This was added in the 1.13 update and I'm still not sure why. Other mods
seem to get away without it, so I think it's fine to remove.
Also remove the fake net manager, as that's part of Forge nowadays.
Fixes#1044.
- Fixes#1026
- The remaining bytes counter wasn't being decremented, so the code that
splits off smaller packets was unreachable. Thus all file slices were
being put into a single UploadFileMessage packet.
- Fix UpgradeSpeakerPeripheral not calling super.detach (so old
computers were never cleaned up)
- Correctly lock computer accesses inside SpeakerPeripheral
Fixes#1003.
Fingers crossed this is the last bug. Then I can bump the year and push
a new release tomorrow.
We're still a few days away from release, but don't think anything else
is going to change. And I /really/ don't want to have to write this
changelog (and then merge into later versions) on the 25th.
While Minecraft will automatically push a new buffer when one is
exhausted, this doesn't help if there's only a single buffer in the
queue, and you end up with stutter.
By enquing a buffer when receiving sound we ensure there's always
something queued. I'm not 100% happy with this solution, but it does
alleviate some of the concerns in #993.
Also reduce the size of the client buffer to 0.5s from 1.5s. This is
still enough to ensure seamless audio when the server is running slow (I
tested at 13 tps, but should be able to go much worse).
When the game is paused in SSP world, speakers are not ticked. However,
System.nanoTime() continues to increase, which means the next tick
speakers believe there has been a big jump and so schedule a bunch of
extra audio.
To avoid this, we keep track of how long the game has been paused offset
nanoTime by that amount.
Fixes#994
It's just more confusing having to keep track of where the ByteBuffer is
at. In this case, I think we were forgetting to rewind after computing
the digest.
Hopefully we'll be able to drop some of these in 1.17 as Java 16 has
a few more ByteBuffer methods
Fixes#992
Speakers can now play arbitrary PCM audio, sampled at 48kHz and with a
resolution of 8 bits. Programs can build up buffers of audio locally,
play it using `speaker.playAudio`, where it is encoded to DFPWM, sent
across the network, decoded, and played on the client.
`speaker.playAudio` may return false when a chunk of audio has been
submitted but not yet sent to the client. In this case, the program
should wait for a speaker_audio_empty event and try again, repeating
until it works.
While the API is a little odd, this gives us fantastic flexibility (we
can play arbitrary streams of audio) while still being resilient in the
presence of server lag (either TPS or on the computer thread).
Some other notes:
- There is a significant buffer on both the client and server, which
means that sound take several seconds to finish after playing has
started. One can force it to be stopped playing with the new
`speaker.stop` call.
- This also adds a `cc.audio.dfpwm` module, which allows encoding and
decoding DFPWM1a audio files.
- I spent so long writing the documentation for this. Who knows if it'll
be helpful!
- Remove all the hungrarian notation in variables. Currently leaving
the format of rednet messages for now, while I work out whether this
counts as part of the public API or not.
- Fix the "repeat" program failing with broadcast packets. This was
introduced in #900, but I don't think anybody noticed. Will be more
relevant when #955 is implemented though.
This means that if the current player is breaking a cable/wired modem,
only the part they're looking at has breaking progress. Closes#355.
A mixin is definitely not the cleanest way to do this. There's a couple
of alternatives:
- CodeChickenLib's approach of overriding the BlockRendererDispatcher
instance with a delegating subclasss. One mod doing this is fine,
several is Not Great.o
- Adding a PR to Forge: I started this, and it's definitely the ideal
solution, but any event for this would have a ton of fields and just
ended up looking super ugly.
I assume people have broken coroutine dispatchers - I didn't think it
was possible to queue an actual event with no type.
See cc-tweaked/cc-restitched#31. Will fix it too once merged downstream!
Opening a screen KeyBinding.releaseAll(), which forces all inputs to be
considered released. However, our init() function then calls
grabMouse(), which calls Keybinding.setAll(), undoing this work.
The fix we're going for here is to call releaseAll() one more time[^1]
after grabbing the mouse. I think if this becomes any more of a problem,
we should roll our own grabMouse which _doesn't_ implement any specific
behaviour.
