83593bb508ac2f813985907faae2f153b81771b2
3 Commits
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90c177b7ce |
E40 Process Jobs + E94 Control Jobs + E30 communication state
GEM300 layer: SEMI E40-0705 Process Job and E94-0705 Control Job state machines, plus the E30 §6.1 communication-state machine that sits between HSMS SELECT and full GEM communication. Data-driven via data/process_job_state.yaml and data/control_job_state.yaml, mirroring the existing control_state.yaml pattern. Wire coverage: S14F9/F10 CreateObject (CJ) host -> equipment S14F11/F12 DeleteObject (CJ) host -> equipment S16F5/F6 PRJobCommand host -> equipment S16F9 PRJobAlert equipment -> host S16F11/F12 PRJobCreate (simplified body) host -> equipment S16F13/F14 PRJobDequeue host -> equipment S16F27/F28 CJobCommand host -> equipment Process Job FSM exposes 8 states matching PRJOBSTATE bytes (E40 §10.3.2); HOQ is reorder-aware (move-to-head against an insertion-order vector); Stop/Abort on a Queued PJ routes through ABORTING so the host observes PRJOBSTATE=7 on the wire (§6.3); alert_enabled is settable per-PJ for PRALERT control; FSM dispatches through ProcessJobStore::on_change_ dynamically so a late set_state_change_handler() reaches existing PJs. Hardening: loader rejects NoState (sentinel) as initial/from/to and rejects `on: created` rows; static_asserts pin enum values to wire bytes; ProcessJobStore is non-movable to keep the per-PJ this-capture safe. Server simulator cascades the full CJ -> PJ lifecycle on CJSTART so the wire trace exercises every legal state. CEIDs 400/401 fire on CJ state changes via the existing event-report pipeline. Tests: 60+ new assertions across test_process_jobs, test_control_jobs, test_communication_state, test_hsms_connection, plus loader and messages round-trip coverage. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com> |
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813e011409 |
Close COMPLIANCE.md gap: Documentation (S1F19-F22)
tests / build-and-test (push) Failing after 32s
Adds the GEM "Documentation" Fundamental capability: the equipment now
self-reports which GEM capabilities it supports, and the host can
discover the DVID namelist with the same shape used for SVIDs.
Catalog (data/messages.yaml -> generated messages.hpp)
S1F19 W header-only Get GEM Compliance Request
S1F20 <L,3 <A SOFTREV>
<A EQPTYP>
<L,a <L,2 <U1 CCODE> <A CDESC>>>>
Get GEM Compliance Data
S1F21 W <L,n <U4 VID>> DVID Namelist Request (n=0 = all)
S1F22 <L,n <L,3 <U4 VID>
<A VNAME>
<A UNITS>>> DVID Namelist Data
Codegen emits CapabilityEntry and GemCompliance structs. S1F22 reuses
S1F12's StatusName struct (same wire shape; dedup avoids redefinition).
Equipment data dictionary (data/equipment.yaml)
device: Adds `equipment_type: "EQUIPMENT"`
for the S1F20 EQPTYP field.
capabilities: New section. List of
- {code, name} (CCODE, CDESC) pairs honestly
reflecting what the codebase
implements: 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8,
9, 11, 12, 14 (partial), 15.
dvids: New section, same schema as
svids:. Demo populates two:
- WaferCounter (U4, units wafer)
- ChamberPressure (F4, units Torr)
Loader (src/config/loader.cpp + include/secsgem/config/loader.hpp)
EquipmentDescriptor gains equipment_type and capabilities (vector of
(uint8_t, string) pairs). load_equipment now reads `capabilities:`
into the descriptor and `dvids:` into model.dvids.
Server (apps/secs_server.cpp)
router.on(1, 19) returns S1F20 with desc.software_rev,
desc.equipment_type, and desc.capabilities converted to
vector<CapabilityEntry>.
router.on(1, 21) returns S1F22 built from model.dvids.all().
Client (apps/secs_client.cpp)
Two new demo steps after Request Online and before SVID discovery:
S1F19 -> S1F20: logs SOFTREV, EQPTYP, and every (CCODE, CDESC)
the equipment claims.
S1F21 -> S1F22: logs each DVID with units.
Tests
tests/test_messages.cpp Round-trip S1F19/F20 with a 3-entry
capability list; round-trip S1F22 with two
DVIDs.
tests/test_loader.cpp Asserts equipment_type, the capabilities
list contains CCODE 14 (Spooling), and the
two DVIDs land in model.dvids.
COMPLIANCE.md
"Documentation" Fundamental moves from ⬜ to ✅.
S1F19/F20 + S1F21/F22 rows in the coverage matrix flip to ✅.
The "what would it take" list drops the documentation-messages bullet.
Verified
- Tests: 77 cases / 444 assertions pass.
- Demo: client logs the full capability list received from the
equipment, including CCODE 14 "Spooling (partial; S2F43/F44 +
S6F23/F24)" — the equipment honestly reports its partial
implementation rather than overclaiming.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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b871cd9da2 |
Table/YAML-driven refactor (Layer 1 start)
Move equipment capabilities and the E30 control state machine out of C++
code and into YAML data files; introduce a Router for SECS dispatch;
consolidate small files.
