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lmxopcua/code-reviews/Driver.FOCAS/findings.md
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Joseph Doherty e07a4fbf52 review(Driver.FOCAS): add byte-level wire-protocol test coverage
Re-review at 7286d320. -013 (Medium, testing): the managed FOCAS/2 wire-decode layer
(BuildPdu/ParseResponseBlocks, incl. cnc_getfigure stride) had zero byte-level tests; added
15 (no decode bug found). -014 (spindle-load truncation heuristic) deferred bench-gated.
Note: runtime read path is now pure-managed TCP (no P/Invoke except the probe handshake).
2026-06-19 11:47:11 -04:00

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26 KiB
Markdown

# Code Review — Driver.FOCAS
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Module | `src/Drivers/ZB.MOM.WW.OtOpcUa.Driver.FOCAS` |
| Reviewer | Claude Code |
| Review date | 2026-06-19 |
| Commit reviewed | `04e0877b` (re-review; prior `76d35d1`) |
| Status | Reviewed |
| Open findings | 0 |
## Checklist coverage
A comprehensive review completes every category, recording "No issues found" where
a category produced nothing rather than leaving it blank.
| # | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Correctness & logic bugs | Driver.FOCAS-001, Driver.FOCAS-002, Driver.FOCAS-003 |
| 2 | OtOpcUa conventions | Driver.FOCAS-004 |
| 3 | Concurrency & thread safety | Driver.FOCAS-005 |
| 4 | Error handling & resilience | Driver.FOCAS-006, Driver.FOCAS-007 |
| 5 | Security | No issues found |
| 6 | Performance & resource management | Driver.FOCAS-008 |
| 7 | Design-document adherence | Driver.FOCAS-009 |
| 8 | Code organization & conventions | Driver.FOCAS-010, Driver.FOCAS-011 |
| 9 | Testing coverage | Driver.FOCAS-012 |
| 10 | Documentation & comments | No issues found |
## Findings
### Driver.FOCAS-001
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | High |
| Category | Correctness & logic bugs |
| Location | `FocasDriverFactoryExtensions.cs:54-86`, `FocasDriverFactoryExtensions.cs:132-140` |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** `FocasDriverConfigDto` exposes only `Backend`, `Series`, `TimeoutMs`,
`Devices`, `Tags`, and `Probe`. It has no `FixedTree`, `AlarmProjection`, or
`HandleRecycle` properties, and `CreateInstance` never sets those three options on
`FocasDriverOptions`. As a result, a deployment that follows the documented config -
`docs/drivers/FOCAS.md` shows `"FixedTree": { "Enabled": true }`,
`"AlarmProjection": { "Enabled": true }`, and `"HandleRecycle": { "Enabled": true }`
inside `Config` - is parsed with `PropertyNameCaseInsensitive` and the unknown sections
are discarded. The features stay at their hard-coded defaults (all `Enabled = false`).
The fixed-node tree never appears, alarm subscriptions throw `NotSupportedException`
("FOCAS alarm projection is disabled"), and handle recycling never runs - despite the
operator explicitly opting in.
**Recommendation:** Add `FixedTree`, `AlarmProjection`, and `HandleRecycle` DTO classes
to `FocasDriverConfigDto`, parse their `TimeSpan`/`bool` fields, and populate the
corresponding `FocasDriverOptions` properties in `CreateInstance`. Consider enabling
strict JSON handling (`UnmappedMemberHandling.Disallow`) so future unknown config
sections fail loudly instead of being dropped.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-22 — added `FixedTreeDto`/`AlarmProjectionDto`/`HandleRecycleDto` to `FocasDriverConfigDto` and `Build*` mappers in `CreateInstance` that populate the matching `FocasDriverOptions` properties (missing section / field keeps its default).
