Setting a horse's passenger to a non-living entity will cause a
server crash when the horse ticks, we need to check that it is
a living entity before casting, and skip otherwise.
With the update in 1.7 that improved the server ping, it was made to
include a long version string for CraftBukkit. This value is too long
for proper display so we now send a shortened string consisting of
the server implementation and the minecraft version.
When we first added the reach limiter in CraftBukkit there was no
difference between how far the client could reach in vanilla while in
Survival or Creative. At some point in Minecraft's cycle Creative was
given a block extra to work with and our protection was not updated to
account for this. We need to respect the possibility of different game
modes in Minecraft providing the client with varying reach distances.
Due to an incorrect mapping of this method to a friendly name, we're
unfortunately calling the wrong method within EntityPlayer.reset() to
reset attributes. Instead of what we've mapped as "removeAllEffects", we
should be calling EntityLiving.aP(). This mapping should be corrected in
the next naming version.
In the CraftBlockState implementation, updating the blockstate onto
a block will force the block state data value onto the block.
Unlike vanilla which relied on block data being set when the type
changed, we must instead explicitely set the data in the blockstate.
Minecraft now uses resource packs instead of texture packs, which broke
the setTexturePack method, as the client no longer listens on the MC|TPack
channel.
This commit fixes the issue by adding in a setResourcePack method, and by
deprecating setTexturePack and rewriting it to call the newly added
setResourcePack. In order to simplify the method and prevent this from
happening in the future, setResourcePack calls EntityPlayer.a(String) to use
the same logic as minecraft when sending resource packs.
In Minecraft 1.7, URL processing was removed from the client while the
server gained the ability to designate a URL to be launched in response to
clicking text. However, this functionality is not implemented in the
vanilla server. This commit adds that functionality to messages sent to
the client, processing URLs as clickable.
Additionally, char array iteration is replaced with regex.
When growing trees we use a BlockChangeDelegate which queues up the block
changes so plugins can modify/block/log tree growing. However, we always
check the actual world when checking for existing blocks. This means when
the tree growing code checks to see if putting a leaf in a block is valid
it may incorrectly overwrite a log block that should exist in that
location. To ensure trees grow correctly we now check the delegate itself
for blocks that match the queried location before checking the world.
Commit c576054539790bdeb35285f62863d74b48c0782d removed the chunklist
collection stored in ChunkProviderServer, however it has been partially
restored in some places by 7e1ac0a77129b169704c1e222ff2deb3ab6cd2d2. As
not all references to this were restored, this has caused the chunklist
and chunks collections to become out of sync, resulting in a memory leak.
This commit removes chunklist from ChunkProviderServer again.
When ItemDye is used to place a Cocoa Block, the postPlace() method
should not be called, as data is handled within the ItemDye class.
However, if Cocoa is placed via its block item, postPlace() should
still be called to mirror vanilla behavior.
Due to changes in the generation of trees, the name of the class responsible
for the generation of jungle trees has changed from WorldGenMegaTree to
WorldGenJungleTree. As such, references to WorldGenMegaTree need to be
updated to WorldGenJungleTree to generate the correct type of tree.
Pulled from PR #1277
Several sounds were renamed in Minecraft 1.7, and have been updated
accordingly. Additionally, two sounds, HURT and BREATH, were removed from
Minecraft.
For Cocoa Blocks, Block.getDropType() returns the item form of the Cocoa
block, rather than the Cocoa Bean item. Because of this, Cocoa blocks need
to have explicit handling in order to return the proper drop contents.
Previously, due to the way that death events were called, Blazes only
fired death events when they dropped loot. This change fixes that,
enabling death events for Blazes whenever they die, regardless of loot
drops.
EnderDragons did not call an EntityTargetEvent when they
were targeting random players in the End. This commit
adds that event call into the targeting code.
Explosions directly caused by LivingEntities, such as creepers and tnt lit
by players, have their EntityDamageEvent explicitely handled within
the Explosion class. In order to prevent double events when damage
is handled for other DamageSources, we need return null for explosion
based damage sources.
The EntityLiving dealDamage method will not call an event for the
entity damage caused by an explosion without an associated
entity cause, therefore, the explosion caused by EnderCrystals
needs to be explicitely handled within the EnderDragon class.
Bukkits Visibility API should prevent players from seeing fall particles
of players that they cannot see. This commit alters the handling to
provide an EntityPlayer argument that is later used to determine if they
are visible.
We do ray tracing on arm swings to filter out swings that hit blocks since
punching blocks has its own event handling. However, some blocks cannot
be punched so the air interact type is still valid for them. Luckily
these blocks all have a means to query them so add an additional check
for this and don't fail the check for them.
This changes the logic for furnace smelt event to consider a result of
null (read: air / invalid), which will still consume an item. It also
properly considers item meta in the result, instead of only checking the
item data value.
Log4j takes a long time to load on startup. Before it loads, the server
appears to have frozen as there is no output until after. We now print
a loading message before this happens to let the user know the server
is actually working.
When pistons push/pull blocks they call Entity.move(float, float) to move
entities out of their path. For hanging entities this code path makes them
simply die and drop as an item. We now call an event in this scenario so
plugins can control this behavior.
Some types of damage are handled specially so do not end up returning an
event in handleEntityDamageEvent. To ensure we don't have problems with
these we need to check for them and simply ignore them, as they've been
handled already.
Calling this event allows plugins to react to the situation by simply
handling a normal damage event, possibly using existing code to
handle other entity damage.
Pulled from PR #1279
A vanilla server does a series of checks for the client black-listing
certain chat types (commands or chat). This change changes a CB
whitelist to the vanilla blacklist behavior.
This implements the detonate method from bukkit by setting the fuse
timer to 0. This makes a firework explode using the normal codepath,
but without waiting for the fuse.
The validation check in CraftMapView.render(CraftPlayer) filters out any
values less than 0. As of Minecraft 1.7, -128 through -113 are valid colors,
so filtering them out prevents some of the new colors from being sent.
This commit fixes the issue by adjusting the validation check to include
any values less than or equal to -113. As the minimum value for a byte is
-128, no invalid colors are included.
WorldGenerator setType and setTypeAndData have their arguments changed to
add in support for CraftBlockChangeDelegate, which changes the method
signature. This change in the method signature breaks any WorldGenerators
that aren't modified to use CraftBlockChangeDelegate.
This commit fixes the issue by readding the old method and maintaining the
CraftBlockChangeDelegate method. This makes it so that there is a
compatible method for both CraftBlockChangeDelegate WorldGenerators and
unmodified WorldGenerators.
Additionally, this commit reduces and corrects the diffs in
WorldGenerator, moving the fix for layering violations to
CraftBlockChangeDelegate.
A Block object is now passed in place of the previous id value, so the
obfuscated name for all subsequent arguments was shifted. As such,
BlockCanBuildEvent was using the incorrect values for both the material
and the location of the event.
This is corrected by swapping the values into the correct order and
providing an id based upon the Block passed into the method.
CraftBukkit modifies the IRecipe interface, adding new methods, so all
classes that implement IRecipe need to be imported and modified to add the
new methods.
Extending ShapelessRecipes implements the added methods and allows
RecipeBookClone to work with the Recipes API in a way that is consistent
with similar recipes, even if the recipe information present in the API
isn't technically correct.
Adding or removing operators was mistakenly using a loose player lookup
method, which would cause a permission refreshes on an online player whos
name starts with the name of the (offline) opped player.
Add/Remove op operations are exact name match only and the permission
refresh will behave the same way.
Both log4j and our own jline/jansi initialization attempt to catch
errors caused by jansi's use of native libraries. However both of them use
the Exception type which does not catch all errors. On Windows Server 2008
R2 Enterprise without installing extra software the required C++ libraries
are not available which causes an error that does not extend Exception. To
ensure we catch all errors I've changed both of these to catch Throwable
instead which gets us a working console minus jansi functionality.
l previously was the block id, however Minecraft's refactoring means that
the method is now passed a Block reference rather than the id. l is now
the data value of the block, so the block retrieved with that value is not
the correct block to be testing.
