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