NetworkBehaviour
Both the NetworkObject
and NetworkBehaviour
components require the use of specialized structures to be serialized and used with RPC
s and NetworkVariables
:
For NetworkObject
s use the NetworkObjectReference.
For NetworkBehaviour
s use the NetworkBehaviourReference.
NetworkBehaviour
NetworkBehaviour
s can use NetworkVariable
s and RPC
s to synchronize state and send messages over the network. to replicate any netcode aware properties or send/receive RPCs a GameObject
must have a NetworkObject component and at least one NetworkBehaviour
component. A NetworkBehaviour
requires a NetworkObject
component on the same relative GameObject
or on a parent of the GameObject
with the NetworkBehaviour
component assigned to it. If you add a NetworkBehaviour
to a GameObject that does not have a NetworkObject
(or any parent), then Netcode for GameObjects will automatically add a NetworkObject
component to the GameObject
in which the NetworkBehaviour
was added.
NetworkBehaviour
is an abstract class that derives from MonoBehaviour
and is primarily used to create unique netcode/game logic.
NetworkBehaviours
can contain RPC methods and NetworkVariables
. When you call an RPC function, the function isn't called locally. Instead a message is sent containing your parameters, the networkId
of the NetworkObject
associated with the same GameObject (or child) that the NetworkBehaviour
is assigned to, and the "index" of the NetworkObject
relative NetworkBehaviour
(that is, a NetworkObject
can have several NetworkBehaviours, the index communicates "which one").
It is important that the NetworkBehaviour
s on each NetworkObject
remains the same for the server and any client connected. When using multiple projects, this becomes especially important so the server doesn't try to call a client RPC on a NetworkBehaviour
that might not exist on a specific client type (or set a NetworkVariable, etc).
Pre-Spawn and MonoBehaviour Updates
Since NetworkBehaviour
s derive from MonoBehaviour, the FixedUpdate
, Update
, and LateUpdate
methods, if defined, will still be invoked on NetworkBehaviour
s even when they're not yet spawned. to "exit early" to avoid executing netcode specific code within the update methods, you can check the local NetworkBehaviour.IsSpawned
flag and return if it isn't yet set like the below example:
private void Update()
{
if (!IsSpawned)
{
return;
}
// Netcode specific logic below here
}
Spawning
OnNetworkSpawn
is invoked on each NetworkBehaviour
associatd with a NetworkObject
spawned. This is where all netcode related initialization should occur.
You can still use Awake
and Start
to do things like finding components and assigning them to local properties, but if NetworkBehaviour.IsSpawned
is false don't expect netcode distinguishing properties (like IsClient, IsServer, IsHost, etc) to be accurate while within the those two methods (Awake and Start).
For reference purposes, below is a table of when NetworkBehaviour.OnNetworkSpawn
is invoked relative to the NetworkObject
type:
Dynamically Spawned | In-Scene Placed |
---|---|
Awake | Awake |
OnNetworkSpawn | Start |
Start | OnNetworkSpawn |
Dynamically Spawned NetworkObjects
For dynamically spawned NetworkObjects
(instantiating a network Prefab during runtime) the OnNetworkSpawn
method is invoked before the Start
method is invoked. So, it's important to be aware of this because finding and assigning components to a local property within the Start
method exclusively will result in that property not being set in a NetworkBehaviour
component's OnNetworkSpawn
method when the NetworkObject
is dynamically spawned. To circumvent this issue, you can have a common method that initializes the components and is invoked both during the Start
method and the OnNetworkSpawned
method like the code example below:
public class MyNetworkBehaviour : NetworkBehaviour
{
private MeshRenderer m_MeshRenderer;
private void Start()
{
Initialize();
}
private void Initialize()
{
if (m_MeshRenderer == null)
{
m_MeshRenderer = FindObjectOfType<MeshRenderer>();
}
}
public override void OnNetworkSpawn()
{
Initialize();
// Do things with m_MeshRenderer
base.OnNetworkSpawn();
}
}
In-Scene Placed NetworkObjects
For in-scene placed NetworkObjects
, the OnNetworkSpawn
method is invoked after the Start
method since the SceneManager scene loading process controls when the NetworkObject
s are instantiated. The previous code example shows how one can design a NetworkBehaviour
that assures both in-scene placed and dynamically spawned NetworkObject
s will have assigned the required properties before attempting to access them. Of course, you can always make the decision to have in-scene placed NetworkObjects
contain unique components to that of dynamically spawned NetworkObjects
. It all depends upon what usage pattern works best for your project.
