ITurtleUpgrade.getModel has always been rather error-prone to use, due
to its client-only nature. As ModelResourceLocation is now client-only
again in Forge 1.19.1, no seems a good time to fix this.
The getter for models is now a separate interface inside a new
dan200.computercraft.api.client package. These are registered
per-TurtleUpgradeSerialiser (as those should correspond to class
anyway). It's a little ugly, and we may rename the XxxSerialiser classes
to something more general in a future update.
I'm not wild about the interface here either - happy to change it in
future versions too.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Also clean up the generic arguments to IUpgradeBase/UpgradeSerialiser a
little bit. It's not great (wish Java had HKTs), but it's better.
We're doing lots of weird OpenGL shenangins anyway, so it doesn't make
sense to use it. Instead just draw directly using the Tesselator
BufferBuilder.
This might improve compatiability with Sodium/Rubidium. Please don't let
me know if it doesn't though - I really don't want to have to deal with
it any more.
- Lots of refactoring/cleanup to Forge's events and client APIs.
- Render types/layers for blocks are now set on the model rather than
in code.
- Models now can work with multiple render types. As this would
massively complicate the implementation of the turtle item model, we
now implement a much simpler version, which makes use of Forge's
BakedModel.getRenderPasses to return a separate model for the core
turtle and each upgrade.
- Send monitor contents to players immediately when they start watching
the chunk. ChunkWatchEvent.Watch is now fired from a more sensible
location, so this is much easier to implement!
Rather than blanket disabling http with http.enabled. I think it's still
useful to keep the option around, but hopefully make it clearer what the
ramifications are.
- Changed page background to render as one quad, instead of two halves.
- Set page background to a z-offset that is between zeroth (potentially
bold border) and subsequent background pages. Bold borders were at the
same z-offset before.
We removed the config which ran all JavaExec tasks with the given
launcher, so need to override this again.
A little abusrd that this isn't done by Gradle, but there we go.
No bearing on MC, but allows us to drop the depenedency in other
projects (CCEmuX, eval.tweaked.cc, etc...)
I'd quite like to spin the core into a separate project which doesn't
depend on MC at all, but not worth doing right now.
Just saves us from having to worry about conflicts with other mods which
bundle Cobalt. This might make the transition to Jar-in-Jar easier too -
not sure yet!
Also produce an API jar - fixes#1060.
- Switch to plugins { ... } imports for Forge (FG finally supports it!)
- Use FG's new fg.component to clean up our Maven metadata instead. We
also mark JEI as optional (using Gradle's registerFeature), which
means we've no stray deps inside our POM any more.
No bearing on MC, but allows us to drop the depenedency in other
projects (CCEmuX, eval.tweaked.cc, etc...)
I'd quite like to spin the core into a separate project which doesn't
depend on MC at all, but not worth doing right now.
Oh my, a same day release! Well, if we use the AoE timezone.
Entirely untested (well, aside from automated tests), I haven't even
launched a client. In my defence, its just past midnight and I've been
up since 4am.
- Add a basic data exporter to the test mod, run via a /ccexport
command. This dumps all of CC's recipes, and the item icons needed to
display those recipes.
- Post-process our illuaminate HTML, applying several transforms:
- Apply syntax highlighting to code blocks. We previously did this
at runtime, so this shaves some bytes off the bundle.
- Convert a mc-recipe custom element into a recipe grid using
react/react-dom.
- Add a recipe to the speaker page. I'll probably clean this up in the
future (though someone else is free to too!), but it's a nice
start and proof-of-concept.
I tried so hard here to use next.js and MDX instead of rolling our own
solution again, but it's so hard to make it play well with "normal"
Markdown, which isn't explicitly written for MDX.
We now track whether a tile is enqueued or not via an atomic boolean on
the block entity itself, rather than using a hash set. This is
significantly faster (>10x).
This is mostly intended for monitors, as they're the only peripheral
likely to call TickScheduler.schedule lots of times (rather than modems,
which just invoke it when opening/closing a channel[^1])[^2]. This
change is enough to allow me to update 120 monitors each tick without
any major tearing.
[^1]: GPS does do this on each gps.locate call, so it will help there,
but modems are typically limited by other computers sending messages,
not peripheral calls themselves.
[^2]: Note that montitors implement their own change tracking, so still
only call this once per tick. But it's enough to introduce some latency!
This gives us slightly better compression, as backgrounds will often be
a single run of colours while the foreground won't be.
In practice, this is rarely an issue, as most terminals are small, but
worth doing anyway.
Just like vanilla locking, this isn't accessible in survival.
> "im retired! im retired!!", i continue to insist as i slowly shrink
> and transform into a corn cob.
- Make assertions a little more relaxed
- Increase timeouts of computer tests (again :D:).
- Log where we're up to in computer tests, to make tracking stalls a
little easier
- Rewrap everything at 80 columns. To make this tolerable I'm using
IDEA's language fragment support - hence the absurd line lengths.
- Add full stops to all comments.
- Clarify that HTTP rules are applied in-order.
- Parse Co-authored-by lines too. There's several contributors (mostly
via weblate, but a few GH ones too) who weren't credited otherwise.
- Add support for git mailmap, remapping some emails to a canonnical
username. This allows us to remove some duplicates - nobody needs
both SquidDev and "Jonathan Coates."
I'm not making this file public, as it contains email addresses. This
does mean that CI builds will still contain the full list with
duplicates.
- Add a TOC to the Local IPs page.
- Increase the echo delay in our speaker audio page to 1.5s. This
sounds much better and is less clashy than 1s. Also add a
sleep(0) (eww, I know) to fix timeouts on some browsers/computers.
- Move Lua feature compat to a new "reference" section. Still haven't
figured out how to structure these docs - open to any ideas really.
- Mention FFmpeg as an option for converting to DFPWM (closes#1075).
- Allow data-mount to override built-in files. See my comment in #1069.
Previously we would compute the current timeout flags every 128
instructions of the Lua machine. While computing these flags is
_relatively_ cheap (just get the current time), it still all adds up.
Instead we now set the timeout flags from the computer monitor/watchdog
thread. This does mean that the monitor thread needs to wake up more
often[^1] _if the queue is full_, otherwise we can sleep for 100ms as
before.
This does mean that pausing is a little less accurate (can technically
take up 2*period instead). This isn't great, but in practice it seems
fine - I've not noticed any playability issues.
This offers a small (but measurable!) boost to computer performance.
[^1]: We currently sleep for scaledPeriod, but we could choose to do less.
- Reset state while the server is starting rather than once it has
started. Hopefully fixes a weird issue where wireless modems wouldn't
be "connected" on server startup.
- Correctly reset the MainThread metrics on server start/stop.
Geesh, this is nasty. Because ComputerThread is incredibly stateful, and
we want to run tests in isolation, we run each test inside its own
isolated ClassLoader (and thus ComputerThread instance).
Everything else is less nasty, though still a bit ... yuck. We also
define a custom ILuaMachine which just runs lambdas[^1], and some
utilities for starting those.
This is then tied together for four very basic tests. This is sufficient
for the changes I want to make, but might be nice to test some more
comprehensive stuff later on (e.g. timeouts after pausing).
[^1]: Which also means the ILuaMachine implementation can be changed by
other mods[^2], if someone wants to have another stab at LuaJIT :p.
[^2]: In theory. I doubt its possible in practice because so much is
package private.
This is about 5-6x faster than using a String as we don't need to
allocate and copy multiple times. In the grand scheme of things, still
vastly overshadowed by the Lua interpreter, but worth doing.
- Start making the summary lines for modules a little better. Just say
what the module does, rather than "The X API does Y" or "Provides Y".
There's still a lot of work to be done here.
- Bundle prism.js on the page, so we can highlight non-Lua code.
- Copy our local_ips wiki page to the main docs.
This allows us to sync the position to the entity immediately, rather
than the sound jumping about.
Someone has set up rick-rolling pocket computers (<3 to whoever did
this), and the lag on them irritates me enough to fix this.
Fixes#1074
- Bump Forge version to latest RB.
- Generate an 8-bit audio stream again, as we no longer need to be
compatible with MC's existing streams.
No functionality changes, just mildly less hacky.
GlStateManager.glDeleteBuffers clears a buffer before deleting it on
Linux - I assume otherwise there's memory leaks on some drivers? - which
clobbers BufferUploader's cache. Roll our own version which resets the
cache when needed.
Also always reset the cache when deleting/creating a DirectVertexBuffer.
This /significantly/ improves performance of the VBO renderer (3fps to
80fps with 120 constantly changing monitors) and offers some minor FPS
improvements to the TBO renderer.
This also makes the 1.16 rendering code a little more consistent with
the 1.18 code, cleaning it up a little in the process.
Closes#1065 - this is a backport of those changes for 1.16. I will
merge these changes into 1.18, as with everything else (oh boy, that'll
be fun).
Please note this is only tested on my machine right now - any help
testing on other CPU/GPU configurations is much appreciated.
Historically I've been reluctant to do this as people might be running
Optifine for performance rather than shaders, and the VBO renderer was
significantly slower when monitors were changing.
With the recent performance optimisations, the difference isn't as bad.
Given how many people ask/complain about the TBO renderer and shaders, I
think it's worth doing this, even if it's not as granular as I'd like.
Also changes how we do the monitor backend check. We now only check for
compatibility if BEST is selected - if there's an override, we assume
the user knows what they're doing (a bold assumption, if I may say so
myself).
- For TBOs, we now pass cursor position, colour and blink state as
variables to the shader, and use them to overlay the cursor texture
in the right place.
