LoopDelay is 0 in test servers (bare struct, no Viper defaults), so
sendLoop spins without delay and satisfies conditions in <1ms. The
10ms poll interval was the new bottleneck — dropping to 1ms cuts the
channelserver test suite from ~136s to ~5s.
Blind sleeps accumulate serially (no t.Parallel anywhere) and inflate
under the race detector's scheduling overhead — contributing to the
~136s channelserver test run time.
Replace ~75 arbitrary sleeps (50ms–1s) across 7 test files with 2s
polling loops that exit as soon as the expected condition holds. Sleeps
that are genuinely intentional (race-condition stress tests, cache
expiry, temporal spacing in timestamp tests, backpressure pacing) are
left untouched.
main.go always sets both Channels and Registry together, making the
Channels fallback paths dead code. This removes:
- Server.Channels field from the Server struct
- 3 if/else fallback blocks in handlers_session.go (replaced with
Registry.FindChannelForStage, SearchSessions, SearchStages)
- 1 if/else fallback block in handlers_guild_ops.go (replaced with
Registry.NotifyMailToCharID)
- 3 method fallbacks in sys_channel_server.go (WorldcastMHF,
FindSessionByCharID, DisconnectUser now delegate directly)
Updates anti-patterns.md #6 to "accepted design" — Session struct is
appropriate for this game server's handler pattern, and cross-channel
coupling is now fully routed through the ChannelRegistry interface.
The config package used `package _config` with a leading underscore,
which is unconventional in Go. Rename to `package config` (matching the
directory name) and use `cfg` as the standard import alias across all
93 importing files.