EnTT
is a header-only, tiny and easy to use entity-component system (and much
more) written in modern C++.
The entity-component-system (also known as ECS) is an architectural pattern
used mostly in game development.
EnTT
offers a sparse set based model that doesn't require users to specify the
set of components neither at compile-time nor at runtime.
This is why users can instantiate the core class simply like:
entt::registry registry;
In place of its more annoying and error-prone counterpart:
entt::registry<comp_0, comp_1, ..., comp_n> registry;
Furthermore, it isn't necessary to announce the existence of a component type. When the time comes, just use it and that's all.
EnTT
is designed as a container that can be used at any time, just like a
vector or any other container. It doesn't attempt in any way to take over on the
user codebase, nor to control its main loop or process scheduling.
Unlike other more or less well known models, it also makes use of independent
pools that can be extended via static mixins. The built-in signal support is
an example of this flexible model: defined as a mixin, it's easily disabled if
not needed. Similarly, the storage class has a specialization that shows how
everything is customizable down to the smallest detail.
EnTT
is entirely designed around the principle that users have to pay only for
what they want.
When it comes to using an entity-component system, the tradeoff is usually
between performance and memory usage. The faster it is, the more memory it uses.
Even worse, some approaches tend to heavily affect other functionalities like
the construction and destruction of components to favor iterations, even when it
isn't strictly required. In fact, slightly worse performance along non-critical
paths are the right price to pay to reduce memory usage and have overall better
performance.
EnTT
follows a completely different approach. It gets the best out from the
basic data structures and gives users the possibility to pay more for higher
performance where needed.
So far, this choice has proven to be a good one and I really hope it can be for many others besides me.
EnTT
is such that a T**
pointer (or whatever a custom pool returns) is
always available to directly access all the instances of a given component type
T
.
I cannot say whether it will be useful or not to the reader, but it's worth to
mention it since it's one of the corner stones of this library.
Many of the tools described below give the possibility to get this information
and have been designed around this need.
The rest is experimentation and the desire to invent something new, hoping to
have succeeded.
The registry to store, the views and the groups to iterate. That's all.
The entt::entity
type implements the concept of entity identifier. An entity
(the E of an ECS) is an opaque element to use as-is. Inspecting it isn't
recommended since its format can change in future.
Components (the C of an ECS) are both move constructible and move assignable
types. No need to register them nor their types.
Systems (the S of an ECS) can be plain functions, functors, lambdas and so
on. It's not required to announce them in any case and have no requirements.
The next sections go into detail on how to use the entity-component system part
of the EnTT
library.
The project is composed of many other classes in addition to those described
below. For more details, please refer to the inline documentation.
Pools of components are a sort of specialized version of a sparse set. Each
pool contains all the instances of a single component type and all the entities
to which it's assigned.
Sparse arrays are paged to avoid wasting memory. Packed arrays of components
are also paged to have pointer stability upon additions. Packed arrays of
entities are not instead.
All pools rearranges their items in order to keep the internal arrays tightly
packed and maximize performance, unless pointer stability is enabled.
A registry stores and manages entities (or better, identifiers) and pools.
The class template basic_registry
lets users decide what's the preferred type
to represent an entity. Because std::uint32_t
is large enough for almost all
the cases, there also exists the enum class entt::entity
that wraps it and
the alias entt::registry
for entt::basic_registry<entt::entity>
.
Entities are represented by entity identifiers. An entity identifier contains
information about the entity itself and its version.
User defined identifiers are allowed as enum classes and class types that define
an entity_type
member of type std::uint32_t
or std::uint64_t
.
A registry is used both to construct and to destroy entities:
// constructs a naked entity with no components and returns its identifier
auto entity = registry.create();
// destroys an entity and all its components
registry.destroy(entity);
The create
member function also accepts a hint and has an overload that gets
two iterators and can be used to generate multiple entities at once efficiently.
Similarly, the destroy
member function also works with a range of entities:
// destroys all the entities in a range
auto view = registry.view<a_component, another_component>();
registry.destroy(view.begin(), view.end());
In addition to offering an overload to force the version upon destruction. Note that this function removes all components from an entity before releasing its identifier. There also exists a lighter alternative that only releases the elements without poking in any pool, for use with orphaned entities:
// releases an orphaned identifier
registry.release(entity);
As with the destroy
function, also in this case entity ranges are supported
and it's possible to force the version during release.
In both cases, when an identifier is released, the registry can freely reuse it
internally. In particular, the version of an entity is increased (unless the
overload that forces a version is used instead of the default one).
Users can probe an identifier to know the information it carries:
// returns true if the entity is still valid, false otherwise
bool b = registry.valid(entity);
// gets the version contained in the entity identifier
auto version = registry.version(entity);
// gets the actual version for the given entity
auto curr = registry.current(entity);
Components can be assigned to or removed from entities at any time. As for the entities, the registry offers a set of functions to use to work with components.
The emplace
member function template creates, initializes and assigns to an
entity the given component. It accepts a variable number of arguments to use to
construct the component itself if present:
registry.emplace<position>(entity, 0., 0.);
// ...
auto &vel = registry.emplace<velocity>(entity);
vel.dx = 0.;
vel.dy = 0.;
The default storage detects aggregate types internally and exploits aggregate
initialization when possible.
Therefore, it's not strictly necessary to define a constructor for each type, in
accordance with the rules of the language.
On the other hand, insert
works with ranges and can be used to:
Assign the same component to all entities at once when a type is specified as a template parameter or an instance is passed as an argument:
// default initialized type assigned by copy to all entities
registry.insert<position>(first, last);
// user-defined instance assigned by copy to all entities
registry.insert(from, to, position{0., 0.});
Assign a set of components to the entities when a range is provided (the length of the range of components must be the same of that of entities):
// first and last specify the range of entities, instances points to the first element of the range of components
registry.insert<position>(first, last, instances);
If an entity already has the given component, the replace
and patch
member
function templates can be used to update it:
// replaces the component in-place
registry.patch<position>(entity, [](auto &pos) { pos.x = pos.y = 0.; });
// constructs a new instance from a list of arguments and replaces the component
registry.replace<position>(entity, 0., 0.);
When it's unknown whether an entity already owns an instance of a component,
emplace_or_replace
is the function to use instead:
registry.emplace_or_replace<position>(entity, 0., 0.);
This is a slightly faster alternative for the following snippet:
if(registry.all_of<velocity>(entity)) {
registry.replace<velocity>(entity, 0., 0.);
} else {
registry.emplace<velocity>(entity, 0., 0.);
}
The all_of
and any_of
member functions may also be useful if in doubt about
whether or not an entity has all the components in a set or any of them:
// true if entity has all the given components
bool all = registry.all_of<position, velocity>(entity);
// true if entity has at least one of the given components
bool any = registry.any_of<position, velocity>(entity);
If the goal is to delete a component from an entity that owns it, the erase
member function template is the way to go:
registry.erase<position>(entity);
When in doubt whether the entity owns the component, use the remove
member
function instead. It behaves similarly to erase
but it erases the component
if and only if it exists, otherwise it returns safely to the caller:
registry.remove<position>(entity);
The clear
member function works similarly and can be used to either:
Erases all instances of the given components from the entities that own them:
registry.clear<position>();
Or destroy all entities in a registry at once:
registry.clear();
Finally, references to components can be retrieved simply as:
const auto &cregistry = registry;
// const and non-const reference
const auto &crenderable = cregistry.get<renderable>(entity);
auto &renderable = registry.get<renderable>(entity);
// const and non-const references
const auto [cpos, cvel] = cregistry.get<position, velocity>(entity);
auto [pos, vel] = registry.get<position, velocity>(entity);
The get
member function template gives direct access to the component of an
entity stored in the underlying data structures of the registry. There exists
also an alternative member function named try_get
that returns a pointer to
the component owned by an entity if any, a null pointer otherwise.
