This lets us remove the dependency of OpenSim.Framework.dll on data/avataranimations.xml, which is not necessary for ROBUST.
This commit also takes care of the odd situation where animations are stored and used internally with uppercase names (e.g. "STAND")
but scripts refer to them with lowercase names (e.g. "sit").
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.
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.
Telehub settings now persist to the database and are saved across sim restarts. So-far this only works on MySQL. this is a work in progress, teleport routing is not yet implemented.
Support for viewer side of telehub management. Can manupulate Telehubs and SpawnPoints from the viewer estate managemnt tools. This is a work in progress and does not yet persist or affect teleport routing.
As far as I know, viewers don't use this mechanism to recieve new TextureEntry data for avatars. This is done via the AvatarAppearance packet instead.
Tested this back to viewer 1.23.
Replacing with Utils.EmptyBytes since converting the texture entry to bytes on each AvatarUpdate (or which there are many) is not cost-free.
Further filters "debug packet <level>" to exclused [Request]ObjectPropertiesFamily if level is below 25.
Adjust some method doc
Minor changes to some logging messages.
The caller is already an async thread from LLClientView so this doesn't hold up the client.
However, launching on a separate thread does remove the effect of m_setAppearanceLock
This was potentially allowing two different SetAppearance threads to interfere with each other, though this probably rarely happens, if at all.
The only caller is the LLUDP stack and this has to validate the UDP circuit itself, so we know that it exists.
This allows us to eliminate another null check elsewhere and simplifies the method contract
This means that avatar/appearance data of other avatars and scene objects for a client will be sent after the ack rather than possibly before.
This may stop some avatars appearing grey on login.
This introduces a new OpenSim.Framework.ISceneAgent to accompany the existing OpenSim.Framework.ISceneObject and ISceneEntity
This allows IClientAPI to handle this as it can't reference OpenSim.Region.Framework.Interfaces
OutPacket() must be called within the m_killRecord lock. Otherwise the following event sequence is possible
1) LLClientView.ProcessEntityUpdates() passes the kill record check for a particular part suspends before OutPacket()
2) Another thread calls LLClientView.SendKillObject() to delete the same part and modifies the kill record
3) The same thread places the kill packet on the Task queue.
4) The earlier thread resumes and places the update packet on the Task queue after the kill packet.
This results in a ghost part in the sim that only goes away after client relog.
This commit also removes the unnecessary m_entityUpdates.SyncRoot locking in SendKillObject.
setting position at the same time as taint appears to undermine the whole purpose of taint
testing doesn't reveal any obvious regressions in doing this