This is just a simple RSA public key digital signature thing built on
libtomcrypt. The gist:
Some admin will generate a public/private key with rsa_make_keys, keeping the
private key secret. Using the private key and rsa_sign, the admin will sign
the autoupdater manifests, generating manifest.txt.sig.
The public key ships with the game (adding 270 bytes to the download), the
.sig is downloaded with the manifest by the autoupdater (256 bytes extra
download), then the autoupdater checks the manifest against the signature
with the public key. if the signature isn't valid (the manifest was tampered
with or corrupt), the autoupdater refuses to continue.
If the manifest is to be trusted, it lists sha256 checksums for every file to
download, so there's no need to sign every file; if they can't tamper with the
manifest, they can't tamper with any other file to be updated since the file's
listed sha256 won't match.
If the private key is compromised, we generate new keys and ship new
installers, so new installations will be able to update but existing ones
will need to do a new install to keep getting updates. Don't let the private
key get compromised. The private key doesn't go on a public server. Maybe it
doesn't even live on the admin's laptop hard drive.
If the download server is compromised and serving malware, the autoupdater
will reject it outright if they haven't compromised the private key, generated
a new manifest, and signed it with the private key.
libtomcrypt is sort of a big pile of source code, so instead of putting it
in revision control, we have a script to download it. Most things don't need
it. It lives on GitHub, so we _could_ do a git submodule, but most people
don't need it, so why waste their disk and bandwidth? That said, when compiled
you end up with a few hundred kilobytes of binary code to verify a signature
and no external dependencies, so it seems like a win.
Previously tested a mod cvar which may be wrong when multiple
mods are involved or config is reset. Let's check the server
cache's internet server count directly.
The blinking disconnect icon is drawn over lagometer in Q3.
Team Arena moved the lagometer location. Now let's draw the
disconnect icon over lagometer in Team Arena too!
"/team score" draws an oversized scoreboard in Q3. In Team Arena
it draws nothing. They probably intended to replace it with the
new .menu UI. But since it didn't happen, go ahead and use the Q3
tournament scoreboard.
- Actually use the second 'force' pass in G_Spawn when out of
available slots.
- Make G_EntitiesFree return qtrue if we can open a new slot.
(Only used when spawning Harvester skulls.)
Fixes not spawning Harvester skulls when there are no 'open freed
slots', but we have other slots available to open.
The Team Arena menu uses red team for single player but q3_ui
(and mods could) use blue. Also handle all the game types, not
just the ones used by Team Arena. Fixes FFA and Team DM.
Opening the find friend menu in the Team Arena server browser
hitches due to trying to resolve blank host names.
In UI_BuildFindPlayerList() status requests that are initial or
completed state or have timed out get reset. This means it starts
with MAX_SERVERSTATUSREQUESTS (16) blank host names. So just ignore
them in UI_GetServerStatusInfo().
The console message "1 servers listed in browser with 2 players."
would count clients multiple times when viewing favorite servers.
When viewing favorite servers in Team Arena UI, servers are added
to list before getting ping response. Each time UI checked pings
and inserted server it incremented the player count.
Filter favorite servers based on cached server info and new info
instead of only the cached info.
If cached server info is filtered out, don't add it to server list
but wait for getinfo response before marking server as invisible.
The player column in Team Arena UI lists clients and max clients
in format of "clients [maxclients]". When sorting by clients the
max clients is ignored which results in player column being
disorganized.
When servers have the same number of clients, sort based on max
clients. Otherwise client sort is sub-sorted based on order of
getinfo responses (ping).
Having to manually request the list, with two buttons (get new
list, refresh list) is somewhat confusing. Also since it looks
like there are no servers, users might not try to figure out
how to get the server list.
The first time viewing a master server list in Team Arena UI,
automatically request a new server list. After that the cache
will be available with a timestamp of the last refresh time.
I think this will make it easier to understand how the menu
works.
This may cause unneeded updating of the server cache because the
last refresh timestamp is per-fs_game but the server cache is
shared by all games. This will only occur once for each game
though so it's not a big concern.
Lots of Linux distros have different names (libcurl-gnutls.so vs etc), and
version the symbols (curl_global_init@@CURL_LIBSSL_3), so it's more compatible
to just dlsym the basic entry points we need and just demand that libcurl is
installed at all.
Alternately: we'll use our own libcurl build, but we'll probably have to dump
SSL support to make this sane to do.
Resolve master server addresses every 24 hours instead of keeping
result forever. Don't clear sv_master[1-5] cvar if the address fails
to resolve; it might work later.
constructions like (dataMask & ~3) was used to protect against out-of-bound load/store when address is 4-byte closer to dataMask
but at the same time it effectively cut low address bits for ALL load/store operations which is totally wrong in terms of conformance to ALLOWED (i.e. generated by q3lcc from C sources) low-level operations like packed binary data parsing
Save argument instead of using a pointer to cmd token memory that
might be overwritten when Cmd_TokenizeString() is called.
