Node Go is a web application for playing the board game Go in real time
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Bump minimist from 1.2.5 to 1.2.6 in /packages/play-node-go
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Node Go

A browser application to play Go in real time.

The project in it's current state
Client only prototype

Screenshot of an in-progress game of Go.

About Go
Technical Challenges
Setup For Development
Known Bugs
Roadmap
Features
Tech


The Game of Go

Go is a 2 player abstract strategy game of perfect information.

Players take turns placing playing pieces called stones on the intersections of a gridded board. This board is usually a square 19 points across. Stones remain on the points at which they are placed unless they are captured by the opposing player. Capture occurs when a stone or group of stones no longer has any adjascent empty points.

Play ends when both players agree that they have exhausted all advantageous moves. Scoring is determined by counting and comparing the area controlled by either player.

For a more detailed explanation of the rules, please see my previous illustrated explanation of the game of go or the American Go Association's Concise Rules of Go.


Technical Challenges

Modeling Game State

A go board typically consists of 361 points which can exist in a number of states. Points can influence the state of points that are orthogonal neighbors. This relationship can be thought of as an undirected graph, with each point being a vertex typically of degree 4. Special cases include 'edge' points, whose degree is 3 or, in the case of corner points, 2.

Many of the methods that manage the state of the game and of the board, make use of this graph representation. Groups are contiguous points with the same color stone which are important in determining the life or death of stones on the board. When a player makes a move, (provided that move is legal,) the point at which the move is made will utilize a breadth-first graph traversal calling a joinGroup method on each point with the same color stone.

Adjacent points without stones are very important to the state of a point as well. These are known as liberties, and so long as a group of stones has at least one point with at least one liberty, that group remains alive and on the board. Therefore, the joinGroup method also utilizes a depth first traversal to mark all of the liberties of a group. Both the stones and the liberties of the group are memoized on the Game object.

Image of Game logic

Game Records

For the moment, game records are modeled as a list where each move has the type {player: <string: player color>, pos: {x: <integer>, y: <integer>}}.

The database move table contains additional information number, game_record, and prior_move in addition to a foreign key for a game row. number represents the move number in a game record (for now this corresponds to list position), game_record is a boolean representing whether the move was 'official' or is an alternate move used in study, and prior_move is a reference to another move row allowing for the construction of a tree model for the game (see Expanding this representation, below.)

There is a backend service that processes this list of moves into a current board state (Modeling Game State.) On the frontend, users have the option of expanding a menu to view the move order in the format below.

Game Record: Black and white 19x19 grid with moves represented as circles filled in with stone color and marked with move number. Below the grid is an overflow area for moves made at previously played points in the format /[new move number and color at old move number and color/]

This is a customary representation of game records printed in Go literature. A frontend service processes the list of moves and plots each move onto a <canvas> element drawn to resemble the grid lines on a board, with moves that are placed at prior points plotted on an additional <canvas> element below.

Expanding this representation

This representation will be expanded when support for alternate game paths is added. Alternate game paths will allow users to study completed games by playing out the consequences of moves not in the completed game. This feature will require a tree structure for the game record where moves on the main line are referred with a main property on each move node and alternate moves with any number of alternate references.

Caching multiple in-progress games

Image of Game module in context

Partitioning Game Rooms

Finding a game starts with joining a game room. Image of Home Screen with 'main' game room Watch an in progress game, join a game, or study a historic game. Image of Room Screen with multiple games in various states


Setup

Local Repo

$ git clone https://github.com/sorrelbri/node-go.git

Install Deps

$ npm run bootstrap

Runs lerna bootstrap command installing dependencies for project, development and package dependencies

Initialize Database

Download PostgreSQL

To verify PostgreSQL installation:

$ psql -V

Node Go API was built with version 11.4. See documentation for Postgres download.

Create Databases

$ psql
# psql(11.4)
CREATE DATABASE node-go;
CREATE DATABASE node-go-test; # testing database

Configure Environment

$ touch packages/server/.env
# .env
NODE_ENV=development
PORT=# set development port for API
REACT_ADDRESS=http://localhost:3000 # default
PG_CONNECTION_STRING=postgresql://localhost:5432/node-go
PG_CONNECTION_STRING_TEST=postgresql://localhost:5432/node-go-test
JWT_SECRET=# generate a secret key for JWT signing algorithm
TEST_SECRET=# same as above, for test environment
SALT_ROUNDS=# set number of salt rounds for bcrypt hashing function
DOMAIN=localhost
USER_ONE_PASSWORD=# credentials for testing with 
USER_ONE_EMAIL=# same as above

Smoke test

$ lerna run test

Run Database Migrations

$ cd packages/server; npm run migrate; npm run seed

Running in development

$ cd packages/server
$ npm start # or if you have nodemon
$ nodemon
$ cd packages/play-node-go
$ npm start

Known Bugs

  • game end logic not implemented on front end yet
  • no authorization for game moves
  • websocket connections may remain open, pooling prevents runaway leaks, but tests may hang

Roadmap

6/20

  1. Frontend implementation of game end logic
  2. Auth for games
  3. Game request creation

7/20

  1. Generate game records
  2. Implement chat
  3. Implement study mode

Features

  • Realtime play
  • Account authentication
  • Chat
  • Study mode
  • Multiple game settings
  • Customizable board size
  • Download games in .sgf format

Built with

Management & Deployment

  • Lerna
  • CircleCI