The Discontinued entry was a special edge case that could lead to a Metadata type returning null. Instead, just directly use null in the 1.8->1.9 code where it is checked against. Also renamed the Meta1_17Types entries to be in uppercase and properly represent their value type.
This could mean life and death, see
`new Metadata(17, MetaType1_14.Float, event.meta()).value()`
vs.
`new Metadata(17, MetaType1_14.Float, event.meta().value())`
This essentially merges the two approaches to the metadata handling from ViaVersion and ViaBackwards and improves on both designs.
ViaVersion did not track every single entity, but only those needed (at least in theory) and can work with untracked entities' metadata. It had a very simple method overridden by metadata rewriter implementations, directly operating on the full metadata list and manually handling meta index changes as well as item/block/particle id changes.
ViaBackwards on the other hand had to track *every single* entity and threw warnings otherwise - while less prone to errors due to giving obvious warnings in the console, it unnecessarily tracks a lot of entities, and those warnings also annoys users when encountering virtual entity plugins (operating asynchronously and sending update packets while already untracked or not yet tracked). Dedicated MetaHandlers made id changes and filtering a lot easier to read and write. However, the actual metadata list handling and its distribution to handlers was not very well implemented and required a lot of list copying and creation as well as exception throws to cancel individual metadata entries.
This version has MetaFilters built with a Builder containing multiple helper functions, and the entity tracking is properly given its own map, hashed by a Protocol's class, to be easily and generically accessible from anywhere with only a Protocol class from the UserConnection, along with more optimized metadata list iteration. The entity tracking is largely unchanged, keeping ViaVersion's approach to not having to track *all* entities (and being able to handle null types in meta handlers).
All of this is by no means absolutely perfect, but is much less prone to errors than both previous systems and takes a lot less effort to actually write. A last possible change would be to use a primitive int to object map that is built to be concurrency save for the EntityTracker, tho that would have to be chosen carefully.
This brings no improvement now, but if primitive read/write methods for manual calls were implemented later, a signature break will have been prevented by this (aka breaking it now)
This does not affect any previous states of this project; only future modifications as well as the project as a whole will be under the GNU General Public License from now on. The newly introduced api directory, partly split from common, is an exception to this, still being licensed under the MIT license.
See the README for details.