No known method for causing the issue without engine changes.
Cmd_TokenizeString() is called by FS_PureServerSetReferencedPaks()
in CL_Disconnect() but it's not an issue because the string is
blank.
Thanks @mickael9.
Check for truncated paths which could allow loading a library with
a non-standard extension. Also provides a better message for why a
valid library with a long path would fail to load.
Processing a callvote command after a vote passed to change maps but
has not been executed yet will result in 1) map change immediately
happening 2) after new map loads players have vote HUD messages but
Game VM doesn't have a vote in progress. The phantom vote status will
only be removed if players start a new vote or run vid_restart.
The underlying issue is that a second callvote sets vote config
strings but a map change is executed before they are sent to clients.
Resulting in clients getting "cs" reliable commands with the config
string changes _after_ the map change. Out of sync config strings.
Even if the underlying issue was fixed, the second vote would be lost.
So it's best to not force a map change to happen immediately anyway.
Reported by Tobias Kuehnhammer.
- Paths to search for mods are now specified in an array
- Mods can now consist solely of ".pk3dir" folders and still be
considered valid
- The function now has a consistent style
+seta, +sets, and +setu were ignored because Com_AddStartupCommands
thought Com_StartupVariable handled it.
+set didn't allow value to be multiple tokens which due to Unix shell
unintuitively removing quotes causes the variable to only be set to
the first token. This could be worked around by escaping quotes
ioq3ded +set g_motd \"hello world\"
but it doesn't match behavior of other start up commands (which now
includes seta, sets, and setu) that use all tokens.
source_t filename and includepath are 1024 but MAX_PATH is 64. As far as
I know the paths don't exceed that so this probably doesn't fix anything.
Similar changes were already made to l_script.c so this makes things
consistent. This was found because it was fixed in RTCW's code.
MISSIONPACK define is already required for this file or else it triggers an #error at the top of the file - removing redundant test that will never occur.
gcc 6 with -Wall -Wextra warns:
code/botlib/l_precomp.c: In function ‘PC_NameHash’:
code/botlib/l_precomp.c:551:2: warning: ‘register’ is not at beginning of declaration [-Wold-style-declaration]
int register hash, i;
^~~
Modern compilers either ignore the register storage class when
generating code, or generate better code without it, so just remove
most of them.
The remaining uses are in third-party bundled libraries (libjpeg, zlib),
and in a PowerPC-specific inline function consisting of inline
assembler (because I'm not 100% confident that it doesn't have
some practical use there).
If ERR_DROP during Com_GameRestart after shutting down client, Com_Error
needs to restart the client otherwise there is just a black window. Also,
clear the game restarting flag in Com_Error otherwise it's not possible to
run Com_GameRestart again later.
I don't know of a way to trigger ERR_DROP, in FS_Restart for instance,
without engine changes however.
Offer to restore settings when loading a mod that crashed, not the first
mod that gets loaded after a crash. Before the first mod loaded (usually
baseq3) would get the option even if missionpack or some other mod crashed.
- Make pid files separate for each fs_game.
- Remove/write pid every time switching fs_game.
- Create path before writing pid file otherwise it fails on first run.
- Show mod description.txt or fs_game instead of engine name in abnormal
exit message.
- Check com_fullyInitialized in Com_Error before removing PID,
otherwise "ioquake3 --version" segfaults when accessing fs_gamevar->string
(plus not fully initialized isn't really a normal shutdown).
As with the other branch of the if/else, each element of
foundPlayerServerNames is in fact the same size as each element of
foundPlayerServerAddresses, so it was fine; but it's better to make
it obvious that we are using the right array sizes.
This function is used in the Team Arena menus
I don't think it's actually possible to reach this line with
foundPlayerServerNames < 1, because by the time we get here we have
set it to 1 + the actual number of servers; but if we did, it would
clearly underflow into foundPlayerServerNames[-1], which would be
undefined behaviour. gcc 6 diagnoses this with a warning:
code/ui/ui_main.c: In function ‘UI_BuildFindPlayerList’:
code/ui/ui_main.c:4138:16: warning: array subscript is below array bounds [-Warray-bounds]
Also correct the sizeof() invocation to make it more obviously
correct (in fact the buffers for names and addresses happen to both
be of size MAX_ADDRESSLENGTH, so it was fine, but it's good to be
obvious).
Given an array b[] of length n, pointers to &b[0]..&b[n] are defined
(where only &b[0]..&b[n-1] can be validly dereferenced). &b[-1], or
equivalently b-1, is not something we can use in valid Standard C.
gcc 6 diagnoses this as:
code/client/snd_wavelet.c:33:9: warning: array subscript is below array bounds [-Warray-bounds]
and might take this undefined behaviour as permission to emit
"more efficient" object code that is not what the author expected,
for example nothing at all. Use a macro to fake a 1-based array instead.
