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Featured Replies

Posted

I need to trigger code on the server when a particular event fires on the client. I have two questions: are uuid's the same on both the client and server, ie can I use the uuid of an entity on the client to find that same entity on the server, and if so, whats the best way to send a uuid in a packet? I tried looking into forges built in packet system, but it doesn't have a way to send uuids, only primitives and bytes, and I'd like to avoid converting a uuid into bytes if possible.

Minecraft normally uses the entity ID (Entity#getEntityId) rather than the unique ID in networking situations (and this is its main purpose). This reduces unnecessary network traffic as the entity ID is a single 32-bit integer (that's actually compressed further) rather than a UUID that's sent as a pair of 64-bit integers.

 

If you absolutely need to send a UUID, you can wrap the ByteBuf in a PacketBuffer and use PacketBuffer#readUniqueId/PacketBuffer#writeUniqueId to read/write UUIDs.

Edited by Choonster

Please don't PM me to ask for help. Asking your question in a public thread preserves it for people who are having the same problem in the future.

Like this? but it crashes, with a classexception

	@Override
	public void fromBytes(ByteBuf buf) {
		PacketBuffer packetBuf = (PacketBuffer) buf;
		dragonId = packetBuf.readUniqueId();
		controlState = buf.readByte();
	}

	@Override
	public void toBytes(ByteBuf buf) {
		PacketBuffer packetBuf = (PacketBuffer) buf;
		packetBuf.writeUniqueId(dragonId);
		buf.writeByte(controlState);

	}

 

13 minutes ago, TheRPGAdventurer said:

Like this? but it crashes, with a classexception


	@Override
	public void fromBytes(ByteBuf buf) {
		PacketBuffer packetBuf = (PacketBuffer) buf;
		dragonId = packetBuf.readUniqueId();
		controlState = buf.readByte();
	}

	@Override
	public void toBytes(ByteBuf buf) {
		PacketBuffer packetBuf = (PacketBuffer) buf;
		packetBuf.writeUniqueId(dragonId);
		buf.writeByte(controlState);

	}

 

 

The ByteBuf passed to those methods isn't an instance of PacketBuffer, you need to create a new instance of PacketBuffer and pass the ByteBuf to the constructor.

Please don't PM me to ask for help. Asking your question in a public thread preserves it for people who are having the same problem in the future.

Like this

 

	@Override
	public void fromBytes(ByteBuf buf) {
		if(buf instanceof PacketBuffer) {
	    	PacketBuffer packetBuf = (PacketBuffer) buf;
	    	dragonId = packetBuf.readUniqueId();
		}
		controlState = buf.readByte();
	}

	@Override
	public void toBytes(ByteBuf buf) {
		if(buf instanceof PacketBuffer) {
		  PacketBuffer packetBuf = (PacketBuffer) buf;
		  packetBuf.writeUniqueId(dragonId);
		}
		buf.writeByte(controlState);

	}

 

17 minutes ago, TheRPGAdventurer said:

Like this

 


	@Override
	public void fromBytes(ByteBuf buf) {
		if(buf instanceof PacketBuffer) {
	    	PacketBuffer packetBuf = (PacketBuffer) buf;
	    	dragonId = packetBuf.readUniqueId();
		}
		controlState = buf.readByte();
	}

	@Override
	public void toBytes(ByteBuf buf) {
		if(buf instanceof PacketBuffer) {
		  PacketBuffer packetBuf = (PacketBuffer) buf;
		  packetBuf.writeUniqueId(dragonId);
		}
		buf.writeByte(controlState);

	}

 

 

No. As I said, those ByteBufs aren't PacketBuffers; so that code will never send the unique IDs.

 

When I say "create a new instance", I mean "use the new operator".

Edited by Choonster

Please don't PM me to ask for help. Asking your question in a public thread preserves it for people who are having the same problem in the future.

  • Author

@Choonster would using the entityID work for players? I need the server to know when a player is left clicking, but the left click event is clientside only, hence the need for packets.

8 minutes ago, theishiopian said:

@Choonster would using the entityID work for players? I need the server to know when a player is left clicking, but the left click event is clientside only, hence the need for packets.

 

The entity ID should work for players, but it's not actually needed here. The player who sent the packet is available on the server side through the MessageContext, see this example in the documentation for more details.

Please don't PM me to ask for help. Asking your question in a public thread preserves it for people who are having the same problem in the future.

3 minutes ago, theishiopian said:

Oh, so I can just send an empty packet from the player?

 

Yes, that should work.

Please don't PM me to ask for help. Asking your question in a public thread preserves it for people who are having the same problem in the future.

  • Author

@Choonster OK, I've got most of it set up, but I have one more question: How does the server know which player sent the packet? Do I have to specify somehow, or will the server somehow be able to tell? Currently, I have an event handler listening for PlayerInteract.LeftClickEmpty, which then sends an empty packet to the server like so:

 

Core.INSTANCE.sendToServer(new DeflectPacket());

 

(I defined the networkwrapper instance in the core mod class temporarily, I'll move it to somewhere else later)

 

EDIT: I tested it, and it works! But I'd still appreciate an explanation as to WHY it works.

 

Edited by theishiopian
testing

3 minutes ago, theishiopian said:

@Choonster OK, I've got most of it set up, but I have one more question: How does the server know which player sent the packet? Do I have to specify somehow, or will the server somehow be able to tell? Currently, I have an event handler listening for PlayerInteract.LeftClickEmpty, which then sends an empty packet to the server like so:

 

Core.INSTANCE.sendToServer(new DeflectPacket());

 

(I defined the networkwrapper instance in the core mod class temporarily, I'll move it to somewhere else later)

 

The server maintains a network connection for each connected client along with a reference to the server-side player entity. When a packet is received on this connection, the server knows which player sent it and you can access the player through the NetworkContext.

Please don't PM me to ask for help. Asking your question in a public thread preserves it for people who are having the same problem in the future.

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