4f3031aeb9
C9 — the flagship vendor example now demonstrates the intended integration
shape. examples/pvd_tool/main.cpp: 1093 -> 570 lines. The 466-line
hand-registered handler section and the hand-wired Server/Router/emit
plumbing are gone, replaced by EquipmentRuntime + register_default_handlers
(the example now serves all 56 handlers, up from its hand-picked 51) +
commands.set_handler for the START-runs-the-recipe behaviour (was a
hard-coded S2F41 router override). All domain logic — sensor simulator,
recipe runner, alarm threshold monitor, EPT cycler, Prometheus gauges —
unchanged. pvd's SVIDs 1/2 and CEIDs 400/401 match the roles: defaults, so
the built-ins bind with no config change. Verified: builds clean, boots
("registered 56 handlers", config loaded, EPT cycling), HSMS :5000 accepts,
metrics :9090 answers HTTP 200. logfn flushes per line so docker/CI logs
are visible immediately.
Writing project — new tutorial chapter docs/42_vendor_daemon_and_clients.md:
why a daemon (the host-timer argument), the proto contract and the HCACK-4
command semantics, the Python client walkthrough, EquipmentRuntime +
capability registration + roles:, the threading contract (posting API /
read_sync / hooks-on-io-thread) and primary-vs-observer slots, and a
which-tier-do-I-pick table. Indexed in 00_index Part 4. Refreshed the three
spots that still described pvd_tool's old "51 handlers in ~460 lines" shape
(ch35, ch41, pvd README) — drift killed in the same commit that made it.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Fable 5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
159 lines
7.1 KiB
Markdown
159 lines
7.1 KiB
Markdown
# ACME-PVD-3000 — worked vendor example
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A fictional Physical Vapor Deposition tool, end-to-end. This is what
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a real tool integrator's deployment looks like:
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- `equipment.yaml` — the tool's data dictionary (29 SVIDs, 5 DVIDs,
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7 ECIDs, 21 CEIDs, 12 alarms, 3 recipes, 9 host commands)
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- `main.cpp` — the vendor application: sensor simulator, recipe
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runner, alarm threshold monitor, EPT cycling, metrics exporter,
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Router handlers wiring it all to the wire.
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If you're starting a real integration, **fork these two files** and
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customize. They're written to be a template, not an abstract demo.
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## What it demonstrates
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| Section in main.cpp | What it shows you how to do |
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|-------------------------------|----------------------------------------------------------------------|
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| §1 Helpers + constants | The few `kSvidX / kCeidX` constants worth pinning at file scope |
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| §2 Sensor simulator | Multi-cadence sensor poll loops (10 Hz pressure, 1 Hz temps), with the `asio::post`-onto-strand thread-safety pattern |
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| §3 Recipe runner | Driving a PJ through SettingUp → Processing → ProcessComplete by walking the recipe body, with per-step CEID emission |
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| §4 Alarm threshold monitor | Continuous threshold-based alarm logic (chamber pressure, cleaning interval) with set/clear emission |
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| §5 EPT cycling | E116 state transitions driven by PJ state + safety alarms |
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| §6 main() | `EquipmentRuntime` + `register_default_handlers` (all 56 GEM handlers in one call) + `commands.set_handler` for the START behaviour |
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| §7 main() | Loading YAML → validating → composing → running, including the Prometheus exporter on `:9090` (§7.3) |
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## Running it
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From repo root:
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```bash
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# Validate the configs (this is what your CI should do).
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docker compose run --rm builder /app/build/secs_server --validate-config \
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--config /app/examples/pvd_tool/equipment.yaml \
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--state-table /app/data/control_state.yaml \
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--pj-state-table /app/data/process_job_state.yaml \
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--cj-state-table /app/data/control_job_state.yaml
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# Start the tool.
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docker compose run --rm builder /app/build/pvd_tool \
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/app/examples/pvd_tool/equipment.yaml \
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/app/data/control_state.yaml \
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5000 \
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9090
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# In another shell, drive it with the conformance harness or a real host.
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docker compose run --rm builder /app/build/secs_conformance \
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--host 127.0.0.1 --port 5000 --device 0
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# 47 / 47 checks passed
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```
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Or via Docker Compose if you'd rather wire it as a service.
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## What the host sees
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Once a host connects and SELECTs:
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1. **S1F1 → S1F2** returns `MDLN="ACME-PVD-3000"`, `SOFTREV="1.4.2"`.
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2. **S1F3** on the 32 SVIDs returns live sensor readings — chamber
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pressure tracks the simulator's target (default 1e-7 Torr in
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idle), wafer counter increments per processed PJ, EPT state
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gauge says `Standby`.
