add dstring_replace. this replaces a string of lenth rlen at position
pos with data of lenth len, growing, shrinking and shuffling data as
appropriate. At this rate, the dstring `class' will get buffer gap
editing capabilities :)
cmd.c:
Cmd_TokenizeString builds cmd_active_buffer->line again.
Cmd_Process bails out instantly if cmd_active_buffer is a legacy buffer
and uses dstring_replace to modify the parameters in
cmd_active_buffer->line. This last change results in drastic
simplification (and accuracy) of the commandline reconstruction code,
both in Cmd_TokenizeString and Cmd_Process.
now recycled, not freed. Fixed some bugs in exp.c. Ready to add embeded
functions (read: function calls with return values) and for loops.
Probably some other misc. fixes, I tend to go on debugging streaks.
Changed Cmd_TokenizeString to accept a flag that controls the application
of filters (tags, variables, escape characters) to the tokens and modified
a few places in the source that called it. Added a secondary command
buffer that is parsed without filters for legacy command support.
Currently, it is only used for commands stuffed into the console from the
server. It is hacky, and I hope to eventually generalize the console
interface to support any number of buffers and audit the rest of the code
to recognize it. For now, the legacy buffer at least keeps escape
character parsing from destroying info strings.
code cleanups and general performance work to be developed in relative peace.
While cleaning up the networking code /is/ important, fixing QF's perfomance
issues is of much higher priority.
This required changes to the api (info_t instead of char *) but should be
a net gain in speed (not a lot, admittedly: it was pretty fast to begin
with, but this paves the way for some other changes I have in mind).
svc_serverinfo, and svc_download
I havn't tested svc_download, since I don't want to play with having
seperate dirs for the client vs server on one computer.
directly into the packet data.
- change a bunch of char *'s to const char *'s for the above. Only
thing that had trouble was the cl_nofake handler, which I changed to
use a local buffer.
- add MSG_ReadStaticString which acts like the old MSG_ReadString,
specifically that it uses a static buffer and tollerates
unterminated strings.
- add a Q_strnlen function, and make strnlen use it if strnlen is
undefined.
- Add a net_svc.h and net_svc.c which will preparse svc messages into
structs, for easier handling. Currently only soundlist and
modellist are done.
- rename pr_deadbeef to pr_deadbeef_ents
- add pr_deadbeef_locals, which does uninited locals. (crashes from
it are undeniably buggy code, unlike pr_deadeef_ents)
- add a missing break to packetlog printing's switch
- add sv_kickfake, which kicks people for attempting to fake messages,
or replaces the ^Ms with # if disabled.
generice, and also more in line with the rest of quake's clipping system
(ie, support the entity size selected hulls). I'm not /entirly happy with
what's here, but it's a start, and the force fields in customtf work /much/
better :)
it's harmless and some maps (such as engwar1) use it. (the map may
be considered broken because of it, but everything ELSE works fine
with a leading slash, since it's relative anyway)
userinfo setting.
float (string key, string value) SetUserInfo;
key = infostring key
value = new value
returs: 0 for key not changed, non-0 to broadcast the change
api change: Cmd_Args () now takes a parameter inidcating which arg to
start at for grabbing the un-parsed command line
qw/source/sv_ccmds.c:
implement kk's tell command and user name matching (though # is used for
the wildcard and it's still case sensitive)
everything else:
adjust for the new Cmd_Args protype
Some sbar cleanups (still broken, suspect driver issues.).
Removal of pmodel and emodel infokeys, waste of info space.
For servers allow people downloading to hear people talking.
quakeio.h -> vfile.h
More diff reduction between trunk and my VFS code. Also took the time to
put some headers in order and fix a few #include's pointed out by moving
things around a bit.