Spigot still maintains some partial implementation of "tick skipping", a
practice in which the MinecraftServer.currentTick field is updated not
by an increment of one per actual tick, but instead set to
System.currentTimeMillis() / 50. This behaviour means that the tracked
tick may "skip" a tick value in case a previous tick took more than the
expected 50ms.
To compensate for this in important paths, spigot/craftbukkit
implements "wall-time". Instead of incrementing/decrementing ticks on
block entities/entities by one for each call to their tick() method,
they instead increment/decrement important values, like
an ItemEntity's age or pickupDelay, by the difference of
`currentTick - lastTick`, where `lastTick` is the value of
`currentTick` during the last tick() call.
These "fixes" however do not play nicely with minecraft's simulation
distance as entities/block entities implementing the above behaviour
would "catch up" their values when moving from a non-ticking chunk to a
ticking one as their `lastTick` value remains stuck on the last tick in
a ticking chunk and hence lead to a large "catch up" once ticked again.
Paper completely removes the "tick skipping" behaviour (See patch
"Further-improve-server-tick-loop"), making the above precautions
completely unnecessary, which also rids paper of the previous described
incompatibility with non-ticking chunks.
== AT ==
public net.minecraft.world.level.block.ChestBlock isBlockedChestByBlock(Lnet/minecraft/world/level/BlockGetter;Lnet/minecraft/core/BlockPos;)Z
== AT ==
private-f net/minecraft/world/item/ItemStack components
public net/minecraft/world/food/FoodProperties DEFAULT_EAT_SECONDS
public org/bukkit/craftbukkit/block/CraftBlockStates getBlockState(Lorg/bukkit/World;Lnet/minecraft/core/BlockPos;Lnet/minecraft/world/level/block/state/BlockState;Lnet/minecraft/world/level/block/entity/BlockEntity;)Lorg/bukkit/craftbukkit/block/CraftBlockState;
public net/minecraft/world/level/block/entity/BlockEntity saveId(Lnet/minecraft/nbt/CompoundTag;)V
Co-authored-by: GhastCraftHD <julius.gruenberg@leghast.de>
This fixes exploits that let players destroy bedrock by Pistons, explosions
and Mushrooom/Tree generation.
These blocks are designed to not be broken except by creative players/commands.
So protect them from a multitude of methods of destroying them.
A config is provided if you rather let players use these exploits, and let
them destroy the worlds End Portals and get on top of the nether easy.
For saddles, carpets, horse armor, and chests for horse-likes
a BlockDispenseEvent handler that always mutated the item without
changing the type would result in a SO error because when it went
to find the replacement dispense behavior (since the item "changed")
it didn't properly handle if the replacement was the same instance
of dispense behavior.
Additionally equippable mob heads, wither skulls, and carved pumpkins
are subject to the same possible error.
Furthermore since 1.21.2, the DISPENSER_REGISTRY map doesn't have a default
return value anymore and some dispense behaviors like equippable and
regular items will not have a defined behavior in that map and might throw
a NPE in that case.
This causes spawnAfterBreak to spawn xp by default, removing the need to manually add xp wherever this method is used.
For classes that use custom xp amounts, they can drop the resources with disabling
Setting whether a block break dropped items controlled
far more than just whether blocks dropped, like stat increases
food consumption, turtle egg count decreases, ice to water
conversions and beehive releases
Upstream incorrectly skipped explosion logic if
the bed was occupied and added a "feature" where
if you set your spawn in a respawn anchor world
but then replaced it with a bed, you could respawn
at the bed in that world.
Beyond calling the BlockFadeEvent in more places, this patch also aims
to pass the proper replacement state to the event, specifically for
potentially waterlogged block states fading.
Co-authored-by: Lulu13022002 <41980282+Lulu13022002@users.noreply.github.com>
Also standardizes how to handle EntityChangeBlockEvent before a removeBlock or destroyBlock
call. Always use 'state.getFluidState().createLegacyBlock()' to get the new state instead of
just using the 'air' state.
Also fixes the new block data for EntityBreakDoorEvent (a sub-event from
EntityChangeBlockEvent)
Co-authored-by: Lulu13022002 <41980282+Lulu13022002@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jake Potrebic <jake.m.potrebic@gmail.com>