As we no longer need to render the cursor, we can skip the depth
buffer, meaning we have to do one fewer upload+draw cycle.
- For VBOs, we bake the cursor into the main VBO, and switch between
rendering n and n+1 quads. We still need the depth blocker, but can
save one upload+draw cycle when the cursor is visible.
This saves significant time on the TBO renderer - somewhere between 4
and 7ms/frame, which bumps us up from 35 to 47fps on my test world (480
full-sized monitors, changing every tick). [Taken on 1.18, but should be
similar on 1.16]
Like #455, this sets our uniforms via a UBO rather than having separate
ones for each value. There are a couple of small differences:
- Have a UBO for each monitor, rather than sharing one and rewriting it
every monitor. This means we only need to update the buffer when the
monitor changes.
- Use std140 rather than the default layout. This means we don't have
to care about location/stride in the buffer.
Also like #455, this doesn't actually seem to result in any performance
improvements for me. However, it does make it a bit easier to handle a
large number of uniforms.
Also cleans up the generation of the main monitor texture buffer:
- Move buffer generation into a separate method - just ensures that it
shows up separately in profilers.
- Explicitly pass the position when setting bytes, rather than
incrementing the internal one. This saves some memory reads/writes (I
thought Java optimised them out, evidently not!). Saves a few fps
when updating.
- Use DSA when possible. Unclear if it helps at all, but nice to do :).
This takes a non-trivial amount of time on the render thread[^1], so
worth doing.
I don't actually think the allocation is the heavy thing here -
VisualVM says it's toWorldPos being slow. I'm not sure why - possibly
just all the block property lookups? [^2]
[^1]: To be clear, this is with 120 monitors and no other block entities
with custom renderers. so not really representative.
[^2]: I wish I could provide a narrower range, but it varies so much
between me restarting the game. Makes it impossible to benchmark
anything!
The VBO renderer needs to generate a buffer with two quads for each
cell, and then transfer it to the GPU. For large monitors, generating
this buffer can get quite slow. Most of the issues come from
IVertexBuilder (VertexConsumer under MojMap) having a lot of overhead.
By emitting a ByteBuffer directly (and doing so with Unsafe to avoid
bounds checks), we can improve performance 10 fold, going from
3fps/300ms for 120 monitors to 111fps/9ms.
See 41fa95bce4 and #1065 for some more
context and other exploratory work. The key thing to note is we _need_ a
separate version of FWFR for emitting to a ByteBuffer, as introducing
polymorphism to it comes with a significant performance hit.
- Move all RenderType instances into a common class.
Cherry-picked from 41fa95bce4:
- Render GL_QUADS instead of GL_TRIANGLES.
- Remove any "immediate mode" methods from FWFR. Most use-cases can be
replaced with the global MultiBufferSource and a proper RenderType
(which we weren't using correctly before!).
Only the GUI code (WidgetTerminal) needs to use the immediate mode.
- Pre-convert palette colours to bytes, storing both the coloured and
greyscale versions as a byte array.
Cherry-picked from 3eb601e554:
- Pass lightmap variables around the various renderers. Fixes#919 for
1.16!
"Instead, it is a standard program, which its API into the programs that it launches."
becomes
"Instead, it is a standard program, which injects its API into the programs that it launches."
A little shorter and more explicit than constructing the Vector3d
manually. Fixes an issue where sounds were centered on the bottom left
of speakers, not the middle (see cc-tweaked/cc-restitched#85).
See #1061, closes#1064.
Nobody ever seems to implement this correctly (though it's better than
1.12, at least we've not seen any crashes), and this isn't a fight I
care enough about fighting any more.
- Remove the POSITION_COLOR render type. Instead we just render a
background terminal quad as the pocket computer light - it's a little
(lot?) more cheaty, but saves having to create a render type.
- Use the existing position_color_tex shader instead of our copy. I
looked at using RenderType.text, but had a bunch of problems with GUI
terminals. Its possible we can fix it, but didn't want to spend too
much time on it.
- Remove some methods from FixedWidthFontRenderer, inlining them into
the call site.
- Switch back to using GL_QUADS rather than GL_TRIANGLES. I know Lig
will shout at me for this, but the rest of MC uses QUADS, so I don't
think best practice really matters here.
- Fix the TBO backend monitor not rendering monitors with fog.
Unfortunately we can't easily do this to the VBO one without writing
a custom shader (which defeats the whole point of the VBO backend!),
as the distance calculation of most render types expect an
already-transformed position (camera-relative I think!) while we pass
a world-relative one.
- When rendering to a VBO we push vertices to a ByteBuffer directly,
rather than going through MC's VertexConsumer system. This removes
the overhead which comes with VertexConsumer, significantly improving
performance.
- Pre-convert palette colours to bytes, storing both the coloured and
greyscale versions as a byte array. This allows us to remove the
multiple casts and conversions (double -> float -> (greyscale) ->
byte), offering noticeable performance improvements (multiple ms per
frame).
We're using a byte[] here rather than a record of three bytes as
notionally it provides better performance when writing to a
ByteBuffer directly compared to calling .put() four times. [^1]
- Memorize getRenderBoundingBox. This was taking about 5% of the total
time on the render thread[^2], so worth doing.
I don't actually think the allocation is the heavy thing here -
VisualVM says it's toWorldPos being slow. I'm not sure why - possibly
just all the block property lookups? [^2]
Note that none of these changes improve compatibility with Optifine.
Right now there's some serious issues where monitors are writing _over_
blocks in front of them. To fix this, we probably need to remove the
depth blocker and just render characters with a z offset. Will do that
in a separate commit, as I need to evaluate how well that change will
work first.
The main advantage of this commit is the improved performance. In my
stress test with 120 monitors updating every tick, I'm getting 10-20fps
[^3] (still much worse than TBOs, which manages a solid 60-100).
In practice, we'll actually be much better than this. Our network
bandwidth limits means only 40 change in a single tick - and so FPS is
much more reasonable (+60fps).
[^1]: In general, put(byte[]) is faster than put(byte) multiple times.
Just not clear if this is true when dealing with a small (and loop
unrolled) number of bytes.
[^2]: To be clear, this is with 120 monitors and no other block entities
with custom renderers. so not really representative.
[^3]: I wish I could provide a narrower range, but it varies so much
between me restarting the game. Makes it impossible to benchmark
anything!
Forge 4.0.18 deprecated a lot of methods and moved where
RegistryEvent.NewRegistry lives, so we needed to update. This does break
the CC API a little bit (sorry!) though given Forge 1.18.2 is still in
flux, that's probably inevitable.
There's a couple of alternative ways to solve this. Ideally we'd send
our network messages at the same time as MC does
(ChunkManager.playerLoadedChunk), but this'd require a mixin.
Instead we just rely on the fact that if the chunk isn't loaded,
monitors won't have done anything and so we don't need to send their
contents!
Fixes#1047, probably doesn't cause any regressions. I've not seen any
issues on 1.16, but I also hadn't before so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.
It's now impossible to run the client tests (tests are still there, but
none of the other infrastructure is). We've not run these for months now
due to their severe flakiness :(.
This was added in the 1.13 update and I'm still not sure why. Other mods
seem to get away without it, so I think it's fine to remove.
Also remove the fake net manager, as that's part of Forge nowadays.
Fixes#1044.
- Fixes#1026
- The remaining bytes counter wasn't being decremented, so the code that
splits off smaller packets was unreachable. Thus all file slices were
being put into a single UploadFileMessage packet.
- Fix UpgradeSpeakerPeripheral not calling super.detach (so old
computers were never cleaned up)
- Correctly lock computer accesses inside SpeakerPeripheral
Fixes#1003.
Fingers crossed this is the last bug. Then I can bump the year and push
a new release tomorrow.
We're still a few days away from release, but don't think anything else
is going to change. And I /really/ don't want to have to write this
changelog (and then merge into later versions) on the 25th.
While Minecraft will automatically push a new buffer when one is
exhausted, this doesn't help if there's only a single buffer in the
queue, and you end up with stutter.
By enquing a buffer when receiving sound we ensure there's always
something queued. I'm not 100% happy with this solution, but it does
alleviate some of the concerns in #993.
Also reduce the size of the client buffer to 0.5s from 1.5s. This is
still enough to ensure seamless audio when the server is running slow (I
tested at 13 tps, but should be able to go much worse).
When the game is paused in SSP world, speakers are not ticked. However,
System.nanoTime() continues to increase, which means the next tick
speakers believe there has been a big jump and so schedule a bunch of
extra audio.
To avoid this, we keep track of how long the game has been paused offset
nanoTime by that amount.
Fixes#994
It's just more confusing having to keep track of where the ByteBuffer is
at. In this case, I think we were forgetting to rewind after computing
the digest.
Hopefully we'll be able to drop some of these in 1.17 as Java 16 has
a few more ByteBuffer methods
Fixes#992
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.
This means that if the current player is breaking a cable/wired modem,
only the part they're looking at has breaking progress. Closes#355.
A mixin is definitely not the cleanest way to do this. There's a couple
of alternatives:
- CodeChickenLib's approach of overriding the BlockRendererDispatcher
instance with a delegating subclasss. One mod doing this is fine,
several is Not Great.o
- Adding a PR to Forge: I started this, and it's definitely the ideal
solution, but any event for this would have a ton of fields and just
ended up looking super ugly.
I assume people have broken coroutine dispatchers - I didn't think it
was possible to queue an actual event with no type.
