I was having issues where dropped items would clip into blocks when
dropped, and then phase upwards through the turtle instead. This makes
things a little more consistent with dispenser behaviour.
Instead of taking control of the breaking logic in all cases, we now
only do so when we have both a cable and modem. This allows us to fall
back to default vanilla behaviour and so correctly drop the modem/cable
item.
We now call getLevel() when attaching the peripheral, so need the
position to be available immediately. Fixes#1274.
I /think/ the entity should always be present, as peripherals are
only created on startup or when calling pocket.equipBack, both of which
require a player.[^1]
I suspect this was a little broken before (the level wouldn't be
available if a modem received a message before the position had
been set), but that would be much rarer.
I'm not 100% convinced about the thread-safety of this code (the writes
to level may not be immediately visible on other threads), so may need
to think about that.
[^1]: Note that when peripherals come to be /attached/ they may no
longer have a player (as there's a gap between turning a computer on and
it actually starting). However, the level/position will have been
initialised by then, so this isn't a problem.
Use `InteractionResult.sidedSuccess` / `.CONSUME` where applicable instead of `.SUCCESS`. This prevents the server from sending an additional swing animation packet to the client. Normally this isn't a problem, since the client will de-duplicate swing packets if they are within the animation duration of the currently playing swing; however, when connected to a server with a high ping the packet is sent after the animation is already finished on the client, resulting in a duplicate animation.
We now perform movement translations before rendering the label, rather
than afterwards. This means the label moves smoothly(ish), rather than
jumping from block to block.
I've been meaning to fix this for over 6 years, and just kept
forgetting.
Previously ILuaContext.executeMainThreadTask worked by running
ILuaContext.issueMainThreadTask, pulling task_complete events, and then
returning the results.
While this makes the implementation simple, it means that the task's
results were converted into Lua values (in order to queue the event) and
then back into Java ones (when the event was pulled), before eventually
being converted into Lua once more.
Not only is this inefficient, as roundtripping isn't lossless, you
couldn't return functions or rich objects from main thread functions
(see https://github.com/dan200/ComputerCraft/issues/125).
We now store the return value on the Java side and then return that when
the receiving the task_complete event - the event no longer carries the
result. Note this does not affect methods using issueMainThreadTask!
- Fix client classes not being included in Forge.
- Only remap Nettty's HTTP classes, not all of them. This feels a
little more error prone - maybe we should jar-in-jar this in the
future.
- Use the correct refmaps on Forge.
- Prevent the Fabric jar pulling in some other mods.
Closes#1247
- Correctly handle FileOperationExceptions for the root mount.
- Remove some checks from MountWrapper: Mount/WritableMount should do
these already!
- Normalise file paths, always using a '/'.
- Separate FileMount into separate FileMount and WritableFileMount
classes. This separates the (relatively simple) read-only code from
the (soon to be even more complex) read/write code.
It also allows you to create read-only mounts which don't bother with
filesystem accounting, which is nice.
- Make openForWrite/openForAppend always return a SeekableFileHandle.
Appendable files still cannot be seeked within, but that check is now
done on the FS side.
- Refactor the various mount tests to live in test contract interfaces,
allowing us to reuse them between mounts.
- Clean up our error handling a little better. (Most) file-specific code
has been moved to FileMount, and ArchiveMount-derived classes now
throw correct path-localised exceptions.
Lots of minor changes, but nothing too nasty - just tedious.
Known bugs/issues:
- REI and JEI haven't been updated at the time of writing, so our usage
of their APIs may be incompatible.
- Crash when opening the config UI in Fabric, as forgeconfigapi-port
hasn't been updated yet.
Will hold off on doing a release until those mods have updated.
- Flip http.websocket and http.websocketAsync docs (fixes#1244)
- Fix http.request queuing a http_failure event with no URL when
passing a malformed URL
- Fix http.websocketAsync not queuing websocket_failure events on
immediate failure.
In classic squid tradition: 20% code, and 80% test logic.