Something the log4j ConsoleAppender does makes the console work correctly
on Windows. After trying to pull pieces of it out and run them manually
I decided to just put the appender back. We now once again start with the
ConsoleAppender then remove it immediately after starting.
WorldMapCollection stores scoreboard, map (item), structure, and
village information. Scoreboards are explicitly handled globally,
while villages and structures are erroneously shared.
This commit separates the WorldMapCollections to not be shared among
custom worlds. Maps are special-cased to maintain the previous shared
behavior.
This change will print a warning when a plugin induces a forced save. A
player or console forcing a save (via a command) is ignored for purposes
of printing a warning.
The WorldMapCollection object for SecondaryWorldServers(Nether, End) is
shared with the main world, so saving it again for each SecondaryWorldServer
is redundant.
This commit removes the redundant call by checking if the WorldServer is an
instanceof SecondaryWorldServer before invoking worldMaps.a().
The recent Minecraft update rendered the
e20e50f85083dc53cb5456254bcf5781ef750daa fix incorrect by adding a
compound name to the base tag in some code. This fix changes all uses
of tag changes to explicitly use a name.
When a "uid.dat" file is corrupt (empty or <16 bytes), WorldNBTStorage
will silently fail to read and return null. Non-null behavior is
expected everywhere that this value is used.
This change will force a random UUID when the previous UUID cannot be
read, and getUUID to no longer silently ignore read/write exceptions.
This change adds the location and a more specific message to the
IllegalArgumentException that gets thrown when a hanging entity is being
spawned in a location that it cannot survive.
Opening a hopper inventory created by Server.createInventory will
currently have no effect as proper handling code is missing in
CraftEntityHuman for hopper inventories that aren't associated with a tile
entity or minecart. Initialization logic for hoppers is also missing from
CraftContainer, which is necessary for the opening of custom hopper
inventories.
This commit fixes the two aforementioned by adding proper handling to
CraftHumanEntity for opening inventories not associated with a tile
entity, and by adding initialization logic for hoppers to CraftContainer.
Previously fires spawned by lightning strikes were in the wrong locations.
This introduced the possibility of having blocks replaced when they should
not be.
EntityLightning now uses the correct locations as defined to spawn the
fires when needed.
When an entity is being moved as the passenger of an entity from one
entity to another, a VehicleExitEvent is fired, but it is assumed that the
current entity is a Vehicle. However, entities can be passengers of more than
just Vehicles, which causes a ClassCastException to be thrown.
This commit fixes the issue by checking that the current entity's vehicle's
bukkitEntity is an instance of Vehicle before casting it to Vehicle.
Prior to this change when a plugin called Player.hasLineOfSite() the
method would always return false because EntityHuman does not extend
EntityInsentient. This commit changes that by explicitly checking for
line of sight between two entities and returning that value.
This commit removes chat wrapping. It is no longer needed, as clients
properly render lines with line breaks.
This commit also changes an outgoing chat message to use the vanilla
behavior for indicating a client cannot chat with commands-only setting.
If a plugin generates an exception when returning a world generator, the
server will crash. This change adds a try-catch block to keep the server
from crashing on plugin defined world generators.
Custom inventories currently do not validate the titles provided. Null values
cause NPEs when writing packets. Values longer than 32 characters
disconnect clients.
This change throws and IllegalArgumentException for null titles or titles
longer than 32 characters.
The unleash event is only called for animals that are sitting - ones that
receive no movement vector. This adds the missing event call for
non-sitting animals.
When only considering trackers from player perspective, attach entity
packet could be sent before a packet for a respective vehicle is in view
and will, in turn, be ignored.
This adds another notification when the vehicle comes into view to cover
all cases.
A method has been added to Player which allows the server to send a sound string to the client. Assuming the client has the specified sound, it will be played. This is needed by the implementation of the /playsound command.
Items that cause entities to change state, including tags, chest, and
leashes, do not update the client properly following the firing of
PlayerInteractEntityEvent. This change makes the item checks occur
before the event fires, to concur with the client's assumptions.
This commit implements the ability to set the scale of hearts that the
client renders. When the Packet44UpdateAttributes packet is sent, the
max health attribute is replaced with a scaled version, to preserve the
scaled health illusion clientside.
In order to accurately display the scaled health for players, a true
health is stored within CraftPlayer, and the datawatcher now stores the
scaled health. The getHealth() method for players still returns their
true health.
Changed setHealth() within EntityLiving to appropriately handle health
for instances of EntityPlayer. Inlined a call to
setHealth(getMaxHealth()) within the EntityLiving constructor to work
around CraftEntity instantiation.
Additionally fixes the health values sent when eating food within
FoodMetaData and ItemFood, which previously sent the unscaled health;
this commit alters them to send the properly scaled health.
Additionally fixes BUKKIT-4535, BUKKIT-4536, and BUKKIT-4127
This changes livingEntity.addPotionEffect(PotionEffect, boolean) to
construct the MobEffect using the constructor that includes the ambient
setting as supplied by the PotionEffect
This also changes livingEntity.getActivePotionEffects() to construct the
PotionEffects using the ambient setting supplied by the MobEffects.
This change makes it so that EntityHuman#setPassengerOf(Entity) invokes
its parent method when leaving vehicles so that VehicleExitEvent is fired
for players leaving vehicles.
This change also fixes BUKKIT-2110, making it so VehicleExitEvent
correctly handles cancellation. The implementation of VehicleExitEvent
completely ignored the cancellation state of the event, making it so that
cancelling the event had no effect. Cancelling a VehicleExitEvent now
causes the entity to remain inside of the vehicle, with no visual stutter.
API has been added to interface with Horses and to modify their inventories. Horse entities will now be recognized with the type EntityType.HORSE, and will no longer be UNKNOWN.
HorseJumpEvent, EntityDamageEvent, and EntityTameEvent are all correctly fired for horses.
This commit fixes BUKKIT-4393.
Cancelling InventoryDragEvent causes the placed items to be lost. This is
because the cursor is set to the result prior to the event taking place,
so the items are removed from the cursor. When the event is cancelled, the
items removed from the cursor aren't placed in the inventory, and are just
lost.
This change sets the cursor back to the original cursor when the event is
cancelled.
Cancelling an InventoryClickEvent for a single click causes the click not
to be processed by the clicked inventory. The server then doesn't
correctly identify their second click as being a double click, causing an
inconsistency between what the Player believes the inventory to be and
what the server believes the inventory to be.
This change forces an updateInventory call whenever an InventoryClickEvent
whose action is NOTHING is cancelled. Both clicks are considered
PICKUP_ALL, so updating the inventory after the second click fixes any
inconsistencies that could arise between the client and the server.
Currently, the method used for calculating the damage of zombies is scaled
to their health, but it uses the default max health rather than the real
max health value. If zombies have more health than the default max health
value, the amount of damage they deal becomes negative.
This is caused by EntityZombie.getMaxHealth() returning a hardcoded value of
20, which is the vanilla max health for zombies. Rather than using this value
when calculating zombie damage, the call is changed to instead use
((CraftLivingEntity) this.bukkitEntity).getMaxHealth(). This uses the true
maximum health of the Entity. "this.maxHealth" could be used instead of the
aforementioned method, however that creates a very unclear diff, and a
confusing change.
When a Player drops an ItemStack while in creative mode by placing it outside
of their inventory window, the slot number in the packet is -1. The check
that was added to avoid throwing InventoryCreativeEvent excessively didn't
take this into account, and would cause an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException to
be thrown when attempting to get the slot specified by the packet.
This change shorts the invocation of player.defaultContainer.getSlot(
packet107setcreativeslot.b) to only occur if the slot id is within the range
of the Inventory. This prevents attempting to get the slot from a location
that is actually outside of the Inventory.
This commit brings the InventoryClickEvent up to date with the new Minecraft
changes in 1.5.
InventoryDragEvent (thanks to @YLivay for his PR) is added to represent the
new "dragging" or "painting" functionality, where if you hold an itemstack and
click-drag over several slots, the items will be split evenly (left click) or
1 each (right click).
The ClickType enum is used to represent what the client did to trigger the
event.
The InventoryAction enum is reserved for future expansion, but will be used to
indicate the approximate result of the action.
