bevy/crates/bevy_ecs
Alice Cecile 7237c2173b
Make observers metadata / storage publicly visible (#19608)
# Objective

Our strategy for storing observers is made up of several moving parts,
which are ultimately fairly simple nested HashMaps.

These types are currently `pub`, but lack any meaningful way to access
this data.

We have three options here: 

1. Make these internals not `pub` at all.
2. Make the data read-only accessible.
3. Make the data mutably accessible.

## Solution

I've opted for option 2, exposing read-only values. This is consistent
with our existing approach to the ECS internals, allowing for easier
debugging without risking wanton data corruption. If one day you would
like to mutably access this data, please open an issue clearly
explaining what you're trying to do.

This was a pretty mechanical change, exposing fields via getters. I've
also opted to do my best to clarify some field names and documentation:
please double-check those for correctness. It was hard to be fully
confident, as the field names and documentation was not very clear ;)

## Testing

I spent some time going through the code paths, making sure that users
can trace all the way from `World` to the leaf nodes. Reviewers, please
ensure the same!

## Notes for reviewers

This is part of a broader observer overhaul: I fully expect us to change
up these internals and break these shiny new APIs. Probably even within
the same cycle!

But clean up your work area first: this sort of read-only getter and
improved docs will be important to replace as we work.
2025-06-16 22:00:33 +00:00
..
compile_fail Component lifecycle reorganization and documentation (#19543) 2025-06-10 00:59:16 +00:00
examples Event Split: Event, EntityEvent, and BufferedEvent (#19647) 2025-06-15 16:46:34 +00:00
macros Let query items borrow from query state to avoid needing to clone (#15396) 2025-06-16 21:05:41 +00:00
src Make observers metadata / storage publicly visible (#19608) 2025-06-16 22:00:33 +00:00
Cargo.toml bevyengine.org -> bevy.org (#19503) 2025-06-05 23:09:28 +00:00
clippy.toml implement UniqueEntityVec (#17549) 2025-01-28 06:00:59 +00:00
LICENSE-APACHE Cleanup publish process (#17728) 2025-02-09 17:46:19 +00:00
LICENSE-MIT Cleanup publish process (#17728) 2025-02-09 17:46:19 +00:00
README.md Event Split: Event, EntityEvent, and BufferedEvent (#19647) 2025-06-15 16:46:34 +00:00

Bevy ECS

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What is Bevy ECS?

Bevy ECS is an Entity Component System custom-built for the Bevy game engine. It aims to be simple to use, ergonomic, fast, massively parallel, opinionated, and featureful. It was created specifically for Bevy's needs, but it can easily be used as a standalone crate in other projects.

ECS

All app logic in Bevy uses the Entity Component System paradigm, which is often shortened to ECS. ECS is a software pattern that involves breaking your program up into Entities, Components, and Systems. Entities are unique "things" that are assigned groups of Components, which are then processed using Systems.

For example, one entity might have a Position and Velocity component, whereas another entity might have a Position and UI component. You might have a movement system that runs on all entities with a Position and Velocity component.

The ECS pattern encourages clean, decoupled designs by forcing you to break up your app data and logic into its core components. It also helps make your code faster by optimizing memory access patterns and making parallelism easier.

Concepts

Bevy ECS is Bevy's implementation of the ECS pattern. Unlike other Rust ECS implementations, which often require complex lifetimes, traits, builder patterns, or macros, Bevy ECS uses normal Rust data types for all of these concepts:

Components

Components are normal Rust structs. They are data stored in a World and specific instances of Components correlate to Entities.

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Component)]
struct Position { x: f32, y: f32 }

Worlds

Entities, Components, and Resources are stored in a World. Worlds, much like std::collections's HashSet and Vec, expose operations to insert, read, write, and remove the data they store.

use bevy_ecs::world::World;

let world = World::default();

Entities

Entities are unique identifiers that correlate to zero or more Components.

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Component)]
struct Position { x: f32, y: f32 }
#[derive(Component)]
struct Velocity { x: f32, y: f32 }

let mut world = World::new();

let entity = world
    .spawn((Position { x: 0.0, y: 0.0 }, Velocity { x: 1.0, y: 0.0 }))
    .id();

let entity_ref = world.entity(entity);
let position = entity_ref.get::<Position>().unwrap();
let velocity = entity_ref.get::<Velocity>().unwrap();

Systems

Systems are normal Rust functions. Thanks to the Rust type system, Bevy ECS can use function parameter types to determine what data needs to be sent to the system. It also uses this "data access" information to determine what Systems can run in parallel with each other.

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Component)]
struct Position { x: f32, y: f32 }

fn print_position(query: Query<(Entity, &Position)>) {
    for (entity, position) in &query {
        println!("Entity {} is at position: x {}, y {}", entity, position.x, position.y);
    }
}

Resources

Apps often require unique resources, such as asset collections, renderers, audio servers, time, etc. Bevy ECS makes this pattern a first class citizen. Resource is a special kind of component that does not belong to any entity. Instead, it is identified uniquely by its type:

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Resource, Default)]
struct Time {
    seconds: f32,
}

let mut world = World::new();

world.insert_resource(Time::default());

let time = world.get_resource::<Time>().unwrap();

// You can also access resources from Systems
fn print_time(time: Res<Time>) {
    println!("{}", time.seconds);
}

Schedules

Schedules run a set of Systems according to some execution strategy. Systems can be added to any number of System Sets, which are used to control their scheduling metadata.

