Removes synchronization from sending packets
Makes normal packet sends no longer need to be wrapped and queued like it use to work.
Adds more packet queue immunities on top of keep alive to let the following scenarios go out
without delay:
- Keep Alive
- Chat
- Kick
- All of the packets during the Player Joined World event
Hoping that latter one helps join timeout issues more too for slow connections.
Removes processing packet queue off of main thread
- for the few cases where it is allowed, order is not necessary nor
should it even be happening concurrently in first place (handshaking/login/status)
Ensures packets sent asynchronously are dispatched on main thread
This helps ensure safety for ProtocolLib as packet listeners
are commonly accessing world state. This will allow you to schedule
a packet to be sent async, but itll be dispatched sync for packet
listeners to process.
This should solve some deadlock risks
This may provide a decent performance improvement because thread synchronization incurs a cache reset
so by avoiding ever entering a synchronized block, we get to avoid that, and packet sending is a really
hot activity.
Upstream has released updates that appears 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:
b999860d SPIGOT-2304: Add LootGenerateEvent
CraftBukkit Changes:
77fd87e4 SPIGOT-2304: Implement LootGenerateEvent
a1a705ee SPIGOT-5566: Doused campfires & fires should call EntityChangeBlockEvent
41712edd SPIGOT-5707: PersistentDataHolder not Persistent on API dropped Item
Calling this 2.0 as it's a pretty major improvement with more knobs to twist.
This update fixes many things. The goal here is to restore vanilla behavior to some degree.
Instead of permanent inactive pools of animals, let them show some signs of life some....
Yes this may reduce performance compared to before, but I hope it is minimal. Got to find a balance.
Previous EAR logic really compromised vanilla behavior of mobs. This tries to restore it.
Changes:
1) All monsters are now classed as Monster. Mojang has an interface, we should use it.
- This now includes Shulker, Slimes, see #2 for Phantom and Ghast
2) Villagers and Flying Monsters now have their own separate activation range configs.
- Villagers will default to your Animals config
3) Added a bunch of more immunities
- Brand new entities are immune for a few seconds
- Entities that recently traveled by portal are immune for few seconds
- Entities that are leashed to a player are immune
- Ender Signals are immune
- Entities that are jumping, climbing, dying (lol) are immune
- Minecarts are now always immune to the movement restriction
4) Villagers immunity received major overhaul...
- Now has many immunities for Villager activities to let them
do their work then go back inactive
- Such as interacting with doors and workstations should be more normal now
- Raids will trigger immunities, in that villagers will run and hide when bell rings.
- Raid should keep the entire village immune during the raid to keep gameplay mechanics
You can disable raids by game rule if you dont want raids
Then the big one.....
Wake Up Inactive Entities:
One issue plagueing "farms" is that we no longer even let entities move now.
Entities become lifeless.
A new system has been introduced to wake up inactive entities every so often, to let
them stretch their legs, eat some food, play with each other and experience the good entity life.
Animals, Villagers, Monsters (Includes Pillagers), and Flying Monsters will now wake up every
so often after staying inactive for a very long. This grants them a temporary immunity, that
the goal is they will then find "stuff to do" by having a longer activity window.
How many to wake up, how often they wake up, and for how long they wake up are all configurable.
Current EAR Immunities really don't give some entities enough of a window to find work
to then keep them immune for the work to even start. This system should help that.
We will only wake up a few entities per tick on the first wave, restoring 1 per type per world per tick.
So say you have 10 monsters qualify for inactive wake up, all 8 will wake up on the first eligible tick,
and then the 9th will wake up on next tick, 10th on next tick.
If for 5 ticks no more inactive wake up, our buffer will have built back up to 5, and then 5 can go next needed tick.
This basically incrementally wakes them up, preventing too many from waking up in a single tick, to reduce impact to TPS.