TouhouLS/TouhouStation/Assets/Code/Photon/Plugins/Photon3Unity3D.xml

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2020-08-22 05:29:00 +00:00
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<doc>
<assembly>
<name>Photon3Unity3D</name>
</assembly>
<members>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Hashtable">
<summary>
This is a substitute for the Hashtable class, missing in: Win8RT and Windows Phone. It uses a Dictionary&lt;object,object&gt; as base.
</summary>
<remarks>
Please be aware that this class might act differently than the Hashtable equivalent.
As far as Photon is concerned, the substitution is sufficiently precise.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Hashtable.Clone">
<summary>
Creates a shallow copy of the Hashtable.
</summary>
<remarks>
A shallow copy of a collection copies only the elements of the collection, whether they are
reference types or value types, but it does not copy the objects that the references refer
to. The references in the new collection point to the same objects that the references in
the original collection point to.
</remarks>
<returns>Shallow copy of the Hashtable.</returns>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass">
<summary>
Contains several (more or less) useful static methods, mostly used for debugging.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.GetTickCount">
<summary>
Gets the local machine's "milliseconds since start" value (precision is described in remarks).
</summary>
<remarks>
This method uses Environment.TickCount (cheap but with only 16ms precision).
PhotonPeer.LocalMsTimestampDelegate is available to set the delegate (unless already connected).
</remarks>
<returns>Fraction of the current time in Milliseconds (this is not a proper datetime timestamp).</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.CallInBackground(System.Func{System.Boolean},System.Int32,System.String)">
<summary>
Creates a background thread that calls the passed function in 100ms intervals, as long as that returns true.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.StartBackgroundCalls(System.Func{System.Boolean},System.Int32,System.String)">
<summary>
Creates a background thread that calls the passed function in intervals, as long as that returns true.
</summary>
<param name="myThread">The function to call. Must return true, if it should be called again.</param>
<param name="millisecondsInterval">Milliseconds to sleep between calls of myThread. Default: 100ms.</param>
<param name="taskName">An optional name for the task for eased debugging.</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.StopBackgroundCalls(System.Byte)">
<summary>
Ends the thread with the given id (= index of the thread list).
</summary>
<param name="id">The unique ID of the thread.</param>
<returns>True if the thread is canceled and false otherwise, e.g. if the thread with the given ID does not exist.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.StopAllBackgroundCalls">
<summary>
Ends the thread with the given id (= index of the thread list).
</summary>
<param name="id">The unique ID of the thread.</param>
<returns>True if the thread is canceled and false otherwise, e.g. if the thread with the given ID does not exist.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.WriteStackTrace(System.Exception,System.IO.TextWriter)">
<summary>
Writes the exception's stack trace to the received stream.
</summary>
<param name="throwable">Exception to obtain information from.</param>
<param name="stream">Output sream used to write to.</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.WriteStackTrace(System.Exception)">
<summary>
Writes the exception's stack trace to the received stream. Writes to: System.Diagnostics.Debug.
</summary>
<param name="throwable">Exception to obtain information from.</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.DictionaryToString(System.Collections.IDictionary)">
<summary>
This method returns a string, representing the content of the given IDictionary.
Returns "null" if parameter is null.
</summary>
<param name="dictionary">
IDictionary to return as string.
</param>
<returns>
The string representation of keys and values in IDictionary.
</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.DictionaryToString(System.Collections.IDictionary,System.Boolean)">
<summary>
This method returns a string, representing the content of the given IDictionary.
Returns "null" if parameter is null.
</summary>
<param name="dictionary">IDictionary to return as string.</param>
<param name="includeTypes"> </param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.ByteArrayToString(System.Byte[])">
<summary>
Converts a byte-array to string (useful as debugging output).
Uses BitConverter.ToString(list) internally after a null-check of list.
</summary>
<param name="list">Byte-array to convert to string.</param>
<returns>
List of bytes as string.
</returns>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SupportClass.ThreadSafeRandom">
<summary>
Class to wrap static access to the random.Next() call in a thread safe manner.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EncryptorManaged.CryptoBase.BLOCK_SIZE">
<summary>
Defines block size for encryption/decryption algorithm
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EncryptorManaged.CryptoBase.IV_SIZE">
<summary>
Defines IV size for encryption/decryption algorithm
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EncryptorManaged.CryptoBase.HMAC_SIZE">
<summary>
Defines HMAC size for packet authentication algorithm
</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode">
<summary>
Enumeration of situations that change the peers internal status.
Used in calls to OnStatusChanged to inform your application of various situations that might happen.
</summary>
<remarks>
Most of these codes are referenced somewhere else in the documentation when they are relevant to methods.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.Connect">
<summary>the PhotonPeer is connected.<br/>See {@link PhotonListener#OnStatusChanged}*</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.Disconnect">
<summary>the PhotonPeer just disconnected.<br/>See {@link PhotonListener#OnStatusChanged}*</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.Exception">
<summary>the PhotonPeer encountered an exception and will disconnect, too.<br/>See {@link PhotonListener#OnStatusChanged}*</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.ExceptionOnConnect">
<summary>the PhotonPeer encountered an exception while opening the incoming connection to the server. The server could be down / not running or the client has no network or a misconfigured DNS.<br/>See {@link PhotonListener#OnStatusChanged}*</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.SecurityExceptionOnConnect">
<summary>Used on platforms that throw a security exception on connect. Unity3d does this, e.g., if a webplayer build could not fetch a policy-file from a remote server.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.QueueOutgoingReliableWarning">
<summary>PhotonPeer outgoing queue is filling up. send more often.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.QueueOutgoingUnreliableWarning">
<summary>PhotonPeer outgoing queue is filling up. send more often.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.SendError">
<summary>Sending command failed. Either not connected, or the requested channel is bigger than the number of initialized channels.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.QueueOutgoingAcksWarning">
<summary>PhotonPeer outgoing queue is filling up. send more often.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.QueueIncomingReliableWarning">
<summary>PhotonPeer incoming queue is filling up. Dispatch more often.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.QueueIncomingUnreliableWarning">
<summary>PhotonPeer incoming queue is filling up. Dispatch more often.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.QueueSentWarning">
<summary>PhotonPeer incoming queue is filling up. Dispatch more often.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.ExceptionOnReceive">
<summary>Exception, if a server cannot be connected. Most likely, the server is not responding. Ask user to try again later.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.TimeoutDisconnect">
<summary>Disconnection due to a timeout (client did no longer receive ACKs from server).</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.DisconnectByServer">
<summary>Disconnect by server due to timeout (received a disconnect command, cause server misses ACKs of client).</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.DisconnectByServerUserLimit">
<summary>Disconnect by server due to concurrent user limit reached (received a disconnect command).</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.DisconnectByServerLogic">
<summary>Disconnect by server due to server's logic (received a disconnect command).</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.EncryptionEstablished">
<summary>(1048) Value for OnStatusChanged()-call, when the encryption-setup for secure communication finished successfully.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode.EncryptionFailedToEstablish">
<summary>(1049) Value for OnStatusChanged()-call, when the encryption-setup failed for some reason. Check debug logs.</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonPeerListener">
<summary>
Callback interface for the Photon client side. Must be provided to a new PhotonPeer in its constructor.
</summary>
<remarks>
These methods are used by your PhotonPeer instance to keep your app updated. Read each method's
description and check out the samples to see how to use them.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonPeerListener.DebugReturn(ExitGames.Client.Photon.DebugLevel,System.String)">
<summary>
Provides textual descriptions for various error conditions and noteworthy situations.
In cases where the application needs to react, a call to OnStatusChanged is used.
OnStatusChanged gives "feedback" to the game, DebugReturn provies human readable messages
on the background.
</summary>
<remarks>
All debug output of the library will be reported through this method. Print it or put it in a
buffer to use it on-screen. Use PhotonPeer.DebugOut to select how verbose the output is.
</remarks>
<param name="level">DebugLevel (severity) of the message.</param>
<param name="message">Debug text. Print to System.Console or screen.</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonPeerListener.OnOperationResponse(ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationResponse)">
<summary>
Callback method which gives you (async) responses for called operations.
</summary>
<remarks>
Similar to method-calling, operations can have a result.
Because operation-calls are non-blocking and executed on the server, responses are provided
after a roundtrip as call to this method.
Example: Trying to create a room usually succeeds but can fail if the room's name is already
in use (room names are their IDs).
This method is used as general callback for all operations. Each response corresponds to a certain
&quot;type&quot; of operation by its OperationCode.
<para></para>
</remarks>
<example>
When you join a room, the server will assign a consecutive number to each client: the
&quot;actorNr&quot; or &quot;player number&quot;. This is sent back in the OperationResult's
Parameters as value of key <see cref="!:ParameterCode.ActorNr" />.<para></para>
Fetch your actorNr of a Join response like this:<para></para>
<c>int actorNr = (int)operationResponse[(byte)OperationCode.ActorNr];</c>
</example>
<param name="operationResponse">The response to an operation\-call.</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonPeerListener.OnStatusChanged(ExitGames.Client.Photon.StatusCode)">
<summary>
OnStatusChanged is called to let the game know when asyncronous actions finished or when errors happen.
</summary>
<remarks>
Not all of the many StatusCode values will apply to your game. Example: If you don't use encryption,
the respective status changes are never made.
The values are all part of the StatusCode enumeration and described value-by-value.
