Massively reduces memory allocation of 2048 byte buffers by using
an object pool for these.
Uses lots of advanced new capabilities of the Paper codebase :)
Targets 3072 * 8 buffers per 1GB of heap memory up to a max consideration
of 6GB of heap (any more over 6GB won't give more nibble pool)
You can control the 3072 number by setting -DPaper.nibbleBucketSize=2048
Remember this number is * 8 then * heap memory in GB
That is 98304 objects for 4GB of memory, at 2064 bytes roughly, meaning 194MB
You may also control max number of pooled objects directly instead of any
dynamic calculation using -DPaper.maxNibblePoolSize=1024000
While this will use more old generation by a tad bit, allocation rate will drop
significantly, causing less young generation GC's.
This commit has gone through extensive testing for over a day and confident
it no longer has any issues with light corruption.
This commit doesn't do much on its own, but adds a new Java Cleaner API
that lets us hook into Garbage Collector events to reclaim pooled objects and
return them to the pool.
Adds framework for Network Packets to know when a packet has finished dispatching
to get an idea when a packet is done sending to players.
Rewrites PooledObjects impl to properly respect max pool size and remove
almost all risk of contention.
Bumps the Paper Async Task Queue to use 2 threads, and properly shuts it down on shutdown.
Use a proper teleport for teleporting to entities in different
worlds.
Validate that the target entity is valid and deny spectate
requests from frozen players.
Also, make sure the entity is spawned to the client before
sending the camera packet. If the entity isn't spawned clientside
when it receives the camera packet, then the client will not
spectate the target entity.
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.
Upstream has released updates that appears to apply and compile correctly.
This update has not been tested by PaperMC and as with ANY update, please do your own testing
Bukkit Changes:
ffc8e4ca SPIGOT-5716: Clarify documentation of MultipleFacing
CraftBukkit Changes:
d07a78b1 SPIGOT-5716: Clarify documentation of MultipleFacing
46a13860 SPIGOT-5718: Block.BreakBlockNaturally does not reflect tool used
214ffea9 SPIGOT-5727: GameRule doImmediateRespawn cannot be set per-world
Spigot Changes:
2f5d615f SPIGOT-5730: Modernise inventory patch
a2bdb119 SPIGOT-5679: Add config option for end portal activation sound
Closes#3352
I swear the crap that stuff will abuse to make stuff happen is insane.
Hash codes apparently changing behavior of stuff based on its value, so
reverting 2d401d2dfbFixes#3346Fixes#3341
I utilized the IDE to convert streams to non streams code, so shouldn't
be any risk of behavior change. Only did minor optimization of the
generated code set to remove unnecessary things.
I expect us to just drop this patch on next major update and re-apply
it with the IDE again and re-apply the collections optimization.
Optimize collection by creating a list instead of a set of the key and value.
This lets us get faster foreach iteration, as well as avoids map lookups on
the values when needed.
Removed streams from hoppers and also fixed a mistake in the logic.
When this patch was ported to 1.14/1.15, a line of code was put in
the wrong place which disabled a significant portion of the improvement.
Replaced usages of streams in isEmpty and itemstack checks
Replaced usage of streams in pulling loop
Replaced usage of streams in Lootable Inventory isEmpty() check
Only check for refilling Lootable Inventory when accessing first slot, not all
All of these in general were pretty significant hits, so this single commit
is going to cause tacos to magically appear in front of you every day.
🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮🌮
Nom Nom Nom
If you hate taco's, you're not allowed to use this improvement.
Also ignore the renames, pulled a lot of PR's.
Server.reload() had this logic to give time for tasks to shutdown,
however shutdown did not...
Adds a 5 second grace period for any async tasks to finish and warns
if any are still running after that delay just as reload does.
Closes#3337
If anything used setPositionRaw, it left potential for an AABB
to be left stale at their old location, which could cause massive
AABB boxes if movement ever then got called on the new position.
This guarantees any time we set the entities position, we also
update their AABB.