By default, each storage comes with a mixin that adds signal support to it.
This allows for fancy things like dependencies and reactive systems.
The on_construct
member function returns a sink (which is an object for
connecting and disconnecting listeners) for those interested in notifications
when a new instance of a given component type is created:
// connects a free function
registry.on_construct<position>().connect<&my_free_function>();
// connects a member function
registry.on_construct<position>().connect<&my_class::member>(instance);
// disconnects a free function
registry.on_construct<position>().disconnect<&my_free_function>();
// disconnects a member function
registry.on_construct<position>().disconnect<&my_class::member>(instance);
Similarly, on_destroy
and on_update
are used to receive notifications about
the destruction and update of an instance, respectively.
Because of how C++ works, listeners attached to on_update
are only invoked
following a call to replace
, emplace_or_replace
or patch
.
The function type of a listener is equivalent to the following:
void(entt::registry &, entt::entity);
In all cases, listeners are provided with the registry that triggered the notification and the involved entity.
Note also that:
Listeners for the construction signals are invoked after components have been assigned to entities.
Listeners designed to observe changes are invoked after components have been updated.
Listeners for the destruction signals are invoked before components have been removed from entities.
There are also some limitations on what a listener can and cannot do:
Connecting and disconnecting other functions from within the body of a listener should be avoided. It can lead to undefined behavior in some cases.
Removing the component from within the body of a listener that observes the construction or update of instances of a given type isn't allowed.
Assigning and removing components from within the body of a listener that observes the destruction of instances of a given type should be avoided. It can lead to undefined behavior in some cases. This type of listeners is intended to provide users with an easy way to perform cleanup and nothing more.
Please, refer to the documentation of the signal class to know about all the
features it offers.
There are many useful but less known functionalities that aren't described here,
such as the connection objects or the possibility to attach listeners with a
list of parameters that is shorter than that of the signal itself.
Signals are the basic tools to construct reactive systems, even if they aren't
enough on their own. EnTT
tries to take another step in that direction with
the observer
class template.
In order to explain what reactive systems are, this is a slightly revised quote
from the documentation of the library that first introduced this tool,
Entitas:
Imagine you have 100 fighting units on the battlefield but only 10 of them changed their positions. Instead of using a normal system and updating all 100 entities depending on the position, you can use a reactive system which will only update the 10 changed units. So efficient.
In EnTT
, this means to iterating over a reduced set of entities and components
with respect to what would otherwise be returned from a view or a group.
On these words, however, the similarities with the proposal of Entitas
also
end. The rules of the language and the design of the library obviously impose
and allow different things.
An observer
is initialized with an instance of a registry and a set of rules
that describes what are the entities to intercept. As an example:
entt::observer observer{registry, entt::collector.update<sprite>()};
The class is default constructible and can be reconfigured at any time by means
of the connect
member function. Moreover, instances can be disconnected from
the underlying registries through the disconnect
member function.
The observer
offers also what is needed to query the internal state and to
know if it's empty or how many entities it contains. Moreover, it can return a
raw pointer to the list of entities it contains.
However, the most important features of this class are that:
It's iterable and therefore users can easily walk through the list of entities
by means of a range-for loop or the each
member function.
It's clearable and therefore users can consume the entities and literally reset the observer after each iteration.
These aspects make the observer an incredibly powerful tool to know at any time what are the entities that matched the given rules since the last time one asked:
for(const auto entity: observer) {
// ...
}
observer.clear();
The snippet above is equivalent to the following:
observer.each([](const auto entity) {
// ...
});
At least as long as the observer
isn't const. This means that the non-const
overload of each
does also reset the underlying data structure before to
return to the caller, while the const overload does not for obvious reasons.
The collector
is an utility aimed to generate a list of matcher
s (the actual
rules) to use with an observer
instead.
There are two types of matcher
s:
Observing matcher: an observer will return at least all the living entities for which one or more of the given components have been updated and not yet destroyed.
entt::collector.update<sprite>();
Updated in this case means that all listeners attached to on_update
are
invoked. In order for this to happen, specific functions such as patch
must
be used. Refer to the specific documentation for more details.
Grouping matcher: an observer will return at least all the living entities that would have entered the given group if it existed and that would have not yet left it.
entt::collector.group<position, velocity>(entt::exclude<destroyed>);
A grouping matcher supports also exclusion lists as well as single components.
Roughly speaking, an observing matcher intercepts the entities for which the
given components are updated while a grouping matcher tracks the entities that
have assigned the given components since the last time one asked.
If an entity already has all the components except one and the missing type is
assigned to it, the entity is intercepted by a grouping matcher.
In addition, a matcher can be filtered with a where
clause:
entt::collector.update<sprite>().where<position>(entt::exclude<velocity>);
This clause introduces a way to intercept entities if and only if they are
already part of a hypothetical group. If they are not, they aren't returned by
the observer, no matter if they matched the given rule.
In the example above, whenever the component sprite
of an entity is updated,
the observer probes the entity itself to verify that it has at least position
and has not velocity
before to store it aside. If one of the two conditions of
the filter isn't respected, the entity is discarded, no matter what.
A where
clause accepts a theoretically unlimited number of types as well as
multiple elements in the exclusion list. Moreover, every matcher can have its
own clause and multiple clauses for the same matcher are combined in a single
one.
Sorting entities and components is possible with EnTT
. In particular, it uses
an in-place algorithm that doesn't require memory allocations nor anything else
and is therefore particularly convenient.
There are two functions that respond to slightly different needs:
Components can be sorted either directly:
registry.sort<renderable>([](const auto &lhs, const auto &rhs) {
return lhs.z < rhs.z;
});
Or by accessing their entities:
registry.sort<renderable>([](const entt::entity lhs, const entt::entity rhs) {
return entt::registry::entity(lhs) < entt::registry::entity(rhs);
});
There exists also the possibility to use a custom sort function object for when the usage pattern is known. As an example, in case of an almost sorted pool, quick sort could be much slower than insertion sort.
Components can be sorted according to the order imposed by another component:
registry.sort<movement, physics>();
In this case, instances of movement
are arranged in memory so that cache
misses are minimized when the two components are iterated together.
As a side note, the use of groups limits the possibility of sorting pools of components. Refer to the specific documentation for more details.
The so called helpers are small classes and functions mainly designed to offer built-in support for the most basic functionalities.
The entt::null
variable models the concept of null entity.
The library guarantees that the following expression always returns false:
registry.valid(entt::null);
A registry rejects the null entity in all cases because it isn't considered
valid. It also means that the null entity cannot own components.
The type of the null entity is internal and should not be used for any purpose
other than defining the null entity itself. However, there exist implicit
conversions from the null entity to identifiers of any allowed type:
entt::entity null = entt::null;
Similarly, the null entity can be compared to any other identifier:
const auto entity = registry.create();
const bool null = (entity == entt::null);
As for its integral form, the null entity only affects the entity part of an identifier and is instead completely transparent to its version.
Be aware that entt::null
and entity 0 aren't the same thing. Likewise, a zero
initialized entity isn't the same as entt::null
. Therefore, although
entt::entity{}
is in some sense an alias for entity 0, none of them can be
used to create a null entity.
Similar to the null entity, the entt::tombstone
variable models the concept of
tombstone.
Once created, the integral form of the two values is the same, although they
affect different parts of an identifier. In fact, the tombstone only uses the
version part of it and is completely transparent to the entity part.
Also in this case, the following expression always returns false:
registry.valid(entt::tombstone);
Moreover, users cannot set the tombstone version when releasing an entity:
registry.destroy(entity, entt::tombstone);
In this case, a different version number is implicitly generated.
