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?
I have not once ever seen this system help debug a crash.
One report of a suspected memory leak with the system.
This adds additional overhead to asynchronous task dispatching
Finally made timings accept "Callback style" reports, so plugins
can listen for when the report is done.
Added new Util interfaces, MessageCommandSender and BufferedCommandSender
This restores and improves using RCON to generate timings reports
Limit a single entity to colliding a max of configurable times per tick.
This will alleviate issues where living entities are hoarded in 1x1 pens
This is not tied to the maxEntityCramming rule. Cramming will still apply
just as it does in Vanilla, but entity pushing logic will be capped.
You can set this to 0 to disable collisions.
Spigot rebrought this back after it was removed for years due to the performance hit.
It is unknown if the JIT will optimize it out as effeciently with how it was
added, so we do not want any risk of performance degredation.
Paper has a proper Timings system that makes the Vanilla Method profiler obsolete and inferior.
We have long been receiving feedback about our warning messages when
excessive velocities are set on entities. We have, for the most part,
ignored much of this feedback because these warnings can be vital in
identifying the cause of a watchdog crash. These crashes would otherwise
be more difficult to identify without this information.
However, in many cases these warnings are unnecessarily verbose as the
server handles these excessive sets itself without user intervention.
As a compromise, we will only warn the user as part of a watchdog crash
log, and we will only include the most recent occurrence. This commit
represents a first effort on this front. It may need to be tweaked later
to provide more relevant information, such as the time it occurred,
and/or not printing the warning at all if the occurrence was a certain
time period ago.