We store a reference to the chunk the entity is currently in, so use it
to more accurately unregister it in chunkCheck
Should maybe fix some entity loss issues.
Obscure detail in that if you teleport right on a chunk line, it
adds +1 to your collision check and will check the unloaded neighbor.
but the call to load the chunk then returned null if it was pending unload, such
as the load we did in Player List
However we want gen=true for players here anyways, so use getType
This also cleans up the implementation of Async Chunks to get rid of most
Consumer callbacks and instead return futures.
This lets us propogate errors correctly up the future chain
(barring one isn't lost even deeper in the chain...)
So exceptions can now bubble to plugins using getChunkAtAsync
While there is more down the collision system, remove some of the wrapping
Spliterator stuff as even this wrapper stream has shown up in profiling.
With other collision optimizations, we might also even avoid inner streams too.
This patch replaces the vanilla collision code for both block and entity collisions with faster implementations by JellySquid, used originally in her Lithium mod.
Optimizes Full Block voxel collisions, and removes streams from Entity collisions
Original code by JellySquid, licensed under GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0
you can find the original code on https://github.com/jellysquid3/lithium-fabric/tree/1.15.x/fabric (Yarn mappings)
Ported by
Co-authored-by: Zoutelande <54509836+Zoutelande@users.noreply.github.com>
Touched up by Aikar to keep previous paper optimizations
The collision code takes an AABB and generates a cuboid of checks rather
than a cylinder, so at high velocity this can generate a lot of chunk checks.
Treat an unloaded chunk as a collision for entities, and also for players if
the "prevent moving into unloaded chunks" setting is enabled.
If that setting is not enabled, collisions will be ignored for players, since
movement will load only the chunk the player enters anyways and avoids loading
massive amounts of surrounding chunks due to large AABB lookups.
Fixes#3321
This was using SIGNIFICANT amounts of memory allocating many
long[]'s for BitSets for every ProtoChunk in the cache that had
been unloaded and reloaded.
This will result in a nice memory reduction.
Actually showed up in profiling as decent time spent here...
Noticed y/z was missing its final that it use to have, when x had it. some how
must of got messed up on some update. though people suggest this shouldn't of
mattered anyways, but lets put it back for safety.
Added cache of hashcode, as well as optimized the hash code using larger primes.
Also stored the long value of the x/y/z so that for equals we can compare a single long,
as well as have that long value cached for .asLong()
This lets you run /paper fixlight <chunkRadius> (max 5) to automatically
fix all light data in the chunks.
Permission node is same "bukkit.command.paper"
Now tracks the full startup time for "Done" message at end, as apparently
Vanillas was done in a place that skipped tracking a lot of code too.
This fixes an issue with ViaVersion
Will now run those tasks just before we print "Done" so that startup
time is appropriately accounted for a plugin, as well as will no longer
trip the watchdog on startup.
Any plugin that tries to bypass this is just going to then trip watchdog
on Spigot too, so don't you dare.
Stop trying to cheat the delay your plugin added to startup time.
This isn't a behavior change because the first thing the tick does....
was run these tasks....
So it's just moving it slightly a few lines to be before a watchdog tick and
to account for it in "Done" time.
Fixes#3294
When adding/removing to a chunk, we need to also look at
editing the loaded entity list.
Co-authored-by: Spottedleaf <Spottedleaf@users.noreply.github.com>
Upstream has released updates that appears to apply and compile correctly.
This update has not been tested by PaperMC and as with ANY update, please do your own testing
Bukkit Changes:
da9ef3c5 #496: Add methods to get/set ItemStacks in EquipmentSlots
3abebc9f #492: Let Tameable extend Animals rather than Entity
941111a0 #495: Expose ItemStack and hand used in PlayerShearEntityEvent
4fe19cae #494: InventoryView - Add missing Brewing FUEL_TIME
CraftBukkit Changes:
933e9094 #664: Add methods to get/set ItemStacks in EquipmentSlots
18722312 #662: Expose ItemStack and hand used in PlayerShearEntityEvent
Removes synchronization from sending packets
Makes normal packet sends no longer need to be wrapped and queued like it use to work.
