folder when deleting objects from a scene. The use of the trash
folder causes assets to be created and stored everytime you delete
an object from the scene (slows down the delete and adds mostly useless
assets to your database).
Default is on (use the trash folder) which is the standard behavior.
This was an oversight when removing some race conditions from PhysicsActor setting recently.
Regression tests extended to probe this code path.
Extending regression tests required implementation of a BasicPhysicsPrim (there was none before). However, BasicPhysics plugin is still of no current practical use other than to fill in as a component for other parts of regression testing.
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.
This adds ScenePresence to IClientAPI.SceneAgent earlier on in the add client process so that its information is available to EventManager.OnNewClient() and OnClientLogin()
Also add a code comment as to why we're caching friend information for child agents.
We need to cache child agents so that friends object edit/delete permissions will work across boarders on regions hosted by different simulators.
This reverts commit d9f7b8549b.
This allows us to avoid unnecessary multiple calls to the friends service.
All friends functions originate from the root agent and only go to other root agents in existing code.
This also allows us to eliminate complex ref counting.
On osgrid and other places, I have observed that manually sending appearance updates from the console often relieves grey avatar syndrome.
Despite hunting high and low, I haven't been able to find where this packet is sometimes being lost - it might be a persistent viewer bug for all I know.
Therefore, this experimental setting resends appearance data for everybody in the scene every 60 seconds. These packets are small and the viewer only fetches texture
data if it doesn't already have it.
Default is false.
The idea is to make the critical main scene loop as skinny as possible - it doesn't need to run things that aren't time critical and don't depend on update ordering.
This will be done gradually over time to try and uncover any issues. Many non-criticial scene loop activities are being launched on separate threadpool threads anyway.
This may also allow modules to register their own maintenance jobs without having to maintain their own timers and threads.
Currently the maintenance loop runs once a second, as opposed to the 89ms scene loop.
Update() now accepts a frames parameter which can control the number of frames updated.
-1 will update until shutdown.
The watchdog updating moves above the maintc recalculation for any required sleep since it should be accounted for within the frame.
The first llDie() could lock Scene.m_deleting_scene_object.
The second llDie() would then wait at this lock.
The first llDie() would go on to remove the second script but always abort it since the second script's WorkItem would not go away.
Easiest solution here is to remove the m_deleting_scene_object since it's no longer justified - we no longer lock m_parts but take a copy instead.
This also requires an adjustment in XEngine.OnRemoveScript not to use instance.ObjectID instead when firing the OnObjectRemoved event.
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.
We can now do this since the entire scene and all objects within it are now successfully gc'd at the end of these tests.
This greatly improves the time taken to run each test (by reducing teardown time, not the time to actually do the test work that we're interested in).
Slightly simplifies config read in Scene constructor to help facilitate this.
This allows scripts to run in child prims that are outside region boundaries.
This is an interim patch applied from http://opensimulator.org/mantis/view.php?id=5899 though it does not resolve that bug
Thanks tglion!
On the first frame, all startup scene objects are added to the physics scene.
This can cause a considerable delay, so we don't start raising the alarm on scene loop timeouts until the second frame.
This commit also slightly changes the behaviour of timeout reporting.
Previously, a report was made for the very first timed out thread, ignoring all others until the next watchdog check.
Instead, we now report every timed out thread, though we still only do this once no matter how long the timeout.
This involves
1) On forcible teleport, call m_scene.RequestTeleportLocation() rather than ScenePresence.Teleport() - only EntityTransferModule now should call SP.Teleport()
2) When avatar is being forcibly moved due to banlines, use a 'stop movement' tolerance of 0.2 to requested position rather than 1
This prevents the avatar sometimes being stuck to banlines until they teleport somewhere else.
This aims to fix some problems in http://opensimulator.org/mantis/view.php?id=5822