Additionally, handling of creative inventory editing is improved with the new
InventoryCreativeEvent, and handling of numberkey presses is also improved
within InventoryClickEvent and CraftItemEvent.
Also, cancelling a creative click now displays properly on the client.
Adresses BUKKIT-3692, BUKKIT-4035, BUKKIT-3859 (new 1.5 events),
BUKKIT-2659, BUKKIT-3043, BUKKIT-2659, and BUKKIT-2897 (creative click events).
We only go through event creation and calling when dispensing filled buckets
if the bucket is able to place its liquid. However, the check for this is
incorrect so the event is not called when a block liquids can destroy is
in front of the dispenser. This commit fixes the check to match the checks
vanilla does when actually using the bucket.
The CraftBlock class is setting bit 0x4 of the update flag when bit 0x2
should in fact be set here. Bit 0x2 means "do updates"; bit 0x4 means
"don't do updates if the world is static, even when bit 0x2 is set".
Minecraft 1.5.2 changed mob spawning by ignoring persistent mobs from the
mob count. In CraftBukkit all mobs that previously used a separate hard
coded persistence system were ported to instead use this one. This causes
all animals to be persistent by default and thus never be counted. To
correct this issue we consider if the mob would be considered persistent
in the hard coded system as well when deciding if a mob should count.
Currently there are several cases where a player will have their inventory
screen closed client side but we will not call an event. To correct this
we call the event when the server is the cause of the inventory closing
instead of just when the client is the cause. We also ensure the server is
closing the inventory reliably so we get the events. Additionally this
commit also calls the event when a player disconnects which will handle
kicks, quits, and server shutdown.
As an optimization we don't do any movement processing on entities that
have not moved. However, players in minecarts trigger this condition when
the minecart is moving on its own. This causes issues with things that rely
on player collision like tripwires. To correct this and any future related
issues we always handle movement for passengers and their vehicles even
if one of the two hasn't moved since they are linked.
When converting things in Minecraft to use wall time instead of ticks I
realized we'd run into integer division rounding issues and could have
updates that end up counting as zero ticks. To compensate for this the
code ensures we always process at least one tick. However, every time we
end up with zero ticks the next time we have an extra tick due to rounding
the other way with the leftovers. This means we are going far too fast and
should not have this at least one tick logic at all.
On top of this some potions rely on the number of ticks they run and not
just the amount of time they last and so potions were put back to running
with ticks entirely.
If a chunk has somehow managed to save with arrays that are not 4096
entries long when reading them again we will get exceptions. Checking the
array length and resizing if needed is cheap so we should do this to help
avoid crashing servers due to this error.
When a chunk is being loaded the server checks to ensure the chunk's idea
of where it is located matches where it was located in the region file. If
these two values do not match the chunk's idea of its position is updated
and the chunk is reloaded. In vanilla minecraft this loading involves the
chunk's tile entities as well. With the change to loading player chunks
asynchronously we split loading tile entities to a separate step that takes
place after this check. Because of this tile entities are loaded with
invalid locations that result in trying to fetch block data from negative
or too large positions in the chunk's internal block storage arrays.
Because loading the tile entities is not thread safe we cannot return to
vanilla behavior here. Instead when we detect a misplaced chunk we just
edit the NBT data for the chunk to relocate the tile entities. This results
in them moving correctly with the chunk without having to actually load
them first.
If a hopper is unable to perform any action during a tick it attempts to do
so every tick from then on. Once it is able to do so it then sets a delay
before attempting to do something again. To avoid excessive CPU usage for
hoppers sitting idle we now apply this delay regardless of the success of
the action.
When using the new feature in 1.5 to drop the item in any highlighted slot,
the anvil result slot does not apply the full anvil calculation that picking
up the item does, including the experience calculation.
Currently furnace smelting and the item pickup delay timer use wall time
(aka actual time passed) to emulate a constant tick rate so run at the
same speed regardless of the server's actual tick rate. There are several
other places this makes sense so this commit converts them.
The item despawn timer is converted so now always takes 5 minutes. Users
know this 5 minute number well so keeping this constant helps to avoid
confusion. This also helps alleviate lag because if a large number of item
drops is the reason your server is running slowly having them stay around
longer just means your server is slow longer.
Potion brewing and the zombie villager conversion timer are now constant.
These match the furnace criteria of being useful for hiding lag and not
having a detrimental effect on gameplay.
Potion effects are now also using wall time. The client is told about effect
times in ticks and displays this information to the user as minutes and
seconds assuming a solid 20 ticks per second. The server does have
code for updating the client with the current time remaining to help
avoid skew due to differing tick rates but making this a constant makes
sense due to this display.
Add a check to avoid doing movement work if an entity doesn't move. This
usually will not ever happen in the current server but is useful when it
does and will be more useful in the future.
Only process mob on mob (non-player) collisions every other tick. Players
tend to pack a lot of mobs into a small space (sheep farm, mob grinder, etc)
so they do a lot of work processing collisions. To help alleviate some of
this we only run these calculations every other tick. This has no visible
effect on the client but can be a huge win on the server depending on
circumstances.
Use generic entity inWater checking for squids. Squids have their own logic
currently for determining if they are in water. This check is almost
identical to the generic entity checking which is run anyway. To avoid
doing duplicate work we just remove the squid version. This does not
have any noticeable effect on gameplay since the checks are so similar.
Use HashSet for tile entities instead of ArrayList. Using an ArrayList for
storing tile entities in a world means we have very expensive inserts and
removes that aren't at the end of the array due to the array copy this
causes. This is most noticeable during chunk unload when a large number of
tile entities are removed from the world at once. Using a HashSet here uses
a little more memory but is O(1) for all operations so removes this
bottleneck.
When a player comes into range of an entity in a vehicle they will often be
sent the spawn packet for the rider before receiving one for the vehicle.
This causes the attachment packet to fail client side because it attempts
to attach the rider to a vehicle that doesn't exist on the client. To
correct this we account for both possible orderings and send the
attachment packet appropriately.
Vanilla also sends an new attach packet every 60 ticks even if the vehicle
has not changed. As this packet is a toggle this resulting in players
teleporting around randomly. Since we handle attachments properly now we
simply revert this section to use the 1.4 logic.
When looking up tile entities for a chunk to send to a player we currently
loop through every tile entity in the world checking if it is within the
bounds of the relevant chunk. Instead of doing this we can just use the
tile entities list stored in the chunk to avoid this costly searching.
As a further optimization, we also modify the generic range-based lookup
to use chunks as well. For most lookups this will give a smaller search
pool which will result in faster lookups.
Thanks to @mikeprimm for the idea and most of the implementation.
In certain scenarios a boat can be killed multiple ways in a single tick.
Due to improper guards this can cause the death code to run multiple times
creating item drops. To correct this we insert the appropriate death check.
Two connection status checks were added to setting a scoreboard for a
player. The first checks to see if a player has logged in yet, which
implicates the ability to receive packets. The second checks to affirm
that the CraftPlayer reference is still to a logged in player; setting
it while not logged in would maintain a stale player reference in the
scoreboard manager.
The method's return value was being incorrectly calculated from the
perspective of this.canHurt(that), where it's actually used from the
this.canBeHurtBy(that) perspective.
The method getTeam gets the team from name of, as opposed to getting the
team a player belongs to.
This also addresses BUKKIT-4002 and partially BUKKIT-4044
When a world is created using our API, it does not use secondary world
server and will maintain a reference to its own scoreboard. In vanilla,
this is not an issue as there is only ever one world.
Similarly to maps, an overwrite to the scoreboard reference has been
added for when another world has been created.
This should also address BUKKIT-3982 and BUKKIT-3985
In commit 7710efc5f9 we corrected the handling of large chests as the
destination for hoppers moving items but did not apply the same fix for
large chests being the source or for droppers. This commit updates these
to have the same fix.
This implementation facilitates the correspondence of the Bukkit Scoreboard
API to the internal minecraft implementation.
When the first scoreboard is loaded, the scoreboard manager will be created.
It uses the newly added WeakCollection for handling plugin scoreboard
references to update the respective objectives. When a scoreboard contains no
more active references, it should be garbage collected.