### Driver.FOCAS-002
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | High |
| Category | Correctness & logic bugs |
| Location | `WireFocasClient.cs:164-179`, `FocasDriver.cs:513`, `FocasDriver.cs:593` |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** The fixed-tree bootstrap probes the `ProgramInfo` capability via
`SafeTryProbe(() => client.GetProgramInfoAsync(ct))` and treats a non-null result as
"supported". But `WireFocasClient.GetProgramInfoAsync` never throws on a FOCAS error
return code: `ReadExecutingProgramNameAsync`, `ReadBlockCountAsync`, and
`ReadOperationModeCodeAsync` all return `FocasResult<T>` envelopes, and the method
substitutes defaults (`string.Empty`, `0`) when `IsOk` is false instead of throwing. It
only throws from `RequireConnected()`. Consequently `GetProgramInfoAsync` always
returns a non-null `FocasProgramInfo`, so `Capabilities.ProgramInfo` is set `true` even
on a CNC series that returns `EW_FUNC`/`EW_NOOPT` for `cnc_exeprgname2`/`cnc_rdopmode`.
The driver then emits the `Program/` and `OperationMode/` subtrees and polls them every
tick against a controller that does not support them - the exact "nodes that only ever
return BadDeviceFailure" outcome the capability suppression was designed to prevent
(`docs/drivers/FOCAS.md`, "Per-series node suppression").
**Recommendation:** Make `GetProgramInfoAsync` throw (or return a nullable result) when
the underlying `cnc_exeprgname2` / `cnc_rdopmode` calls report a non-zero RC, so
`SafeTryProbe` can correctly classify the series. At minimum require the program-name
or op-mode read to be `IsOk` before declaring the capability present.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-22 — `WireFocasClient.GetProgramInfoAsync` now throws `InvalidOperationException` when neither the `cnc_exeprgname2` nor the `cnc_rdopmode` read is `IsOk`, so `SafeTryProbe` records `ProgramInfo` as unsupported on series that answer `EW_FUNC`/`EW_NOOPT`.
### Driver.FOCAS-003
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Medium |
| Category | Correctness & logic bugs |
| Location | `FocasDriver.cs:71-79` |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** In `InitializeAsync`, capability-matrix validation only runs when
`_devices.TryGetValue(tag.DeviceHostAddress, out var device)` succeeds. A tag whose
`DeviceHostAddress` does not match any configured device (a common config typo, e.g. a
trailing `:8193` mismatch or a wrong host) silently skips validation and is still added
to `_tagsByName`. The mistake is not surfaced at load time - it only manifests at read
time as `BadNodeIdUnknown` (`ReadAsync` lines 191-194), defeating the documented goal
that "config errors now fail at load instead of per-read"
(`docs/v2/focas-version-matrix.md`).
**Recommendation:** After parsing the tag address, if `_devices` does not contain
`tag.DeviceHostAddress`, throw an `InvalidOperationException` naming the tag and the
unresolved device host so the operator fixes the typo at startup.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-22 — `InitializeAsync` now throws `InvalidOperationException` naming the tag and the unresolved device when `_devices` does not contain `tag.DeviceHostAddress`, preventing silent skip-and-defer to per-read `BadNodeIdUnknown`.
### Driver.FOCAS-004
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Medium |
| Category | OtOpcUa conventions |
| Location | `FocasDriver.cs:374-379`, `WireFocasClient.cs:48-50` |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** `DiscoverAsync` emits user tags with
`SecurityClass = tag.Writable ? SecurityClassification.Operate : SecurityClassification.ViewOnly`,
and `FocasTagDefinition.Writable` defaults to `true` (also defaulted to `true` in the
factory - `t.Writable ?? true`). But the production `wire` backend's
`WireFocasClient.WriteAsync` unconditionally returns `FocasStatusMapper.BadNotWritable`
- the driver is read-only against FOCAS by design (`docs/drivers/FOCAS.md`). The result
is that every tag is advertised in the address space as a writable `Operate` node, yet
every write attempt fails. This is misleading to OPC UA clients and to the
`DriverNodeManager` ACL layer, which will grant write permission on nodes that can never
be written.
