This resolves some issues which caused entities to not be resent correctly.
Entities that are interacted with need to be resent to the client, so we resend all the entity
data to the player whilst making sure not to clear dirty entries from the tracker. This makes
sure that values will be correctly updated to other players.
This also adds utilities to aid in further preventing entity desyncs.
This also also fixes the bug causing cancelling PlayerInteractEvent to cause items to continue
to be used despite being cancelled on the server.
For example, items being consumed but never finishing, shields being put up, etc.
The underlying issue of this is that the client modifies their synced data values,
and so we have to (forcibly) resend them in order for the client to reset their using item state.
See: https://github.com/PaperMC/Paper/pull/1896
== AT ==
public net.minecraft.server.level.ChunkMap$TrackedEntity serverEntity
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.
Players are able to use alt accounts and enderpearls to travel
long distances utilizing the pearls in unloaded chunks and loading
the chunk later when convenient.
This disables that by not saving the thrower when the chunk is unloaded.
This is mainly useful for survival servers that do not allow freeform teleporting.
Note: Currently removed as enderpearls are ticked as long as their owner is online in 1.21.2.
Might be worth to re-add once an option to disable the above vanilla mechanic is added, to
fully prevent enderpearl travel exploits.
== AT ==
public net.minecraft.world.entity.projectile.Projectile ownerUUID
When enabled, ender pearls will not load chunks and will save to the world instead of the player.
== AT ==
public net.minecraft.world.entity.projectile.Projectile cachedOwner
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.
If a plugin sets the health of a living entity above 0 after it has already died, the entity will be "revived".
It will behave the exact same as before, except with the internal "dead" flag set, resulting in 2 behavior changes,
A: it's completely invulnerable to all damage
B: it's unable to pickup items
isValid() for these bugged entities will return true, isDead() will return false, despite the dead flag.
This patch checks that the mob isn't dead before saying its alive.
Also, even if the plugin is responsibly checking !isDead() before modifying health, on very rare circumstances
I am currently unable to replicate, these "revived" entities can still appear
Most of the visual artifacts that result from having item merge radius above vanilla levels is from items merging vertically,
which realistically, only happens when a player is dropping items, or items are dropping from breaking a block.
Most of the scenarios where item merging makes sense involves the two item entities being on the same Y level. i.e on the ground next to each other.
This is even more apparent since paper fixed items being able to merge through blocks.
This patch allows us to configure items to only merge horizontally, which is what vanilla does.
This allows us to have both the reduced number of item entities a high item-merge radius provides,
without most of the visual artifacts caused by items merging vertically.
The recent upstream update moved around the event logic for
EntiyDamageEvent and its derivatives.
However, the event was called on every call to #hurt as it was moved out
of actuallyHurt.
This patch moves the invocation directly before the #actuallyHurt calls,
respective invulnerable timings.
Called whenever a players shield is disabled. This is mainly caused by
attacking players or monsters that carry axes.
The event, while similar to the PlayerItemCooldownEvent, offers other
behaviour and can hence not be implemented as a childtype of said event.
Specifically, cancelling the event prevents the game events from being
sent to the player.
Plugins listening to just the PlayerItemCooldownEvent may not want said
sideeffects, meaning the disable event cannot share a handlerlist with
the cooldown event
EntityTeleportEvent#setTo is marked as nullable and so is the
getTo method. This fixes the handling of a null "to" location
by treating it the same as the event being cancelled. This is
already existing behavior for the EntityPortalEvent (which
extends EntityTeleportEvent).
Instead of just tracking the itemstacks, this tracks with it, the
action to take with that itemstack to apply the correct logic
on dropping the item instead of generalizing it for all dropped
items like CB does.
Fixes EntityPotionEffectEvent
Fixes EntityPoseChangeEvent
Asynchronous chunk generation provides an opportunity for things
to happen async that previously fired synchronous-only events. This
patch is for mitigating those issues by various methods.
Also fixes correctly marking/clearing the entity generation flag.
This patch sets the generation flag anytime an entity is created
via StructureTemplate before loading from NBT to catch uses of
the flag during the loading logic. This patch clears the generation
flag from an entity when added to a ServerLevel for the situation
where generation happened directly to a ServerLevel and the
entity still has the flag set.
Upstream did not account for different hands when storing
the breed item for later use in the event. Also they only
stored a reference to the stack, not a copy so if the stack
changed after love mode was started, the breed item in the event
also changed. Also in several places, the breed item was stored after
it was decreased by one to consume the item.