Posted August 13, 20196 yr People on my server have been getting this issue alot: java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException: readerIndex(32) + length(1) exceeds writerIndex(32): PooledUnsafeDirectByteBuf(ridx: 32, widx: 32, cap: 32). But the debug log doesnt provide anything useful for me to find the source of the problem. I know the problem is with one of my packets, how do I find the packet with the 32 index?
August 13, 20196 yr Author The problem is that I dont know what the problem is in the first place. Can you explain to me what this error means exactly and where I should be looking/ what problem I am facing? Edited August 13, 20196 yr by 4sterism
August 13, 20196 yr 9 hours ago, 4sterism said: People on my server Question: Did you write your own mod or Do you just run a modded server? Apparently I'm a complete and utter jerk and come to this forum just like to make fun of people, be confrontational, and make your personal life miserable. If you think this is the case, JUST REPORT ME. Otherwise you're just going to get reported when you reply to my posts and point it out, because odds are, I was trying to be nice. Exception: If you do not understand Java, I WILL NOT HELP YOU and your thread will get locked. DO NOT PM ME WITH PROBLEMS. No help will be given.
August 13, 20196 yr Author 4 hours ago, Draco18s said: Question: Did you write your own mod or Do you just run a modded server? Its a mod that I was changing; I have access to the source code and heavily modified it.
August 13, 20196 yr Author 8 hours ago, diesieben07 said: The problem is that you are trying to read data where there is none. This usually means you have a mismatch between the data you are sending and the data you are trying to read on the other side. Again: Show your code. Will do, I look at all my Handlers and post up the one soon.
August 13, 20196 yr Author @Override public NBTTagCompound getNBT() { nbt.setFloat(MANA, mana); nbt.setFloat(ENERGY, energy); nbt.setInteger(LEVEL, level); nbt.setInteger(EXP, exp); nbt.setInteger(RARITY, rarity); nbt.setString(UUID, uuid); nbt.setString(NAME, name); nbt.setBoolean(MOB_SAVED_ONCE, true); nbt.setInteger(CURRENT_MAP_ID, currentMapId); nbt.setBoolean(EQUIPS_CHANGED, equipsChanged); nbt.setFloat(DMG_DONE_BY_NON_PLAYERS, dmgByNonPlayers); if (unit != null) { NBTTagCompound unitnbt = new NBTTagCompound(); Writer.write(unitnbt, unit); nbt.setTag(UNIT_OBJECT, unitnbt); } if (kills != null) { NBTTagCompound killsnbt = new NBTTagCompound(); Writer.write(killsnbt, kills); nbt.setTag(KILLS_OBJECT, killsnbt); } return nbt; } @Override public void setNBT(NBTTagCompound value) { this.nbt = value; this.mana = value.getFloat(MANA); this.energy = value.getFloat(ENERGY); this.level = value.getInteger(LEVEL); this.exp = value.getInteger(EXP); this.rarity = value.getInteger(RARITY); this.uuid = value.getString(UUID); this.name = value.getString(NAME); this.currentMapId = value.getInteger(CURRENT_MAP_ID); this.equipsChanged = value.getBoolean(EQUIPS_CHANGED); this.dmgByNonPlayers = value.getFloat(DMG_DONE_BY_NON_PLAYERS); NBTTagCompound object_nbt = (NBTTagCompound) this.nbt.getTag(UNIT_OBJECT); if (object_nbt != null) { unit = new Unit(); Reader.read(object_nbt, unit); } NBTTagCompound kills_nbt = (NBTTagCompound) this.nbt.getTag(KILLS_OBJECT); if (kills_nbt != null) { kills = new PlayerMapKillsData(); Reader.read(kills_nbt, kills); } }
August 13, 20196 yr Author 8 hours ago, diesieben07 said: The problem is that you are trying to read data where there is none. This usually means you have a mismatch between the data you are sending and the data you are trying to read on the other side. Again: Show your code. Ok, Ive looked through the packets and noticed this one read and writed differently. The reader is missing Mobd saved once. Is this the problem? Edited August 13, 20196 yr by 4sterism