</remarks>
<param name="statusCode">A code to identify the situation.</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonPeerListener.OnEvent(ExitGames.Client.Photon.EventData)">
<summary>
Called whenever an event from the Photon Server is dispatched.
</summary>
<remarks>
Events are used for communication between clients and allow the server to update clients over time.
The creation of an event is often triggered by an operation (called by this client or an other).
Each event carries its specific content in its Parameters. Your application knows which content to
expect by checking the event's 'type', given by the event's Code.
Events can be defined and extended server-side.
If you use the LoadBalancing application as base, several events like EvJoin and EvLeave are already defined.
For these events and their Parameters, the library provides constants, so check the EventCode and ParameterCode
classes.
Photon also allows you to come up with custom events on the fly, purely client-side. To do so, use
OpRaiseEvent.<para></para>
Events are buffered on the client side and must be Dispatched. This way, OnEvent is always taking
place in the same thread as a <see cref="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.DispatchIncomingCommands" /> call.
</remarks>
<param name="eventData">The event currently being dispatched.</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StreamBuffer.Compact">
<summary>
The bytes between Position and Length are copied to the beginning of the buffer. Length decreased by Position. Position set to 0.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StreamBuffer.GetBufferAndAdvance(System.Int32,System.Int32@)">
<summary>
Brings StreamBuffer to the state as after writing of 'length' bytes. Returned buffer and offset can be used to actually fill "written" segment with data.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StreamBuffer.SetLength(System.Int64)">
<summary>
Sets stream length. If current position is greater than specified value, it's set to the value.
</summary>
<remarks>
SetLength(0) resets the stream to initial state but preserves underlying byte[] buffer.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.StreamBuffer.SetCapacityMinimum(System.Int32)">
<summary>
Guarantees that the buffer is at least neededSize bytes.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerStateValue">
<summary>
Value range for a Peer's connection and initialization state, as returned by the PeerState property.
</summary>
<remarks>
While this is not the same as the StatusCode of IPhotonPeerListener.OnStatusChanged(), it directly relates to it.
In most cases, it makes more sense to build a game's state on top of the OnStatusChanged() as you get changes.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerStateValue.Disconnected">
<summary>The peer is disconnected and can't call Operations. Call Connect().</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerStateValue.Connecting">
<summary>The peer is establishing the connection: opening a socket, exchanging packages with Photon.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerStateValue.InitializingApplication">
<summary>The connection is established and now sends the application name to Photon.</summary>
<remarks>You set the "application name" by calling PhotonPeer.Connect().</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerStateValue.Connected">
<summary>The peer is connected and initialized (selected an application). You can now use operations.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerStateValue.Disconnecting">
<summary>The peer is disconnecting. It sent a disconnect to the server, which will acknowledge closing the connection.</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.ConnectionProtocol">
<summary>
These are the options that can be used as underlying transport protocol.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.ConnectionProtocol.Udp">
<summary>Use UDP to connect to Photon, which allows you to send operations reliable or unreliable on demand.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.ConnectionProtocol.Tcp">
<summary>Use TCP to connect to Photon.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.ConnectionProtocol.WebSocket">
<summary>A TCP-based protocol commonly supported by browsers.For WebGL games mostly. Note: No WebSocket IPhotonSocket implementation is in this Assembly.</summary>
<remarks>This protocol is only available in Unity exports to WebGL.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.ConnectionProtocol.WebSocketSecure">
<summary>A TCP-based, encrypted protocol commonly supported by browsers. For WebGL games mostly. Note: No WebSocket IPhotonSocket implementation is in this Assembly.</summary>
<remarks>This protocol is only available in Unity exports to WebGL.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.DebugLevel">
<summary>
Level / amount of DebugReturn callbacks. Each debug level includes output for lower ones: OFF, ERROR, WARNING, INFO, ALL.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.DebugLevel.OFF">
<summary>No debug out.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.DebugLevel.ERROR">
<summary>Only error descriptions.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.DebugLevel.WARNING">
<summary>Warnings and errors.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.DebugLevel.INFO">
<summary>Information about internal workflows, warnings and errors.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.DebugLevel.ALL">
<summary>Most complete workflow description (but lots of debug output), info, warnings and errors.</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer">
<summary>
Instances of the PhotonPeer class are used to connect to a Photon server and communicate with it.
</summary>
<remarks>
A PhotonPeer instance allows communication with the Photon Server, which in turn distributes messages
to other PhotonPeer clients.<para></para>
An application can use more than one PhotonPeer instance, which are treated as separate users on the
server. Each should have its own listener instance, to separate the operations, callbacks and events.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.NoSocket">
<summary>False if this library build contains C# Socket code. If true, you must set some type as SocketImplementation before connecting.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.NativeDatagramEncrypt">
<summary>True, if this library needs a native Photon "Encryptor" plugin library for "Datagram Encryption". If false, this dll attempts to use managed encryption.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.DebugBuild">
<summary>True if the library was compiled with DEBUG setting.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.ClientSdkId">
<summary>A simplified identifier for client SDKs. Photon's APIs might modify this (as a dll can be used in more than one product). Helps debugging.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.ClientSdkIdShifted">
<summary>For the Init-request, we shift the ClientId by one and the last bit signals a "debug" (0) or "release" build (1).</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.AsyncKeyExchange">
<summary>Defines if Key Exchange for Encryption is done asynchronously in another thread.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.ClientVersion">
<summary>Version of this library as string.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.SerializationProtocolType">
<summary>Enables selection of a (Photon-)serialization protocol. Used in Connect methods.</summary>
<remarks>Defaults to SerializationProtocol.GpBinaryV16;</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.SocketImplementationConfig">
<summary>Defines which IPhotonSocket class to use per ConnectionProtocol.</summary>
<remarks>
Several platforms have special Socket implementations and slightly different APIs.
To accomodate this, switching the socket implementation for a network protocol was made available.
By default, UDP and TCP have socket implementations assigned.
You only need to set the SocketImplementationConfig once, after creating a PhotonPeer
and before connecting. If you switch the TransportProtocol, the correct implementation is being used.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.SocketImplementation">
<summary>
Can be used to read the IPhotonSocket implementation at runtime (before connecting).
</summary>
<remarks>
Use the SocketImplementationConfig to define which IPhotonSocket is used per ConnectionProtocol.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.DebugOut">
<summary>
Sets the level (and amount) of debug output provided by the library.
</summary>
<remarks>
This affects the callbacks to IPhotonPeerListener.DebugReturn.
Default Level: Error.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.Listener">
<summary>
Gets the IPhotonPeerListener of this instance (set in constructor).
Can be used in derived classes for Listener.DebugReturn().
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.BytesIn">
<summary>
Gets count of all bytes coming in (including headers, excluding UDP/TCP overhead)
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.BytesOut">
<summary>
Gets count of all bytes going out (including headers, excluding UDP/TCP overhead)
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.ByteCountCurrentDispatch">
<summary>
Gets the size of the dispatched event or operation-result in bytes.
This value is set before OnEvent() or OnOperationResponse() is called (within DispatchIncomingCommands()).
</summary>
<remarks>
Get this value directly in OnEvent() or OnOperationResponse(). Example:
void OnEvent(...) {
int eventSizeInBytes = this.peer.ByteCountCurrentDispatch;
//...
void OnOperationResponse(...) {
int resultSizeInBytes = this.peer.ByteCountCurrentDispatch;
//...
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.CommandInfoCurrentDispatch">
<summary>Returns the debug string of the event or operation-response currently being dispatched or string. Empty if none.</summary>
<remarks>In a release build of the lib, this will always be empty.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.ByteCountLastOperation">
<summary>
Gets the size of the last serialized operation call in bytes.
The value includes all headers for this single operation but excludes those of UDP, Enet Package Headers and TCP.
</summary>
<remarks>
Get this value immediately after calling an operation.
Example:
this.loadbalancingClient.OpJoinRoom("myroom");
int opjoinByteCount = this.loadbalancingClient.ByteCountLastOperation;
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.TrafficStatsIncoming">
<summary>
Gets the byte-count of incoming "low level" messages, which are either Enet Commands or Tcp Messages.
These include all headers, except those of the underlying internet protocol Udp or Tcp.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.TrafficStatsOutgoing">
<summary>
Gets the byte-count of outgoing "low level" messages, which are either Enet Commands or Tcp Messages.
These include all headers, except those of the underlying internet protocol Udp or Tcp.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.TrafficStatsGameLevel">
<summary>
Gets a statistic of incoming and outgoing traffic, split by operation, operation-result and event.
</summary>
<remarks>
Operations are outgoing traffic, results and events are incoming.
Includes the per-command header sizes (Udp: Enet Command Header or Tcp: Message Header).
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.TrafficStatsElapsedMs">
<summary>
Returns the count of milliseconds the stats are enabled for tracking.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.TrafficStatsEnabled">
<summary>
Enables or disables collection of statistics in TrafficStatsIncoming, TrafficStatsOutgoing and TrafficstatsGameLevel.
</summary>
<remarks>
Setting this to true, also starts the stopwatch to measure the timespan the stats are collected.
Enables the traffic statistics of a peer: TrafficStatsIncoming, TrafficStatsOutgoing and TrafficstatsGameLevel (nothing else).
Default value: false (disabled).