An active reference can be held by a still registered objective, team, and
transitively a score for a still registered objective. An internal reference
will also be kept if a player's specific scoreboard has been set, and will
remain persistent until that player logs out.
A player's specific scoreboard becomes the scoreboard used when determining
team structure for the player's attacking damage and the player's vision.
This class is designed to be an invisible layer between a normal collection,
and one that silently loses entries because they are only weakly referencable.
Some operations have additional overhead to be semantically correct, but it
maintains the equals contract for all entries, as opposed to identity.
It does not support the equals or hash code method as it cannot easily have
the transitive and commutative properties.
This adds calls to BlockRedstoneEvent for the new daylight sensor and
trapped chest blocks. Note that the redstone level for trapped chests
cannot be modified, as it is based on the number of players currently
viewing the chest's inventory.
When an array of an inventory's contents is requested, we loop through the contents of the NMS inventory's ItemStacks in order to return Bukkit ItemStacks that can be used through the API. However, the NMS ItemStack can, in some cases, be larger than the physical size of the inventory. Using the size of the NMS array as a limit on the loop that follows can result in an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException because the Bukkit array's length is the actual size of the inventory, and thus will be smaller.
With this commit we use the smaller of the two arrays' length as the limit in the loop, thus eliminating the possibility that the smaller array will be asked for an index higher than its length.
When a block placement happens we currently update physics on the
attempted placement and update again if the placement is cancelled.
To correct the first one we simply set the block without applying
physics. To correct the second we have to add a new method to
BlockState that lets us update without applying physics and use
this method method when putting the block back.
Without this check, any non-null reference to a plugin is considered
'valid' for registering a task in the scheduler. This is obviously
unintentional behavior and has been changed to throw an
IllegalPluginAccessException. It is now consistent with the
SimplePluginManager event registration contract.
This in affect also addresses BUKKIT-3950 for uninitialized plugin
references (ones without a description).
Large chests work in a different fashion as they are a combination of
two other inventories. This causes their getOwner method to always return
null as their is no correct return. To compensate for this for the hopper
events we special case them to use their CraftBukkit counterpart that has
the information we need for the event.
When a splash potion has no applicable effects we currently do not call
PotionSplashEvent. This means plugins are unable to make custom
potions with reliable splash handling as they have to relicate the
functionality themselves.
With this commit we simply make the event fire regardless of the effects
on the potion.
When cloning an item, all references are copied to the new item. For
collections, this makes internal changes become visible in both the old and
new items.
In CraftMetaItem, clone was not making copies of the appropriate collections
and has been fixed for non-null values.
In CraftMetaEnchantedBook and CraftMetaPotion, clone was using possible empty
collection references and has been changed to explicitly null-check instead.
I should try to compile before I say "this change is okay".
I should try to compile before I say "this change is okay".
I should try to compile before I say "this change is okay".
I should try to compile before I say "this change is okay".
for i in range(100)
This causes the server to generate PrepareItemEnchantEvent even in the
case that an item is already enchanted or otherwise would normally not
be enchantable.
The client resets all formatting after a color code is received, but currently the ANSI codes do not, and so the console does not accurately reflect the appearance of the formatted text. Instead, the ANSI color codes are now set to reset all text attributes.
Currently when dealing with physical interactions with pressure plates
and tripwires we immediately block their activation as soon as a single
entity involved has their event cancelled. We also fire events whenever
an entity intersects the block a wooden button is in even if they aren't
actually pressing it. To correct this we move the button interaction to
the correct place and modify all three to only block the activation if
every entity is blocked from using them instead of just one of them.
CraftServer methods that implement the Server interface will throw an
IllegalArgumentException if a method cannot operate on a null input
and given a null pointer.
This causes methods to fail early and identify that a plugin is
responsible for passing in an invalid argument. This will only
change the exception thrown, if there originally was a thrown
exception. This helps with hunting down legitimate problems
with CraftBukkit.
If the server changes the weather it will set the per-player weather
variable and future changes will not apply. We should only set this
variable when a plugin is requesting per-player weather and not when
the server it doing it.
We used to fall Item.filterData() for this but that method is meant for
converting item data to block data during placement and does the wrong
thing for this case. Instead we just see if the item should have data and
if not set it to zero. We also have to filter wool data explicitly because
clients crash when given invalid wool data.
In Minecraft 1.5 saplings do not grow with a single use of bonemeal anymore.
Our code assumes they will and only takes away bonemeal from the player
when the tree grows successfully (not cancelled by a plugin). Instead we
now always remove a bonemeal even if a plugin is the reason a tree didn't
grow as this matches the vanilla logic more closely.
If a custom TravelAgent is used and returns null for findOrCreate method
a NullPointerException will occur.
Conflicts:
src/main/java/net/minecraft/server/PlayerList.java
Currently, CraftTravelAgent will call s() on the passed-in WorldServer in order to set DEFAULT. However, s() will always return null at this point, because WorldServer.P will still be null, as it is set after the constructor is called. Instead, we set CraftTravelAgent.DEFAULT to the instance that is being constructed.
Recent changes caused PlayerPortalEvent to suddenly return null
unexpectedly and could end up in NPEs resulting that did not before.
This commit addresses that situation by always ensuring a TravelAgent
instance is returned.
The TravelAgent for world 0 is returned arbitrarily in an effort to
compensate for plugins that are implementation dependent and expect some
form of a TravelAgent to be accessible in the event at all times.
Vanilla does not check for blocks in which the player could
suffocate when changing dimension, so portals will happily spawn
players in blocks when using a portal under certain
circumstances. However, we currently check for these instances
and move the player up until they will not suffocate. This means
that players can sometimes be taken to above the target portal,
making it seem as if a portal was not created. Instead, we now
disable this suffocation check when moveToWorld is called from
changeDimension, mirroring vanilla behavior more accurately.
Due to the having to generate new logic to avoid using the customized
PlayerConnection.moveToWorld, entities returning from The End were not
properly calculating their exit target. This commit corrects that
logic.
By having a single function to process BlockPlacement logic, we make
it so that there is consistent behavior throughout all BlockPlace
events. This should allow for easier troubleshooting and less diffs
in source.
This also fixes BUKKIT-3463 by including the correct coordinates that
were clicked to the event.
Also fixes: BUKKIT-3477 and BUKKIT-3488
Minecraft likes to double check that tile entities get set after they
are placed, however we didn't set tile entities until after our event
was called. This caused the world to have multiple tile entities in a
single block location; to fix this we now set tile entities before
the event.
When the skull BlockPlaceEvent was added it was made so the event
would be called after all the data has been set, however this is a
behavior change that is inconsistent with other BlockPlaceEvents.
Instead, if people wish to get the block data they should schedule
a task.
Relates to: BUKKIT-3438
When either of those settings are false, the worlds are not loaded and
therefore will not be targeted for portal exits. Existing worlds are
iterated directly to avoid defaulting to the first world if a direct
dimension match is not found.
Plugins must also specify exit from custom Bukkit worlds to comply with
original commit: https://github.com/Bukkit/CraftBukkit/commit/2dc2af0
This commit introduces a constant to clarify the dependency on the
CraftBukkit implementation of custom worlds having a dimension offset.
By returning the following value (7) we remove the need to special
case pistons in any way (other than the original purpose of this
check, which is to ensure pistons have valid data)
The previous logic was faulty since it lost the logic of "placing" the
block. It was also taking into account data that could have been
changed outside of the processing of this event, which is irrelevant
to the processing of this event.
The javadocs state that a null may be used to remove the currently
playing sound, however this causes a NullPointerException.
It also doesn't process registering the record correctly, along with
processing non-valid items.
By using return 0, we exit the loop prematurely preventing other
creature types from being spawned if one type is set to 0. By using
continue we move on to the other types and allow them to spawn
properly.
Fixes BUKKIT-3408, BUKKIT-3190, BUKKIT-3191, BUKKIT-3407
These changes relate mostly to semantical changes for serialization
contract, exception of changing the map scaling value from byte to boolean,
what it should have been in the first place. Appropriate unit tests were
added for CraftMapMeta, as they were missing.