August 13, 20196 yr Author package com.robertx22.network; import com.robertx22.mmorpg.Main; import com.robertx22.uncommon.capability.EntityData; import com.robertx22.uncommon.capability.EntityData.UnitData; import io.netty.buffer.ByteBuf; import net.minecraft.entity.Entity; import net.minecraft.entity.EntityLivingBase; import net.minecraft.entity.player.EntityPlayer; import net.minecraft.nbt.NBTTagCompound; import net.minecraftforge.fml.common.network.ByteBufUtils; import net.minecraftforge.fml.common.network.simpleimpl.IMessage; import net.minecraftforge.fml.common.network.simpleimpl.IMessageHandler; import net.minecraftforge.fml.common.network.simpleimpl.MessageContext; import java.util.concurrent.Executors; import java.util.concurrent.ScheduledExecutorService; import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit; public class EntityUnitPackage implements IMessage { public int id; public NBTTagCompound nbt; public EntityUnitPackage() { } public EntityUnitPackage(Entity entity) { this.id = entity.getEntityId(); this.nbt = entity.getCapability(EntityData.Data, null).getNBT(); } public EntityUnitPackage(Entity entity, UnitData data) { this.id = entity.getEntityId(); this.nbt = data.getNBT(); } @Override public void fromBytes(ByteBuf buf) { nbt = ByteBufUtils.readTag(buf); id = nbt.getInteger("id"); } @Override public void toBytes(ByteBuf buf) { nbt.setInteger("id", id); ByteBufUtils.writeTag(buf, nbt); } public static class Handler implements IMessageHandler<EntityUnitPackage, IMessage> { @Override public IMessage onMessage(EntityUnitPackage message, MessageContext ctx) { Runnable noteThread = new Runnable() { @Override public void run() { try { final EntityPlayer player = Main.proxy.getPlayerEntityFromContext(ctx); if (player != null && player.world != null) { Entity entity = player.world.getEntityByID(message.id); EntityLivingBase en = (EntityLivingBase) entity; if (en != null) { en.getCapability(EntityData.Data, null).setNBT(message.nbt); } } } catch (Exception e) { e.printStackTrace(); } } }; ScheduledExecutorService scheduler = Executors.newSingleThreadScheduledExecutor(); scheduler.schedule(noteThread, 1, TimeUnit.SECONDS); return null; } } } Edited August 13, 20196 yr by 4sterism
August 13, 20196 yr Author its the nbt data associated with this packet. I deleted one entry and when it errored again, this time with was 31 instead of 32, so they're related. What I dont get is why readerIndex(31) + length(1) exceeds writerIndex(31). Where did that length 1 come from?
August 13, 20196 yr Author 16 minutes ago, diesieben07 said: The code you posted has nothing to do with packets. Posted
August 13, 20196 yr Author 3 minutes ago, diesieben07 said: This is terrible in so many ways. It spawns a new thread every time. Spawning threads is very expensive. It does not properly dispose the created ExecutorService. Guava does this for you in this case through the finalize method (which is also just terrible, because it makes the GC work much harder to clean up this object), but it's still bad coding style. It's accessing MInecraft code from a completely random thread. Minecraft code must (99% of the time) only be accessed from it's main thread. I'll leave out the fact that just dumping the whole capability NBT down the network is stupid (only sync what you need and don't use NBT for it if you can help it). That error means that something is trying to read one byte (length 1), but there are 0 bytes available (because both readerIndex and writerIndex are 31). Read the Javadoc on ByteBuf, it explains how readerIndex and writerIndex work. Show where you register your packets and where you send them. I didn't write this code, but I'm willing to learn how to fix and clean it up. As for where the code is registered. MinecraftForge.EVENT_BUS.register(new PlayerUnitPackage()); MinecraftForge.EVENT_BUS.register(new