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.TrafficStatsReset">
<summary>
Creates new instances of TrafficStats and starts a new timer for those.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.CommandLogSize">
<summary>Size of CommandLog. Default is 0, no logging.</summary>
<remarks>
A bigger log is better for debugging but uses more memory.
Get the log as string via CommandLogToString.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.CommandLogToString">
<summary>Converts the CommandLog into a readable table-like string with summary.</summary>
<remarks>
Sent reliable commands begin with SND. Their acknowledgements with ACK.
ACKs list the reliable sequence number of the command they acknowledge (not their own).
Careful: This method should not be called frequently, as it's time- and memory-consuming to create the log.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.EnableServerTracing">
<summary>
Debugging option to tell the Photon Server to log all datagrams.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.QuickResendAttempts">
<summary>
Up to 4 resend attempts for a reliable command can be done in quick succession (after RTT+4*Variance).
</summary>
<remarks>
By default 0. Any later resend attempt will then double the time before the next resend.
Max value = 4;
Make sure to adjust SentCountAllowance to a slightly higher value, as more repeats will get done.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.PeerState">
<summary>
This is the (low level) state of the connection to the server of a PhotonPeer. Managed internally and read-only.
</summary>
<remarks>
Don't mix this up with the StatusCode provided in IPhotonListener.OnStatusChanged().
Applications should use the StatusCode of OnStatusChanged() to track their state, as
it also covers the higher level initialization between a client and Photon.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.PeerID">
<summary>
This peer's ID as assigned by the server or 0 if not using UDP. Will be 0xFFFF before the client connects.
</summary>
<remarks>Used for debugging only. This value is not useful in everyday Photon usage.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.CommandBufferSize">
<summary>
Initial size internal lists for incoming/outgoing commands (reliable and unreliable).
</summary>
<remarks>
This sets only the initial size. All lists simply grow in size as needed. This means that
incoming or outgoing commands can pile up and consume heap size if Service is not called
often enough to handle the messages in either direction.
Configure the WarningSize, to get callbacks when the lists reach a certain size.
UDP: Incoming and outgoing commands each have separate buffers for reliable and unreliable sending.
There are additional buffers for &quot;sent commands&quot; and &quot;ACKs&quot;.
TCP: Only two buffers exist: incoming and outgoing commands.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.RhttpMinConnections">
<summary> (default=2) minimum number of open connections </summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.RhttpMaxConnections">
<summary> (default=6) maximum number of open connections, should be > RhttpMinConnections </summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.LimitOfUnreliableCommands">
<summary>
Limits the queue of received unreliable commands within DispatchIncomingCommands before dispatching them.
This works only in UDP.
This limit is applied when you call DispatchIncomingCommands. If this client (already) received more than
LimitOfUnreliableCommands, it will throw away the older ones instead of dispatching them. This can produce
bigger gaps for unreliable commands but your client catches up faster.
</summary>
<remarks>
This can be useful when the client couldn't dispatch anything for some time (cause it was in a room but
loading a level).
If set to 20, the incoming unreliable queues are truncated to 20.
If 0, all received unreliable commands will be dispatched.
This is a "per channel" value, so each channel can hold up to LimitOfUnreliableCommands commands.
This value interacts with DispatchIncomingCommands: If that is called less often, more commands get skipped.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.QueuedIncomingCommands">
<summary>
Count of all currently received but not-yet-Dispatched reliable commands
(events and operation results) from all channels.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.QueuedOutgoingCommands">
<summary>
Count of all commands currently queued as outgoing, including all channels and reliable, unreliable.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.ChannelCount">
<summary>
Gets / sets the number of channels available in UDP connections with Photon.
Photon Channels are only supported for UDP.
The default ChannelCount is 2. Channel IDs start with 0 and 255 is a internal channel.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.CrcEnabled">
<summary>
While not connected, this controls if the next connection(s) should use a per-package CRC checksum.
</summary>
<remarks>
While turned on, the client and server will add a CRC checksum to every sent package.
The checksum enables both sides to detect and ignore packages that were corrupted during transfer.
Corrupted packages have the same impact as lost packages: They require a re-send, adding a delay
and could lead to timeouts.
Building the checksum has a low processing overhead but increases integrity of sent and received data.
Packages discarded due to failed CRC cecks are counted in PhotonPeer.PacketLossByCrc.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.PacketLossByCrc">
<summary>
Count of packages dropped due to failed CRC checks for this connection.
</summary>
<see cref="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.CrcEnabled"/>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.PacketLossByChallenge">
<summary>
Count of packages dropped due to wrong challenge for this connection.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.ResentReliableCommands">
<summary>
Count of commands that got repeated (due to local repeat-timing before an ACK was received).
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.WarningSize">
<summary>
The WarningSize was used test all message queues for congestion.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.SentCountAllowance">
<summary>
Number of send retries before a peer is considered lost/disconnected. Default: 7.
The initial timeout countdown of a command is calculated by the current roundTripTime + 4 * roundTripTimeVariance.
Please note that the timeout span until a command will be resent is not constant, but based on
the roundtrip time at the initial sending, which will be doubled with every failed retry.
DisconnectTimeout and SentCountAllowance are competing settings: either might trigger a disconnect on the
client first, depending on the values and Roundtrip Time.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.TimePingInterval">
<summary>
Sets the milliseconds without reliable command before a ping command (reliable) will be sent (Default: 1000ms).
The ping command is used to keep track of the connection in case the client does not send reliable commands
by itself.
A ping (or reliable commands) will update the RoundTripTime calculation.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.DisconnectTimeout">
<summary>
Milliseconds before an individual command must be ACKed by server - after this a timeout-disconnect is triggered.
DisconnectTimeout is not an exact value for a timeout. The exact timing of the timeout depends on the frequency
of Service() calls and commands that are sent with long roundtrip-times and variance are checked less often for
re-sending!
DisconnectTimeout and SentCountAllowance are competing settings: either might trigger a disconnect on the
client first, depending on the values and Roundtrip Time.
Default: 10000 ms.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.ServerTimeInMilliSeconds">
<summary>
Approximated Environment.TickCount value of server (while connected).
</summary>
<remarks>
UDP: The server's timestamp is automatically fetched after connecting (once). This is done
internally by a command which is acknowledged immediately by the server.
TCP: The server's timestamp fetched with each ping but set only after connecting (once).
The approximation will be off by +/- 10ms in most cases. Per peer/client and connection, the
offset will be constant (unless FetchServerTimestamp() is used). A constant offset should be
better to adjust for. Unfortunately there is no way to find out how much the local value
differs from the original.
The approximation adds RoundtripTime / 2 and uses this.LocalTimeInMilliSeconds to calculate
in-between values (this property returns a new value per tick).
The value sent by Photon equals Environment.TickCount in the logic layer.
</remarks>
<value>
0 until connected.
While connected, the value is an approximation of the server's current timestamp.
</value>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.ConnectionTime">
<summary>The internally used "per connection" time value, which is updated infrequently, when the library executes some connectio-related tasks.</summary>
<remarks>
This integer value is an infrequently updated value by design.
The lib internally sets the value when it sends outgoing commands or reads incoming packages.
This is based on SupportClass.GetTickCount() and an initial time value per (server) connection.
This value is also used in low level Enet commands as sent time and optional logging.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.LastSendAckTime">
<summary>The last ConnectionTime value, when some ACKs were sent out by this client.</summary>
<remarks>Only applicable to UDP connections.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.LastSendOutgoingTime">
<summary>The last ConnectionTime value, when SendOutgoingCommands actually checked outgoing queues to send them. Must be connected.</summary>
<remarks>Available for UDP and TCP connections.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.LocalTimeInMilliSeconds">
<summary>
Gets a local timestamp in milliseconds by calling SupportClass.GetTickCount().
See LocalMsTimestampDelegate.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.LocalMsTimestampDelegate">
<summary>
This setter for the (local-) timestamp delegate replaces the default Environment.TickCount with any equal function.
</summary>
<remarks>
About Environment.TickCount:
The value of this property is derived from the system timer and is stored as a 32-bit signed integer.
Consequently, if the system runs continuously, TickCount will increment from zero to Int32..::.MaxValue
for approximately 24.9 days, then jump to Int32..::.MinValue, which is a negative number, then increment
back to zero during the next 24.9 days.
</remarks>
<exception cref="T:System.Exception">Exception is thrown peer.PeerState is not PS_DISCONNECTED.</exception>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.RoundTripTime">
<summary>
Time until a reliable command is acknowledged by the server.
The value measures network latency and for UDP it includes the server's ACK-delay (setting in config).
In TCP, there is no ACK-delay, so the value is slightly lower (if you use default settings for Photon).
RoundTripTime is updated constantly. Every reliable command will contribute a fraction to this value.
This is also the approximate time until a raised event reaches another client or until an operation
result is available.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.RoundTripTimeVariance">
<summary>
Changes of the roundtriptime as variance value. Gives a hint about how much the time is changing.
</summary>
</member>
<!-- Badly formed XML comment ignored for member "P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.TimestampOfLastSocketReceive" -->
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.ServerAddress">
<summary>
The server address which was used in PhotonPeer.Connect() or null (before Connect() was called).
</summary>
<remarks>
The ServerAddress can only be changed for HTTP connections (to replace one that goes through a Loadbalancer with a direct URL).
