Look, I originally had this split into several commits, but lots of
other cleanups got mixed in. I then backported some of the cleanups to
1.12, did other tidy ups there, and eventually the web of merges was
unreadable.
Yes, this is a horrible mess, but it's still nicer than it was. Anyway,
changes:
- Flatten everything. For instance, there are now three instances of
BlockComputer, two BlockTurtle, ItemPocketComputer. There's also no
more BlockPeripheral (thank heavens) - there's separate block classes
for each peripheral type.
- Remove pretty much all legacy code. As we're breaking world
compatibility anyway, we can remove all the code to load worlds from
1.4 days.
- The command system is largely rewriten to take advantage of 1.13's
new system. It's very fancy!
- WidgetTerminal now uses Minecraft's "GUI listener" system.
- BREAKING CHANGE: All the codes in keys.lua are different, due to the
move to LWJGL 3. Hopefully this won't have too much of an impact.
I don't want to map to the old key codes on the Java side, as there
always ends up being small but slight inconsistencies. IMO it's
better to make a clean break - people should be using keys rather
than hard coding the constants anyway.
- commands.list now allows fetching sub-commands. The ROM has already
been updated to allow fancy usage such as commands.time.set("noon").
- Turtles, modems and cables can be waterlogged.
Are most of these changes small and petty? Yes. However, IMO they do
make the code more readable. Anyway, a summary of some of the more
interesting changes:
- Expose Abstract*Upgrade classes in the API
- Fix the spelling of Jonathan in the API docs (*shakes fist*)
- Fix bug with printout not working in the offhand.
- Rename any argments/variables accidentally named "m_*", and add an
inspection to prevent it happening again.
- Remove most of the Block*.Properties classes - just inline them in
the parent class.
- Return super.writeToNBT instead of reassigning at the top.
OK, so let's get this out of the way, there's some actual changes mixed
in here too. I'm really sorry:
- Turtles can now not be renamed with unnamed item tags (previously it
would clear the name, this seemed a little unideal).
- commands.getBlock(s)Data will also include NBT.
Now, onto the horror story which is these inspection changes:
- Make a lot of methods static
- Typo fixes
- Make utility classes final + private constructor
- Lots of reformatting (ifs -> ternary, invert control flow, etc...)
- ???
- Profit!
I'm so going to regret this - can pretty much guarantee this is going to
break something.
Oh goodness, this is going to painful to update to 1.13.
We now translate:
- Computer/Disk ID tooltips
- /computercraft descriptions, synopsises and usages. The last of these
may not always be translated when in SMP, as it is sometimes done on
the server, but the alternative would be more complex than I'm happy
with.
- Tracking field names. Might be worth adding descriptions too in the
future.
Also cleanup a couple of other translation keys, so they're more
consistent with Minecraft.
Closes#141
Previously we would register the recipes within our code, but the
advancements were written manually. This now generates JSON files for
both the advancement and recipe.
While this does mean we're shipping even more JSON, we'll need to do
this for 1.13 anyway, and means our advancements are guaranteed to be
consistent.
On a side note, a couple of other changes:
- Turtle upgrades are now mounted on the right in the creative
menu/fake recipes. This means the upgrade is now clearly visible in
the inventory.
- We no longer generate legacy turtle items at all: we'll always
construct turtle_expanded.
- Several peripheral items are no longer registered as having sub-types
(namely advanced and full-block modems).
- We only have one disk advancement now, which unlocks all 16 recipes.
- We have removed the disk conversion recipes - these can be
exposed through JEI if needed.
- TimeoutState uses nanoseconds rather than milliseconds. While this is
slightly less efficient on Windows, it's a) not the bottleneck of Lua
execution and b) we need a monotonic counter, otherwise we could
fail to terminate computers if the time changes.
- Add an exception handler to all threads.
- Document several classes a little better - I'm not sure how useful
all of these are, but _hopefully_ it'll make the internals a little
more accessible.
- Restrict what items can be inserted into printers. They're now closer
to brewing stands or furnaces: nothing can go in the output slot,
only ink in the ink slot, and only paper in the paper slot.
- Fix build.gradle using the wrong version
- Trim the width of tables to fit when displaying on the client. Closes
#45. Note, our solution isn't perfect, as it will wordwrap too, but
it's adaquate for now.
- Only have computers implement custom block drop logic: everything
else only drops in creative mode.
- Fix redstone inputs not being received correctly. Introduced in
8b86a954ee, yes I'm a silly billy.
- Only update the neighbour which changed.
We currently generate the crafting item once when the upgrade is first
created, and cache it for the duration of the game. As the item never
changes throughout the game, and constructing a stack is a little
expensive (we need to fire an event, etc...), the caching is worth
having.
However, some mods may register capabilities after we've constructed our
ItemStack. This means the capability will be present on other items but
not ours, meaning they are not considered equivalent, and thus the item
cannot be equipped.
In order to avoid this, we use compare items using their share-tag, like
Forge's IngredientNBT. This means the items must still be "mostly" the
same (same enchantements, etc...), but allow differing capabilities.
See NillerMedDild/Enigmatica2Expert#655 for the original bug report -
in this case, Astral Sourcery was registering the capability in init,
but we construct upgrades just before then.