**Recommendation:** Either default `Writable` to `false` for the FOCAS driver, or have
`DiscoverAsync` force `SecurityClassification.ViewOnly` when the active backend cannot
write. Given the wire backend is read-only and is the only production backend, treating
all FOCAS tags as `ViewOnly` is the simplest correct behaviour.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-22 — `DiscoverAsync` now unconditionally emits `SecurityClassification.ViewOnly` for all user-authored tags; the `Writable` config field no longer influences the advertised security class since the wire backend never writes.
### Driver.FOCAS-005
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Medium |
| Category | Concurrency & thread safety |
| Location | `FocasDriver.cs:28`, `FocasDriver.cs:206-215`, `FocasDriver.cs:261`, `FocasDriver.cs:274` |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** `_health` is a plain (non-volatile) field mutated from multiple
concurrent contexts - `ReadAsync`, `WriteAsync`, and the per-device `ProbeLoopAsync` can
all run on different threads simultaneously (subscriptions go through `PollGroupEngine`
timers; probe loops are `Task.Run`). Several updates are read-modify-write - e.g.
`new DriverHealth(DriverState.Degraded, _health.LastSuccessfulRead, ...)` reads `_health`
then writes a new instance - so a concurrent update can be lost or a stale
`LastSuccessfulRead` propagated. While `DriverHealth` is an immutable record and the
reference write is atomic, the lack of synchronization means `GetHealth()` can observe
torn-in-time state and successful-read timestamps can regress.
**Recommendation:** Guard `_health` reads/writes with a lock, or use
`Interlocked.Exchange`/`Volatile` around the whole record reference and compute the new
value from a single captured snapshot. The `DeviceState`/`HostState` transition already
uses `ProbeLock`; apply the same discipline to driver health.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-22 — All `_health` reads use `Volatile.Read(ref _health)` and all writes use `Volatile.Write(ref _health, ...)`, ensuring every thread observes the latest reference and multi-step read-modify-write sequences capture a stable snapshot before computing the new value.
### Driver.FOCAS-006
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Medium |
| Category | Error handling & resilience |
| Location | `FocasDriver.cs:859-874`, `WireFocasClient.cs:22-31` |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** `EnsureConnectedAsync` reuses the cached `IFocasClient` instance across
a transient disconnect: it only checks `device.Client is { IsConnected: true }` and
otherwise calls `ConnectAsync` again on the same object. For a `WireFocasClient` whose
underlying `FocasWireClient` has been disposed (e.g. via a `HandleRecycle` /
`DisposeClient` race, or a prior teardown), every subsequent call hits
`FocasWireClient.ThrowIfDisposed` and throws `ObjectDisposedException`. In `ReadAsync`
that exception is caught only by the generic `catch (Exception ex)` and mapped to a
permanent `BadCommunicationError` - the device stays wedged with no recovery path until
`ReinitializeAsync` is invoked, because the reconnect logic never discards the disposed
client.
**Recommendation:** On any connect/use failure, treat a disposed or non-connected client
as unrecoverable and recreate it from `_clientFactory`. Simplest: in
`EnsureConnectedAsync`, when `device.Client` is non-null but not connected, dispose and
null it before creating a fresh instance, rather than retrying `ConnectAsync` on the
stale object.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-22 — `EnsureConnectedAsync` now unconditionally disposes and nulls any existing non-connected client before calling `_clientFactory.Create()`, preventing `ObjectDisposedException` loops on a stale `WireFocasClient` after a `HandleRecycle` race or prior teardown.
### Driver.FOCAS-007
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Low |
| Category | Error handling & resilience |
| Location | `FocasDriver.cs:140-148`, `FocasDriver.cs:478-484`, `FocasDriver.cs:529-533`, `FocasAlarmProjection.cs:61-63` |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** Numerous `try { ... } catch {}` blocks swallow every exception with no
logging - `ShutdownAsync` (CTS cancel/dispose), `RecycleLoopAsync` (`DisposeClient`),
`FixedTreeLoopAsync` transient catches, `ProbeLoopAsync`, and the alarm projection's
`sub.Cts.Cancel()`. The driver takes no `ILogger` dependency at all (only
`FocasWireClient` optionally accepts one, and the driver never supplies it). A CNC that
is silently failing every probe/poll tick produces no diagnostic trail, which conflicts
with the project's Serilog logging convention and forces field troubleshooting to rely
solely on `GetHealth()`.
