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Test Server & Client

(Written by Eli Barzilay [email protected].)

This is a server and a client to run a paperless test. The clients will run in "kiosk mode" --- locking out all other applications, which is intended to prevent students from chatting, looking up stuff on the web etc. (Locking works only on Windows.) The server can run in any platform, but it is slightly more convenient if it is unix-like (Linux/WSL/macOS), preferably inside Emacs.

Why?

Running a paperless exam has some major advantages:

  • When you get back from your exam you don't need to schlep a pile of papers. You don't need to count them every five seconds to make sure that they're all there. And you also don't need to worry about leaving the pile of graded exams on the roof of your car and realize later that you forgot them there, then spend three hours scanning the roads and sidewalks.

  • You don't need to deal with student handwriting (sometime even intentionally obscured --- I've seen cases where students who didn't know the answer wrote text that could barely be read).

  • You can provide the students with additional materials, so they don't need to kill half of a tree because your exam is open materials. (However, this is limited to text files.)

  • You can update files during the test: clarify questions, add hints etc. You can even have a rough sketch of some questions and write them up as the test goes on...

  • You can provide "template files" for the students to modify. For example, you can give them some function and ask to fix a bug.

  • Grading is often a repetitive job, and I found myself starting with writing detailed comments, and later on (when the 10th exam has the same mistake) settle on explanation-less crosses and other obscure markings. When you edit files, it is easy to copy+paste the same comment.

  • Grading can be more consistent if you're doing such copy+paste that includes the grading. In addition, it is easy to grep for a particular error that you've seen to make sure that the grading is consistent.

  • Obviously, you can easily come up with a textual markup system so that you compute the exam grades automatically from the graded files. I'm using a system like that for homework submission and grading, and having exams in electronic formats fits nicely into this system.

  • The same holds for distributing the works. You can keep the original pristine files in case students want to complain --- no need to worry about pencil-written exam being modified post-grading, and you can have the graded files available through your usual channels (eg, through the Racket handin-server).

Features

The server and the client were designed to be very robust and secure, while being convenient to use.

  • Server-client communication is done through an encrypted connection. The server can be setup to accept connections only from some known IP addresses (and will report attempted connections from other IPs).

  • Clients do not have a "save" or a "submit" button --- the text is continuously sent back to the server for storage. This frees students from dealing with such details while they're stressed for time.

  • Clients do not have a Racket REPL. This wouldn't be too hard to add, but I think that this would be bad for several reasons: students can easily get dragged to a long debugging session instead of focusing on the test; you can get dragged to asking tougher questions since the students can now actually try things out; and you can get dragged to harsher grading ("if it doesn't work, you don't get the points", versus "you got the rough idea right, so you get the points" which is common with written exams and make them less stressful).

  • The server backs up the directories of all clients periodically, to make things safer, and to avoid "I accidentally hit delete in the last minute" excuses.

  • Clients use a number of tricks to make the application run in "kiosk mode": making it nearly impossible to switch to another application or kill the client. There are cases when some of these may fail (for example, at the NEU lab ctrl+alt+delete cannot be disabled) --- the client has a safety mechanism against this: if you hit ctrl+alt+delete it will notice that it's not the focused window, and then it will (a) alert the server, and (b) set itself back into focus.

  • You can set up a master password that can unlock a client. (Hit ctrl+shift+P, then the password, then enter.) This is another safety feature in case of some server catastrophe: in this case you can manually unlock a station and copy the written solution out to a different application.

  • The server keeps a live connection with all clients and polls them frequently. This is done for two reasons:

    • if the client dies (either due to a bug, or to a break attempt), the server will detect and report it,

    • on each poll the client sends the server the updated contents of editable buffers to save.

  • The client can withstand being disconnected from the server (e.g., if the server is restarted for some reason) --- it will alert the student, but will continue to operate as usual. (Specifically, the student can continue reading files and writing answers during such downtimes.) The client keeps all changes and when a connection is re-established, synchronization resumes.

