Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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ScopedRegistrarHelper
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so the user need not reverse-engineer the code to figure out the output.
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Since timers presents a timers.Timer Lua class supporting queries and
cancellation, make TimersListener::scheduleAfter() and scheduleEvery() respond
immediately so the newly constructed Timer object has the reqid necessary to
perform those subsequent operations.
This requires that Lua invocations of these operations avoid calling the
caller's callback with that initial response.
Reinvent leap.generate() to return a Lua object supporting next() and done()
methods. A plain Lua coroutine that (indirectly) calls fiber.wait() confuses
the fiber scheduler, so avoid implementing generate() as a Lua coroutine.
Add a bit more leap.lua diagnostic output.
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leap.eventstream() is used when we expect the viewer's LLEventAPI to send an
immediate first response with the reqid from the request, followed by some
number of subsequent responses bearing the same reqid. The difference between
eventstream() and generate() is that generate() expects the caller to request
each such response, whereas eventstream calls the caller's callback with each
response.
cancelreq() is for canceling the background fiber launched by eventstream()
before the callback tells it to quit.
Make WaitFor:close() remove the object from the waitfors list; similarly, make
WaitForReqid:close() remove the object from the pending list. For this reason,
cleanup() must iterate over a copy of each of the pending and waitfors lists.
Instead of unregisterWaitFor() manually searching the waitfors list, use
table.find().
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script
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following promotion of secondlife/viewer #705: Maintenance X
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LLAvatarListUpdater is an LLEventTimer subclass meant to be a base class of
still other subclasses. One would presume that every one of them should
override tick(), since LLAvatarListUpdater::tick() is a no-op that simply asks
to be called again. But making it abstract (=0) produces errors since at least
one subclass does not define its own tick() method. This seems less than
useful, since the specific tick() method is the whole point of deriving from
LLEventTimer, but oh well.
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Instead of maintaining a whole separate unordered_map to look up target times,
make room in the HandleMap entry for the target time. There's still
circularity, but the split into doAtTime1() and doAtTime2() resolves it: since
doAtTime2() accepts the mHandles iterator created by doAtTime1(), doAtTime2()
can simply store the new mQueue handle_type into the appropriate slot.
Also sprinkle in a few more override keywords for consistency.
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Some timer use cases need to know not only whether the timer is active, but
how much time remains before it (next) fires.
Introduce LLLater::mDoneTimes to track, for each handle, the timestamp at
which it's expected to fire. We can't just look up the target timestamp in
mQueue's func_at entry because there's no documented way to navigate from a
handle_type to a node iterator or pointer. Nor can we store it in mHandles
because of order dependency: we need the mDoneTimes iterator so we can bind it
into the Periodic functor for doPeriodically(), but we need the mQueue handle
to store in mHandles. If we could find the mQueue node from the new handle, we
could update the func_at entry after emplace() -- but if we could find the
mQueue node from a handle, we wouldn't need to store the target timestamp
separately anyway.
Split LLLater::doAtTime() into internal doAtTime1() and doAtTime2(): the first
creates an mDoneTimes entry and returns an iterator, the second finishes
creating new mQueue and mHandles entries based on that mDoneTimes entry.
This lets doPeriodically()'s Periodic bind the mDoneTimes iterator. Then
instead of continually incrementing an internal data member, it increments the
mDoneTimes entry to set the next upcoming timestamp. That lets getRemaining()
report the next upcoming timestamp rather than only the original one.
Add LLEventTimer::isRunning() and getRemaining(), forwarding to its LLLater
handle.
Fix various LLEventTimer subclass references to mEventTimer.stop(), etc.
Fix non-inline LLEventTimer subclass tick() overrides for bool, not BOOL.
Remove LLAppViewer::idle() call to LLEventTimer::updateClass(). Since
LLApp::stepFrame() already calls LLCallbackList::callFunctions(), assume we've
already handled that every tick.
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The big idea is to reduce the number of per-tick callbacks asking, "Is it time
yet? Is it time yet?" We do that for LLEventTimer and LLEventTimeout.