Fixes#975
[^1]: Obvious problem here is that we do minecraft.screen=xyz rather
than setScreen. We need to - otherwise we'd just hit a stack
overflow - but it's not great.
- Build fails right now due to module issues, so this won't be pushed
to GitHub.
- Monitors render transparently when loaded into the world. I don't
think this is a 1.17 bug, so not sure what's going on here!
Peripherals can now have multiple types:
- A single primary type. This is the same as the current idea of a
type - some identifier which (mostly) uniquely identifies this kind
of peripheral. For instance, "speaker" or "minecraft:chest".
- 0 or more "additional" types. These are more like traits, and
describe what other behaviour the peripheral has - is it an
inventory? Does it supply additional peripherals (like a wired
modem)?.
This is mostly intended for the generic peripheral system, but it might
prove useful elsewhere too - we'll have to see!
- peripheral.getType (and modem.getTypeRemote) now returns 1 or more
values, rather than exactly one.
- Add a new peripheral.hasType (and modem.hasTypeRemote) function which
determines if a peripheral has the given type (primary or
additional).
- Change peripheral.find and all internal peripheral methods to use
peripheral.hasType instead.
- Update the peripherals program to show all types
This effectively allows you to do things like
`peripheral.find("inventory")` to find all inventories.
This also rewrites the introduction to the peripheral API, hopefully
making it a little more useful.
- Capability invalidation and tile/block entity changes set a dirty bit
instead of refetching the peripheral immediately.
- Then on the block's tick we recompute the peripheral if the dirty bit
is set.
Fixes#696 and probably fixes#882. Some way towards #893, but not
everything yet.
This is probably going to break things horribly. Let's find out!
- Bump copy-cat version to have support for initial files in
directories and the blit fixes.
- Add an example nft image and move example nfp into a data/ directory.
- Fix nft parser not resetting colours on the start of each line.
The feature nobody asked for, but we're getting anyway.
Old way to register a turtle/pocket computer upgrade:
ComputerCraftAPI.registerTurtleUpgrade(new MyUpgrade(new ResourceLocation("my_mod", "my_upgrade")));
New way to register a turtle/pocket computer upgrade:
First, define a serialiser for your turtle upgrade type:
static final DeferredRegister<TurtleUpgradeSerialiser<?>> SERIALISERS = DeferredRegister.create( TurtleUpgradeSerialiser.TYPE, "my_mod" );
public static final RegistryObject<TurtleUpgradeSerialiser<MyUpgrade>> MY_UPGRADE =
SERIALISERS.register( "my_upgrade", () -> TurtleUpgradeSerialiser.simple( MyUpgrade::new ) );
SERIALISERS.register(bus); // Call in your mod constructor.
Now either create a JSON string or use a data generator to register your upgrades:
class TurtleDataGenerator extends TurtleUpgradeDataProvider {
@Override
protected void addUpgrades( @Nonnull Consumer<Upgrade<TurtleUpgradeSerialiser<?>>> addUpgrade )
simple(new ResourceLocation("my_mod", my_upgrade"), MY_UPGRADE.get()).add(addUpgrade);
}
}
See much better! In all seriousness, this does offer some benefits,
namely that it's now possible to overwrite or create upgrades via
datapacks.
Actual changes:
- Remove ComputerCraftAPI.register{Turtle,Pocket}Upgrade functions.
- Instead add {Turtle,Pocket}UpgradeSerialiser classes, which are used
to load upgrades from JSON files in datapacks, and then read/write
them to network packets (much like recipe serialisers).
- The upgrade registries now subscribe to datapack reload events. They
find all JSON files in the
data/$mod_id/computercraft/{turtle,pocket}_upgrades directories,
parse them, and then register them as upgrades.
Once datapacks have fully reloaded, these upgrades are then sent over
the network to the client.
- Add data generators for turtle and pocket computer upgrades, to make
the creation of JSON files a bit easier.
- Port all of CC:T's upgrades over to use the new system.
- Subscribe to the "on add reload listener" event, otherwise we don't
get reloads beyond the first one! This means we no longer need to
cast the resource manager to a reloadable one.
