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A scoring program for gliding competitions striving for 100% accuracy and determinism

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igc-xc-score

License: LGPL v3 Node.js CI codecov

igc-xc-score is a paragliding and hang-gliding XC scoring tool in vanilla JS.

It can be used directly from the command-line, or as a library embedded in a web browser or an application.

Currently FFVL, XContest, FAI and XCLeague scoring rules are implemented, but you can pass your own structure with scoring info.

Changing the multipliers or the closing distances is easy, adding new bounding algorithms is not.

See scoring-rules.config.js if you want to modify the rules.

You have an IGC file for which you think that there is a higher scoring solution using only track-log points? Send it along with your turnpoints and I will investigate.

Background

Correctly scoring paragliding XC flights is a rather hard linear optimization problem that remains impossible to correctly solve in a deterministic way for every possible flight.

If you are new to the subject, I suggest you start with the ground-breaking work of Ondřej Palkovský Paragliding Competition Tracklog Optimization.

The task might seem impossible at first, as the complexity of the general case is O(n⁵) and a competition-level flight log will usually contain up to 40,000 or 50,000 records. To further complicate matters, all calculations happen in a non-euclidean space which happens to be the Earth's surface. Luckily, even if an absolutely universal solution remains impossible, there is usually some internal structure of the solution space.

The worst case of this algorithm remains a O(n⁴log(n)), but the average complexity is only O(n²log³(n)). It uses a classical branch and bounding approach with a n³ branching for triangles with a O(n log(n)) cost function and branching for 3 turnpoints distance flights with a O(n) cost function. Different scoring types run in parallel until they are bounded. It has really good performance for triangles, but tends to be a little bit slow for long straight flights.

Geographical distances are calculated on a WGS84 ellipsoid (oblate spheroid) according to the FAI's recommendations and FFVL's rules, taking into account not only the curvature of Earth, but also its flattening over the poles. In reality, the additional error incurred from not applying these corrections would be only about 500m for 500km.

This tools tries to be as precise as possible. There is no resampling, no interpolation and only points lying on the flight track log are used as turn points. As such, its run time could be extreme in some cases. Two modes of execution are provided: optimal solution at all costs and bounded-time execution. When running in bounded-time mode the tool will report if it has found the absolutely best solution or if it had to abandon the search due to reaching of the time limit.

Correctness is considered to be achieved if the additional error induced by the tool itself is inferior to the standard GPS accuracy.

Algorithm

The algorithm used has a few key differences to the one described by Ondřej Palkovský in his excellent 2010 paper. The most notable one is that the cardinality of the branching is only 3. The branching is over the 3 turnpoints expressed in linear coordinates over the flight log records, thus giving O(n³) basic branching complexity.

The two remaining points - the closing points of the triangle for triangle flights and the start/finish points for the free distance flights, are determined as part of the cost function.

The rationale behind this decision is that both of these problems are well-known and well-studied simple geometric problems.

  • Finding the triangle closing points is a classical nearest-neighbor search which can be solved in O(n log(n)) by a number of different approaches, this tool uses a packed Hilbert R-tree provided by mourner/flatbush, locally compensated for the curvature of Earth. Keep in mind that this distance does not need to be 100% precise, as it is used only for selecting the closest point, the scoring effect of the closing distance is measured by the method described in the following section
  • Finding the best start/finish points is a simple minimum/maximum search which is a O(n) problem
  • Both can be further optimized by keeping the intermediate results in an R-Tree or a Hashmap, shared among all the branches

The only weakness of the current implementation are flights consisting of (nearly) perfectly straight lines. These are in fact impossible to optimize, producing a very large number of (nearly) identical solutions that can not be eliminated and therefore must be calculated in order to guarantee that the obtained result is indeed optimal. For those particular cases there is another possible approach with dynamic programming which has a bounded execution time, on the order of a few minutes for the longest flights. This approach is currently not used since it has a rather detrimental impact on the average execution time and has no real benefits aside some very rare, almost perfectly straight line flights.

The branch selection is breadth-first biased when branching and depth-first biased when bounding.