Behavioural changes: none. Demo identical (15 SxFy transactions +
3 equipment-initiated primaries), 67 test cases / 384 assertions still
all green. Structural changes only.
Why
---
The previous server.cpp held the equipment data dictionary (3 SVIDs,
2 ECIDs, 3 CEIDs, 2 alarms, 2 recipes, 4 host commands) as imperative
C++ in a 50-line `populate()` function, and routed inbound messages
through a 150-line if-ladder. Adding a new SVID required a recompile.
Adding a new state transition required editing two switch statements
(`operator_*` and `on_host_request_*`). The control state machine's
behavioural rules were spread across imperative code in two methods.
This is exactly what implementation_plan.md calls out as the wrong
shape: behavioural rules should live in versioned data, and every
runtime/test/analyzer should read from that data rather than re-encode
it. This commit starts that move.
What's new
----------
data/equipment.yaml
Equipment data dictionary. Declarative SVIDs / ECIDs / CEIDs /
alarms / recipes / host commands. Host commands carry their HCACK
ack code plus optional `emit_ceid` and `set_alarm` side-effects.
Adding a new SVID or command is a YAML edit, no recompile.
data/control_state.yaml
The E30 §6.2 control state transition table as data. Each row is
(from, on) -> (to [, then] [, ack]). `then` chains an auto-advance
through the transient AttemptOnline state. The previous
imperative switch is gone.
include/secsgem/config/loader.hpp + src/config/loader.cpp
yaml-cpp-backed loader. `load_control_state(path)` returns a
ControlTransitionTable + initial state; `load_equipment(path, model)`
populates the EquipmentDataModel and returns the device descriptor
(id, MDLN, SOFTREV, optional auto-emit CEID). Surfaces config
errors with file path + field name via ConfigError.
include/secsgem/gem/router.hpp (header-only)
Small (stream, function) -> handler map. Server registers all
handlers once at startup, then the Connection's message handler is
just `router.dispatch(msg)`. Unhandled primaries with W set get
SxF0 by default. Replaces the if-ladder in secs_server.cpp.
include/secsgem/gem/control_state.hpp + .cpp
ControlTransitionTable is the new pure data type. ControlStateMachine
is now a thin engine over the table: `fire(event)` looks up the row,
optionally transitions, optionally chains a `then` transition, returns
the ack code. Behaviour rules no longer live in C++ switches.
The default in-code table matches data/control_state.yaml row for row;
tests rely on it so they don't need the YAML file.
include/secsgem/gem/data_model.hpp + .cpp
`register_command(rcmd, CommandSpec)` replaces the function-handler
signature. CommandSpec = (HostCmdAck, optional emit_ceid, optional
set_alarm). `dispatch_command` returns a CommandResult so the server
can fire the side-effects after S2F42 is sent.
apps/secs_server.cpp
No populate(), no if-ladder. Loads equipment.yaml + control_state.yaml
at startup (clean error on bad config), wires the Router once,
delegates dispatch. Sm change handler reads emit_on_control_change
from the YAML. Welcome S10F3 removed for parity with config (a future
YAML rule could re-introduce it declaratively).
tests/test_loader.cpp (new)
Verifies the YAML loader produces the same shape as the in-code
default table, and that equipment.yaml populates every section
(SVIDs/ECIDs/CEIDs/alarms/recipes/commands). SECSGEM_DATA_DIR
CMake define points at ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/data so tests don't
depend on cwd.
CMakeLists.txt, Dockerfile
find_package(yaml-cpp) and link. libyaml-cpp-dev added to the
Ubuntu base image (yaml-cpp 0.8 ships the modern target name).
File consolidation
------------------
Five small files removed; their content lives in fewer headers:
- secs2/item.cpp -> inline in secs2/item.hpp
- secs2/message.cpp -> inline in secs2/message.hpp
- hsms/types.hpp -> merged into hsms/header.hpp
- hsms/frame.hpp -> merged into hsms/header.hpp
- hsms/frame.cpp -> merged into hsms/header.cpp
hsms/header.hpp is now "the HSMS wire format" in one place: SType + status
enums + Timers + Header + Frame + constants. All includers updated.
Net effect
----------
Before: equipment data dictionary lived in 50 lines of imperative
populate() inside secs_server.cpp; dispatch in a 20-branch if-ladder.
After: equipment data dictionary lives in 47 lines of YAML; dispatch
is a Router built once. Adding a new capability is now a YAML edit
in the common case.
Test count up to 67 cases / 384 assertions (+4 cases / +106 assertions)
covering the loader and the new table-driven SM paths.
What's NOT changed
------------------
The per-SxFy reply construction still lives in C++ (each message has a
unique body shape). Moving those into YAML/JSON message-shape
definitions is the next refactor step but requires a generic typed
encoder/decoder driven by shape descriptors; out of scope here.
Spooling, the S9 error stream, S1F19/F20, and the other gaps in
COMPLIANCE.md remain unchanged.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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