An SDK to create Mods for dhewm3
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Daniel Gibson bad9c08c3f Make Sys_SetInteractiveIngameGuiActive() work better
it could happen that UIs are added to the internal list twice,
and also that the last UI wasn't removed from the list when a new one
was focused fast enough.

That should work better now, I hope I didn't break anything..
2024-03-18 23:01:31 +01:00
cm Untangle the epic precompiled.h mess 2018-08-20 01:46:28 +02:00
d3xp Make Sys_SetInteractiveIngameGuiActive() work better 2024-03-18 23:01:31 +01:00
framework Make sure MAX_OSPATH has sane size 2022-05-17 07:17:46 +02:00
game Make Sys_SetInteractiveIngameGuiActive() work better 2024-03-18 23:01:31 +01:00
idlib Fix MSVC non-Release builds (_alloca()/assert() didn't play nice) 2024-03-18 23:01:31 +01:00
MayaImport Make it build as SDK 2018-08-26 01:43:10 +02:00
renderer renderer/RenderSystem.h: Changes from dhewm3 2022-05-17 07:17:46 +02:00
sound Make it build as SDK 2018-08-26 01:43:10 +02:00
sys From dhewm3: Add absolute mouse mode and refactor mouse grabbing code 2022-05-17 07:17:46 +02:00
tools/compilers/aas Untangle the epic precompiled.h mess 2018-08-20 01:46:28 +02:00
ui Untangle the epic precompiled.h mess 2018-08-20 01:46:28 +02:00
.gitignore Make it build as SDK 2018-08-26 01:43:10 +02:00
CMakeLists.txt CMake: Fix D3_ARCH, theoretically support Windows on ARM 2022-05-17 07:17:46 +02:00
config.h.in Make it build as SDK 2018-08-26 01:43:10 +02:00
COPYING.txt Add GPLv3 COPYING.txt 2018-08-20 01:46:20 +02:00
README.md README: Update list of mods and mention script debugger 2022-05-29 03:11:55 +02:00

dhewm3 Mod SDK

This repository contains an SDK that can be used to create modifications ("mods") for (or port Doom3 mods to) dhewm3.

It contains (mostly) the same source files as the original Doom3 SDK, but these are taken from dhewm3 and are licensed under GPLv3, not the SDK license.
Another small difference is that this is built using CMake instead of SCons + VS Project files.
This means that you need CMake to build it, but don't worry, on Windows it can create a Visual Studio Solution for you so you can program and compile with Visual Studio like you might be used to.

Some ports of existing Mods

This repository also contains ports of existing mods whichs authors released the source under GPL; you can find these in their own branches: Classic Doom 3, Denton's Enhanced Doom3, Fitz Packerton, Hard Corps, Scarlet Rivensin: The Ruiner and Doom3: The Lost Mission

In addition to this repository, there is also the LibreCoop mod that implements Coop gameplay for dhewm3: LibreCoop Github for the source code and LibreCoop on ModDB which has the game data.

You can find Win32 DLLs and Linux x86_64 (amd64) .so libraries of those mods that work with dhewm3 1.5.x at the dhewm3 Github release page (the dhewm3-mods-1.5.* archives).

How to build

On Windows

You need CMake either Visual Studio (2010 and newer have been tested) or MinGW-w64

  1. Clone the dhewm3-sdk git repo
  2. (optional: switch to an existing mods branch: git checkout dentonmod)
  3. create a build directory in your dhewm3-sdk/ directory (build/ or build-dentonmod/ or whatever)
  4. Start the CMake GUI
  5. Select your dhewm3-sdk/ folder for "Where is the source code" and your
    build directory from step 3 for "Where to build the binaries".
  6. Click [Configure], select what you want to build with, e.g. "Visual Studio 15 2017", click [Finish], wait for CMake to do its thing
    • If you're using MinGW you'll have to select your build type now, e.g. Debug (not optimized but debuggable) or Release (optimized and thus faster, but can't be debugged that well).
    • (For Visual Studio you don't have to select a build type now, you can do it in in Visual Studio)
  7. Click [Generate]
  8. Building:
    • If you're using Visual Studio, you should be able to just click [Open Project] to open the generated Project in Visual Studio. You can now compile the SDK in Visual Studio (and of course make your changes to the code).
    • (Untested:) For MinGW, open your MinGW or MSys shell, switch to your build directory and execute make -j4 to build the game DLL
  9. Now it's time to copy the DLL (e.g. dentonmod.dll) to your dhewm3 install, where base.dll and d3xp.dll are
    • For Visual Studio the DLL should be in a subdirectory of your build directory, depending on the build type you selected in build/Debug/ or build/Release/ or similar
    • For MinGW the DLL should be directly in your build directory.
  10. start the game with that mod, like dhewm3 +set fs_game dentonmod

(Make sure to actually have the mods game data in the right directory as well; the directory name should be the same as the game lib name, but without .dll, for example dentonmod/ for dentonmod.dll)