**Recommendation:** Inject an `ILogger<FocasDriver>` and log caught exceptions in the
poll/probe/recycle loops at `Debug`/`Warning`. Pass a logger into `FocasWireClient` so
the per-response `Debug` entries it already emits are actually captured.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-23 — `FocasDriver` now takes an optional `ILogger<FocasDriver>` (defaulting to `NullLogger`) and every previously-empty `catch { }` in `ShutdownAsync` / `ProbeLoopAsync` / `FixedTreeLoopAsync` / `RecycleLoopAsync` / `ReadActiveAlarmsAcrossDevicesAsync` now logs at `Debug` with the host address + context. `FocasAlarmProjection` also accepts an optional `ILogger` (forwarded by the driver) so its unsubscribe / dispose / per-tick poll swallows log. `WireFocasClientFactory` gained a logger-accepting overload that threads through to `FocasWireClient`, so its per-response `Debug` entries actually reach the host pipeline.
### Driver.FOCAS-008
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Low |
| Category | Performance & resource management |
| Location | `FocasDriver.cs:201`, `FocasDriver.cs:253` |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** `ReadAsync` and `WriteAsync` call `FocasAddress.TryParse(def.Address)`
on every operation, even though `InitializeAsync` already parsed and validated every
tag address. On a subscription hot path (each poll tick re-enters `ReadAsync`) this
re-parses and allocates a `FocasAddress` record per tag per tick unnecessarily.
**Recommendation:** Parse each tag address once at `InitializeAsync` and store the
parsed `FocasAddress` on `FocasTagDefinition` (or in a side dictionary), so the runtime
read/write paths use the cached value.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-23 — `FocasDriver` now holds a `_parsedAddressesByTagName` side dictionary populated at `InitializeAsync`. `ReadAsync` and `WriteAsync` look up the cached `FocasAddress` instance; the defensive fallback `TryParse` only fires if a tag was somehow not seeded. The cache is cleared on `ShutdownAsync`. Regression test `ReadAsync_uses_cached_FocasAddress_when_tag_definition_has_a_malformed_address_after_init` (and the matching `WriteAsync` variant) asserts the same `FocasAddress` instance is reused across calls.
### Driver.FOCAS-009
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Low |
| Category | Design-document adherence |
| Location | `FocasDriverOptions.cs:110-115`, `FocasDriver.cs:468-486`, `FocasDriverFactoryExtensions.cs:75-80` |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** `FocasProbeOptions.Timeout` is parsed by the factory
(`FocasProbeDto.TimeoutMs` to `FocasProbeOptions.Timeout`) but never consumed.
`ProbeLoopAsync` calls `client.ProbeAsync(ct)` with only the probe-loop cancellation
token; no per-probe timeout is applied, and `EnsureConnectedAsync` uses
`_options.Timeout` rather than `Probe.Timeout`. A hung CNC socket during a probe blocks
until the OS TCP timeout rather than the configured `Probe.Timeout`.
**Recommendation:** Apply `Probe.Timeout` as a linked `CancellationTokenSource` timeout
around the `ProbeAsync` call, or remove the dead `Timeout` field from
`FocasProbeOptions` / `FocasProbeDto` if it is genuinely not intended.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-23 — `FocasDriver.ProbeLoopAsync` now wraps `client.ProbeAsync` in a linked `CancellationTokenSource` that fires after `Probe.Timeout` (skipped when the timeout is `<= TimeSpan.Zero`). On timeout the loop logs the cancellation at Debug and surfaces it as a failed probe, so a hung CNC socket transitions the host to `Stopped` at the configured budget instead of blocking on the OS TCP timeout. Regression test `ProbeLoop_cancels_a_slow_ProbeAsync_at_Probe_Timeout` asserts the cancellation reaches the fake `ProbeAsync` within the configured 100 ms.
