Sending poison messages should suffice to kill the voice session: attempting to `.leave()`. Fixes#88.
This was tested using `cargo make ready` and the modified `serenity/voice/` example.
This PR adds several enhancements to Driver connection logic:
* Driver (re)connection attempts now have a default timeout of around 10s.
* The driver will now attempt to retry full connection attempts using a user-provided strategy: currently, this defaults to 5 attempts under an exponential backoff strategy.
* The driver will now fire `DriverDisconnect` events at the end of any session -- this unifies (re)connection failure events with session expiry as seen in #76, which should provide users with enough detail to know *which* voice channel to reconnect to. Users still need to be careful to read the session/channel IDs to ensure that they aren't overwriting another join.
This has been tested using `cargo make ready`, and by setting low timeouts to force failures in the voice receive example (with some additional error handlers).
Closes#68.
This is a simple organisational change which moves `crate::Bitrate` to `crate::driver::Bitrate` to slightly clean up the crate root.
This has been tested using `cargo make ready`.
This change fixes tasks hanging due to rare cases of messages being lost between full Discord reconnections by placing a configurable timeout on the `ConnectionInfo` responses. This is a companion fix to [serenity#1255](https://github.com/serenity-rs/serenity/pull/1255). To make this doable, `Config`s are now used by all versions of `Songbird`/`Call`, and relevant functions are added to simplify setup with configuration. These are now non-exhaustive, correcting an earlier oversight. For future extensibility, this PR moves the return type of `join`/`join_gateway` into a custom future (no longer leaking flume's `RecvFut` type).
Additionally, this fixes the Makefile's feature sets for driver/gateway-only compilation.
This is a breaking change in:
* the return types of `join`/`join_gateway`
* moving `crate::driver::Config` -> `crate::Config`,
* `Config` and `JoinError` becoming `#[non_breaking]`.
This was tested via `cargo make ready`, and by testing `examples/serenity/voice_receive` with various timeout settings.
* Driver Benchmarks
Benchmarks driver use cases for single packet send,
multiple packet send, float vs opus, and the cost of
head-of-queue track removal.
Mix costs for large packet counts are also included.
This is a prelude to the optimisations discussed in
#21.
* Typo in benchmark
* Place Opus packet directly into packet buffer
Cleans up some other logic surrounding this, too. Gets a 16.9% perf improvement on opus packet passthrough (sub 5us here).
* Better track removal
In theory this should be faster, but it aint. Keeping in case
reducing struct sizes down the line magically makes this
faster.
* Reduce size of Input, TrackHandle
Metadata is now boxed away. Similarly, TrackHandles are neatly Arc'd to reduce their size to pointer length (and mitigate the impact of copies if we add in more fields).
Main goal: a lot of nested future/result folding.
This mainly modifies error handling for Tracks and TrackHandles to be
more consistent, and hides the underlying channel result passing in
get_info. Errors returned should be far clearer, and are domain
specific rather than falling back to a very opaque use of the underlying
channel error. It should be clearer to users why their handle commands
failed, or why they can't make a ytdl track loop or similar.
Also fixed/cleaned up Songbird::join(_gateway) to return in a single
await, sparing the user from the underlying channel details and repeated
Errs. I was trying for some time to extend the same graces to `Call`,
but could not figure out a sane way to get a 'static version of the
first future in the chain (i.e., the gateway send) so that the whole
thing could happen after dropping the lock around the Call. I really
wanted to fix this to happen as a single folded await too, but I think
this might need some crazy hack or redesign.
Far cleaner and more reliable than the old doc-link pattern. Also allowed me to spot some event types and sources which should have been made non_exhaustive.
* Adds a uuid field to tracks and handles to make it easier to identify and match event sources after the fact.
* Adds optional feature "builtin-queue" to expose a queue on every driver, as a convenience for users who can guarantee they'll need a queue for every driver/call.
* Adds methods to queues to allow access to the currently running track handle, remove a specified queue entry, as well as to mutate the underlying queue from a closure.
This implements a proof-of-concept for an improved audio frontend. The largest change is the introduction of events and event handling: both by time elapsed and by track events, such as ending or looping. Following on from this, the library now includes a basic, event-driven track queue system (which people seem to ask for unusually often). A new sample, `examples/13_voice_events`, demonstrates both the `TrackQueue` system and some basic events via the `~queue` and `~play_fade` commands.
Locks are removed from around the control of `Audio` objects, which should allow the backend to be moved to a more granular futures-based backend solution in a cleaner way.