Clock Publisher
Introduction#
ClockPublisher
allows the publication of the simulation time from the clock operating within AWSIM. The current time is retrived from a TimeSource
object via the SimulatorROS2Node
. The AWSIM provides convenient method for selecting the appropriate time source type as well as the flexibility to implement custom TimeSources
tailored to specific user requirements.
Setup#
To enable the publication of the current time during simulation execution, ClockPublisher
must be included as a component within the scene. Moreover, to allow the TimeSource
to be set or changed, the TimeSourceSelector
object must also be present in the active scene.
Selecting Time Source#
The desired TimeSource
can be selected in two ways:
- Inspector Selection:
TimeSource
type can be conveniently choosen directly from the editor interface.
- JSON Configuration File: Alternatively, the
TimeSource
type can be specified in the JSON configuration file via the TimeSource field. The supported values for this field can be found in the list of available time sources in the "String Value for JSON Config" column.
List of Time Sources#
Type | String Value for JSON Config | Description |
---|---|---|
UNITY | unity | based on the time of the Unity Engine |
SS2 | ss2 | driven by an external source, used by the scenario simulator v2 |
DOTNET_SYSTEM | system | based on system time, starting with time since UNIX epoch, progressing according to simulation timescale |
DOTNET_SIMULATION | simulation | based on system time, starting with zero value, progressing according to simulation timescale |
ROS2 | ros2 | based on ROS2 time (system time by default) |
Architecture#
The ClockPublisher
operates within a dedicated thread called the 'Clock' thread. This design choice offers significant advantages by freeing the publishing process from the constraints imposed by fixed update limits. As a result, ClockPublisher
is able to consistently publish time at a high rate, ensuring stability and accuracy.
Accessing Time Source#
Running the clock publisher in a dedicated thread introduced the challenge of accessing shared resources by different threads. In our case, the Main Thread and Clock Thread compete for TimeSoruce
resources. The diagram below illustrates this concurrent behaviour, with two distinct threads vying for access to the TimeSource
:
- Main Thread: included publishing message by sensors (on the diagram blueish region labeled sensor loop),
- Clock Thread: included clock publisher (on the diagram blueish region labeled clock loop).
Given multiple sensors, each with its own publishing frequency, alongside a clock running at 100Hz, there is a notable competition for TimeSource
resources. In such cases, it becomes imperative for the TimeSource
class to be thread-safe.
Thread-Safe Time Source#
The TimeSource
synchronization mechanism employs a mutex to lock the necessary resource for the current thread. The sequence of actions undertaken each time the GetTime()
method is called involves:
- acquiring the lock,
- getting the current time, e.g. system time since epoch, (this may be different for each type of time source),
- obtaining the current simulation time-scale,
- calculating the delta time since previous call, influenced by the time scale,
- returning the current time,
- releasing the lock.
Extensions#
There are two additional classes used to synchronise the UnityEngine TimeAsDouble
and TimeScale
values between threads:
TimeScaleProvider
: facilitates the synchronisation of the simulation time scale value across threads,TimeAsDoubleProvider
: provides access to the UnityEngineTimeAsDouble
to the threads other than the main thread.