See cc-tweaked/cc-restitched#31. Will fix it too once merged downstream!
testModExtra must /strictly/ be the set of dependencies which are not
present in implementation - there can't be any duplicates.
Yes, it's stupid, but the whole lazyToken("minecraft_classpath") thing
wasn't really built with this in mind, so not much we can do :)
Opening a screen KeyBinding.releaseAll(), which forces all inputs to be
considered released. However, our init() function then calls
grabMouse(), which calls Keybinding.setAll(), undoing this work.
The fix we're going for here is to call releaseAll() one more time[^1]
after grabbing the mouse. I think if this becomes any more of a problem,
we should roll our own grabMouse which _doesn't_ implement any specific
behaviour.
Fixes#975
[^1]: Obvious problem here is that we do minecraft.screen=xyz rather
than setScreen. We need to - otherwise we'd just hit a stack
overflow - but it's not great.
- Build fails right now due to module issues, so this won't be pushed
to GitHub.
- Monitors render transparently when loaded into the world. I don't
think this is a 1.17 bug, so not sure what's going on here!
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.
- Capability invalidation and tile/block entity changes set a dirty bit
instead of refetching the peripheral immediately.
- Then on the block's tick we recompute the peripheral if the dirty bit
is set.
Fixes#696 and probably fixes#882. Some way towards #893, but not
everything yet.
This is probably going to break things horribly. Let's find out!
- Bump copy-cat version to have support for initial files in
directories and the blit fixes.
- Add an example nft image and move example nfp into a data/ directory.
- Fix nft parser not resetting colours on the start of each line.
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.
- Fix broken /cctest marker
- Correctly wait for the screenshot to be taken before continuing.
- Filter out client tests in a different place, meaning we can remove
the /cctest runall command
- Bump kotlin version
- Add lightmap parameters to the text, computer and printout renderers.
- Printouts are always rendered using the current lightmap. When
interacting with the GUI, we use the fullbright lightmap coordinate.
- Pocket computers render their border using the lightmap. Terminal and
light do not use the lightmap at all.
There's some funkiness going on here with render types - it appears the
"correct" position_color_tex_lightmap render type is actually one used
for text.
Fixes#919. This bug does occur on 1.16 too, but given how complex the
rendering changes are between 1.16 and 1.17 I do /not/ want to have to
implement this twice. Sorry.
This ensures inventory slots are synced while the container is open,
meaning the hotbar (which is visible underneath the GUI) correctly
updates.
Fixes#915
When placed in the off hand, pocket computers now render a different
screen when opened in the off-hand, just rendering text at the top of
the screen rather than "opening" the whole computer.
This means you can view the world and computer in your hand at the
same time, effectively allowing you to emulate the
Plethora/MoarPeripherals keyboard (and much more).
This currently requires you to move the pocket computer to the other
hand to open it normally. I did look into allowing for shift+right click
to open normally, but this is awkward when you're looking at a something
like a monitor - you need to shift as otherwise you'd click the block!
Plethora hooks into onItemUseFirst instead, and this might be an option
in the future - meaning that right click would always open some computer
GUI and never the blocks. This may be something we change in the future
- let's get some feedback first!
Closes#861. Apologies for this essay, but if you got this far you were
probably interested!
As always, a massive diff which is largely just moving files between
projects. This does fix a couple of issues with advancements, but
otherwise should behave the same.
Speaking of which, should probably go and test some of these recipes...
Instead of using ids for each computer each computer is spawned with id
0 but has a label which matches up to its test name. This has several
advantages:
- No more confusing IDs: the test code now just does thenComputerOk()
and that's it - the computer to track is inferred from the test name.
- All files are stored on one computer, which means we can write code
which is shared between tests.
This spins up a Minecraft instance (much like we do for the server) and
instructs the client to take screenshots at particular times. We then
compare those screenshots and assert they match (modulo some small
delta).
Basically mimic the actual API that Minecraft would expose if the
methods hadn't been stripped. Lots of ATs and unsafe hacks to get this
working, but thankfully the API we can expose to the user is pretty
nice. Yay for Kotlin?
Anyway, will cause some immediate pain (yay merge conflicts) but should
make keeping the two in sync much easier.
These are still equivalent to the official mappings but also include
method names and javadoc. Yay!
A bit weird to be on versioned mappings after 8 months of MojMap :).!
- Fix missing shader for printout render type
- Use current buffer provider for pocket computers rather than the
tesselator. This requires us to use a non-depth-writing terminal +
depth blocker, as otherwise one gets z-fighting.
- Thus refactor some of the shaders to be terminal wide, not just for
monitors.
Fixes#894
- Use linear attenuation.
- Fix speakers being 16 times as loud as they should be. They correctly
cut off at the right distance, but didn't fade out as one might
expect.
- Clamp volume at 0, not 1. Fixes#892
I don't think anybody actually used these, and I'm not convinced they
had much value anyway.
It might be worth switching the refueling code to work as a registry
instead, though events are kinda nice.
- Remap everything to use MojMap class names too. This is what Forge
uses, so \o/.
This does NOT currently rename any classes to use suffix notation or
BlockEntity. That will come in a later change. We do however rename
references of "World" to "Level".
- Move the test mod into a separate "cctest" source set. As Forge now
works using Jigsaw we cannot have multiple mods defining the same
package, which causes problems with our JUnit test classes.
- Remove our custom test framework and replace it with vanilla's (this
is no longer stripped from the jar). RIP kotlin coroutines.
It's still worth using Kotlin here though, just for extension
methods.
- Other 1.17-related changes:
- Use separate tile/block entity tick methods for server and client
side, often avoiding ticking at all on the client.
- Switch much of the monitor rendering code to use vanilla's
built-in shader system. It's still an incredibly ugly hack, so not
really expecting this to work with any rendering mods, but we'll
cross that bridge when we come to it.
It's probably the lowest traffic module :p.
Also (somewhat) improve the deprecated messages in os.loadAPI. We really
need a proper article on require and converting from os.loadAPI.
Plan here is to release 1.98 for 1.16.x and 1.17.x and 1.97.1 for
1.15.x. However, will let this sit for a few days while I sort out 1.98
and the 1.17 port just in case any more bugs pop up.
This uses Netty's global traffic shaping handlers to limit the rate at
which packets can be sent and received. If the bandwidth limit is hit,
we'll start dropping packets, which will mean remote servers send
traffic to us at a much slower pace.
This isn't perfect, as there is only a global limit, and not a
per-computer one. As a result, its possible for one computer to use
all/most bandwidth, and thus slow down other computers.
This would be something to improve on in the future. However, I've spent
a lot of time reading the netty source code and docs, and the
implementation for that is significantly more complex, and one I'm not
comfortable working on right now.
For the time being, this satisfies the issues in #33 and hopefully
alleviates server owner's concerns about the http API. Remaining
problems can either be solved by moderation (with help of the
//computercraft track` command) or future updates.
Closes#33
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).
By default CT applies them on the client and server. In a single player
world, this means we try to create two upgrades, which obviously fails!
Fixes#721
When exiting paint via the keyboard by typing "Ctrl" then "E"
separately, we consume the "key" event within paint, leaving the shell
to consume "read".
To avoid this, we run a sleep(0) to gobble any other left-over events.
Note, it's generally not enough to run a queueEvent/pullEvent here, as
the char event may not have ended up on the queue yet. Alas, as this
solution is pretty ugly.
- Move some shared Gui{Computer,Turtle} code into a new class. Using
entirely different naming conventions because of course (they are
consistent with MojMap, just not the rest of CC:T).
- Fix some mouse scaling issues in the terminal.
Speakers now play sounds using a custom set of packets.
- When playing a sound, we send the resource id, position, volume,
pitch and a UUID for the _speaker_ to all nearby clients.
- This UUID is then used when we need to update the sound. When the
speaker is moved or destroyed, we send a new packet to clients and
update accordingly.
This does have one side effect, that speakers can now only play one
sound at a time. I think this is accceptable - otherwise it's possible
to spam ward in a loop.
Notes still use the old networking code, and so will not be affected.
Closes#823
- 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
- Upgade to Gradle 7.0 and FG 5.0
- Allow running with any Java version - this now correctly compiles
Forge with the right version.
- Upload to Modrinth too. This is entirely untested, so may need some
tweaking.
Adds a sidebar to the computer and turtle GUI. This currently provides
- A power indicator, which turns on/shuts down a computer.
- Button to queue a "terminate" event
I've written three or four integrations with bundled cables now over the
various versions, and I'm still not convinced this one is right. It
appears to work though, so we'll see.
We need depend on the main jar here (rather than the API jar), as
otherwise our javadoc tools fails - the API references some internal
classes which aren't on our classpath.
It might be nice to write tests for this (and CT) in the future -
goodness knows these features are fragile - but that'll require some
more gradle work which I don't want to do right now.
Closes#772
- Move registry code into the various *Registry classes.
I'm not sure this is any more sensible, but things being registered
in different places kinda irked me.
- Everything else (i.e. event listeners) goes in a {Client,Common}Hooks
class right now. It's not ideal, but I don't think we can split it up
much.
- Fix double updateOutput() call in TileComputerBase - I guess a
merge/rebase gone wrong in the past.
- Don't call updateBlock() when creating a server computer. This used
to be needed when we sent the computer to the client, but this is no
longer the case.
- Don't call updateBlock() on TileMonitors when updating from the
client. We don't need to do a redraw here, as this is all stored in
the block state now.
- Don't update the block when reading turtle upgrades. See #643 for
some background here.
