Up to now Anti-Xray did only replace blocks that have the default block
state of the specified blocks in hidden-blocks (engine-mode: 1) or
hidden-blocks and replacement-blocks (engine-mode: 2). Therefore it wasn't
possible to replace for example chests facing south because chest refers to
the default block state facing north. Supporting block states in these lists
is overkill. Instead this commit makes Anti-Xray to replace all block states
of a specified block. However, Anti-Xray will still place the default block
states.
Upstream has released updates that appear to apply and compile correctly.
This update has not been tested by PaperMC and as with ANY update, please do your own testing
CraftBukkit Changes:
2ffdb31ec Use upstream plexus-compiler-eclipse
Upstream has released updates that appear to apply and compile correctly.
This update has not been tested by PaperMC and as with ANY update, please do your own testing
Bukkit Changes:
c589f546 Use upstream plexus-compiler-eclipse
Upstream has released updates that appear to apply and compile correctly.
This update has not been tested by PaperMC and as with ANY update, please do your own testing
Bukkit Changes:
d264e972 #591: Add option for a consumer before spawning an item
1c537fce #590: Add spawn and transform reasons for piglin zombification.
CraftBukkit Changes:
ee5006d1 #810: Add option for a consumer before spawning an item
f6a39d3c #809: Add spawn and transform reasons for piglin zombification.
0c24068a Organise imports
Spigot Changes:
bff52619 Organise imports
Upstream has released updates that appear to apply and compile correctly.
This update has not been tested by PaperMC and as with ANY update, please do your own testing
Bukkit Changes:
9d0ad318 Fix javadoc errors in previous commits
9501daa2 #578: Add methods to modify the rate of regeneration and starvation
197d8f3d #577: Add EntityExhaustionEvent
CraftBukkit Changes:
a021e334 #795: Add methods to modify the rate of regeneration and starvation
509e523c #792: Add EntityExhaustionEvent
Spigot Changes:
db99f821 Rebuild patches
Related to #4174, #4717.
As it stands, `JsonList` throws an NPE on `jsonarray.iterator()` when
the reader given is at EOF. This means there is an unintelligible
message shown to the player:
```
[16:44:31 ERROR]: Encountered an unexpected exception
java.lang.NullPointerException: Cannot invoke "com.google.gson.JsonArray.iterator()" because "jsonarray" is null
at net.minecraft.server.v1_16_R2.JsonList.load(JsonList.java:192) ~[patched_1.16.3.jar:git-Paper-248]
at net.minecraft.server.v1_16_R2.DedicatedPlayerList.y(SourceFile:95) ~[patched_1.16.3.jar:git-Paper-248]
...
```
This is clearly not understandable to the untrained eye: what is
`jsonarray`? What is `DedicatedPlayerList.y`?
This rather does a proper exception message:
```
[16:42:59 ERROR]: Encountered an unexpected exception
java.lang.NullPointerException: The file "banned-players.json" is either empty or corrupt
at com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull(Preconditions.java:787) ~[paper-1.16.3.jar:git-Paper-"8e6d90c2d"]
at net.minecraft.server.v1_16_R2.JsonList.load(JsonList.java:190) ~[paper-1.16.3.jar:git-Paper-"8e6d90c2d"]
at net.minecraft.server.v1_16_R2.DedicatedPlayerList.y(SourceFile:95) ~[paper-1.16.3.jar:git-Paper-"8e6d90c2d"]
...
```
It is still an exception, which server owners may or may not understand,
but the message now says exactly what went wrong, and who would've
known, now we know what `DedicatedPlayerList.y` is, and we know what
file was broken.
This is more of a quality of life change, but it is certainly useful to
the server owners that come into `#paper-help` and the issue tracker
(#4174) to ask for help with unintelligible messages we need to open a
patched Paper project to make any sense out of.
Check state of jsonarray instead of checkNotNull
Co-authored-by: Riley Park <riley.park@meino.net>
The behavioural nearby sensors are validated every tick on the entities
that registered the respective sensors and are therefore a good subject
to performance improvements.
More specifically this commit replaces the Stream#filter usage with
ArrayList#removeIf as the removeIf method on an array list is heavily
optimized towards a single internal array re-allocation without any
further overhead on the removeIf call.
The only negative of this change is the rather agressive diff these
patches introduce as the methods are basically being reimplemented
compared to the previous stream-based implementation.
See: https://nipafx.dev/java-stream-performance/
Note: Updated LICENCE.md to release this commit under MIT