New attribute DatabasePager::_expiryFrames sets number of frames a PagedLOD child is kept in memory. The attribute is set with DatabasePager::setExpiryFrames method or OSG_EXPIRY_FRAMES environmental variable.
New attribute PagedLOD::PerRangeData::_
frameNumber contains frame number of last cull traversal.
Children of PagedLOD are expired when time _AND_ number of frames since last cull traversal exceed OSG_EXPIRY_DELAY _AND_ OSG_EXPIRY_FRAMES respectively. By default OSG_EXPIRY_FRAMES = 1 which means that nodes from last cull/rendering
traversal will not be expired even if last cull time exceeds OSG_EXPIRY_DELAY. Setting OSG_EXPIRY_FRAMES = 0 revokes previous behaviour of PagedLOD.
Setting OSG_EXPIRY_FRAMES > 0 fixes problems of children reloading in lazy rendering applications. Required behaviour is achieved by manipulating OSG_EXPIRY_DELAY and OSG_EXPIRY_FRAMES together.
Two interface changes are made:
DatabasePager::updateSceneGraph(double currentFrameTime) is replaced by DatabasePager::updateSceneGraph(const osg::FrameStamp &frameStamp). The previous method is in #if 0 clause in the header file. Robert, decide if You want to include it.
PagedLOD::removeExpiredChildren(double expiryTime, NodeList &removedChildren) is deprecated (warning is printed), when subclassing use PagedLOD::removeExpiredChildren(double expiryTime, int expiryFrame, NodeList &removedChildren) instead. "
/users/mvalle/OSG/OpenSceneGraph/src/osg/BufferObject.cpp: In member function `virtual void osg::ElementBufferObject::compileBuffer(osg::State&) const':
/users/mvalle/OSG/OpenSceneGraph/src/osg/BufferObject.cpp:600: warning: cast to pointer from integer of different size"
MemoryBarrier() is used in the implementation, so it should be checked.
This in effect disables the faster atomic ops on msvc 7.1 and older, even if
only the MemoryBarrier() call is missing. But it ensures for the fist cut
that it will build everywhere. If somebody cares for msvc 7.1 enough and has
one for testing installed, he might provide the apropriate defines to guard
that MemoryBarrier() call.
I tested that msvc8 32/64bit still passes the configure tests and compiles.
"
implementation of the atomic increment and decrement into a implementation
file.
This way inlining and compiler optimization can no longer happen for these
implementations, but it fixes compilation on win32 msvc targets. I expect
that this is still faster than with with mutexes.
Also the i386 gcc target gets atomic operations with this patch. By using an
implementation file we can guarantee that we have the right compiler flags
available."