This change lets players who are in their bed have a position which is above
ground for a longer period of time. This is because of the server not setting
their position to the ground/exit location when entering the bed, resulting in
the server believing they're still in the air.
Because we moved entity registration to occur before the PlayerJoinEvent occurs,
We started tracking the entity too early before it was registered to the client.
So delay tracking until after list packets have been sent.
No longer will trigger Synchronous Chunk Loads when a player logs
in to the server.
Will delay PlayerJoinEvent until the chunk has been loaded.
Should have massive performance benefits for larger servers with
lots of players logging in and out.
Confused on this one, as commit history says Spigots version is older
than our version, so i'm not sure how we ended up duplicating this when
the 2 events are 100% identical.
Subclass spigots event and rely on the inheritance system, and clean up
the duplicate event fires.
Fix Spigots setPosition to use setPositionRaw to avoid chunk load prematurely.
For years, plugin developers have had to delay many things they do
inside of the PlayerJoinEvent by 1 tick to make it actually work.
This all boiled down to 1 reason why: The event fired before the
player was fully ready and joined to the world!
Additionally, if that player logged out on a vehicle, the event
fired before the vehicle was even loaded, so that plugins had no
access to the vehicle during this event either.
This change finally fixes this issue, fully preparing the player
into the world as a fully ready entity, vehicle included.
There should be no plugins that break because of this change, but might
improve consistency with other plugins instead.
For example, if 2 plugins listens to this event, and the first one
teleported the player in the event, then the 2nd plugin actually
would be getting a valid player!
This was very non deterministic. This change will ensure every plugin
receives a deterministic result, and should no longer require 1 tick
delays anymore.
Appending to the tail of the chunk tasks leaves a
window for the chunk to be moved to a
non-ticking status.
Additionally, use CB's callback executor so we
can ensure that we are not incorrectly
scheduling.
See: https://gist.github.com/aikar/dd22bbd2a3d78a2fd3d92e95e9f28dc6
as part of post processing a chunk, we can call ChunkConverter.
ChunkConverter then kicks off major physics updates, and when blocks
that have connections across chunk boundries occur, a recursive risk
can occur where A updates a block that triggers a physics request.
That physics request may trigger a chunk request, that then enqueues
a task into the Mailbox ChunkTaskQueueSorter.
If anything requests that same chunk that is in the middle of conversion,
it's mailbox queue is going to be held up, so the subsequent chunk request
will be unable to proceed.
We delay post processing of Chunk.A() 1 "pass" by re stuffing it back into
the executor so that the mailbox ChunkQueue is now considered empty.
This successfully fixed a reoccurring and highly reproduceable crash
for heightmaps.
If the request to shut down the server is received while we are in
a watchdog hang, immediately treat it as a crash and begin the shutdown
process. Shutdown process is now improved to also shutdown cleanly when
not using restart scripts either.
If a server is deadlocked, a server owner can send SIGHUP (or any other signal
the JVM understands to shut down as it currently does) and the watchdog
will no longer need to wait until the full timeout, allowing you to trigger
a close process and try to shut the server down gracefully, saving player and
world data.
Previously there was no way to trigger this outside of waiting for a full watchdog
timeout, which may be set to a really long time...
Additionally, fix everything to do with shutting the server down asynchronously.
Previously, nearly everything about the process was fragile and unsafe. Main might
not have actually been frozen, and might still be manipulating state.
Or, some reuest might ask main to do something in the shutdown but main is dead.
Or worse, other things might start closing down items such as the Console or Thread Pool
before we are fully shutdown.
This change tries to resolve all of these issues by moving everything into the stop
method and guaranteeing only one thread is stopping the server.
We then issue Thread Death to the main thread of another thread initiates the stop process.
We have to ensure Thread Death propagates correctly though to stop main completely.
This is to ensure that if main isn't truely stuck, it's not manipulating state we are trying to save.
Also check class loader cache before locking to speed up cached hits to avoid the lock
wasn't gonna make a unique build just for that but can lump it in here.
Very few entities actually hard collide, so store them in their own
entity slices and provide a special getEntites type call just for them.
This reduces entity collision checking impact (in my testing) by 25%
for crammed entities (shove 130 cows into an 8x6 area in one chunk).
Less crammed entities are likely to show significantly less benefit.
Effectively, this patch optimises crammed entity situations.
A players previous block break location is held onto permanently, and if
an interact event is cancelled, the client sends a stop breaking block packet
This then tries to update client about that old location.
This old location might then be in a now unloaded chunk, and it caused it to load.
We now also clear reference to it once abort destroy block is ran to stop trying
to send updates about the old block anyways.
I had did a few of the operations myself, which would have broken chunkCheck
from doing it itself, which would leave some state left in the original chunk
and thats not good....
If the request to shut down the server is received while we are in
a watchdog hang, immediately treat it as a crash and begin the shutdown
process. Shutdown process is now improved to also shutdown cleanly when
not using restart scripts either.
If a server is deadlocked, a server owner can send SIGUP (or any other signal
the JVM understands to shut down as it currently does) and the watchdog
will no longer need to wait until the full timeout, allowing you to trigger
a close process and try to shut the server down gracefully, saving player and
world data.
Previously there was no way to trigger this outside of waiting for a full watchdog
timeout, which may be set to a really long time...
Leaf informed me this could cause ordering issues.
So, the risk if this occurring is lowered now anyways, but if an
entity causes a sync chunk load, it could process an unload...
We will tackle the problem better in a future commit
Also fixed another async-chunks=false issue
This will help prevent many cases of unregistering entities during entity ticking
Currently delays Chunk Unloads and Async Chunk load callbacks
Also dropped mid ticking chunk tasks during entity ticking to reduce this risk
This is how it use to behave on Paper, and this is totally destroying
the ability to try to shut the server down gracefully during the
shutdown process as events firing on the watchdog thread are throwing
errors.
This isn't an issue on Spigot
This has caused me so many rollbacks on watchdog already :(
Previous method only worked for a normal shutdown, and didn't include
when the server enters a closing state due to watchdog crashes
This is the correct variable to detect the server is in the middle of shutdown process
The streams hurt performance and allocate tons of garbage, so
replace them with the standard iterator.
Also optimise the stream.anyMatch statement to move to a bitset
where we can replace the call with a single bitwise operation.
This fix is for the few people who are using such low end systems that
asynchronous chunk loading hurts them rather than helping.
The previous build made paper crash if you turned off async chunks, and
this fixes that issue.
Mark chunks that are blocking main thread for world generation as urgent
Implements a general priority system so that chunks that are sorted in
the generator queues can prioritize certain chunks over another.
Urgent chunks will jump to the front of the line, ensuring that a
sync chunk load on an ungenerated chunk does not lag the server for
a long period of time if the servers generator queues are filled with
lots of chunks already.
This massively reduces the lag spikes from sync chunk gens.
This is also a precursor to my next improvement to prioritize chunks
in front of the player (Frustum Priorization)
In most cases, this change won't benefit much. However, there
exists the possibility that your Chunk Task threads are all busy
doing super slow work such as converting chunks.
If this occurs, the main thread blocking tasks, even at highest priority,
has to wait for some thread to become available.
This change gives us a waiting thread used only for main thread blocking
tasks, as well as an increased thread priority level, so that the OS
will give priority to this thread over the other threads.
This is more about guarantees, and won't be any real performanc boost
to anyone who has low or fast activity on their chunk tasks anyways.
But not all of us force upgrade our worlds, and this can be a life saver.
also reordered some patches because multiple PR's were merged.