The type of a tombstone is internal and can change at any time. However, there
exist implicit conversions from a tombstone to identifiers of any allowed type:
entt::entity null = entt::tombstone;
Similarly, the tombstone can be compared to any other identifier:
const auto entity = registry.create();
const bool tombstone = (entity == entt::tombstone);
Be aware that entt::tombstone
and entity 0 aren't the same thing. Likewise, a
zero initialized entity isn't the same as entt::tombstone
. Therefore, although
entt::entity{}
is in some sense an alias for entity 0, none of them can be
used to create tombstones.
Sometimes it's useful to get the entity from a component instance.
This is what the entt::to_entity
helper does. It accepts a registry and an
instance of a component and returns the entity associated with the latter:
const auto entity = entt::to_entity(registry, position);
A null entity is returned in case the component doesn't belong to the registry.
The registry
class is designed to be able to create short circuits between its
functions. This simplifies the definition of dependencies between different
operations.
For example, the following adds (or replaces) the component a_type
whenever
my_type
is assigned to an entity:
registry.on_construct<my_type>().connect<&entt::registry::emplace_or_replace<a_type>>();
Similarly, the code shown below removes a_type
from an entity whenever
my_type
is assigned to it:
registry.on_construct<my_type>().connect<&entt::registry::remove<a_type>>();
A dependency can also be easily broken as follows:
registry.on_construct<my_type>().disconnect<&entt::registry::emplace_or_replace<a_type>>();
There are many other types of dependencies. In general, most of the functions that accept an entity as the first argument are good candidates for this purpose.
Sometimes it's useful to directly invoke a member function of a component as a
callback. It's already possible in practice but requires users to extend their
classes and this may not always be possible.
The invoke
helper allows to propagate the signal in these cases:
registry.on_construct<clazz>().connect<entt::invoke<&clazz::func>>();
All it does is pick up the right component for the received entity and invoke the requested method, passing on the arguments if necessary.
A handle is a thin wrapper around an entity and a registry. It provides the same
functions that the registry offers for working with components, such as
emplace
, get
, patch
, remove
and so on. The difference being that the
entity is implicitly passed to the registry.
It's default constructible as an invalid handle that contains a null registry
and a null entity. When it contains a null registry, calling functions that
delegate execution to the registry will cause an undefined behavior, so it's
recommended to check the validity of the handle with implicit cast to bool
when in doubt.
A handle is also non-owning, meaning that it can be freely copied and moved
around without affecting its entity (in fact, handles happen to be trivially
copyable). An implication of this is that mutability becomes part of the
type.
There are two aliases that use entt::entity
as their default entity:
entt::handle
and entt::const_handle
.
Users can also easily create their own aliases for custom identifiers as:
using my_handle = entt::basic_handle<my_identifier>;
using my_const_handle = entt::basic_handle<const my_identifier>;
Handles are also implicitly convertible to const handles out of the box but not
the other way around.
A handle stores a non-const pointer to a registry and therefore it can do all
the things that can be done with a non-const registry. On the other hand, a
const handles store const pointers to registries and offer a restricted set of
functionalities.
This class is intended to simplify function signatures. In case of functions that take a registry and an entity and do most of their work on that entity, users might want to consider using handles, either const or non-const.
The organizer
class template offers support for creating an execution graph
from a set of functions and their requirements on resources.
The resulting tasks aren't executed in any case. This isn't the goal of this
tool. Instead, they are returned to the user in the form of a graph that allows
for safe execution.
All functions are added in order of execution to the organizer:
entt::organizer organizer;
// adds a free function to the organizer
organizer.emplace<&free_function>();
// adds a member function and an instance on which to invoke it to the organizer
clazz instance;
organizer.emplace<&clazz::member_function>(&instance);
// adds a decayed lambda directly
organizer.emplace(+[](const void *, entt::registry &) { /* ... */ });
These are the parameters that a free function or a member function can accept:
entt::basic_view
with any possible combination of types.T
(that is, a context variable).The function type for free functions and decayed lambdas passed as parameters to
emplace
is void(const void *, entt::registry &)
instead. The first parameter
is an optional pointer to user defined data to provide upon registration:
clazz instance;
organizer.emplace(+[](const void *, entt::registry &) { /* ... */ }, &instance);
In all cases, it's also possible to associate a name with the task when creating it. For example:
organizer.emplace<&free_function>("func");
When a function of any type is registered with the organizer, everything it
accesses is considered a resource (views are unpacked and their types are
treated as resources). The constness of the type also dictates its access mode
(RO/RW). In turn, this affects the resulting graph, since it influences the
possibility of launching tasks in parallel.
As for the registry, if a function doesn't explicitly request it or requires a
constant reference to it, it's considered a read-only access. Otherwise, it's
considered as read-write access. All functions will still have the registry
among their resources.
When registering a function, users can also require resources that aren't in the list of parameters of the function itself. These are declared as template parameters:
organizer.emplace<&free_function, position, velocity>("func");
Similarly, users can override the access mode of a type again via template parameters:
organizer.emplace<&free_function, const renderable>("func");
In this case, even if renderable
appears among the parameters of the function
as not constant, it will be treated as constant as regards the generation of the
task graph.
To generate the task graph, the organizer offers the graph
member function:
std::vector<entt::organizer::vertex> graph = organizer.graph();
The graph is returned in the form of an adjacency list. Each vertex offers the following features:
ro_count
and rw_count
: they return the number of resources accessed in
read-only or read-write mode.
ro_dependency
and rw_dependency
: useful for retrieving the type info
objects associated with the parameters of the underlying function.
top_level
: indicates whether a node is a top level one, that is, it has no
entering edges.
info
: returns the type info object associated with the underlying function.
name
: returns the name associated with the given vertex if any, a null
pointer otherwise.
callback
: a pointer to the function to execute and whose function type is
void(const void *, entt::registry &)
.
data
: optional data to provide to the callback.
children
: the vertices reachable from the given node, in the form of indices
within the adjacency list.
Since the creation of pools and resources within the registry isn't necessarily
thread safe, each vertex also offers a prepare
function which can be called to
setup a registry for execution with the created graph:
auto graph = organizer.graph();
entt::registry registry;
for(auto &&node: graph) {
node.prepare(registry);
}
The actual scheduling of the tasks is the responsibility of the user, who can use the preferred tool.
Each registry has a context associated with it, which is an any
object map
accessible by both type and name for convenience. The name isn't really a
name though. In fact, it's a numeric id of type id_type
to be used as a key
for the variable. Any value is accepted, even runtime ones.
The context is returned via the ctx
functions and offers a minimal set of
feature including the following:
// creates a new context variable by type
registry.ctx().emplace<my_type>(42, 'c');
// creates a new context variable with a name
registry.ctx().emplace_hint<my_type>("my_variable"_hs, 42, 'c');
// gets the context variable by type as a non-const reference from a non-const registry
auto &var = registry.ctx().at<my_type>();
// gets the context variable by name as a const reference from either a const or a non-const registry
const auto &cvar = registry.ctx().at<const my_type>("my_variable"_hs);
// resets the context variable by type
registry.ctx().erase<my_type>();
// resets the context variable associated with the given name
registry.ctx().erase<my_type>("my_variable"_hs);
The type of a context variable must be such that it's default constructible and
can be moved. If the supplied type doesn't match that of the variable when using
a name, the operation will fail.
For all users who want to use the context but don't want to create elements, the
contains
and find
functions are also available:
const bool contains = registry.ctx().contains<my_type>();
const my_type *value = registry.ctx().find<const my_type>("my_variable"_hs);
Also in this case, both functions support constant types and accept a name for
the variable to look up, as does at
.
