types of property updates to be specified. Not sure if one form
of property update should supercede another. But for now the old
OpenSim behavior is preserved by sending both.
to the entity update queue. The number of property packets can
become significant when selecting/deselecting large numbers of
objects.
This is experimental code.
when client and simulator throttles are set. This algorithm also uses
pre-defined burst rate of 150% of the sustained rate for each of the
throttles.
Removed the "state" queue. The state queue is not a Linden queue and
appeared to be used just to get kill packets sent.
types of property updates to be specified. Not sure if one form
of property update should supercede another. But for now the old
OpenSim behavior is preserved by sending both.
to the entity update queue. The number of property packets can
become significant when selecting/deselecting large numbers of
objects.
This is experimental code.
This should happen if the client supplies a task ID with the RezObject call.
The rez goes through the same code as llRezObject(), so the same perms are applied.
Rotation isn't yet preserved, this should be fixed shortly.
when client and simulator throttles are set. This algorithm also uses
pre-defined burst rate of 150% of the sustained rate for each of the
throttles.
Removed the "state" queue. The state queue is not a Linden queue and
appeared to be used just to get kill packets sent.
time to wait to retransmit packets) always maxed out (no retransmissions
for 24 or 48 seconds.
Note that this is going to cause faster (and more) retransmissions. Fix
for dynamic throttling needs to go with this.
This brings it into line with the Windows and Linux libraries.
This is a universal dylib with x86_64, i386 and ppc parts. However, even on a 64 bit Intel machine Mono can only P/INVOKE the i386 version right now. ppc is untested.
The configuration used to compile was
CFLAGS="-g -O2 -isysroot /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.6.sdk -arch i386 -arch x86_64 -arch ppc" CXXFLAGS="-g -O2 -isysroot /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.6.sdk -arch i386 -arch x86_64 -arch ppc" LDFLAGS="-arch i386 -arch x86_64 -arch ppc" ./configure --enable-old-trimesh --disable-asserts --enable-shared --disable-dependency-tracking --disable-demos --without-x
--disable-demos --without-x is required to build ODE on Mac OS X
CFLAGS, CXXFLAGS and --disable-dependency-tracking are necessary to build the universal dylib (some compilation lines use CFLAGS instead of CXXFLAGS)
The other settings are tweaks for using ODE with OpenSim
implement the display names functionality as such, but it allows scripts
that are display name aware to function as if the display name were implemented
and set to the avatar name.
implement the display names functionality as such, but it allows scripts
that are display name aware to function as if the display name were implemented
and set to the avatar name.
This means that Mac OS X users can now use the standard sqlite adaptor instead of the legacy one.
This is SQLite 3.7.5. I configured the build with the line
CFLAGS="-Os -g -isysroot /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.6.sdk -arch i386 -arch x86_64 -arch ppc7400 -DSQLITE_ENABLE_COLUMN_METADATA" LDFLAGS="-arch i386 -arch x86_64 -arch ppc7400" ./configure --disable-dependency-tracking
The SQLITE_ENABLE_COLUMN_METADATA flag exports the metadata symbols that modern Mono SQLite adaptors need.
The -Os removes debugging symbols (as per the sqlite3 source pkg README)
The other parts are to cross compile for x86_64, i386 and ppc. On Mac OS X, Mono can actually only P/INVOKE 32-bit libraries even on 64 bit platforms so i386 is being used. The dylib has not been tested on ppc.