Adds more packet queue immunities on top of keep alive to let the following scenarios go out
without delay:
- Keep Alive
- Chat
- Kick
- All of the packets during the Player Joined World event
Hoping that latter one helps join timeout issues more too for slow connections.
Removes processing packet queue off of main thread
- for the few cases where it is allowed, order is not necessary nor
should it even be happening concurrently in first place (handshaking/login/status)
Ensures packets sent asynchronously are dispatched on main thread
This helps ensure safety for ProtocolLib as packet listeners
are commonly accessing world state. This will allow you to schedule
a packet to be sent async, but itll be dispatched sync for packet
listeners to process.
This should solve some deadlock risks
This may provide a decent performance improvement because thread synchronization incurs a cache reset
so by avoiding ever entering a synchronized block, we get to avoid that, and packet sending is a really
hot activity.
Undo the accidental renaming of a method in 0aad8bf
Aikar wanted to rename DataPalette#getDataBits(T object) to getOrCreateIdFor
in 0aad8bf but he also accidentally renamed
ChunkPacketInfo#getDataBitsIndex(int chunkSectionIndex) to
getOrCreateIdForIndex.
Remove chunk-edge-mode and chunk loading entirely from Anti-Xray
The chunk-edge-mode is broken since several versions.
Loading chunk neighbors for chunk edge obfuscation isn't needed anymore.
Unlike in previous versions, these are under normal circumstances already loaded
at the time we need them (plugins for example can bypass this).
Use the modified methods and constructors everywhere
Anti-Xray provides support for the default nms methods and constructors,
which where modified by Anti-Xray to avoid breaking stuff (plugins)
which somehow uses these methods.
However, the modified versions of those methods and constructors should be used
where possible.
Increases risk of deadlock if a plugin using protocollib sends a packet
async, and then a listener then reads world state, and main thread is then
blocked waiting for the queue to flush.
This will break out of the synchronized block when it jumps to the netty event loop.
See: https://gist.github.com/aikar/e7abb2ba7059149d0a91f7a226e98590
Java 9+ doesn't allow using the exposed cleanup method, but added
a new method on Unsafe to do it.
So have to detect java version and use the appropriate strategy.
See: https://www.evanjones.ca/java-bytebuffer-leak.html
This is potentially a source of lots of native memory usage.
We are clearly seeing native usage upwards to 1-4GB which doesn't make sense.
Region File usage fixed in previous patch should of tecnically only been somewhat
temporary until GC finally gets it some time later, but between all the various
plugins doing IO on various threads, this hidden detail of the JDK could be
keeping long lived large direct buffers in cache.
Set system properly at server startup if not set already to help protect from this.
Mojang was semi leaking native memory here by relying on finalizers
to clean up the direct memory.
Finalizers have no guarantee on when they will be ran, and since this is
old generation memory, it might be a while before its called.
This method shows up as super hot in profiler, and also a high "self" time.
Upon analyzing, it appears most usages of this method fall down to the final
else statement of the nasty ternary.
Upon even further analyzation, it appears then the majority of those have a
consistent list 1.... One with Infinity head and Tails.
First optimization is to detect these infinite states and immediately return that
VoxelShapeMergerList so we can avoid testing the rest for most cases.
Break the method into 2 to help the JVM promote inlining of this fast path.
Then it was also noticed that VoxelShapeMergerList constructor is also a hotspot
with a high self time...
Well, knowing that in most cases our list 1 is actualy the same value, it allows
us to know that with an infinite list1, the result on the merger is essentially
list2 as the final values.
This let us analyze the 2 potential states (Infinite with 2 sources or 4 sources)
and compute a deterministic result for the MergerList values.
Additionally, this lets us avoid even allocating new objects for this too, further
reducing memory usage.