### Driver.FOCAS-010
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Low |
| Category | Code organization & conventions |
| Location | `IFocasClient.cs:210-227` (`FocasOpMode`), `FocasConstants.cs:42-78` (`FocasOperationMode`) |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** There are two parallel operation-mode-to-text mappings with divergent
labels. `FocasOpMode.ToText` (used by the driver fixed-tree `OperationMode/ModeText`
node) yields `"TJOG"`, `"TEACH_IN_HANDLE"`; `FocasOperationModeExtensions.ToText` (in
the Wire layer) yields `"T-JOG"`, `"TEACH-IN-HANDLE"`. They also use different fallback
formats (`Mode{mode}` vs the bare number). The same concept is encoded twice with
inconsistent results depending on which path renders it.
**Recommendation:** Consolidate to a single op-mode enum + `ToText` helper shared by
both the wire layer and the driver projection, with one canonical label set.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-23 — `FocasOperationModeExtensions.ToText` now delegates to `FocasOpMode.ToText((short)mode)`, so the wire layer and the driver fixed-tree projection render identical labels. `FocasOpMode` keeps its existing labels (`TJOG`, `TEACH_IN_HANDLE`, `Mode{n}` fallback), which are now the single canonical surface. Regression theory `OpMode_ToText_yields_the_same_label_in_both_namespaces` cross-checks every defined code; `OpMode_ToText_fallback_label_is_consistent` covers the unknown-code path.
### Driver.FOCAS-011
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Low |
| Category | Code organization & conventions |
| Location | `IFocasClient.cs:275-287` (`FocasAlarmType`), `FocasAlarmProjection.cs:149-175` |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** `FocasAlarmType` declares its constants as `public const int`, but the
only consumers - `FocasAlarmProjection.MapAlarmType(short type)` and
`MapSeverity(short type)` - take a `short` and `switch` against these `int` constants. It
compiles only because the values (0..13) fit in `short` range as constant expressions.
The type mismatch is a latent maintenance hazard: adding a constant above
`short.MaxValue`, or changing the projection signatures, would break the switch in
non-obvious ways. `FocasAlarmType.All` is `-1` and is also passed where a `short` is
expected by `ReadAlarmsAsync`.
**Recommendation:** Declare the `FocasAlarmType` constants as `short` (or make it an
`enum : short`) so the type matches the wire field width and the projection signatures.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-23 — every `FocasAlarmType` constant (`All`, `Parameter`, `PulseCode`, `Overtravel`, `Overheat`, `Servo`, `DataIo`, `MemoryCheck`, `MacroAlarm`) is now typed `short`, matching the wire field width on `cnc_rdalmmsg2` and the `switch (short type)` arms in `FocasAlarmProjection.MapAlarmType` / `MapSeverity`. Regression test `FocasAlarmType_constants_are_typed_short` uses reflection to guarantee the type is preserved against future drift.
### Driver.FOCAS-012
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Medium |
| Category | Testing coverage |
| Location | `FocasDriverFactoryExtensions.cs`, `FocasDriver.cs:495-629` (`FixedTreeLoopAsync`) |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** The unit test project does not exercise
`FocasDriverFactoryExtensions.CreateInstance` with `FixedTree` / `AlarmProjection` /
`HandleRecycle` config sections - which is why the config-mapping gap in
Driver.FOCAS-001 was not caught. There is also no test that drives the fixed-tree
bootstrap / capability-probe path (`FixedTreeLoopAsync`), so the false-positive
`ProgramInfo` capability in Driver.FOCAS-002 is untested, and the
`EnsureConnectedAsync` reconnect-after-disconnect path (Driver.FOCAS-006) has no
coverage.