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3. **S2F33/F35/F37** binds dynamic event reports; CEIDs 300 / 301 /
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310 / 311 fire on real PJ activity.
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4. **S2F41 RCMD=START** kicks the recipe runner: any PJ in
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WaitingForStart transitions to Processing and the simulator
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starts tracking the recipe's step targets. Sensor values change
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in real time. CEID 300 (ProcessStarted) emits, then per-step
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CEID 310/311, then CEID 301 (ProcessCompleted) on completion.
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5. **S2F41 RCMD=FAULT** sets alarm 4 → S5F1 emitted (if enabled
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via S5F3 first).
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6. **S7F19** lists the 3 recipes; **S7F5** returns the body
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(multi-line STEP definitions).
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7. **S16F11** (PJ create) + **S14F9** (CJ create) + **S16F27**
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(CJSTART) drives the full E40/E94 lifecycle.
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## What's the same as the secs-gem demo server
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`apps/secs_server.cpp` (used by `docker compose up server`) is the
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canonical fully-loaded server. This example is structurally a
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slimmer fork:
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- Same Router pattern (`gem::Router` + `router.on(s, f, [...])`)
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- Same event/alarm emission helpers (`deliver_or_spool`,
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`emit_event`, `emit_alarm_set`)
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- Same control-state-change handler wiring
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What this example adds that the demo doesn't:
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- **Sensor simulator** with multi-cadence poll loops. The demo's
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SVID values stay at their YAML defaults; PVD's drift toward
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recipe-step targets.
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- **Recipe runner** that parses the recipe body and drives the PJ
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FSM step-by-step. The demo's RCMD=START just emits the linked
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CEID; PVD actually walks the recipe.
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- **Alarm threshold monitor** — continuous evaluation of sensor
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values against ECID setpoints. The demo only fires alarms when
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RCMD=FAULT is sent.
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- **EPT cycling** — automatic Standby↔Productive↔UnscheduledDowntime
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based on PJ + alarm state. The demo doesn't cycle EPT.
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- **Prometheus metrics exporter** on a second port. The demo logs
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but doesn't export.
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If you want one of these patterns in your own tool, lift the code
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from `main.cpp` directly — each section is independently usable.
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## What's not here
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- **Persistence.** The demo server's `--spool-dir` flag is the
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pattern to copy. Add `model->spool.enable_persistence(...)` etc.
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at startup before binding the port. See
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[`docs/INTEGRATION.md`](../../docs/INTEGRATION.md) §5.
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- **E84 handshake timers.** No load-port AMHS wiring; see
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[`docs/INTEGRATION.md`](../../docs/INTEGRATION.md) §4.6 for the
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`E84AsioTimers` adapter.
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- **Real I/O bridges.** Sensor values come from a random-walk
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simulator. A real PVD tool would have a PLC/serial driver
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module-bridge feeding `model->svids.set_value(...)` from real
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hardware.
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- **Production deployment hardening** —
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[`docs/SECURITY.md`](../../docs/SECURITY.md) (nftables, stunnel,
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minisign signing) and
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[`docs/INTEGRATION.md`](../../docs/INTEGRATION.md) §7 (HA pattern).
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## What you'd change for *your* tool
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1. **Replace `equipment.yaml`** with your tool's actual SVIDs,
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ECIDs, alarms, recipes. Run
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`secs_server --validate-config` after every edit.
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2. **Replace the sensor simulator** (`pvd::Simulator`) with calls
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into your real hardware driver. Keep the `asio::post` pattern
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for cross-thread updates.
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3. **Replace the recipe runner** with your real recipe engine
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integration. The shape — fire `Start`, walk steps, fire
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`ProcessComplete` — is the contract; the implementation is
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yours.
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4. **Replace the alarm threshold monitor** with your real
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alarm sources (sensor interrupts, watchdog timers, hardware
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fault lines). Same `emit_alarm_set / emit_alarm_clear` API.
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5. **Keep most of the Router handler section** — those are spec-
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defined and you'll need them all in production.
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That's it. No framework, no DI container, no abstract base
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classes. ~1,100 lines of vendor code on top of the library.
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## Cross-references
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- [`docs/INTEGRATION.md`](../../docs/INTEGRATION.md) — the conceptual
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tutorial this example concretizes
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- [`docs/ARCHITECTURE.md`](../../docs/ARCHITECTURE.md) — how stores
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compose, how to extend
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- [`docs/BENCHMARKS.md`](../../docs/BENCHMARKS.md) — what the
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throughput envelope looks like
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- [`docs/SECURITY.md`](../../docs/SECURITY.md) — production hardening
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configs
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- [`apps/secs_server.cpp`](../../apps/secs_server.cpp) — the demo
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server's fully-loaded Router (every handler PVD inherits + a
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few more)
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