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.
Removed some language about the old mailing list, pointed to forums,
and more accurately to the
wiki, updated reference to SDL.
Zardoz speaks to you, His chosen ones.
A built-in GNU Make rule causes code/tools/lcc/lburg/gram.y to replace
gram.c if gram.y has a newer modified time. This causes git diff to
pick up changes to gram.c, which seems to have been manually modified
to fix warnings and may vary by Yacc used to create it. It also
requires installing a program to generate a file that already exists
in a usable state in the code repository.
So replace the built-in rule so it is only used if USE_YACC is 1
(defaults to 0). The Yacc executable name can be overriden using
`make YACC=yacc` like before.
I preferred to touch gram.c instead of installing Yacc because of the
problems it causes. It doesn't really seem like a good idea to recommend
others do that instead of disabling Yacc the Makefile though.
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.