2

I am building a game with a good emphasis on physics. Therefore I need the game to run on a very specific interval. Current code:

public double period = .02; //this is the run interval in seconds

//main gameLoop
public void gameLoop(){
    long startTime;
    long sleep;

    while(running){
        startTime = System.nanoTime();

        Graphics2D g = s.getGraphics();
        operateEntities(g);
        g.dispose();
        s.update();
        //figure out how long it must sleep to take .02s altogether
        sleep = ((int)(period*1000) - (System.nanoTime() - startTime)*100000);
        try{
            if(sleep > 0){
                Thread.sleep(sleep);
            }else{
                System.err.println("Warning: program runtime exceeded period");
            }
        }catch(Exception ex){}

        gameTime += period;
    }
}

This is not working as expected. Currently the main thread is executing without sleeping at all, and the "Warning: program runtime exceeded period" warning is firing.

Previously I was using System.currentTimeMillis(), but it was not accurate enough for my purposes, so I switched to System.nanoTime()

Increasing the period actually serves to speed up the program, while reducing it slows it down.

Is there a simple logic faw? is my understanding of System.nanoTime() off? or is there a better way to run the methods operateEntities, dispose, and update on a specific interval?

EDIT: for the record, the program does not take more than .02s to complete. It has been tested

5
  • 1
    Where is running initialized?
    – edhedges
    Aug 6, 2012 at 19:35
  • Have you checked what value "sleep" comes back as? Whenever I run into similar problems I place a lot of print statements.
    – 4444
    Aug 6, 2012 at 19:37
  • Interesting definition of the word "period" you've got there.
    – Matt Ball
    Aug 6, 2012 at 19:37
  • 2
    Please don't catch Exception and silently do nothing. Catch the most specific exception you can and be careful that you truly can ignore the exception. Aug 6, 2012 at 19:38
  • 1.Running is a private boolean initialized in that class. 2.Sleep returns as a negative number. 3.the term "period" best fits the physics behind it. 4.I don't know enough about java to know what exceptions that try could throw Aug 6, 2012 at 19:46

2 Answers 2

8

Nanoseconds are smaller than milliseconds, and as such, to convert nanos -> millis, you must divide by 100000, not mulitply by it;

    //figure out how long it must sleep to take .02s altogether
    sleep = ((int)(period*1000) - (System.nanoTime() - startTime)*100000);

should be changed to

    //figure out how long it must sleep to take .02s altogether
    sleep = ((int)(period*1000) - (System.nanoTime() - startTime)/100000);

Your current code was trying to sleep 200ms minus a big number, making sleep be negative, and giving you the "Warning: program runtime exceeded period" output

1
  • Aw crap right, converted the wrong way. Thanks, it's better, but it's till running more frequently than it should be (gaah!). I know this because gametime gets displayed on a clock; it's ticking at about 200% real time Aug 6, 2012 at 19:41
2

Breaking down your code there are a number of problems:

//Multiplies by 100,000 rather than divides.
sleep = ((int)(period*1000) - (System.nanoTime() - startTime)*100000);
//Note that sleep here is a very small number minus a very large number: probably negative.

try{
  if(sleep > 0){//If positive, sleep
    Thread.sleep(sleep);
  } else{//throws an error in all other cases.
    System.err.println("Warning: program runtime exceeded period");
  }
}catch(Exception ex){}//Empty exception handling poorly handles the thread.sleep() Exception requirement.

This code will always error out unless you make your period value much larger. However, even beyond that your approach will not likely yield the result you want: accurate timing. What your core loop is:

  • Calculate the physics for 0.02 seconds.
  • Go to sleep.
  • Check what time it is.
  • If a particular period (0.02 seconds) has passed, continue, otherwise sleep again.
  • Repeat.

With a small enough time slice this will be accurate. However, threads don't work like that. You cannot guarantee when the thread will wake up. It could be never. It could be in three seconds. It could be instantly. Chances are you're going to overshoot whatever your time period is, and you will effectively never hit it dead on.

Instead of relying on a specific incremental period, you need to scale all your physics by the period of time that has actually passed, rather than rely on a specific period of time passing consistently every time.

  • Go to sleep.
  • Find out how much time has passed.
  • Calculate physics for that time period.
  • Repeat.

You still want a small time slice to sleep, but this way you eliminate the error introduced by the thread scheduler.

1
  • Never would have thought of that. An elegant solution, thank you! luckily most of the physics already scales off of period so I can change fps as needed. Aug 6, 2012 at 19:59

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