This makes it so animals (tame or not) will sit properly and not move
around.
Wild animals that are sitting may override the sitting position if
they are attacking.
The 'tag' NBTTagCompound field of the ItemStack assumes that it is OK to
save a reference to an NBT supplied via load() and assumes it is OK to
supply a reference to the internal field during a save(). Neither is true,
as Chunk NBT structures are required to be read-only once created (due to
being written asynchronously off the server thread AND due to the potential
to be passed to a new Chunk if the same chunk is reloaded before the
writing of the NBT is completed by the File I/O thread). Keeping a live
reference to the NBT copy passed in, or to the NBT value passed back
during saving, creates serious thread safety issues which can result in
corrupted data being written to the world data files.
The specific issue here was uncovered by the recent change to use
setName("") on the ItemStack.tag object. When a chunk is being loaded
again before its save is completed, this results in name of the field
in the NBT being set to "". This causes it to be saved as "" instead
of "tag" resulting in it not being properly reloaded in the future which
results in the itemstack losing all of its metadata.
Teleportation should never be processed on dead entities. If you wish
to teleport an entity, do it on a living entity. If you wish to
teleport a player, set their respawn location in PlayerRespawnEvent.
This adds two settings to bukkit.yml, allowing activation and control of
two chunk garbage collection triggering conditions:
chunk-gc/period-in-ticks controls a periodic GC, run once every N ticks
(default is 600); chunk-gc/load-threshold causes the GC to run once
after every N calls to loadChunk() on a given world (this call is an API
call used by plugins, and is distinct from the path taken for routine
player movement-based loading). In both cases, setting to zero will
disable the given GC scheduling strategy.
In either case, the act of doing the GC is simply one of scanning the
loaded chunks, seeing which are NOT being used by one or more players
(due to view-distance) and which are not already queued for unload, and
queueing them for a normal unload. Ultimately, the unload is then
processed the same as if the chunk were unloaded due to leaving the
view-distance range of all players, so the impact on plugins should be
no different (and strategies such as handling the ChunkUnloadEvent in
order to prevent unload will still work).
The initial interval for the periodic GC is randomized on a per-world
basis, in order to avoid all world being GCed at the same time -
minimizing potential lag spikes.
With the persistence api introduced, pets did not have their
persistence flag updated to reflect their persistence. This caused
tame ocelots to not persist under specific conditions.
Slimes and wolves have health that can change based on certain
conditions. So we check if their max health should be updated, and if
it has been customized in any way.
We also scale the wolf's health for their tail
An ItemStack gains the tag name "tag" when the stack is serialized
to NBT, however items don't have a tag *until* they are serialized at
least once. So to solve this, we remove the tag name when loading the
NBT data.
Another problem with NBT are TagLists, when transferring tag lists
between the server and the client the names are lost, and so we
simply don't add a name to the tag.
If you cancel a BlockPlaceEvent for a sign the world is updated as if
the block was placed and then destroyed. To avoid this we set the block
without updating physics then apply the update after the event.
When unloading chunks we have a check to ensure we do not remove players
from the world due to the issues this would cause. However, our check
to see if the player is in this chunk is reversed and is in fact entirely
wrong. Even if the player isn't currently in this chunk we do not want
to remove them as that will still cause the same issues.
The key "direction" incorrectly mapped to variables that were already
set in the entity. In order to prevent loading incorrect data we
renamed "direction" to "power."
The player would have no permissions (other than their OP status)
when checked in the Quit event. This is because we removed permissions
before the event occurred. By calling it afterwards, we can persist
the data until the server finally removes the player.
In some situations, an async task could be cancelled with no tasks
pending. This means the finally {} block from run() never gets executed
properly on the last async task to have run, as it expected to be
executed again.
This fix takes the only spot that the task period is set to cancelled
and will check to see if the task should be purged from the runners
list.
Some meta functionality is refactored into common methods.
CraftItemStack uses the ItemMetaKey identifiers for enchantments.
Refactored unit test to include extra functionality; initially only
checking the presence of the DelegateDeserialization annotation.
The setTexturePack method causes the player's client to
download and switch to a texture pack specified by a URL.
Note: Players can disable server textures on their client, in which
case this API would not affect them.
With 1.4, entity sound tracking changed for the better.
Our previous method additions can now be removed.
All that's left is checking if the source can be seen
by the recipient of the sound packet. Thanks, Mojang!
The purpose of the isSimilar method was designed to consider all NBT
data, not solely enchantments, without the need to have exact stack
size matches. The respective methods in CraftInventory were still
comparing enchantments instead of the ItemMeta.
Changes some NPEs to IllegalArgumentExceptions for exception consistency.
Contains(ItemStack, int) correctly calculates number of ItemStacks.
Adds a containsAtLeast(ItemStack, int) for finding a combined amount of a
single similar ItemStack.
Makes some utility methods private to prevent ambiguity in use.
When a player triggers a chunk load via walking around or teleporting there
is no need to stop everything and get this chunk on the main thread. The
client is used to having to wait some time for this chunk and the server
doesn't immediately do anything with it except send it to the player. At
the same time chunk loading is the last major source of file IO that still
runs on the main thread.
These two facts make it possible to offload chunks loaded for this reason
to another thread. However, not all parts of chunk loading can happen off
the main thread. For this we use the new AsynchronousExecutor system to
split chunk loading in to three pieces. The first is loading data from
disk, decompressing it, and parsing it in to an NBT structure. The second
piece is creating entities and tile entities in the chunk and adding them
to the world, this is still done on the main thread. The third piece is
informing everyone who requested a chunk load that the load is finished.
For this we register callbacks and then run them on the main thread once
the previous two stages are finished.
There are still cases where a chunk is needed immediately and these will
still trigger chunk loading entirely on the main thread. The most obvious
case is plugins using the API to request a chunk load. We also must load
the chunk immediately when something in the world tries to access it. In
these cases we ignore any possibly pending or in progress chunk loading
that is happening asynchronously as we will have the chunk loaded by the
time they are finished.
The hope is that overall this system will result in less CPU time and
pauses due to blocking file IO on the main thread thus giving more
consistent performance. Testing so far has shown that this also speeds up
chunk loading client side although some of this is likely to be because
we are sending less chunks at once for the client to process.
Thanks for @ammaraskar for help with the implementation of this feature.
When a player has canPickUpLoot set to true the code for mob pickup is
triggerd which does not know how to deal with player inventory. Since
players have their own logic for picking up items we simply disable this
code for them.
The old flag for picking up loot was default to false, making existing players not able to pickup items. We now use this flag for Players, which gives us the problem we had in 48b46f83.
To fix this, we add an incremental flag that will be cross-examined to check if the data was saved before or after the flag level was introduced.
Addresses BUKKIT-3143
As an added feature, players defaulted to being able to not pick up items if the flag was false. However, since minecraft doesn't normally use the flag on players, the flag was always false.
Adds:
- Getting/Setting equipment
- getting/setting drop rates
- getting/setting ability to pick up items
-- As an added feature, players with this flag start off with a canceled PlayerPickupItemEvent
When a mob is marked with the persistent flag (animal or anything with
setRemoveWhenFarAway(false)) the entire block of code for checking if they
should be despawned is skipped. However, one part of this code updates the
mob state if a player is close enough to them. It turns out this state is
used by the AI system to decide if the mob should move around randomly or
not. To stop mobs from being frozen in place we now update this state if
the persistent flag is set as well.
Currently when a plugin wants to get the location of something it calls
getLocation() which returns a new Location object. In some scenarios this
can cause enough object creation/destruction churn to be a significant
overhead. For this cases we add a method that updates a provided Location
object so there is no object creation done. This allows well written code
to work on several locations with only a single Location object getting
created.
Providing a more efficient way to set a location was also looked at but
the current solution is the fastest we can provide. You are not required
to create a new Location object every time you want to set something's
location so, with proper design, you can set locations with only a single
Location object being created.
The old default for the persistent flag on mobs was false which was then
written out to their NBT data when they were saved. We now use this data
for all mobs, not just non-animal mobs. However, this means animals that
spawned before that change will now start despawning like monsters do.
