Connecting Gaia Sky instances
Gaia Sky offers a method to connect different instances together so that their internal state is synchronized. The model uses a primary-replica scenario, where one (and only one) instance acts as a primary and one or more instances act as replicas, getting their internal states updated over a network. The user interacts with the primary instance and all replicas are updated accordingly.
Contents
Note
In this section we use the words ‘primary’ and ‘master’ interchangeably to refer to the main Gaia Sky instance that controls the rest. We also use the words ‘slave’ and ‘replica’ to describe the instances that are controlled by the primary.
This section describes only how to configure the primary and the replica instances in order to connect them together. This method is used to provide multi-projector rendering support (i.e. planetarium domes), but extra steps are needed in order to configure the orientation, distortion warp and blend settings for each replica instance.
The various instances are connected using the REST API server feature of Gaia Sky.
Hint
Multi-projector configuration is covered in the “Planetarium mode multi-projector setup” section.
Configuration
The configuration is easy and painless. You will need to launch each instance of
Gaia Sky using a different configuration file (config.yaml
). You can
run Gaia Sky with a specific configuration file by using the -p
or --properties
command line flags:
$ gaiasky -p ~/.config/gaiasky/config.primary.yaml
The next sections explain how to configure the primary and the replica instances.
Configuration: replica instance(s)
You can have as many replica instances as you want, but here we’ll explain the process of setting up two replicas.
Copy the current
config.yaml
file in your config folder (see folders) intoconfig.replica0.yaml
. The name is irrelevant, but choose something meaningful. Repeat withconfig.replica1.yaml
.Set the property
program::net::slave::active: true
in each file and make sure thatprogram::net::master::active
is set tofalse
.Set the desired port to listen to in
program::net::restPort
. For example, to use the port 13900 just set the propertyprogram::net::restPort: 13900
. Use a different port for each replica (i.e. replica 0 listens to 13900, slave 1 listens to 13901, etc.). For example, to set up a replica in port 13900, make sure that the following lines are in its configuration file:
program:
net:
restPort: 13900
master:
active: false
slave:
active: true
The replica instances should be launched before the primary. Launch the replica(s) with:
$ # Launch replica 0
$ gaiasky -p /path/to/config.replica0.yaml
$ # Launch replica 1
$ gaiasky -p /path/to/config.replica1.yaml
Once the replica(s) have been launched, you can verify that the API is working by
visiting http://localhost:13900/api/help
with your browser.
Modify the port with whatever port you are using.
Hint
Only the primary instance is starting the scripting server. The replicas are automatically forbidden to do so!
Configuration: primary instance
Copy the current config.yaml
file into config.primary.yaml
and
edit the following lines.
Set the property
progra::net::master::active: true
and make sure thatprogram::net::slave::active
is set tofalse
.Add the locations of all desired replicas under the settings
program::net::master::slaves: [URL1, URL2, ...]
.
For example, in order to connect the primary with two replicas, both running locally (localhost
) on ports 13900 and 13901, add the following to the config.primary.yaml
file:
program:
net:
restPort: 13900
master:
active: true
slaves: [http://localhost:13900/api/,http://localhost:13901/api/]
slave:
active: false
Then, just launch the primary (after the replicas are running!):
$ gaiasky -p /path/to/config.primary.yaml
Caveats
Even though this offers a very flexible system to connect several instances of Gaia Sky together, each instance is a fully-fledged application with its own copy of the scene graph and the data structures. This means that, if you run them locally, the data and scene graph will be replicated several times in memory, possibly consuming lots of gigabytes.
Handle it with care.