Fixes incorrect spigot handling of the invulnerability damage
reduction applied when an already invulnerable entity is damaged with a
larger damage amount than the initial damage.
Vanilla still damages entities even if invulnerable if the damage to be
applied is larger than the previous damage taken. In that case, vanilla
applies the difference between the previous damage taken and the
proposed damage.
Spigot's damage modifier API takes over the computation of damage
reducing effects, however spigot invokes this handling with the initial
damage before computing the difference to the previous damage amount.
This leads to the reduction values to generally be larger than expected,
as they are computed on the not-yet-reduced value.
Spigot applies these reductions after calling the EntityDamageEvent and
*then* subtracts the previous damage point, leading to the final damage
amount being smaller than expected.
This patch cannot simply call the EntityDamageEvent with the reduced
damage, as that would lead to EntityDamageEvent#getDamage() returning
the already reduced damage, which breaks its method contract.
Instead, this patch makes use of the DamageModifier API, implementing
the last-damage-reduction as a DamageModifier.
Upstream has released updates that appear to apply and compile correctly.
This update has not been tested by PaperMC and as with ANY update, please do your own testing
Bukkit Changes:
ff64962b SPIGOT-7124: MapPalette.getColor(0) returns the wrong color
CraftBukkit Changes:
8f3647242 SPIGOT-7127: /say doesn't work from console
The behavioural nearby sensors are validated every tick on the entities
that registered the respective sensors and are therefore a good subject
to performance improvements.
More specifically this commit replaces the Stream#filter usage with
ArrayList#removeIf as the removeIf method on an array list is heavily
optimized towards a single internal array re-allocation without any
further overhead on the removeIf call.
The only negative of this change is the rather agressive diff these
patches introduce as the methods are basically being reimplemented
compared to the previous stream-based implementation.
See: https://nipafx.dev/java-stream-performance/
Note: Updated LICENCE.md to release this commit under MIT
Fixes issue #1177
`MapMaker#weakKeys()` makes the `Map` use identity comparison for the keys, while also enabling the automatical removal of dropped classes from the cache.
The changes are the same as in #1399, except now the original patch is modified instead of a new one being created.