A field management system that just works.
For participants and spectators:
- Same network isolation and security as the official FIRST FMS
- No-lag realtime scoring
- Team stack lights and sevent-segment display are replaced by an LCD screen, which shows team info before the match and realtime scoring and timer during the match
- Smooth-scrolling rankings display
- Direct publishing of schedule, results, and rankings to The Blue Alliance
For scorekeepers:
- Runs on Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux
- No install prerequisites
- No "pre-start" – hardware is configured automatically and in the background
- Flexible and quick match schedule generation
- Streamlined realtime score entry
- Reports, results, and logs can be viewed from any computer
Teams may use Cheesy Arena freely for practice, scrimmages, and off-season events. See LICENSE for more details.
Via binaries:
- Download the latest release for OS X or Windows
- Unzip the file
- On Mac OS X, run
cheesy-arena.command
, and on Windows, runcheesy-arena.exe
- Navigate to http://localhost:8080 in your browser (Google Chrome recommended)
From source:
- Download Go
- Set up your Go workspace
- If you're using Windows and don't already have a working version of GCC (needed to compile a dependency), install TDM-GCC.
- Download the Cheesy Arena source and dependencies with
go get github.com/Team254/cheesy-arena
- Compile the code with
go build
- Run the
cheesy-arena
orcheesy-arena.exe
binary - Navigate to http://localhost:8080 in your browser (Google Chrome recommended)
Configuration:
Set the IP address of the computer running Cheesy Arena to 10.0.100.5. Driver stations will broadcast their presence on the network to this hardcoded address so that the FMS does not need to discover them by some other method.
Cheesy Arena is written using Go, a relatively new language developed by Google. Go excels in the areas of concurrency, networking, performance, and portability, which makes it ideal for a field management system.
Cheesy Arena is implemented as a web server, with all human interaction done via browser. The graphical interfaces are implemented in HTML, JavaScript, and CSS. There are many advantages to this approach – development of new graphical elements is rapid, and no software needs to be installed other than on the server. Client web pages send commands and receive updates using WebSockets.
SQLite3 is used as the datastore, and making backups or transferring data from one installation to another is as simple as copying the database file.
Schedule generation is fast because pregenerated schedules are included with the code. Each schedule contains a certain number of matches per team for placeholder teams 1 through N, so generating the actual match schedule becomes a simple exercise in permuting the mapping of real teams to placeholder teams. The pregenerated schedules are checked into this repository and can be vetted in advance of any events for deviations from the randomness (and other) requirements.
Cheesy Arena includes support for, but doesn't require, networking hardware similar to that used in official FRC events. Teams are issued their own SSIDs and WPA keys, and when connected to Cheesy Arena are isolated to a VLAN which prevents any communication other than between the driver station, robot, and event server. The network hardware is configured via SSH and Telnet commands for the new set of teams when each mach is loaded.
Cheesy Arena has the ability to integrate with an Allen-Bradley PLC setup similar to the one that FIRST uses, to read field sensors and control lights and motors. The PLC hardware travels with the Chezy Champs field.
Due to the prohibitive cost of the LEDs and LED controllers used on official fields, a custom solution was developed for Chezy Champs using consumer-grade LED strips and embedded microcontrollers.
See the Advanced Networking wiki page for instructions on what equipment to obtain and how to configure it in order to support advanced network security.
Cheesy Arena is far from finished! You can help by:
- Checking out the TODO list, writing a missing feature, and sending a pull request
- Filing any bugs or feature requests using the issue tracker
- Contributing documentation to the wiki
- Sending baked goods to Pat
Several folks have contributed pull requests. Thanks!
In addition, the following individuals have contributed to make Cheesy Arena a reality:
- Tom Bottiglieri
- James Cerar
- Kiet Chau
- Travis Covington
- Nick Eyre
- Patrick Fairbank
- Eugene Fang
- Thad House
- Karthik Kanagasabapathy
- Ken Mitchell
- Andrew Nabors
- Jared Russell
- Austin Schuh
- Colin Wilson