See #658
- Return a more sensible string for empty treasure disks (i.e. those
given by /give). This should help identify packs which are giving
items in non-supported ways.
- Fix NPE when the treasure mount doesn't exist.
Fixes#801
- Simplify how the turtle's inventory is processed. We now copy all
items into the player inventory, attempt to place, and then copy the
items back.
This also fixes the problem where turtle.place() wouldn't (always)
update the item which was placed.
I'm also hoping this is more "correct" in how we process drops from
entities and whatnot. Though I've not had any reports of issues, so
it's probably fine.
- Replace the "error message" string array with an actual object. It'd
be nicer all these functions returned a TurtleCommandResult, but
merging error messages from that is a little harder.
Fun facts: the test suite was actually helpful here, and caught the fact
that hoeing was broken!
Implementation is a little awkward, as we can't send OPEN_FILE links
from the server, so we ensure the client runs a
/computercraft open-computer ID command instead. We then intercept this
on the client side and use that to open the folder.
- Add a basic problem matcher for illuaminate errors.
- Add a script (tools/parse-reports.py) which parses the XML reports
generated by checkstyle and junit, extracts source locations, and
emits them in a manner which can be consumed by another set of
matchers.
This should make it a little easier to see problems for folks who just
rely on CI to test things (though also, please don't do this if you can
help it).
using "optipng -o7 -strip all". I ran this a few years ago and had some
issues, but aren't seeing any problems now. I don't know if this is a
graphics card change, or just optipng fixed some bugs.
These are fairly minimal changes, but hopefully save a few bytes!
- Remove the service provider code and require people to explicitly
register these. This is definitely more ugly, but easier than people
pulling in AutoService or similar!
- Add an API for registering capabilities.
- Expand the doc comments a little. Not sure how useful they'll be, but
let's see!
There's still so much work to be done on this, but it's a "good enough"
first step.
This way we still get some differences between files and folders on
normal computers. I did try with just green, but I think the contrast is
too low.
Closes#656
Unlike short handles, we don't read these immediately, and so we can't
close it right away. Otherwise the file is considered empty!
FixesSquidDev-CC/treasure-programs#1
This uses pre-commit [1] to check patches are well formed and run
several linters on them. We currently do some boring things (check files
are syntactically valid) as well as some project-specific ones:
- Run illuaminate on the Lua files
- Run checkstyle on Java
[1]: https://pre-commit.com/
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.
- Don't treat turtles/pocket computers with no upgrades as an "any"
turtle. Otherwise getting the recipe of a crafty turtle shows the
recipe of a normal turtle too.
- Fix "get usage" of upgrade items not returning their recipes.
- Fix NPEs inside JEI (closes#719)
- Add remaining docs for the turtle API
- Add documentation for the fluid storage peripheral.
- Enforce undocumented warning for most modules (only io and window
remaining).
"Finish" in quotes, because these are clearly a long way from perfect.
I'm bad at writing docs, OK!
Fixes#701 (well, hopefully). Our BlockModelProvider is created when
running other mods' data generators (thought not run), which causes
issues as none of the models are considered as "existing files".
This is definitely going to break the build (it shouldn't, but these
things always do). Anyway...
- Use the new Java toolchain support, rather than requiring the user to
install multiple Java versions.
- Bump versions of several plugins.
We're sadly stuck on Gradle <7 for now, as they drop the old
maven-publish plugin, which drops SCP support.
We send monitor updates when a player starts watching a chunk. However,
the block/tile data has not been sent when this event is fired, and so
the packet is entirely ignored.
Instead, we now queue a "send this" task, which is then dispatched on
the next tick end.
I have memories of this working on 1.12, so either something changed in
an update or I'm a complete idiot. Both are possible.
Fixes#687
The replacement is objectively worse. However, it supports Git
worktrees, which sadly jgit does not.
We really need to rewrite the build script to make it lazy so we're not
executing these commands every time.
Building against 1.16.4 for now to ensure we don't break it. Hopefully
we can bump this too once most people have migrated.
Will push a release tomorrow - don't want to be sorting out merge
conflicts at 23:30.
More importantly, `./gradlew check' actually runs the in-game tests,
which makes the CI steps look a little more sensible again.
Somewhat depressing that one of the longest files (15th) in CC:T is the
build script.
This probably fails "responsible disclosure", but it's not an RCE and
frankly the whole bug is utterly hilarious so here we are...
It's possible to open a file on a disk drive and continue to read/write
to them after the disk has been removed:
local disk = peripheral.find("drive")
local input = fs.open(fs.combine(disk.getMountPath(), "stream"), "rb")
local output = fs.open(fs.combine(disk.getMountPath(), "stream"), "wb")
disk.ejectDisk()
-- input/output can still be interacted with.
This is pretty amusing, as now it allows us to move the disk somewhere
else and repeat - we've now got a private tunnel which two computers can
use to communicate.
Fixing this is intuitively quite simple - just close any open files
belonging to this mount. However, this is where things get messy thanks
to the wonderful joy of how CC's streams are handled.
As things stand, the filesystem effectively does the following flow::
- There is a function `open : String -> Channel' (file modes are
irrelevant here).
- Once a file is opened, we transform it into some <T extends
Closeable>. This is, for instance, a BufferedReader.
- We generate a "token" (i.e. FileSystemWrapper<T>), which we generate
a week reference to and map it to a tuple of our Channel and T. If
this token is ever garbage collected (someone forgot to call close()
on a file), then we close our T and Channel.
- This token and T are returned to the calling function, which then
constructs a Lua object.
The problem here is that if we close the underlying Channel+T before the
Lua object calls .close(), then it won't know the underlying channel is
closed, and you get some pretty ugly errors (e.g. "Stream Closed"). So
we've moved the "is open" state into the FileSystemWrapper<T>.
The whole system is incredibly complex at this point, and I'd really
like to clean it up. Ideally we could treat the HandleGeneric as the
token instead - this way we could potentially also clean up
FileSystemWrapperMount.
BBut something to play with in the future, and not when it's 10:30pm.
---
All this wall of text, and this isn't the only bug I've found with disks
today :/.
Name a more iconic duo than @SquidDev and over-engineered test
frameworks.
This uses Minecraft's test core[1] plus a home-grown framework to run
tests against computers in-world.
The general idea is:
- Build a structure in game.
- Save the structure to a file. This will be spawned in every time the
test is run.
- Write some code which asserts the structure behaves in a particular
way. This is done in Kotlin (shock, horror), as coroutines give us a
nice way to run asynchronous code while still running on the main
thread.
As with all my testing efforts, I still haven't actually written any
tests! It'd be good to go through some of the historic ones and write
some tests though. Turtle block placing and computer redstone
interactions are probably a good place to start.
[1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vXaWOJTCYNg
ForgeGradle (probably sensibly) yells at me about doing this. However:
- There's a reasonable number of mods doing this, which establishes
some optimistic precedent.
- The licence update in Aug 2020 now allows you to use them for
"development purposes". I guess source code counts??
- I'm fairly sure this is also compatible with the CCPL - there's an
exception for Minecraft code.
The main motivation for this is to make the Fabric port a little
easier. Hopefully folks (maybe me in the future, we'll see) will no
longer have to deal with mapping hell when merging - only mod loader
hell.
.getMethods() may throw if a method references classes which don't exist
(such as client-only classes on a server). This is an Error, and so is
unchecked - hence us not handling it before.
Fixes#645
- Fix doc library-path
- Only style <pre> code blocks as executable. Skip <code> ones.
- Document the default parameters in gps. Yes, we should do it
everywhere, but one has to start somewhere!
This has been broken for almost a year (28th Jan 2020), and I never
noticed. Good job me.
Fixes#641, closes#648 (basically the same, but targetting 1.15.x)
- Generate theme-color. Hopefully this time it works!
- Specify a site url. Technically this is wrong (we should use the
current git branch), but it's good enough for now.
- Move some options into a sub-category.
I knew I shouldn't do modding on things which aren't my main computer.
I actually did run checkstyleMain before committing, but entirely forgot
about this one. Go me.
- Move some common upgrade code to IUpgradeBase. 99% sure this this
preserves binary compatibility (on the JVM at least).
- Instead of requiring the share tag to match, allow upgrades to
specify their own predicate. IMO this is a little ugly, but required
to fix#614 as other mods chuck their own NBT on items.
- Remove incorrect impostor recipes for pocket computers. We were
generating them from the list of turtle upgrades instead!
- Fix JEI plugin not blocking impostor recipes as of the data-generator
rewrite.
As explained in the comment, "built-in" rendering types are now manually
rendered ("finish"ed) before calling finish() on the main renderer. This
means our depth blocker hasn't actually been drawn (if a monitor is the
last TE to be rendered), and so blocks pass the depth test when they
shouldn't.
Fixes#599
Maybe the capability system was a mistake in retrospect, as we don't
store the peripheral outside, so there's no way to reuse it. That will
probably come in a later change.
As a smaller fix, we pass the invalidate listener directly. The lifetime
of this is the same as the computer, so we don't create a new one each
time.
There's still the potential to leak memory if people break/replace a
computer (as listeners aren't removed), but that's an unavoidable flaw
with capabilities.
Fixes#593
I'm getting quite addicted to this. Maybe less savings than monitors,
but still worth doing due to the number of files created.
Also fix our angle calculations for monitors. Thankfully we hadn't
shipped this yet :).
Means we can now do fs.combine("a", "b", "c"). Of course, one may just
write "a/b/c" in this case, but it's definitely useful elsewhere.
