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).
This makes frame time stats properly tally with fps, which saves confusion and makes it easier to interpret numbers.
In some ways this is not so artifical - physics FPS runs at the higher rate.
This is to make these statistics actually match their names (and also be more accurate as number of frames can vary under heavy load)
Currently using scene frames (11.23 every second) instead of physics frames (56.18 per second)
This is the same async behaviour as normal logouts.
This is necessary because the event queue will sleep the thread for 5 seconds on an ack timeout logout as the client isn't around to pick up the final event queue messages.
Instead of checking whether the client still exists by trying to retrieve again from the client manager, this patch gets it back from IncomingPacket and checks the IClientAPI.IsActive state.
This is always done as part of Scene.RemoveClient()
Also refactors try/catching in Scene.RemoveClient() to log NREs instead of silently discarding, since these are useful symptoms of problems.
This is done by making the kick user command call IClientAPI.Close() rather than routing through Scene.IncomingCloseAgent(), which also called IClientAPI.Close()
DisableSimulator for child agents is moved from IncomingCloseAgent() to RemoveClient(), this is not a functional change since IncomingCloseAgent() always ends up calling RemoveClient()
This alarm can then invoke this to log extra information.
This is used in LLUDPServer to show which client was being processed when incoming and outgoing udp watchdog alarms are triggered.
The packet was actually being handled but not acted on.
This change extends the default timeout for paused clients to 5 minutes
and makes both the paused and non-paused timeout periods configurable.
1) The return messages were being wrongly populated with the names of asset, inventory and sale types when their corresponding integers should have been used instead.
2) Folders with links were including the linked items in the descendents figure, when only the links should be included.
3) Links and linked items in link folders were not being included in the return data, and not in the correct order.
Now that these issues have been addressed, outfits and attachments appear to work consistently when HTTP inventory is enabled (as is now the default).
These will act as a sanity check with the main scene stats, to show that physics scene entities are being managed properly.
Total prims will not match scene total prims since physics total does not include phantom prims
Also zeros collisions scores on all prims after report collection, not just the top 25.
As before, this collision scores are only reset after a report is requested, which may give unrealistic numbers on the first request.
So to see more realistic scores, ignore the first report and then refresh the request after a couple of seconds or so.
If active, the physics module can return arbitrary stat counters that can be seen via the MonitoringModule
(http://opensimulator.org/wiki/Monitoring_Module)
This is only active in OdeScene if collect_stats = true in [ODEPhysicsSettings].
This patch allows OdeScene to collect elapsed time information for calls to the ODE native collision methods to assess what proportion of time this takes compared to total physics processing.
This data is returned as ODENativeCollisionFrameMS in the monitoring module, updated every 3 seconds.
The performance effect of collecting stats is probably extremely minor, dwarfed by the rest of the physics code.