Distance between two points on the surface of a WGS84 ellipsoid

The FAI recommended method for computing distance is distance on the surface of a WGS84 ellipsoid. Finding the distance between two points on a WGS84 ellipsoid is not a trivial problem. The ellipsoid surface equations do not have a closed-form expression (video) and the distance can not be directly calculated. The currently de-facto standard method for computing it is called Vincenty's algorithm and it is an iterative solution which makes it computationally very expensive. It is available through the hp=true option, giving twice slower execution speed for a much higher precision - which is currently hard-coded at 60cm over the WGS84 reference ellipsoid. If the hp=true option is not used, I have settled over a simplified direct formula obtained by Taylor series expansion of the ellipsoid surface equations. This method, which requires 5 cosinus, that can be further reduced to 2 cosinus by using trigonometric identities (contributed by @vic), and 1 square root computation, can be found in FCC's recommendations for computing distances not exceeding 500km. Keep in mind that this distance is the distance of one leg, and not the whole flight. It has a typical error of 5m and a maximum error of 10m for 100km which should be acceptable for most paragliding and hang-gliding flights. On flights with exceptionally long legs (such as the French national distance record), the error can be as high as 25m, which is more than the standard GPS error. The method is described here: Code of Federal Regulations (Annual Edition). Title 47: Telecommunication. and on also on Wikipedia. This is the very same formula that was famously mistaken in an earlier edition of the document.

As a side note, while the GPS navigation system coordinates are relative to WGS84, which remains the current widely approved standard, the internal model used has been upgraded to the more recent EGM96, which is a higher-order model (a geoid). The typical error of WGS84 when compared to EGM96 is less than 1m (on the horizontal) which is less than the typical GPS receiver error. Thus WGS84, which is mathematically much simpler to use, will probably stay in use for most practical applications.

En France

En France l'ellipsoïde de référence normalisé par l'IGN est le GRS80 pour la métropole et le WGS84 pour les DOM-TOM. Le géoïde utilisé est celui du RGF93. Les deux ellipsoïdes sont absolument équivalents, à moins d'un millimètre près, et l'utilisation des coordonnées WGS84 est admise par l'IGN sans aucune transformation supplémentaire.

Rounding of the result

No cross-country league has completely unambiguous score and distance rounding rules - in fact only FAI and XContest have any rounding rules at all. Until the leagues decide to resolve the ambiguity, igc-xc-score has adopted its own rounding rules:

  • All legs and closing distances are rounded separately
  • The legs are summed and the penalty is calculated
  • The triangle closing, minSide and maxSide are checked against the rounded results
  • The penalty is rounded and it is applied
  • The final distance is rounded according to the final rounding rule if there is a special final rounding rule
  • The multiplier is applied
  • The final score is rounded according to the final rounding rule if there is a special final rounding rule, otherwise it is rounded normally

If you don't have lots of experience with floating point numbers on a computer, keep in mind that some fractional numbers that are round in decimal notation are not round in binary notation. If you are a simple user of the interface this does not concern you. If you are using the library to develop 3rd party software and using the raw floating numbers, you should study the example web page or the CLI program - pay attention to toFixed() calls - you will need to do the same in your code - or otherwise your users will complain that 99.04 sometimes appears as 99.03999999999999.

FAI Records rules

The FAI rules are scored using turnpoints in cylinders according to the FAI Sporting Code Section 7D. As this scoring is very peculiar, very complex and used only for evaluating FAI records, I have focused only on obtaining a perfect result and I haven't implemented time-saving optimizations. As a result, this scoring is very slow, taking up to 10 minutes for some flights. If there is more interest in scoring flights with cylinder TPs, and especially if any company or institution is willing to sponsor this work (1 week), it will be possible to greatly speed up this algorithm. If you are interested in contributing the required code yourself, I can provide guidance (for free). The missing part is the bounding of the possible solutions that fails to take into account that the real score will be slightly lower than the simple sum of the legs distances. Thus, the adjustFAICylinders has to be adapted to work with the bounding functions to avoid trying huge amounts of useless solutions.

