- Fix monitor renderer debug text showing up even when debug overlay
was not visible. This was a Forge-specific bug, which is why I'd not
noticed it I guess??
- Don't crash on alternative implementations of LoggerContext. Fixes
#1431. I'm not 100% sure what is causing this - it doesn't happen
with just CC:T at least - but at least we can bodge around it.
This is a little more general than InventoryStorage and means we can get
rid of our nasty double chest hack.
The generic peripheral system doesn't currently support generics (hah),
and so we need to use a wrapper class for now.
- Standardise our badges a little, adding a modrinth badge.
- Mention Fabric and Forge support.
- Don't include MC version in the Modrinth version number. I feel this
was required at some point, but apparently not any more! This also
allows us to use Modrinth for the Forge update JSON.
This is a horrible commit: It's a breaking change in a pretty subtle
way, which means it won't be visible while updating. Fortunately I think
the only mod on 1.19.4 is Plethora, but other mods (Mek, Advanced
Peripherals) may be impacted when they update. Sorry!
For some motivation behind the original issue:
The default IArguments implementation (VarargArguments) lazily converts
Lua arguments to Java ones. This is mostly important when passing tables
to Java functions, as we can avoid the conversion entirely if the
function uses IArguments.getTableUnsafe.
However, this lazy conversion breaks down if IArguments is accessed on a
separate thread, as Lua values are not thread-safe. Thus we need to
perform this conversion before the cross-thread sharing occurs.
Now, ideally this would be an implementation detail and entirely
invisible to the user. One approach here would be to only perform this
lazy conversion for methods annotated with @LuaFunction(unsafe=true),
and have it be eager otherwise.
However, the peripheral API gets in the way here, as it means we can no
longer inspect the "actual" method being invoked. And so, alas, this
must leak into the public API.
TLDR: If you're getting weird errors about scope, add an
IArguments.escapes() call before sharing the arguments between threads.
Closes#1384
- Add a new recipe type for turtle overlays, and recipe generator
support for this recipe.
- Add trans and rainbow flags.
- Exclude .license files from the generated jar. I'm not thrilled on
the whole .license file system, but it's kinda the easiest way.
- Regenerate data. Yes, this is 90% of the commit :D.
- Fix several inaccuracies with several files not marking Dan's
authorship. Most of these are new files, where the code was moved from
somewhere else:
- In the public API: IDynamicLuaObject, ILuaAPI, TaskCallbakc,
IDynamicPeripheral, UpgradeBase
- In the ROM: fs, http, require
- Do not mark Dan as an author for entirely new code. This affects
DetailHelpers, DropConsumer, FluidData, InventoryMethods, ItemDetails,
MonitorRenderState, NoTermComputerScreen, Palette, PlatformHelperImpl,
UploadFileMessage, the Terminal tests, and any speaker-related files.
- Relicence many files under the MPL where we have permission to do
so. See #1339 for further details.
Thank you to everyone who has contributed so far! Cannot overstate how
appreciated it is <3.
Trying to play a non-DFPWM (or WAV) file will generate terrible noise,
which in turns generates confused users. Instead, fail to play the audio
file and redirect them to the docs.
When a client sided pocket computer was first seen via an item stack
(rather than the computer state being synced over the networK), it would
always be created in greyscale due to this incorrect instanceof check.
Closes#1347
- Consult __name in native code too. Closes#1355. This has the added
advantage that unconvertable values (i.e. functions) will now
correctly be reported as their original type, not just nil.
- Fix the error message in cc.expect, so it matches the rest of Lua.
This has been bugging me for years, and I keep forgetting to change
it.
- Several files where @MCJack123 is the exclusive contributor. He has
signed over all contributions to "any OSI-approved license". Thank
you!
- Various the file handle classes: Looking at these again, I don't
think they contain any of the original code.
- Timeouts are now driven by an interrupt system, rather than polling.
While we do not impose memory limits, this should close#1333.
- Update the table library to largely match Lua 5.4:
- Add table.move
- Table methods (with the exception of foreach/foreachi) now use
metamethods (closes#1088).
There's still some remaining quirks (for instance, table.insert
accepts values out-of-bounds), but I think that's fine.
- Cobalt's threaded-coroutine system is gone (load now supports
yielding), so we no longer track coroutine metrics.
- Type errors now use __name. See #1355, though this does not apply to
CC methods (either on the Java or CraftOS side), so is not enough to
resolve it.
See https://github.com/SquidDev/Cobalt/compare/v0.6.0...v0.7.0 for the
full delta.
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/
Many thanks to Lem for managing to reproduce it. It was actually an easy
bug bug to spot on second look, but having a reliable way to verify was
super helpful.
Fixes#1338
While it is a really nice library, it ends up being a bit overkill for
our needs - we don't need config syncing or anything. By NIHing our own,
we can drop one dependency and ease the updating burden a little.
Closes#1296
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.