High performance Spigot fork that aims to fix gameplay and mechanics inconsistencies
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Travis Watkins 1044c32a54 Lower compression level to avoid overloading the thread. Fixes BUKKIT-2963
When sending chunks to a player we use their writer thread to do chunk
compression to avoid blocking the main thread with this work. However,
after a teleport or respawn there are a large number of chunk packets to
process. This causes the thread to spend a long period handling compression
while we continue dumping more chunk packets on it to handle. The result of
this is a noticable delay in getting responses to commands and chat
immediately after teleporting.

Switching to a lower compression level reduces this load and makes our
behavior more like vanilla. We do, however, still give this thread more
work to do so there will likely still be some delay when comparing to
vanilla. The only way to avoid this would be to put chunk compression back
on the main thread and give everyone on the server a poorer experience
instead.
2012-11-18 09:16:50 -06:00
src Lower compression level to avoid overloading the thread. Fixes BUKKIT-2963 2012-11-18 09:16:50 -06:00
.gitignore Ignore minecraft resources in src directory 2011-11-29 21:20:14 +11:00
LGPL.txt We're LGPL. 2011-01-02 10:58:11 +01:00
LICENCE.txt We're LGPL. 2011-01-02 10:58:11 +01:00
pom.xml Update CraftBukkit to Minecraft 1.4.5. 2012-11-16 10:13:34 -06:00
README.md Updated README.md with more coding and pull request conventions and tips to get your pull request accepted. 2012-02-24 00:09:53 -05:00

CraftBukkit

A Bukkit (Minecraft Server API) implementation

Website: http://bukkit.org
Bugs/Suggestions: http://leaky.bukkit.org

Compilation

We use maven to handle our dependencies.

  • Install Maven 3
  • Check out and install Bukkit
    • Note: this is not needed as the repository we use has Bukkit too, but you might have a newer one (with your own changes :D)
  • Check out this repo and: mvn clean package

Coding and Pull Request Conventions

  • We generally follow the Sun/Oracle coding standards.
  • No tabs; use 4 spaces instead.
  • No trailing whitespaces.
  • No CRLF line endings, LF only, put your gits 'core.autocrlf' on 'true'.
  • No 80 column limit or 'weird' midstatement newlines.
  • The number of commits in a pull request should be kept to a minimum (squish them into one most of the time - use common sense!).
  • No merges should be included in pull requests unless the pull request's purpose is a merge.
  • Pull requests should be tested (does it compile? AND does it work?) before submission.
  • Any major additions should have documentation ready and provided if applicable (this is usually the case).
  • Most pull requests should be accompanied by a corresponding Leaky ticket so we can associate commits with Leaky issues (this is primarily for changelog generation on dl.bukkit.org).
  • Try to follow test driven development where applicable.

If you make changes or add net.minecraft.server classes it is mandatory to:

  • Get the files from the mc-dev repo - make sure you have the last version!
  • Make a separate commit adding the new net.minecraft.server classes (commit message: "Added x for diff visibility" or so).
  • Then make further commits with your changes.
  • Mark your changes with:
    • 1 line; add a trailing: // CraftBukkit [- Optional reason]
    • 2+ lines; add
      • Before: // CraftBukkit start [- Optional comment]
      • After: // CraftBukkit end
  • Keep the diffs to a minimum (really important)

Tips to get your pull request accepted

Making sure you follow the above conventions is important, but just the beginning. Follow these tips to better the chances of your pull request being accepted and pulled.

  • Make sure you follow all of our conventions to the letter.
  • Make sure your code compiles under Java 5.
  • Provide proper JavaDocs where appropriate.
  • Provide proper accompanying documentation where appropriate.
  • Test your code.
  • Make sure to follow coding best practises.
  • Provide a test plugin binary and source for us to test your code with.
  • Your pull request should link to accompanying pull requests.
  • The description of your pull request should provide detailed information on the pull along with justification of the changes where applicable.