  • You can update client-visible files on the server --- the changes will be sent to all clients, and the clients will visually indicate modified files so students can easily see that they need to read something.

  • The server can require users to login to be able to edit files. In this case, the files that the student writes will be saved in a directory with the username. It can also work in a login-less mode, so each client corresponds to a single student working; in this case, you will need to make students write their names in their answer file(s). (This sounds insecure, but works perfectly fine in practice: as long as a responsible person is present in the room, making sure that people do not switch stations.) You can also require logins without having a password file: and login students on the machine using the master password which will work with any username. (This is also useful if some students forgot their password.)

    You can even do so remotely from the server prompt using the login command, but note that if the server is restarted, the clients will need to be re-logged-in. (This should be automated by making the server remember such forced logins, and replay them if it restarts.)

  • If the server is set up to require logins, the client is still functional before such login is successful --- but it will not show editable files. This is useful, for example, if you have twice the number of machines than the number of students: each student can then use one machine to write their answers, and another machine to read the exam material.

  • Clients are identified with a unique client id (which you setup when the clients are started, or leave the default as the IP number), and after logging in, they are identified by usernames. These must be unique, so no user can login on two clients at the same time (but if a machine crashes, it is possible to have the student move to a different machine). In our lab, I set each client id to correspond to the physical location of the machine, so it is later possible to know if two students were sitting next to each other. (When there's suspected copying, for example.)

  • If a client is disconnected, and later reconnected, it will show the same content, including files that were modified by the logged-in username (if logins are required) or files that were modified on the client with the same client id --- so no edits (beyond the few seconds of poll frequency) are lost on a client crash.

  • The server controller can send messages to all clients. The message will flash at the bottom of each client to avoid a student missing it. The message is also logged in a "messages" buffer, so students can read these messages later again. The controller can also send a message to a single client.

  • Clients can send a message to the server, which is done with a chat-like interface. Together with the above, it is possible for students to ask you questions privately, and for you to announce a message back for the whole class. (For example, a student asks a question, you realize that further clarification is important so you edit a file or add a new one, and tell everyone about it.) It is also possible to disable this feature in the configuration file.

  • The server controller has extensive control over the clients through several commands (more below). It is possible to freeze all clients (in case you want to make sure that students listen to what you're saying) or a specific one; force all clients (or a specific one) to switch to the messages window in case you want to make sure they're reading some messages that you're sending; unlock a client (or all) remotely; restart a client (or all) to recycle the machine for someone else; or kill a client (or all) which is useful at the end of the test.

  • The clients can show the time --- which you can configure to be a normal clock, or a countdown to a specific time. You can also change this time at the server prompt, including to any random (short) text (for example 1min!). In all cases, the displayed time is controlled by the server, so a station with a bad internal clock will not cause problems.

  • Many more aspects of both the server and the clients are customizable. All the way down to indicator colors.

Running the Server and the Clients

  • Create a new working directory for your test, in this directory create the following (most of these can be configured to different names):

    • config.rktd file for customizations specific to your exam. You can just copy the config.rktd file in the source directory to your working directory and change what you need. You can also remove things that you don't need to change --- the configuration file in the source directory is used for defaults. Some of the entries here are important --- more on this below.

    • A content directory with all the content that your student should see. Most importantly, it should include some messages file whose contents will be displayed to the students when the test client starts up (in the configuration file it is marked by a path with a mode of interaction), and a text file with your exam text. It should also include a file for the students to write their answers in --- this file can be blank, or it can have some template text in. You can of course have multiple files for the exam and for the answers (eg, one file for each question and one for each answer). Additional materials can be provided --- lecture notes, code files etc. Use subdirectories to organize this content, since the clients will show that as a hierarchical list. The config.rktd file has an entry to specify which files are editable, which files are presented in Racket mode (with syntax-based highlighting), the order that files are listed, and more. Also note that this content can be updated while the exam is running: you can edit existing files (eg, when you find a typo), or add new files (like adding notes, hints, and examples).

    • A passwords.rktd file if you want students to log-in to be able to do the exam. In the configuration file you can choose to let students work on any machine, and in that case you don't need this file. (More below.)