De-Spawning
OnNetworkDespawn
is invoked on each NetworkBehaviour
associated with a NetworkObject
when it's de-spawned. This is where all netcode "despawn cleanup code" should occur, but isn't to be confused with destroying. Despawning occurs before anything is destroyed.
Destroying
Each 'NetworkBehaviour' has a virtual 'OnDestroy' method that can be overridden to handle clean up that needs to occur when you know the NetworkBehaviour
is being destroyed.
If you override the virtual 'OnDestroy' method it's important to alway invoke the base like such:
public override void OnDestroy()
{
// Clean up your NetworkBehaviour
// Always invoked the base
base.OnDestroy();
}
NetworkBehaviour
handles other destroy clean up tasks and requires that you invoke the base OnDestroy
method to operate properly.
NetworkBehaviour Pre-Spawn Synchronization
There can be scenarios where you need to include additional configuration data or use a NetworkBehaviour
to configure some non-netcode related component (or the like) before a NetworkObject
being spawned. This can be particularly critical if you want specific settings applied before NetworkBehaviour.OnNetworkSpawn
being invoked. When a client is synchronizing with an existing network session, this can become problematic as messaging requires a client to be fully synchronized before you know "it is safe" to send the message and even if you send a message there is the latency involved in the whole process that might not be convenient and can require additional specialized code to account for this.
NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
allows you to write and read custom serialized data during the NetworkObject
serialization process.
There are two cases where NetworkObject
synchronization occurs:
- When dynamically spawning a
NetworkObject
. - When a client is being synchronized after connection approval
- that is, Full synchronization of the
NetworkObject
s and scenes.
- that is, Full synchronization of the
If you haven't already become familiar with the INetworkSerializable
interface, then you might read up on that before proceeding as NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
as it follows a similar usage pattern.
Order of Operations When Dynamically Spawning:
The following provides you with an outline of the order of operations that occur during NetworkObject
serialization when dynamically spawned.
Server-Side:
GameObject
withNetworkObject
component is instantiated.- The
NetworkObject
is spawned.- For each associated
NetworkBehaviour
component,NetworkBehaviour.OnNetworkSpawn
is invoked.
- For each associated
- The
CreateObjectMessage
is generatedNetworkObject
state is serialized.NetworkVariable
state is serialized.NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
is invoked for eachNetworkBehaviour
component.- If this method isn't overridden then nothing is written to the serialization buffer.
- The
CreateObjectMessage
is sent to all clients that are observers of theNetworkObject
.
Client-Side:
- The
CreateObjectMessage
is receivedGameObject
withNetworkObject
component is instantiated.NetworkVariable
state is deserialized and applied.NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
is invoked for eachNetworkBehaviour
component.- If this method isn't overridden then nothing is read from the serialization buffer.
- The
NetworkObject
is spawned- For each associated
NetworkBehaviour
component,NetworkBehaviour.OnNetworkSpawn
is invoked.
- For each associated
Order of Operations During Full (late-join) Client Synchronization:
Server-Side:
- The
SceneEventMessage
of typeSceneEventType.Synchronize
is created- All spawned
NetworkObjects
that are visible to the client, already instantiated, and spawned are serialized.NetworkObject
state is serialized.NetworkVariable
state is serialized.NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
is invoked for eachNetworkBehaviour
component.- If this method isn't overridden then nothing is written to the serialization buffer.
- All spawned
- The
SceneEventMessage
is sent to the client.
