- factor out own class for the iadsnetwork within the conflicttheater
- This class will handle all Skynet related things - no specific group_name handling necessary in future
- make iadsbuilding own TGO class because SAM & EWRs are Vehicle Groups. IADS Elements dont have any groups attached.
- added command center, connection node and power source as Ground objects which can be added by the campaign designer
- adjust lua generator to support new iads units
- parse the campaign yaml to get the iads network information
- use the range as fallback if no yaml information was found
- complete rewrite of the skynet lua script
- allow destruction of iads network to be persistent over all rounds
- modified the presetlocation handling: the wrapper PresetLocation for PointWithHeading now stores the original name from the campaign miz to have the ability to process campaign yaml configurations based on the ground unit
- Implementation of the UI representation for the IADS Network
- Give user the option to enable or disable advanced iads
- Extended the layout system: Implement Sub task handling to support PD
This allows unique identification across saves. The front-end needs to
be able to differentiate the first carrier in game A and the first
carrier in game B, but because carriers (and other non-airfield CPs) are
assigned IDs sequentially, collisions were to be expected. The front-end
can't tell the difference between a reloaded game and a new turn, so we
need to ensure different IDs across games.
This is a handy cleanup anyway, since callers constructing CPs no longer
need to manually track the CP ID counter.
Fixes https://github.com/dcs-liberation/dcs_liberation/issues/2078.
During package planning we don't care about the details of the flight
plan, just the layout (to check if the layout is threatened and we need
escorts). Splitting these will allow us to reduce the amount of work
that must be done in each loop of the planning phase, potentially
caching attempted flight plans between loops.
Split the oversized file into one per plan type. This also moves the
layout responsibility out of the oversized FlightPlanBuilder and into
each flight plan type file.
A serverconfig.env (or just environment variables) can be set to
override the default bind address/port for the backend. This is passed
to the front end as a query parameter.
There are still two more of these that don't show up in openapi.json
because they don't show up in HTTP routes (only in the websocket):
* GameUpdateEvents
* FrozenCombat
I'm not sure if there's a way to forcibly include those in the
openapi.json, if I should add a no-op API to force it to happen, or if I
should just ignore it. For now I'm going with option 3.
operation_ids give us better function names when generating the
typescript API from the openapi.json. BaseModel.Config.title does the
same for type names. Response models (or 204 status codes) need to be
explicit or the API will be declared as returning any.
The React UI running in a browser can't connect to the backend without
punching a hole for CORS, which isn't done by default. We don't need the
API key to protect from browsers, and anything else running on the
user's machine that can access the backend (that's hosted on only
localhost) already has enough control to do damage without using
Liberation as an attack vector.
https://github.com/dcs-liberation/dcs_liberation
This may not be the way to do this long term, but it is how the old map
works so it's at least not a regression. It might be better to generate
events for the between-turn changes in state instead.
https://github.com/dcs-liberation/dcs_liberation/issues/2039
Useful for development if you want to disable API key authentication for
debugging the server without having to pull the generated key out of the
log every time.
There are some TODOs here but th behavior is flagged off by default. The
biggest TODO here is that the time spent frozen is not simulated, so
flights that are engaged by SAMs will unfreeze, move slightly, then re-
freeze.
https://github.com/dcs-liberation/dcs_liberation/issues/1680
If there's a websocket being waited on the shut down won't actually
happen. Add a new event for shut down and send it to break the websocket
out of its loop.
We can't directly use frozen dataclasses from pydcs in our interface
because pydantic can't process them. Pydantic is able to automatically
convert to our modelview type from the pydcs type though.
This is briefly moving us over to my fork of pydcs while we wait for
https://github.com/pydcs/dcs/pull/206 to be merged. The adaptation is
invasive enough that I don't want it lingering for long.
Apparently it's a bad idea to try to make the core data pydantic models,
and those should really be treated more as a view-model. Doing otherwise
causes odd patterns (like the UI info I had leaked into the core type),
and makes it harder to interop with third-party types.
By default logging configuration is defined by
resources/default_logging.yaml. Very noisy loggers (like the
uvicorn.access logger) are kept out of the console and UI logs by
default. Developers (or weird users) can customize their default logging
config by copying the file to resources/logging.yaml and editing as
needed. It would be preferable to load this file form the Liberation
user directory, but because first-time initialization requires the UI,
we want to configure logging before we necessarily know where to find
that.
We don't have any sensitive data, but we do access the file system. On
the off chance that some phishing website decides to try to use
Liberation as an attack vector, prevent access to the API by
unauthorized applications. An API key is generated at each program start
and passed to the front end via the QWebChannel.