Removed AICurlEasyRequestStateMachine_added and
AICurlEasyRequestStateMachine_finished because the state machine is not
taking any action there anyway, and those states might be skipped all
together even, so they make no sense / shouldn't exist.
This reverts commit ef35aa7954
because it contained too much wrong things that I won't be
using. I'll re-commit stuff from it after that that I do
want to keep.
This work extends AIStateMachine to run multiplex() in the thread
that calls run(), cont() or set_state(). Note that all three
eventually call locked_cont(), so thats where multiplex() is called
from. Calling multiplex() means "running the state machine", as in
"calling multiplex_impl".
Currently only LLURLRequest uses this feature, and then only
for the HTTPGetResponder, and well only for the initializing,
start up and normal finish states.
A current/remaining problem is that we run into a situation where
the curl thread runs a statemachine to it's finish and kills it,
while the main thread is also 'running' it and tries to call
multiplex while the statemachine isn't running anymore.
Although it should never happen that a file descriptor is suddenly
closed, it appeared that this happens on linux 64bit when using
FMODex... Not really sure how useful this is, but at least now the
viewer just continues to work, as if -say- the socket was closed
remotely. Before the curl thread would go into a tight loop that it
wouldn't recover from until the watchdog thread terminated the viewer.
Moved AICurlPrivate::Stats to AICurlInterface::Stats and added several
counters to keep track of the number of existing instances of
respectively AICurlEasyRequest, AICurlEasyRequestStateMachine,
BufferedCurlEasyRequest, ResponderBase and
ThreadSafeBufferedCurlEasyRequest.
Every curl transaction is a AICurlEasyRequestStateMachine which has a
AICurlEasyRequest as member, which is a reference counting pointer to
a ThreadSafeBufferedCurlEasyRequest. And now BufferedCurlEasyRequest is
derived from CurlEasyRequest which is derived from CurlEasyHandle, but
neither are used separatedly.