8050c7bd77
ANY/ALL/NONE have been temporarily removed until I implement the HOPS (horizontal operations) sub-instructions, which will all both 32-bit and 64-bit operands and several other operations (eg, horizontal add). All the fancy addressing modes for the conditional branch instructions have been permanently removed: I decided the gain was too little for the cost (24 instructions vs 6). JUMP and CALL retain their addressing modes, though. Other instructions have been shuffled around a little to fill most of the holes in the upper block of 256 instructions: just a single small 7-instruction hole. Rearrangements in the actual engine are mostly just to keep the code organized. The only real changes were the various IF statements and dealing with the resulting changes in their addressing. |
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config.d | ||
debian | ||
desktop | ||
doc | ||
hw | ||
include | ||
libs | ||
m4 | ||
nq | ||
pkg-config | ||
qtv | ||
qw | ||
RPM | ||
ruamoko | ||
tools | ||
.gitignore | ||
bootstrap | ||
configure.ac | ||
COPYING | ||
INSTALL | ||
Makefile.am | ||
NEWS | ||
README.md | ||
TODO |
QuakeForge
QuakeForge is descended from the original Quake engine as released by Id Software in December 1999, and can be used to play original Quake and QuakeWorld games and mods (including many modern mods). While this will always be the case, development continues.
However, QuakeForge is not just a Quake engine, but includes a collection of tools for creating Quake mods, and is progressing towards being a more general game engine.
Quake and QuakeWorld
Support for Quake and QuakeWorld is split into two program sets: nq for Quake and qw-client for QuakeWorld, with the target system as an additional suffix: -x11 For the X Window system (Linux, BSD, etc), -win for MS Windows (plus others that are not currently maintained).
Both nq and qw-client support multiple renderers: 8-bit software, 32-bit software, OpenGL 2, EGL (mostly, one non-EGL function is used), and Vulkan (very WIP), all within the one executable.
Dedicated servers for both Quake (nq-server) and QuakeWorld (qw-server) are included, as well as a master server for QuakeWorld (qw-master).
Tool
QuakeForge includes several tools for working with Quake data:
- bsp2image produces wireframe images from Quake maps (bsp files)
- io_mesh_qfmdl for importing and exporting Quake mdl files to/from Blender
- io_qfmap for Quake map source files (WIP Blender addon)
- pak create, list and extract Quake pak files. There's also zpak which can be used to compress the contents of pak files using gzip (QuakeForge has transparent support for gzip compressed files)
- qfbsp for compiling map files to bsp files, includes support for vis clusters, and can be used to extract data and information from bsp files.
- qfcc is QuakeForge's version of qcc, but is significantly more advanced, with support for standard C syntax, including most C types, as well as Objective-C object oriented programming (Ruamoko). Mmost of the advanced features require the QuakeForge engine, but qfcc can produce progs files compatible with the original Quake engine with limited support for some of the advanced featuers (C syntax, reduced global usage, some additional operators (eg, better bit operators, remainder (%)). Includes qfprogs for inspecting progs files.
- qflight creates lightmaps for Quake maps
- qfvis for compiling PVS data for Quake maps. One of the faster implementations available.
- Plus a few others in various stages of usefulness: qflmp, qfmodelgen, qfspritegen, wad, qfwavinfo
Building
For now, please refer to INSTALL for information on building on Linux. Building for windows is done by cross-compiling using MXE. There are scripts in tools/mingw and tools/mingw64 that automate the process of configuring and building both the tools run on the build-host and the windows targets.