- removed protocol.Event: CNPeers now send protocol.PacketEvents
- peer uData is held in CNPeer, use SetUserData() and UserData() to
set/read it
- Service.PacketHandler calback has changed, removed uData:
switched calls to peer.SetUserData() and peer.UserData() where appropriate
- service.Service lots of tidying up, removed dependence on old
protocol.Event.
- service.Service && protocol.CNPeer now accept a cancelable context.
hooray graceful shutdowns and unit tests!
- general cleanup
- each CNPeer is given a unique chan *protocol.Event to pass events to
the service.handleEvents() loop. this is now passed to CNPeer.Handler()
as opposed to NewCNPeer().
- service has basically been rewritten. handleEvents() main loop uses
reflect.SelectCase() now to handle all of the eRecv channels for each
peer
- new protocol Event type: EVENT_CLIENT_CONNECT
- Added service_test.go; blackbox-styled testing like the others.
TestService() starts a service and spins up a bunch of dummy peers
and verifies that each packet sent causes the corresponding packet
handler to be called.
started out as me making a service abstraction..
- db.Player exists again, and entity.Player uses it as an embedded struct
- chunk.ForEachEntity() lets you add/remove entities during iteration now
- removed account related fields from CNPeer
- protocol/pool has been merged with protocol.
use protocol.GetBuffer() and protocol.PutBuffer().
- new protocol/internal/service!
service.Service is an abstraction layer to handle multiple CNPeer*
connections and allows you to associate each with an interface{} uData.
In the future it might also handle a task queue for jobs that
modify/interact with the player's uData, called from service.handleEvents()
- PacketHandler callback type has a new param! uData is passed as well now
- much of loginserver/shardserver is now handled by the shared service
abstraction
- SHARD: NPC_ENTER packets are now sent on player loading complete
rather than on enter.
- lol, i had no idea python *FINALLY* added a switch/case equivalent.
sadly though, it looks like the generated python bytecode is
nearly identical in performance.
there's no lookup table magic for match/case, and is almost
identical to if/else if/else. it amounts to syntax sugar 😭
- our db_test tests now use psql version 15 (which is the same
version our docker-compose file uses) for consistency.
- also added another test, TestDBPlayer