This is /technically/ a breaking change as fs.combine(a, b:gsub(...))
will no longer function (as gsub returns multiple arguments). However,
I've done a quick search through GH and my Pastebin archives and can't
find any programs which would break. Fingers crossed.
A little dubious, but apparently CC used to support it. This means we're
consistent with methods like io.write or string.len which accept strings
or numbers.
Fixes#591
Provides a basic interface for running examples on tweaked.cc. This is probably
janky as anything, but it works on my machine.
This is the culmination of 18 months of me building far too much infrastructure
(copy-cat, illuaminate), so that's nice I guess.
I should probably get out more.
I didn't think it was worth it, and then I found myself needing to
update a dozen of them. The code isn't especially pretty, but it works,
so that's fine.
Also fixes several issues with us using the wrong texture (closes#572).
I've put together a wiki page[1] which describes each texture in a
little more detail.
[1] https://github.com/SquidDev-CC/CC-Tweaked/wiki/Monitor-texture-reference
When we construct a new ServerPlayerEntity (and thus TurtlePlayer), we
get the current (global) advancement state and call .setPlayer() on it.
As grantCriterion blocks FakePlayers from getting advancements, this
means a player will no longer receive any advancements, as the "wrong"
player object is being consulted.
As a temporary work around, we attempt to restore the previous player to
the advancement store. I'll try to upstream something into Forge to
resolve this properly.
Fixes#564
This is a long way away from "feature complete" as it were. However,
it's definitely at a point where it's suitable for general usage - I'm
happy with the API, and don't think I'm going to be breaking things any
time soon.
That said, things aren't exposed yet for Java-side public consumption. I
was kinda waiting until working on Plethora to actually do that, but not
sure if/when that'll happen.
If someone else wants to work on an integration mod (or just adding
integrations for their own mod), do get in touch and I can work out how
to expose this.
Closes#452
Minecraft propagates "strong" redstone signals (such as those directly
from comparators or repeaters) through solid blocks. This includes
computers, which is a little annoying as it means one cannot feed
redstone wire from one side and a repeater from another.
This changes computers to not propagate strong redstone signals, in the
same way transparent blocks like glass do.
Closes#548.
The HTTP filtering system becomes even more complex! Though in this
case, it's pretty minimal, and definitely worth doing.
For instance, the following rule will allow connecting to localhost on
port :8080.
[[http.rules]]
host = "127.0.0.1"
port = 8080
action = "allow"
# Other rules as before.
Closes#540
I hope the Fabric folks now realise this is gonna be a race of who can
update first :p. Either way, this was a very easy update - only changes
were due to unrelated Forge changes.
Doesn't fix#515 (arguably makes it worse in the sense that it's more
likely to throw). However it should provide better error reporting, and
make it more clear that it's not CC:T's fault.
It appears I had failed to update this when last bumping the Forge
version. Closes#521 - we're relying on a feature only added in Forge
31.1.16, and they're using 3.1.14.
Control characters become escaped as JSON requires
Non-ASCII characters get escaped as well for better interoperability
We assume here that lua strings represent only first 256 code points of unicode
We can just scrape them from the @AutoService annotation, which saves us
having to duplicate any work. Hopefully fixes#501, but I haven't tested
in a non-dev environment yet.
When dealing with invalid paths (for instance, ones which are too long
or malformed), Java may throw a FileSystemException. This contains the
absolute path (i.e. C:/Users/Moi/.../.minecraft/...), which is printed
to the user within CC - obviously not ideal!
We simply catch this exception within the MountWrapper and map it back
to the local path. The disadvantage of doing it here is that we can't
map the path in the exception back to the computer - we'd need to catch
it in FileMount for that - so we just assume it referrs to the original
path instead.
Doing it in FileMount ends up being a little uglier, as we already do
all the exception wrangling in FileWrapper, so this'll do for now.
Fixes#495
It's no longer possible to implement this on the tile, due to the
conflict in getType. Given this is a really bad idea, it's not a big
issue, but we should mention it in the documentation.
Fixes#496.
A lot is broken, but at least we can get in game:
- GUIs render a whole bunch of additional "inventory" text, which we
really don't want.
- Computers load from the wrong location.
- There's some issues with using Forge's tags from outside of JSON
recipes. We need to work out why.
This PR adds some documentation for APIs that did not have docs in the
source yet. This includes the:
* drive peripheral
* FS API
* OS PAI
* printer peripheral
* speaker peripheral
illuaminate does not handle Java files, for obvious reasons. In order to
get around that, we have a series of stub files within /doc/stub which
mirrored the Java ones. While this works, it has a few problems:
- The link to source code does not work - it just links to the stub
file.
- There's no guarantee that documentation remains consistent with the
Java code. This change found several methods which were incorrectly
documented beforehand.
We now replace this with a custom Java doclet[1], which extracts doc
comments from @LuaFunction annotated methods and generates stub-files
from them. These also contain a @source annotation, which allows us to
correctly link them back to the original Java code.
There's some issues with this which have yet to be fixed. However, I
don't think any of them are major blockers right now:
- The custom doclet relies on Java 9 - I think it's /technically/
possible to do this on Java 8, but the API is significantly uglier.
This means that we need to run javadoc on a separate JVM.
This is possible, and it works locally and on CI, but is definitely
not a nice approach.
- illuaminate now requires the doc stubs to be generated in order for
the linter to pass, which does make running the linter locally much
harder (especially given the above bullet point).
We could notionally include the generated stubs (or at least a cut
down version of them) in the repo, but I'm not 100% sure about that.
[1]: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/9/docs/api/jdk/javadoc/doclet/package-summary.html
- Refer to this as "data" rather than "metadata". I'm still not sure
where the meta came from - blame OpenPeripheral I guess.
- Likewise, use getItemDetail within inventory methods, rather than
getItemMeta.
- Refactor common data-getting code into one class. This means that
turtle.getItemDetail, turtle.inspect and commands.getBlockInfo all
use the same code.
- turtle.getItemDetail now accepts a second "detailed" parameter which
will include the full metadata (#471, #452).
- Tags are now only included in the detailed list. This is a breaking
change, however should only affect one version (1.89.x) and I'm not
convinced that the previous behaviour was safe.
This allows for configuring the size of computers and pocket computers,
as well as the max size of monitors.
There's several limitations with the current implementation, but it's
still "good enough" for an initial release:
- Turtles cannot be resized.
- GUIs do not scale themselves, so "large" sizes will not render within
the default resolution.
This exposes a basic peripheral for any tile entity which does not have methods
already registered. We currently provide the following methods:
- Inventories: size, list, getItemMeta, pushItems, pullItems.
- Energy storage: getEnergy, getEnergyCapacity
- Fluid tanks: tanks(), pushFluid, pullFluid.
These methods are currently experimental - it must be enabled through
`experimental.generic_peripherals`. While this is an initial step towards
implementing #452, but is by no means complete.
Well, mostly. We currently don't do recipe serializers as I'm a little
too lazy. For items, blocks and TE types this does make registration
nicer - we've some helper functions which help reduce duplication.
Some types (containers, TEs, etc..) are a little less nice, as we now
must define the registry object (i.e. the WhateverType<?>) in a separate
class to the class it constructs. However, it's probably a worthwhile
price to pay.
No clue how we're going to do this for the dynamic peripheral system
if/when that ships, but this is a good first stage.
Like the Java APIs, this relies on stub files, so we can't link to the
implementation which is a bit of a shame. However, it's a good first
step.
I'm really not very good at this modding lark am I? I've done a basic
search for other missing methods, and can't see anything, but goodness
knows.
Fixes#480
When calling .flip(), we limit the size of the buffer. However, this
limit is not reset when writing the next time, which means we get
out-of-bounds errors, even if the buffer is /technically/ big enough.
Clearing the buffer before drawing (rather than just resetting the
position) is enough to fix this.
Fixes#476 (and closes#477, which is a duplicate)
We never added back replacing of ${version} strings, which means that CC
was reporting incorrect version numbers in _HOST, the user agent and
network versions. This meant we would allow connections even on
mismatched versions (#464).
We shift all version handling into ComputerCraftAPI(Impl) - this now
relies on Forge code, so we don't want to run it in emulators.
- Strip any gui._.config options. These haven't been used since 1.12
and while they may return, it doesn't seem worth it right now.
- Fix a couple of typos in the English translations.
- Import from https://i18n.tweaked.cc. There's definitely some problems
with the import - empty translations are still included, so we write
a script to strip them.
This is simply exposed as a table from tag -> true. While this is less
natural than an array, it allows for easy esting of whether a tag is
present.
Closes#461
- Use texture over texture2D - the latter was deprecated in GLSL 1.30.
- Cache the tbo buffer - this saves an allocation when monitors update.
Closes#455. While the rest of the PR has some nice changes, it
performs signlificantly worse on my system.
This moves monitor networking into its own packet, rather than serialising
using NBT. This allows us to be more flexible with how monitors are
serialised.
We now compress terminal data using gzip. This reduces the packet size
of a max-sized-monitor from ~25kb to as little as 100b.
On my test set of images (what I would consider to be the extreme end of
the "reasonable" case), we have packets from 1.4kb bytes up to 12kb,
with a mean of 6kb. Even in the worst case, this is a 2x reduction in
packet size.
While this is a fantastic win for the common case, it is not abuse-proof.
One can create a terminal with high entropy (and so uncompressible). This
will still be close to the original packet size.
In order to prevent any other abuse, we also limit the amount of monitor
data a client can possibly receive to 1MB (configurable).
It should be release quality in all honesty[^1], but let's leave it a
few days to see if any issues trickle in.