To avoid this we add a new flag to the mob's saved data to mark if the
data was saved before or after we started using it and ignore it if it
was before.
As of 1.4 mobs have a flag to determine if they despawn when away from a
player or not. Unfortunately animals still use their own system to prevent
despawning instead of making use of this flag. This change modifies them
to use the new system (defaults to true) and to add API for plugins to adjust
this.
If the player is not in Creative (i.e. does not have the ability to
instantly build) we need to decrement the MonsterEgg item stack when used
on a breedable parent mob.
Stale player references will add a player back into the world when
teleporting them, causing a cascade of issues relating to ghost entities
and servers failing to stop.
On join we unconditionally add the player to the world they logged out in.
If a plugin teleports a player during PlayerJoinEvent in a way that adds
them to a world (cross-world teleport) we end up with one player in two
places. To avoid this we check to see if the player has changed worlds or
is already added to the world we have we skip adding them again.
This is a missed part of the original "[Bleeding] Use case from player data
for OfflinePlayer. Fixes BUKKIT-519" commit. It avoids doing (somewhat
expensive) lookups of player data to find the correct capitalization inside
getOfflinePlayers() as we're already loading their name from the player data
and thus have the correct capitalization.
When sending chunks to a player we use their writer thread to do chunk
compression to avoid blocking the main thread with this work. However,
after a teleport or respawn there are a large number of chunk packets to
process. This causes the thread to spend a long period handling compression
while we continue dumping more chunk packets on it to handle. The result of
this is a noticable delay in getting responses to commands and chat
immediately after teleporting.
Switching to a lower compression level reduces this load and makes our
behavior more like vanilla. We do, however, still give this thread more
work to do so there will likely still be some delay when comparing to
vanilla. The only way to avoid this would be to put chunk compression back
on the main thread and give everyone on the server a poorer experience
instead.
When an event changes the item to be dispensed we check to see if the new
item has special behavior for dispensing and if so pass it on to that
behavior handler. However, we are actually checking the old itemstack and
passing the new itemstack so this check fails.
If a plugin looks up a player that is offline they may not know the correct
capitalization for the name. In this case they're likely to get it wrong
and since we cache the result even after the player joins the server all
future request for an OfflinePlayer will return one with incorrect case.
When looking up a player who has played on the server before we can
get the correct case from the player data file saved by the server. If
the player has never played before this point we cannot do anything and
will still have the same issue but this is not a solvable problem.
If a player travels past 32,000,000 blocks on the X or Z coordinates they
will be kicked for having an illegal position. On kick their player data
is saved which includes their (illegal) position. This means on join they
are immediately kicked again for the same reason and are stuck. Instead of
kicking at all in this case just teleport the player back to their previous
position just like the moved wrongly check does.
In order to correctly handle disconnects for invalid chat we setup a
Waitable and pass it to the main thread then wait for it to be processed.
However, commands are also chat packets and they are already on the main
thread. In this case, waiting will deadlock the server so we should just
do a normal disconnect.
End portals can only be placed in the end during the dragon's death.
Attempts to place them outside of this window causes the block to remove
itself. However, we still create the tile entity for the portal which
leads to exceptions spamming the console about a tile entity existing
without the appropriate block. In these cases we should not place the tile
entity at all.
When invalid chat is detected we currently drop the connection with no
hint as to why as anything else is not allowed while we're off the main
thread. To give valid disconnect reasons and fire proper events instead
pass these off to the main thread and wait for it to process them.
If a plugin cancels a PlayerInteractEvent when left clicking a block the
client may have removed this block if they are in creative mode or if the
block breaks in a single hit. In this case, we need to update the client's
tile entity as well as telling it the block still exists.
Packet 51 is used to send updates about large changes to single chunks
and to remove chunks from the client when they get out of range. In the
first case a single packet object is created and queued for all relevant
players. With our current chunk compression scheme this means the first
player to have the packet processed will start the compression and get the
packet correctly but the rest will get garbage.
Since this packet never contains much data it is better to simply handle
compression of it on the main thread like vanilla does instead of putting in
locks and dealing with their overhead and complexity.
When a client tries to break a block it assumes it has done so unless told
otherwise by the server. This means the client also wipes out any tile
entity data it has for the block as well. We do not send this data when
updating the client so clients lose things like text on signs, skull type,
etc when they aren't allowed to break the block.
Skulls need their tile entity in order to create an item correctly when
broken unlike every other block. Instead of sprinkling special cases all
over the code just override dropNaturally for skulls to read from their
tile entity and make sure everything that wants to drop them calls this
method before removing the block. There is only one case where this wasn't
already true so we end up with much less special casing.
Sheep now use the crafting system when breeding to determine what color
their baby should be. This triggers an event but the event wants the
crafting inventory to have a result slot which sheep do not have. This
event could be useful for plugins to control the output of sheep breeding
so instead of disabling it we add a result slot so the event fires without
issue.
If a chunk gets a block added to it that requires the extended block id
nibble array (block id greater than 255) the array is created and saved
with the chunk. When the blocks are verified to make sure they exist these
entries are erased but the extended block id array is not. This causes the
server and client to disagree about how much data a chunk has which makes
the client crash while trying to load the chunk for rendering.
To resolve these issues we now clear the extended block id array on chunk
load if there is no valid data in it.
When a block creates a falling entity the block is not immediately removed
from the world. Instead, the falling entity is responsible for removing it
but only if the block still exists. Due to certain piston mechanics it is
possible to move the block before this check happens and thus the block is
not removed. This should be fine as the entity will kill itself in this
situation. However, the code does not stop here and continues running the
rest of the entity logic which includes either placing a block in the world
or placing a block item in the world depending on the circumstances.
If a block is air we return immediately so miss the cleanup work that would
normally happen in this case in vanilla. This causes us to get in to a
situation where, due to odd packet sending from the client, we never
properly stop an attempt by the client to break a block and thus it
eventually breaks.
We also use our own variable for block damage and never sync it up with the
vanilla one so damage reporting to other clients is not always correct.
The static assertions are not normally evaluated in the JVM, and failed
to fail when the enums went from size 25 to size 26. This meant missing
values would not be detected at runtime and instead return null,
compounding problems later. The switches should never evaluate to null
so will instead throw runtime assertion errors.
Additional unit tests were added to detect new paintings and assure they
have proper, unique mappings. The test checks both that a mapping
exists, is not null, and does not duplicate another mapping.
If a defensive copy is not used in the API, changes to the item are
reflected in memory, but never updated to the client. It also goes
against the general contract provided in Bukkit, where setItem should be
the only way to change the underlying item frame.
Skull blocks store their type in a tile entity and use their block data
as rotation. When breaking a block the block data is used for determining
what item to drop. Simply changing this to use the skull method for getting
their drop data is not enough because their tile entity is already gone.
Therefore we have to special case skulls to get the correct data _and_ get
that data before breaking the block.
On player death player PotionEffects need to be updated so that a player's
invisibility and other effects are removed, otherwise they will persist
after a respawn. This is a carry-over from our use of persistent player
entities.
Some features added in 1.4.2 use the difficulty value as an index to an
array so while before having it set to an invalid value would do nothing
or maybe cause an odd side effect somewhere it now crashes the server. This
patch ensures difficulty values are clamped between 0 and 3, inclusive.
Filtering item data is usually a good idea to make sure we don't have
invalid data or data on items that shouldn't have it. However, anvils
use item data in slightly different way and so running its code for
filtering here causes the data to be corrupted.
A couple method names were changed between 1.3.2 and 1.4.2 but were missed
in the update. One of these affects being able to enchant bows and the
other is used for updating player animations while firing.
Vanilla has its own handlers for plugin channel messages for things like
texture packs, books, and anvils. When vanilla handles one of these messages
we should not also pass it to plugins because they will be duplicating work
and potentially running in to situations our plugin system isn't setup to
handle. This is how 1.3.2 worked but was lost in the 1.4.2 update.
CommandMap now contains the functionality for tab completion. This
commit replaces the vanilla implementation and simply delegates it to
the Bukkit API.