EntityUnitPackage()); MinecraftForge.EVENT_BUS.register(new DamageNumberPackage()); MinecraftForge.EVENT_BUS.register(new ParticlePackage()); MinecraftForge.EVENT_BUS.register(new WorldPackage()); MinecraftForge.EVENT_BUS.register(new PacketAnimation()); Network.registerMessage(PlayerUnitPackage.Handler.class, PlayerUnitPackage.class, 0, Side.CLIENT); Network.registerMessage(EntityUnitPackage.Handler.class, EntityUnitPackage.class, 1, Side.CLIENT); Network.registerMessage(DamageNumberPackage.Handler.class, DamageNumberPackage.class, 2, Side.CLIENT); Network.registerMessage(ParticlePackage.Handler.class, ParticlePackage.class, 3, Side.CLIENT); Network.registerMessage(WorldPackage.Handler.class, WorldPackage.class, 4, Side.CLIENT); Network.registerMessage(MessagePackage.Handler.class, MessagePackage.class, 5, Side.CLIENT); @Mod.EventBusSubscriber public class OnTrackEntity { @SubscribeEvent public static void onEntityTrack(PlayerEvent.StartTracking event) { Entity entity = event.getTarget(); if (entity instanceof EntityLivingBase) { if (entity.isEntityEqual(event.getEntityPlayer()) == false) { if (entity.hasCapability(EntityData.Data, null)) { Main.Network.sendTo(new EntityUnitPackage((EntityLivingBase) entity), (EntityPlayerMP) event.getEntityPlayer()); } } } } } /** * @return checks if it should be synced to clients. Clients currently only see health and status * effects */ private DirtyCheck getDirtyCheck() { DirtyCheck check = new DirtyCheck(); check.hp = (int) MyStats.get(Health.GUID).Value; return check; } public void RecalculateStats(EntityLivingBase entity, UnitData data, int level, IWorldData world) { data.setEquipsChanged(false); if (data.getUnit() == null) { data.setUnit(this, entity); } DirtyCheck old = getDirtyCheck(); Unit copy = this.Clone(); int tier = 0; if (world != null) { tier = world.getTier(); } ClearStats(); MobRarity rar = Rarities.Mobs.get(data.getRarity()); float hpadded = this.getHpAdded(entity, rar, data); MyStats.get(Health.GUID).Flat += hpadded; if (entity instanceof EntityPlayer) { List<GearItemData> gears = PlayerStatUtils.getEquipsExcludingWeapon(entity); // slow boolean gearIsValid = this.isGearCombinationValid(gears, entity); ItemStack weapon = entity.getHeldItemMainhand(); if (weapon != null) { GearItemData wep = Gear.Load(weapon); if (wep != null && wep.GetBaseGearType().slotType().equals(GearSlotType.Weapon)) gears.add(wep); } ItemStack offhand = entity.getHeldItemOffhand(); if (offhand != null) { GearItemData off = Gear.Load(offhand); if (off != null && off.GetBaseGearType().slotType().equals(GearSlotType.OffHand)) gears.add(off); } PlayerStatUtils.AddPlayerBaseStats(data, this); if (gearIsValid) { PlayerStatUtils.CountWornSets(entity, gears, this); PlayerStatUtils.AddAllGearStats(entity, gears, this, level); // slow, but required PlayerStatUtils.AddAllSetStats(entity, this, level); } } else { MobStatUtils.AddMobcStats(data, data.getLevel(), entity); MobStatUtils.AddMobTierStats(this, tier); } CommonStatUtils.AddStatusEffectStats(this, level); CommonStatUtils.AddMapAffixStats(this, level); PlayerStatUtils.CalcStatConversionsAndTransfers(copy, this); PlayerStatUtils.CalcTraits(data); CalcStats(data); DirtyCheck newcheck = getDirtyCheck(); if (old.isDirty(newcheck)) { Main.Network.sendToAllTracking(new EntityUnitPackage(entity, data), entity); } }
August 13, 20196 yr Author 4 minutes ago, diesieben07 said: Is RecalculateStats ever called not on the main thread? I dont understand what Im being asked, and googling just describes errors.
August 13, 20196 yr Author Thank you for taking your time. Ok, I will try to upload a repository. RecalculateStats is called int he same class and another class. That has a method called recalculateStats, that checks if the unit is null or if there is a need to recalc the stats. That method is called in a number of places.