On Linux and other Unix-likes

On Linux and similar the following should work (if you have cmake, make and GCC/g++ installed):

  1. Clone the dhewm3-sdk git repo
  2. switch to your git clone's directory: cd dhewm3-sdk
  3. (optional: switch to an existing mods branch: git checkout dentonmod)
  4. create a build directory: mkdir build
  5. switch to build directory: cd build
  6. create Makefile with CMake: cmake ..
    • by default, this will create an RelWithDebInfo build, which is optimized but still has debug info, so it's somewhat debuggable. You can select another kind of build with cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug .. for a Debug build with less optimization, which will make it easier to debug (but possibly slower). You could also replace "Debug" with "Release" for a proper optimized Release build without any Debug info.
  7. compile the mod .so: make -j4
  8. it (e.g. dentonmod.so) should now be in the build/ directory, copy it to your dhewm3 install, where base.so and d3xp.so are
  9. start the game with that mod, like dhewm3 +set fs_game dentonmod

(Make sure to actually have the mods game data in the right directory as well; the directory name should be the same as the game lib name, but without .so/.dylib, for example dentonmod/ for dentonmod.so)

How to port a Mod to dhewm3

The usual (easiest) way to port a mod is to make a diff between the mod's source and the Doom3 SDK and apply the resulting patch to the vanilla game source (from the master branch).
Afterwards usually some manual work must be done to resolve patching conflicts and get the mod to compile.
Also, the CMakeLists.txt file must be adjusted (see the dentonmod branch for examples).

Please note that currently I only accept mods that are released under the GPL license - the one used by Open Source Doom3 (i.e. not only the Doom3 SDK license) - because neither the GPL nor the SDK license allow merging code from both licenses.
So please get permission from the mod authors first.

Yes, this unfortunately means that unless you manage to contact Sikkpin and get his permission, there will be no Sikkmod for dhewm3 (and neither other mods that use Sikkmod code) :-(
(If you are Sikkpin, please get in touch!)

Getting in touch

If you are a mod author and want to release your mod's sourcecode under GPL, but don't want to port it yourself (or don't have time or are unsure how) please contact me, I can probably help you :-)

The easiest way to contact me is by creating an issue in this Github repository, or by sending a DM to caedes in the id Tech Forums or by pinging caedes in the #iodoom3 IRC channel on FreeNode.
If you prefer E-Mail, you can find my address in the git commits.

New features that mods can use

dhewm3 has some features that the original Doom3 didn't have that are interesting for Mods.

The Script Debugger

dhewm3 1.5.2 and newer contain the Script Debugger (that you may remember from Quake4).
While most of the code for it is in the engine, the game code also needs some small changes for it to work.

The debugger branch has the necessary changes in its last commit.

Injecting all supported resolutions into the video menu

Mods that have their own video settings menu can tell dhewm3 to replace the "choices" and "values" entries in their choiceDef with the resolutions supported by dhewm3 (and corresponding modes).
So if we add new video modes to dhewm3, they'll automatically appear in the menu without changing the .gui
To enable this, you only need to add a injectResolutions 1 entry to the resolution choiceDef. By default, the first entry will be "r_custom*" for r_mode -1, which means "custom resolution, use r_customWidth and r_customHeight".
If the "r_custom*" entry should be disabled for your mod, just add another entry: injectCustomResolutionMode 0

Scale GUIs to 4:3

Fullscreen menus (like the main menu and the PDA) are scaled to 4:3 by default, adding black bars on the left/right when using widescreen resolutions (users can disable this with r_scaleMenusTo43 0).
By default, this is not done for other GUIs, mainly because the HUD is a fullscreen GUI and also handles damage effects (coloring the whole screen red), which would look shitty if scaled to 4:3 with black/empty bars on the left/right.
However, you can still enable this for your WIN_DESKTOP GUIs, either in the .gui itself or via C++ code when loading the GUI (I found this especially useful for the crosshairs/cursor GUI).

WIN_DESKTOP means that this can currently only be set for the top-level window in a .gui (all its subwindows/widgets will be scaled implicitly).

There are two ways to make a GUI use this:

  1. in the .gui add a window variable scaleto43 1, like

     windowDef Desktop {
     rect	0 ,0 ,640 ,480
     nocursor	1
     float	talk 	0
    
     scaleto43 1
    
     // .. etc rest of windowDef
    
  2. When creating the GUI from C++ code, you can afterwards make the UserInterface scale to 4:3 like this:

     idUserInterface* ui = Whatever(); // create it
     ui->SetStateBool("scaleto43", true);
     ui->StateChanged(gameLocal.time);
    

    Both lines are important!

    Keep in mind that if the GUI is saved to the savegame, you need to call this after restoring the GUI from the savegame, see 5070b8c7ec for an example.

    Also note that you can not generally inject variables into GUIs like that from C++, dhewm3 has special code to make the "scaleto43" case work.