- Move IDirectionalTile constraint from IPeripheralTile to
TilePeripheralBase.
- Make *WiredModemFull no longer inherit from *PeripheralBase. While
there is still some shared logic (namely in the syncing of "anim"),
it's largely fine as we don't store label or direction in NBT.
- Add a TickScheduler. This is a thread-safe version of
World.scheduleUpdate. We simply build a set of all TEs, and schedule
them to be updated the next tick.
- Make ModemState receive an "onChanged" listener, which is fired
whenever the modem changes.
- Make WiredModemFull no longer tick, instead scheduling updates when
it is first loaded and whenever the modem changes.
It's rather embarassing that it's been restructured _again_, but I think
this is a nice middle-ground. The previous implementation was written
mostly for Fabric, which doesn't always map perfectly to Forge.
- Move the message identifier into the registration phrase. It's not
really a property of the message itself, rather a property of the
registry, so better suited there.
- Move message handling into the message itself. Honestly, it was just
ending up being rather messy mixing the logic in two places.
This also means we can drop some proxy methods, as it's easier to
have conditionally loaded methods.
- Move network registry into a dedicated class, as that's what we're
doing for everything else.
- Move the "world directory" getter out of the proxy - we can just use
Forge's code here.
- Remove the server proxies, as both were empty. We don't tend to
register any dedicated-server specific code, so I think we can leave
them out.
This offers several advantages
- Less registration code: the subscribers are reigstered automatically,
and we don't need to worry about sided-proxies.
- We no longer have so many .instance() calls.
- Move all HTTP tasks to a unified "MonitoredResource" model. This
provides a uniform way of tracking object's lifetimes and disposing
of them when complete.
- Rewrite HTTP requests to use Netty instead of standard Java. This
offers several advantages:
- We have access to more HTTP verbs (mostly PATCH).
- We can now do http -> https redirects.
- We no longer need to spawn in a new thread for each HTTP request.
While we do need to run some tasks off-thread in order to resolve
IPs, it's generally a much shorter task, and so is less likely to
inflate the thread pool.
- Introduce several limits for the http API:
- There's a limit on how many HTTP requests and websockets may exist
at the same time. If the limit is reached, additional ones will be
queued up until pending requests have finished.
- HTTP requests may upload a maximum of 4Mib and download a maximum
of 16Mib (configurable).
- .getResponseCode now returns the status text, as well as the status
code.
While Plethora has been updated to no longer require these, it's
probably worth keeping them around a little longer, as people may not
upgrade them in sync.
- Remove redundant constructors and super calls
- Standardise naming of texture fields
- Always use postfix notations for loops
- Cleanup several peripheral classes
There's several reasons for this change:
- Try to make ComputerCraft.java less monolithic by moving
functionality into separate module-specific classes.
- Hopefully make the core class less Minecraft dependent, meaning
emulators are a little less dependent on anything outside of /core.
Note we still need /some/ methods in the main ComputerCraft class in
order to maintain backwards compatibility with Plethora and
Computronics.
Many bits of IInventory (open/close, fields, etc...) are not actually
needed most implementations, so we can clean things up a little with a
common interface.
Some methods act the same on both sides, and so can be in utility
classes. Others are only needed on one side, and so do not really need
to be part of the proxy.
- Remove TurtleVisionCamera. It would be possible to add this back in
the future, but for now it is unused and so should be removed.
- Move frame info (cursor blink, current render frame) into a
FrameInfo class.
- Move record methods (name, playing a record) into a RecordUtil class.
As CCEdu has not been updated, and is unlikely to be updated as Dan does
not have the rights to open source it, we're removing explicit support
for now.
If an alternative arises in the future, it would be good to support, but
in a way which requires less workarounds in CC's core.
Using turtle.suck on an inventory filled with tools would fill the
entire chest with said item, rather than extracting a single item. In
order to avoid that, we clamp the extract limit to the max stack size
when first extracting an item.
This also inlines the makeSlotList logic, which means we can avoid
creating an array for each inventory operation. This probably won't
have any meaninful performance impact (even on large inventories), but
is a nice optimisation to make.
- Remove a redundant logger
- Provide a getter for the ComputerCraft thread group. This allows us
to monitor child threads within prometheus.
- Replace a deprecated call with a fastutils alternative.
This is a preliminary for updating to 1.13, as many of the name changes
apply to both. This will make it harder to remain consistent with
actual CC, though that will be less of a consideration when 1.13 hits.
- Try to make drop capturing a little more generic. This now allows for
capturing a block's drop at a given position, as well as any drop
within a bounding box (for things which don't play nicely).
- Use as much of Minecraft's block breaking logic as possible,
hopefully simplifying things and making it more consistent with other
mods.
This adds IComputerItem.withFamily(ItemStack, ComputerFamily) as well as
a ComputerFamilyRecipe class. Each type of computer (normal, turtle,
pocket) defines a recipe using this class, as they require a different
number of gold ingots to upgrade.
- Cable and modem can be broken individually
- Ray tracing will go through "holes" in the cable.
- Pick block will determine which part you are looking at.
- Selection box will only highlight the region you are looking at:
modem or cable.
- Convert most recipes to JSON
- Add JSON factories for impostor and turtle recipes.
- Several mappings changes
- Migrate to Forge's new registry system