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    Go
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  • Created almost 3 years ago
  • Updated about 1 year ago

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Repository Details

Just another ECS library for Ebitengine

donburi

Donburi

Donburi is just another Entity Component System library for Ebitengine inspired by legion.

It aims to be a feature rich and high performance ECS Library.

GoDoc

Contents

Summary

  • It introduces the concept of Archetype, which allows us to query entities very efficiently based on the components layout.
  • It is possible to combine And, Or, and Not conditions to perform complex queries for components.
  • It avoids reflection for performance.
  • Ability to dynamically add or remove components from an entity.
  • Type-safe APIs powered by Generics
  • Provides Features that are common in game dev (e.g., math, transform, hieralchy, events, etc) built on top of the ECS architecture.

Examples

To check all examples, visit this page.

The bunnymark example was adapted from mizu's code, which is made by sedyh.

Installation

go get github.com/yohamta/donburi

Getting Started

Worlds

import "github.com/yohamta/donburi"

world := donburi.NewWorld()

Entities can be created via either Create (for a single entity) or CreateMany (for a collection of entities with the same component types). The world will create a unique ID for each entity upon insertion that we can use to refer to that entity later.

// Component is any struct that holds some kind of data.
type PositionData struct {
  X, Y float64
}

type VelocityData struct {
  X, Y float64
}

// ComponentType represents kind of component which is used to create or query entities.
var Position = donburi.NewComponentType[PositionData]()
var Velocity = donburi.NewComponentType[VelocityData]()

// Create an entity by specifying components that the entity will have.
// Component data will be initialized by default value of the struct.
entity = world.Create(Position, Velocity)

// We can use entity (it's a wrapper of int64) to get an Entry object from World
// which allows you to access the components that belong to the entity.
entry := world.Entry(entity)

// You can set or get the data via the ComponentType
Position.SetValue(math.Vec2{X: 10, Y: 20})
Velocity.SetValue(math.Vec2{X: 1, Y: 2})

position := Position.Get(entry)
velocity := Velocity.Get(entry)

position.X += velocity.X
position.Y += velocity.y

Components can be added and removed through Entry objects.

// Fetch the first entity with PlayerTag component
query := donburi.NewQuery(filter.Contains(PlayerTag))
// Query.First() returns only the first entity that 
// matches the query.
if entry, ok := donburi.First(world); ok {
  donburi.Add(entry, Position, &PositionData{
    X: 100,
    Y: 100,
  })
  donburi.Remove(entry, Velocity)
}

Entities can be removed from World with the World.Remove() as follows:

if SomeLogic.IsDead(world, someEntity) {
  // World.Remove() removes the entity from the world.
  world.Remove(someEntity)
  // Deleted entities become invalid immediately.
  if world.Valid(someEntity) == false {
    println("this entity is invalid")
  }
}

Entities can be retrieved using the First and Each methods of Components as follows:

// GameState Component
type GameStateData struct {
  // .. some data
}
var GameState = donburi.NewComponentType[GameStateData]()

// Bullet Component
type BulletData struct {
  // .. some data
}
var Bullet = donburi.NewComponentType[BulletData]()

// Init the world and create entities
world := donburi.NewWorld()
world.Create(GameState)
world.CreateMany(100, Bullet)

// Query the first GameState entity
if entry, ok := GameState.First(world); ok {
  gameState := GameState.Get(entry)
  // .. do stuff with the gameState entity
}

// Query all Bullet entities
Bullet.Each(world, func(entry *donburi.Entry) {
  bullet := Bullet.Get(entry)
  // .. do stuff with the bullet entity
})

Queries

Queries allow for high performance and expressive iteration through the entities in a world, to get component references, test if an entity has a component or to add and remove components.

// Define a query by declaring what componet you want to find.
query := donburi.NewQuery(filter.Contains(Position, Velocity))

// Iterate through the entities found in the world
query.Each(world, func(entry *donburi.Entry) {
  // An entry is an accessor to entity and its components.
  position := Position.Get(entry)
  velocity := Velocity.Get(entry)
  
  position.X += velocity.X
  position.Y += velocity.Y
})

There are other types of filters such as And, Or, Exact and Not. Filters can be combined wth to find the target entities.

For example:

// This query retrieves entities that have an NpcTag and no Position component.
query := donburi.NewQuery(filter.And(
  filter.Contains(NpcTag),
  filter.Not(filter.Contains(Position))))

If you need to determine if an entity has a component, there is entry.HasComponent

For example:

// We have a query for all entities that have Position and Size, but also any of Sprite, Text or Shape.
query := donburi.NewQuery(
  filter.And(
    filter.Contains(Position, Size),
    filter.Or(
      filter.Contains(Sprite),
      filter.Contains(Text),
      filter.Contains(Shape),
    )
  )
)

// In our query we can check if the entity has some of the optional components before attempting to retrieve them
query.Each(world, func(entry *donburi.Entry) {
  // We'll always be able to access Position and Size
  position := Position.Get(entry)
  size := Size.Get(entry)
  
  
  if entry.HasComponent(Sprite) {
    sprite := Sprite.Get(entry)
    // .. do sprite things
  }
  
  if entry.HasComponent(Text) {
    text := Text.Get(entry)
    // .. do text things
  }
  
  if entry.HasComponent(Shape) {
    shape := Shape.Get(entry)
    // .. do shape things
  }
  
})

Tags

One or multiple "Tag" components can be attached to an entity. "Tag"s are just components with no data.