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.UsedProtocol">
<summary>The protocol this peer is currently connected/connecting with (or 0).</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.TransportProtocol">
<summary>This is the transport protocol to be used for next connect (see remarks).</summary>
<remarks>The TransportProtocol can be changed anytime but it will not change the
currently active connection. Instead, TransportProtocol will be applied on next Connect.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.IsSimulationEnabled">
<summary>
Gets or sets the network simulation "enabled" setting.
Changing this value also locks this peer's sending and when setting false,
the internally used queues are executed (so setting to false can take some cycles).
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.NetworkSimulationSettings">
<summary>
Gets the settings for built-in Network Simulation for this peer instance
while IsSimulationEnabled will enable or disable them.
Once obtained, the settings can be modified by changing the properties.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.OutgoingStreamBufferSize">
<summary>
Defines the initial size of an internally used StreamBuffer for Tcp.
The StreamBuffer is used to aggregate operation into (less) send calls,
which uses less resoures.
</summary>
<remarks>
The size is not restricing the buffer and does not affect when poutgoing data is actually sent.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.MaximumTransferUnit">
<summary>
The Maximum Trasfer Unit (MTU) defines the (network-level) packet-content size that is
guaranteed to arrive at the server in one piece. The Photon Protocol uses this
size to split larger data into packets and for receive-buffers of packets.
</summary>
<remarks>
This value affects the Packet-content. The resulting UDP packages will have additional
headers that also count against the package size (so it's bigger than this limit in the end)
Setting this value while being connected is not allowed and will throw an Exception.
Minimum is 576. Huge values won't speed up connections in most cases!
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.IsEncryptionAvailable">
<summary>
This property is set internally, when OpExchangeKeysForEncryption successfully finished.
While it's true, encryption can be used for operations.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.IsSendingOnlyAcks">
<summary>
While true, the peer will not send any other commands except ACKs (used in UDP connections).
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.peerBase">
<summary>Implements the message-protocol, based on the underlying network protocol (udp, tcp, http).</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.#ctor(ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonPeerListener,ExitGames.Client.Photon.ConnectionProtocol)">
<summary>
Creates a new PhotonPeer instance to communicate with Photon and selects the transport protocol. We recommend UDP.
</summary>
<param name="listener">a IPhotonPeerListener implementation</param>
<param name="protocolType">Protocol to use to connect to Photon.</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.Connect(System.String,System.String)">
<summary>
Connects to a Photon server. This wraps up DNS name resolution, sending the AppId and establishing encryption.
</summary>
<remarks>
This method does a DNS lookup (if necessary) and connects to the given serverAddress.
The return value gives you feedback if the address has the correct format. If so, this
starts the process to establish the connection itself, which might take a few seconds.
When the connection is established, a callback to IPhotonPeerListener.OnStatusChanged
will be done. If the connection can't be established, despite having a valid address,
the OnStatusChanged is called with an error-value.
The applicationName defines the application logic to use server-side and it should match the name of
one of the apps in your server's config.
By default, the applicationName is "LoadBalancing" but there is also the "MmoDemo".
You can setup your own application and name it any way you like.
</remarks>
<param name="serverAddress">
Address of the Photon server. Format: ip:port (e.g. 127.0.0.1:5055) or hostname:port (e.g. localhost:5055)
</param>
<param name="applicationName">
The name of the application to use within Photon or the appId of PhotonCloud.
Should match a "Name" for an application, as setup in your PhotonServer.config.
</param>
<returns>
true if IP is available (DNS name is resolved) and server is being connected. false on error.
</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.Connect(System.String,System.String,System.Object)">
<summary>
Connects to a Photon server. This wraps up DNS name resolution, sending the AppId and establishing encryption.
</summary>
<remarks>
This method does a DNS lookup (if necessary) and connects to the given serverAddress.
The return value gives you feedback if the address has the correct format. If so, this
starts the process to establish the connection itself, which might take a few seconds.
When the connection is established, a callback to IPhotonPeerListener.OnStatusChanged
will be done. If the connection can't be established, despite having a valid address,
the OnStatusChanged is called with an error-value.
The applicationName defines the application logic to use server-side and it should match the name of
one of the apps in your server's config.
By default, the applicationName is "LoadBalancing" but there is also the "MmoDemo".
You can setup your own application and name it any way you like.
</remarks>
<param name="serverAddress">
Address of the Photon server. Format: ip:port (e.g. 127.0.0.1:5055) or hostname:port (e.g. localhost:5055)
</param>
<param name="applicationName">
The name of the application to use within Photon or the appId of PhotonCloud.
Should match a "Name" for an application, as setup in your PhotonServer.config.
</param>
<param name="custom">
Allows you to send some data, which may be used by server during peer creation
(e.g. as additional authentication info).
You can use any serializable data type of Photon.
Helpful for self-hosted solutions. Server will read this info on peer creation stage,
and may reject client without creating of peer if auth info is invalid.
</param>
<returns>
true if IP is available (DNS name is resolved) and server is being connected. false on error.
</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.Disconnect">
<summary>
This method initiates a mutual disconnect between this client and the server.
</summary>
<remarks>
Calling this method does not immediately close a connection. Disconnect lets the server
know that this client is no longer listening. For the server, this is a much faster way
to detect that the client is gone but it requires the client to send a few final messages.
On completion, OnStatusChanged is called with the StatusCode.Disconnect.
If the client is disconnected already or the connection thread is stopped, then there is no callback.
The default server logic will leave any joined game and trigger the respective event
(<see cref="!:EventCode.Leave" text="EventCode.Leave" />) for the remaining players.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.StopThread">
<summary>
This method immediately closes a connection (pure client side) and ends related listening Threads.
</summary>
<remarks>
Unlike Disconnect, this method will simply stop to listen to the server. Udp connections will timeout.
If the connections was open, this will trigger a callback to OnStatusChanged with code StatusCode.Disconnect.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.FetchServerTimestamp">
<summary>
This will fetch the server's timestamp and update the approximation for property ServerTimeInMilliseconds.
</summary>
<remarks>
The server time approximation will NOT become more accurate by repeated calls. Accuracy currently depends
on a single roundtrip which is done as fast as possible.
The command used for this is immediately acknowledged by the server. This makes sure the roundtrip time is
low and the timestamp + rountriptime / 2 is close to the original value.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.EstablishEncryption">
<summary>
This method creates a public key for this client and exchanges it with the server.
</summary>
<remarks>
Encryption is not instantly available but calls OnStatusChanged when it finishes.
Check for StatusCode EncryptionEstablished and EncryptionFailedToEstablish.
Calling this method sets IsEncryptionAvailable to false.
This method must be called before the "encrypt" parameter of OpCustom can be used.
</remarks>
<returns>If operation could be enqueued for sending</returns>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.PayloadEncryptionSecret">
<summary>PayloadEncryption Secret. Message payloads get encrypted with it individually and on demand.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.InitDatagramEncryption(System.Byte[],System.Byte[])">
<summary>
Initializes Datagram Encryption.
</summary>
<param name="encryptionSecret">secret used to chipher udp packets</param>
<param name="hmacSecret">secret used for authentication of udp packets</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.Service">
<summary>
This method excutes DispatchIncomingCommands and SendOutgoingCommands in your application Thread-context.
</summary>
<remarks>
The Photon client libraries are designed to fit easily into a game or application. The application
is in control of the context (thread) in which incoming events and responses are executed and has
full control of the creation of UDP/TCP packages.
Sending packages and dispatching received messages are two separate tasks. Service combines them
into one method at the cost of control. It calls DispatchIncomingCommands and SendOutgoingCommands.
Call this method regularly (2..20 times a second).
This will Dispatch ANY remaining buffered responses and events AND will send queued outgoing commands.
Fewer calls might be more effective if a device cannot send many packets per second, as multiple
operations might be combined into one package.
</remarks>
<example>
You could replace Service by:
while (DispatchIncomingCommands()); //Dispatch until everything is Dispatched...
SendOutgoingCommands(); //Send a UDP/TCP package with outgoing messages
</example>
<seealso cref="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.DispatchIncomingCommands"/>
<seealso cref="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.SendOutgoingCommands"/>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.SendOutgoingCommands">
<summary>
Creates and sends a UDP/TCP package with outgoing commands (operations and acknowledgements). Also called by Service().
</summary>
<remarks>
As the Photon library does not create any UDP/TCP packages by itself. Instead, the application
fully controls how many packages are sent and when. A tradeoff, an application will
lose connection, if it is no longer calling SendOutgoingCommands or Service.
If multiple operations and ACKs are waiting to be sent, they will be aggregated into one
package. The package fills in this order:
ACKs for received commands
A "Ping" - only if no reliable data was sent for a while
Starting with the lowest Channel-Nr:
Reliable Commands in channel
Unreliable Commands in channel
This gives a higher priority to lower channels.
A longer interval between sends will lower the overhead per sent operation but
increase the internal delay (which adds "lag").
Call this 2..20 times per second (depending on your target platform).
</remarks>
<returns>The if commands are not yet sent. Udp limits it's package size, Tcp doesnt.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.DispatchIncomingCommands">
<summary>
Dispatching received messages (commands), causes callbacks for events, responses and state changes within a IPhotonPeerListener.
</summary>
<remarks>
DispatchIncomingCommands only executes a single received
command per call. If a command was dispatched, the return value is true and the method
should be called again.
This method is called by Service() until currently available commands are dispatched.
In general, this method should be called until it returns false. In a few cases, it might
make sense to pause dispatching (if a certain state is reached and the app needs to load
data, before it should handle new events).
