Up until Minecraft version 1.5 it was not possible to teleport entities
within vehicles. With the 1.5 update came the change in the Minecraft
teleportation logic to dismount before teleporting the entity, if
applicable.
This commit ammends the existing CraftBukkit logic for rejecting
teleportation for entities in vehicles to permit the action. Due to this
change, CraftBukkit is now in-line with Minecraft 1.5 teleportation logic.
Setting the goal target overrides the entity's will to do something
else. This makes it so entities like wolves with attack another player
with .setTarget(), instead of hanging next to their owner.
Currently, plugins can set a player's display name to null, which could
cause issues for other calls to getDisplayName that aren't expecting a null
value. This changes setDisplayName to follow the same logic as
setPlayerListName, which sets the player's name back to their unmodified
"vanilla" name if it receives a null value as a parameter.
Bans require a name and UUID but our API only allows for a single string
identifier for a ban entry. Until this is sorted out go back to the old
name based setup since we can always get a UUID given a name.
The server's check is for whether or not a player can pass the whitelist
not just if the player is on it. That seems like more useful information
but the API has always just checked if they are on it so this commit
restores that.
The method in EntityLiving to remove a potion effect was remapped during
the 1.7.5 update. The method invocation in CraftLivingEntity was not
updated to invoke the remapped method, which has led to a random method in
LivingEntity being called in its place.
This commit corrects the behavior of removePotionEffect by changing the
method to invoke the remapped method as opposed to EntityLiving#m(float).
Thanks to @gabizou for finding this issue.
Previously no implementation existed to access various additional
information fields regarding bans. This implementation expands on the
information outlined in the sister Bukkit commit to provide access to
the Minecraft implementation of the ban system.
This implementation of the banning API contains 2 new classes which
provide access to the internal workings of the built-in banning
system within Minecraft.
The CraftBanEntry class simply supports the representation of an internal
Minecraft BanEntry object. The data that may be modified within this new
object must be manually saved to the list contained within the
CraftBanEntry using it's save() method.
The CraftBanList class supports the representation of an internal
Minecraft BanList object through proxy methods. These methods do
validation on the passed objects where needed to ensure safe input to the
backed Minecraft objects.
These changes additionally re-route the existing banning API to the newer,
more detailed, system. Functionality prior to this change still behaves
as documented by the contract defined by the methods changed.
Hanging entities are placed into the entity tracker and updates are sent
out to clients for the initial placement. Thereafter data watchers are
configured to monitor the item inside the frame. However, if the
direction the ItemFrame facing changes the entity tracker will not send
out updates.
This commit removes and recreates the ItemFrame entity in the same way
that was already done for Painting entities. This causes clients to
be updated appropriately.
Because EntityFireball.setDirection() adds a random offset to passed
parameters, it is not appropriate for use in an API method. As such,
the values need to be directly set to remain accurate.
Previously, trying to launch a ThrownExpBottle or Fish projectile would
result in an IllegalArgumentException. This commit adds support for both
ThrownExpBottle and Fish, which means that all current projectiles are
now properly supported by this method.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.