When tab completing /deop, a potentially large set of players is used for
finding suitable player names. This potentially large set of players can
cause performance concerns on servers. To fix this, only the set of
operators should be considered for the /deop tab completion where the
player set is much more relevant and follows suit with other commands
which employ "more specific" player sets when possible. This commit adds
this more efficient behaviour.
By: bendem <online@bendem.be>
Previously, when calling the /tp command with coordinates, no TeleportCause
was passed, causing the resulting PlayerTeleportEvent to be called with
TeleportCause.PLUGIN instead of TeleportCause.COMMAND. This commit adds the
missing TeleportCause to ensure that the resulting PlayerTeleportEvent
reports the correct TeleportCause.
By: GJ <gjmcferrin@gmail.com>
When executing an alias we already call an event for the alias itself. The
extra events are not needed for logging purposes as the alias itself is
logged and the events cause issues for plugins trying to do spam checking
on their own.
By: Travis Watkins <amaranth@ubuntu.com>
There is no need to print a stacktrace when an alias fails, we do not do
this for normal commands. We also now give error messages when attempting
to register an alias instead of having them just silently not function.
By: Travis Watkins <amaranth@ubuntu.com>
Adds a large expansion of the aliases system. Aliases can now take arguments,
reorder their arguments, and only pass certain arguments to certain commands.
New syntax added to the aliases are $1 for optional arguments, $$1 for
required arguments, $1- for optionally using all the arguments from the
specified position onward, and $$1- to do the same thing but require at least
the specified position exist. These exist for numbers 1 through 9. You are
able to pass arguments to one command of a multiple command argument and not
others. You can also use the argument as a prefix and/or suffix. A raw $ can
be represented in the arguments by using \$.
Examples:
aliases:
# Usage: /testobjective score_deaths 1 5
testobjective:
- "testfor @p[$$1=$$3,$$1_min=$$2]"
# Usage: /ban Amaranthus Because reasons
ban:
- ban $$1 $2-
- say Banned $$1
# Usage: /icanhasbukkit
icanhasbukkit:
- version
# Usage: /icanhasplugin HomeBukkit
icanhasplugin:
- version $$1
One change from the previous aliases system is that commands are no longer
passed all arguments implicitly. You must explicitly pass the arguments
you want to pass to the command.
By: t00thpick1 <t00thpick1dirko@gmail.com>