Instead of checking whether it was set previously, setting it to false,
then setting it back to true if it was true before, just use the
command-line argument in git to override the config for that command.
Using a variable makes it pretty painless to do.
This is not a perfect workaround but it seems to be the best solution
for the moment.
On Windows, this means that when a patch fails to apply, you would now
need to fix that patch, finish the apply (AM), then rebuild all patches,
and then finally re-run the patch apply procedure in order to continue.
This adds a small amount of overhead compared to the traditional method
(which will still work on *nix environments, including WSL). However, it
seems preferable to the build not working on Windows at all.
* Make the legacy ping handler more reliable
The Minecraft server often fails to respond to old ("legacy") pings
from old Minecraft versions using the protocol used before the switch
to Netty in Minecraft 1.7.
Due to packet fragmentation[1], we might not have all needed bytes
available when the LegacyPingHandler is called. In this case, it will
run into an error, remove the handler and continue using the modern
protocol.
This is unlikely to happen for the first two revisions of the legacy
ping protocol (used in Minecraft 1.5.x and older) since the request
consists of only one or two bytes, but happens frequently for the
last/third revision introduced in Minecraft 1.6.
It has much larger, variable packet sizes due to the inclusion of
the virtual host (the hostname/port used to connect to the server).
The solution[2] is simple: If we find more than two matching bytes,
we buffer the remaining bytes until we have enough to fully read and
respond to the request.
[1]: https://netty.io/wiki/user-guide-for-4.x.html#wiki-h3-11
[2]: https://netty.io/wiki/user-guide-for-4.x.html#wiki-h4-13
* Add legacy ping support to PaperServerListPingEvent
Add a new method to StatusClient check if the client is a legacy
client that does not support all of the features provided in the
event.
* Drop original implementation for old player sample API
* Add extended PaperServerListPingEvent
Add a new event that extends the original ServerListPingEvent
and allows full control of the response sent to the client.
* Implement deprecated player sample API
Rather than checking the platform or operating system, simply check if
the command exists. If the check fails, check if the md5 command exists.
If that fails as well, cancel the build script. Otherwise, assign the
alias as before.
This allows plugins that give players the ability to apply the experience
points to the Item Mending formula, which will repair an item instead
of giving the player experience points.
Both an API To standalone mend, and apply mending logic to .giveExp has been added.
Improves performance by keying every chunk thats part of a structure to a hashmap
instead of only the first one.
This allows us to avoid iterating the entire structures value set to see
if a block position is inside of a structure.
This should have pretty decent performance improvement to any standard world
that has been around for a whilewith lots of structures due to ineffeciencies
in how MC stores structures (even unloaded chunks has structured data loaded)
Port of 303a775fc3
Will display a list of all entities in a world, as well as which chunks
they are in. Hopefully, this will make tracking down chunks with lots of
entities easier.
Only real change from the forge version is that instead of dimension
IDs, we accept world names in the form of a string.
/paper entity list - Lists all entities in the player's current world
/paper entity list minecraft:zombie - Lists all zombies in the player's
current world
/paper entity list * world_nether - Lists all entities in the nether
/paper entity list minecraft:ghast world_nether - Lists all ghasts in
the nether
Someone wrote some horrible code that throws a world accessing task
onto the HTTP DOWNLOADER Thread Pool, for an activity that is not even
heavy enough to warrant async operation.
This then triggers async chunk loads!
What in the hell were you thinking?