This will hopefully make it easier to track down various issues which
might otherwise go unnoticed or provide little information.
The main areas modified are those that external APIs may provide values
for or interact with: various providers and ILuaObject/IPeripheral
implementations. However, we do also log in a couple of other places
which indicate a problem with this, or another, mod.
This adds a common ILogger interface and two built-in loggers - one
which prints to stdout, the other using a Log4J logger. These are split
up as not to cause dependency issues for emulators.
The stdout logger is enabled by default, but the ComputerCraft mod class
will swap over to using FML's mod specific logger, which provides a more
consistent look with the rest of Minecraft.
There was a very small gap between the turtle frame and the top of the
turtle body. This increases the height of the body by one pixel, adding
a little bit of overlap and ensuring the frame renders on top fixes
this issue.
- Makes ITurtleItem implement IColourableItem
- Only cache one turtle item model for all colours, rather than one for
each colour.
- Allow ITurtleAccess to set an arbitrary colour.
This allows for other items, such as turtles, to be dyed in the future.
This also adds support for the ore dictionary, meaning you can use other
mod's dyes to colour items.
- Move the encoding/decoding from the Filesystem implementation to the
individual handles.
- Move each handle into an core.apis.handles package from the main fs
API.
- Move the HTTP response to inherit from these handles.
- Allow binary handles' read function to accept a number, specifying
how many characters to read - these will be returned as a Lua string.
- Add readAll to binary handles
- Allow binary handles' write function to accept a string which is
decoded into the individual bytes.
- Add "binary" argument to http.request and friends in order to return
a binary handle.
- Ensure file handles are open when reading from/writing to them.
- Return the error message when opening a file fails.
This provides a publically accessible way of interacting with wireless
networks, hopefully extending to wired networks in the future.
Unlike the original INetwork/IReceiver system, networked devices listen
on all channels, filtering when they recieve the packet. This allows
other peripheral mods to be more flexible in their packet handling.