The goal of reproducible builds is that a rebuild of the same source
code with the same compiler, libraries, etc. should result in the same
binaries. SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH provides a standard way for build systems
to fill in the date of the latest source change, typically from a git
commit or from metadata like the debian/changelog in Debian packages.
This does not change anything if SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH is not defined;
the intention is that a larger build system like a Debian package
will define it.
Please see https://reproducible-builds.org/ for more information about
reproducible builds.
Bot's lastkilledplayer was set to -1 after carrying out an ordered kill.
Later in BotChat_Random() the PlayerName function was passed -1 which
caused a "Error: PlayerName: playernum out of range" message.
I think the reason it was set to negative one is so that if the bot is
ordered to kill the player again, the bot will not say it's done and
drop the goal. Though, if the bot killed the player based on it's own
decision, it will just say it's done and drop the goal (bug?).
Let's check the time of the last kill to see if it happened since the
team order was received instead of setting lastkilledplayer to -1
after completing the team ordered kill. This fixes bot dropping goal
if target player was the last player they killed and the PlayerName
out of range error.
At the end of CL_RunCinematic, RoQShutdown sets currentHandle to -1.
This causes the return at the end to be return cinTable[-1].status.
Use return FMV_EOF when RoQShutdown is called.
I think FMV_EOF should be returned instead of FMV_IDLE which is set in
RoQShutdown because RoQShutdown is clearing out state so it can be reused
for a new cinematic.
The return value isn't actually read by the ioq3 client, renderers,
cgame, or ui.
Make Yes/No, Multi, Slider, and Bind items allow enter key to change
value without mouse over item. Add support for left and right arrow keys
and joystick button 1-4 to Yes/No, Multi, and Slider and many item
specific 'ownerdraw' key handlers.
Listbox still requires mouse hover and Team Arena main menu requires
mouse hover to get anywhere...
Enabling K_JOY1-4 to select in default key handler also caused additional
mouse button (K_AUX1-16) to select, which is done in q3_ui as well. Both
handle K_AUX equally badly (not treated as a mouse button and not handled
by item specific key handlers), so it's probably fine.
Explicitly set cull type for skybox to front, instead of using whatever
cull type the previous shader used (which could result in the skybox
not being visible due to only drawing back faces). The sky cloud stages
set the cull type so they are not affected by previous cull type.
Server/client VoIP protocol is handled by adding new cvars
cl_voipProtocol and sv_voipProtocol, sv_voip and cl_voip
are used to auto set/clear them. All users need to touch
are cl/sv_voip as 0 or 1 just like before.
Old Speex VoIP packets in demos are skipped.
New VoIP packets are skipped in demos if sv_voipProtocol
doesn't match cl_voipProtocol.
Notable difference between usage of speex and opus codecs,
when using Speex client would be sent 80ms at a time.
Using Opus, 60ms is sent at a time. This was changed because
the Opus codec supports encoding up to 60ms at a time.
(Simpler to send only one codec frame in a packet.)
The number of draw surfaces was range checked against number of surfaces for
the current view but needs to check total for the frame otherwise can read
past the end of the tr.refdef.drawSurfs array when there are multiple views.
Reserve space for end of list and swap buffer commands. These are absolutely
required and cannot be dropped. Dropping swap buffer command causes screen
to not update and possible crash from drawsurf buffer overflow if not enough
cmd buffer space for many continous frames.
Text_Width's scale argument will be multiplied by glyphScale, so don't
pass useScale that is already multiplied by glyphScale as this makes
the scale too big.
GNU platforms (Linux, kFreeBSD, Hurd) have endian.h to determine
endianness, so all architectures except x86_64 are in fact treated
identically, except that their ARCH_STRING is different.
The ARCH_STRING must always be identical to the ARCH from the Makefile,
otherwise the engine will not find its cgame, game and ui plugins
under their expected names and startup will fail. If we pass it in
from the Makefile, then an identical value is guaranteed, and we can
get rid of an increasingly long list of defined(__some_cpu__) tests.
The one remaining quirk is that we test __x86_64__ to determine
whether to define idx64; I've kept that, but separated it from
the ARCH_STRING.
On non-Linux platforms we only support a few architectures anyway,
so keeping the list up to date is less of a burden; *BSD porters
could probably use the same technique to get support for lots of
architectures with little effort, but I have not done that here,
because I cannot test it.
Windows must continue to support preprocessor-based architecture tests
in any case, so that the MSVC solutions (which do not use the Makefile)
can continue to work. However, Windows only runs on a few CPU families,
so this shouldn't be a significant burden in practice.
When cross-compiling, the tools are compiled for the build architecture
(COMPILE_PLATFORM, COMPILE_ARCH) rather than the host architecture
(PLATFORM, ARCH), so define ARCH_STRING to COMPILE_ARCH on a GNU
COMPILE_PLATFORM.
MASK_REG in EmitMovEDXStack would incorrectly emit asm if 'andit' was 0.
'andit' would never be 0 though so it wasn't causing issues.
Found by Coverity.