both support this. The client tells the server it can support compressed
downloads by setting the z flag in the *cap userinfo. If the server detects
that the client supports compression, and the file to be downloaded is
compressed (more accurately, has the .gz extension), the server sends a special
download packet with a size of -2 (-1 indicates error),, percent of 0, followed
by the new name of the file (eg maps/foo.bsp.gz for maps/foo.bsp). The client
WILL NOT accept a new filename that doesn not match the old name for the length
of the old name. The client also will not accept a new name if there are . or
.. path components. If the client rejects the new name, it prints a warning
message and aborts that download.
code.
Then we have the completely purge of treating 'unsigned' as a type, it
is NOT a type, it is a TYPE MODIFIER!
Under gcc for x86 it happens to try and do something sane, just treat it
as a unsigned int, but that is EVIL, it is a MODIFIER and if ANYONE adds
code which uses unsigned as a type in itself I /WILL/ harm them!!!
split up the headerfiles and such. common.[ch] and qwsvdef.h no longer exist. More work still needs to be done (esp for windows) but this should be a major improvement.