I added Sys_RegisterShutdown years ago and never really did anything
with it: now any system that needs to be shutdown can ensure it gets
shutdown on program exit, and in the correct order (ie, reverse to init
order).
I've decided that setting pr.max_edicts and pr.zone_size as part of the
local progs initialization rather than in PR_LoadProgsFile makes more
sense. For one, it is unlikely for the limits to change every time progs is
reloaded. Also, they seem to be a property of the VM rather than the progs.
However, there is nothing stopping the caller from updating max_edicts and
zone_size every call.
These are the ones where I could easily make scan-build happy. They do seem
to be potential holes where invalid data in one place could result in use
of uninitialized values.
While scan-build wasn't what I was looking for, it has proven useful
anyway: many of the sizeof errors were just noise, but a few were actual
bugs (allocating too much or too little memory).
The search for these files will stop in the vpath that contains the .bsp
file to which they belong. This will prevent problems with
id1/maps/start.lit being used for shadows/maps/start.bsp.
This is based on ccr's patch, but a little more thorough (he missed some
potential problems) and probably more readable (the original code wasn't
the greatest (still isn't, but...))..
I'd forgotten that ED_ConvertToPlist mangled light into light_lev and
single component angle values into a vector. This fixes much of the
breakage in qflight (but not the light levels)
The data needed for the checks has been gone from QF for a very long time
(since Jan 2000), and good riddance to it, really: I suspect it's in
violation of id's copyright on the game data (ok, it might be fair use, but
still...).
Something is funny with Ubuntu such that -ldl needs to be specifically
added even though QFutil's .la specifies it. I don't know if it's a libtool
issue or not, but this does work.
More will probably be necessary, but this was sufficient to get prover to
the point where qfcc segged building qwaq (0.7.2).
hipdemo1.dem has a single leading space. They probably did "%2d" for the
track number, as there is no space before the minus sign in the other
hipnotic demos.
Now the user can create and destroy IMTs at will, though currently
destroying IMTs is currently all or nothing (imt_drop_all).
An IMT is created via imt_create which takes the keydest name (key_game
etc), the name of the IMT (must be unique for all IMTs) and optionally the
name of the IMT to which the key binding search will fall back if there is
no binding in the current IMT, but must be already defined and on the same
keydest. This means that IMTs now have user determined fallback paths. The
requirements for the fallback IMT prevent loops and other weird behaviour.
Actual key binding via in_bind is unaffected. This is why the IMT name must
be unique across all IMTs.
The "imt" command works with the key_game keydest, but imt_keydest is
provided for specifying the active IMT for a specific keydest.
At startup, default IMTs are setup to emulate the previous static IMTs so
old configs will continue to work (mostly). New config files will be
written with commands to drop all of the current IMTs and build new ones,
with the bindings and active IMT set as well.
This fixes the status bar refresh issues in sw. The problem was that with
two viddef's hanging around, things got a little confused and recalc_refdef
wasn't getting into the renderer.
This fixes the flickering status bar for those renderers that use
scr_copyeverything correctly. sw and sw32. glsl flukes out by not touching
scr_copyeverything and gl is wrong by always clearing it to 0 and never
setting it later.
The cshift is now drawn before centerprint, console and the loading plaque.
Unfortunately, due to something odd going on, the sbar stuff is drawn by
the console rather than by Sbar_Draw :P.
Need to up the precision by one due to the difference between g and e, but
much prettier. Might need to rename that function :P I wish I'd thought to
check if g would work, but thanks to divVerent for the suggestion.
This fixes the infinite loop in Sock's shadows mode. Thanks to Spike for
helping me with what should be happening. However, we're still uncertain
about just how the thinktime/sv.time logic should behave.
It turns out gcc has a way to force functions to inline even when it thinks
doing so would not be a good idea (call to a modest sized function unlikely).
F6 is fantastic, until you hit it by mistake after dieing when you meant
to hit F9 (I've done that way too often). quick.sav is still the last file
written via F6 (so F9 is unaffected), but now the previous quick.sav
becomes quick1.sav. Up to 5 (currently) backups will be kept: quick1 is
the newest, quick5 the oldest. A menu for accessing the backups has been
added as a sub-menu of the load menu.
This fixes the broken intermissions. There might be a better fix, but this
will do for now because the one alternative solution (getting
V_CalcIntermissionRefdef to poke directly at entity states) is not
something I particularly want to do.
Note that this is only a soft-limit and prevents excessive beams when only
one is expected. If more beams are desirned, just use 0 for the entity
number.
Really, when cl_nodelta is in effect (eg, .qwd demo recording and thus
playback). QW now uses the new shared entity state block as I'd intended.
Thanks to the cleanup of ghost entities (ie, entities that have been
removed but continue to be rendered), glsl overkill has gone from 157 to
163 fps :)
It was a hack to help with cleaning up the renderer, but is now in the way
of merging the clients.
This happens to fix the position/angle lerping, though angles behave a
little oddly.
CL_StopPlayback was incorrectly calling Key_SetKeyDest with key_game. As
CL_SetState calls Key_SetKeyDest with the appropriate parameter,
CL_StopPlayback calling Key_SetKeyDest is actually redundate, so just
change key_game_target back to IMT_0.
NQ's client-side onground now works similarly to QW's: -1 = not on ground,
0+ = on ground (plane num?) but only 0 is used in NQ as the necessary
information is not sent over the network.
The protocol is not affected: the incoming colors byte is split into the
two fields when read from the packet. This simplifies a lot of code
elsewhere.
When the stufftext buffering was implemented, we forgot about
svc_serverdata...
While nq might normally not have the issue, I thought it best to implement
in nq, too.
nq now rejects anything that doesn't look like a .dem, and qw not only
rejects anything that looks like neither a .qwd nor a .mvd, but even
detects which one is being played by the contents rather than the file name
(foo.mvd.gz would be mis-detected as a qwd!!).
The change to nq SV_RunThink to match that in qw finally bit my bum. I
suspect it's really a bug in the honey progs (using ltime on a non-pusher),
but QF locking up is not very friendly. I want to keep the option of having
a think loop in the same frame for progs that expect it (using
self.nextthink = time), but also NQ's original method of running think
every frame. Hopefully no progs expect "self.nextthink = time" to run
every frame rather than loop within the current frame.
Now it doesn't matter if you get 22 fps or 72, you jump the same height,
which actually happens to be slightly higher than the previous 72fps jump.
Effectively, you jump the height you would if you got infinite fps ;)
The renderer now gets initialized and things sort of work (qw-client will
idle, though nothing is displayed). However, as the viddef stuff is broken,
it segs on trying to run the overkill demo.
Still, nothing will work: no plugins are loaded and they're all broken
anyway.
glx, sgl, glslx etc are going away, just the basics will be built: fbdev
(probably go away eventually), sdl, x11 and hopefully someday win. That's
actually the only reason anything links.
Just about to do a release, and I realized windows users wouldn't have any
way of checking out the new renderer. I'll add wglsl when I get a chance to
do some testing.
Most subsystems that depend on other subsystems now call the init functions
themselves. This makes for much cleaner client initialization (more work
needs to be done for the server).
The renderer should now be free of any direct access to client code. Even
3d rendering is now done via a function pointer.
The cshift code is done as a 2d screen function.