9ff28f4026
A common source of crashes on modded Minecraft servers comes from modders accidently calling client only code from the client, this PR is another large step towards elimitating that. This PR has been months in the making and years in the planning, requiring major changes to Loom & Loader. In recent Minecraft versions Mojang has made it easier than ever to cleanly split the jar, going against the status-quo of merging the client and server into one jar. From the start we have designed Fabric to have a very clear split between client and common (client & server) code. Fabric has always encoraged keeping client only code seprate from the server, this can be seen at a fundamental level with the entrypoints in Loader. Fabric API's have all been designed with this mind. This PR provides a compile safety net around Fabric API using client only code on the server. Even though there are almost 400 changed files, minimal changes beyond moving the files were required to achieve this in Fabric API, thanks to the effort of all contributors in the past. These changes should not affect modders or players in anyway, a single "universal" jar is still produced. Im happy to awnswer any questions. |
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.github | ||
deprecated | ||
fabric-api-base | ||
fabric-api-lookup-api-v1 | ||
fabric-biome-api-v1 | ||
fabric-blockrenderlayer-v1 | ||
fabric-command-api-v2 | ||
fabric-content-registries-v0 | ||
fabric-convention-tags-v1 | ||
fabric-crash-report-info-v1 | ||
fabric-data-generation-api-v1 | ||
fabric-dimensions-v1 | ||
fabric-entity-events-v1 | ||
fabric-events-interaction-v0 | ||
fabric-game-rule-api-v1 | ||
fabric-gametest-api-v1 | ||
fabric-item-api-v1 | ||
fabric-item-groups-v0 | ||
fabric-key-binding-api-v1 | ||
fabric-lifecycle-events-v1 | ||
fabric-loot-tables-v1 | ||
fabric-mining-level-api-v1 | ||
fabric-models-v0 | ||
fabric-networking-api-v1 | ||
fabric-object-builder-api-v1 | ||
fabric-particles-v1 | ||
fabric-registry-sync-v0 | ||
fabric-renderer-api-v1 | ||
fabric-renderer-indigo | ||
fabric-rendering-data-attachment-v1 | ||
fabric-rendering-fluids-v1 | ||
fabric-rendering-v1 | ||
fabric-resource-conditions-api-v1 | ||
fabric-resource-loader-v0 | ||
fabric-screen-api-v1 | ||
fabric-screen-handler-api-v1 | ||
fabric-textures-v0 | ||
fabric-transfer-api-v1 | ||
fabric-transitive-access-wideners-v1 | ||
gradle | ||
src/main/resources | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
build.gradle | ||
checkstyle.xml | ||
gradle.properties | ||
gradlew | ||
gradlew.bat | ||
HEADER | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
settings.gradle |
Fabric API
Essential hooks for modding with Fabric.
Fabric API is the library for essential hooks and interoperability mechanisms for Fabric mods. Examples include:
- Exposing functionality that is useful but difficult to access for many mods such as particles, biomes and dimensions
- Adding events, hooks and APIs to improve interopability between mods.
- Essential features such as registry synchronization and adding information to crash reports.
- An advanced rendering API designed for compatibility with optimization mods and graphics overhaul mods.
Also check out Fabric Loader, the (mostly) version-independent mod loader that powers Fabric. Fabric API is a mod like any other Fabric mod which requires Fabric Loader to be installed.
For support and discussion for both developers and users, visit the Fabric Discord server.
Using Fabric API to play with mods
Make sure you have install fabric loader first. More information about installing Fabric Loader can be found here.
To use Fabric API, download it from CurseForge, GitHub Releases or Modrinth.
The downloaded jar file should be placed in your mods
folder.
Using Fabric API to develop mods
To setup a Fabric development environment, check out the Fabric example mod and follow the instructions there. The example mod already depends on Fabric API.
To include the full Fabric API with all modules in the development environment, add the following to your dependencies
block in the gradle buildscript:
Groovy DSL
modImplementation "net.fabricmc.fabric-api:fabric-api:FABRIC_API_VERSION"
Kotlin DSL
modImplementation("net.fabricmc.fabric-api:fabric-api:FABRIC_API_VERSION")
Alternatively, modules from Fabric API can be specified individually as shown below (including module jar to your mod jar):
Groovy DSL
// Make a collection of all api modules we wish to use
Set<String> apiModules = [
"fabric-api-base",
"fabric-command-api-v1",
"fabric-lifecycle-events-v1",
"fabric-networking-api-v1"
]
// Add each module as a dependency
apiModules.forEach {
include(modImplementation(fabricApi.module(it, FABRIC_API_VERSION)))
}
Kotlin DSL
// Make a set of all api modules we wish to use
setOf(
"fabric-api-base",
"fabric-command-api-v1",
"fabric-lifecycle-events-v1",
"fabric-networking-api-v1"
).forEach {
// Add each module as a dependency
modImplementation(fabricApi.module(it, FABRIC_API_VERSION))
}
Instead of hardcoding version constants all over the build script, Gradle properties may be used to replace these constants. Properties are defined in the gradle.properties
file at the root of a project. More information is available here.
Contributing
See something Fabric API doesn't support, a bug or something that may be useful? We welcome contributions to improve Fabric API.
Check out the Contributing guidelines*.
* The contributing guidelines are work in progress
Modules
Fabric API is designed to be modular for ease of updating. This also has the advantage of splitting up the codebase into smaller chunks.
Each module contains its own README.md
* explaining the module's purpose and additional info on using the module.
* The README for each module is being worked on; not every module has a README at the moment