We've seen many a cases where the "last good" x/y/z is desynced from
the x/y/z that is checked for moving too fast.
Theory is that when you have multiple movement packets queued up,
and the player is teleported after the first then the 2nd and 3rd come in,
it is triggering a massive movement velocity.
This will ensure that the servers position is synchronized anytime player is te
Fixes#3258
It was still technically read correctly in what it was doing, but
all our Player events begin with Player.
Nothing uses this event yet so safe to rename.
If you are some rapid adopter of this event, sorry :P
If a server enables Anti Xray, packet sending can be delayed until the
chunk has been obfuscated, blocking the entire queue from going out.
On a busy server, considering Anti Xray can only operate on a single
thread, it is quite possible the obfuscation backlog can get quite behind
resulting in a delay of sending packets.
And logging in is a clear area where lots of chunks are going to be queued
for obfuscation....
We should probably special case a few more than this (such as chat),
but this will hopefully help the keep alive issues some people run into.
Now has separate configs to control Villager immunities a bit.
whether or not they wake up due to panic situations (raids)
and when should they wake up when work is available after being
inactive for so long, and for how long.
This work config may make the 'wake up inactive' feature for villagers
useless in most scenarios, but if there is a situation where the villager
does go without needing to work for a long period of time, it would kick
in then.
This also removes movement based immunities, so now villagers should only move
if they trigger a work immunity, panic immunity, or inactive wake up immunity.
Fixes#3263
Upstream has released updates that appears to apply and compile correctly.
This update has not been tested by PaperMC and as with ANY update, please do your own testing
Bukkit Changes:
b999860d SPIGOT-2304: Add LootGenerateEvent
CraftBukkit Changes:
77fd87e4 SPIGOT-2304: Implement LootGenerateEvent
a1a705ee SPIGOT-5566: Doused campfires & fires should call EntityChangeBlockEvent
41712edd SPIGOT-5707: PersistentDataHolder not Persistent on API dropped Item
If a sync load was triggered, it would process pending join events,
causing them to be added to the world in the middle of the entity ticking
process.
This caused their add to be queued instead of immediate, causing
"Illegal Tracking" errors.
This schedules it to fire at the players next Connection Tick, which
is exactly where this entire process use to run anyways.
Also added missing tab complete and syntax for syncloadinfo debug command
Upstream has released updates that appears to apply and compile correctly.
This update has not been tested by PaperMC and as with ANY update, please do your own testing
Bukkit Changes:
220bc594 #486: Add method to get player's attack cooldown
21853d39 SPIGOT-5681: Increase max plugin channel size
5b972adc Improve build process
b55e58d9 Note which custom generator is missing required method
CraftBukkit Changes:
893ad93b #650: Add method to get player's attack cooldown
ef706b06 #655: Added support for the VM tag jansi.passthrough when processing messages sent to a ColouredConsoleSender.
e0cfb347 SPIGOT-5689: Fireball.setDirection increases velocity too much
94cb030f SPIGOT-5673: swingHand API does not show to self
b331a055 SPIGOT-5680: isChunkGenerated creates empty region files
e1335932 Improve build process
a8ec1d60 Add a couple of method null checks to CraftWorld
ce66f693 Misc checkstyle fixes
8bd0e9ab SPIGOT-5669: Fix Beehive.isSedated
Spigot Changes:
2040c4c4 SPIGOT-5677, MC-114796: Fix portals generating outside world border
ab8f6b5a Rebuild patches
e7dc2f53 Rebuild patches
This is the start of a new module for Paper to add support for API's
that interface Mojang API's directly.
This allows us to version properly by MC version incase Mojang makes any major breaking changes.
It also lets us separate Mojang API's from Paper-API so our downstream friends at Glowstone
will not have to worry about Mojang code.
Adds AsyncPlayerSendCommandsEvent
- Allows modifying on a per command basis what command data they see.