- Change the mount cache so it's keyed on path, rather than "path ✕
manager".
- Update the reload listener just to use the mount cache, rather than
having its own separate list. I really don't understand what I was
thinking before.
- Some improvements to validation of monitors. This rejects monitors
with invalid dimensions, specifically those with a width or height
of 0. Should fix#922.
- Simplify monitor collapsing a little. This now just attempts to
resize the four "corner" monitors (where present) and then expands
them if needed. Fixes#913.
- Rewrite monitor expansion so that it's no longer recursive. Instead
we track the "origin" monitor and replace it whenever we resize to
the left or upwards.
Also add a upper bound on the loop count, which should prevent things
like #922 happening again. Though as mentioned above, validation
should prevent this anyway.
- Some small bits of cleanup to general monitor code.
I have absolutely no confidence that this code is any better behaved
than the previous version. Let's find out I guess!
- Add a new GenericPeripheral interface. We don't strictly speaking
need this - could put this on GenericSource - but the separation
seems cleaner.
- GenericPeripheral.getType() returns a new PeripheralType class, which
can either be untyped() or specify a type name. This is a little
over-engineered (could just be a nullable string), but I'm planning
to allow multiple types in the future, so want some level of
future-proofing.
- Thread this PeripheralType through the method gathering code and
expose it to the GenericPeripheralProvider, which then chooses an
appropriate name.
This is a little ugly (we're leaking information about peripherals
everywhere), but I think is fine for now. It's all private internals
after all!
Closes#830
- Move TaskCallback into the API and make it package private. This
effectively means it's not an API class, just exists there for
convenience reasons.
- Replace any usage of TaskCallback.make with
ILuaContext.executeMainThreadTask.
- Some minor formatting/checkstyle changes to bring us inline with
IntelliJ config.
- Allow any tool to break an "instabreak" block (saplings, plants,
TNT). Oddly this doesn't include bamboo or bamboo sapings (they're
marked as instabreak, only to have their strength overridden again!),
so we also provide a tag for additional blocks to allow.
- Hoes and shovels now allow breaking any block for which this tool is
effective.
- Use block tags to drive any other block breaking capabilities. For
instance, hoes can break pumpkins and cactuses despite not being
effective.
This should get a little nicer in 1.17, as we can just use block tags
for everything.
Let's see how this goes.
- Update references to the new repo
- Use rrsync on the server, meaning make-doc.sh uploads relative to the
website root.
- Bump Gradle wrapper to 7.2. Not related to this change, but possibly
fixes running under Java 16. Possibly.
Yes, I know this is a terrible feature. But it's been a long week and
I'm so tired.
Also fix the ordering in motd_spec. Who thought putting the month first
was reasonable?
This means wired peripherals now correctly track their current mounts
and attached state, rather than inheriting from the origin wired modem.
Closes#890
Allows us to run multiple "computers" in parallel and send messages
betwene them. I don't think this counts as another test framework, but
it's sure silly.
- Fix broken /cctest marker
- Correctly wait for the screenshot to be taken before continuing.
- Filter out client tests in a different place, meaning we can remove
the /cctest runall command
- Bump kotlin version
- Add lightmap parameters to the text, computer and printout renderers.
- Printouts are always rendered using the current lightmap. When
interacting with the GUI, we use the fullbright lightmap coordinate.
- Pocket computers render their border using the lightmap. Terminal and
light do not use the lightmap at all.
There's some funkiness going on here with render types - it appears the
"correct" position_color_tex_lightmap render type is actually one used
for text.
Fixes#919. This bug does occur on 1.16 too, but given how complex the
rendering changes are between 1.16 and 1.17 I do /not/ want to have to
implement this twice. Sorry.
This ensures inventory slots are synced while the container is open,
meaning the hotbar (which is visible underneath the GUI) correctly
updates.
Fixes#915
When placed in the off hand, pocket computers now render a different
screen when opened in the off-hand, just rendering text at the top of
the screen rather than "opening" the whole computer.
This means you can view the world and computer in your hand at the
same time, effectively allowing you to emulate the
Plethora/MoarPeripherals keyboard (and much more).
