Mod:Creation Kit/Persistence (Papyrus)

=Overview= Persistence is the act of making an Object Reference stick around in the game and not be unloaded. This applies to all references in the game, including things like actor references. Because they continue to stick around, they consume processor time and memory when other references in the same area will have disappeared and unloaded.

=What makes objects persistent?= The following things keep an object around:

Functions
When a function is run on an object, the object will stick around until the function exits. This also includes long-running latent functions.

Properties
When a script property is pointed at a reference in the editor, the target reference will be flagged as "permanently persistent". In other words, nothing you do during runtime will unload the object. This means that, if possible, you should not use properties to point at references directly. If you can, pull references in from events or other locations to avoid permanently keeping them around. Even if you reassign a value to your property while the game is running, the original reference will stick around.

Variables
When any variable in a currently loaded script points at a reference, that reference is temporarily persistent. It will stay persistent until no variables are pointing at it any more, at which point it will unload. (This assumes no other game system is keeping the object alive) This means that you should try not to have variables holding on to objects any longer then you need them. You can clear variables by assigning "None" to them.

Registered events
Any reference that is registered to receive various events will be persistent until it unregisters for the events. This applies to any event you explicitly register for which include (but are not limited to) OnUpdate, OnGainLOS, OnSleep, and OnAnimationEvent.

Examples
=Seeing Why Something is Persistent= If an object is persistent due to Papyrus, you can use the console command Mod:Creation Kit/DumpPapyrusPersistenceInfo to print out everything holding onto the object to the script log.

Note that this command only knows about Papyrus and will be unable to tell you if something else is keeping the object persistent (like being in an alias).

=Conclusion= So there are a few things to keep in mind when trying to keep things from sticking around too long:
 * Avoid long-running functions
 * Avoid properties to references if possible
 * Variables to references should only be pointing at a reference for as long as they need to
 * Only register for updates for as long as you need them