Adds CommandRegisteredEvent
- Allows manipulating the CommandNode to add more children/metadata for the client
Calling this 2.0 as it's a pretty major improvement with more knobs to twist.
This update fixes many things. The goal here is to restore vanilla behavior to some degree.
Instead of permanent inactive pools of animals, let them show some signs of life some....
Yes this may reduce performance compared to before, but I hope it is minimal. Got to find a balance.
Previous EAR logic really compromised vanilla behavior of mobs. This tries to restore it.
Changes:
1) All monsters are now classed as Monster. Mojang has an interface, we should use it.
- This now includes Shulker, Slimes, see #2 for Phantom and Ghast
2) Villagers and Flying Monsters now have their own separate activation range configs.
- Villagers will default to your Animals config
3) Added a bunch of more immunities
- Brand new entities are immune for a few seconds
- Entities that recently traveled by portal are immune for few seconds
- Entities that are leashed to a player are immune
- Ender Signals are immune
- Entities that are jumping, climbing, dying (lol) are immune
- Minecarts are now always immune to the movement restriction
4) Villagers immunity received major overhaul...
- Now has many immunities for Villager activities to let them
do their work then go back inactive
- Such as interacting with doors and workstations should be more normal now
- Raids will trigger immunities, in that villagers will run and hide when bell rings.
- Raid should keep the entire village immune during the raid to keep gameplay mechanics
You can disable raids by game rule if you dont want raids
Then the big one.....
Wake Up Inactive Entities:
One issue plagueing "farms" is that we no longer even let entities move now.
Entities become lifeless.
A new system has been introduced to wake up inactive entities every so often, to let
them stretch their legs, eat some food, play with each other and experience the good entity life.
Animals, Villagers, Monsters (Includes Pillagers), and Flying Monsters will now wake up every
so often after staying inactive for a very long. This grants them a temporary immunity, that
the goal is they will then find "stuff to do" by having a longer activity window.
How many to wake up, how often they wake up, and for how long they wake up are all configurable.
Current EAR Immunities really don't give some entities enough of a window to find work
to then keep them immune for the work to even start. This system should help that.
We will only wake up a few entities per tick on the first wave, restoring 1 per type per world per tick.
So say you have 10 monsters qualify for inactive wake up, all 8 will wake up on the first eligible tick,
and then the 9th will wake up on next tick, 10th on next tick.
If for 5 ticks no more inactive wake up, our buffer will have built back up to 5, and then 5 can go next needed tick.
This basically incrementally wakes them up, preventing too many from waking up in a single tick, to reduce impact to TPS.
This was missing Entity Tracking Range support, creating different
values in this section vs normal section.
Concerned this might of caused some carnage on tracker if this code says
"Yes you should track this player 500 blocks away from you on a horse" and then
the other check uses the normal value.
Set:
settings:
- use-optimized-ticklist: false
If you are having issues with block updates and want to see if this fixes it.
Please report confirmations on #3145 ticket
This is friendlier to plugins as far as the plugin is concerned,
the inventory did open and immediately closed.
We avoid sending the packet to client so they don't see the window
flash either.
If a plugin wants to avoid wasteful fake opens, they should check
that the player is not sleeping before opening the inventory.
Renames a bunch of timings to be more appropriate for the new environment.
Many things dealt with sync loads which wasn't correct anymore.
adjusted timings to be a little bit more accurate here.
Also cleaned up old 1.13 async chunks configs so people won't keep
thinking they can change some of those configs when they can't.
Process loads outside of any canSleep check. Original intent was to
only apply those restrictions to generations but realized I had some
checks higher up the call chain.
Reworked the back off strategy to just run every 1 millisecond per world,
and to apply the per tick limit to generations only.
This guarantees that your chunk will load with at most around 1ms delay.
Additionally, fire midTick processing in a few more places, notably the
oversleep section so we can keep processing loads here too which has
a large up to 50ms window...
Speaking of oversleep, we had a bug in our implementation changes for
Timings that caused oversleep to not sleep the correct amount.