This currently requires you to move the pocket computer to the other
hand to open it normally. I did look into allowing for shift+right click
to open normally, but this is awkward when you're looking at a something
like a monitor - you need to shift as otherwise you'd click the block!
Plethora hooks into onItemUseFirst instead, and this might be an option
in the future - meaning that right click would always open some computer
GUI and never the blocks. This may be something we change in the future
- let's get some feedback first!
Closes#861. Apologies for this essay, but if you got this far you were
probably interested!
As always, a massive diff which is largely just moving files between
projects. This does fix a couple of issues with advancements, but
otherwise should behave the same.
Speaking of which, should probably go and test some of these recipes...
Instead of using ids for each computer each computer is spawned with id
0 but has a label which matches up to its test name. This has several
advantages:
- No more confusing IDs: the test code now just does thenComputerOk()
and that's it - the computer to track is inferred from the test name.
- All files are stored on one computer, which means we can write code
which is shared between tests.
This spins up a Minecraft instance (much like we do for the server) and
instructs the client to take screenshots at particular times. We then
compare those screenshots and assert they match (modulo some small
delta).
Basically mimic the actual API that Minecraft would expose if the
methods hadn't been stripped. Lots of ATs and unsafe hacks to get this
working, but thankfully the API we can expose to the user is pretty
nice. Yay for Kotlin?
Anyway, will cause some immediate pain (yay merge conflicts) but should
make keeping the two in sync much easier.
- Fix missing shader for printout render type
- Use current buffer provider for pocket computers rather than the
tesselator. This requires us to use a non-depth-writing terminal +
depth blocker, as otherwise one gets z-fighting.
- Thus refactor some of the shaders to be terminal wide, not just for
monitors.
Fixes#894
- Use linear attenuation.
- Fix speakers being 16 times as loud as they should be. They correctly
cut off at the right distance, but didn't fade out as one might
expect.
- Clamp volume at 0, not 1. Fixes#892
I don't think anybody actually used these, and I'm not convinced they
had much value anyway.
It might be worth switching the refueling code to work as a registry
instead, though events are kinda nice.
- Remap everything to use MojMap class names too. This is what Forge
uses, so \o/.
This does NOT currently rename any classes to use suffix notation or
BlockEntity. That will come in a later change. We do however rename
references of "World" to "Level".
- Move the test mod into a separate "cctest" source set. As Forge now
works using Jigsaw we cannot have multiple mods defining the same
package, which causes problems with our JUnit test classes.
- Remove our custom test framework and replace it with vanilla's (this
is no longer stripped from the jar). RIP kotlin coroutines.
It's still worth using Kotlin here though, just for extension
methods.
- Other 1.17-related changes:
- Use separate tile/block entity tick methods for server and client
side, often avoiding ticking at all on the client.
- Switch much of the monitor rendering code to use vanilla's
built-in shader system. It's still an incredibly ugly hack, so not
really expecting this to work with any rendering mods, but we'll
cross that bridge when we come to it.
Plan here is to release 1.98 for 1.16.x and 1.17.x and 1.97.1 for
1.15.x. However, will let this sit for a few days while I sort out 1.98
and the 1.17 port just in case any more bugs pop up.
This uses Netty's global traffic shaping handlers to limit the rate at
which packets can be sent and received. If the bandwidth limit is hit,
we'll start dropping packets, which will mean remote servers send
traffic to us at a much slower pace.
This isn't perfect, as there is only a global limit, and not a
per-computer one. As a result, its possible for one computer to use
all/most bandwidth, and thus slow down other computers.
This would be something to improve on in the future. However, I've spent
a lot of time reading the netty source code and docs, and the
implementation for that is significantly more complex, and one I'm not
comfortable working on right now.
For the time being, this satisfies the issues in #33 and hopefully
alleviates server owner's concerns about the http API. Remaining
problems can either be solved by moderation (with help of the
//computercraft track` command) or future updates.
Closes#33
Also add a test for rednet message sending. Hopefully gives some of the
modem and networking code a little bit of coverage (which is clearly the
same as being right :p).
By default CT applies them on the client and server. In a single player
world, this means we try to create two upgrades, which obviously fails!