This change affects the old chat compatibility layer from an
implementation only standpoint. It does not queue the 'event' to fire,
but rather queues a runnable that allows the calling thread to wait for
execution to finish.
The other effect of this change is that rcon connects now have their
commands queued to be run on next server tick using the same
implementation.
The internal implementation is in org.bukkit.craftbukkit.util.Waitable.
It is very similar to a Future<T> task, but only contains minimal
implementation with object.wait() and object.notify() calls
under the hood of waitable.get() and waitable.run().
PlayerPreLoginEvent now properly implements thread-safe event execution
by queuing the events similar to chat and rcon. This is still a poor way
albeit proper way to implement thread-safety; PlayerPreLoginEvent will
stay deprecated.
The implementation for the new methods mimics the old methods. The final
call for the old methods now maps to the new methods with an additional
call to get id.
If two players (or a player and any other entity) are teleported to the
same location in the same tick they will both get added to the other's
destroy queue then have a new entity spawn packet sent. Next tick the
destroy queue will be processed and they will then be invisible to each
other. To prevent this situation we remove the entity from the destroy
queue when sending out a spawn packet for them.
The new AI system introduced by Minecraft 1.2 no longer relies on the
target field in the entity so it is frequently out of sync with what the
entity is actually doing. This modifies the AI goal to update the target
so our API can return the correct information.
In 1.2.5 and older versions of CraftBukkit we allowed the use of data
values on bug mushroom and mob spawner blocks for use with plugins.
For the 1.3 update the mechanism for doing this was changed and I
accidentally used the wrong value when adding these, indicating that
they should not have data instead of our actual intent. This change
corrects this regression.
If a plugin calls player.hidePlayer(other); then player.showPlayer(other);
in the same tick the other player will be added to the entity destroy queue
then a spawn packet will be sent. On the next tick the queue will be
processed and a destroy packet will be sent that renders the other player
invisible. To correct this we ensure the destroy queue is in sync with use
of the vanish API.
In some situations an entity or tile entity can be added to the world but
have its own 'world' field be null or otherwise incorrect. As the entity
was added to this world to be ticked assume it actually is in this world.
An internal method for making the debug output for CraftScheduler's
async tasks was erroneously using the 'this' reference when the loop
should be referencing the current task.
This change was done to remove the internal sound names from the API.
Along with moving the internal names into CraftBukkit, a unit test was
added for any new sounds added in the API to assure they have a non-null
mapping.
After further testing it appears that while the original LongHashtable
has issues with object creation churn and is severly slower than even
java.util.HashMap in general case benchmarks it is in fact very efficient
for our use case.
With this in mind I wrote a replacement LongObjectHashMap modeled after
LongHashtable. Unlike the original implementation this one does not use
Entry objects for storage so does not have the same object creation churn.
It also uses a 2D array instead of a 3D one and does not use a cache as
benchmarking shows this is more efficient. The "bucket size" was chosen
based on benchmarking performance of the HashMap with contents that would
be plausible for a 200+ player server. This means it uses a little extra
memory for smaller servers but almost always uses less than the normal
java.util.HashMap.
To make up for the original LongHashtable being a poor choice for generic
datasets I added a mixer to the new implementation based on code from
MurmurHash. While this has no noticable effect positive or negative with
our normal use of chunk coordinates it makes the HashMap perform just as
well with nearly any kind of dataset.
After these changes ChunkProviderServer.isChunkLoaded() goes from using
20% CPU time while sampling to not even showing up after 45 minutes of
sampling due to the CPU usage being too low to be noticed.
This fix changes the 'state' of the last accessed variables to be more
accurate. Changing the coordinates of the last accessed chunk should
never precede actually setting the last accessed chunk, as loading a
chunk may at some point call back to getChunkAt with a new set of
coordinates before the chunk has actually been loaded. The coordinates
would have been set, but the actual chunk would not. With no check for
accuracy, this causes fringe case issues such as null block states.
Big thanks to @V10lator for finding where the root of the problem was
occurring.
This implementation of a visibility API check for sounds
was created by adding extra methods carrying the source entity
in WorldManager and ServerConfigurationManagerAbstract and
adding a test for canSee in the SCMA sendPacketNearby method.
This approach involves no logic copying, just method addition.
I opted to cast to WorldManager as:
1) IWorldAccess is not in CraftBukkit at the moment
2) There is no other IWorldAccess implemented in CraftBukkit,
nor is there likely to be one soon. If that day comes, easy fix.
The new setting is located at "ticks-per.autosave". By changing this
value, it affects how often a full save is automatically executed,
measured in ticks.
This value is defaulting to 0 (off) because we believe that the vast
majority of servers already have a third-party solution to automatically
saving the server at set intervals. Having the built in auto-save disabled
by default ensures that we are not saving things twice; doing so leads to
absolutely no benefits, but results in detrimental and noticeable
unnecessary performance decrease.
For servers that do not use an automated external script to perform saves,
this setting can be turned on by setting the value higher than 0, with 900
being the value used in vanilla.
Refactoring dependencies 'changes' the string literal in the code. This
commit changes the literal to instead use a char[] to initialize a new
String. On a bytecode level, there will not exist a String literal for these
two values; the shade plugin will no longer refactor them.
Refactoring jline also changes the other String literals we use for
notifying jline of the current state. To insure that our local code reflects
the inner logic in jline, the key value was changed to the static final
variable located in TerminalFactory. Likewise, UnsupportedTerminal uses the
explicit class name (as reflection is used later with the value that has
been set).
Async tasks are notorious for causing CMEs and corrupted data when
accessing the API. This change makes a linked list to track recent tasks
that may no longer be running. It is accessed via the toString method on
the scheduler. This behavior is not guaranteed, but it is accessible as
such currently.
Although toString is located in the scheduler, its contract does not
guarantee an accurate or up to date call when accessed from a second
thread.
When 1.3.1 was released, a try-catch block was removed from the tick
loop that called the method in NMS to handle commands. This restores a
try-catch to prevent the console from crashing the server.
Minecraft resets abilities based on what it knows client side, when someone dies and is in "survival," by default they should be in "survival." However, we allow modification of the PlayerAbilities, so we send this update out to the client.
Oh and, the format of the commit is like this to see if it looks any good. :)
Previously, the timeout would erroneously get converted to milliseconds
twice. The second conversion was removed.
Spurious wakeups were not handled properly, and would instead throw a
TimeoutException even if the waited time was not reached..
The new scheduler uses a non-blocking methodology. Combining volatile
references to make a linked reference chain, with the atomic reference
handling the tail, tasks are queued without waiting for locks. The main
thread will no longer limit the length of time spend for scheduled tasks,
but no task will run twice in the same tick. Scheduling a new task inside of
a synchronous task will always run the new task during the same tick,
assuming there is no supplied delay > 0.
Asynchronous tasks are now run using a thread pool. Any thread-local
implemenation should now account for threads being reused between
executions.
Race conditions were carefully examined and the order of logic is now very
important. Each task is placed in a secondary collection before removal from
primary collections. Thus, by reading tasks from the collections in the same
order they travel, it retains state-safety. This does make modifications
less responsive in some situations, as the task may be transitioning before
the modifier accesses it. This cost outweighs the requirement to synchronize
on the scheduler; previously any conflict would be first-come-first-serve,
with the main thread backing out arbitrarily.
Many codepaths only end up with one iterator being used at a time and
most of the rest only get up to two being used so using a static pool of
three is wasteful. This also allows us to efficiently handle cases that
exceed 3 iterators in use. Overall this dramatically increases the hit rate
and results in less iterators being created.
This ArrayList duplicates part of the functionality of the much more
efficient chunk map so can be removed as the map can be used in the few
places this was needed.
Replace uses of LongHashtable and LongHashset with new implementations.
Remove EntryBase, LongBaseHashtable, LongHashset, and LongHashtable as they
are no longer used.
LongObjectHashMap does not use Entry or EntryBase classes internally for
storage so has much lower object churn and greater performance. LongHashSet
is not as much of performance win for our use case but for general use is
up to seventeen times faster than the old implementation and is in fact
faster than alternatives from "high performance" java libraries. This is
being added so that if someone tries to use it in the future in a place
unrelated to its current use they don't accidentally end up with something
slower than the Java collections HashSet implementation.