      The supported format for this is currently a big list holding two-item lists, each holding a login name and the md5 checksum string of the password. (It should be easy to extend this to other kinds of password hashes, like the one used in unix labs. Mail me if you need such an extension.)

    • private-key.pem and private-key.pem to be used by the server. (See the handin-server for instructions on how to make those, or if you are using the handin server, you can just use the same files.)

  • If you haven't done so, go over your local configuration file and change the entries that are specific to you. Most importantly, you'll need to specify the machine that the server is running on, and the port number.

  • While you're in this directory, run

    .../server.rkt
    

    which will start up the server. The script will run the server code in a loop, so if it crashes for some reason it will start back up. (The clients are fairly robust, and should let students continue their work in this case, trying to reconnect to the server in the background.) If you don't want to be running the server in a loop, or if you're not running it in a unix-like environment, you can just run racket directly with the file:

    racket .../server.rkt
    

    This will be more convenient to do in Emacs, since you then get its line-editing capabilities, and you can also set it to show log output directly (possibly in addition to a log file) using the stderr entry in the configuration file (Emacs helps here since log output that is displayed while you're entering a line will not mess up your input line).

  • If you prefer to have a separate logfile and no stderr output, then you should open a new terminal window, and in it run something like

    tail -f LOG
    

    so you can see log entries as they come in. (This include alerts in case a student is trying to hack around the client application --- exit from it and/or run a different application.)

  • The server is now listening for connections, and the next step is to start up the clients. The server makes this more convenient in two ways. First, you don't need to install anything on the client machines beyond Racket --- and then copy a single netboot.rkt file which will retrieve the client sources from the server and run the client. (This is also a safety feature: if there is a bug in the client, or a problem in the configuration file, running netboot.rkt will get the updated sources and configuration.)

    Secondly, since this netboot.rkt needs to connect to the server, it needs to know its address. Instead of creating a "netboot.rkt" file that requires configuration, the server can make such a file for you. Enter make-netboot at the server prompt, and the file will be created (in the working directory). The file can be a Racket file to be run with racket, or a batch file that will extract and run the Racket file. Creating a batch file is more convenient because it leaves you with less actions to perform on each machine (this can be important if you have a lab of 50 machines --- you won't want to leave a machine without the client running, since that can be used by students). See the configuration section for more details on how to configure the kind of netboot file that is generated.

  • After you copy netboot.rkt to the client, you can run it with either the Racket executable. It will create a new directory, contact the server and retrieve the client source files, then run the client.

  • From this point on, clients are active and can be used to read the material and write answers (after logging in, if required by the configuration). The server prompt has many commands that can be used to control clients, communicate with students, and much more. (See below.)

  • At the end of the exam, you can enter kill -all on the server prompt to terminate all clients.

Configuration Options

The configuration file is basically a single S-expression with a hierarchical structure for setting various options. There are a few global options, and then some options in sections for the server, the client, and the netboot. In the following list, entries that are marked with "(!)" are ones that you will probably want to modify in your own configuration file, and entries marked with "(!!)" are ones that you will almost certainly need to modify.

  • Global options

    • workdir: this is the path to the working directory where the server will do its work (and where the exam-specific configuration is found, the content, student files, etc). It can be an absolute path, or a path that is relative to where the process was started (eg, the default . will make it use the directory the server process was run from).
  • (!!) server-name, server-port: the name of the server machine, and the port number to listen at.

  • (!!) client-port: the client connects to the server via server-port unless this is specified as non-#f, in which case it will use it. This can be useful in case the server is listening on a private port which is forwarded to from a public one.

  • (!!) master-password: the md5 sum of the master password. This password can be used to unlock a client (hit ctrl+shift+P, then the password and then enter), and it can also be used to log in any username (even ones that don't exist in the password file). To set a master password, evaluate this code:

    (require file/md5)
    (md5 #"my-password")
    

    (Be careful with this, for example, if you run it in the DrRacket REPL then your password will be saved in the expression history.)

