This commit completely revamps the way that blocks are represented in memory at runtime.
Instead of being represented by legacy Mojang block IDs and metadata, which are dated, limited and unchangeable, we now use custom PM block IDs, which are generated from VanillaBlocks.
This means we have full control of how they are assigned, which opens the doors to finally addressing inconsistencies like glazed terracotta, stripped logs handling, etc.
To represent state, BlockDataReader and BlockDataWriter have been introduced, and are used by blocks with state information to pack said information into a binary form that can be stored on a chunk at runtime.
Conceptually it's pretty similar to legacy metadata, but the actual format shares no resemblance whatsoever to legacy metadata, and is fully controlled by PM.
This means that the 'state data' may change in serialization format at any time, so it should **NOT** be stored on disk or in a config.
In the future, this will be improved using more auto-generated code and attributes, instead of hand-baked decodeState() and encodeState(). For now, this opens the gateway to a significant expansion of features.
It's not ideal, but it's a big step forwards.
this does come at a performance cost, but is necessary for metadata expansion.
we finally concede that this is not going to happen without BC breaks, however small they might be ...
This test is intended to enforce that the BlockFactory always has the same blocks in it from one commit to the next. Since there are a lot of changes going on right now around this, it's important that this is checked because bugs can go under the radar when large changes are happening.
The consistency check will need to be regenerated whenever a new block is registered, new states are found or when things are removed.
this is a bad fix, but it doesn't matter a whole lot. The problem stems from furnace not having a valid 0 variant, so things go haywire when the default mapped 0 variant is registered to LIT_FURNACE because the default state is of course unlit.
This is a major change to the way block metadata is handled within the PM core. This separates variant metadata (which really ought to be part of the ID) from state metadata, and in a couple of cases flattens separate states of blocks together.
The result of this is that invalid variants can be much more easily detected, and additionally state handling is much cleaner since meta is only needed at the serialize layer instead of throughout the code.