Context variables can also be used to create aliases for existing variables that
aren't directly managed by the registry. In this case, it's also possible to
make them read-only.
To do that, the type used upon construction must be a reference type and an
lvalue is necessarily provided as an argument:
time clock;
registry.ctx().emplace<my_type &>(clock);
Read-only aliased properties are created using const types instead:
registry.ctx().emplace<const my_type &>(clock);
From the point of view of the user, there are no differences between a variable that is managed by the registry and an aliased property. However, read-only variables aren't accessible as non-const references:
// read-only variables only support const access
const my_type *ptr = registry.ctx().find<const my_type>();
const my_type &var = registry.ctx().at<const my_type>();
Aliased properties can be erased as it happens with any other variable. Similarly, they can also be associated with user-generated names (or ids).
In EnTT
, almost everything is customizable. Components are no exception.
In this case, the standardized way to access all component properties is the
component_traits
class.
Various parts of the library access component properties through this class. It
makes it possible to use any type as a component, as long as its specialization
of component_traits
implements all the required functionalities.
The non-specialized version of this class contains the following members:
in_place_delete
: Type::in_place_delete
if present, false otherwise.page_size
: Type::page_size
if present, ENTT_PACKED_PAGE
(for non-empty
types) or 0 (for empty types) otherwise.Where Type
is any type of component. All properties can be customized by
specializing the above class and defining all its members, or by adding only
those of interest to a component definition:
struct transform {
static constexpr auto in_place_delete = true;
// ... other data members ...
};
The component_traits
class template will take care of correctly extracting the
properties from the supplied type to pass them to the rest of the library.
In the case of a direct specialization, the class is also sfinae-friendly. It
supports single and multi type specializations as well as feature-based ones.
The ability to achieve pointer stability for one, several or all components is a
direct consequence of the design of EnTT
and of its default storage.
In fact, although it contains what is commonly referred to as a packed array,
the default storage is paged and doesn't suffer from invalidation of references
when it runs out of space and has to reallocate.
However, this isn't enough to ensure pointer stability in case of deletion. For
this reason, a stable deletion method is also offered. This one is such that
the position of the elements is preserved by creating tombstones upon deletion
rather than trying to fill the holes that are created.
For performance reasons, EnTT
favors storage compaction in all cases, although
often accessing a component occurs mostly randomly or traversing pools in a
non-linear order on the user side (as in the case of a hierarchy).
In other words, pointer stability is not automatic but is enabled on request.
The library offers out of the box support for in-place deletion, thus offering
storage with completely stable pointers. This is achieved by specializing the
component_traits
class or by adding the required properties to the component
definition when needed.
Views and groups adapt accordingly when they detect a storage with a different
deletion policy than the default. In particular:
size_hint
is available.In other words, the more generic version of a view is provided in case of stable
storage, even for a single type view.
In no case a tombstone is returned from the view itself. Likewise, non-existent
components aren't returned, which could otherwise result in an UB.
EnTT
doesn't attempt in any way to offer built-in methods with hidden or
unclear costs to facilitate the creation of hierarchies.
There are various solutions to the problem, such as using the following class:
struct relationship {
std::size_t children{};
entt::entity first{entt::null};
entt::entity prev{entt::null};
entt::entity next{entt::null};
entt::entity parent{entt::null};
// ... other data members ...
};
However, it should be pointed out that the possibility of having stable pointers
for one, many or all types solves the problem of hierarchies at the root in many
cases.
In fact, if a certain type of component is visited mainly in random order or
according to hierarchical relationships, using direct pointers has many
advantages:
struct transform {
static constexpr auto in_place_delete = true;
transform *parent;
// ... other data members ...
};
Furthermore, it's quite common for a group of elements to be created close in time and therefore fallback into adjacent positions, thus favoring locality even on random accesses. Locality that won't be sacrificed over time given the stability of storage positions, with undoubted performance advantages.
EnTT
takes advantage of what the language offers at compile-time. However,
this can have its downsides (well known to those familiar with type erasure
techniques).
To fill the gap, the library also provides a bunch of utilities and feature that
can be very useful to handle types and pools at runtime.
Storage classes are fully self-contained types. These can be extended via mixins
to add more functionalities (generic or type specific). In addition, they offer
a basic set of functions that already allow users to go very far.
The aim is to limit the need for customizations as much as possible, offering
what is usually necessary for the vast majority of cases.
When a storage is used through its base class (i.e. when its actual type isn't
known), there is always the possibility of receiving a type_info
describing
the type of the objects associated with the entities (if any):
if(entt::type_id<velocity>() == base.type()) {
// ...
}
Furthermore, all features rely on internal functions that forward the calls to
the mixins. The latter can then make use of any information, which can be set
via bind
:
base.bind(entt::forward_as_any(registry));
The bind
function accepts an entt::any
object, that is a typed type-erased
value.
This is how a registry passes itself to all pools that support signals and
also why a storage keeps sending events without requiring the registry to be
passed to it every time.
Alongside these more specific things, there are also a couple of functions
designed to address some common requirements such as copying an entity.
In particular, the base class behind a storage offers the possibility to take
the object associated with an entity through an opaque pointer:
const void *instance = base.get(entity);
Similarly, the non-specialized emplace
function accepts an optional opaque
pointer and behaves differently depending on the case:
When the pointer is null, the function tries to default-construct an instance of the object to bind to the entity and returns true on success.
When the pointer is non-null, the function tries to copy-construct an instance of the object to bind to the entity and returns true on success.
This means that, starting from a reference to the base, it's possible to bind components with entities without knowing their actual type and even initialize them by copy if needed:
// create a copy of an entity component by component
for(auto &&curr: registry.storage()) {
if(auto &storage = curr.second; storage.contains(src)) {
storage.emplace(dst, storage.get(src));
}
}
This is particularly useful to clone entities in an opaque way. In addition, the decoupling of features allows for filtering or use of different copying policies depending on the type.
EnTT
is strongly based on types and has always allowed to create only one
storage of a certain type within a registry.
However, this doesn't work well for users who want to create multiple storage of
the same type associated with different names, such as for interacting with a
scripting system.
Nowadays, the library has solved this problem and offers the possibility of associating a type with a name (or rather, a numeric identifier):
using namespace entt::literals;
auto &&storage = registry.storage<velocity>("second pool"_hs);
If a name isn't provided, the default storage associated with the given type is
always returned.
Since the storage are also self-contained, the registry doesn't try in any way
to duplicate its API and offer parallel functionalities for storage discovered
by name.
However, there is still no limit to the possibilities of use. For example:
auto &&other = registry.storage<velocity>("other"_hs);
registry.emplace<velocity>(entity);
storage.emplace(entity);
In other words, anything that can be done via the registry interface can also be
done directly on the reference storage.
On the other hand, those calls involving all storage are guaranteed to also
reach manually created ones:
// will remove the entity from both storage
registry.destroy(entity);
Finally, a storage of this type can be used with any view (which also accepts multiple storages of the same type, if necessary):
// direct initialization
entt::basic_view direct{
registry.storage<velocity>(),
registry.storage<velocity>("other"_hs)
};
// concatenation
auto join = registry.view<velocity>() | entt::basic_view{registry.storage<velocity>("other"_hs)};
The possibility of direct use of storage combined with the freedom of being able
to create and use more than one of the same type opens the door to the use of
EnTT
at runtime, which was previously quite limited.
Sure the basic design remains very type-bound, but finally it's no longer bound
to this one option alone.
The registry
class offers basic support to serialization.
It doesn't convert components to bytes directly, there wasn't the need of
another tool for serialization out there. Instead, it accepts an opaque object
with a suitable interface (namely an archive) to serialize its internal data
structures and restore them later. The way types and instances are converted to
a bunch of bytes is completely in charge to the archive and thus to final users.