  • (!!) path-specs: a specification of the directory layout. This is an important entry so it is described separately below.

  • Server options

    • poll-frequency: the server periodically polls all clients. This is done for security (to make sure that no client is killed), and more importantly to retrieve client edits for local storage. This sets the time in seconds between these polls.

    • read-timeout: when the server is reading from a client, it will wait this many seconds before it decides that the client is dead.

    • read-limit: reading a message from the client is limited to this number of kilobytes. (This is a safety measure to avoid malicious clients from crashing the server.)

    • (!) accept-ips: this can be set to a string which specifies an IP number prefix that will be accepted by the server. For example, "12.34.56" means that any IP address that begins with these three numbers (followed by any number) will be accepted and any other IP address will be rejected. The default, #f, means that all IP addresses are accepted. (You will probably want to set this to some prefix that is specific to your lab's network.) It can also be a list of such strings.

    • (!) logfile, stderr, prompt: the log file that the server will use for all alerts (if any), whether it should show log messages on stderr, and the prompt that the server shows for the controller (you). As said above, if you're using a log file and no stderr, you will need to run tail -f logfile in a separate terminal window so you know about important alerts. Another alternative is to set prompt to #f to have no prompt: in this case the stderr output will be mixed with your input --- but if you run this in Emacs it will keep your input line intact so you get a convenient interface.

    • (!) login-mode: this is a boolean flag. When it is #t (the default), students need to log in to be able to work. This does not require a password file: you can login students from the server (using any username that is convenient, like the student's name). When this flag is set to #f, clients are immediately ready to edit answer files. In this case you will need to instruct them to write their name in the file, and you will need to keep an eye so that students don't switch machines. (In my experience, this is much more practical than it sounds --- in fact, this security model is similar to each student having their own piece of paper, but a little better since changing seats is more difficult than changing papers.)

    • (!) password-verifier: if you choose to have students login using known username/password pairs, you need to setup a file with this information and set this to be a list that has the hash method and the password file (which can be an absolute path or relative to the working directory). Currently, only md5 hashes are supported (which is what the handin server uses), with a file that is formatted as a list of two-element lists, each holding a username and an md5 hash. [It is easy to add other methods if needed --- it will require a new passwords-*.rkt source file to implement.]

    • (!) content-dir: the directory where all exam content is found. This includes read-only files for reading, a messages file for the greeting message, and editable file(s) for writing answers. The directory hierarchy of this is mirrored in the client interface. Use the path-specs configuration option (see below) to describe the various files.

    • (!) clients-dir: the directory where files that clients edit is stored at. Each client will have a separate directory, named after the username if login-mode is on, or after the client id otherwise. Also, this name will be used for backup directories (eg, if this is set to clients, then backup directories will be called clients-YYYYMMDDHHMMSS).

    • (!) allow-messages?: if this is #t, then clients are allowed to send messages to the server controller (to ask questions), otherwise this is disabled. Note there is a server command to disable/enable this dynamically if needed.

    • backup-interval: perform a backup of the clients directory every this many seconds. Backups are done only when polling, the the most you can get from this (eg, set to 0) is one backup every poll. You can also set it to #f to disable backups (not a good idea!). Each backup is a directory copy of the clients-dir (set above), named by a suffix that indicates the date and time of the backup.

    • backup-command: if this is set to #f, then copy-directory/files will be used to perform a backup. Otherwise, you can set it to a list holding a command name and flags to use for the backup --- the default is ("cp" "-al") which uses the linux cp command in a mode that creates hard-links instead of copies, so frequent backups do not take much time or disk space. (Note that when a client sends an edit, the file is replaced so backups are not modified too.)

  • Netboot options

    • (!) file: the netboot file name that the server will create for you when you use the make-netboot command. The suffix of this file determines the kind of netboot that is generated --- either a Racket file or a batch file (which will extract and run the Racket netboot file, possibly in a loop).

