NetworkClient time snapshots

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vis2k 2022-09-28 11:50:47 +07:00
parent 1694000d21
commit 005369340a
2 changed files with 103 additions and 0 deletions

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using System.Collections.Generic;
using UnityEngine;
namespace Mirror
{
// empty snapshot that is only used to progress client's local timeline.
public struct TimeSnapshot : Snapshot
{
public double remoteTime { get; set; }
public double localTime { get; set; }
public TimeSnapshot(double remoteTime, double localTime)
{
this.remoteTime = remoteTime;
this.localTime = localTime;
}
}
public static partial class NetworkClient
{
// decrease bufferTime at runtime to see the catchup effect.
// increase to see slowdown.
// 'double' so we can have very precise dynamic adjustment without rounding
[Header("Snapshot Interpolation: Buffering")]
[Tooltip("Local simulation is behind by sendInterval * multiplier seconds.\n\nThis guarantees that we always have enough snapshots in the buffer to mitigate lags & jitter.\n\nIncrease this if the simulation isn't smooth. By default, it should be around 2.")]
public static double bufferTimeMultiplier = 2;
public static double bufferTime => NetworkServer.sendInterval * bufferTimeMultiplier;
// <servertime, snaps>
public static SortedList<double, TimeSnapshot> snapshots = new SortedList<double, TimeSnapshot>();
// for smooth interpolation, we need to interpolate along server time.
// any other time (arrival on client, client local time, etc.) is not
// going to give smooth results.
// in other words, this is the remote server's time, but adjusted.
//
// internal for use from NetworkTime.
// double for long running servers, see NetworkTime comments.
internal static double localTimeline;
// catchup / slowdown adjustments are applied to timescale,
// to be adjusted in every update instead of when receiving messages.
static double localTimescale = 1;
// catchup /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// catchup thresholds in 'frames'.
// half a frame might be too aggressive.
[Header("Snapshot Interpolation: Catchup / Slowdown")]
[Tooltip("Slowdown begins when the local timeline is moving too fast towards remote time. Threshold is in frames worth of snapshots.\n\nThis needs to be negative.\n\nDon't modify unless you know what you are doing.")]
public static float catchupNegativeThreshold = -1; // careful, don't want to run out of snapshots
[Tooltip("Catchup begins when the local timeline is moving too slow and getting too far away from remote time. Threshold is in frames worth of snapshots.\n\nThis needs to be positive.\n\nDon't modify unless you know what you are doing.")]
public static float catchupPositiveThreshold = 1;
[Tooltip("Local timeline acceleration in % while catching up.")]
[Range(0, 1)]
public static double catchupSpeed = 0.01f; // 1%
[Tooltip("Local timeline slowdown in % while slowing down.")]
[Range(0, 1)]
public static double slowdownSpeed = 0.01f; // 1%
[Tooltip("Catchup/Slowdown is adjusted over n-second exponential moving average.")]
public static int driftEmaDuration = 1; // shouldn't need to modify this, but expose it anyway
// we use EMA to average the last second worth of snapshot time diffs.
// manually averaging the last second worth of values with a for loop
// would be the same, but a moving average is faster because we only
// ever add one value.
static ExponentialMovingAverage driftEma;
// dynamic buffer time adjustment //////////////////////////////////////
// dynamically adjusts bufferTimeMultiplier for smooth results.
// to understand how this works, try this manually:
//
// - disable dynamic adjustment
// - set jitter = 0.2 (20% is a lot!)
// - notice some stuttering
// - disable interpolation to see just how much jitter this really is(!)
// - enable interpolation again
// - manually increase bufferTimeMultiplier to 3-4
// ... the cube slows down (blue) until it's smooth
// - with dynamic adjustment enabled, it will set 4 automatically
// ... the cube slows down (blue) until it's smooth as well
//
// note that 20% jitter is extreme.
// for this to be perfectly smooth, set the safety tolerance to '2'.
// but realistically this is not necessary, and '1' is enough.
[Header("Snapshot Interpolation: Dynamic Adjustment")]
[Tooltip("Automatically adjust bufferTimeMultiplier for smooth results.\nSets a low multiplier on stable connections, and a high multiplier on jittery connections.")]
public static bool dynamicAdjustment = true;
[Tooltip("Safety buffer that is always added to the dynamic bufferTimeMultiplier adjustment.")]
public static float dynamicAdjustmentTolerance = 1; // 1 is realistically just fine, 2 is very very safe even for 20% jitter. can be half a frame too. (see above comments)
[Tooltip("Dynamic adjustment is computed over n-second exponential moving average standard deviation.")]
public static int deliveryTimeEmaDuration = 2; // 1-2s recommended to capture average delivery time
static ExponentialMovingAverage deliveryTimeEma; // average delivery time (standard deviation gives average jitter)
}
}

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fileFormatVersion: 2
guid: ad039071a9cc487b9f7831d28bbe8e83
timeCreated: 1664340480