Mission Optimisation

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Revision as of 14:45, 17 October 2021 by R3vo (talk | contribs) (replaced static table with diag commands categories)
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This page is about Mission Optimisation. For scripting optimisation, see Code Optimisation.

Introduction

This article will try to be a general guide about improving your mission's performance.
As usual, moderation is the key; do not expect to find on this page a magical solution that makes it possible to run thousands of AI at 144 FPS. Everything comes at a cost, the tweaks here will simply allow you to locate issues and calibrate your mission properly.


Before anything

Before optimising anything, make sure you do not have any performance issue running the game itself:

  • Read Arma 3: Performance Optimisation
  • Open the editor, place a unit in the area you like and test your computer.
    • You can get current FPS in Arma 3 by going into video options or using diag_fps
    • Steam allows you to display FPS in a screen corner, in Settings > In game > FPS Counter
  • Use (unofficial) Performance Guides to get better performances:
  • Play your mission in singleplayer. If your mission runs fine, its network messages might very well be the issue. See Multiplayer Scripting for good practice tips.
  • Usual bottlenecks:
    • Lower your graphical settings (resolution, textures). If you get way better performances, at least your GPU limits you.
    • If the game keeps having low FPS when running @ 1024×768/low textures then your CPU is most likely the issue. Mission scripts may be performance-hogging too.
Please note that view distance (among other settings) impacts both GPU and CPU!
View distance can be separately set for each clients independently from the server's value through scripting.
This can make or break performance for the client.


Creating your mission


Performance impact table

means a heavy impact on performance
means an average impact
means little to no performance impact.
Topic CPU GPU Net-
work
Solution

AI unit quantity

  • Use Agents whenever possible
  • The more units there are, the more network updates there will be - hence the impact on both CPU and network.
  • If a client has a low-end machine, they shouldn't lead a group of many AIs as these would then be locally computed.
  • Arma 3: Dynamic Simulation allows you to freeze AI that are distant from players. Many distance settings should be set according to the mission.
If you own more than one average computer, you could consider Headless client to offload AI from the server.

Object quantity

The less objects, the more FPS you will have.
Only the on-screen objects will strongly impact GPU.

General script mistakes

Having too many scripts running is a cause for severe performance issues and execution delays in singleplayer as well as multiplayer.

High-frequency scripts

Checking a condition too often is usually a source of poor performance. Does your code execution need to be frame-perfect, or can you afford a delay of a few seconds?
  • A while-loop checking without a minimum loop-sleep time is usually a sign of bad conception.while { true } // bad if you don't know what you are doing
    while { alive player } // better
    while { sleep 1 ; alive player } // perfect
  • Triggers check their set condition every 0.5 second (hardcoded value). If a large area is covered or condition code is too complex, this can become an issue; the triggers should then be converted to scripts if possible.
  • Triggers can be made Server-Side only to save clients' resources.
All of the mission-related calculation (objectives, completion distance, etc.) must be done server-side. Local effects should be calculated client-side.

High-frequency network messages

  • Use publicVariable wisely; for specific cases, consider publicVariableServer / publicVariableClient
  • Creating units/vehicles globally implies a network synchronisation, keep them to a minimum / at one-point in the mission.
  • Keep global effect commands to a minimum:
    • e.g a setPos will synchronise the unit position to every client, a good practice is to use these commands punctually. If you need a frequent "set position" you may want to look at attachTo depending on your usage.
    • global marker commands always send all the marker's information. If you are creating/updating many markers e.g server-side, edit them with local commands, except the last one (that will be global) to send the whole marker's status over the network, once.
  • Lower client's view distance in order to lessen its object position update requests

Unscheduled code

Unscheduled code can have a high impact on the framerate, as such code is not subject to the scheduler's management (as its name suggests) and will run without limitation. Cyclic unscheduled low-performance code can make the game unplayable, up to freezing it.
  • As only time-critical scripts should run unscheduled, spawn any other code from unscheduled environment once you have the required results:(...) // unscheduled code
    [_var1, _var2] spawn TAG_fnc_MyFunction;
    (...) // other unscheduled code


What else?

If you have applied all these recommendations and your mission still doesn't run well in multiplayer (but does in singleplayer), it might be caused by mods that you are running which could be badly, or not at all, optimised.

If you want to be sure, run the same mission with and without mods. If you have a big difference in performance, look no further.


Performance Diagnostic tools

Server commands

  • #monitor 5
    • Shows performance information of the server. Interval 0 means to stop monitoring.
  • #monitords 5
    • Shows performance information in the dedicated server console. Interval 0 means to stop monitoring. (since Arma 3 v1.64)

Diagnostic commands

See also