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.)
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.
When the engine is compiled with Clang it appears that the return value
is being written to the WRONG address, either due to the vm_ variables being
changed (unexpectedly) elsewhere, or as a result of bad assembly assumptions;
having a stack variable pointing to where to write the return value seems
to do the trick.
This fixes the case where, for a trap_Register()-like call, weird numbers
are being returned when, during the process, an error message is printed
(which in Tremulous results in a QVM call and (nested) system call).
If a pk3 search path is passed to FS_FOpenFileReadDir, a non-zero
file handle is returned if file is not found. This causes incorrect
behavior in FS_ReadFileDir (when a pk3 search path is passed in)
which only checks file handle, not length, for seeing if file exists.
I don't know of any issues in ioq3 caused by this.