Because we now moved it into the NEXT tick instead of THIS tick, the
value of nextTick had already been increased to +50ms, resulting in
the risk of sleeping more than it should, but, more importantly, this
caused every task that was trying to NOT run during oversleep to actually
run during oversleep.
This is now fixed.
Another small tweak is to the /tps command, to no longer show the star when
TPS is right at 20.
Due to ineffeciencies in the sleep precision, TPS is commonly 20.02.
This causes the star to show up almost constantly, so now only show it if
we actually hit a real "catchup".
This commit also improves the changes to the CallbackExecutor, in that
it now is also recursion safe.
It was possible that the executor could run tasks out of desired order
if the executor task scheduled more executor tasks.
We solve this by ensuring new additions do not enter the currently iterated queue.
Each depth level will have its own queue.
Fixes#3220
This notably fixes the newest "Donkey Dupe", but also fixes a lot
of dupe bugs in general around nether portals and entity world transfer
We also fix item duplication generically by anytime we clone an item
to drop it on the ground, destroy the source item.
This avoid an itemstack ever existing twice in the world state pre
clean up stage.
So even if something NEW comes up, it would be impossible to drop the
same item twice because the source was destroyed.
This should make us more forward proof on preventing dupes.
These dupes have been in for years at this point, they aren't new...
Everyone knows about them and are mitigating with plugins atm breaking gameplay.
so better to make it clear its fixed in the messaging.
I am submitting this to Mojang.
We still keep vanilla process of waiting for existing session to be removed before logging in
by storing a separate map of pending.
also fire the callback using executor incase further recursion causes any trouble
* Don't check for Entities with Inventories if the block above us is also occluding (not just Inventoried)
* Remove Streams from Item Suck In and restore restore 1.12 AABB checks which is simpler and no voxel allocations (was doing TWO Item Suck ins)
* Restore missing application of previous optimization to getEntities for Inventoried Entities from CullanP
* Use getChunkIfLoadedImmediately for getting loaded entities (faster/simpler, no risk of sync loads)
I feel sorry for those who need to do this, and now feel sorry more
since back to slow startups again.
There is keep-spawn-loaded-range in paper.yml to reduce the range to
mitigate this if you must keep async chunks off.
Bump chunk priority to ensure chunks load fast
Handle case where client disconnects before they even fire PlayerJoinEvent
- no longer call PlayerQuitEvent or print quit message.
- don't save the player data file if never joined. Nothing has changed.
CraftBukkit has a bug here that if you do save it, you will lose
any horse that the player logged off on because the horse hasn't
been resummoned yet.
ChunkMapDistance polls multiple entries for pendingChunkUpdates
Each of these have the potential to move a chunk in and out of
"Loaded" state, which will result in multiple callbacks being
needed within a single tick of ChunkMapDistance
Use an ArrayDeque to store this Queue
This event is called when processing a player's attack on an entity
right before their attack strength cd is reset, there are no existing
events that fire within this period of time so it was impossible to
capture the players attack strength via API prior to this commit.
The event is cancellable, which will just skip over the normal reset of
attack strength cd
This change lets players who are in their bed have a position which is above
ground for a longer period of time. This is because of the server not setting
their position to the ground/exit location when entering the bed, resulting in
the server believing they're still in the air.
Because we moved entity registration to occur before the PlayerJoinEvent occurs,
We started tracking the entity too early before it was registered to the client.
So delay tracking until after list packets have been sent.
No longer will trigger Synchronous Chunk Loads when a player logs
in to the server.
Will delay PlayerJoinEvent until the chunk has been loaded.
Should have massive performance benefits for larger servers with
lots of players logging in and out.
Confused on this one, as commit history says Spigots version is older
than our version, so i'm not sure how we ended up duplicating this when
the 2 events are 100% identical.
Subclass spigots event and rely on the inheritance system, and clean up
the duplicate event fires.
