Documentation > Developers
While OpenMOLE's core code is not intended to be directly accessible to most users, an easy-to-use transparent and flexible API has
been developed for simple development of user extensions to the core. This API allows the user to implement new tasks, methods, samplings.
Contents
Concepts of the API 🔗
The primitives for the API are imported by importing contents of packageorg.openmole.core.dsl.extension
.
These primitive provide constructors for
- tasks
- samplings
- hooks
Task extensions 🔗
To define a new task, useTask(name: String)(process: FromContext => Context)
. What the task does is defined by the provided closure, which transforms a FromContext
into a Context
.
You can add implicits in your apply
method to get advanced services (mole services, network services, etc.).
Validation is provided with the validate
method which transforms validation parameters into a sequence of throwables.
For example
object MyTask {
def apply(taskparam: Double,taskval: Val[Double])(implicit moleService: MoleServices,workspace: Workspace, networkService: NetworkService) =
Task("MyTask"){
parameters =>
// do something with from context parameters : here add a constant to a double prototype
Context(taskval -> parameters.context(taskval) + taskparam)
} validate {vp => vp.map{proto => if(proto.v < 0) new Throwable("double proto should be positive") }} set (
(inputs,outputs) += (taskval)
)
}
Sampling extensions 🔗
To implement a sampling, the constructorSampling
takes a function transforming a FromContext
into a sampling results,
which is an Iterator[Iterable[Variable[_]]]
.
For example the following sampling assigns uniformally a sequence of doubles to some prototypes :
object MySampling {
def apply(values: FromContext[Array[[Double]]],prototypes: Val[_]*) = Sampling {
p =>
values.from(p.context).map{ value => prototypes.toList.map{ proto => Variable(proto,value)}}.toIterator
} validate { _ => Seq.empty} inputs {prototypes} prototypes {prototypes}
}
Integrating your extension into the build 🔗
OpenMOLE uses OSGI bundles to integrate its different components into a single application. This allows for example loading bundle in a dynamical way, what is done when adding user plugins through the GUI. To integrate your module into the build process of OpenMOLE, several steps have thus to be performed:- Add your module as an Osgi project into the main build file build.sbt. For example, in the case of a new sampling, the syntax would be similar to the sobol sampling:
. Note that you need to specify the bundles you use in your code, and the external libraries dependencies. You also need to add your module to the integrated ones, by adding the project tolazy val quasirandomSampling = OsgiProject(pluginDir, "org.openmole.plugin.sampling.quasirandom", imports = Seq("*")) dependsOn(exception, workflow, workspace, openmoleDSL) settings ( libraryDependencies += Libraries.math ) settings (pluginSettings: _*)
allSamplings
for example. If your library dependency requires specific resolvers, these can be added todefaultSettings
or only locally to your project. - Add your library dependencies to the
Libraries
object in the file openmole/project/Libraries.scala. For the code above, you would have to specify theLibraries.math
value, which in this particular case is the apache common math library:lazy val math = "org.openmole.library" %% "org-apache-commons-math" % "3.6.1"
. The library is defined as a bundle under the organisation org.openmole.library. The construction of this bundle is detailed in the next step. - Transform the required library dependencies into OSGI bundles. This step is done during the library publishing step of OpenMOLE compilation: you have thus to modify
libraries/build.sbt
by adding a new OSGI project, for example
. At this stage, the exports statement is important since it is thanks to it that the classes will be visible to other OSGI bundles and more particularly your plugin.lazy val math = OsgiProject(dir, "org.apache.commons.math", exports = Seq("org.apache.commons.math3.*"), privatePackages = Seq("assets.*")) settings ( libraryDependencies += "org.apache.commons" % "commons-math3" % mathVersion, version := mathVersion) settings(settings: _*)
- A last step may be necessary in the case your dependencies have themselves dependencies which are already OSGI bundle.
In that case, a conflict will occur and they must be added to a bundle filter used during the final assembly of OpenMOLE.
This filter is defined as
bundleFilter
in main build. Add the names of the offending libraries in thebundleFilter.exclude
function.