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.
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.
- 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.
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?
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.
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).
- 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
These are largely copied across from Cobalt's test suite, with some
minor tweaks. It actually exposed one bug in Cobalt, which is pretty
nice.
One interesting thing from the coroutine tests, is that Lua 5.4 (and
one assumes 5.2/5.3) doesn't allow yielding from within the error
handler of xpcall - I rather thought it might.
This doesn't add any of the PUC Lua tests yet - I got a little
distracted.
Also:
- Allow skipping "keyword" tests, in the style of busted. This is
implemented on the Java side for now.
- Fix a bug with os.date("%I", _) not being 2 characters wide.