Finishing an operation started via
`OngoingOperationTracker.BeginOperation()` was risky in cases where the
operation ended at a callback on another thread (which, in the case of
multiplayer, is *most* cases). In particular, if any consumer registered
a callback that mutates transforms when the operation ends, it would
result in crashes after the framework-side safety checks.
Rework `OngoingOperationTracker` into an always-present component
residing in the drawable hierarchy, and ensure that the
`operationInProgress` bindable is always updated on the update thread.
This way consumers don't have to add local schedules in multiple places.
In theory this seemed like a good idea (and an optimisation in some
cases, due to lower fill rate), but in practice this leads to weird edge
cases.
This aims to do away with the operations on external drawables by
applying a dim to the area behind the `LoadingLayer` when required.
I went over each usage and ensured they look as good or better than
previously.
The specific bad usage here was the restoration of the colour on dispose
(if the `LoadingLayer` was disposed in a still-visible state).
I'm aware that the `BeatmapListingOverlay` will now dim completely during
load. I think this is fine for the time being.
Looks like this was just copy-paste without any thought into whether it
should exist. It really shouldn't exist.
This is a thing for the playlists system because the *whole system*
there relies on polling the web API to get updated information. In the
case of mutliplayer, we hand off all communications to the realtime
server at the point of joining the rooms.
The argument that this was there to do faster polling on the selection
isn't valid since the polling times were the same for both cases.
Closes#11348.
It needs to be explicitly stated that the users in this list are related
to the *joined* room. Especially since it's sharing its variable name
with `SpectatorStreamingClient` where it has the opposite meaning (is a
list of *globally* playing players).
The fix here is correcting the access of `user.Country`. The deicision
to have null users display is because this is the best we can do (if
osu-web could not resolve the user). We still want the users in the
lobby to be aware of this user's presence, rather than hiding them from
view.
osu-stable does a similar thing, showing these users as `[Loading]`. I
decided to go with blank names instead because having *any* text there
causes confusion. We can iterate on this in future design updates.