August 13, 20196 yr Author 14 minutes ago, diesieben07 said: Where is RecalculateStats called from? In general, is it possible to post a Git repository of the mod? https://github.com/ndrwln/Mine-and-Slash-modified Its just open source code I modified so... I also think the baubles jar is a forked version someone changed so that it would send an event when equipment changed. So that my mod could catch it and recalculate the stats. Its in the lib folder. The original implementation of the mod would not recalc stats when a bauble equip was changed -_-. The crash doesnt occur when changing equipment, though. Sometimes we can go 40 minutes without a crash. Other times its constant crashing, Edited August 13, 20196 yr by 4sterism
August 13, 20196 yr Author Just walk around and fight monsters ig. It's spaghetti code. Edited August 13, 20196 yr by 4sterism
August 13, 20196 yr Author 1 minute ago, diesieben07 said: Which monsters? I can't even fight the slimes in superflat, their attacks are one-hit kills and things like regen don't work. I don't know whats causing the crashes exactly. And yh, I think I need to nerf slime dmg. We dont encounter lots of slimes. Regen happens every second. Ive never seen a problem with regen.
August 13, 20196 yr Author 1 minute ago, diesieben07 said: Sorry, but I am not playing around for hours in game trying to get this to happen... You need to spend some time and isolate it. Ok. I will do that. On server, fighting mosnters can usually cause crashes. Testing on client doesnt cause crashes though, which is telling. Edited August 13, 20196 yr by 4sterism
August 13, 20196 yr Author I can maybe test my server by disabling monster spawns and see what happens.
August 14, 20196 yr Author 6 hours ago, diesieben07 said: This is terrible in so many ways. It spawns a new thread every time. Spawning threads is very expensive. It does not properly dispose the created ExecutorService. Guava does this for you in this case through the finalize method (which is also just terrible, because it makes the GC work much harder to clean up this object), but it's still bad coding style. It's accessing MInecraft code from a completely random thread. Minecraft code must (99% of the time) only be accessed from it's main thread. By the way, where should I read up on how to improve this for future reference?
August 14, 20196 yr 3 minutes ago, 4sterism said: By the way, where should I read up on how to improve this for future reference? You can look up how threading works in Java and the common design pattern when using threading. Some tips: Spoiler Modder Support: Spoiler 1. Do not follow tutorials on YouTube, especially TechnoVision (previously called Loremaster) and HarryTalks, due to their promotion of bad practice and usage of outdated code. 2. Always post your code. 3. Never copy and paste code. You won't learn anything from doing that. 4. Quote Programming via Eclipse's hotfixes will get you nowhere 5. Learn to use your IDE, especially the debugger. 6. Quote The "picture that's worth 1000 words" only works if there's an obvious problem or a freehand red circle around it. Support & Bug Reports: Spoiler 1. Read the EAQ before asking for help. Remember to provide the appropriate log(s). 2. Versions below 1.11 are no longer supported due to their age. Update to a modern version of Minecraft to receive support.
August 14, 20196 yr Is this mod released somewhere? If so that's against my permission as i reserved all rights. I only allowed private use of modified code. Also the 1.12.2 version has a crapton of my spaghetti code which is mostly ironed out in 1.14.4 as i spent months reworking most things. Yes, months to rework things, so i don't suggest you try fix. Also sorry sieben for the problems.
August 15, 20196 yr Author 4 hours ago, robertx555 said: Is this mod released somewhere? If so that's against my permission as i reserved all rights. I only allowed private use of modified code. Also the 1.12.2 version has a crapton of my spaghetti code which is mostly ironed out in 1.14.4 as i spent months reworking most things. Yes, months to rework things, so i don't suggest you try fix. Also sorry sieben for the problems. Its not relased anywhere, its just for a group of small friends. I have no interest in releasing it anywhere.
August 15, 20196 yr Author 21 hours ago, DavidM said: You can look up how threading works in Java and the common design pattern when using threading. Thanks
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