Processing a callvote command after a vote passed to change maps but
has not been executed yet will result in 1) map change immediately
happening 2) after new map loads players have vote HUD messages but
Game VM doesn't have a vote in progress. The phantom vote status will
only be removed if players start a new vote or run vid_restart.
The underlying issue is that a second callvote sets vote config
strings but a map change is executed before they are sent to clients.
Resulting in clients getting "cs" reliable commands with the config
string changes _after_ the map change. Out of sync config strings.
Even if the underlying issue was fixed, the second vote would be lost.
So it's best to not force a map change to happen immediately anyway.
Reported by Tobias Kuehnhammer.
- Paths to search for mods are now specified in an array
- Mods can now consist solely of ".pk3dir" folders and still be
considered valid
- The function now has a consistent style
+seta, +sets, and +setu were ignored because Com_AddStartupCommands
thought Com_StartupVariable handled it.
+set didn't allow value to be multiple tokens which due to Unix shell
unintuitively removing quotes causes the variable to only be set to
the first token. This could be worked around by escaping quotes
ioq3ded +set g_motd \"hello world\"
but it doesn't match behavior of other start up commands (which now
includes seta, sets, and setu) that use all tokens.
source_t filename and includepath are 1024 but MAX_PATH is 64. As far as
I know the paths don't exceed that so this probably doesn't fix anything.
Similar changes were already made to l_script.c so this makes things
consistent. This was found because it was fixed in RTCW's code.
MSYS2 and some mingw builds use mingw64 instead of mingw32. If you run
`make installer` from the top-level, PLATFORM should be set correctly
when building the installer.
gcc 6 with -Wall -Wextra warns:
code/botlib/l_precomp.c: In function ‘PC_NameHash’:
code/botlib/l_precomp.c:551:2: warning: ‘register’ is not at beginning of declaration [-Wold-style-declaration]
int register hash, i;
^~~
Modern compilers either ignore the register storage class when
generating code, or generate better code without it, so just remove
most of them.
The remaining uses are in third-party bundled libraries (libjpeg, zlib),
and in a PowerPC-specific inline function consisting of inline
assembler (because I'm not 100% confident that it doesn't have
some practical use there).