- The existing event to scene has been split into 2: OnAgentUpdate and OnAgentCameraUpdate, to better reflect the two types of updates that the viewer sends. We can run one without the other, which is what happens when the avie is still but the user is camming around
- Added thresholds (as opposed to equality) to determine whether the update is significant or not. I thin these thresholds are ok, but we can play with them later
- Ignore updates of HeadRotation, which were problematic and aren't being used up stream
move around when standing on a stationary object.
Create proper linkage between BSCharacter and its actor by generating
a UpdatedProperties event the same way BSPrim does.
Added here since it was the most convenient place
Number is in the last column, "Sig. AgentUpdates" along with percentage of all AgentUpdates
Percentage largely falls over time, most cpu for processing AgentUpdates may be in UDP processing as turning this off even earlier (with "debug lludp toggle agentupdate" results in a big cpu fall
Also tidies up display.
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.
When Melanie added the web fetch inventory throttle to core, she made the long poll requests (EQs) effectively be handled on an active loop. All those requests, if they existed, were being constantly dequeued, checked for events (which most often they didn't have), and requeued again. This was an active loop thread on a 100ms cycle!
This fixes the issue. Now the inventory requests, if they aren't ready to be served, are placed directly back in the queue, but the long poll requests aren't placed there until there are events ready to be sent or timeout has been reached.
This puts the LongPollServiceWatcherThread back to 1sec cycle, as it was before.
This reverts commit 21a09ad3ad.
After more analysis and discussion, it is apparant that the Count(), Contains() and GetQueueArray() cannot be made thread-safe anyway without external locking
And this change appears to have a positive impact on performance.
I still believe that Monitor.Exit() will not release any thread for Monitor.Wait(), as per http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-gb/library/vstudio/system.threading.monitor.exit%28v=vs.100%29.aspx
so this should in theory make no difference, though mono implementation issues could possibly be coming into play.
This reverts commit 42e2a0d66e
Reverting because unfortunately this introduces race conditions because Contains(), Count() and GetQueueArray() may now end up returning the wrong result if another thread performs a simultaneous update on m_queue.
Code such as PollServiceRequestManager.Stop() relies on the count being correct otherwise a request may be lost.
Also, though some of the internal queue methods do not affect state, they are not thread-safe and could return the wrong result generating the same problem
lock() generates Monitor.Enter() and Monitor.Exit() under the covers. Monitor.Exit() does not cause Monitor.Wait() to exist, only Pulse() and PulseAll() will do this
Reverted with agreement.