This is to eliminate disruption until co-op termination has been well-tested.
In non co-op mode, XEngine will continue to load DLLs of the existing Script class and the new XEngineScript class.
Moving to co-op mode still requires existing script DLL deletion to force recompilation, either manually or by setting DeleteScriptsOnStartup = true for one run.
This change also means that scripts which fail to initialize do not still show up as running scripts.
This involves inserting opensim_reserved_CheckForCoopTermination() calls in lsl -> c# translation at any place where the script could be in a loop with no wait calls.
These places are for, while, do-while, label, user function call and manual event function call.
Call goes through to an XEngineScriptBase which extends ScriptBase.
IEngine is extended to supply necessary engine-specific parent class references and constructor parameters to Compiler.
Unfortunately, since XEngineScriptBase has to be passed WaitHandle in its constructor, older compiled scripts will fail to load with an error on the OpenSim console.
Such scripts will need to be recompiled, either by removing all *.dll files from the bin/ScriptEngines/<region-id> or by setting DeleteScriptsOnStartup = true in [XEngine] for one run.
Automatic recompilation may be implemented in a later commit.
This feature should not yet be used, default remains termination with Thread.Abort() which will work as normal once scripts are recompiled.
This makes use of EventWaitHandles since various web references indicate that Thread.Interrupt() can also cause runtime instability.
If co-op termination is enabled, then termination sets the wait handle instead of waiting for a timeout before possibly aborting the thread.
This allows the script to cleanly terminate if it's in a llSleep/LL function delay or the next time it enters such a wait without any timeout period.
Co-op termination is not yet testable since checking for termination request within loops that never trigger a wait is not yet implemented.
This commit, unlike 1b5c41c, passes the wait handle as an extra parameter through IScript.Initialize() instead of passing IScriptInstance itself.
This makes use of EventWaitHandles since various web references indicate that Thread.Interrupt() can also cause runtime instability.
If co-op termination is enabled, then termination sets the wait handle instead of waiting for a timeout before possibly aborting the thread.
This allows the script to cleanly terminate if it's in a llSleep/LL function delay or the next time it enters such a wait without any timeout period.
Co-op termination is not yet testable since checking for termination request within loops that never trigger a wait is not yet implemented.
This is to allow the future co-operative script thread terminate feature to detect and act upon termination requests.
This splits the assembly and state loading out from the ScriptInstance() constructor to a separate Load() method
in order to facilititate continued script logic regression testing.
This allows different categories of stats to be shown, with options to list categories or show all stats.
Currently categories are scene and simulator and only a very few stats are currently registered via this mechanism.
This commit also adds percentage stats for packets and blocks reused from the packet pool.
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.
Intended for use if there are future issues with mono crashes whilst generate dynamic textures.
This test is triggered via a new test-stress nant target.
Not run by default.
This is to allow a second attempt to remove an avatar even if "show connections" shows them as already inactive (i.e. close has already been attempted once).
You should only attempt --force if a normal kick fails.
This is partly for diagnostics as we have seen some connections occasionally remain on lbsa plaza even if they are registered as inactive.
This is not a permanent solution and may not work anyway - the ultimate solution is to stop this problem from happening in the first place.
This aims to capture the amount of memory that OpenSim turns over whilst operating a region.
This memory is not lost - apart from leaks it is reclaimed by the garbage collector.
However, the more memory that gets turned over the more work the GC has to do to reclaim it.
Another thread could come and turn off physics for a part (null PhysicsActor) at any point.
Had to turn off localCopy on warp3D CoreModules section in prebuild.xml since on current nant this copies all DLLs in bin/ which can be a very large number with compiled DLLs
No obvious reason for doing that copy - nothing else does it.
Rename IFriendsModule.GetFriendPerms() -> GetRightsGrantedByFriend() to be more self-documenting and consistent with friends module terminology.
Add some method doc.
This is to deal with the hundred lines of command splurge when one previously typed "help"
Modelled somewhat on the mysql console
One can still type help <command> to get per command help at any point.
Categories capitalized to avoid conflict with the all-lowercase commands (except for commander system, as of yet).
Does not affect command parsing or any other aspects of the console apart from the help system.
Backwards compatible with existing modules.
Some successful collision attacks have been carried out on sha1 with speculation that more are possible.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptographic_hash_function#Cryptographic_hash_algorithms
No successful attacks have been shown on sha256, which makes it less likely that anybody will be able to engineer an asset hash collision in the future.
Tradeoff is more storage required for hashes, and more cpu to hash, though this is neglible compared to db operations and network access.
In over 4 years this never progressed beyond an unimplemented stub.
This doesn't mean that it can't come back if someone is interested in implementing PhysX support.