The callbacks to the peer's IPhotonPeerListener are executed in the same thread that is
calling DispatchIncomingCommands. This makes things easier in a game loop: Event execution
won't clash with painting objects or the game logic.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.VitalStatsToString(System.Boolean)">
<summary>
Returns a string of the most interesting connection statistics.
When you have issues on the client side, these might contain hints about the issue's cause.
</summary>
<param name="all">If true, Incoming and Outgoing low-level stats are included in the string.</param>
<returns>Stats as string.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.OpCustom(System.Byte,System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary{System.Byte,System.Object},System.Boolean)">
<summary>
Channel-less wrapper for OpCustom().
</summary>
<param name="customOpCode">Operations are handled by their byte\-typed code.
The codes of the &quot;LoadBalancong&quot; application are in the class <see cref="!:LoadBalancing.OperationCode" />.</param>
<param name="customOpParameters">Containing parameters as key\-value pair. The key is byte\-typed, while the value is any serializable datatype.</param>
<param name="sendReliable">Selects if the operation must be acknowledged or not. If false, the
operation is not guaranteed to reach the server.</param>
<returns>If operation could be enqueued for sending</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.OpCustom(System.Byte,System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary{System.Byte,System.Object},System.Boolean,System.Byte)">
<summary>
Allows the client to send any operation to the Photon Server by setting any opCode and the operation's parameters.
</summary>
<remarks></remarks>
Photon can be extended with new operations which are identified by a single
byte, defined server side and known as operation code (opCode). Similarly, the operation's parameters
are defined server side as byte keys of values, which a client sends as customOpParameters
accordingly.<para></para>
<param name="customOpCode">Operations are handled by their byte\-typed code. The codes of the
&quot;LoadBalancing&quot; application are in the class <see cref="!:ExitGames.Client.Photon.LoadBalancing.OperationCode" />.</param>
<param name="customOpParameters">Containing parameters as key\-value pair. The key is byte\-typed, while the value is any serializable datatype.</param>
<param name="sendReliable">Selects if the operation must be acknowledged or not. If false, the
operation is not guaranteed to reach the server.</param>
<param name="channelId">The channel in which this operation should be sent.</param>
<returns>If operation could be enqueued for sending</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.OpCustom(System.Byte,System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary{System.Byte,System.Object},System.Boolean,System.Byte,System.Boolean)">
<summary>
Allows the client to send any operation to the Photon Server by setting any opCode and the operation's parameters.
</summary>
<summary>
Variant with encryption parameter.
Use this only after encryption was established by EstablishEncryption and waiting for the OnStateChanged callback.
</summary>
<param name="customOpCode">Operations are handled by their byte\-typed code. The codes of the
&quot;LoadBalancing&quot; application are in the class <see cref="!:ExitGames.Client.Photon.LoadBalancing.OperationCode" />.</param>
<param name="customOpParameters">Containing parameters as key\-value pair. The key is byte\-typed, while the value is any serializable datatype.</param>
<param name="sendReliable">Selects if the operation must be acknowledged or not. If false, the
operation is not guaranteed to reach the server.</param>
<param name="channelId">The channel in which this operation should be sent.</param>
<param name="encrypt">Can only be true, while IsEncryptionAvailable is true, too.</param>
<returns>If operation could be enqueued for sending</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.OpCustom(ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationRequest,System.Boolean,System.Byte,System.Boolean)">
<summary>
Allows the client to send any operation to the Photon Server by setting any opCode and the operation's parameters.
</summary>
<remarks>
Variant with an OperationRequest object.
This variant offers an alternative way to describe a operation request. Operation code and it's parameters
are wrapped up in a object. Still, the parameters are a Dictionary.
</remarks>
<param name="operationRequest">The operation to call on Photon.</param>
<param name="sendReliable">Use unreliable (false) if the call might get lost (when it's content is soon outdated).</param>
<param name="channelId">Defines the sequence of requests this operation belongs to.</param>
<param name="encrypt">Encrypt request before sending. Depends on IsEncryptionAvailable.</param>
<returns>If operation could be enqueued for sending</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonPeer.RegisterType(System.Type,System.Byte,ExitGames.Client.Photon.SerializeMethod,ExitGames.Client.Photon.DeserializeMethod)">
<summary>
Registers new types/classes for de/serialization and the fitting methods to call for this type.
</summary>
<remarks>
SerializeMethod and DeserializeMethod are complementary: Feed the product of serializeMethod to
the constructor, to get a comparable instance of the object.
After registering a Type, it can be used in events and operations and will be serialized like
built-in types.
</remarks>
<param name="customType">Type (class) to register.</param>
<param name="code">A byte-code used as shortcut during transfer of this Type.</param>
<param name="serializeMethod">Method delegate to create a byte[] from a customType instance.</param>
<param name="constructor">Method delegate to create instances of customType's from byte[].</param>
<returns>If the Type was registered successfully.</returns>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonCodes.ClientKey">
<summary>Param code. Used in internal op: InitEncryption.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonCodes.ModeKey">
<summary>Encryption-Mode code. Used in internal op: InitEncryption.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonCodes.ServerKey">
<summary>Param code. Used in internal op: InitEncryption.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonCodes.InitEncryption">
<summary>Code of internal op: InitEncryption.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonCodes.Ping">
<summary>TODO: Code of internal op: Ping (used in PUN binary websockets).</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PhotonCodes.Ok">
<summary>Result code for any (internal) operation.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ServerAddress">
<summary>The server's address, as set by a Connect() call, including any protocol, ports and or path.</summary>
<remarks>If rHTTP is used, this can be set directly.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ByteCountLastOperation">
<summary>Byte count of last sent operation (set during serialization).</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ByteCountCurrentDispatch">
<summary>Byte count of last dispatched message (set during dispatch/deserialization).</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.CommandInCurrentDispatch">
<summary>The command that's currently being dispatched.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.TrafficPackageHeaderSize">
<summary>EnetPeer will set this value, so trafficstats can use it. TCP has 0 bytes per package extra</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.TrafficStatsEnabled">
<summary>See PhotonPeer value.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.TrafficStatsIncoming">
<summary>See PhotonPeer value.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.TrafficStatsOutgoing">
<summary>See PhotonPeer value.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.TrafficStatsGameLevel">
<summary>See PhotonPeer value.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.peerID">
This ID is assigned by the Realtime Server upon connection.
The application does not have to care about this, but it is useful in debugging.
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.peerConnectionState">
<summary>
This is the (low level) connection state of the peer. It's internal and based on eNet's states.
</summary>
<remarks>Applications can read the "high level" state as PhotonPeer.PeerState, which uses a different enum.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.serverTimeOffset">
<summary>
The serverTimeOffset is serverTimestamp - localTime. Used to approximate the serverTimestamp with help of localTime
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.NetworkSimulationSettings">
<summary>
Gets the currently used settings for the built-in network simulation.
Please check the description of NetworkSimulationSet for more details.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.CommandLogSize">
<summary>Size of CommandLog. Default is 0, no logging.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.CommandLog">
<summary>Log of sent reliable commands and incoming ACKs.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.InReliableLog">
<summary>Log of incoming reliable commands, used to track which commands from the server this client got. Part of the PhotonPeer.CommandLogToString() result.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.CommandLogResize">
<summary>Reduce CommandLog to CommandLogSize. Oldest entries get discarded.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.CommandLogInit">
<summary>Initializes the CommandLog and InReliableLog according to CommandLogSize. A value of 0 will set both logs to 0.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.CommandLogToString">
<summary>Converts the CommandLog into a readable table-like string with summary.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.BytesOut">
<summary>
Count of all bytes going out (including headers)
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.BytesIn">
<summary>
Count of all bytes coming in (including headers)
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.CustomInitData">
<summary>Set via Connect(..., customObject) and sent in Init-Request.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.AppId">
<summary>Temporary cache of AppId. Used in Connect() to keep the AppId until we send the Init-Request (after the network-level (and Enet) connect).</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ConnectionStateValue">
<summary>
This is the replacement for the const values used in eNet like: PS_DISCONNECTED, PS_CONNECTED, etc.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ConnectionStateValue.Disconnected">
<summary>No connection is available. Use connect.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ConnectionStateValue.Connecting">
<summary>Establishing a connection already. The app should wait for a status callback.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ConnectionStateValue.Connected">
<summary>
The low level connection with Photon is established. On connect, the library will automatically
send an Init package to select the application it connects to (see also PhotonPeer.Connect()).
When the Init is done, IPhotonPeerListener.OnStatusChanged() is called with connect.
</summary>
<remarks>Please note that calling operations is only possible after the OnStatusChanged() with StatusCode.Connect.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ConnectionStateValue.Disconnecting">
<summary>Connection going to be ended. Wait for status callback.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ConnectionStateValue.AcknowledgingDisconnect">
<summary>Acknowledging a disconnect from Photon. Wait for status callback.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ConnectionStateValue.Zombie">
<summary>Connection not properly disconnected.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.timeLastSendOutgoing">
<summary>Set to timeInt, whenever SendOutgoingCommands actually checks outgoing queues to send them. Must be connected.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.Connect(System.String,System.String,System.Object)">
<summary>Connect to server and send Init (which inlcudes the appId).</summary>
<remarks>If customData is not null, the new init will be used (http-based).</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.IsIpv6">
<summary>If IPhotonSocket.Connected is true, this value shows if the server's address resolved as IPv6 address.</summary>
<remarks>
You must check the socket's IsConnected state. Otherwise, this value is not initialized.