LLLater presents doAtTime(LLDate), with doAfterInterval() and doPeriodically()
methods implemented using doAtTime(). All return handles. The free functions
doAfterInterval() and doPeriodically() now forward to the corresponding
LLLater methods.
LLLater also presents isRunning(handle) and cancel(handle).
LLLater borrows the tactic of LLEventTimer: while there's at least one running
timer, it registers an LLCallbackList tick() callback to service ready timers.
But instead of looping over all of them asking, "Are you ready?" it keeps them
in a priority queue ordered by desired timestamp, and only touches those whose
timestamp has been reached. Also, it honors a maximum time slice: once the
ready timers have run for longer than the limit, it defers processing other
ready timers to the next tick() call. The intent is to consume fewer cycles
per tick() call, both by the management machinery and the timers themselves.
Revamp LLCallbackList to accept C++ callables in addition to (classic C
function pointer, void*) pairs. Make addFunction() return a handle (different
than LLLater handles) that can be passed to a new deleteFunction() overload,
since std::function instances can't be compared for equality.
In fact, implement LLCallbackList using boost::signals2::signal, which provides
almost exactly what we want.
LLCallbackList continues to accept (function pointer, void*) pairs, but now
we store a lambda that calls the function pointer with that void*. It takes
less horsing around to create a C++ callable from a (function pointer, void*)
pair than the other way around. For containsFunction() and deleteFunction(),
such pairs are the keys for a lookup table whose values are handles.
Instead of having a static global LLCallbackList gIdleCallbacks, make
LLCallbackList an LLSingleton to guarantee initialization. For backwards
compatibility, gIdleCallbacks is now a macro for LLCallbackList::instance().
Move doOnIdleOneTime() and doOnIdleRepeating() functions to LLCallbackList
methods, but for backwards compatibility continue providing free functions.
Reimplement LLEventTimer using LLLater::doPeriodically(). One implication is
that LLEventTimer need no longer be derived from LLInstanceTracker, which we
used to iterate over all instances every tick. Give it start() and stop()
methods, since some subclasses (e.g. LLFlashTimer) used to call its member
LLTimer's start() and stop(). Remove updateClass():
LLCallbackList::callFunctions() now takes care of that.
Remove LLToastLifeTimer::start() and stop(), since LLEventTimer now provides
those. Remove getRemainingTimeF32(), since LLLater does not (yet) provide that
feature.
While at it, make LLEventTimer::tick() return bool instead of BOOL, and change
existing overrides.
Make LLApp::stepFrame() call LLCallbackList::callFunctions() instead of
LLEventTimer::updateClass().
We could have refactored LLEventTimer to use the mechanism now built into
LLLater, but frankly the LLEventTimer API is rather clumsy. You MUST derive a
subclass and override tick(), and you must instantiate your subclass on the
heap because, when your tick() override returns false, LLEventTimer deletes
its subclass instance. The LLLater API is simpler to use, and LLEventTimer is
much simplified by using it.
Merge lleventfilter.h's LLEventTimeoutBase into LLEventTimeout, and likewise
merge LLEventThrottleBase into LLEventThrottle. The separation was for
testability, but now that they're no longer based on LLTimer, it becomes
harder to use dummy time for testing. Temporarily skip tests based on
LLEventTimeoutBase and LLEventThrottleBase.
Instead of listening for LLEventPump("mainloop") ticks and using LLTimer,
LLEventTimeout now uses LLLater::doAfterInterval(). Instead of LLTimer and
LLEventTimeout, LLEventThrottle likewise now uses LLLater::doAfterInterval().
Recast a couple local LLEventTimeout pre-lambda callable classes with lambdas.
Dignify F64 with a new typedef LLDate::timestamp. LLDate heavily depends on
that as its base time representation, but there are those who question use of
floating-point for time. This is a step towards insulating us from any future
change.
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LF, and trim trailing whitespaces as needed
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