As of #458, BlockPeripheral will act as a full/opaque block for some
peripherals and a transparent one for others. However, some Block
methods use the default state rather than the current one. This means
modems report being a full block when they are not, leading to
suffocating entities and lighting glitches.
This restructures monitor in order to make it thread-safe: namely
removing any world interaction from the computer thread.
Instead of each monitor having their own terminal, resize flag, etc...
we use a monitor "multiblock" object. This is constructed on the origin
monitor and propagated to other monitors when required.
We attempt to construct the multiblock object (and so the corresponding
terminal) as lazily as posible. Consequently, we only create the
terminal when fetching the peripheral (not when attaching, as that is
done on the computer thread).
If a monitor is resized (say due to placing/breaking a monitor) then we
will invalidate all references to the multiblock object, construct a new
one if required, and propagate it to all component monitors.
This commit also fixes several instances of glLists not being deleted
after use. It is not a comprehensive fix, but that is outside the scope
of this commit.
- Ensure usage is consistent
- Allow computer selectors to return multiple values
- Fix commands being marked as usable when it isn't
- Add /computercraft turn-on, a counter to /computercraft shutdown
As tiles outside the world border are not ticked, turtles are rendered
entirely useless. Furthermore, the turtle animation will never progress
resulting in visual glitches.
In order to avoid this, we ensure the target position is within the
world border when moving to it.
When a player places a turtle, they are marked as its owner. Any actions
they perform (such as breaking blocks, moving, etc...) are performed
using this player's game profile.
This allows turtles to work correctly with various permissions mods.
Previously you would have to whitelist all turtles in order for them to
function within a claim.
This means one can call .getFamily() in a thread-safe manner, ensuring
turtle.getFuelLimit() does not cause issues. As we use a specialist
TE class for each family this does not require any specialist caching.
This adds several commands which may be useful for server owners. It'd
be nice to integrate this into ComputerCraft itself, but the associated
command framework is quite large so we'd have to think about it.
This migrates TurtleMultiModel's current vertex transformation system
into something more powerful and "correct". Namely, it has the following
improvements:
- Handles all position formats (float, byte, etc...)
- Correctly translates normals of quads
- Reorders faces if the winding order is reversed
ILuaAPI has been moved to dan200.computercraft.api.lua. One creates
a new API by registering an instance of ILuaAPIFactory. This takes an
instance of IComputerSystem and returns such an API.
IComputerSystem is an extension of IComputerAccess, with methods to
access additional information about the the computer, such as its label
and filesystem.
- ComputerThread constructs multiple threads instead of just one,
depending on a config options.
- The synchronized blocks of PeripheralAPI.PeripheralWrapper have been
shifted a little to ensure no deadlocks occur.
Whilst I'm pretty sure this is safe for general use, I'm disabling this
by default for now. I may consider enabling it in the future if no
issues are found.