    • client-dir: when the netboot script runs, it will contact the server to get the client source files, and put them in this directory (creating it, and asking permission to delete it if it exists). This can be a relative path (relative to where the netboot process is run from) or an absolute one.

    • client-files: lists the files that are needed to run the client. The first file is what gets executed to run the client.

    • (!) racket-path: the path to the Racket directory to use in a batch file netboot. (Absolute or relative to where it is running from.) Can also be a list of such paths --- the first one that exists will be used.

    • (!) batch-prefix: a list of batch lines to put at the beginning of a batch netboot file. For example, you can use ("C:" "cd \\Temp") to switch to C:\Temp before extracting and running the Racket netboot script.

    • (!) batch-loop?: if this is true (the default), then a netboot batch file will run the Racket script in a loop, waiting for a keypress between runs. This can be convenient in a lab when many clients need to be restarted.

  • Client options

    • (!!) app-locked?: controls whether clients lock the machine in "kiosk mode". The default is set to #f to avoid accidentally locking your machine (did you set a master password yet?). Set it to #t when you get to run the clients in the lab.

    • read-timeout: similar to the read-timeout entry in the server section, only this determines when the client decides that the server is not responding. This should be relatively larger than the poll frequency, since the client uses this when it is waiting for server polls.

    • (!) ask-for-client-id?: if this is set to #t, the client will ask for a client-id to use when it starts (the idea is that you go around the lab and assign client ids when you start things up). A client id will be saved (in a local file) and used as the default value if the client runs again. You can also set it to #f, which will make it use such a saved or otherwise the client will have its IP address as an id. Finally, if-missing (the default) will ask for an id only if no saved id is found (ie, the first time you run a client).

    • (!) id-file-directories: directories to try to use when saving and reading the client-id. You should make sure that this directory exists on the lab machines, and that it is local. (For example, don't use your home directory if you need to log onto all of these machines.)

    • (!) show-clock?: should clients show a clock on the bottom of the screen? If this is set to #t, then clients will show it --- the time is updated from the server so it does not depend on client internal clocks. Also, you can use the set-time command on the server prompt to change the time that is displayed (see below).

    • buffer-limit: limit on the size of buffers, measured in kilobytes. It is best to make this considerably smaller than the read-limit server option, to avoid clients disconnecting due to buffers that are too long.

    Note: the following options are GUI customization, see the source configuration file for a syntax for the different kinds of options. (When the options below are font, style, or color, then this means a description of such a feature is expected.)

    • default-font-size, min-font-size, max-font-size: default size for displayed content, and maximum and minimum sizes it can change to (the size is configurable on the client). Be careful not to allow sizes that are too big so students can easily read nearby screens.

    • message-font, clock-font: the font used to display status-bar messages, and the clock.

    • toc-item-style: the default style to use for the right-hand-side hierarchical list of files and directories.

    • status-color, alert-color, message-color: the color that is used in the messages window for status messages, alert messages, and messages from the server (when you enter some text).

    • unsynced-color, unlocal-editable-color, unseen/new-color, unread-messages-color: colors are used to indicate the state of different "buffers" on the right-hand-side list. The first indicates an editable buffer that was not yet synchronized to the server; the second is for an editable buffer that the student did not modify yet (ie, there is no client-local version on the server, and no edits done on the client); the third indicates a text that the student didn't see yet (didn't switch to), including files that were created while the clients are running (eg, clarifications, typos, and hints); the fourth color highlights the messages buffer when the server sent a messages (which is logged there).

  • (!!) Path specs

    This entry is used by both the server and the client to set properties for paths in your content tree. Its value is a list of path specification. The provided configuration file has a sample spec, which you will need to modify for your exam's content (it also has a more formal description of the syntax).

    Each specification entry looks like

    [<path> <pathdata> ...]
    

    where the <path> specifies paths that this entry applies for, and the rest specify properties for it. When a path property is searched, each of these entries is tried in order, returning the property value when it is first found. The <path> part is a list of values that correspond to the path elements, each can be a string (a file or a directory name), a regexp (all file/directory names that match), the symbol ? (any name), or the symbol * (any number of path elements with any name). (*) can therefore be used as a default entry. Note that each property is searched separately, so you can have, for example, several (*) entries for different properties. The properties themselves are specified as an even-length list of property name and a value.