The goal of the serialization part is to allow users to make both a dump of the
entire registry or a narrower snapshot, that is to select only the components in
which they are interested.
Intuitively, the use cases are different. As an example, the first approach is
suitable for local save/restore functionalities while the latter is suitable for
creating client-server applications and for transferring somehow parts of the
representation side to side.
To take a snapshot of a registry, use the snapshot
class:
output_archive output;
entt::snapshot{registry}
.entities(output)
.component<a_component, another_component>(output);
It isn't necessary to invoke all functions each and every time. What functions to use in which case mostly depends on the goal and there is not a golden rule for that.
The entities
member function makes the snapshot serialize all entities (both
those still alive and those released) along with their versions.
On the other hand, the component
member function is a function template the
aim of which is to store aside components. The presence of a template parameter
list is a consequence of a couple of design choices from the past and in the
present:
First of all, there is no reason to force a user to serialize all the components at once and most of the times it isn't desiderable. As an example, in case the stuff for the HUD in a game is put into the registry for some reasons, its components can be freely discarded during a serialization step because probably the software already knows how to reconstruct them correctly.
Furthermore, the registry makes heavy use of type-erasure techniques internally and doesn't know at any time what component types it contains. Therefore being explicit at the call site is mandatory.
There exists also another version of the component
member function that
accepts a range of entities to serialize. This version is a bit slower than the
other one, mainly because it iterates the range of entities more than once for
internal purposes. However, it can be used to filter out those entities that
shouldn't be serialized for some reasons.
As an example:
const auto view = registry.view<serialize>();
output_archive output;
entt::snapshot{registry}.component<a_component, another_component>(output, view.begin(), view.end());
Note that component
stores items along with entities. It means that it works
properly without a call to the entities
member function.
Once a snapshot is created, there exist mainly two ways to load it: as a whole
and in a kind of continuous mode.
The following sections describe both loaders and archives in details.
A snapshot loader requires that the destination registry be empty and loads all
the data at once while keeping intact the identifiers that the entities
originally had.
To use it, just pass to the constructor a valid registry:
input_archive input;
entt::snapshot_loader{registry}
.entities(input)
.component<a_component, another_component>(input)
.orphans();
It isn't necessary to invoke all functions each and every time. What functions to use in which case mostly depends on the goal and there is not a golden rule for that. For obvious reasons, what is important is that the data are restored in exactly the same order in which they were serialized.
The entities
member function restores the sets of entities and the versions
that they originally had at the source.
The component
member function restores all and only the components specified
and assigns them to the right entities. Note that the template parameter list
must be exactly the same used during the serialization.
The orphans
member function literally releases those entities that have no
components attached. It's usually useless if the snapshot is a full dump of the
source. However, in case all the entities are serialized but only few components
are saved, it could happen that some of the entities have no components once
restored. The best the users can do to deal with them is to release those
entities and thus update their versions.
A continuous loader is designed to load data from a source registry to a
(possibly) non-empty destination. The loader can accommodate in a registry more
than one snapshot in a sort of continuous loading that updates the destination
one step at a time.
Identifiers that entities originally had are not transferred to the target.
Instead, the loader maps remote identifiers to local ones while restoring a
snapshot. Because of that, this kind of loader offers a way to update
automatically identifiers that are part of components (as an example, as data
members or gathered in a container).
Another difference with the snapshot loader is that the continuous loader has an
internal state that must persist over time. Therefore, there is no reason to
limit its lifetime to that of a temporary object.
Example of use:
entt::continuous_loader loader{registry};
input_archive input;
loader.entities(input)
.component<a_component, another_component, dirty_component>(input, &dirty_component::parent, &dirty_component::child)
.orphans()
.shrink();
It isn't necessary to invoke all functions each and every time. What functions to use in which case mostly depends on the goal and there is not a golden rule for that. For obvious reasons, what is important is that the data are restored in exactly the same order in which they were serialized.
The entities
member function restores groups of entities and maps each entity
to a local counterpart when required. In other terms, for each remote entity
identifier not yet registered by the loader, it creates a local identifier so
that it can keep the local entity in sync with the remote one.
The component
member function restores all and only the components specified
and assigns them to the right entities.
In case the component contains entities itself (either as data members of type
entt::entity
or as containers of entities), the loader can update them
automatically. To do that, it's enough to specify the data members to update as
shown in the example.
The orphans
member function literally releases those entities that have no
components after a restore. It has exactly the same purpose described in the
previous section and works the same way.
Finally, shrink
helps to purge local entities that no longer have a remote
conterpart. Users should invoke this member function after restoring each
snapshot, unless they know exactly what they are doing.
Archives must publicly expose a predefined set of member functions. The API is straightforward and consists only of a group of function call operators that are invoked by the snapshot class and the loaders.
In particular:
An output archive, the one used when creating a snapshot, must expose a function call operator with the following signature to store entities:
void operator()(entt::entity);
Where entt::entity
is the type of the entities used by the registry.
Note that all member functions of the snapshot class make also an initial call
to store aside the size of the set they are going to store. In this case,
the expected function type for the function call operator is:
void operator()(std::underlying_type_t<entt::entity>);
In addition, an archive must accept a pair of entity and component for each
type to be serialized. Therefore, given a type T
, the archive must contain a
function call operator with the following signature:
void operator()(entt::entity, const T &);
The output archive can freely decide how to serialize the data. The registry is not affected at all by the decision.
An input archive, the one used when restoring a snapshot, must expose a function call operator with the following signature to load entities:
void operator()(entt::entity &);
Where entt::entity
is the type of the entities used by the registry. Each
time the function is invoked, the archive must read the next element from the
underlying storage and copy it in the given variable.
Note that all member functions of a loader class make also an initial call to
read the size of the set they are going to load. In this case, the expected
function type for the function call operator is:
void operator()(std::underlying_type_t<entt::entity> &);
In addition, the archive must accept a pair of references to an entity and its
component for each type to be restored. Therefore, given a type T
, the
archive must contain a function call operator with the following signature:
void operator()(entt::entity &, T &);
Every time such an operator is invoked, the archive must read the next elements from the underlying storage and copy them in the given variables.
EnTT
comes with some examples (actually some tests) that show how to integrate
a well known library for serialization as an archive. It uses
Cereal C++
under the hood, mainly
because I wanted to learn how it works at the time I was writing the code.
The code is not production-ready and it isn't neither the only nor (probably) the best way to do it. However, feel free to use it at your own risk.
The basic idea is to store everything in a group of queues in memory, then bring everything back to the registry with different loaders.
First of all, it's worth answering a question: why views and groups?
Briefly, they're a good tool to enforce single responsibility. A system that has
access to a registry can create and destroy entities, as well as assign and
remove components. On the other side, a system that has access to a view or a
group can only iterate, read and update entities and components.
It is a subtle difference that can help designing a better software sometimes.
More in details:
Views are a non-intrusive tool to access entities and components without affecting other functionalities or increasing the memory consumption.
Groups are an intrusive tool that allows to reach higher performance along critical paths but has also a price to pay for that.
There are mainly two kinds of views: compile-time (also known as view
) and
runtime (also known as runtime_view
).
The former requires a compile-time list of component types and can make several
optimizations because of that. The latter can be constructed at runtime instead
using numerical type identifiers and are a bit slower to iterate.
In both cases, creating and destroying a view isn't expensive at all since they
don't have any type of initialization.
Groups come in three different flavors: full-owning groups, partial-owning
groups and non-owning groups. The main difference between them is in terms of
performance.
Groups can literally own one or more component types. They are allowed to
rearrange pools so as to speed up iterations. Roughly speaking: the more
components a group owns, the faster it is to iterate them.