Sent to server in Init-Request.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.SetInitIPV6Bit(System.Boolean)">
<summary>Must be called by a IPhotonSocket when it connected to set IsIpv6.</summary>
<param name="isV6">The new value of IsIpv6.</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.PrepareConnectData(System.String,System.String,System.Object)">
<summary>
</summary>
<param name="serverAddress"></param>
<param name="appID"></param>
<param name="custom"></param>
<returns></returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.DispatchIncomingCommands">
<summary>
Checks the incoming queue and Dispatches received data if possible.
</summary>
<returns>If a Dispatch happened or not, which shows if more Dispatches might be needed.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.SendOutgoingCommands">
<summary>
Checks outgoing queues for commands to send and puts them on their way.
This creates one package per go in UDP.
</summary>
<returns>If commands are not sent, cause they didn't fit into the package that's sent.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.SerializeMessageToMessage(System.Object,System.Boolean,System.Byte[],System.Boolean)">
<summary> Returns the UDP Payload starting with Magic Number for binary protocol </summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.mtu">
<summary> Maximum Transfer Unit to be used for UDP+TCP</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.rhttpMinConnections">
<summary> (default=2) Rhttp: minimum number of open connections </summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.rhttpMaxConnections">
<summary> (default=6) Rhttp: maximum number of open connections, should be &gt; rhttpMinConnections </summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.ExchangeKeysForEncryption(System.Object)">
<summary>
Internally uses an operation to exchange encryption keys with the server.
</summary>
<returns>If the op could be sent.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.NetworkSimRun">
<summary>
Core of the Network Simulation, which is available in Debug builds.
Called by a timer in intervals.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.sentReliableCommands">
<summary>One list for all channels keeps sent commands (for re-sending).</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.outgoingAcknowledgementsPool">
<summary>One pool of ACK byte arrays ( 20 bytes each) for all channels to keep acknowledgements.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.datagramEncryptedConnection">
<summary>Gets enabled by "request" from server (not by client).</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.PeerIdForConnect">
<summary>Initial PeerId as used in Connect command. If EnableServerTracing is false.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.PeerIdForConnectTrace">
<summary>Initial PeerId to enable Photon Tracing, as used in Connect command. See: EnableServerTracing.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.DispatchIncomingCommands">
<summary>
Checks the incoming queue and Dispatches received data if possible.
</summary>
<returns>If a Dispatch happened or not, which shows if more Dispatches might be needed.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.SendAcksOnly">
<summary>
gathers acks until udp-packet is full and sends it!
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.SendOutgoingCommands">
<summary>
gathers commands from all (out)queues until udp-packet is full and sends it!
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.AreReliableCommandsInTransit">
<summary>
Checks if any channel has a outgoing reliable command.
</summary>
<returns>True if any channel has a outgoing reliable command. False otherwise.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.EnqueueOperation(System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary{System.Byte,System.Object},System.Byte,System.Boolean,System.Byte,System.Boolean,ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.EgMessageType)">
<summary>
Checks connected state and channel before operation is serialized and enqueued for sending.
</summary>
<param name="parameters">operation parameters</param>
<param name="opCode">code of operation</param>
<param name="sendReliable">send as reliable command</param>
<param name="channelId">channel (sequence) for command</param>
<param name="encrypt">encrypt or not</param>
<param name="messageType">usually EgMessageType.Operation</param>
<returns>if operation could be enqueued</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.CreateAndEnqueueCommand(System.Byte,System.Byte[],System.Byte)">
<summary>reliable-udp-level function to send some byte[] to the server via un/reliable command</summary>
<remarks>only called when a custom operation should be send</remarks>
<param name="commandType">(enet) command type</param>
<param name="payload">data to carry (operation)</param>
<param name="channelNumber">channel in which to send</param>
<returns>the invocation ID for this operation (the payload)</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.SerializeOperationToMessage(System.Byte,System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary{System.Byte,System.Object},ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.EgMessageType,System.Boolean)">
<summary>Serializes an operation into our binary messages (magic number, msg-type byte and message). Optionally encrypts.</summary>
<remarks>This method is mostly the same in EnetPeer, TPeer and HttpPeerBase. Also, for raw messages, we have another variant.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.ReceiveIncomingCommands(System.Byte[],System.Int32)">
<summary>reads incoming udp-packages to create and queue incoming commands*</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.QueueIncomingCommand(ExitGames.Client.Photon.NCommand)">
<summary>queues incoming commands in the correct order as either unreliable, reliable or unsequenced. return value determines if the command is queued / done.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer.RemoveSentReliableCommand(System.Int32,System.Int32)">
<summary>removes commands which are acknowledged*</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NCommand">
<summary> Internal class for "commands" - the package in which operations are sent.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NCommand.#ctor(ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer,System.Byte,System.Byte[],System.Byte)">
<summary>this variant does only create outgoing commands and increments . incoming ones are created from a DataInputStream</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NCommand.CreateAck(System.Byte[],System.Int32,ExitGames.Client.Photon.NCommand,System.Int32)">
<summary>
ACKs should never be created as NCommand. use CreateACK to wrtie the serialized ACK right away...
</summary>
<param name="buffer"></param>
<param name="offset"></param>
<param name="commandToAck"></param>
<param name="sentTime"></param>
<returns></returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NCommand.#ctor(ExitGames.Client.Photon.EnetPeer,System.Byte[],System.Int32@)">
<summary>reads the command values (commandHeader and command-values) from incoming bytestream and populates the incoming command*</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.TCP_HEADER_BYTES">
<summary>TCP "Package" header: 7 bytes</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.MSG_HEADER_BYTES">
<summary>TCP "Message" header: 2 bytes</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.ALL_HEADER_BYTES">
<summary>TCP header combined: 9 bytes</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.DoFraming">
<summary>Defines if the (TCP) socket implementation needs to do "framing".</summary>
<remarks>The WebSocket protocol (e.g.) includes framing, so when that is used, we set DoFraming to false.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.DispatchIncomingCommands">
<summary>
Checks the incoming queue and Dispatches received data if possible. Returns if a Dispatch happened or
not, which shows if more Dispatches might be needed.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.SendOutgoingCommands">
<summary>
gathers commands from all (out)queues until udp-packet is full and sends it!
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.SendAcksOnly">
<summary>Sends a ping in intervals to keep connection alive (server will timeout connection if nothing is sent).</summary>
<returns>Always false in this case (local queues are ignored. true would be: "call again to send remaining data").</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.SerializeOperationToMessage(System.Byte,System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary{System.Byte,System.Object},ExitGames.Client.Photon.PeerBase.EgMessageType,System.Boolean)">
<summary>Serializes an operation into our binary messages (magic number, msg-type byte and message). Optionally encrypts.</summary>
<remarks>This method is mostly the same in EnetPeer, TPeer and HttpPeerBase. Also, for raw messages, we have another variant.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.EnqueueMessageAsPayload(System.Boolean,System.Byte[],System.Byte)">
<summary>enqueues serialized operations to be sent as tcp stream / package</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.SendPing">
<summary>Sends a ping and modifies this.lastPingResult to avoid another ping for a while.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TPeer.ReceiveIncomingCommands(System.Byte[],System.Int32)">
<summary>reads incoming tcp-packages to create and queue incoming commands*</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IProtocol.Serialize(System.Object)">
<summary>
Serialize creates a byte-array from the given object and returns it.
</summary>
<param name="obj">The object to serialize</param>
<returns>The serialized byte-array</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IProtocol.Deserialize(ExitGames.Client.Photon.StreamBuffer)">
<summary>
Deserialize returns an object reassembled from the given StreamBuffer.
</summary>
<param name="stream">The buffer to be Deserialized</param>
<returns>The Deserialized object</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IProtocol.Deserialize(System.Byte[])">
<summary>
Deserialize returns an object reassembled from the given byte-array.
</summary>
<param name="serializedData">The byte-array to be Deserialized</param>
<returns>The Deserialized object</returns>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationRequest">
<summary>
Container for an Operation request, which is a code and parameters.
</summary>
<remarks>
On the lowest level, Photon only allows byte-typed keys for operation parameters.
The values of each such parameter can be any serializable datatype: byte, int, hashtable and many more.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationRequest.OperationCode">
<summary>Byte-typed code for an operation - the short identifier for the server's method to call.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationRequest.Parameters">
<summary>The parameters of the operation - each identified by a byte-typed code in Photon.</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationResponse">
<summary>
Contains the server's response for an operation called by this peer.
The indexer of this class actually provides access to the Parameters Dictionary.
</summary>
<remarks>
The OperationCode defines the type of operation called on Photon and in turn also the Parameters that
are set in the request. Those are provided as Dictionary with byte-keys.
There are pre-defined constants for various codes defined in the LoadBalancing application.
Check: OperationCode, ParameterCode, etc.
<para></para>
An operation's request is summarized by the ReturnCode: a short typed code for &quot;Ok&quot; or
some different result. The code's meaning is specific per operation. An optional DebugMessage can be
provided to simplify debugging.
