This splits the AIPerService queue up into four queues: one for each
"capability type". On Second Life that doesn't make a difference in
itself for textures because the texture service only serves one
capability type: textures. Other services however can serve two types,
while on Avination - that currently only has one services for everything
- this really makes a difference because that single service now has
four queues.
More importantly however is that the administration of how many requests
are in the "pipeline" (from approving that a new HTTP request may be
added for given service, till curl finished it) is now per capability
type (or service/capabitity type pair actually). This means downloads of
a certain capability type (textures, inventory, mesh, other) will no
longer stall because unapproved requests cluttered the queue for a given
service.
Moreover, before when a request did finished, it would only look for a
new request in the queue of the service that just finished. This simple
algorithm worked when there were no 'PerSerice' objects, and only one
'Curl' queue: because if anything was queued that that was because there
were running requests, and when one of those running requests finished
it made sense to see if one of those queued requests could be added now.
However, after adding multiple queues, one for each service, it could
happen that service A had queued requests while only requests from
service B were actually running: only requests of B would ever finish
and the requests of A would be queued forever.
With this patch the algorithm is to look alternating first in the
texture request queue and then in the inventory request queue - or vice
versa, and if there are none of those, look for a request of a different
type. If also that cannot be found, look for a request in another
service. This is still not optimal and subject to change.
* 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.
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).
Added a new statemachine AIFetchInventoryFolder, which can be used
to fetch the contents of a folder by name or UUID.
Also added AIEvent (and one event,
AIEvent::LLInventoryModel_mIsAgentInvUsable_true, which is needed
for AIFetchInventoryFolder).
Fixed LLInventoryModel::sBackgroundFetchActive to correctly reflect
whether or not LLInventoryModel::backgroundFetch is added to
gIdleCallbacks.
Avoid duplicated entries in sFetchQueue.
Reset sFullFetchStarted in LLInventoryModel::stopBackgroundFetch to
allow for a renewed full fetch when some single-folder fetch stops it.
Added AIStateMachine::mQueued to make calling 'cont()' more robust:
calling cont() / idle() / cont() on a row would otherwise add a
statemachine twice to the active list, which would cause a crash
when it's killed.
Most the changes are due to InventoryObjectList* changing to LLInventoryObject::object_list_t*, LLInventoryItem::II_FLAGS* changing to LLInventoryItemFlags::II_FLAGS* and also const'ing.
Certain perms for certain asset types(callcard&landmarks) have been laxed, as per LL's V2.
LLInventoryType now does lookups mostly though new lldictionary class.
LLLandmark using boost for callbacks, instead of custom class structure.
Holy hell, this was an interesting one to implement. I wish I understood it better. Unfortunately I think this marks the end of trying to re-implement the Local Inventory for Temp and Local textures. It's just not feasible now that the entire inventory system has been whipped into a code shitstorm.
Signed-off-by: Beeks <HgDelirium@gmail.com>