A given component can belong to multiple groups only if they are nested, so
users have to define groups carefully to get the best out of them.
A view behaves differently if it's constructed for a single component or if it has been created to iterate multiple components. Even the API is slightly different in the two cases.
Single type views are specialized to give a boost in terms of performance in all
the situations. This kind of views can access the underlying data structures
directly and avoid superfluous checks. There is nothing as fast as a single type
view. In fact, they walk through a packed (actually paged) array of components
and return them one at a time.
Views also offer a bunch of functionalities to get the number of entities and
components they are going to return. It's also possible to ask a view if it
contains a given entity.
Refer to the inline documentation for all the details.
Multi type views iterate entities that have at least all the given components in
their bags. During construction, these views look at the number of entities
available for each component and pick up a reference to the smallest set of
candidates in order to speed up iterations.
They offer fewer functionalities than single type views. In particular, a multi
type view exposes utility functions to get the estimated number of entities it
is going to return and to know if it contains a given entity.
Refer to the inline documentation for all the details.
There is no need to store views aside as they are extremely cheap to construct.
In fact, this is even discouraged when creating a view from a const registry.
Since all storage are lazily initialized, they may not exist when the view is
built. Therefore, the view itself will refer to an empty placeholder and will
never be re-assigned the actual storage.
In all cases, views return newly created and correctly initialized iterators for
the storage they refer to when begin
or end
are invoked.
Views share the way they are created by means of a registry:
// single type view
auto single = registry.view<position>();
// multi type view
auto multi = registry.view<position, velocity>();
Filtering entities by components is also supported:
auto view = registry.view<position, velocity>(entt::exclude<renderable>);
To iterate a view, either use it in a range-for loop:
auto view = registry.view<position, velocity, renderable>();
for(auto entity: view) {
// a component at a time ...
auto &position = view.get<position>(entity);
auto &velocity = view.get<velocity>(entity);
// ... multiple components ...
auto [pos, vel] = view.get<position, velocity>(entity);
// ... all components at once
auto [pos, vel, rend] = view.get(entity);
// ...
}
Or rely on the each
member functions to iterate both entities and components
at once:
// through a callback
registry.view<position, velocity>().each([](auto entity, auto &pos, auto &vel) {
// ...
});
// using an input iterator
for(auto &&[entity, pos, vel]: registry.view<position, velocity>().each()) {
// ...
}
Note that entities can also be excluded from the parameter list when received
through a callback and this can improve even further the performance during
iterations.
Since they aren't explicitly instantiated, empty components aren't returned in
any case.
As a side note, in the case of single type views, get
accepts but doesn't
strictly require a template parameter, since the type is implicitly defined.
However, when the type isn't specified, for consistency with the multi type
view, the instance will be returned using a tuple:
auto view = registry.view<const renderable>();
for(auto entity: view) {
auto [renderable] = view.get(entity);
// ...
}
Note: prefer the get
member function of a view instead of that of a
registry during iterations to get the types iterated by the view itself.
Views are combined with each other to create new and more specific types.
The type returned when combining multiple views together is itself a view, more
in general a multi component one.
Combining different views tries to mimic C++20 ranges:
auto view = registry.view<position>();
auto other = registry.view<velocity>();
auto pack = view | other;
The constness of the types is preserved and their order depends on the order in
which the views are combined. Therefore, the pack in the example above will
return an instance of position
first and then one of velocity
.
Since combining views generates views, a chain can be of arbitrary length and
the above type order rules apply sequentially.
Runtime views iterate entities that have at least all the given components in
their bags. During construction, these views look at the number of entities
available for each component and pick up a reference to the smallest set of
candidates in order to speed up iterations.
They offer more or less the same functionalities of a multi type view. However,
they don't expose a get
member function and users should refer to the registry
that generated the view to access components. In particular, a runtime view
exposes utility functions to get the estimated number of entities it is going to
return and to know whether it's empty or not. It's also possible to ask a
runtime view if it contains a given entity.
Refer to the inline documentation for all the details.
Runtime views are pretty cheap to construct and should not be stored aside in
any case. They should be used immediately after creation and then they should be
thrown away.
To iterate a runtime view, either use it in a range-for loop:
entt::runtime_view view{};
view.iterate(registry.storage<position>()).iterate(registry.storage<velocity>());
for(auto entity: view) {
// ...
}
Or rely on the each
member function to iterate entities:
entt::runtime_view{}
.iterate(registry.storage<position>())
.iterate(registry.storage<velocity>())
.each([](auto entity) {
// ...
});
Performance are exactly the same in both cases.
Filtering entities by components is also supported for this kind of views:
entt::runtime_view view{};
view.iterate(registry.storage<position>()).exclude(registry.storage<velocity>());
Runtime views are meant for when users don't know at compile-time what types to
use to iterate entities. The storage
member function of a registry could be
useful in this regard.
Groups are meant to iterate multiple components at once and to offer a faster
alternative to multi type views.
Groups overcome the performance of the other tools available but require to get
the ownership of components and this sets some constraints on pools. On the
other side, groups aren't an automatism that increases memory consumption,
affects functionalities and tries to optimize iterations for all the possible
combinations of components. Users can decide when to pay for groups and to what
extent.
The most interesting aspect of groups is that they fit usage patterns. Other
solutions around usually try to optimize everything, because it is known that
somewhere within the everything there are also our usage patterns. However
this has a cost that isn't negligible, both in terms of performance and memory
usage. Ironically, users pay the price also for things they don't want and this
isn't something I like much. Even worse, one cannot easily disable such a
behavior. Groups work differently instead and are designed to optimize only the
real use cases when users find they need to.
Another nice-to-have feature of groups is that they have no impact on memory
consumption, put aside full non-owning groups that are pretty rare and should be
avoided as long as possible.
All groups affect to an extent the creation and destruction of their components.
This is due to the fact that they must observe changes in the pools of
interest and arrange data correctly when needed for the types they own.
That being said, the way groups operate is beyond the scope of this document.
However, it's unlikely that users will be able to appreciate the impact of
groups on the other functionalities of a registry.
Groups offer a bunch of functionalities to get the number of entities and
components they are going to return. It's also possible to ask a group if it
contains a given entity.
Refer to the inline documentation for all the details.
There is no need to store groups aside for they are extremely cheap to create,
even though valid groups can be copied without problems and reused freely.
A group performs an initialization step the very first time it's requested and
this could be quite costly. To avoid it, consider creating the group when no
components have been assigned yet. If the registry is empty, preparation is
extremely fast. Groups also return newly created and correctly initialized
iterators whenever begin
or end
are invoked.
To iterate groups, either use them in a range-for loop:
auto group = registry.group<position>(entt::get<velocity, renderable>);
for(auto entity: group) {
// a component at a time ...
auto &position = group.get<position>(entity);
auto &velocity = group.get<velocity>(entity);
// ... multiple components ...
auto [pos, vel] = group.get<position, velocity>(entity);
// ... all components at once
auto [pos, vel, rend] = group.get(entity);
// ...
}
Or rely on the each
member functions to iterate both entities and components
at once:
// through a callback
registry.group<position>(entt::get<velocity>).each([](auto entity, auto &pos, auto &vel) {
// ...
});
// using an input iterator
for(auto &&[entity, pos, vel]: registry.group<position>(entt::get<velocity>).each()) {
// ...
}
Note that entities can also be excluded from the parameter list when received
through a callback and this can improve even further the performance during
iterations.
Since they aren't explicitly instantiated, empty components aren't returned in
any case.
Note: prefer the get
member function of a group instead of that of a
registry during iterations to get the types iterated by the group itself.
A full-owning group is the fastest tool an user can expect to use to iterate multiple components at once. It iterates all the components directly, no indirection required. This type of groups performs more or less as if users are accessing sequentially a bunch of packed arrays of components all sorted identically, with no jumps nor branches.
