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Servus Build Status

A simple, modular backend for multiplayer games. Simple, because it just handles the (socket) communication between a number of players and provides hooks for the game logic. Modular, because game logic is written as a state machine and loaded into the server at runtime. The server can host multiple game logic modules simultaneously (on different ports)..

This is the result of a two day game-jam with two colleagues and should definitely not be used in production!

Installation

  1. Clone this repository
  2. Get all dependencies with mix deps.get
  3. Run the tests with mix test
  4. Start a server session with iex -S mix
  5. Or create a release with MIX_ENV=prod mix release

Usage

Servus sends and receives messages over socket connections. Messages must be encoded in JSON format. The format of a message is

{
    "type":     <REQUIRED>,
    "value":    <REQUIRED>,
    "target":   <OPTIONAL>>
}

The type of a message can be used in the game logic to implement different commands. The type join is special and is used to join the waiting queue for a game. The value can be any kind of data and will be passed to the receiver of the message (a game logic or server plugin). If a target is given, the message will be routed to the server plugin that that is registered under that name.

When players connect to the server by sending a join message, the player is first put into a waiting queue. Every game logic has to specify the number of players. When that number is reached a new game session is started and all the players in the queue are in game mode now. This approach is a bit unflexible since it only allows a fixed number of players per game. There is also no matching algorithm at all. Only the order in which the players join determines the opponents in a game.

Configuration

The config file is config/config.exs. There are two sections: basic configuration and game specific configuration. In the base config you define which game modules and server plugins to start.

Base configuration (using the included examples)

config :servus, 
  # Start the `connect_four` backend
  backends: [:connect_four],

  # Start the Echo module (accessible to all backends)
  modules: [Echo]

Game specific configuration

config :servus,
  # Configuration for the `connect_four` backend
  # TCP and WebSocket adapters are supported
  connect_four: %{
    adapters: [
      tcp: 3334,
      web: 3335
    ],
    players_per_game: 2,
    implementation: ConnectFour
  }

The implementation is expected to be a gen_fsm statemachine that uses Servus.Game. You should override the init/1 function and return the initial state and the data that will be passed to the fsm actions. For further information you can have a look at the example game under lib/connect_four

Server plugins (or modules)

You can write your own server plugins for various porupses, like for example, saving hiscores. A server plugin is an elixir module that uses Servus.Module. Every plugin will be started as a gen_server internally. A module has to be registered by calling the register macro as soon as possible in the module definition. There are two overridables: startup/0 and shutdown/1. startup/0 allows you to return the plugin state.

To handle messages to the plugin you use the handle macros. In it's simplest form it looks like

handle "echo", args, state do
  Logger.debug "Echo module called"
  args
end

There's also a handlep macro. Use this if you don't want the module to be callable via network. handlep handlers can only be called from within the server (usually from a game backend).

This will simply echo all input. Have a look at the example plugin under lib/echo_module.

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Minimalistic game server in elixir

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