daniele-salvagni / escape-from-the-aliens

πŸŽ“ Software Engineering Project - Java client-server game where every player can choose to use either RMI or Socket connections

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Escape from the Aliens

This is the repository for the java implementation of the board game Escape from Aliens in Outer Space. This project is part of the Software Engineering 2015 course (and Final Test) at Politecnico di Milano.

General info

Repository folders:

  • src/main: contains the java source code of the application.
  • src/test: application unit tests using junit.
  • docs/: various resources unrelated to the source code like spare documentation and uml diagrams.
  • docs/maps/: a collection of maps, resources to manually draw new ones and a quick graphical documentation on the map import/export process.

Usage info

Start the game manager (server)

In order to play you first need to start the game manager, to do that run src/main/java/it/polimi/ingsw/cg_2/view/gamemanager/GameManager.java, it will start automatically and wait for incoming RMI or Socket connections.

Start the game player (client)

To start a game player run src/main/java/it/polimi/ingsw/cg_2/view/gameplayer/GamePlayer.java, you will then be prompted to choose between RMI or Socket connection:

  • Insert RMI to use Remote Method Invocation
  • Insert SOCKET to use a Socket connection

Every client can use a different kind of connection.

Waiting rooms

When the first player connects to the server, a new waiting room will be created, following players will be automatically placed in the same waiting room. When at least two people joined the same waiting room a countdown of 15 seconds starts: if the countdown does reach 0 a new game will be created, if someone else join the room during the countdown it will reset to 15 seconds. When the room reaches the maximum of 8 players the game will start instantly.

The first player (the one that created the waiting room) is allowed to change the default map (GALVANI) before the start of the game by using the command: map <mapname> where <mapname> can be one of the following:

ASCESA, BALENA, CAVOUR, DILEMMA, EN_GARDE, FERMI,
FRENZY, GALILEI, GARIBALDI, GALVANI, MACHIAVELLI,
MORGENLAND, SINISTRA, SOCRATES, SOUND_OF_SILENCE

The game manager supports multiple concurrent games. When a game starts new incoming players will be put in another waiting room, and a new game will start with the same rules as before.

Game commands

The following command will be available only for the waiting room creator and before the start of the game:

  • map <map> - Change the default game map GALVANI to a new one (e.g. map BALENA).

The following command will be available before and after starting a game:

  • chat <message> - Send a text <message> to all players subscribed to the game (e.g. chat hello guys!).

The following commands will be available during a game, based on the specific game rules:

  • get info - Display private informations about the player, such as: the race (alien or human), the rank, the current position, the held and activated items (if any). You should use this command at the start of the game to know the information about your character.
  • move <L:XX> - Move to the specified sector, where L is a letter from A to Z and XX a number from 1 to 99 (e.g. move S:22).
  • attack - Perform an attack in the current sector.
  • draw - Draw a sector card (when in a DANGEROUS sector, only if you don't attack), you could also found an item by doing this.
  • escape - When in an HATCH sector, try to escape.
  • noise <L:XX> - Make a noise in the specified sector, only when you found a DECEPTION card (e.g. noise D:7).
  • pass - Pass the turn to the following player.
  • use <item> [L:XX] - Use a specific item, where item can be onf of the following: adrenaline, attack, sedatives, teleport, spotlight. In the case of spotlight you must provide an additional parameter to choose where to use it (e.g. use spotlight A:13).
  • get log - Display the log from the server of the past public actions executed by the players.

Any other command is not valid.

Implementation details

The whole architecture of the application follows the MVC pattern, the model contains all the information to store the state of the game manager, the controller manages game initialization and rules, the view is composed by two parts: a remote view on the game manager connected to the local view on the game player to remotely interact with the controller.

Model

Model UML Diagram

The model is pretty straightforward, the various decks of cards are implemented with a generic Deck class that automatically shuffle cards in a transparent way when they are finished, some standard creational pattern have been used to instantiate various classes and Zones are loaded from files.