The built in "parallel executor" considers dependencies between systems and (by default) run as many of them in parallel as possible. This maximizes performance, while keeping the system execution safe. To control the system ordering, define explicit dependencies between systems and their sets.

Using Bevy ECS

Bevy ECS should feel very natural for those familiar with Rust syntax:

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Component)]
struct Position { x: f32, y: f32 }
#[derive(Component)]
struct Velocity { x: f32, y: f32 }

// This system moves each entity with a Position and Velocity component
fn movement(mut query: Query<(&mut Position, &Velocity)>) {
    for (mut position, velocity) in &mut query {
        position.x += velocity.x;
        position.y += velocity.y;
    }
}

fn main() {
    // Create a new empty World to hold our Entities and Components
    let mut world = World::new();

    // Spawn an entity with Position and Velocity components
    world.spawn((
        Position { x: 0.0, y: 0.0 },
        Velocity { x: 1.0, y: 0.0 },
    ));

    // Create a new Schedule, which defines an execution strategy for Systems
    let mut schedule = Schedule::default();

    // Add our system to the schedule
    schedule.add_systems(movement);

    // Run the schedule once. If your app has a "loop", you would run this once per loop
    schedule.run(&mut world);
}

Features

Query Filters

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Component)]
struct Position { x: f32, y: f32 }
#[derive(Component)]
struct Player;
#[derive(Component)]
struct Alive;

// Gets the Position component of all Entities with Player component and without the Alive
// component.
fn system(query: Query<&Position, (With<Player>, Without<Alive>)>) {
    for position in &query {
    }
}

Change Detection

Bevy ECS tracks all changes to Components and Resources.

Queries can filter for changed Components:

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Component)]
struct Position { x: f32, y: f32 }
#[derive(Component)]
struct Velocity { x: f32, y: f32 }

// Gets the Position component of all Entities whose Velocity has changed since the last run of the System
fn system_changed(query: Query<&Position, Changed<Velocity>>) {
    for position in &query {
    }
}

// Gets the Position component of all Entities that had a Velocity component added since the last run of the System
fn system_added(query: Query<&Position, Added<Velocity>>) {
    for position in &query {
    }
}

Resources also expose change state:

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Resource)]
struct Time(f32);

// Prints "time changed!" if the Time resource has changed since the last run of the System
fn system(time: Res<Time>) {
    if time.is_changed() {
        println!("time changed!");
    }
}

Component Storage

Bevy ECS supports multiple component storage types.

Components can be stored in:

  • Tables: Fast and cache friendly iteration, but slower adding and removing of components. This is the default storage type.
  • Sparse Sets: Fast adding and removing of components, but slower iteration.

Component storage types are configurable, and they default to table storage if the storage is not manually defined.

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Component)]
struct TableStoredComponent;

#[derive(Component)]
#[component(storage = "SparseSet")]
struct SparseStoredComponent;

Component Bundles

Define sets of Components that should be added together.

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Default, Component)]
struct Player;
#[derive(Default, Component)]
struct Position { x: f32, y: f32 }
#[derive(Default, Component)]
struct Velocity { x: f32, y: f32 }

#[derive(Bundle, Default)]
struct PlayerBundle {
    player: Player,
    position: Position,
    velocity: Velocity,
}

let mut world = World::new();

// Spawn a new entity and insert the default PlayerBundle
world.spawn(PlayerBundle::default());

// Bundles play well with Rust's struct update syntax
world.spawn(PlayerBundle {
    position: Position { x: 1.0, y: 1.0 },
    ..Default::default()
});

Buffered Events

Buffered events offer a communication channel between one or more systems. They can be sent using the EventWriter system parameter and received with EventReader.

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Event, BufferedEvent)]
struct Message(String);

fn writer(mut writer: EventWriter<Message>) {
    writer.write(Message("Hello!".to_string()));
}

fn reader(mut reader: EventReader<Message>) {
    for Message(message) in reader.read() {
        println!("{}", message);
    }
}

Observers

Observers are systems that listen for a "trigger" of a specific Event:

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Event)]
struct Speak {
    message: String
}

let mut world = World::new();

world.add_observer(|trigger: On<Speak>| {
    println!("{}", trigger.message);
});

world.flush();

world.trigger(Speak {
    message: "Hello!".to_string(),
});

These differ from EventReader and EventWriter in that they are "reactive". Rather than happening at a specific point in a schedule, they happen immediately whenever a trigger happens. Triggers can trigger other triggers, and they all will be evaluated at the same time!

If the event is an EntityEvent, it can also be triggered to target specific entities:

use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

#[derive(Event, EntityEvent)]
struct Explode;

let mut world = World::new();
let entity = world.spawn_empty().id();

world.add_observer(|trigger: On<Explode>, mut commands: Commands| {
    println!("Entity {} goes BOOM!", trigger.target());
    commands.entity(trigger.target()).despawn();
});

world.flush();

world.trigger_targets(Explode, entity);