By default, only LevelStem's that specifically match the ResourceKey for
OVERWORLD will have the 5 (currently) impls of CustomSpawner (for
phantoms, wandering traders, etc.). This adds an option to instead of
just looking at the LevelStem key, look at the DimensionType key which
is one level below that. Defaults to off to keep vanilla behavior.
The 4 missing structure set seed configs are strongholds, mineshafts,
buried treasure, and ancient cities.
Strongholds use a ring placement scheme which isn't random so they
utilize the world seed by default, this adds a config to override it
for just generating the ring positions.
Mineshafts and Buried Treasure structure sets are special cases
where the "salt" that can be defined for them via datapacks has 0
effect because the difference between the spacing and separation is 1
which is used as the upper bound in the random with salt. So the random
always returns the same int (0) so the salt has no effect. This adds
seeds/salts to the frequency reducer which has a similar effect.
Co-authored-by: William Blake Galbreath <blake.galbreath@gmail.com>
There is an explicit check in the handling code for empty pistons that
prevents sticky pistons from firing the event. However when we look back
at the history we see that this check was originally added so that ONLY
sticky pistons would fire the retract event. I'm not sure why.
1092acbddf
Over the course of several updates, the meaning of that field appears to
have changed from "is NOT sticky" to "is sticky". So now its having the
opposite effect. Only normal pistons fire the retraction event. And like
all things in CB, it's just been carried around since.
If we are to believe the history, the correct fix for this issue is to
flip it so it only fires for sticky pistons, but that puts us in a
bind. It's already firing for non-sticky pistons, changing it now would
likely result in breakage. Furthermore, there is little documentation as
to WHY that was ever intended to be the case.
Instead we opt to remove the check entirely so that the event fires for
all piston types.
Co-authored-by: Zach Brown <1254957+zachbr@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Madeline Miller <mnmiller1@me.com>
HashMapPalette uses an instance of CrudeIncrementalIntIdentityHashBiMap
internally. A Palette has a preset maximum size = 1 << bits.
CrudeIncrementalIntIdentityHashBiMap has an initial size but is
automatically resized. The CrudeIncrementalIntIdentityHashBiMap is created
with the maximum size in the constructor of HashMapPalette, with the aim
that it doesn't need to be resized anymore. However, there are two things
that I think Mojang hasn't considered here:
1) The CrudeIncrementalIntIdentityHashBiMap is resized, when its initial
size is reached and not the next time, when a further object is added.
2) HashMapPalette adds objects (unnecessarily) before checking if the
initial size of CrudeIncrementalIntIdentityHashBiMap is reached.
This means to actually avoid resize operations in
CrudeIncrementalIntIdentityHashBiMap, one has to add 2 to the initial size
or add 1 and check the size before adding objects. This commit implements
the second approach. Note that this isn't only an optimization but also
makes async reads of Palettes fail-safe. An async read while the
CrudeIncrementalIntIdentityHashBiMap is resized is fatal and can even lead
to corrupted data. This is also something that Anti-Xray is currently
relying on.
Fixes kelp modifier changing growth for other crops
Also add growth modifiers for glow berries, mangrove propagules,
torchflower crops and pitcher plant crops
Also fix above-mentioned modifiers from having the reverse effect
Co-authored-by: Jake Potrebic <jake.m.potrebic@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Noah van der Aa <ndvdaa@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lulu13022002 <41980282+Lulu13022002@users.noreply.github.com>
This patch detects whether or not the server is currently executing as a privileged user and spits out a warning.
The warning serves as a sort-of PSA for newer server admins who don't understand the risks of running as root.
We've seen plenty of bad/malicious plugins hit markets, and there's been a few close-calls with exploits in the past.
Hopefully this helps mitigate some potential damage to servers, even if it is just a warning.
Co-authored-by: Noah van der Aa <ndvdaa@gmail.com>
Sometimes, blocks are changed and then logic is called before the associated
tile entity is removed. When this happens, the factories were relying on the
block at the position, not the tile entity. This change prioritizes using the
tile entity type to determine the block state factory and falls back on
the material type of the block at that location.
== AT ==
public net.minecraft.world.level.block.entity.BlockEntityType validBlocks
In certain areas the player's head rotation could be desynced when teleported/moved.
This is because bukkit uses a separate head rotation field for yaw.
This issue only applies to players.
Preserves overstacked items in loot tables, such as shulker box drops, to prevent the items
from being deleted (as they'd overflow past the bounds of the container)-- or worse, causing
chunk bans via the large amount of NBT created by unstacking the items.
Fixes GH-5140 and GH-4748.
Example config:
packet-limiter:
kick-message: '&cSent too many packets'
limits:
all:
interval: 7.0
max-packet-rate: 500.0
ServerboundPlaceRecipePacket:
interval: 4.0
max-packet-rate: 5.0
action: DROP
all section refers to all incoming packets, the action for all is
hard coded to KICK.
For specific limits, the section name is the class's name,
and an action can be defined: DROP or KICK
If interval or rate are less-than 0, the limit is ignored
Child nodes are handled by CommandDispatcher#parse checking
requirements.
Vanilla clients only send ServerboundCommandSuggestionPacket when
encountering a command node with ASK_SERVER suggestions, however a
modified client can send this packet whenever it wants.
Just use the iblockdata already retrieved, removes a getType call.
Also save approx. 5% for the raytrace call, as most (expensive)
raytracing tends to go through air and returning early is an
easy win. The remaining problems with this function
are mostly with the block getting itself.
Tux did some profiling some time ago and showed that the
previous getChunkAt method which had inlined logic for loaded
chunks did get inlined, but the standard CPS.getChunkAt
method was not inlined.