This page contains some tedious details of the implementation; it might be of interest if you’re wondering whether the behaviour you see is intentional or a bug.
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Each game played in a competition is identified using a short string (the game_id). This is used in the SGF game record filename and game name (GN), the log files, the live display, and so on.
For playoff tournaments, game ids are made up from the matchup id and the number of the game within the matchup; for example, the first game played might be 0_0 or 0_000 (depending on the value of number_of_games).
Similarly for all-play-all tournaments, game ids are like AvB_0, using the competitor letters shown in the results grid, with the length depending on the rounds setting.
If scorer is "players" but neither engine is able to score (whether because final_score isn’t implemented, or it fails, or is_reliable_scorer is False), the game result is reported as unknown (SGF result ?).
If both engines are able to score but they disagree about the winner, the game result is reported as unknown. The engines’ responses to final_score are recorded in SGF file comments.
If the engines agree about the winner but disagree about the winning margin, the SGF result is simply B+ or W+, and the engines’ responses are recorded in SGF file comments.
If an engine returns a GTP failure response to any of the commands which set up the game (eg boardsize or fixed_handicap), the game is treated as void.
If an engine fails to start, exits unexpectedly, or produces a GTP response which is ill-formed at the protocol level, the game is treated as void.
As an exception, if such an error happens after the game’s result has been established (in particular, if one player has already forfeited the game), the game is not treated as void.
Before reporting the game result, the ringmaster sends quit to both engines, closes their input and output pipes, and waits for the subprocesses to exit.
If an engine hangs (during the game or at exit), the ringmaster will just hang too (or, if in parallel mode, one worker process will).
The exit status of engine subprocesses is ignored.
Void games are games which were not completed due to a software failure, and which don’t count as a forfeit by either engine.
Void games don’t appear in the competition results. They’re recorded in the event log, and a warning is displayed on screen when they occur.
If record_games is enabled, a game record will be written for each void game that had at least one move played. These are placed in the code.void/ subdirectory of the competition directory.
A void game will normally be replayed, with the same game id (the details depend on the competition type; see below).
(Note that void games aren’t the same thing as games whose SGF result is Void; the ringmaster uses that result for games which exceed the move_limit.)
A single error which causes a void game will not normally cause a competition to be prematurely halted, but multiple errors may.
The details depend on the competition type:
For playoff and all-play-all tournaments, a run is halted early if the first game in any matchup is void, or if two games in a row for the same matchup are void.
For tuning events, a run is halted immediately if the first game to finish is void.
Otherwise, in Monte Carlo tuning events a void game will be ignored: a new game will be scheduled from the current state of the MCTS tree (and the original game number will be skipped). If two game results in a row are void, the run will be halted.
In cross-entropy tuning events a void game will be replayed; if it fails again, the run will be halted.
In parallel mode, outstanding games will be allowed to complete.
If flock() is available, the ringmaster will detect attempts to run a competition which is already running (but this probably won’t work if the control file is on a network filesystem).
It’s fine to use show and report, or the tournament results API, while a competition is running.
The check for Ctrl-X uses the ringmaster’s controlling terminal, independently of stdin and stdout. If there’s no controlling terminal, or termios isn’t available, this check is disabled.
The engine subprocesses are left attached to the ringmaster’s controlling terminal, so they will receive signals from Ctrl-C; unless they detach from their controlling terminal or ignore the signal, they should exit cleanly in response.
Running the ringmaster in the background (including using Ctrl-Z) should work properly (you probably want quiet mode).
The stop action is implemented by writing a code.cmd file to the competition directory.
Gomill is designed for a UTF-8 environment; it is intended to work correctly if non-ASCII characters provided as input are encoded in UTF-8, and to produce terminal and report output in UTF-8.
Non-ASCII characters in the control file must be encoded in UTF-8.
GTP engines may return UTF-8 characters in in response to name, version, gomill-describe_engine, or gomill-explain_last_move.
In practice, non-ASCII characters from GTP engines will normally be passed through untranslated, so if you have a non-UTF-8 environment things will probably work reasonably (if your terminal uses the same encoding).
SGF files written by Gomill always explicitly specify UTF-8 encoding.