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.