<para></para>
Each call of an operation gets an ID, called the &quot;invocID&quot;. This can be matched to the IDs
returned with any operation calls. This way, an application could track if a certain OpRaiseEvent
call was successful.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationResponse.OperationCode">
<summary>The code for the operation called initially (by this peer).</summary>
<remarks>Use enums or constants to be able to handle those codes, like OperationCode does.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationResponse.ReturnCode">
<summary>A code that &quot;summarizes&quot; the operation's success or failure. Specific per operation. 0 usually means "ok".</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationResponse.DebugMessage">
<summary>An optional string sent by the server to provide readable feedback in error-cases. Might be null.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationResponse.Parameters">
<summary>A Dictionary of values returned by an operation, using byte-typed keys per value.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationResponse.Item(System.Byte)">
<summary>
Alternative access to the Parameters, which wraps up a TryGetValue() call on the Parameters Dictionary.
</summary>
<param name="parameterCode">The byte-code of a returned value.</param>
<returns>The value returned by the server, or null if the key does not exist in Parameters.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationResponse.ToString">
<summary>ToString() override.</summary>
<returns>Relatively short output of OpCode and returnCode.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.OperationResponse.ToStringFull">
<summary>Extensive output of operation results.</summary>
<returns>To be used in debug situations only, as it returns a string for each value.</returns>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EventData">
<summary>
Contains all components of a Photon Event.
Event Parameters, like OperationRequests and OperationResults, consist of a Dictionary with byte-typed keys per value.
</summary>
<remarks>
The indexer of this class provides access to the Parameters Dictionary.
The operation RaiseEvent allows you to provide custom event content. Defined in LoadBalancing, this
CustomContent will be made the value of key ParameterCode.CustomEventContent.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EventData.Code">
<summary>The event code identifies the type of event.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EventData.Parameters">
<summary>The Parameters of an event is a Dictionary&lt;byte, object&gt;.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EventData.Item(System.Byte)">
<summary>
Alternative access to the Parameters.
</summary>
<param name="key">The key byte-code of a event value.</param>
<returns>The Parameters value, or null if the key does not exist in Parameters.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EventData.ToString">
<summary>ToString() override.</summary>
<returns>Short output of "Event" and it's Code.</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.EventData.ToStringFull">
<summary>Extensive output of the event content.</summary>
<returns>To be used in debug situations only, as it returns a string for each value.</returns>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SerializeMethod">
<summary>
Type of serialization methods to add custom type support.
Use PhotonPeer.ReisterType() to register new types with serialization and deserialization methods.
</summary>
<param name="customObject">The method will get objects passed that were registered with it in RegisterType().</param>
<returns>Return a byte[] that resembles the object passed in. The framework will surround it with length and type info, so don't include it.</returns>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.DeserializeMethod">
<summary>
Type of deserialization methods to add custom type support.
Use PhotonPeer.RegisterType() to register new types with serialization and deserialization methods.
</summary>
<param name="serializedCustomObject">The framwork passes in the data it got by the associated SerializeMethod. The type code and length are stripped and applied before a DeserializeMethod is called.</param>
<returns>Return a object of the type that was associated with this method through RegisterType().</returns>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol">
<summary>
Provides tools for the Exit Games Protocol
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol.Serialize(System.Object)">
<summary>
Serialize creates a byte-array from the given object and returns it.
</summary>
<param name="obj">The object to serialize</param>
<returns>The serialized byte-array</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol.Deserialize(System.Byte[])">
<summary>
Deserialize returns an object reassembled from the given byte-array.
</summary>
<param name="serializedData">The byte-array to be Deserialized</param>
<returns>The Deserialized object</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol.Serialize(System.Int16,System.Byte[],System.Int32@)">
<summary>
Serializes a short typed value into a byte-array (target) starting at the also given targetOffset.
The altered offset is known to the caller, because it is given via a referenced parameter.
</summary>
<param name="value">The short value to be serialized</param>
<param name="target">The byte-array to serialize the short to</param>
<param name="targetOffset">The offset in the byte-array</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol.Serialize(System.Int32,System.Byte[],System.Int32@)">
<summary>
Serializes an int typed value into a byte-array (target) starting at the also given targetOffset.
The altered offset is known to the caller, because it is given via a referenced parameter.
</summary>
<param name="value">The int value to be serialized</param>
<param name="target">The byte-array to serialize the short to</param>
<param name="targetOffset">The offset in the byte-array</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol.Serialize(System.Single,System.Byte[],System.Int32@)">
<summary>
Serializes an float typed value into a byte-array (target) starting at the also given targetOffset.
The altered offset is known to the caller, because it is given via a referenced parameter.
</summary>
<param name="value">The float value to be serialized</param>
<param name="target">The byte-array to serialize the short to</param>
<param name="targetOffset">The offset in the byte-array</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol.Deserialize(System.Int32@,System.Byte[],System.Int32@)">
<summary>
Deserialize fills the given int typed value with the given byte-array (source) starting at the also given offset.
The result is placed in a variable (value). There is no need to return a value because the parameter value is given by reference.
The altered offset is this way also known to the caller.
</summary>
<param name="value">The int value to deserialize into</param>
<param name="source">The byte-array to deserialize from</param>
<param name="offset">The offset in the byte-array</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol.Deserialize(System.Int16@,System.Byte[],System.Int32@)">
<summary>
Deserialize fills the given short typed value with the given byte-array (source) starting at the also given offset.
The result is placed in a variable (value). There is no need to return a value because the parameter value is given by reference.
The altered offset is this way also known to the caller.
</summary>
<param name="value">The short value to deserialized into</param>
<param name="source">The byte-array to deserialize from</param>
<param name="offset">The offset in the byte-array</param>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol.Deserialize(System.Single@,System.Byte[],System.Int32@)">
<summary>
Deserialize fills the given float typed value with the given byte-array (source) starting at the also given offset.
The result is placed in a variable (value). There is no need to return a value because the parameter value is given by reference.
The altered offset is this way also known to the caller.
</summary>
<param name="value">The float value to deserialize</param>
<param name="source">The byte-array to deserialize from</param>
<param name="offset">The offset in the byte-array</param>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16">
<summary>
Exit Games GpBinaryV16 protocol implementation
</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType">
<summary>
The gp type.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Unknown">
<summary>
Unkown type.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Array">
<summary>
An array of objects.
</summary>
<remarks>
This type is new in version 1.5.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Boolean">
<summary>
A boolean Value.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Byte">
<summary>
A byte value.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.ByteArray">
<summary>
An array of bytes.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.ObjectArray">
<summary>
An array of objects.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Short">
<summary>
A 16-bit integer value.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Float">
<summary>
A 32-bit floating-point value.
</summary>
<remarks>
This type is new in version 1.5.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Dictionary">
<summary>
A dictionary
</summary>
<remarks>
This type is new in version 1.6.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Double">
<summary>
A 64-bit floating-point value.
</summary>
<remarks>
This type is new in version 1.5.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Hashtable">
<summary>
A Hashtable.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Integer">
<summary>
A 32-bit integer value.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.IntegerArray">
<summary>
An array of 32-bit integer values.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Long">
<summary>
A 64-bit integer value.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.String">
<summary>
A string value.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.StringArray">
<summary>
An array of string values.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Custom">
<summary>
A custom type. 0x63
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.GpType.Null">
<summary>
Null value don't have types.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.Serialize(ExitGames.Client.Photon.StreamBuffer,System.Object,System.Boolean)">
<summary>
Calls the correct serialization method for the passed object.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.Protocol16.DeserializeInteger(ExitGames.Client.Photon.StreamBuffer)">
<summary>
DeserializeInteger returns an Integer typed value from the given stream.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PingMono">
<summary>Uses C# Socket class from System.Net.Sockets (as Unity usually does).</summary>
<remarks>Incompatible with Windows 8 Store/Phone API.</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.PingMono.StartPing(System.String)">
<summary>
Sends a "Photon Ping" to a server.
</summary>
<param name="ip">Address in IPv4 or IPv6 format. An address containing a '.' will be interpretet as IPv4.</param>
<returns>True if the Photon Ping could be sent.</returns>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonSocket.Protocol">
<summary>The protocol for this socket, defined in constructor.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonSocket.ConnectAddress">
<summary>Address, as defined via a Connect() call. Including protocol, port and or path.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonSocket.ServerAddress">
<summary>Contains only the server's hostname (stripped protocol, port and or path). Set in IphotonSocket.Connect().</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonSocket.ServerPort">
<summary>Contains only the server's port address (as string). Set in IphotonSocket.Connect().</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonSocket.AddressResolvedAsIpv6">
<summary>Where available, this exposes if the server's address was resolved into an IPv6 address or not.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonSocket.TryParseAddress(System.String,System.String@,System.UInt16@,System.String@,System.String@)">
<summary>
Separates the given address into address (host name or IP) and port. Port must be included after colon!
</summary>
<remarks>
This method expects any address to include a port. The final ':' in addressAndPort has to separate it.
IPv6 addresses have multiple colons and <b>must use brackets</b> to separate address from port.