[^1]: Well, aside from upsidedown turtles!
timetout, max_upload, max_download and max_websocket_message may now be
configured on a domain-by-domain basis. This uses the same system that
we use for the block/allow-list from before:
Example:
[[http.rules]]
host = "*"
action = "allow"
max_upload = 4194304
max_download = 16777216
timeout = 30000
This registers IPeripheral as a capability. As a result, all (Minecraft
facing) functionality operates using LazyOptional<_>s instead.
Peripheral providers should now return a LazyOptional<IPeripheral> too.
Hopefully this will allow custom peripherals to mark themselves as
invalid (say, because a dependency has changed).
While peripheral providers are somewhat redundant, they still have their
usages. If a peripheral is applied to a large number of blocks (for
instance, all inventories) then using capabilities does incur some
memory overhead.
We also make the following changes based on the above:
- Remove the default implementation for IWiredElement, migrating the
definition to a common "Capabilities" class.
- Remove IPeripheralTile - we'll exclusively use capabilities now.
Absurdly this is the most complex change, as all TEs needed to be
migrated too.
I'm not 100% sure of the correctness of this changes so far - I've
tested it pretty well, but blocks with more complex peripheral logic
(wired/wireless modems and turtles) are still a little messy.
- Remove the "command block" peripheral provider, attaching a
capability instead.
When creating a peripheral or custom Lua object, one must implement two
methods:
- getMethodNames(): String[] - Returns the name of the methods
- callMethod(int, ...): Object[] - Invokes the method using an index in
the above array.
This has a couple of problems:
- It's somewhat unwieldy to use - you need to keep track of array
indices, which leads to ugly code.
- Functions which yield (for instance, those which run on the main
thread) are blocking. This means we need to spawn new threads for
each CC-side yield.
We replace this system with a few changes:
- @LuaFunction annotation: One may annotate a public instance method
with this annotation. This then exposes a peripheral/lua object
method.
Furthermore, this method can accept and return a variety of types,
which often makes functions cleaner (e.g. can return an int rather
than an Object[], and specify and int argument rather than
Object[]).
- MethodResult: Instead of returning an Object[] and having blocking
yields, functions return a MethodResult. This either contains an
immediate return, or an instruction to yield with some continuation
to resume with.
MethodResult is then interpreted by the Lua runtime (i.e. Cobalt),
rather than our weird bodgey hacks before. This means we no longer
spawn new threads when yielding within CC.
- Methods accept IArguments instead of a raw Object array. This has a
few benefits:
- Consistent argument handling - people no longer need to use
ArgumentHelper (as it doesn't exist!), or even be aware of its
existence - you're rather forced into using it.
- More efficient code in some cases. We provide a Cobalt-specific
implementation of IArguments, which avoids the boxing/unboxing when
handling numbers and binary strings.
- cc.pretty.pretty now accepts two additional options:
- function_args: Show function arguments
- function_source: Show where functions are defined.
- Expose the two options as lua.* settings (defaulting function_args to
true, and function_source to false).
These are then used in the Lua REPL.
Closes#361
- Use jacoco for Java-side coverage. Our Java coverage is /terrible
(~10%), as we only really test the core libraries. Still a good thing
to track for regressions though.
- mcfly now tracks Lua side coverage. This works in several stages:
- Replace loadfile to include the whole path
- Add a debug hook which just tracks filename->(lines->count). This
is then submitted to the Java test runner.
- On test completion, we emit a luacov.report.out file.
As the debug hook is inserted by mcfly, this does not include any
computer startup (such as loading apis, or the root of bios.lua),
despite they're executed.
This would be possible to do (for instance, inject a custom header
into bios.lua). However, we're not actually testing any of the
behaviour of startup (aside from "does it not crash"), so I'm not
sure whether to include it or not. Something I'll most likely
re-evaluate.
`local varname = value` results in `varname` being inaccessible in
the next REPL input. This is often unintended and can lead to confusing
behaviour. We produce a warning when this occurs.
This uses the system described in #409, to render monitors in a more
efficient manner.
Each monitor is backed by a texture buffer object (TBO) which contains
a relatively compact encoding of the terminal state. This is then
rendered using a shader, which consumes the TBO and uses it to index
into main font texture.
As we're transmitting significantly less data to the GPU (only 3 bytes
per character), this effectively reduces any update lag to 0. FPS appears
to be up by a small fraction (10-15fps on my machine, to ~110), possibly
as we're now only drawing a single quad (though doing much more work in
the shader).
On my laptop, with its Intel integrated graphics card, I'm able to draw
120 full-sized monitors (with an effective resolution of 3972 x 2330) at
a consistent 60fps. Updates still cause a slight spike, but we always
remain above 30fps - a significant improvement over VBOs, where updates
would go off the chart.
Many thanks to @Lignum and @Lemmmy for devising this scheme, and helping
test and review it! ♥
Unknown blit colours, such as " " will be translated to black for the
background or white for the foreground. This restores the behaviour from
before #412.
- Write to a PacketBuffer instead of generating an NBT tag. This is
then converted to an NBT byte array when we send across the network.
- Pack background/foreground colours into a single byte.
This derives from some work I did back in 2017, and some of the changes
made/planned in #409. However, this patch does not change how terminals
are represented, it simply makes the transfer more compact.
This makes the patch incredibly small (100 lines!), but also limited in
what improvements it can make compared with #409. We send 26626 bytes
for a full-sized monitor. While a 2x improvement over the previous 58558
bytes, there's a lot of room for improvement.
This functions the same as shell.run, but does not tokenise the
arguments. This allows us to pass command line arguments through to
another program without having to re-quote them.
Closes#417
- Remove the parenthesis around the text (so it's now
"Computer ID: 12"), rather than "(Computer ID: 12").
- Show the tooltip if the computer has an ID and no label (as well as
when in advanced mode).
- Lint references to unknown fields of modules, excluding the keys and
colours modules. This caught several silly errors in our stub files,
but nothing else.
- Lint on using unknown globals. This highlighted a couple of really
silly mistakes. Fixes#427.
- Add documentation for fs.attributes, fs.getCapacity and pocket, as
they were not defined before.
Co-authored-by: JackMacWindows <jackmacwindowslinux@gmail.com>
- I'm excluding pocket computers, as they have such a tiny screen I'm
not sure the screen estate is worth it.
Pocket computers /generally/ aren't people's starter machine, so I
think this is fine.
- Prune the motd list, and try to make them a little shorter. I think
this list is more of the interesting ones. We can modify this list in
the future, as we get more feedback.[^1]
- Also fix paint/edit not adding an extension when they should. This
was caused by the settings rewrite, as the explicitly provided
default shadowed the one provided by bios.lua.
[^1]: ~5 months ago I asked for some feedback about enabling motds by
default. I only got something constructive back today >_>.
This replaces the allow/block lists with a series of rules. Each rule
takes the form
[[http.rules]]
host = "127.0.0.0/8"
action = "block"
This is pretty much the same as the previous config style, in that hosts
may be domains, wildcards or in CIDR notation. However, they may also be
mixed, so you could allow a specific IP, and then block all others.
- The store is now split into two sections:
- A list of possible options, with some metadata about them.
- A list of values which have been changed.
- settings.define can be used to register a new option. We have
migrated all existing options over to use it. This can be used to
define a default value, description, and a type the setting must have
(such as `string` or `boolean).
- settings.{set,unset,clear,load,store} operate using this value list.
This means that only values which have been changed are stored to
disk.
Furthermore, clearing/unsetting will reset to the /default/ value,
rather than removing entirely.
- The set program will now display descriptions.
- settings.{load,save} now default to `.settings` if no path is given.
This is a backport of 1.15's terminal rendering code with some further
improvements. This duplicates a fair bit of code, and is much more
efficient.
I expect the work done in #409 will supersede this, but that's unlikely
to make its way into the next release so it's worth getting this in for
now.
- Refactor a lot of common terminal code into
`FixedWithFontRenderer`. This shouldn't change any behaviour, but
makes a lot of our terminal renderers (printed pages, terminals,
monitors) a lot cleaner.
- Terminal rendering is done using a single mode/vertex format. Rather
than drawing an untextured quad for the background colours, we use an
entirely white piece of the terminal font. This allows us to batch
draws together more elegantly.
- Some minor optimisations:
- Skip rendering `"\0"` and `" "` characters. These characters occur
pretty often, especially on blank monitors and, as the font is empty
here, it is safe to skip them.
- Batch together adjacent background cells of the same colour. Again,
most terminals will have large runs of the same colour, so this is a
worthwhile optimisation.
These optimisations do mean that terminal performance is no longer
consistent as "noisy" terminals will have worse performance. This is
annoying, but still worthwhile.
- Switch monitor rendering over to use VBOs.
We also add a config option to switch between rendering backends. By
default we'll choose the best one compatible with your GPU, but there
is a config option to switch between VBOS (reasonable performance) and
display lists (bad).
When benchmarking 30 full-sized monitors rendering a static image, this
improves my FPS[^1] from 7 to 95. This is obviously an extreme case -
monitor updates are still slow, and so more frequently updating screens
will still be less than stellar.
[^1]: My graphics card is an Intel HD Graphics 520. Obviously numbers
will vary.
This would return true for any block with a fluid in it, including
waterlogged blocks. This resulted in much broken behaviour
- Turtles cannot place blocks when waterlogged (fixedd #385)
- Turtles could move into waterlogged blocks (such as fences),
replacing them.
This is relatively unoptimised right now, but should be efficient enough
for most practical applications.
