API Changes:
- Minecraft had updated ModelResourceLocation to no longer inherit from
ResourceLocation.
To allow referencing both already baked models
(ModelResourceLocation) and loading new models (via ResourceLocation)
in turtle model loadders, we add a new "ModelLocation" class, that
acts as a union between the two.
I'm not entirely convinced by the design here, so might end up
changing again before a stable release.o
- Merge IMedia.getAudioTitle and IMedia.getAudio into a single
IMedia.getAudio method, which now returns a JukeboxSong rather than a
SoundEvent.
Other update notes:
- Minecraft had rewritten how buffers are managed again. This is a
fairly minor change for us (vertex -> addVertex, normal -> setNormal,
etc...), with the exception that you can no longer use
MultiBufferSource.immediate with the tesselator.
I've replaced this with GuiGraphics.bufferSource, which appears to be
fine, but worth keeping an eye on in case there's any odd render
state issues.
- Crafting now uses a CraftingInput (a list of items) rather than a
CraftingContainer, which allows us to simplify turtle crafting code.
Ever since 1.17, turtle and pocket upgrades have been loaded from
datpacks, rather than being hard-coded in Java. However, upgrades have
always been stored in our own registry-like structure, rather than using
vanilla's registries.
This has become a bit of a problem with the introduction of components.
The upgrade components now hold the upgrade object (rather than just its
id), which means we need the upgrades to be available much earlier (e.g.
when reading recipes).
The easiest fix here is to store upgrades in proper registries instead.
This means that upgrades can no longer be reloaded (it requires a world
restart), but otherwise is much nicer:
- UpgradeData now stores a Holder<T> rather than a T.
- UpgradeSerialiser has been renamed to UpgradeType. This now just
provides a Codec<T>, rather than JSON and network reading/writing
functions.
- Upgrade classes no longer implement getUpgradeID(), but instead have
a getType() function, which returns the associated UpgradeType.
- Upgrades are now stored in turtle_upgrade (or pocket_upgrade) rather
than turtle_upgrades (or pocket_upgrades). This will break existing
datapacks, sorry!
Originally we exposed a single registerTurtleUpgradeModellermethod which
could be called from both Fabric (during a mod's client init) and Forge
(during FMLClientSetupEvent).
This was fine until we allowed upgrades to specify model dependencies,
which would then automatically loaded, as this means model loading now
depends on upgrade modellers being loaded. Unknown to me, this is not
guaranteed to be the case on Forge - mod setup happens at the same time
as resource reloading!
Unfortunately there's not really a salvageable way of fixing this with
the current API. Forge now uses a registration event-based system,
meaning we can guarantee all modellers are loaded before models are
baked.
This adds SPDX license headers to all source code files, following the
REUSE[1] specification. This does not include any asset files (such as
generated JSON files, or textures). While REUSE does support doing so
with ".license" files, for now we define these licences using the
.reuse/dep5 file.
[1]: https://reuse.software/
Mostly in prep for 1.19.4.
- Update to Loom 1.1.
- Simplifies our handling of remapped configurations a little.
- Removes the need for a fake fabric.mod.json in the API jar.
For reasons I don't quite understand, this required us to bump the
Fabric API version. Otherwise interfaces are not injected.
- Update to Rollup 3.0.
- Do NOT update NullAway: It now correctly checks @Nullable fields in
inherited classes. This is good, but also a pain as Minecraft is a
little over-eager in where it puts @Nullable.
- 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.
- 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.
This fixes several issues I had with consuming multi-loader CC:T in
various upstream mods.
- Include /all/ sources in the Forge/Fabric jar. Before it was just the
common classes, and not the core or API.
- Use some Gradle magic to remove superfluous dependencies from the POM
file. Also make sure Cobalt and Netty are present as dependencies.
- Start using minimize() in our shadow jar config again.
- Add support for Fabric. This is mostly pretty simple, though does
require a lot more mixins than Forge.
Half this diff is due to data generators: we run them separately as
some aspects (recipes mostly) are different between the loaders.
- Add integration with Iris (same as our Oculus support) and REI
(mostly the same as our JEI support).
- Generic peripherals only support inventories (or rather
InventoryStorage) right now. Supporting more of the Fabric storage
API is going to be tricky due to the slotted nature of the API: maybe
something to revisit after Transfer API V3 (V4?, I've lost track).
Note, this does /not/ mean I will be publishing a Fabric version of
CC:T. My plan is to rebase CC:R on top of this, hopefully simplifying
the maintenance work on their end and making the two mods a little more
consistent.