A full-owning group is created as:
auto group = registry.group<position, velocity>();
Filtering entities by components is also supported:
auto group = registry.group<position, velocity>(entt::exclude<renderable>);
Once created, the group gets the ownership of all the components specified in the template parameter list and arranges their pools as needed.
Sorting owned components is no longer allowed once the group has been created.
However, full-owning groups can be sorted by means of their sort
member
functions. Sorting a full-owning group affects all its instances.
A partial-owning group works similarly to a full-owning group for the components it owns, but relies on indirection to get components owned by other groups. This isn't as fast as a full-owning group, but it's already much faster than views when there are only one or two free components to retrieve (the most common cases likely). In the worst case, it's not slower than views anyway.
A partial-owning group is created as:
auto group = registry.group<position>(entt::get<velocity>);
Filtering entities by components is also supported:
auto group = registry.group<position>(entt::get<velocity>, entt::exclude<renderable>);
Once created, the group gets the ownership of all the components specified in
the template parameter list and arranges their pools as needed. The ownership of
the types provided via entt::get
doesn't pass to the group instead.
Sorting owned components is no longer allowed once the group has been created.
However, partial-owning groups can be sorted by means of their sort
member
functions. Sorting a partial-owning group affects all its instances.
Non-owning groups are usually fast enough, for sure faster than views and well suited for most of the cases. However, they require custom data structures to work properly and they increase memory consumption. As a rule of thumb, users should avoid using non-owning groups, if possible.
A non-owning group is created as:
auto group = registry.group<>(entt::get<position, velocity>);
Filtering entities by components is also supported:
auto group = registry.group<>(entt::get<position, velocity>, entt::exclude<renderable>);
The group doesn't receive the ownership of any type of component in this case. This type of groups is therefore the least performing in general, but also the only one that can be used in any situation to slightly improve performance.
Non-owning groups can be sorted by means of their sort
member functions.
Sorting a non-owning group affects all its instances.
A type of component cannot be owned by two or more conflicting groups such as:
registry.group<transform, sprite>()
.registry.group<transform, rotation>()
.However, the same type can be owned by groups belonging to the same family, also called nested groups, such as:
registry.group<sprite, transform>()
.registry.group<sprite, transform, rotation>()
.Fortunately, these are also very common cases if not the most common ones.
It allows to increase performance on a greater number of component combinations.
Two nested groups are such that they own at least one component type and the list
of component types involved by one of them is contained entirely in that of the
other. More specifically, this applies independently to all component lists used
to define a group.
Therefore, the rules for defining whether two or more groups are nested can be
summarized as:
One of the groups involves one or more additional component types with respect to the other, whether they are owned, observed or excluded.
The list of component types owned by the most restrictive group is the same or contains entirely that of the others. This also applies to the list of observed and excluded components.
It means that nested groups extend their parents by adding more conditions in the form of new components.
As mentioned, the components don't necessarily have to be all owned so that two groups can be considered nested. The following definitions are fully valid:
registry.group<sprite>(entt::get<renderable>)
.registry.group<sprite, transform>(entt::get<renderable>)
.registry.group<sprite, transform>(entt::get<renderable, rotation>)
.Exclusion lists also play their part in this respect. When it comes to defining
nested groups, an excluded component type T
is treated as being an observed
type not_T
. Therefore, consider these two definitions:
registry.group<sprite, transform>()
.registry.group<sprite, transform>(entt::exclude<rotation>)
.They are treated as if users were defining the following groups:
group<sprite, transform>()
.group<sprite, transform>(entt::get<not_rotation>)
.Where not_rotation
is an empty tag present only when rotation
is not.
Because of this, to define a new group that is more restrictive than an existing
one, it's enough to take the list of component types of the latter and extend it
by adding new component types either owned, observed or excluded, without any
precautions depending on the case.
The opposite is also true. To define a larger group, it will be enough to take
an existing one and remove constraints from it, in whatever form they are
expressed.
Note that the greater the number of component types involved by a group, the
more restrictive it is.
Despite the extreme flexibility of nested groups which allow to independently
use component types either owned, observed or excluded, the real strength of
this tool lies in the possibility of defining a greater number of groups that
own the same components, thus offering the best performance in more
cases.
In fact, given a list of component types involved by a group, the greater the
number of those owned, the greater the performance of the group itself.
As a side note, it's no longer possible to sort all groups when defining nested
ones. This is because the most restrictive group shares its elements with the
less restrictive ones and ordering the latter would invalidate the former.
However, given a family of nested groups, it's still possible to sort the most
restrictive of them. To prevent users from having to remember which of their
groups is the most restrictive, the registry class offers the sortable
member
function to know if a group can be sorted or not.
The registry
class offers two overloads when it comes to constructing views
and groups: a const version and a non-const one. The former accepts only const
types as template parameters, the latter accepts both const and non-const types
instead.
It means that views and groups can be constructed from a const registry and they
propagate the constness of the registry to the types involved. As an example:
entt::view<const position, const velocity> view = std::as_const(registry).view<const position, const velocity>();
Consider the following definition for a non-const view instead:
entt::view<position, const velocity> view = registry.view<position, const velocity>();
In the example above, view
can be used to access either read-only or writable
position
components while velocity
components are read-only in all
cases.
Similarly, these statements are all valid:
position &pos = view.get<position>(entity);
const position &cpos = view.get<const position>(entity);
const velocity &cpos = view.get<const velocity>(entity);
std::tuple<position &, const velocity &> tup = view.get<position, const velocity>(entity);
std::tuple<const position &, const velocity &> ctup = view.get<const position, const velocity>(entity);
It's not possible to get non-const references to velocity
components from the
same view instead and these will result in compilation errors:
velocity &cpos = view.get<velocity>(entity);
std::tuple<position &, velocity &> tup = view.get<position, velocity>(entity);
std::tuple<const position &, velocity &> ctup = view.get<const position, velocity>(entity);
The each
member functions also propagates constness to its return values:
view.each([](auto entity, position &pos, const velocity &vel) {
// ...
});
A caller can still refer to the position
components through a const reference
because of the rules of the language that fortunately already allow it.
The same concepts apply to groups as well.
Views and groups are narrow windows on the entire list of entities. They work by
filtering entities according to their components.
In some cases there may be the need to iterate all the entities still in use
regardless of their components. The registry offers a specific member function
to do that:
registry.each([](auto entity) {
// ...
});
As a rule of thumb, consider using a view or a group if the goal is to iterate
entities that have a determinate set of components. These tools are usually much
faster than combining the each
function with a bunch of custom tests.
In all the other cases, this is the way to go. For example, it's possible to
combine each
with the orphan
member function to clean up orphan entities
(that is, entities that are still in use and have no assigned components):
registry.each([®istry](auto entity) {
if(registry.orphan(entity)) {
registry.release(entity);
}
});
In general, iterating all entities can result in poor performance. It should not
be done frequently to avoid the risk of a performance hit.
However, it can be convenient when initializing an editor or to reclaim pending
identifiers.
Most of the ECS available out there don't allow to create and destroy entities
and components during iterations, nor to have pointer stability.
EnTT
partially solves the problem with a few limitations:
Creating entities and components is allowed during iterations in most cases and it never invalidates already existing references.
Deleting the current entity or removing its components is allowed during iterations but it could invalidate references. For all the other entities, destroying them or removing their iterated components isn't allowed and can result in undefined behavior.
When pointer stability is enabled for the type leading the iteration, adding instances of the same type may or may not cause the entity involved to be returned. Destroying entities and components is always allowed instead, even if not currently iterated, without the risk of invalidating any references.
