If this consistently increases then this is a problem since it means the simulator is receiving more requests than it can distribute to other parts of the code.
AgentUpdate packet. This fixes the problem with vehicles not moving forward
after the first up-arrow.
Code to fix a potential exception when using different IClientAPIs.
Conflicts:
OpenSim/Region/ClientStack/Linden/UDP/LLClientView.cs
If we're not receiving packets with multiple threads (m_asyncPacketHandling) then this is critical since it will limit the number of incoming UDP requests that the region can handle and affects packet loss.
If m_asyncPacketHandling then this is less critical though a long process will increase the scope for threads to race.
This is an experimental stat which may be changed.
In this new protocol, and as committed before, the viewer is not sent EnableSimulator/EstablishChildCommunication for the destination. Instead, it is sent TeleportFinish directly. TeleportFinish, in turn, makes the viewer send a UserCircuitCode packet followed by CompleteMovementIntoRegion packet. These 2 packets tend to occur one after the other almost immediately to the point that when CMIR arrives the client is not even connected yet and that packet is ignored (there might have been some race conditions here before); then the viewer sends CMIR again within 5-8 secs. But the delay between them may be higher in busier regions, which may lead to race conditions.
This commit improves the process so there are are no race conditions at the destination. CompleteMovement (triggered by the viewer) waits until Update has been sent from the origin. Update, in turn, waits until there is a *root* scene presence -- so making sure CompleteMovement has run MakeRoot. In other words, there are two threadlets at the destination, one from the viewer and one from the origin region, waiting for each other to do the right thing. That makes it safe to close the agent at the origin upon return of the Update call without having to wait for callback, because we are absolutely sure that the viewer knows it is in th new region.
Note also that in the V1 protocol, the destination was getting UseCircuitCode from the viewer twice -- once on EstablishAgentCommunication and then again on TeleportFinish. The second UCC was being ignored, but it shows how we were not following the expected steps...
Enabling this will stop anybody from moving on a sim, though all other updates should be unaffected.
Appears to make some cpu difference on very basic testing with a static standing avatar (though not all that much).
Need to see the results with much higher av numbers.
This appears to improve cpu usage since launching a new thread is more expensive than performing a small amount of inline logic.
However, needs testing at scale.
Justin, if you read this, there's a long story here. Some time ago you placed SendInitialDataToMe at the very beginning of client creation (in LLUDPServer). That is problematic, as we discovered relatively recently: on TPs, as soon as the client starts getting data from child agents, it starts requesting resources back *from the simulator where its root agent is*. We found this to be the problem behind meshes missing on HG TPs (because the viewer was requesting the meshes of the receiving sim from the departing grid). But this affects much more than meshes and HG TPs. It may also explain cloud avatars after a local TP: baked textures are only stored in the simulator, so if a child agent receives a UUID of a baked texture in the destination sim and requests that texture from the departing sim where the root agent is, it will fail to get that texture.
Bottom line: we need to delay sending the new simulator data to the viewer until we are absolutely sure that the viewer knows that its main agent is in a new sim. Hence, moving it to CompleteMovement.
Now I am trying to tune the initial rez delay that we all experience in the CC. I think that when I fixed the issue described above, I may have moved SendInitialDataToMe to much later than it should be, so now I'm moving to earlier in CompleteMovement.
reception thread to sleep for 30ms if the number of available user worker
threads got low. It doesn't look like any of the UDP packet types are
marked async so this check is 1) unnecessary and 2) really crazy since
it stops up the reception thread under heavy load without any indication.
also moves the implementing code into LLUDPServer.cs along with other debug commands from OpenSim.cs
gets all debug lludp commands to only activate for the set scene if not root
This was an undocumented interface which I think was for long defunct region load balancing experiments.
Also adds method doc for some IClientNetworkServer methods.
This introduces a pull stat type in addition to the push stat type.
A pull stat takes a method on construction which knows how to update the stat on request.
In this way, special interfaces for pull stat collection are not necessary.
Even when an avatar is standing still, it's sending in a constant stream of AgentUpdate packets that the client creates new UDPPacketBuffer objects to handle.
This option pools those objects. This reduces memory churn.
Currently off by default. Works but the scope can be expanded.
This is controlled via the "debug lludp start <in|out|all>" and "debug lludp stop <in|out|all>" region console commands.
The command "debug lludp status" will show current status.
These were neither being returned or in many places reused.
Getting packets from a pool rather than deallocating and reallocating reduces memory churn which in turn reduces garbage collection time and frequency.
This is to resolve previous build break.
This unnecessarily but harmlessly reads and sets the parameter multiple times - scene was doing the same thing.
IsActive is more appropriate since unack timeout is not due to voluntary logout.
This is in line with operations such as manual kick that do not set the IsLoggingOut flag.
It's also slightly better race-wise since it reduces the chance of this operation clashing with another reason for client deactivation (e.g. manual kick).