as per comments.
Comments out the pixel-cache resetting since it doesn't seem we need it
any more to avoid draw oddities?
For `.fast_path` appends, this nearly got it working except the new path
segments are either not being connected correctly (step curve) or not
being drawn in full since the history path (plain line).
Leaving the attempted code commented in for a retry in the future; my
best guesses are that maybe,
- `.connectPath()` call is being done with incorrect segment length
and/or start point.
- the "appended" data: `appended = array[-append_len-1:slice_to_head]`
(done inside the formatter) isn't correct (i.e. endpoint handling
considering a path append) and needs special handling for different
curve types?
Ensure `.boundingRect()` calcs and `.draw_last_datum()` do geo-sizing
based on source data instead of presuming some `1.0` unit steps in some
spots; we need this to support an epoch index as is needed for overlays.
Further, clean out a bunch of old bounding rect calc code and add some
commented code for trying out `QRectF.united()` on the path + last datum
curve segment. Turns out that approach is slower as per eyeballing the
added profiler points.
After trying to hack epoch indexed time series and failing miserably,
decided to properly factor out all formatting routines into a common
subsystem API: ``IncrementalFormatter`` which provides the interface for
incrementally updating and tracking pre-path-graphics formatted data.
Previously this functionality was mangled into our `Renderer` (which
also does the work of `QPath` generation and update) but splitting it
out also preps for being able to do graphics-buffer downsampling and
caching on a remote host B)
The ``IncrementalFormatter`` (parent type) has the default behaviour of
tracking a single field-array on some source `ShmArray`, updating
a flattened `numpy.ndarray` in-mem allocation, and providing a default
1d conversion for pre-downsampling and path generation.
Changed out of `Renderer`,
- `.allocate_xy()`, `update_xy()` and `format_xy()` all are moved to
more explicitly named formatter methods.
- all `.x/y_data` nd array management and update
- "last view range" tracking
- `.last_read`, `.diff()`
- now calls `IncrementalFormatter.format_to_1d()` inside `.render()`
The new API gets,
- `.diff()`, `.last_read`
- all view range diff tracking through `.track_inview_range()`.
- better nd format array names: `.x/y_nd`, `xy_nd_start/stop`.
- `.format_to_1d()` which renders pre-path formatted arrays ready for
both m4 sampling and path gen.
- better explicit overloadable formatting method names:
* `.allocate_xy()` -> `.allocate_xy_nd()`
* `.update_xy()` -> `.incr_update_xy_nd()`
* `.format_xy()` -> `.format_xy_nd_to_1d()`
Finally this implements per-graphics-type formatters which define
each set up related formatting routines:
- `OHLCBarsFmtr`: std multi-line style bars
- `OHLCBarsAsCurveFmtr`: draws an interpolated line for ohlc sampled data
- `StepCurveFmtr`: handles vlm style curves
More or less a revamp (and possibly first draft for something similar in
`tractor` core) which ensures all actor trees attempt to discover the
`pikerd` registry actor.
Implementation improvements include:
- new `Registry` singleton which houses the `pikerd` discovery
socket-address `Registry.addr` + a `open_registry()` manager which
provides bootstrapped actor-local access.
- refine `open_piker_runtime()` to do the work of opening a root actor
and call the new `open_registry()` depending on whether a runtime has
yet been bootstrapped.
- rejig `[maybe_]open_pikerd()` in terms of the above.
Allows running simultaneous data feed services on the same (linux) host
by avoiding file-name collisions instead keying shm buffer sets by the
given `brokerd` instance. This allows, for example, either multiple dev
versions of the data layer to run side-by-side or for the test suite to
be seamlessly run alongside a production instance.
Previously we were relying on implicit actor termination in
`maybe_spawn_daemon()` but really on `pikerd` teardown we should be sure
to tear down not only all service tasks in each actor but also the actor
runtimes. This adjusts `Services.cancel_service()` to only cancel the
service task scope and wait on the `complete` event and reworks the
`open_context_in_task()` inner closure body to,
- always cancel the service actor at exit.
- not call `.cancel_service()` (potentially causing recursion issues on
cancellation).
- allocate a `complete: trio.Event` to signal full task + actor termination.
- pop the service task from the `.service_tasks` registry.
Further, add a `maybe_set_global_registry_sockaddr()` helper-cm to do
the work of checking whether a registry socket needs-to/has-been set
and use it for discovery calls to the `pikerd` service tree.
Seems that by default their history indexing rounds down/back to the
previous time step, so make sure we add a minute inside `Client.bars()`
when the `end_dt=None`, indicating "get the latest bar". Add
a breakpoint block that should trigger whenever the latest bar vs. the
latest epoch time is mismatched; we'll remove this after some testing
verifying the history bars issue is resolved.
Further this drops the legacy `backfill_bars()` endpoint which has been
deprecated and unused for a while.
Always use `open_sample_stream()` to register fast and slow quote feed
buffers and get a sampler stream which we use to trigger
`Sampler.broadcast_all()` calls on the service side after backfill
events.
Now spawned under the `pikerd` tree as a singleton-daemon-actor we offer
a slew of new routines in support of this micro-service:
- `maybe_open_samplerd()` and `spawn_samplerd()` which provide the
`._daemon.Services` integration to conduct service spawning.
- `open_sample_stream()` which is a client-side endpoint which does all
the work of (lazily) starting the `samplerd` service (if dne) and
registers shm buffers for update as well as connect a sample-index
stream for iterator by the caller.
- `register_with_sampler()` which is the `samplerd`-side service task
endpoint implementing all the shm buffer and index-stream registry
details as well as logic to ensure a lone service task runs
`Services.increment_ohlc_buffer()`; it increments at the shortest period
registered which, for now, is the default 1s duration.
Further impl notes:
- fixes to `Services.broadcast()` to ensure broken streams get discarded
gracefully.
- we use a `pikerd` side singleton mutex `trio.Lock()` to ensure
one-and-only-one `samplerd` is ever spawned per `pikerd` actor tree.
Drop the `_services` module level ref and adjust all client code to
match. Drop struct inheritance and convert all methods to class level.
Move `Brokerd.locks` -> `Services.locks` and add sampling mod to pikerd
enabled set.
We're moving toward a single actor managing sampler work and distributed
independently of `brokerd` services such that a user can run samplers on
different hosts then real-time data feed infra. Most of the
implementation details include aggregating `.data._sampling` routines
into a new `Sampler` singleton type.
Move the following methods to class methods:
- `.increment_ohlc_buffer()` to allow a single task to increment all
registered shm buffers.
- `.broadcast()` for IPC relay to all registered clients/shms.
Further add a new `maybe_open_global_sampler()` which allocates
a service nursery and assigns it to the `Sampler.service_nursery`; this
is prep for putting the step incrementer in a singleton service task
higher up the data-layer actor tree.
When we see multiple history frames that are duplicate to the request
set, bail re-trying after a number of tries (6 just cuz) and return
early from the tsdb backfill loop; presume that this many duplicates
means we've hit the beginning of history. Use a `collections.Counter`
for the duplicate counts. Make sure and warn log in such cases.
Wow, turns out tick framing was totally borked since we weren't framing
on "greater then throttle period long waits" XD
This moves all the framing logic into a common func and calls it in
every case:
- every (normal) "pre throttle period expires" quote receive
- each "no new quote before throttle period expires" (slow case)
- each "no clearing tick yet received" / only burst on clears case