In other terms, iterators are rarely invalidated. Also, component references
aren't invalidated when a new element is added while they could be invalidated
upon destruction due to the swap-and-pop policy, unless the type leading the
iteration undergoes in-place deletion.
As an example, consider the following snippet:
registry.view<position>([&](const auto entity, auto &pos) {
registry.emplace<position>(registry.create(), 0., 0.);
// references remain stable after adding new instances
pos.x = 0.;
});
The each
member function won't break (because iterators remain valid) nor will
any reference be invalidated. Instead, more attention should be paid to the
destruction of entities or the removal of components.
Use a common range-for loop and get components directly from the view or move
the deletion of entities and components at the end of the function to avoid
dangling pointers.
For all types that don't offer stable pointers, iterators are also invalidated
and the behavior is undefined if an entity is modified or destroyed and it's not
the one currently returned by the iterator nor a newly created one.
To work around it, possible approaches are:
Store aside the entities and the components to be removed and perform the operations at the end of the iteration.
Mark entities and components with a proper tag component that indicates they must be purged, then perform a second iteration to clean them up one by one.
A notable side effect of this feature is that the number of required allocations is further reduced in most cases.
Groups are a faster alternative to views. However, the higher the performance,
the greater the constraints on what is allowed and what is not.
In particular, groups add in some rare cases a limitation on the creation of
components during iterations. It happens in quite particular cases. Given the
nature and the scope of the groups, it isn't something in which it will happen
to come across probably, but it's good to know it anyway.
First of all, it must be said that creating components while iterating a group isn't a problem at all and can be done freely as it happens with the views. The same applies to the destruction of components and entities, for which the rules mentioned above apply.
The additional limitation pops out instead when a given component that is owned
by a group is iterated outside of it. In this case, adding components that are
part of the group itself may invalidate the iterators. There are no further
limitations to the destruction of components and entities.
Fortunately, this isn't always true. In fact, it almost never is and this
happens only under certain conditions. In particular:
Iterating a type of component that is part of a group with a single type view and adding to an entity all the components required to get it into the group may invalidate the iterators.
Iterating a type of component that is part of a group with a multi type view and adding to an entity all the components required to get it into the group can invalidate the iterators, unless users specify another type of component to use to induce the order of iteration of the view (in this case, the former is treated as a free type and isn't affected by the limitation).
In other words, the limitation doesn't exist as long as a type is treated as a
free type (as an example with multi type views and partial- or non-owning
groups) or iterated with its own group, but it can occur if the type is used as
a main type to rule on an iteration.
This happens because groups own the pools of their components and organize the
data internally to maximize performance. Because of that, full consistency for
owned components is guaranteed only when they are iterated as part of their
groups or as free types with multi type views and groups in general.
An empty type T
is such that std::is_empty_v<T>
returns true. They also are
the same types for which empty base optimization (EBO) is possible.
EnTT
handles these types in a special way, optimizing both in terms of
performance and memory usage. However, this also has consequences that are worth
mentioning.
When an empty type is detected, it's not instantiated by default. Therefore,
only the entities to which it's assigned are made available. There doesn't exist
a way to get empty types from a registry. Views and groups will never return
their instances (for example, during a call to each
).
On the other hand, iterations are faster because only the entities to which the
type is assigned are considered. Moreover, less memory is used, mainly because
there doesn't exist any instance of the component, no matter how many entities
it is assigned to.
More in general, none of the feature offered by the library is affected, but for
the ones that require to return actual instances.
This optimization is disabled by defining the ENTT_NO_ETO
macro. In this case,
empty types are treated like all other types. Setting a page size at component
level via the component_traits
class template is another way to disable this
optimization selectively rather than globally.
In general, the entire registry isn't thread safe as it is. Thread safety isn't
something that users should want out of the box for several reasons. Just to
mention one of them: performance.
Views, groups and consequently the approach adopted by EnTT
are the great
exception to the rule. It's true that views, groups and iterators in general
aren't thread safe by themselves. Because of this users shouldn't try to iterate
a set of components and modify the same set concurrently. However:
As long as a thread iterates the entities that have the component X
or
assign and removes that component from a set of entities, another thread can
safely do the same with components Y
and Z
and everything will work like a
charm. As a trivial example, users can freely execute the rendering system and
iterate the renderable entities while updating a physic component concurrently
on a separate thread.
Similarly, a single set of components can be iterated by multiple threads as long as the components are neither assigned nor removed in the meantime. In other words, a hypothetical movement system can start multiple threads, each of which will access the components that carry information about velocity and position for its entities.
This kind of entity-component systems can be used in single threaded applications as well as along with async stuff or multiple threads. Moreover, typical thread based models for ECS don't require a fully thread safe registry to work. Actually, users can reach the goal with the registry as it is while working with most of the common models.
Because of the few reasons mentioned above and many others not mentioned, users are completely responsible for synchronization whether required. On the other hand, they could get away with it without having to resort to particular expedients.
Finally, EnTT
can be configured via a few compile-time definitions to make
some of its parts implicitly thread-safe, roughly speaking only the ones that
really make sense and can't be turned around.
In particular, when multiple instances of objects referencing the type index
generator (such as the registry
class) are used in different threads, then it
might be useful to define ENTT_USE_ATOMIC
.
See the relevant documentation for more information.
A special mention is needed for the iterators returned by views and groups. Most
of the times they meet the requirements of random access iterators, in all cases
they meet at least the requirements of forward iterators.
In other terms, they are suitable for use with the parallel algorithms of the
standard library. If it's not clear, this is a great thing.
As an example, this kind of iterators can be used in combination with
std::for_each
and std::execution::par
to parallelize the visit and therefore
the update of the components returned by a view or a group, as long as the
constraints previously discussed are respected:
auto view = registry.view<position, const velocity>();
std::for_each(std::execution::par_unseq, view.begin(), view.end(), [&view](auto entity) {
// ...
});
This can increase the throughput considerably, even without resorting to who knows what artifacts that are difficult to maintain over time.
Unfortunately, because of the limitations of the current revision of the
standard, the parallel std::for_each
accepts only forward iterators. This
means that the default iterators provided by the library cannot return proxy
objects as references and must return actual reference types instead.
This may change in the future and the iterators will almost certainly return
both the entities and a list of references to their components by default sooner
or later. Multi-pass guarantee won't break in any case and the performance
should even benefit from it further.
A const registry is also fully thread safe. This means that it won't be able to
lazily initialize a missing storage when a view is generated.
The reason for this is easy to explain. To avoid requiring types to be
announced in advance, a registry lazily creates the storage objects for the
different components. However, this isn't possible for a thread safe const
registry.
On the other side, all pools must necessarily exist when creating a view.
Therefore, static placeholders for missing storage are used to fill the gap.
Note that returned views are always valid and behave as expected in the context
of the caller. The only difference is that static placeholders (if any) are
never renewed.
As a result, a view created from a const registry may behave incorrectly over
time if it's kept for a second use.
Therefore, if the general advice is to create views when necessary and discard
them immediately afterwards, this becomes almost a rule when it comes to views
generated from a const registry.
Fortunately, there is also a way to instantiate storage classes early when in
doubt or when there are special requirements.
Calling the storage
method is equivalent to announcing the existence of a
particular storage, to avoid running into problems. For those interested, there
are also alternative approaches, such as a single threaded tick for the registry
warm-up, but these are not always applicable.
In this case, no placeholders will be used since all storage exist. In other
words, views never risk becoming invalid.
There are many other features and functions not listed in this document.
EnTT
and in particular its ECS part is in continuous development and some
things could be forgotten, others could have been omitted on purpose to reduce
the size of this file. Unfortunately, some parts may even be outdated and still
to be updated.
For further information, it's recommended to refer to the documentation included in the code itself or join the official channels to ask a question.