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Opentrons

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Introduction

This is the Opentrons library, the Python module that runs Opentrons robots. It contains the code that interprets and executes protocols; code that controls the hardware both during and outside of protocols; and all the other small tasks and capabilities that the robot fulfills.

This document is about the structure and purpose of the source code. For information on how to use the Opentrons library or the robot in general, please refer to our Full API Documentation for detailed instructions.

The Opentrons library has two purposes:

  1. Control an Opentrons robot. The API server uses the Opentrons library when controlling a robot. We boot up a server for the robot’s HTTP endpoints, and a server for its WebSockets-based RPC system for control during protocols. We are configured by files in the robot’s filesystem in /data.
  2. Simulate protocols on users’ computers. When simulating a protocol on a user’s computer, we use the entry point in opentrons.simulate. We set up simulators for the protocol, but do not run any kind of web servers. We are configured by files in the user’s home directory (for more information see configuration).

Setting Up For Development

First, read the top-level contributing guide section on setup. As that document states, once you have installed the prerequisites you can simply run make setup in this subdirectory. If you want to make the environment as it will be on an OT-2 specifically, run make setup-ot2

The only additional prerequisite concerns building documentation. If you want to build the PDF version of the documentation, you will need an installation of LaTeX that includes the pdflatex tool. Note that if you don’t install this, everything will still work - you just won’t get the PDF documentation.

Updating A Robot

Since the library is installed on a robot, we need to have easy ways of getting newly-built wheels to the robot. This is provided by the push-api target of the top-level makefile. To send a library to the robot, navigate to the top-level opentrons directory and run make push-api host=<robot ip>. If you forget the host= part, the makefile will look for a robot connected via USB. Note that the update facility relies on the update-server running.

The top level makefile (and the library makefile) also have a target called term, which will give you an SSH terminal in the robot. This is just a light skin over invoking SSH with some options that make it more tolerant about frequently-changing IP addresses. It also takes an argument: make term host=<robot ip> connects to a specific ip, and if you don’t specify host= the makefile will look for a robot connected via USB. Unlike push-api, this command only needs the robot to be booted to function.

Tests and Linting

All code changes should be accompanied by test changes as a rule of thumb. The only exceptions are to changes that are mostly about invoking different things in the system or changing hardware behavior; these should be documented with tests run on physical robots.

Our tests live in tests/opentrons and are run with pytest. Tests are run in CI on every pull request and on edge; PRs will not be merged with failing tests.

Tests should be organized similarly to the organization of the module itself.

We use Flake8 for lint checks, and mypy for type-checking annotations. Both of these tools are run in the lint makefile target, and is run in CI; PRs will not be merged with failing lint. Usage of noqa to temporarily disable lint is discouraged, but if you need to please disable only a specific rule and leave a comment explaining exactly why. The same goes with type: ignore.

New code should have appropriate type annotations, and refactors of old code should try to add type annotations. We’re flexible about the refactor part, though - if adding type annotations greatly expands the scope of a PR, it’s OK to not add them as long as you explain this in the PR message.

Simulating Protocols

To simulate a protocol using this package, you can use the console script opentrons_simulate, which is installed when this package is installed from pip. For detailed information on how to run the script, run opentrons_simulate --help. In general, however, simulating a protocol is as simple as running opentrons_simulate.exe C:\path\to\protocol on Windows or opentrons_simulate /path/to/protocol on OSX or Linux.

The simulation script can also be invoked through python with python -m opentrons.simulate /path/to/protocol.

This also provides an entrypoint to use the Opentrons simulation package from other Python contexts such as an interactive prompt or Jupyter. To simulate a protocol in python, open a file containing a protocol and pass it to opentrons.simulate.simulate:

import opentrons.simulate
protocol_file = open('/path/to/protocol.py')
opentrons.simulate.simulate(protocol_file)

The function will either run and return or raise an exception if there is a problem with the protocol.

Configuration

The module has a lot of configuration, some of which is only relevant when running on an actual robot, but some of which could be useful during simulation. When the module is first imported, it will try and write configuration files in ~/.opentrons/config.json (C:\Users\%USERNAME%\.opentrons\config.json on Windows). This contains mostly paths to other configuration files and directories, most of which will be in that folder. The location can be changed by setting the environment variable OT_API_CONFIG_DIR to another path. Inividual settings in the config file can be overridden by setting environment variables named like OT_API_${UPPERCASED_VAR_NAME} (for instance, to override the serial_log_file config element you could set the environment variable OT_API_SERIAL_LOG_FILE to a different path).

Dealing With Robot Versions

The OT-2 does not use the hardware subdirectory or the opentrons_hardware package. This can be a problem to work around. Please keep imports of opentrons_hardware to limited places inside the hardware_control submodule and tests of that submodule, and ensure that anything outside these safe areas conditionally imports opentrons_hardware or imports it inside a non-file scope in a place used only outside an OT2. In tests, any test that uses the OT3 hardware controller will be skipped in the test-ot2 Makefile recipe.