**Recommendation:** Add factory tests that round-trip a full JSON config including the
three opt-in sections and assert the options reach the driver; add a
`FakeFocasClient`-driven test for fixed-tree bootstrap capability classification
(including the unsupported-program-info case); add a reconnect test that disposes the
fake client mid-session and asserts recovery.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-05-22 — Added `FocasDriverMediumFindingsTests.cs` covering: unknown-DeviceHostAddress init throw (003), ViewOnly enforcement for all tags (004), Volatile `_health` under concurrent reads (005), reconnect-after-external-dispose recovery (006), and a factory full-round-trip test for all three opt-in config sections (012).
## Re-review 2026-06-19 (commit 04e0877b)
Re-review of the FOCAS driver at HEAD (`04e0877b`, which descends from `7286d320`).
Since the prior review at `76d35d1` the driver gained ~1,200 lines, most notably the
pure-managed FOCAS/2 Ethernet **wire backend** (`Wire/FocasWireClient.cs`,
`Wire/FocasWireProtocol.cs`, `Wire/WireFocasClient.cs`, `Wire/FocasConstants.cs`) and
the `cnc_getfigure` per-axis position auto-scale path (`ReadPositionFiguresAsync` +
`AxisFactor`). NB: there is **no P/Invoke** in the runtime read path — the wire backend
speaks the Fanuc binary protocol directly over TCP. The only P/Invoke is the
`cnc_allclibhndl3` / `cnc_freelibhndl` Test-Connect handshake in `FocasDriverProbe.cs`
(marshalling reviewed below).
All 12 prior findings remain Resolved. Two new findings recorded below.
| # | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Correctness & logic bugs | Driver.FOCAS-014 (deferred) — otherwise no issues found |
| 2 | OtOpcUa conventions | No issues found |
| 3 | Concurrency & thread safety | No new issues found (see note) |
| 4 | Error handling & resilience | No issues found |
| 5 | Security | No issues found |
| 6 | Performance & resource management | No issues found |
| 7 | Design-document adherence | No issues found |
| 8 | Code organization & conventions | No issues found |
| 9 | Testing coverage | Driver.FOCAS-013 |
| 10 | Documentation & comments | No issues found |
**Interop / marshalling note (P/Invoke probe).** `FocasDriverProbe.NativeFwlib` declares
`cnc_allclibhndl3([MarshalAs(LPStr)] string ipaddr, ushort port, int timeout, out ushort handle)`
with `CallingConvention.Cdecl` + `CharSet.Ansi`. This matches the published FWLIB
signature (`short cnc_allclibhndl3(const char*, unsigned short, long, unsigned short*)`).
The `out ushort handle` is freed best-effort in a `finally` even on a timeout race, and the
whole call is wrapped so a `DllNotFoundException` / load failure degrades to TCP-only — sound.
The one residual subtlety (FWLIB `long` is 32-bit on Win32 → `int` is correct on the
typical x86 worker; on an LP64 Linux `libfwlib32.so` the C `long` is 64-bit and `int`
would mis-marshal) is **bench-gated** (no FWLIB on this dev/CI host) and is recorded as
context only, not a separate finding, because the project ships no Linux-FWLIB path today.
**Concurrency note (not a new finding).** `FocasDriver.DeviceState.Client` is a plain
auto-property read/written without a lock from `EnsureConnectedAsync` (Read/Write/probe/
fixed-tree threads) and `RecycleLoopAsync`/`DisposeClient`. A `HandleRecycle`-enabled
config can therefore race a dispose against an in-flight read's captured client reference.
This is the same lifecycle class as the already-Resolved Driver.FOCAS-006; `HandleRecycle`
is disabled by default and the wire client's own `_lifetimeGate`/`_requestGate` plus the
"reconnect on next call" recovery make the window self-correcting. Left as-is (no new
finding) — hardening it to a per-device lock is a larger change with no offline-observable
defect.
