Ideally we'd add a couple more tests in the future, but this'll do for
now.
The bootstrap class is largely yoinked from CCTweaks-Lua, so is a tad
ugly. It works though.
FileSystemMount was originally added to allow using ReadableByteChannels
instead of InputStreams. However, as zip files do not allow seeking,
there is no benefit of using them over the original JarMount (which we
need to preserve for backwards compatibility).
Instead of maintaining two near-identical mounts, we remove the
FileSystemMount and rewrite the JarMount implementation with several
improvements:
- Rewrite the jar scanning algorithm to be closer to 1.13+'s data pack
mount. This means we no longer require the jar file to have
directories before the file (though this was not a problem in
practice).
- Add all JarMounts to a ReferenceQueue, closing up the ZipFile when
they have been garbage collected (fixes#100).
- Cache the contents of all files for 60 seconds (with some constraints
on size). This allows us to seek on ROM files too (assuming they are
small), by reading the whole thing into memory.
The cache is shared across all mounts, and has a 64MiB limit, and
thus should not have an adverse impact on memory.
- Only generate resource pack mounts if the desired directory exists.
- Allow mounting files, as well as directories (fixes#90).
As always, also a wee bit of cleanup to some of the surrounding code.
- Abstract peripheral ID and type checking into separate class
- Update peripherals directly rather than marking as invalid then
fetching from the network.
- Update peripherals when adjacent tiles change
This does result in a slightly more ugly interface, but reduces the
amount of work needed to perform partial updates of peripherals, such as
those done by neighbouring tile updates.