Client-Side:
- The
SceneEventMessage
of typeSceneEventType.Synchronize
is received - Scene information is deserialized and scenes are loaded (if not already)
- In-scene placed
NetworkObject
s are instantiated when a scene is loaded.
- In-scene placed
- All
NetworkObject
oriented synchronization information is deserialized- Dynamically spawned
NetworkObject
s are instantiated and state is synchronized - For each
NetworkObject
instance:NetworkVariable
state is deserialized and applied.NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
is invoked.- If this method isn't overridden then nothing is read from the serialization buffer.
- The
NetworkObject
is spawned- For each associated
NetworkBehaviour
component,NetworkBehaviour.OnNetworkSpawn
is invoked.
- For each associated
- Dynamically spawned
OnSynchronize Example
Now that you understand the general concept behind NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
, the question you might have is "when would you use such a thing"? NetworkVariable
s can be useful to synchronize state, but they also are only updated every network tick and you might have some form of state that needs to be updated when it happens and not several frames later so you decide to use RPCs. However, this becomes an issue when you want to synchronize late joining clients as there is no way to synchronize late joining clients based on RPC activity over the duration of a network session. This is one of many possible reasons one might want to use NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
.
In the example below, it provides one simple use-case scenario where you can use NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
to synchronize late-joining clients with state set by ClientRpc
events:
using UnityEngine;
using Unity.Netcode;
/// <summary>
/// Simple RPC driven state that shows one
/// form of NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize usage
/// </summary>
public class SimpleRpcState : NetworkBehaviour
{
private bool m_ToggleState;
/// <summary>
/// Late joining clients will be synchronized
/// to the most current m_ToggleState
/// </summary>
protected override void OnSynchronize<T>(ref BufferSerializer<T> serializer)
{
serializer.SerializeValue(ref m_ToggleState);
base.OnSynchronize(ref serializer);
}
public void ToggleState(bool stateIsSet)
{
m_ToggleState = stateIsSet;
}
/// <summary>
/// Synchronizes connected clients with the
/// server-side m_ToggleState
/// </summary>
/// <param name="stateIsSet"></param>
[ClientRpc]
private void ToggleStateClientRpc(bool stateIsSet)
{
m_ToggleState = stateIsSet;
}
}
Since NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
is primarily used for server to client synchronization, RPC state synchronization only works when using ClientRpcs since NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
is only invoked on the server side during the write part of serialization and only invoked on the client side during the read part of serialization. When running a host NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
is still only invoked once (server-side) during the write part of serialization.
Debugging OnSynchronize Serialization
If your serialization code has a bug and throws an exception, then NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
has additional safety checking to handle a graceful recovery without completely breaking the rest of the synchronization serialization pipeline.
When Writing:
If user-code throws an exception during NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
, it catches the exception and if:
- LogLevel = Normal: A warning message that includes the name of the
NetworkBehaviour
that threw an exception while writing will be logged and that part of the serialization for the givenNetworkBehaviour
is skipped. - LogLevel = Developer: It provides the same warning message as well as it logs an error with the exception message and stack trace.
After generating the log message(s), it rewinds the serialization stream to the point just before it invoked NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
and will continue serializing. Any data written before the exception occurred will be overwritten or dropped depending upon whether there are more NetworkBehaviour
components to be serialized.
When Reading:
For exceptions this follows the exact same message logging pattern described above when writing. The distinct difference is that after it logs one or more messages to the console, it skips over only the serialization data written by the server-side when NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
was invoked and continues the deserialization process for any remaining NetworkBehaviour
components.
However, there is an additional check to assure that the total expected bytes to read were actually read from the buffer. If the total number of bytes read does not equal the expected number of bytes to be read it will log a warning that includes the name of the NetworkBehaviour in question, the total bytes read, the expected bytes to be read, and lets you know this NetworkBehaviour
is being skipped.
When using NetworkBehaviour.OnSynchronize
you should be aware that you are increasing the synchronization payload size per instance. If you have 30 instances that each write 100 bytes of information you will have increased the total full client synchronization size by 3000 bytes