Here is the utility function to create a tag component.

// This is the utility function to make tag component
func NewTag() *ComponentType {
  return NewComponentType(struct{}{})
}

Since "Tags" are components, they can be used in queries in the same way as components as follows:

var EnemyTag = donburi.NewTag()
world.CreateMany(100, EnemyTag, Position, Velocity)

// Search entities with EnemyTag
EnemyTag.Each(world, func(entry *donburi.Entry) {
  // Perform some operation on the Entities with the EnemyTag component.
}

Systems (Experimental)

âš  this feature is currently experimental, the API can be changed in the future.

The ECS package provides so-called System feature in ECS which can be used together with a World instance.

See the GoDoc and Example.

How to create an ECS instance:

import (
  "github.com/yohamta/donburi"
  ecslib "github.com/yohamta/donburi/ecs"
)

world := donburi.NewWorld()
ecs := ecslib.NewECS(world)

A System is created from just a function that receives an argument (ecs *ecs.ECS).

// Some System's function
func SomeFunction(ecs *ecs.ECS) {
  // ...
}

ecs.AddSystem(SomeFunction)

We can provide Renderer for certain system.

ecs.AddRenderer(ecs.LayerDefault, DrawBackground)

// Draw all systems
ecs.Draw(screen)

The Layer parameter allows us to control the order of rendering systems and to which screen to render. A Layer is just an int value. The default value is just 0.

For example:

const (
  LayerBackground ecslib.LayerID = iota
  LayerActors
)

// ...

ecs.
  AddSystem(UpdateBackground).
  AddSystem(UpdateActors).
  AddRenderer(LayerBackground, DrawBackground).
  AddRenderer(LayerActors, DrawActors)

// ...

func (g *Game) Draw(screen *ebiten.Image) {
  screen.Clear()
  g.ecs.DrawLayer(LayerBackground, screen)
  g.ecs.DrawLayer(LayerActors, screen)
}

The ecs.Create() and ecs.NewQuery() wrapper-functions allow to create and query entities on a certain Layer:

For example:

var layer0 ecs.LayerID = 0

// Create an entity on layer0
ecslib.Create(layer0, someComponents...)

// Create a query to iterate entities on layer0
queryForLayer0 := ecslib.NewQuery(layer0, filter.Contains(someComponent))

Debug

The debug package provides some debug utilities for World.

For example:

debug.PrintEntityCounts(world)

// [Example Output]
// Entity Counts:
// Archetype Layout: {TransformData, Size, SpriteData, EffectData } has 61 entities
// Archetype Layout: {TransformData, Size, SpriteData, ColliderData } has 59 entities
// Archetype Layout: {TransformData, Size, SpriteData, WeaponData} has 49 entities
// ...

Features

Under the features directory, we develop common functions for game dev. Any kind of Issues or PRs will be very appreciated.

Math

The math package provides the basic types (Vec2 etc) and helpers.

See the GoDoc for more details.

Transform

The transofrm package provides the Tranform Component and helpers.

It allows us to handle position, rotation, scale data relative to the parent.

This package was adapted from ariplane's code, which is created by m110.

For example:

w := donburi.NewWorld()

// setup parent
parent := w.Entry(w.Create(transform.Transform))

// set world position and scale for the parent
transform.SetWorldPosition(parent, dmath.Vec2{X: 1, Y: 2})
transform.SetWorldScale(parent, dmath.Vec2{X: 2, Y: 3})

// setup child
child := w.Entry(w.Create(transform.Transform))
transform.Transform.SetValue(child, transform.TransformData{
  LocalPosition: dmath.Vec2{X: 1, Y: 2},
  LocalRotation: 90,
  LocalScale:    dmath.Vec2{X: 2, Y: 3},
})

// add the child to the parent
transform.AppendChild(parent, child, false)

// get world position of the child with parent's position taken into account
pos := transform.WorldPosition(child)

// roatation
rot := transform.WorldRotation(child)

// scale
scale := transform.WorldScale(child)

How to remove chidren (= destroy entities):

// Remove children
transform.RemoveChildrenRecursive(parent)

// Remove children and the parent
transform.RemoveRecursive(parent)

Events

The events package allows us to send arbitrary data between systems in a Type-safe manner.

This package was adapted from ariplane's code, which is created by m110.

For example:

import "github.com/yohamta/donburi/features/events"

// Define any data
type EnemyKilled struct {
  EnemyID int
}

// Define an EventType with the type of the event data
var EnemyKilledEvent = events.NewEventType[EnemyKilled]()

// Create a world
world := donburi.NewWorld()

// Add handlers for the event
EnemyKilledEvent.Subscribe(world, LevelUp)
EnemyKilledEvent.Subscribe(world, UpdateScore)

// Sending an event
EnemyKilledEvent.Publish(world, EnemyKilled{EnemyID: 1})

// Process specific events
EnemyKilledEvent.ProcessEvents(world)

// Process all events
events.ProcessAllEvents(world)

// Receives the events
func LevelUp(w donburi.World, event EnemyKilled) {
  // .. processs the event for levelup
}

func UpdateScore(w donburi.World, event EnemyKilled) {
  // .. processs the event for updating the player's score
}

Projects Using Donburi

Architecture

arch

How to contribute?

Feel free to contribute in any way you want. Share ideas, questions, submit issues, and create pull requests. Thanks!

Contributors

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