Cubic Coordinates The constraints of the hexagonal maps are modeled by implementing some of the algorithms on Amit Patel's blog (Hexagonal Grids).

Map encoding

As hexagonal maps are hard to understand, we decided not to use Plain Text, XML files or external tools, but we used something quick and accessible to everyone to edit them or create new ones, images.

The official supported format for map files is .PNG (but also other formats may work), it is mandatory not to use lossy compression. By using 2x2px cells and shifting down each even column by 1px it is very easy to understand cell adjacency, giving an overview of the map and the possibility for anyone to edit them with the most basic image editing software. It could also be helpful in the case of the implementation of a random map generator to have an overview of the generated maps without the need of a graphical interface.

Every standard RGB color is supported, however we suggest not to use Black as it could be mistaken with margins by other people editing the maps (but the way it will still work).

The ZoneHelper class is able to support every map dimension, however the implementation of this game will be fixed to a 23x14 cells size like the non-digital version. Smaller maps should be handled correctly so in the case of switching to bigger maps older ones should still be compatible.

Here follows a graphical representation of the conversion process from human to computer readable and vice versa, notice how hard it is to understand neighbors in the version with 1px per sector:

Image Processing

The red circle shows that by shifting columns by half a sector adjacencies becomes clear as every sector has 6 neighbors instead of 4 (or 8 considering diagonals).

Color Palette
Color Sector
66CC66 (Light Green) Secure Sector
009966 (Medium Green) Dangerous Sector
993333 (Red) Escape Hatch
993399 (Purple) Alien Sector
0099CC (Cyan) Human Sector
003333 (Dark Green) EMPTY, no sectors
Implemented Maps

Implemented Maps

Controller

Controller UML Diagram

Yellow classes are the states of the State Machine, Red ones the command actions that act as transitions and in Green the classes used for the Visitor pattern.

The controller has been implemented by merging multiple design patterns: the whole game is managed by a FSM (Finished State Machine) implemented with a State pattern, where each state is a Singleton which allows only some Actions to be executed. Actions are implemented very similarly to a Command pattern, and they determine the following state of the state machine based on their execution. After the execution, actions are also able to generate a pair of private response and public broadcast messages (with the help of the ResponseFactory class), to be handled respectively by the server and the publisher.

State Machine Graph The State Machine that handles actions and turn sequences. Blue and red transitions could also lead to the end of a game (FinishedState).

Actions are generated by a Factory that uses the Visitor Pattern to generate the appropriate action based on the type of the request coming from the view. Every implementation of ActionRequestMsg implements ActionCreator, which imposes the message to return itself to be visited, this allows the ActionFactoryVisitor to create the appropriate action without having to check for the concrete type of the request message.

Here is also an UML diagram that shows the messages alongside the controller (lot-of-arrows-warning): Controller UML Diagram with messages

View

The view is separated in two parts, a remote view on the game manager and a local view on the game player to interact with the game manager. Communication between them can happen with both RMI or Socket based on the choice of each different client.

View UML Diagram Red classes are used by Sockets, Yellow ones by RMI and in Violet are highlighted common interfaces between game manager and game player.

Communication

Client-Server communication uses a request-response communication pattern, while game updates are sent by a broker following the publisher-subscriber pattern.

When a game needs to send an update to its clients, it sends a publish request to the broker with a specific topic for that game. Those publish requests will be put in a queue which will then be dispatched to the clients that subscribed to that topic when possible.

Every message (public or private) sent from the server to the client also contains a visit method from the Visitor Pattern so that the clients can display the displayed information without having to check for the concrete type of the message. This is useful also to implement different visitors for different types of interface (e.g. CLI or GUI).

The same communications pattern are transparently implemented for both RMI and Socket, thanks to polymorphism you don't need to know which one you are using to "talk" with the game manager.

Credits

The original board game and the maps are property of Santa Ragione.

Group members (CG_2):

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πŸŽ“ Software Engineering Project - Java client-server game where every player can choose to use either RMI or Socket connections


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