OpenSpiel has been designed as a framework: a suite of games, algorithms, and tools for research in reinforcement learning and search in games. However, there are situations where one may only want or need a single game/algorithm or small subset from this collection, or a research experiment does not require modifying or otherwise interacting very closely with OpenSpiel other than strictly calling/using it.
In cases like this, it might be nice to use OpenSpiel as a library rather than a framework. This has the benefit of not forcing the use of certain tools like CMake or having to continually recompile OpenSpiel when doing your research.
Luckily, this is easy to achieve with OpenSpiel: you simply need to build it as a shared library once, and then load it dynamically at runtime. This page walks through how to do this assuming a bash shell on Linux, but is very similar on MacOS or for other shells.
The dependencies of OpenSpiel need to be installed before it can be used as a
library. On MacOS and Debian/Ubuntu Linux, this is often simply just running
./install.sh
. Please see the installation from source instructions for more details.
To build OpenSpiel as a shared library, simply run:
mkdir build
cd build
BUILD_SHARED_LIB=ON CXX=clang++ cmake -DPython3_EXECUTABLE=$(which python3) -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=${CXX} ../open_spiel
make -j$(nproc) open_spiel
This produces a dynamically-linked library libopen_spiel.so
(or
lib_openspiel.dylib
on MacOS) in build/
that can be linked against and
loaded dynamically at run-time.
Suppose OpenSpiel was installed in $HOME/open_spiel
. The following line adds
the necessary environment variable to let the shell know where to find
libopen_spiel.so
at run-time:
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="${HOME}/open_spiel/build"
You might want to add this line to your $HOME/.bash_profile
to avoid having to
do it every time you load the library. Of course, if you are already using
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
for something else, then you need to add
${HOME}/open_spiel/build
to it (space-separated paths).
cd ../open_spiel/examples
clang++ -I${HOME}/open_spiel -I${HOME}/open_spiel/open_spiel/abseil-cpp \
-std=c++17 -o shared_library_example shared_library_example.cc \
-L${HOME}/open_spiel/build -lopen_spiel
The first two flags are the include directory paths and the third is the link
directory path. The -lopen_spiel
instructs the linker to link against the
OpenSpiel shared library.
That's it! Now you can run the example using:
./shared_library_example breakthrough
You should also be able to register new games externally without the implementation being within OpenSpiel nor built into the shared library, though we are always interested in growing the library and recommend you contact us about contributing any new games to the suite.