Open MCT (Open Mission Control Technologies) is a next-generation mission control framework for visualization of data on desktop and mobile devices. It is developed at NASA's Ames Research Center, and is being used by NASA for data analysis of spacecraft missions, as well as planning and operation of experimental rover systems. As a generalizable and open source framework, Open MCT could be used as the basis for building applications for planning, operation, and analysis of any systems producing telemetry data.
Please visit our Official Site and Getting Started Guide
Try Open MCT now with our live demo.
Building and running Open MCT in your local dev environment is very easy. Be sure you have Git and Node.js installed, then follow the directions below. Need additional information? Check out the Getting Started page on our website. (These instructions assume you are installing as a non-root user; developers have reported issues running these steps with root privileges.)
- Clone the source code
git clone https://github.com/nasa/openmct.git
- Install development dependencies
npm install
- Run a local development server
npm start
Open MCT is now running, and can be accessed by pointing a web browser at http://localhost:8080/
Documentation is available on the Open MCT website. The documentation can also be built locally.
The clearest examples for developing Open MCT plugins are in the tutorials provided in our documentation.
Additional examples are available in the examples
hierarchy of this
repository; however, be aware that these examples are
not fully-documented, so
the tutorials will likely serve as a better starting point.
We want Open MCT to be as easy to use, install, run, and develop for as possible, and your feedback will help us get there! Feedback can be provided via GitHub issues, or by emailing us at arc-dl-openmct@mail.nasa.gov.
Open MCT is built using npm
and gulp
.
To build Open MCT for deployment:
npm run prepare
This will compile and minify JavaScript sources, as well as copy over assets.
The contents of the dist
folder will contain a runnable Open MCT
instance (e.g. by starting an HTTP server in that directory), including:
- A
main.js
file containing Open MCT source code. - Various assets in the
example
andplatform
directories. - An
index.html
that runs Open MCT in its default configuration.
Additional gulp
tasks are defined in the gulpfile.
A bundle is a group of software components (including source code, declared as AMD modules, as well as resources such as images and HTML templates) that is intended to be added or removed as a single unit. A plug-in for Open MCT will be expressed as a bundle; platform components are also expressed as bundles.
A bundle is also just a directory which contains a file bundle.json
,
which declares its contents.
The file bundles.json
(note the plural), at the top level of the
repository, is a JSON file containing an array of all bundles (expressed as
directory names) to include in a running instance of Open MCT. Adding or
removing paths from this list will add or remove bundles from the running
application.
Tests are written for Jasmine 1.3 and run by Karma. To run:
npm test
The test suite is configured to load any scripts ending with Spec.js
found
in the src
hierarchy. Full configuration details are found in
karma.conf.js
. By convention, unit test scripts should be located
alongside the units that they test; for example, src/foo/Bar.js
would be
tested by src/foo/BarSpec.js
. (For legacy reasons, some existing tests may
be located in separate test
folders near the units they test, but the
naming convention is otherwise the same.)
When npm test
is run, test results will be written as HTML to
target/tests
. Code coverage information is written to target/coverage
.
Certain terms are used throughout Open MCT with consistent meanings or conventions. Any deviations from the below are issues and should be addressed (either by updating this glossary or changing code to reflect correct usage.) Other developer documentation, particularly in-line documentation, may presume an understanding of these terms.
- bundle: A bundle is a removable, reusable grouping of software elements.
The application is composed of bundles. Plug-ins are bundles. For more
information, refer to framework documentation (under
platform/framework
.) - capability: An object which exposes dynamic behavior or non-persistent state associated with a domain object.
- composition: In the context of a domain object, this refers to the set of other domain objects that compose or are contained by that object. A domain object's composition is the set of domain objects that should appear immediately beneath it in a tree hierarchy. A domain object's composition is described in its model as an array of id's; its composition capability provides a means to retrieve the actual domain object instances associated with these identifiers asynchronously.
- description: When used as an object property, this refers to the human-readable description of a thing; usually a single sentence or short paragraph. (Most often used in the context of extensions, domain object models, or other similar application-specific objects.)
- domain object: A meaningful object to the user; a distinct thing in the work support by Open MCT. Anything that appears in the left-hand tree is a domain object.
- extension: An extension is a unit of functionality exposed to the
platform in a declarative fashion by a bundle. For more
information, refer to framework documentation (under
platform/framework
.) - id: A string which uniquely identifies a domain object.
- key: When used as an object property, this refers to the machine-readable identifier for a specific thing in a set of things. (Most often used in the context of extensions or other similar application-specific object sets.)
- model: The persistent state associated with a domain object. A domain object's model is a JavaScript object which can be converted to JSON without losing information (that is, it contains no methods.)
- name: When used as an object property, this refers to the human-readable name for a thing. (Most often used in the context of extensions, domain object models, or other similar application-specific objects.)
- navigation: Refers to the current state of the application with respect to the user's expressed interest in a specific domain object; e.g. when a user clicks on a domain object in the tree, they are navigating to it, and it is thereafter considered the navigated object (until the user makes another such choice.)
- space: A name used to identify a persistence store. Interactions with
persistence will generally involve a
space
parameter in some form, to distinguish multiple persistence stores from one another (for cases where there are multiple valid persistence locations available.)