    These are the properties that are used:

    • ignore: determines whether the path is ignored (which means that the clients never receive it). For example,

      [(* #rx"^[.]" *) ignore #t]
      

      makes the server ignore all directories and filenames that begin with a period.

    • editable: determines whether this is a readonly file or an editable one (ie, used for writing answers). You can have more than one editable file --- for example, you can have a separate file for each question.

    • mode: determines the mode of files. Can be text or racket for text and files (racket mode makes a buffer similar to DrRacket's definitions window).

      It can also be interaction for the messages file: this is a special mode that makes the corresponding file's contents appear in the greeting message on the client, and further notifications (status messages, alerts, and server messages) will be kept in this buffer --- you should have at most one file with this mode. If don't set one, then the messages window will not be selectable on the clients (but the tell! command on the server will still switch to it).

    • order: the paths are usually ordered in lexicographic order (but number parts in names are sorted numerically); this property can be used to force a different order (that is, entries are sorted according to the order properties and then by their name). For example,

      [("exam.txt") order -10]
      

      will place the exam text before other entries. You can also split your exam to several files for each question and one for each answer, and use the order property to make each pair appear together.

    • comparator: this is an alternative way for sorting paths --- it can name a comparison function that is different from the lexicographic comparison. If the same comparator is specified for two names in the same directory, it will be used to sort them, otherwise they are sorted as usual (by an order specification and then lexicographically). The function can return '? to specify that the default ordering should be used. Currently, this is specified as a symbolic name from a fixed set --- and the only possible value is qa-comparator, which compares names so Question<N>* is grouped with Answer<N>*, and a Scratch.* is at the end (this is a convenient configuration for separate question/answer files for different exam questions).

    • style: the style of the hierarchical list item for these paths. You can use this to highlight some files (eg, the exam text).

    • keep-1st-line: a regular expression that determines when the first line in a file should always be shown (similar to the way that DrRacket makes the #lang line sticky).

Server Commands

When the server starts, it provides you with a prompt where you can enter various commands. Some of these commands expect a client id (marked as <id>) --- for these, you can use the client id (or the logged in username), or -all to make the command apply to all clients. Also, ^ means "the last value" and can be used in several places: as the command (use the last command), as the <id> (apply a command to the last named client identifier), and as the text... part of a tell command (use the same text).

  • help --- show a brief summary of the available commands.

  • list --- list the connected clients, with their IP addresses, client ids, and usernames (when a client is logged on).

  • ;... --- any line that begins with a semicolon is shown in the logfile. This is useful to add entries that mark certain events that you want to record.

  • tell <id> text... --- show a message on a client specified by <id>.

  • tell! <id> text... --- similar to tell, but also makes clients switch to the messages window. (Useful when you want to make sure that everyone sees your message.)

  • messages <id> {on|off} --- enables or disables a client from sending messages.

  • set-time time... --- sets the time that is displayed by clients. This can be the current time, a countdown to a specific time, or a fixed string (up to 6 characters). Use set-time help to see the syntax for these options.

  • freeze <id> {on|off} --- freeze (or unfreeze) client(s), making them ignore all input events. (For example, you can use freeze -all on to force a break.)

  • login <id> <username> --- make a client log in as a username. The username can be anything you want, but it cannot have spaces. Cannot be used if the client is already logged in (you can use restart first to have a different login).

  • unlock <id> --- unlock the client application, making it possible to switch to other windows, or close it.

  • restart <id> --- restart the client (the GUI will shut down and restart). This can be useful if you want to "recycle" a machine for a different student to log into. (Note that the client is still the same process, so if, for example, you change the app-locked? setting, the restarted client will not be affected.)

  • kill <id> --- terminate the client. At the end of the exam, you can just enter kill -all to shut down all clients.

  • make-netboot --- create a network boot file to run remotely on client machines. (See above.)

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