Changes LLEnvManagerNew::setRegionChangeCallback to LLAgent::addRegionChangedCallback
Cleans up some of the timeout policies that aren't necessary any longer.
Modernizes parts of LLViewerKeyboard, updates llregistry.h
Begins changeover from LLDynamicArray to std::vector
Minor merge of newer, trivial SSA functions.
Introduces LLAgent functions: addParcelChangedCallback and canJoinGroups
Support for secondlife:///app/appearance SLapps.
Cleans up older functions.
This adds mStatus, mReason and mContent to ResponderBase
and fills those in instead of passing it to member functions.
The added danger here is that now code can accidently try
to access these variables while they didn't already get a
correct value.
Affected members of ResponderBase (that now have less arguments):
decode_llsd_body, decode_raw_body, completedHeaders,
completed -> httpCompleted, result -> httpSuccess,
errorWithContent and error -> httpFailure.
New API:
ResponderBase::setResult
ResponderBase::getStatus()
ResponderBase::getReason()
ResponderBase::getContent()
ResponderBase::getResponseHeaders() (returns AIHTTPReceivedHeaders though, not LLSD)
ResponderBase::dumpResponse()
ResponderWithCompleted::completeResult
ResponderWithResult::failureResult (previously pubErrorWithContent)
ResponderWithResult::successResult (previously pubResult)
Not implemented:
getHTTPMethod() - use getName() instead which returns the class name of the responder.
completedHeaders() is still called as usual, although you can ignore
it (not implement in a derived responder) and call getResponseHeaders()
instead, provided you implement needsHeaders() and have it return true.
However, classes derived from ResponderHeadersOnly do not have
completedHeaders(), so they still must implement completedHeaders(),
and then call getResponseHeaders() or just access mReceivedHeaders
directly, as usual.
Turns out that the only responders that want to get the redirect
status codes themselves are the ones that already had a
redirect_status_ok() exception.
This should fix 'Received 302 (Moved Temporarily) for responder
"AgentStateResponder" which has no followRedir().
Some responders want to deal with redirections themselves, I checked if
this (new, pathfinder related) responder wants that in viewer-release,
but it doesn't. Turning this on requires to also keep track of cookies,
so it's a bit slower and therefore left at the old default: to not let
curl follow redirections. Optionally we would turn it on by default and
explicitely off for those responders that want to deal with 302's
themselves and for those that really don't need it and are used most
heavily.
Added libpathing to LLPHYSICSEXTENSIONS_INCLUDE_DIRS
llviewermenu updated a bit to be closer to v-d/rlva. Best viewed without space changes.
Updated llresmgr.cpp from v-d to "handle special case of input value being zero"
pipeline update: hideObject, restoreHiddenObject, hideDrawable, and unhideDrawable added.
Thanks to Henri Beauchamp for some UI code touchups, thanks to Zi Ree for Rebake notification.
Thanks to Mobius Ryba and Ansariel Hiller for the V1-style pathfinding icons.
Note: When opening from pie menu object selection is lost, unless the floater is already open..
This provides a more reliable reproduction of the bug we've been having with inspect.
* Moved Responder stuff to LLHTTPClient.
* Renamed LLHTTPClient::Responder to LLHTTPClient::ResponderWithResult.
* Deleted LLHTTPClientAdapter and LLHTTPClientInterface.
* Renamed AICurlInterface::TransferInfo to AITransferInfo and moved it
to llhttpclient.h
* Removed 'CURLcode code' argument from completed_headers.
* Removed LLCurlRequest and replaced it's last usage with LLHTTPClient API calls.
* Deleted dead code.
* Renamed all the get4/post4/put4/getByteRange4 etc, back to their
original name without the '4'.
Introduces AIHTTPTimeoutPolicy objects which do not just
specify a single "timeout" in seconds, but a plethora of
timings related to the life cycle of the average HTTP
transaction.
This knowledge is that moved to the Responder being
used instead of floating constants hardcoded in the
callers of http requests. This assumes that the same
timeout policy is wanted for each transaction that
uses the same Responder, which can be enforced is needed.
I added a AIHTTPTimeoutPolicy for EVERY responder,
only to make it easier later to tune timeout values
and/or to get feedback about which responder runs
into HTTP errors in debug output (especially time outs),
so that they can be tuned later. If we already understood
exactly what we were doing then most responders could
have been left alone and just return the default timeout
policy: by far most timeout policies are just a copy
of the default policy, currently.
This commit is not finished... It's a work in progress
(viewer runs fine with it though).