Fixes#721
When exiting paint via the keyboard by typing "Ctrl" then "E"
separately, we consume the "key" event within paint, leaving the shell
to consume "read".
To avoid this, we run a sleep(0) to gobble any other left-over events.
Note, it's generally not enough to run a queueEvent/pullEvent here, as
the char event may not have ended up on the queue yet. Alas, as this
solution is pretty ugly.
- Move some shared Gui{Computer,Turtle} code into a new class. Using
entirely different naming conventions because of course (they are
consistent with MojMap, just not the rest of CC:T).
- Fix some mouse scaling issues in the terminal.
Speakers now play sounds using a custom set of packets.
- When playing a sound, we send the resource id, position, volume,
pitch and a UUID for the _speaker_ to all nearby clients.
- This UUID is then used when we need to update the sound. When the
speaker is moved or destroyed, we send a new packet to clients and
update accordingly.
This does have one side effect, that speakers can now only play one
sound at a time. I think this is accceptable - otherwise it's possible
to spam ward in a loop.
Notes still use the old networking code, and so will not be affected.
Closes#823
- Allow help files to use the ".md" suffix, and move changelog/whatsnew
to use them.
- When files end with ".md", the "help" program attempts to highlight
them. This involves:
- Colour code blocks with a lightGrey background.
- Replace lists to use bullet points instead of "-"/"*".
- Colours headings yellow.
The implementation of this is a bit janky because a) I wrote this and
b) we need to run this step before text wrapping, but preserve
colours and section positions over wrapping (thanks to Jack for
getting this working).
- Add section navigation to the help viewer, with left/right to move to
the next/previous section.
Closes#569
Adds a sidebar to the computer and turtle GUI. This currently provides
- A power indicator, which turns on/shuts down a computer.
- Button to queue a "terminate" event
I've written three or four integrations with bundled cables now over the
various versions, and I'm still not convinced this one is right. It
appears to work though, so we'll see.
We need depend on the main jar here (rather than the API jar), as
otherwise our javadoc tools fails - the API references some internal
classes which aren't on our classpath.
It might be nice to write tests for this (and CT) in the future -
goodness knows these features are fragile - but that'll require some
more gradle work which I don't want to do right now.
Closes#772
- Move registry code into the various *Registry classes.
I'm not sure this is any more sensible, but things being registered
in different places kinda irked me.
- Everything else (i.e. event listeners) goes in a {Client,Common}Hooks
class right now. It's not ideal, but I don't think we can split it up
much.
- Fix double updateOutput() call in TileComputerBase - I guess a
merge/rebase gone wrong in the past.
- Don't call updateBlock() when creating a server computer. This used
to be needed when we sent the computer to the client, but this is no
longer the case.
- Don't call updateBlock() on TileMonitors when updating from the
client. We don't need to do a redraw here, as this is all stored in
the block state now.
- Don't update the block when reading turtle upgrades. See #643 for
some background here.
See #658
- Return a more sensible string for empty treasure disks (i.e. those
given by /give). This should help identify packs which are giving
items in non-supported ways.
- Fix NPE when the treasure mount doesn't exist.
Fixes#801
- Simplify how the turtle's inventory is processed. We now copy all
items into the player inventory, attempt to place, and then copy the
items back.
This also fixes the problem where turtle.place() wouldn't (always)
update the item which was placed.
I'm also hoping this is more "correct" in how we process drops from
entities and whatnot. Though I've not had any reports of issues, so
it's probably fine.
- Replace the "error message" string array with an actual object. It'd
be nicer all these functions returned a TurtleCommandResult, but
merging error messages from that is a little harder.
Fun facts: the test suite was actually helpful here, and caught the fact
that hoeing was broken!
Implementation is a little awkward, as we can't send OPEN_FILE links
from the server, so we ensure the client runs a
/computercraft open-computer ID command instead. We then intercept this
on the client side and use that to open the folder.
Translations for French
Translations for German
Co-authored-by: Anavrins <xanavrins@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jummit <jummit@web.de>
Co-authored-by: Naheulf <newheulf@gmail.com>