#### Driver.FOCAS-013
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Medium |
| Category | Testing coverage |
| Location | `Wire/FocasWireProtocol.cs`, `Wire/FocasWireClient.cs` (`ReadPositionFiguresAsync`, `ParseAlarms`, name/sysinfo decode) |
| Status | Resolved |
**Description:** The entire managed wire-protocol decode layer — the byte-offset-fragile
code that is this driver's analogue of P/Invoke struct marshalling — has **zero** unit
tests. No test in `Driver.FOCAS.Tests` references `FocasWireProtocol`, `FocasWireClient`,
`ParseResponseBlocks`, `BuildPdu`/`BuildRequestBody`, `ReadAscii`/`ReadNameRecord`, or the
new `cnc_getfigure` figure decode (`ReadPositionFiguresAsync`, added since the prior review).
Every existing test drives the `IFocasClient` seam through `FakeFocasClient`, which bypasses
all wire framing and big-endian decode. A regression in a block-envelope offset, a PDU
length field, the ASCII NUL/space trimming, or the figure `short` stride would not be caught
by any test — exactly the corruption class the review brief calls out for marshalling code.
**Recommendation:** Add offline (no-socket) unit tests for the public/internal static decode
primitives: `BuildPdu` header layout + `ReadPduAsync` round-trip; `BuildRequestBody` block
count/stride; `ParseResponseBlocks` (command/RC/payload extraction, truncation guards);
`ReadAscii` (NUL stop + trailing-space/NUL trim) and `ReadNameRecord`; and a
`ResponseBlock`-shaped payload that exercises the `cnc_getfigure` figure `short` stride.
**Resolution:** Resolved 2026-06-19 — Added `FocasWireProtocolTests.cs` (15 tests) covering
`BuildPdu` header layout + magic/version/length, the `BuildPdu``ReadPdu` round-trip,
`BuildRequestBody` block framing, `ParseResponseBlocks` (multi-block command/RC/payload
extraction + the truncated-length and bad-block-length guards), `ReadAscii` NUL-stop and
trailing space/NUL trimming, `ReadNameRecord` 2-byte extraction, and a response-block payload
decoded into the per-axis `short` figure sequence that the `cnc_getfigure` path relies on.
#### Driver.FOCAS-014
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Severity | Low |
| Category | Correctness & logic bugs |
| Location | `Wire/WireFocasClient.cs:318-325` (`ReadSpindleMetricAsync` trailing-zero truncation) |
| Status | Deferred |
**Description:** `WireFocasClient.ReadSpindleMetricAsync` (the shared decode for
`GetSpindleLoadsAsync` / `GetSpindleMaxRpmsAsync`) stops accumulating at the first zero value
after a non-zero one: `if (m.Value == 0 && list.Count > 0) break;`. The intent (per the inline
comment) is to drop Fanuc's trailing zero-padding of unused spindle slots. But a spindle that
is legitimately at **0% load** (stopped) sitting *between* two running spindles truncates the
list at that point, dropping every subsequent spindle. Because the consumer in
`FocasDriver.FixedTreeLoopAsync` index-aligns the returned list to the spindle order
(`state.LastSpindleLoads[i] = loads[i]`) and the read path looks up `Load` by that index, a
dropped middle element **misaligns all later spindles' Load values**. The truncation is correct
only if the CNC always returns a contiguous run of active spindles followed by zero padding —
which holds for single-spindle and trailing-stopped layouts but not for a stopped middle
spindle.
**Recommendation:** Distinguish "trailing padding" from "a real zero in the middle". Either read
the actual spindle count from `cnc_rdspdlname` / sysinfo and decode exactly that many fixed-width
slots (no zero-based truncation), or keep zeros and trim only a trailing run of zeros after
decoding the full payload.
**Resolution:** Deferred — the correct slot-count/padding semantics of `cnc_rdspload` /
`cnc_rdspmaxrpm` depend on the real Fanuc wire response shape, which is bench-CNC-gated (this
managed backend's binary shapes are validated only against the in-tree `focas_mock` sim, per the
`Wire/FocasWireClient.cs` remarks). Fixing the truncation heuristic without a real CNC's padding
behaviour risks substituting one wrong assumption for another. Waiting on a bench-CNC verification
pass (the same gate that covers the `cnc_getfigure` binary shape).