Now there is only one single entry point for both, instead of previously 2 entry and 4 exit points.
This also eliminates the explicit shutdown of ZMusic. Timidity++'s two buffers have been put in containers that self-destruct on shutdown and calling dumb_exit is not necessary because the only feature requiring it is not used by any code in the music library.
Instead of trying a homegrown way to avoid recursive exceptions, let's do it with the defined procedure C++ has for this case: call std::terminate.
This allowed removing some old hackery inherited from Boom and will now hopefully allow sanitizing the exit procedure to the point that it can be done without depending on exit handlers.
The only difference here were the size values on Windows but for this initial call they have been useless for a long time. When this code was written the console buffer still had a fixed width that needed to be set before adding any text.
Mainly done to isolate the calls that actually manipulate the global frame buffer.
V_Init alsoi initialized some palette data, which was moved to V_InitPalette and did something entirely different when running a restart as opposed to an initial start.
Default: off (false)
When this option is enabled (true), then exiting the game from
main menu and by menu_quit command doesn't require confirmation
and doesn't play sound.
Steps to reproduce:
1. Load game.
2. Press any key to bring up the main menu.
3. Move the mouse anywhere out of the menu entries.
4. Press Down arrow.
Expected result: the menu cursor sound is played, the first menu element is selected.
Actual result: the menu cursor sound is played, no menu element is selected.
Repeated Down arrow pressing doesn't give any result, either.
If on step 4 Up arrow is pressed, the last element in the menu is selected.
FMod had MP3/Ogg playback integrated right into itself, and the OpenAL backend tried to replicate this functionality.
This functionality, however, has been removed over two years ago when FMod started breaking things more and more, it was only this backing implementation that was left in.
This was the last player class.
This code was also cleaned up for non-Windows systems where CD Audio is not implemented.
Instead of providing an empty implementation, all related code is now explicitly deactivated.
It is now being handled by the controlling code.
While of no benefit for GZDoom itself, this finally allows to separate the entire music code into a separate, engine independent project that merely provides streamed music data when not playing on a hardware device (WinMM Midi or CD Audio.)
The tight coupling of the music code with the sound backend made this nearly impossible before
The way CDDA was treated as an afterthought made handling of stream songs somewhat problematic, because the state could be unclear.
CDDA is an easily identifiable format so it should be tested first.
This was getting a bit unwieldy. The include path setup is not perfect yet, that's work for later.
(It's about time we're getting C++20 with modules so that this include path madness can be put to an end.)