The idea comes from The OpenGL Shader Wrangler
(http://prideout.net/blog/?p=11). Text files are broken up into chunks via
lines beginning with -- (^-- in regex). The chunks are optionally named
with tags of the form: [0-9A-Za-z._]+. Unnamed chunks cannot be found.
Searching for chunks looks for the longest tag that matches the beginning
of the search tag (eg, a chunk named "Vertex" will be found with a search
tag of "Vertex.foo"). Note that '.' forms the units for the searc
("Vertex.foo" will not find "Vertex.f").
Unlike glsw, this implementation does not have the concept of effects keys
as that will be separate. Also, this implementation takes strings rather
than file names (thus is more generally useful).
This gives QF a consistent qualilty PRNG on all platforms. The
implementation is slightly different from the standard, but gives the same
results for the same speed (details in mersenne.c).
Also move the ALLOC/FREE macros from qfcc.h to QF/alloc.h (needed to for
set.c).
Both modules are more generally useful than just for qfcc (eg, set
builtins for ruamoko).
o All instances of LIBADD/LDADD have a corresponding DEPENDENCIES
specificatiion.
o libraries now use a lib_ldflags macro to keep things consistent
o duplication of source/lib names has been minimized (particularly in
the libraries; more work needs to be done for the executables)
o automake spec blocks have been organized (again, more work needs to be
done for the executables)
GIB will be reworked to use it, and hopefully Rua will also so that the
two languages can share objects, events, etc.
Warning: This uses quite a few hacks and tortured macros, it might cause
breakage.
cl_chat.[ch] to qw to hold advanced chat features, the first of which is
the ability to ignore chat messages from annoying players. Some polishing
in this area still remains, but the current implementation seems to work.
This gives us a bunch more flexibility. plugins no longer have the "lib"
prefix or the version suffix, they're now installed in
$fs_sharepath/QFplugins,, builds should take much less time (in general,
only one of pic or non-pic versions are build), bins and libs can have
individual CFLAGS
within braces, and put support for comments back in (oops). To use math
evaluation, put a math expression inside $(). If you have spaces in your
expression, you'll need to enclose the entire thing in quotes so it doesn't
get split up into multiple tokens.
console command parser. It will eventually include html-like tags for
modifying text (gold numbers, brown characters, etc) and escaped characters.
The major differences so far are that dynamic strings are now used instead
of static buffers, and single quotes can be used to enclose tokens as
well as double quotes.
segfault if your first call was with "". Probably could cause
crashes too
- add a string.c file to libQFutil, with a Q_strcasestr function,
which strcasestr is defined to if it's not already defined. (we'd
get that with glibc if we defined __USE_GNU, but we don't)
- make client_t and SV_ExtractFromUserinfo both use NAME_MAX for
their name arrays, instead of 32 for one and 80 for the other
- rewrite almost all of SV_ExtractFromUserinfo's name handling.
- \r, \n, and \t are all converted to spaces
- leading/trailing spaces are stripped
- consecutive spaces are reduced to a single space
- empty names are considered bad
- user-* nicks are considered bad (unless forced to them)
- a name containing console or admin is considered bad
- a name that already exists is considered bad
- if they have a bad name it gets forced to user-%d, where %d is
their userid
- netname in the progs is now updated properly
- name changes are always reported unless it's the initial setting,
rather than only if they're full connected and not a spectator
- finally, if the name change fails (info string exceeded), give
them the boot. (before this was only done for duplicate names)
That's about it :)
of pre-registered (Sys_RegisterShutdown) function before actually exiting
the program. This should take care of the pain when an ncurses server
crashes.