Avoid overhead of using an ArrayList and resizing it. Also allows for reuse
of objects in the pool during the same tick by explicitly releasing them
back to the pool. This allows for much better cache performance as well
as reduced cache footprint.
Remove redundant ArrayList to avoid excessive object creation and CPU
overhead, the entries are added to the list then immediately iterated through
to run so just run them directly.
Swap order of some conditionals to perform the more efficient check first
as if it fails the list lookup will not be executed.
Remove profiling hooks including some rather expensive calls to getSimpleName.
ChunkSection.e() is called once per chunk section loaded and is quite
expensive (about 20% of CPU time for loading the chunk). This changes the
logic to add a fast path when extended block data is not being used and
reorganizes the loops for more optimal array traversal. Overall this saves
about 20-30% CPU time in this method.
- Hardcore requires a newly generated world
- You will be banned if you die in a hardcore world
- You will NOT be banned if you die in a non-vanilla world
- Your "heart container" will not change without logging back in. (Vanilla bug)
They can spawn any valid entities now. What is a "valid" entity? A "valid" entity is an EntityType with a non-null getName(). (for example: PRIMED_TNT, FALLING_BLOCK)
The method this.a(world, d0, d1, d2, i, j, k) is responsible for
actually placing the lava or water source block in the world. The event
is currently called after this method, thus canceling the event will
cause the player to keep their water/lava bucket but the water/lava will
still appear where they attempted to place it.
In addition, the check for whether a player has creative inventory is
short circuiting before the event fires, so the event will not be called
for these players.
This moves the event call and cancelled check above these two calls to
ensure it always fires and the results of it are honored.
Closes GH-835.
Added two utility collections for use with PlayerChatEvents allowing lazier
initialization of events and less need to synchronize against the player
list.
Provided a hidden queue system for similar logic to pre-1.3 chat. When a
plugin is listening for the deprecated PlayerChatEvent, all chat will be
delayed to be mirror executed from the main thread. All developers are
encouraged to immediately update to the developmental Bukkit chat API as a
minimum transition for server stability.
Additionally, changes were required to bring thread-safety to the flow
logic. CopyOnWriteArrayList is the only viable means to produce thread
safety with minimal diff; using a sane pre-implemented collection would
require reworking of sections of NMS logic.
As a minor change, implemented expected functionality for
PlayerCommandPreProcessEvent. Setting the player should now change the
player executing the command.
Both the CB 1.3.1 code, and vanilla 1.3.1 code, have modified the
behavior of entity tick processing in a way that can lead to disabling
of entity cleanup. Specifically, the tickEntities() call in n.m.s.World,
which processes both the entity cleanup (removing from the world entity
list) and tile entity tick processing (furnaces and such) does not get
called by n.m.s.MinecraftServer's q() method (which drives tick
processing calls in general) when no players are on the given world.
This causes a serious memory leak when automation processes, like dynmap
mapping, load and unload chunks - as entities on unloaded chunks are
only cleaned up during entity tick processing. It also will cause issues
with any mods that use persistent chunk loading (that is, keeping chunks
loaded so that tile entities will continue being processed), since such
processing will no longer function without at least one player on the
given world.
In any case, the tickEntities() call should be called in the same
fashion as under 1.2.x (each tick, independent of player population, as
opposed to being suspended indefinitely when no players are on the given
world). The specific memory leak observed, with removing the unloaded
entites from the world, requires this call be made regularly (or, at
least, whenever the entity unload queue (world.g) is not empty.
Closes GH-832
Added newlines at the end of files
Fixed improper line endings on some files
Matched start - end comments
Added some missing comments for diffs
Fixed syntax on some spots
Minimized some diff
Removed some no longer used files
Added comment on some required files with no changes
Fixed imports of items used once
Added imports for items used more than once
This allows previous causes to be available during the event, as well as making the damage cause a valid one. If EntityDamageEvent is canceled, then it's not the last DamageCause.
Also prevents setting DamageCause involuntarily through construction.
The Path object creates an array of 1024 PathPoint objects as the backing
for a sorted queue but testing shows we tend to get only 80 or so entries
in the array at most. To save memory this changes the default size of the
array to 128. Changing it to 64 was considered but that triggered too many
resizes which is detremental to performance.
When trying to execute stty to get terminal properties an
InterruptedException can be triggered even though we've read all of the
output from stty that we need. Instead of printing a warning and returning
-1 in this case try to parse what data we do have and reset the cache timer.
May also address BUKKIT-1627 and BUKKIT-1686.
The amount of food gained when eating is used for calculating the food
saturation value so capping it at 20 at this point causes us to get
incorrect results. FoodMetaData.eat caps it at 20 anyway so we're safe to
not do so here.
Also readds a line from mc-dev that was mistakenly removed.
TextWrapper used to try to ensure a message would wrap correctly on the
client by counting the width of the characters in pixels and wrapping
before hitting that limit. This was needed because the client would lose
color information when wrapping and could not handle long lines of text.
Now that both of these problems are solved in the client we can replace
TextWrapper with simple code to split the message into multiple packets on
newlines and ensure chat colors carry across to the new packet.
Make EntityLiving call AI logic every tick again.
Rework PathfinderGoalSelector logic.
Adds UnsafeList for use in places where we use ArrayList and know we won't
get index out of range errors. Added usage to World's tickEntities, Chunk's
entitySlices to speed up searching for entities, and to PathfinderGoalSelector
to speed up dealing with AI goals.
Reworked logic in PathfinderGoalSelector with help from fullwall. This code
no longer uses an extra ArrayList for setting up goals and only updates which
goals should be run every other time it is called.
Removed only calling PathfinderGoalSelector every other tick from EntityLiving
as we now only setup new goals every other tick. This ensures existing goals
run every tick to properly update mob movement.
Reduce usage of getCubes as it is an expensive call.
Remove iterator usage and object creation from PathfinderGoalSelector
methods as these are called very often.
Update EntityLiving goal selectors less often as this is still quite an
expensive task.
- Allows drops in creative mode by adding items to the getDrops() list
- Contents of containers are not reported
- Contents of storage minecarts are not reported
Details:
- The attributes of custom inventory views are no longer ignored
- Enchanting or crafting inventories no longer ignore the passed inventory and open a new one
- Inventories associated with tile entities no longer raise a class cast exception if there was no associated tile entity
- InventoryOpenEvent and InventoryCloseEvent (if they already had some other inventory open) now fire in all cases
- If for any reason the inventory failed to open, the method now returns null instead of returned the previous inventory they had open (or the default inventory, if none)
Note: the client seems to predict redstone ore interacting, so you may see
ore lighting up when it shouldn't be. However, cancelled events should
function as expected.
Also adds CraftEventFactory.callEvent(Event), which returns the event called. Currently only used for n.m.s.BlockStationary's lava
BlockIgniteEvent calls.
See the corresponding Bukkit commit for details.
Implementation details:
- Any packets that include an itemstack will send air stacks as null; maybe this will even eliminate the client crash that occurs if the client receives an air stack
- Better handling of null itemstacks in general (ie less converting them to air stacks)
- Inventory.setContents() can now take an array smaller than the inventory without error
- Player.updateInventory() should now correctly update the result slot in a crafting inventory
Some small credit goes to Afforess (initial implementation of openInventory() methods) and Drakia (initial implementation of InventoryOpenEvent and InventoryCloseEvent).
This commit modifies the construction of PortalCreateEvents to specify
a reason for the event. Reasons are either:
1. FIRE: the portal is being created because a player set fire to an
obsidian frame.
2. DESTINATION: the portal is being created as a destination for an existing portal.
- Removed the useless world field.
- Made it so changes to a CraftSign (which is a Block*State*) no longer reflect into the world without calling sign.update().
- All StructureGrowEvent handling for these is in BlockSapling now, using a BlockChangeDelegate to collect the data.
- Moved StructureGrowDelegate into a separate class
Add a recipe iterator to make it possible to retrieve and remove recipes (BUKKIT-738), and updated the recipe classes to not clip the data to 127 (BUKKIT-624)