Launch and landing detection

The tool includes a launch and landing detection based upon a moving average of the vertical and the horizontal (ground) speed. It should correctly segment flight logs containing multiple launches and landings and will score the best flight. It can not distinguish a glider that is completely immobile up in the air for a set period of time (ie, gliding into a wind equal to its airspeed while soaring at its sink rate) from a glider that has landed, but outside of this somewhat rare (and very precarious) situation, or maybe a car climbing a twisty mountain road, it should work well in most typical hike and fly cases. The values, including the number of seconds used for the moving average, can be tweaked in flight.js.

Installation

If you just want to run it from the command-line, download the executable file for your platform from the releases section.

Or, if you already have Node.js, you can download the source distribution with npm:

npm install igc-xc-score

You can try a demo here: https://www.meteo.guru/xc-score/.

The sources used for this demo are in the www directory.

Installing the webpage on your own webserver

If you do not need to customize it, you can simply download igc-xc-score-web.zip from the releases section and unzip it in a directory on your webserver. If you want to integrate the software on your website, read the section The solver library below.

Installing the webpage on your computer for offline use (user)

Download igc-xc-score-web.zip from the releases section and unzip it in a directory on your computer, then open a browser window and navigate to file:/// to wherever you unzipped the folder.

Run the web demo with the built-in webserver (developer)

There is an npm start script. Run in the package root directory:

npm start

Then use your browser to connect to http://localhost:9000

Usage

The prepackaged command-line tool

Using with an executable (user)

igc-xc-score flight.igc out=flight.json maxtime=50 scoring=FFVL
igc-xc-score flight.igc out=flight.json maxtime=50 scoring=XContest

You can visualize the resulting GeoJSON files at geojson.io.

It will contain all the details of the optimal solution - score, distances, turnpoints. See the section below on program output for additional details.

Valid options are:

out=<geojson>           # save the optimal solution in <geojson>
maxtime=<seconds>       # do not run for more than <seconds>, producing eventually a sub-optimal result
quiet=false             # do not output any unncessary information
pipe=false              # run in pipe mode, reading flight data from stdin and writing optimal solutions to stdout, works best with quiet, use stdin for filename
progress=<milliseconds> # report the current solution every <milliseconds>, works best in pipe mode
noflight=false          # do not include the flight track in the geojson output
invalid=false           # include invalid GPS fixes
hp=false                # High Precision mode, use Vincenty's instead of FCC distances, twice slower for a little bit better precision
trim=false              # auto-trim the flight log to its launch and landing points

Using with node (developer)

# when checking out from github (already included in the npm package)
npm run build

# bundled and minified version
node dist/igc-xc-score.cjs flight.igc out=flight.json quiet=true
cat flight.json | jq .properties

# source version for debugging
node src/cli

The solver library

Calling the solver from another Node.js program is easy, you should look at src/cli.js (the CLI tool) and src/test.js (the unit tests) for examples.

CJS

const fs = require('fs');
const IGCParser = require('igc-parser');
const { scoringRules, solver } = require('igc-xc-score');
const flight = IGCParser.parse(fs.readFileSync(path.join('test', test.file), 'utf8'), { lenient: true });
const result = solver(flight, scoringRules.FFVL).next().value;
if (result.optimal)
    console.log(`score is ${result.score}`)

ESM

import IGCParser from 'igc-parser';
import { solver, scoringRules as scoring } from 'igc-xc-score';
const flight = IGCParser.parse(fs.readFileSync(path.join('test', test.file), 'utf8'), { lenient: true });
const result = solver(flight, scoring.FFVL).next().value;
if (result.optimal)
    console.log(`score is ${result.score}`)

solver is a generator function that can be called multiple times with a maximum execution time. Each successive call will return a better solution if such a solution has been found until an optimal solution is reached. I strongly recommend you to use the lenient=true option of igc-parser as a large portion of the IGC files in the paragliding world are coming from devices that do not fully adhere to the IGC standard - especially the smartphone apps some pilots use. Be advised that in JS, a for..of loop will ignore the final return value of a generator. Do not use a for..of loop. Look at index.js for a proper solution.

solver accepts the following options in its third argument:

const default_opt = {
    maxcycle: undefined          // max execution time per cycle in milliseconds
    noflight: false              // do not include the flight track in the geojson output
    invalid: false               // do not filter invalid GPS fixes
    hp: false                    // High Precision mode, use Vincenty's instead of FCC distances, twice slower for a little bit better precision
    trim: false                  // auto-trim the flight to its launch and landing points
};

