Erased almost every instance of WORLD_SIZE and replaced it with a local
power of two, map_size_lg (which respects certain invariants; see
common/src/terrain/map.rs for more details about MapSizeLg). This also
means we can avoid a dependency on the world crate from client, as
desired.
Now that the rest of the code is not expecting a fixed WORLD_SIZE, the
next step is to arrange for maps to store their world size, and to use
that world size as a basis prior to loading the map (as well, probably,
as prior to configuring some of the noise functions).
- replace serde_derive by feature of serde
incl. source code modifications to compile
- reduce futures-timer to "2.0" to be same as async_std
- update notify
- removed mio, bincode and lz4 compress in common as networking is now in own crate
btw there is a better lz4 compress crate, which is newer than 2017
- update prometheus to 0.9
- can't update uvth yet due to usues
- hashbrown to 7.2 to only need a single version
- libsqlite3 update
- image didn't change as there is a problem with `image 0.23`
- switch old directories with newer directories-next
- no num upgrade as we still depend on num 0.2 anyways
- rodio and cpal upgrade
- const-tewaker update
- dispatch (untested) update
- git2 update
- iterations update
- Completely removed both `log` and `pretty_env_logger` and replaced
with `tracing` and `tracing_subscriber` where necessary.
- Converted all `log::info!(...)` et al. statements to just use the
shorthand macro i.e. `info!`. This was mostly to make renaming easier.
- authc no longer uses reqwest
- image only supports PNG
- replace routille with tiny_http
- several other dependencies
- cargo upgrade
- following improvement was measured on R7 1700X:
before:
- cargo build: 3076.73s user / 4:45 total / 589 dependencies
- cargo test: 6118.38s user / 7:30 total / 959 dependencies
after:
- cargo build: 2680.54s user / 4:05 total / 480 dependencies
- cargo test: 5351.81s user / 7:04 total / 791 dependencies
- added xMAC94x to CODEOWNERS for Cargo.toml, he will protect them from now on and hit people with evil looks ;)
For anything in worldgen where you use a HashMap, *please* think
carefully about which hasher you are going to use! This is
especially true if (for some reason) you are depending on hashmap
iteration order remaining stable for some aspect of worldgen.
For anything in worldgen where you use a HashMap, *please* think
carefully about which hasher you are going to use! This is
especially true if (for some reason) you are depending on hashmap
iteration order remaining stable for some aspect of worldgen.