It's now used for both XTEA and ISAAC keys, and there's nothing
XTEA-specific about it so there's no need to duplicate it.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.org>
This is relatively easy as OpenNXT doesn't use the actual SQLite cache
format - it still uses JS5-compressed containers, rather than ZLIB.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.org>
Creating the InputStream first allows us to immediately fail if a key is
invalid, without having the chance of allocating a huge ByteBuf based on
an incorrect length.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.org>
Streaming .tar.gz files requires less memory, as we don't need to
remember metadata about each file for the end of directory record.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.org>
I'm still not particularly happy with this: if the JS5 download
finishes before HTTP, it'll time out and kill the whole process.
Similarly, because it takes so long to import the indexes and as we
can't fetch groups in parallel with that, it can often time out early
during the process.
In the long term, I think I am going to try and move most of the logic
outside of the Netty threads and communicate between threads with queues
or channels. This would also allow us to run multiple JS5 clients in
parallel.
The code also needs some tidying up, particularly constants in the
Js5ChannelHandler constructors.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.org>
It supports reading and writing a cache backed by a Store, as well as
standalone .js5 files.
I'm not quite as happy with this as I am with the lower-level API yet,
and there are still a few remaining TODOs.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.org>
This prevents the archive module from failing on a machine without the
cache installed (like the archive.openrs2.org server).
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.org>
This ensures the server sends a master index compatible with the client
even if all the indexes in the cache use the original Js5Index format.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.org>
These will be used by the high-level cache API, where we don't want to
expose mutable versions of the group/file types as that would allow the
index/cache to get out of sync.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.org>
It's more concise and I suspect Kotlin's implementation is better than
Java's, as it seems to take available() into account.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.org>