When calling from the browser, in order to avoid blocking the main event loop, you should use requestIdleCallback when it is available. When it is not, setTimeout could be a good substitute. It is best to fire the optimizer in small bursts of 50ms to 200ms each in order to keep the browser responsive. The human perception of simultaneity is limited to about 100ms, so this is a good starting point.

function loop() {
    const s = this.next();
    if (!s.done) {
        $('#spinner').show();
        window.requestIdleCallback(loop.bind(this));
        $('#status').html(`trying solutions, best so far is ${s.value.score} points`);
    } else {
        $('#spinner').hide();
        $('#status').html(`Best possible ${s.value.score} points`);
    }
}

window.requestIdleCallback(() => {
    const it = igcSolver(igcFlight, igcScoring.FFVL, { maxcycle: 100 });
    loop.call(it);
})

Integrating with a non-JS desktop application

Probably the easiest way to embed the solver in a non-JS desktop application is to use the provided executable in pipe (stdin/stdout) mode. It expects an IGC file as its and input and it will output the possible solutions in GeoJSON format. See the section below on flight instruments if the file size is a problem.

Or, you can also check my project libnode for a direct solution for embedding Node.js code in a C/C++ application.

Using this module in memory/CPU-constrained embedded environments (ie flight instruments)

Depending on the exact nature of your device, you might be able to use the full version. Android-based devices should be more than capable of running the original JS code.

If the problem is the executable file size

Using the JS code in an older embedded engine (Rhino and Chakra for example) will lead to abysmal performance. However a very simple solution is to use Babel 6 to transpile to ES2015 and to embed Node4:

npm i nexe babel-cli babel-plugin-transform-runtime babel-polyfill babel-preset-env babel-preset-es2015 babel-preset-stage-0
echo '{"presets":["es2015","stage-0"],"plugins":[["transform-runtime",{"regenerator":true}]]}' > .babelrc
babel igc-xc-score.js --minified -o igc-xc-score.es2015.js
cat igc-xc-score.es2015.js | nexe -o igc-xc-score-node4-linux -t linux-x64-4.9.1
cat igc-xc-score.es2015.js | nexe -o igc-xc-score-node4-macos -t mac-x64-4.9.1
cat igc-xc-score.es2015.js | nexe -o igc-xc-score-node4-win.exe -t windows-x64-4.8.4

This will lower the executable size down to about 10Mb on Windows and 15Mb on Linux with almost no loss of performance at all. Further reduction is possible if you build yourself a Node 0.14 package.

If CPU/memory is the problem

I have lots of experience working on ARM and MIPS platforms, so you can contact me for porting the library to your specific device, but this definitely won't be free or open-source software. Debugging a very complex mathematical algorithm in C++ on a small electronic board with an integrated hardware debugger is not a leisure project. Porting this software to an integrated low-level ARM/MIPS board is a 1-month project.

Implementing continuous dynamic search

Modifying the algorithm to allow it to continuously search in-flight for nearby points that maximize the score is also possible and it is a 2-weeks project.

Program Output

The GeoJSON returned by the solver contains what should be the highest scoring solution. It contains the turnpoints (tp0, tp1...) elements, the closing points of the triangle for triangle flights (cp.in and cp.out), the start and finish points for free distance flights (ep.start and ep.finish) the distances lines (yellow/green) and the flight path itself. Every tp/cp element also contains an r and a timestamp field. These are the number and the timestamp of the corresponding GPS fix and can be used to easily verify the correctness of the output of the program.

"type": "Feature",
"id": "tp0",
"properties": {
    "id": "tp0",
    "r": 3799,
    "timestamp": 1546866868000
},
"geometry": {
    "type": "Point",
    "coordinates": [
        6.641583333333333,
        43.73506666666667
    ]
}

Contributing and adding new scoring rules

scoring-rules.config.js is designed to be user-serviceable.

Adding new types of flights requires some basic working knowledge of linear optimization and at least some understanding of the branch and bound algorithm.

Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.

Please make sure to update tests as appropriate.

License

LGPL

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A scoring program for gliding competitions striving for 100% accuracy and determinism

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