* Initialize the LLClientView prim full update queue to the number of prims in the scene for a big performance boost
* Reordered some comparisons on hot code paths for a minor speed boost
* Removed an unnecessary call to the expensive DateTime.Now function (if you *have* to get the current time as opposed to Environment.TickCount, always use DateTime.UtcNow)
* Don't fire the queue empty callback for the Resend category
* Run the outgoing packet handler thread loop for each client synchronously. It seems like more time was being spent doing the execution asynchronously, and it made deadlocks very difficult to track down
* Rewrote some expensive math in LandObject.cs
* Optimized EntityManager to only lock on operations that need locking, and use TryGetValue() where possible
* Only update the attachment database when an object is attached or detached
* Other small misc. performance improvements
* Changed the Send*Data structs in IClientAPI to use public readonly members instead of private members and getters
* Made Parallel.ProcessorCount public
* Started switching over packet building methods in LLClientView to use Util.StringToBytes[256/1024]() instead of Utils.StringToBytes()
* More cleanup of the ScenePresences vs. ClientManager nightmare
* ScenePresence.HandleAgentUpdate() will now time out and drop incoming AgentUpdate packets after three seconds. This fixes a deadlock on m_AgentUpdates that was blocking up the LLUDP server
* Handle the AgentFOV packet
* Bypass queuing and throttles for ping checks to make ping times more closely match network latency
* Only track reliable bytes in LLUDPCLient.BytesSinceLastACK
* Changed the throttling logic to obey the requested client bandwidth limit but also share bandwidth between some of the categories to improve throughput on high prim or heavily trafficked regions
* The broken avatar may not be able to move, but it won't stop simulate from pressing on now. And, the simulator will try to destroy the avatar's physics proxy and recreate it again... but if this is what I think it is, it may not help.
Replaced the update lists with a priority queue implementation in LLClientView.
The priority queues are based on the MinHeap implementation also included in
this commit within the OpneSim.Framework namespace. Initially setup to exactly
mimic the behavior beofre the change which was a first come first serve queue.
* Removed two redundant parameters from SceneObjectPart
* Changed some code in terse update sending that was meant to work with references to work with value types (since Vector3 and Quaternion are structs)
* Committing a preview of a new method for sending object updates efficiently (all commented out for now)
* Apparently the LLClientView should have been doing this previously.. Also fixed the 'You' on the index block.. so the client doesn't display an extra green dot.
* Thanks lkalif for bringing it to our attention.