- Add textutils.json_null. This will be serialized into a literal
`null`. When deserializing, and parse_null is true, this will be
returned instead of a nil.
- Add textutils.unserializeJSON (and textutils.unserializeJSON). This
is a standard compliant JSON parser (hopefully).
- Passing in nbt_style to textutils.unserializeJSON will handle
stringified NBT (no quotes around object keys, numeric suffices). We
don't currently support byte/long/int arrays - something to add in
a future commit.
- Remove stub for table.pack/table.unpack.
- Remove Lua 5.3 bitlib stub. We're not on 5.3, there's no
point emulating it.
- Change peripheral.call to correctly adjust the error level. This is a
terrible hack, but I believe the only good option.
It'd be good to remove load as well, but it's a little more complex due
to our injecting of _ENV.
Closes#363
It hasn't been http_enable for yonks - slightly worried I didn't notice
this earlier.
Also don't refer to ComputerCraft.cfg - the name has changed several
times across versions, so let's leave it ambiguous.
Hopefully provides a /little/ more information about the build process.
Hey, also means I only need to add a CoC to complete GH's community tab!
In all seriousness, there's probably a lot more I need to flesh out
here, such as some kind of vision and guides for issues/PRs. But this at
least documents the local development process. Somewhat.
- Return EPOCH if a zip entry's creation/modification/access time is
missing.
- If a BasicFileAttributes.*Time method returns null, use 0 as our
time. This shouldn't happen, but is a good sanity check.
Fixes#371
This adds documentation comments to many of CC's Lua APIs, and
a couple of the Java ones, through the use of stubs. We then
export these to HTML using illuaminate [1] and upload them to our
documentation site [2].
Uploads currently occur on pushes to master and any release/tag. The
site is entirely static - there is no way to switch between versions,
etc... but hopefully we can improve this in the future.
[1]: github.com/SquidDev/illuaminate/
[2]: https://tweaked.cc/
This means we are already provided with file attributes, which halfs[^1]
the time taken to scan folders.
[^1]: This dropped the fastest scan time from ~1.3s to ~0.6. It's by no
means a perfect benchmark, but this is still an obvious improvement.
- fs.getCapacity just returns the capacity of the current drive, if
available. This will be nil on rom mounts.
- fs.attributes returns an lfs like table of various file attributes.
Currently, this contains:
- access, modification, created: When this file was last accessed,
modified and created. Time is measured in milliseconds since the
epoch, same as os.epoch("utc") and what is accepted by os.date.
- size: Same as fs.getSize
- isDir: same as fs.isDir
Closes#262
- Move timer handling to IAPIEnvironment, rather than OSAPI. This means
the environment is reset on startup/shutdown, much like normal APIs.
- Websocket.receive now accepts an optional timetout (much like
rednet.receive). This starts a timer, and waits for it to complete.
Closes#201
- contains now performs a case-insensitive comparison. While this is a
little dubious, it's required for systems like Windows, where foo and
Foo are the same folder.
- Impose a depth limit on copyRecursive. If there are any other cases
where we may try to copy a folder into itself, this should prevent
the computer entirely crashing.
See #354
- Remove Lua script to generate recipes/advancements for coloured
disks, turtle upgrades and pocket upgrades. Replacing them with Lua
ones.
- Generate most block drops via the data generator system. Aside from
cables, they all follow one of two templates.
- Remove *Stream methods on IMount/IWritableMount, and make the channel
ones the primary.
- Fix location of AbstractTurtleUpgrade
- Make IComputerAccess.getAvailablePeripheral and .getMainThreadMonitor
mandatory.
- IComputerAccess throws a specialised NotAttachedException
Most of the port is pretty simple. The main problems are regarding
changes to Minecraft's rendering system.
- Remove several rendering tweaks until Forge's compatibility it
brought up-to-date
- Map rendering for pocket computers and printouts
- Item frame rendering for printouts
- Custom block outlines for monitors and cables/wired modems
- Custom breaking progress for cables/wired modems
- Turtle "Dinnerbone" rendering is currently broken, as normals are not
correctly transformed.
- Rewrite FixedWidthFontRenderer to to the buffer in a single sweep.
In order to do this, the term_font now also bundles a "background"
section, which is just a blank region of the screen.
- Render monitors using a VBO instead of a call list. I haven't
compared performance yet, but it manages to render a 6x5 array of
_static_ monitors at almost 60fps, which seems pretty reasonable.
- Add a cc.pretty module, which provides a Wadler style pretty printer [1].
- The cc.pretty.pretty function converts an arbitrary object into a
pretty-printed document. This can then be printed to the screen with
cc.pretty.{write, print} or converted to a string with cc.pretty.render.
- Convert the Lua REPL to use the pretty printer rather than
textutils.serialise.
[1]: http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler/papers/prettier/prettier.pdf
GPS requests are now sent and received on CHANNEL_GPS by default
instead. This means it should not be possible to distinguish
computers (and thus locate them) via their GPS requests.
"exit" now has a custom __tostring method, which prints an explanation
message. This is very similar to how Python achives the same
functionality:
lua> exit
Call exit() to exit
lua> exit()
> Actually leaves the REPL
Unfortunately we can't apply the config changes due to backwards
compatibility. This'll be something we may need to PR into Forge.
CraftTweaker support still needs to be added.
It appears that WB opens containers manually, and thus all of our stubs
network stubs are entirely ignored. Thus the only solution here is to
stub out the whole network handler code.
Thankfully this is simple enough - we do the same for Plethora and 1.14.
Fixes#328
This provides the following methods:
- dan200.computercraft.turtle.removeUpgrade(id: String)
- dan200.computercraft.turtle.removeUpgrade(stack: IItemStack)
- dan200.computercraft.turtle.addTool(id: String, craftItem: IItemStack[, toolItem: IItemStack][, kind: string])
While it's pretty minimal, it should allow for a reasonable amount of
functionality.
Closes#327 and #97.
We now use illuaminate[1]'s linting facilities to check the rom and
bios.lua for a couple of common bugs and other problems.
Right now this doesn't detect any especially important bugs, though it
has caught lots of small things (unused variables, some noisy code). In
the future, the linter will grow in scope and features, which should
allow us to be stricter and catch most issues.
As a fun aside, we started off with ~150 bugs, and illuaminate was able
to fix all but 30 of them, which is pretty neat.
[1]: https://github.com/SquidDev/illuaminate
Before it would remain the same across world reloads, and thus would be
out-of-date after leaving the first world. This architecture technically
allows for running multiple servers at once, though that's not going to
matter that soon.
This fixes them not rendering particles when broken. Particle rendering
is a little janky right now, as it uses the whole texture - we should
probably split up the texture into smaller images. Fixes#315
This should fix several issues (see #304, etc...). I'll try to get round
to PRing this into Forge at some point, though on the other hand this is
/super/ ugly.
This shouldn't matter either way - we don't expose it in the creative
menu, and there's no recipes for it. This should shut up a log message
though. Fixes#305.
This fixes monitor rendering underwater (closes#314). By default,
isSolid returns true if the render layer is SOLID. As we use CUTOUT due
to our funky TE rendering, we need to override this to return true
anyway.
This will cause some side effects, as monitors now blocking light
propagation, but I don't think that's the end of the world.
This is sufficiently useful a class, that it's worthwhile exposing it.
Hopefully we can slowly encourage other mods to migrate to it (well, at
least in 1.14), and so make error messages more consistent.
Also:
- Add Javadoc for all public methods
- Clarify the method names a little (getNumber -> getDouble,
getReal -> getFiniteDouble).
- Make the *Table methods return a Map<?,?> instead of
Map<Object, Object>.
Previously we were just returning the current tile. However, if someone
was holding a reference to this inventory (such as a GUI), then it'd be
outdated and invalid once the turtle had moved.
This caused a couple of issues:
- turtle_inventory events would not be fired when moving items in the
turtle GUI.
- As of 75e2845c01, turtles would no
longer share their inventory state after moving. Thus, removing items
from a GUI using an invalid inventory would move them from an old
tile, duplicating the items.
Fixes#298, fixes#300
Not quite sure when this changed, but I'm fairly sure isMouseOver wasn't
a thing when I wrote this. Or I'm a plonker. Both are possible.
Also fixes mouse dragging not being handled in turtles.
Fixes#299
Closes#293. Doesn't really solve anything there aside from exposing the
number, but sadly there's not really anything obvious I can do on my end
- the command API just doesn't expose anything else.
- Adds cc.completions module, with a couple of helper functions for
working with the more general completion functionality (i.e. that
provided by read).
- Adds cc.shell.completions module, which provides shell-specific
completion functions.
- Add a "program completion builder", which allows you to write stuff
like this:
shell.setCompletionFunction( "rom/programs/redstone.lua",
completion.build(
{ completion.choice, { "probe", "set ", "pulse " } },
completion.side) )
Closes#232
It appears several mods inject their own drops on the LOWEST priority,
meaning that we capture the existing drops, and the other mod will clear
the (now empty) drop list and add its own, resulting in dupe bugs.
While I'd argue it's somewhat dubious doing this on the LOWEST priority,
it's not a battle I'm prepared to fight. For now, we just remove the
block/entity drop handlers, and handle all drop logic when entities are
spawned.
Fixes#288
This is the behaviour on 1.14 already, so it makes sense to backport to
1.12.
Any mod may now insert files into assets/computercraft/lua/rom, and
they'll be automatically added to the default ROM mount. This allows
other mods to easily register new programs or autorun files.