Closes#962. Alas, whoever reported this has deleted their account, so
they can't even be happy about it :(.
- Update ForgeConfigAPI to the latest version, to fix the race
condition.
- Move WirelessNetwork lifecycle management to ServerContext.
- Some doc fixes.
- Remove deprecated API members in prep for 1.19.3. This allows us to
remove the mc-stubs and forge-stubs projects.
- Make several methods take a MinecraftServer instead of a Level (or
nothing at all).
- Remove I prefixes from a whole bunch of interfaces, making things a
little more consistent with Java conventions.
This avoids touching the "main" interfaces people consume for now. I
want to do that another Minecraft version, to avoid making the update
too painful.
- Remove IFileSystem and associated getters. This has never worked very
well and I don't think has got much (any?) usage.
I kinda hate this, but not sure what else to do. It might be worth
rewriting sanitizePath in the future to loop through the string once,
but I think this is good enough for now.
This removes the patching of fs and http, and replaces them with their
own standard Lua APIs. This makes the bios a little simpler, and means
we can move the documentation in line.
- Ensure they're correctly synced to the client. This definitely isn't
comprehensive, but doing anything further probably involves multiple
players, which is tricky.
- Quick rendering test for in-hand computers.
Forge requires the file to be in the root of the jar, hence doing it
this way round. The icon is read using ModContainer.findPath, so this
shouldn't conflict with other mods.
Love being on the bleedin' edge. More importantly, this fixes a couple
of issues:
- Translations are loaded on the server, meaning .getItemDetail
correctly translates modded items.
- Shulker boxes cannot be moved inside other shulker boxes using the
transfer API.
- Start using Fab API's ItemStack.getRecipeRemainder().
Translations for Swedish
Translations for French
Co-authored-by: Naheulf <newheulf@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: SquidDev <git@squiddev.cc>
Co-authored-by: Алексей <handbrake.mine@gmail.com>
I was originally pretty sceptical about this, but it actually ends up
being useful for the same reason any other form of datagen is: we can
ensure that names are well formed, and that every string is actually
translated.
There's some future work here to go through all the custom translation
keys and move them into constants (maybe also do something with the
/computercraft command?), but that's a separate chunk of work.
The main motivation for this is to add translation keys to our config:
the Fabric version of Forge Config API provides a config UI, so it's
useful to provide user-friendly strings. Our generator also
automatically copies comments over, turning them into tooltips.
This also updates all of the other language files to match en_us.json
again: it's a very noisy diff as the file is now sorted alphabetically.
Hopefully this won't affect weblate though
[^1]: Amusing really that the Fabric port actually is more useful than
the original.
- Add a new ClientJavaExec Gradle task, which is used for client-side
tests. This:
- Copies the exec spec from another JavaExec task.
- Sets some additional system properties to configure on gametest framework.
- Runs Java inside an X framebuffer (when available), meaning we
don't need to spin up a new window.
We also configure this task so that only one instance can run at
once, meaning we don't spawn multiple MC windows at once!
- Port our 1.16 client test framework to 1.19. This is mostly the same
as before, but screenshots no longer do a golden test: they /just/
write to a folder. Screenshots are compared manually afterwards.
This is still pretty brittle, and there's a lot of sleeps scattered
around in the code. It's not clear how well this will play on CI.
- Roll our own game test loader, rather than relying on the mod loader
to do it for us. This ensures that loading is consistent between
platforms (we already had to do some hacks for Forge) and makes it
easier to provide custom logic for loading client-only tests.
- Run several client tests (namely those involving monitor rendering)
against Sodium and Iris too. There's some nastiness here to set up
new Loom run configurations and automatically configure Iris to use
Complementary Shaders, but it's not too bad. These tests /don't/ run
on CI, so it doesn't need to be as reliable.
- Bundle the core API inside the Fabric API jar for now, to ensure
that ResourceLocation is remapped.
- Add a dummy fabric.mod.json file to the API. We'll remove this once
https://github.com/FabricMC/fabric-loom/pull/749 is released.