Use LRU cache for ESMReaders. When cache capacity is reached close least
recently used ESMReader. Remember the file name if a reader was open. Once the
reader requested again open the file if there is stored name for it. Put
released ESMReader to the back of the free items list. Close ESMReader's from
the front of the free items list.
Cached item can be used only by one client at the same time. If the same item is
requested twice exception is thrown. This should never happen in practice. If
this happens need to fix the client logic.
It's allowed to go over the capacity limit when requesting different readers.
Ideally this should never happen but there will be system error anyway
signalizing about too many open files. Need to fix client logic in this case.
All places that were using a vector of ESMReaders now using the cache. Cache is
local for each use case and there is no need for a thread safety.
Return value can't be nullptr. Pointer complicates the code because has to be
dereferenced.
Also move function definition to hpp to make it easier for compiler to optimize
calls.
Container base record mutations
See merge request OpenMW/openmw!353
(cherry picked from commit 8b33765dd414680f0074b3e115b52b291b4cb7cb)
275908a0 mutate container base records
16fca11d add changelog entry
A Warning indicates a potential problem in the content file(s) that the user told OpenMW to load. E.g. this might cause an object to not display at all or as intended, however the rest of the game will run fine.
An Error, however, is more likely to be a bug with the engine itself - it means that basic assumptions have been violated and the engine might not run correctly anymore.
The above mostly applies to errors/warnings during game-play; startup issues are handled differently: when a file is completely invalid/corrupted to the point that the engine can not start, that might cause messages that are worded as Error due to the severity of the issue but are not necessarily the engine's fault.
Hopefully, being a little more consistent here will alleviate confusion among users as to when a log message should be reported and to whom.
The progress is not particularly accurate. It simply uses the current / total number of records written/read as indication. Cell records are currently the largest by far, but there is a good chance that could be optimized using a change tracking system.