See #242
Lua 5.2+ uses loadfile(filename, mode, env), not loadfile(filename,
env). While this is a minor incompatibility, it'd be nice to be
consistent as much as possible.
We try to handle the incorrect case too, as obviously we don't want to
break existing programs.
This moves expect from the bios into a new craftos.expect module,
removing the internal _G["~expect"] definition. Apparently people were
using this irrespective of the "don't use this" comment, so we need to
find another solution.
While this does introduce some ugliness (having to load the module in
weird ways for programs, duplicating the expect function in memory), it
does allow people to use the function in a supported way, and removes
the global ugliness.
I'm not entirely sure how useful all of these will be yet - still
trying to work out what/when to test things, but hopefully this'll
be a useful datapoint.
This is equally an ugly hack, but means we're at least not constructing
entities with null worlds any more.
Ideally we could always use the turtle entity, but this will require a
bit more of a refactor.
Fixes#265
Mostly just rearranging. Bump JUnit version in an attempt to fix test
outputs, but it appears this is a mix of gradle/gradle#5975 and
gradle/gradle#4438.
- Add Forge's "name" field to the loot tables. This doesn't resolve all
our missing loot providers, but it's a start.
- Add back GUIs for pocket computers, printouts, view computer, etc...
Equivalent to `pastebin run`, but allows running arbitrary URLs
instead.
Is this a little questionable? Yes - people shouldn't be downloading
and running code from the internet. But hey, people do that already,
so we might as well make it convenient.
So very little works, but it compiles and runs.
Things to resolve over the next few days:
- Horrible mappings (should largely be resolved by tomorrow).
- Cannot send extra data over containers - we'll have to see what Forge
does here.
- Turtle models are broken
- No block drops yet - this will largely be cherry-picking whatever I
did on Fabric.
- Weird inventory desyncs (items don't show up initially when
interacting with a CC inventory).
- Probably lots of other things.
- Adds a CheckStyle configuration which is pretty similar to CC's
existing one.
- Add the Gradle license plugin.
- Ensure the existing source code is compatible with these additional
checks.
See #239
- Make mcfly's stubbing system a little more fault-tolerant.
- Add a small utility function which redirects print, printError and
write to capture their output, rather than printing to the terminal.
This can then be matched against in order to determine a program's
output.
It's a little flakey - you can't use it multiple times in an it
block, etc... but it's a nice feature.
- Add a small couple of tests to delete as a proof-of-concept.
- Search for the bug on the issue tracker. Make sure to look at closed issues too!
-->
## Useful information to include:
- Minecraft version
- CC: Tweaked version
- Detailed reproduction steps: sometimes I can spot a bug pretty easily, but often it's much more obscure. The more information I have to help reproduce it, the quicker it'll get fixed.
changelog="Release notes can be found on the GitHub repository (https://github.com/SquidDev-CC/CC-Tweaked/releases/tag/v${mc_version}-${mod_version})."
releaseType=isStable?'release':'alpha'
changelog="Release notes can be found on the GitHub repository (https://github.com/cc-tweaked/CC-Tweaked/releases/tag/v${mc_version}-${mod_version})."
changelog="Release notes can be found on the [GitHub repository](https://github.com/cc-tweaked/CC-Tweaked/releases/tag/v${mc_version}-${mod_version})."
}
publishing{
publications{
mavenJava(MavenPublication){
maven(MavenPublication){
fromcomponents.java
//artifactsourceJar
artifact(apiJar)
fg.component(it)
pom{
name='CC: Tweaked'
description='CC: Tweaked is a fork of ComputerCraft, adding programmable computers, turtles and more to Minecraft.'
The @{modem_message} event is fired when a message is received on an open channel on any @{modem}.
## Return Values
1. @{string}: The event name.
2. @{string}: The side of the modem that received the message.
3. @{number}: The channel that the message was sent on.
4. @{number}: The reply channel set by the sender.
5. @{any}: The message as sent by the sender.
6. @{number}: The distance between the sender and the receiver, in blocks.
## Example
Wraps a @{modem} peripheral, opens channel 0 for listening, and prints all received messages.
```lua
local modem = peripheral.find("modem") or error("No modem attached", 0)
modem.open(0)
while true do
local event, side, channel, replyChannel, message, distance = os.pullEvent("modem_message")
print(("Message received on side %s on channel %d (reply to %d) from %f blocks away with message %s"):format(side, channel, replyChannel, distance, tostring(message)))
see: modem_message For raw modem messages sent outside of Rednet.
see: rednet.receive To wait for a Rednet message with an optional timeout and protocol filter.
---
The @{rednet_message} event is fired when a message is sent over Rednet.
This event is usually handled by @{rednet.receive}, but it can also be pulled manually.
@{rednet_message} events are sent by @{rednet.run} in the top-level coroutine in response to @{modem_message} events. A @{rednet_message} event is always preceded by a @{modem_message} event. They are generated inside CraftOS rather than being sent by the ComputerCraft machine.
## Return Values
1. @{string}: The event name.
2. @{number}: The ID of the sending computer.
3. @{any}: The message sent.
4. @{string|nil}: The protocol of the message, if provided.
## Example
Prints a message when one is sent:
```lua
while true do
local event, sender, message, protocol = os.pullEvent("rednet_message")
if protocol ~= nil then
print("Received message from " .. sender .. " with protocol " .. protocol .. " and message " .. tostring(message))
else
print("Received message from " .. sender .. " with message " .. tostring(message))
see: commands.execAsync To run a command which fires a task_complete event.
---
The @{task_complete} event is fired when an asynchronous task completes. This is usually handled inside the function call that queued the task; however, functions such as @{commands.execAsync} return immediately so the user can wait for completion.
## Return Values
1. @{string}: The event name.
2. @{number}: The ID of the task that completed.
3. @{boolean}: Whether the command succeeded.
4. @{string}: If the command failed, an error message explaining the failure. (This is not present if the command succeeded.)
The @{terminate} event is fired when <kbd>Ctrl-T</kbd> is held down.
This event is normally handled by @{os.pullEvent}, and will not be returned. However, @{os.pullEventRaw} will return this event when fired.
@{terminate} will be sent even when a filter is provided to @{os.pullEventRaw}. When using @{os.pullEventRaw} with a filter, make sure to check that the event is not @{terminate}.
## Example
Prints a message when Ctrl-T is held:
```lua
while true do
local event = os.pullEventRaw("terminate")
if event == "terminate" then print("Terminate requested!") end
By default, ComputerCraft blocks access to local IP addresses for security. This means you can't normally access any
HTTP server running on your computer. However, this may be useful for testing programs without having a remote
server. You can unblock these IPs in the ComputerCraft config.
- [Minecraft 1.13 and later, CC:T 1.87.0 and later](#cc-1.87.0)
- [Minecraft 1.13 and later, CC:T 1.86.2 and earlier](#cc-1.86.2)
- [Minecraft 1.12.2 and earlier](#mc-1.12)
## Minecraft 1.13 and later, CC:T 1.87.0 and later {#cc-1.87.0}
The configuration file can be located at `serverconfig/computercraft-server.toml` inside the world folder on either
single-player or multiplayer. Look for lines that look like this:
```toml
#A list of rules which control behaviour of the "http" API for specific domains or IPs.
#Each rule is an item with a 'host' to match against, and a series of properties. The host may be a domain name ("pastebin.com"),
#wildcard ("*.pastebin.com") or CIDR notation ("127.0.0.0/8"). If no rules, the domain is blocked.
[[http.rules]]
host = "$private"
action = "deny"
```
On 1.95.0 and later, this will be a single entry with `host = "$private"`. On earlier versions, this will be a number of
`[[http.rules]]` with various IP addresses. You will want to remove all of the `[[http.rules]]` entires that have
`action = "deny"`. Then save the file and relaunch Minecraft (Server).
Here's what it should look like after removing:
```toml
#A list of rules which control behaviour of the "http" API for specific domains or IPs.
#Each rule is an item with a 'host' to match against, and a series of properties. The host may be a domain name ("pastebin.com"),
#wildcard ("*.pastebin.com") or CIDR notation ("127.0.0.0/8"). If no rules, the domain is blocked.
[[http.rules]]
#The maximum size (in bytes) that a computer can send or receive in one websocket packet.
max_websocket_message = 131072
host = "*"
#The maximum size (in bytes) that a computer can upload in a single request. This includes headers and POST text.
max_upload = 4194304
action = "allow"
#The maximum size (in bytes) that a computer can download in a single request. Note that responses may receive more data than allowed, but this data will not be returned to the client.
max_download = 16777216
#The period of time (in milliseconds) to wait before a HTTP request times out. Set to 0 for unlimited.
timeout = 30000
```
## Minecraft 1.13 and later, CC:T 1.86.2 and earlier {#cc-1.86.2}
The configuration file for singleplayer is at `.minecraft/config/computercraft-common.toml`. Look for lines that look
like this:
```toml
#A list of wildcards for domains or IP ranges that cannot be accessed through the "http" API on Computers.
#If this is empty then all whitelisted domains will be accessible. Example: "*.github.com" will block access to all subdomains of github.com.
#You can use domain names ("pastebin.com"), wilcards ("*.pastebin.com") or CIDR notation ("127.0.0.0/8").
CC: Tweaked is based off of the Cobalt Lua runtime, which uses Lua 5.1. However, Cobalt and CC:T implement additional features from Lua 5.2 and 5.3 (as well as some deprecated 5.0 features) that are not available in base 5.1. This page lists all of the compatibility for these newer versions.
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