Fix Spigots setPosition to use setPositionRaw to avoid chunk load prematurely.
For years, plugin developers have had to delay many things they do
inside of the PlayerJoinEvent by 1 tick to make it actually work.
This all boiled down to 1 reason why: The event fired before the
player was fully ready and joined to the world!
Additionally, if that player logged out on a vehicle, the event
fired before the vehicle was even loaded, so that plugins had no
access to the vehicle during this event either.
This change finally fixes this issue, fully preparing the player
into the world as a fully ready entity, vehicle included.
There should be no plugins that break because of this change, but might
improve consistency with other plugins instead.
For example, if 2 plugins listens to this event, and the first one
teleported the player in the event, then the 2nd plugin actually
would be getting a valid player!
This was very non deterministic. This change will ensure every plugin
receives a deterministic result, and should no longer require 1 tick
delays anymore.
Appending to the tail of the chunk tasks leaves a
window for the chunk to be moved to a
non-ticking status.
Additionally, use CB's callback executor so we
can ensure that we are not incorrectly
scheduling.
See: https://gist.github.com/aikar/dd22bbd2a3d78a2fd3d92e95e9f28dc6
as part of post processing a chunk, we can call ChunkConverter.
ChunkConverter then kicks off major physics updates, and when blocks
that have connections across chunk boundries occur, a recursive risk
can occur where A updates a block that triggers a physics request.
That physics request may trigger a chunk request, that then enqueues
a task into the Mailbox ChunkTaskQueueSorter.
If anything requests that same chunk that is in the middle of conversion,
it's mailbox queue is going to be held up, so the subsequent chunk request
will be unable to proceed.
We delay post processing of Chunk.A() 1 "pass" by re stuffing it back into
the executor so that the mailbox ChunkQueue is now considered empty.
This successfully fixed a reoccurring and highly reproduceable crash
for heightmaps.
If the request to shut down the server is received while we are in
a watchdog hang, immediately treat it as a crash and begin the shutdown
process. Shutdown process is now improved to also shutdown cleanly when
not using restart scripts either.
If a server is deadlocked, a server owner can send SIGHUP (or any other signal
the JVM understands to shut down as it currently does) and the watchdog
will no longer need to wait until the full timeout, allowing you to trigger
a close process and try to shut the server down gracefully, saving player and
world data.
Previously there was no way to trigger this outside of waiting for a full watchdog
timeout, which may be set to a really long time...
Additionally, fix everything to do with shutting the server down asynchronously.
Previously, nearly everything about the process was fragile and unsafe. Main might
not have actually been frozen, and might still be manipulating state.
Or, some reuest might ask main to do something in the shutdown but main is dead.
Or worse, other things might start closing down items such as the Console or Thread Pool
before we are fully shutdown.
This change tries to resolve all of these issues by moving everything into the stop
method and guaranteeing only one thread is stopping the server.
We then issue Thread Death to the main thread of another thread initiates the stop process.
We have to ensure Thread Death propagates correctly though to stop main completely.
This is to ensure that if main isn't truely stuck, it's not manipulating state we are trying to save.
Also check class loader cache before locking to speed up cached hits to avoid the lock
wasn't gonna make a unique build just for that but can lump it in here.
Very few entities actually hard collide, so store them in their own
entity slices and provide a special getEntites type call just for them.
This reduces entity collision checking impact (in my testing) by 25%
for crammed entities (shove 130 cows into an 8x6 area in one chunk).
Less crammed entities are likely to show significantly less benefit.
Effectively, this patch optimises crammed entity situations.
A players previous block break location is held onto permanently, and if
an interact event is cancelled, the client sends a stop breaking block packet
This then tries to update client about that old location.
This old location might then be in a now unloaded chunk, and it caused it to load.
We now also clear reference to it once abort destroy block is ran to stop trying
to send updates about the old block anyways.
I had did a few of the operations myself, which would have broken chunkCheck
from doing it itself, which would leave some state left in the original chunk
and thats not good....