Examples:
ns.exitgames.com:5058
http://[2001:db8:1f70::999:de8:7648:6e8]:100/
[2001:db8:1f70::999:de8:7648:6e8]:100
See:
http://serverfault.com/questions/205793/how-can-one-distinguish-the-host-and-the-port-in-an-ipv6-url
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonSocket.IsIpv6SimpleCheck(System.Net.IPAddress)">
<summary>Implements a (very) simple test if a (valid) IPAddress is IPv6 by testing for colons (:).</summary>
<remarks>The reason we use this, is that some DotNet platforms don't provide (or allow usage of) the System.Net namespace.</remarks>
<param name="address">A valid IPAddress or null.</param>
<returns>If the IPAddress.ToString() contains a colon (which means it's IPv6).</returns>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.IPhotonSocket.GetIpAddress(System.String)">
<summary>
Returns null or the IPAddress representing the address, doing Dns resolution if needed.
</summary>
<remarks>Only returns IPv4 or IPv6 adresses, no others.</remarks>
<param name="address">The string address of a server (hostname or IP).</param>
<returns>IPAddress for the string address or null, if the address is neither IPv4, IPv6 or some hostname that could be resolved.</returns>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SocketUdp">
<summary> Internal class to encapsulate the network i/o functionality for the realtime libary.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SocketUdp.Send(System.Byte[],System.Int32)">
<summary>used by PhotonPeer*</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SocketUdp.ReceiveLoop">
<summary>Endless loop, run in Receive Thread.</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SocketTcp">
<summary>
Internal class to encapsulate the network i/o functionality for the realtime libary.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SocketTcp.Send(System.Byte[],System.Int32)">
<summary>
used by TPeer*
</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SimulationItem">
<summary>
A simulation item is an action that can be queued to simulate network lag.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SimulationItem.stopw">
<summary>With this, the actual delay can be measured, compared to the intended lag.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SimulationItem.TimeToExecute">
<summary>Timestamp after which this item must be executed.</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SimulationItem.ActionToExecute">
<summary>Action to execute when the lag-time passed.</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.SimulationItem.#ctor">
<summary>Starts a new Stopwatch</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet">
<summary>
A set of network simulation settings, enabled (and disabled) by PhotonPeer.IsSimulationEnabled.
</summary>
<remarks>
For performance reasons, the lag and jitter settings can't be produced exactly.
In some cases, the resulting lag will be up to 20ms bigger than the lag settings.
Even if all settings are 0, simulation will be used. Set PhotonPeer.IsSimulationEnabled
to false to disable it if no longer needed.
All lag, jitter and loss is additional to the current, real network conditions.
If the network is slow in reality, this will add even more lag.
The jitter values will affect the lag positive and negative, so the lag settings
describe the medium lag even with jitter. The jitter influence is: [-jitter..+jitter].
Packets "lost" due to OutgoingLossPercentage count for BytesOut and LostPackagesOut.
Packets "lost" due to IncomingLossPercentage count for BytesIn and LostPackagesIn.
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.isSimulationEnabled">
<summary>internal</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.outgoingLag">
<summary>internal</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.outgoingJitter">
<summary>internal</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.outgoingLossPercentage">
<summary>internal</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.incomingLag">
<summary>internal</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.incomingJitter">
<summary>internal</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.incomingLossPercentage">
<summary>internal</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.IsSimulationEnabled">
<summary>This setting overrides all other settings and turns simulation on/off. Default: false.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.OutgoingLag">
<summary>Outgoing packages delay in ms. Default: 100.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.OutgoingJitter">
<summary>Randomizes OutgoingLag by [-OutgoingJitter..+OutgoingJitter]. Default: 0.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.OutgoingLossPercentage">
<summary>Percentage of outgoing packets that should be lost. Between 0..100. Default: 1. TCP ignores this setting.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.IncomingLag">
<summary>Incoming packages delay in ms. Default: 100.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.IncomingJitter">
<summary>Randomizes IncomingLag by [-IncomingJitter..+IncomingJitter]. Default: 0.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.IncomingLossPercentage">
<summary>Percentage of incoming packets that should be lost. Between 0..100. Default: 1. TCP ignores this setting.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.LostPackagesOut">
<summary>Counts how many outgoing packages actually got lost. TCP connections ignore loss and this stays 0.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.NetworkSimulationSet.LostPackagesIn">
<summary>Counts how many incoming packages actually got lost. TCP connections ignore loss and this stays 0.</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel">
<summary>
Only in use as long as PhotonPeer.TrafficStatsEnabled = true;
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.OperationByteCount">
<summary>Gets sum of outgoing operations in bytes.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.OperationCount">
<summary>Gets count of outgoing operations.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.ResultByteCount">
<summary>Gets sum of byte-cost of incoming operation-results.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.ResultCount">
<summary>Gets count of incoming operation-results.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.EventByteCount">
<summary>Gets sum of byte-cost of incoming events.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.EventCount">
<summary>Gets count of incoming events.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.LongestOpResponseCallback">
<summary>
Gets longest time it took to complete a call to OnOperationResponse (in your code).
If such a callback takes long, it will lower the network performance and might lead to timeouts.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.LongestOpResponseCallbackOpCode">
<summary>Gets OperationCode that causes the LongestOpResponseCallback. See that description.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.LongestEventCallback">
<summary>
Gets longest time a call to OnEvent (in your code) took.
If such a callback takes long, it will lower the network performance and might lead to timeouts.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.LongestEventCallbackCode">
<summary>Gets EventCode that caused the LongestEventCallback. See that description.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.LongestDeltaBetweenDispatching">
<summary>
Gets longest time between subsequent calls to DispatchIncomgingCommands in milliseconds.
Note: This is not a crucial timing for the networking. Long gaps just add "local lag" to events that are available already.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.LongestDeltaBetweenSending">
<summary>
Gets longest time between subsequent calls to SendOutgoingCommands in milliseconds.
Note: This is a crucial value for network stability. Without calling SendOutgoingCommands,
nothing will be sent to the server, who might time out this client.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.DispatchCalls">
<summary>
Gets number of calls of DispatchIncomingCommands.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.DispatchIncomingCommandsCalls">
<summary>
Gets number of calls of DispatchIncomingCommands.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.SendOutgoingCommandsCalls">
<summary>
Gets number of calls of SendOutgoingCommands.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.TotalByteCount">
<summary>Gets sum of byte-cost of all "logic level" messages.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.TotalMessageCount">
<summary>Gets sum of counted "logic level" messages.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.TotalIncomingByteCount">
<summary>Gets sum of byte-cost of all incoming "logic level" messages.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.TotalIncomingMessageCount">
<summary>Gets sum of counted incoming "logic level" messages.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.TotalOutgoingByteCount">
<summary>Gets sum of byte-cost of all outgoing "logic level" messages (= OperationByteCount).</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.TotalOutgoingMessageCount">
<summary>Gets sum of counted outgoing "logic level" messages (= OperationCount).</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStatsGameLevel.ResetMaximumCounters">
<summary>
Resets the values that can be maxed out, like LongestDeltaBetweenDispatching. See remarks.
</summary>
<remarks>
Set to 0: LongestDeltaBetweenDispatching, LongestDeltaBetweenSending, LongestEventCallback, LongestEventCallbackCode, LongestOpResponseCallback, LongestOpResponseCallbackOpCode.
Also resets internal values: timeOfLastDispatchCall and timeOfLastSendCall (so intervals are tracked correctly).
</remarks>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStats.PackageHeaderSize">
<summary>Gets the byte-size of per-package headers.</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStats.ReliableCommandCount">
<summary>
Counts commands created/received by this client, ignoring repeats (out command count can be higher due to repeats).
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStats.TotalPacketBytes">
<summary>Gets count of bytes as traffic, excluding UDP/TCP headers (42 bytes / x bytes).</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStats.TimestampOfLastAck">
<summary>Timestamp of the last incoming ACK that has been read (every PhotonPeer.TimePingInterval milliseconds this client sends a PING which must be ACKd).</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:ExitGames.Client.Photon.TrafficStats.TimestampOfLastReliableCommand">
<summary>Timestamp of last incoming reliable command (every second we expect a PING).</summary>
</member>
<member name="T:Photon.SocketServer.Security.OakleyGroups">
<summary>
Provides classical Diffie-Hellman Modular Exponentiation Groups defined by the
OAKLEY Key Determination Protocol (RFC 2412).
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:Photon.SocketServer.Security.OakleyGroups.Generator">
<summary>
Gets the genrator (N) used by the the well known groups 1,2 and 5.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:Photon.SocketServer.Security.OakleyGroups.OakleyPrime768">
<summary>
Gets the 768 bit prime for the well known group 1.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:Photon.SocketServer.Security.OakleyGroups.OakleyPrime1024">
<summary>
Gets the 1024 bit prime for the well known group 2.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="F:Photon.SocketServer.Security.OakleyGroups.OakleyPrime1536">
<summary>
Gets the 1536 bit prime for the well known group 5.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:Photon.SocketServer.Security.DiffieHellmanCryptoProvider.#ctor">
<summary>
Initializes a new instance of the <see cref="T:Photon.SocketServer.Security.DiffieHellmanCryptoProvider"/> class.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="P:Photon.SocketServer.Security.DiffieHellmanCryptoProvider.PublicKey">
<summary>
Gets the public key that can be used by another DiffieHellmanCryptoProvider object
to generate a shared secret agreement.
</summary>
</member>
<member name="M:Photon.SocketServer.Security.DiffieHellmanCryptoProvider.DeriveSharedKey(System.Byte[])">
<summary>
Derives the shared key is generated from the secret agreement between two parties,
given a byte array that contains the second party's public key.
</summary>
<param name="otherPartyPublicKey">
The second party's public key.
</param>
</member>
</members>
</doc>