This is to resolve previous build break.
This unnecessarily but harmlessly reads and sets the parameter multiple times - scene was doing the same thing.
This should really be happening for all console commands (though many don't).
However, things might get difficult if both a console command and other code invoke the same paths.
This increments a SlowFrames counter if a frame takes over 120% of maximum time.
This commit also introduces a generic OpenSim.Framework.Monitoring.Stat which is available to any code that wants to register a statistic.
This is more granualar than asking objects to create their own reports.
At some point this will supersede earlier IMonitor and IAlert facilities in MonitoringModule which are only available to scene code.
This controls how many undo steps the simulator will store for each prim.
Default is now 20 rather than 5 as it briefly was.
The default number could be increased through this is a memory tradeoff which will scale with the number of prims in the sim and level of activity.
This was present in the code but not enforced, which led to a memory leak over time as part properties were changed, whether by viewer, script or another source.
This commit enforces that limit, which will soon become configurable.
Regression test for undo limit added
Should help with http://opensimulator.org/mantis/view.php?id=6279
This was accidentally introduced in 4fc0cfb
This commit also consistently removes the AssetXferUploader when the transaction completes, no matter if it completed on asset upload or item operation.
The amount of data being retained was small, since this was clothing/bodypart metadata in the asset rather than textures themselves.
This was only used if none of new item, update item or update task item had been set.
But since all transactions go through these paths this old code is redundant.
This was preventing the previous race condition fix in 4fc0cfb from actually working.
This commit also removes some of the pointless transaction id checks - these conditions are already being enforced in AgentAssetsTransactions.
This is done for consistency and to allow removal or some access methods that increase code complexity.
However, this path has not been used for a long time, not even by LL 1.23 - viewers use caps http upload for this instead
On creating these items, the viewer sends a UDP AssetUploadRequest followed by a CreateInventoryItem.
It was possible for the CreateInventoryItem/UpdateInventoryItem to occasionally outrace the AssetUploadRequest and fail to find an initialized Xfer object, at which point the item create would fail.
So instead we always set up a Xfer object on either the asset or inventory item update request.
This does not introduce a new race because code already exists to delay the item operation until the asset is uploaded if necessary (but this only worked if the xfer object already existed)
This resends appearance uuids to avatars in the scene once a minute.
I have seen this help in the past resolve grey appearance problems where viewers have for unknown reasons sometimes ignored the packet.
The overhead is very small since only the UUIDs are sent - the viewer then requests the texture only if it does not have it cached.
This setting will not help with cloudy avatars which are usually due to the viewer not uploading baked texture data or uploading something that isn't valid JPEG2000
Make AssetServiceConnector return more useful data on failure, such as what DLL it was trying to load
Allow LocalAssetServiceConnector.GetData() to work without a cache present, as works for the other lasc Get* methods.
This is to resolve a problem where an asset marked as local but not temporary but still used in the scene would be removed.
The timed expiry scan no longer tries to refetch assets from the scene that are not currently in the cache - this is not helpful since it just drags a lot of data into the cache that may never be referenced.
This removes the DeepScanBeforePurge option since setting this to false will introduce the above problem. This previously had a default of true.