Lag Compensation

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You may be looking for Yahn Bernier's 2001 paper on game engine networking.
Historic client hitboxes (red) versus rewound server hitboxes (blue).

Lag compensation is the notion of the server using a player's latency to rewind time when processing a usercmd, in order to see what the player saw when the command was sent. In combination with prediction, lag compensation can help to combat network latency to the point of almost eliminating it from the perspective of an attacker. For a more detailed explanation, see the Source Multiplayer Networking article.

By default only players are rewound, and one second of location/animation history is kept.

Note.pngNote:CBasePlayer does not use lag compensation; it must be implemented by a derived class. Valve's networked player classes do this already.
Tip.pngTip:Since Left 4 Dead 2, all entities can be lag compensated using the LagCompensate !FGD keyvalue. Use this sparingly!

Configuration

Developer server builds (those compiled with ALLOW_DEVELOPMENT_CVARS), or by using server plugins such as SourceMod (to enable hidden console commands) have some extra commands:

Cvar/CommandParameters or default valueDescriptorEffect
cl_lagcompensationboolAllows clients to tell the server that they don't want their own commands lag compensated. This is not a cheat.
cl_lagcomp_errorcheckintDeprecated? In theory displays error information for the given player index, in practice is not referenced anywhere.
sv_lagcompensationforcerestoreboolCheat. Disabling this causes the game to check if each entity can still occupy its rewind position in the current, un-rewound world. If it can't, it is rewound to the last valid position instead of the desired one.
Todo: Why would anyone want that to happen?
sv_showlagcompensationboolCheat. Displays rewound hitboxes whenever a player is lag compensated. This fills the role of the old sv_showhitboxes command, only without the confusion caused by the hitboxes also being shown when compensation is not in effect.
sv_unlagboolEnable/disable lag compensation entirely.
sv_maxunlagfloatNumber of seconds to store player positions for. Default (and maximum) is 1.

Invocation

Simply wrap whatever code you want lag compensated within two calls to the lagcompensation object:

#ifdef GAME_DLL

#include "..\server\ilagcompensationmanager.h"

void CMyPlayer::FireBullets ( const FireBulletsInfo_t &info )
{
	// Source 2007
	lagcompensation->StartLagCompensation( this, this->GetCurrentCommand() );

	// Alien Swarm and later (See also sub-section below)
	lagcompensation->StartLagCompensation( this, LAG_COMPENSATE_HITBOXES );

	BaseClass::FireBullets(info);

	lagcompensation->FinishLagCompensation( this );
}
#endif

Time will be wound back on the call to StartLagCompensation(), and wound forward again on the call to FinishLagCompensation().

Lag Compensation Type

Starting with Alien Swarm, you can optimise lag compensation with these settings:

LAG_COMPENSATE_BOUNDS
Rewind entities' locations only, skipping animations.
LAG_COMPENSATE_HITBOXES
Rewind both locations and hitboxes. This is the standard setting.
LAG_COMPENSATE_HITBOXES_ALONG_RAY
Rewind hitboxes if an entity is hit by a ray defined by the "weaponPos" StartLagCompensation() overload. Otherwise rewind bounds only.

These setting chosen applies to all entities affected by the rewind.

Implementation

Todo: Supporting lag compensation on new entities.

See also