ROOT CAUSE of the "giant ball with spikes" terrain corruption that
the previous two hotfix attempts (lock + synchronous loading) failed
to address. Threading was a red herring all along.
AC dat conventions:
0xAAAA0xFFFF — LandBlock dat (terrain heightmap)
0xAAAA0xFFFE — LandBlockInfo dat (static-object metadata)
WorldView.NeighborLandblockIds correctly uses 0xFFFF. My
StreamingRegion.EncodeLandblockId from Phase A.1 Task 1 used 0xFFFE
by mistake. Every streaming load was therefore calling
LandblockLoader.Load with the LandBlockInfo id, which makes
DatCollection ask DatBinReader to read a LandBlock from the
LandBlockInfo file. The reader's internal buffer position lands in
the middle of the wrong file's bytes, ReadBytesInternal asks for an
out-of-range slice, throws ArgumentOutOfRangeException, and the
landblocks that DON'T throw return half-populated LandBlock objects
whose Height[] arrays contain garbage. Garbage Z values render as
the spike pattern.
The kicker: my Task-1 review fix added a test
(Constructor_SmallRadius_IDsMatchEncodingRule) that asserted
Assert.Contains(0x1234FFFEu, region.Visible). The test was passing
because it pinned the wrong value. I literally codified the bug.
Fix: change EncodeLandblockId's terminator from 0xFFFEu to 0xFFFFu
and update the test to assert 0x1234FFFFu. The XML doc on Visible
now explicitly explains the 0xFFFF/0xFFFE distinction so this can't
recur.
The previous two hotfixes (_datLock in c991fb2, synchronous streamer
in 531c9f9) stay in place — _datLock is defensive belt-and-suspenders
that documents which entry points read dats, and synchronous loading
is correct-by-default until we decide whether to reintroduce
background loading (Phase A.3 may make it unnecessary anyway).
212 tests green. With this fix the streaming should actually work.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>