- enable precompiled headers for all non-system-specific MIDI devices.
- moved the native Windows and Mac MIDI devices into their respective sections in the project file so that they won't get compiled on the other ones.
This one was particularly nasty because Windows also defines a DWORD, but in Windows it is an unsigned long, not an unsigned int so changing types caused type conflicts and not all could be removed.
Those referring to the Windows type have to be kept, fortunately they are mostly in the Win32 directory, with a handful of exceptions elsewhere.
A major part of this device's implementation details about how to handle the callback were not encapsulated by the device class at all, they were #ifdef'd into the streamer class.
This puts everything into the device class which now exposes a clean interface to the rest of the game with no special handling aside from calling two additional virtual functions that are empty for the other devices
* make the critical section local to the respective platform instead of polluting everything with system specific symbols.
* moved system specific class declarations into the source file instead of having them in the global header.
This commit temporarily disables the Windows system device because it cannot be done without polluting the global header and still needs a bit of refactoring.
The approach being used here caused the entire sound system to be infested by windows.h, just to avoid copying around a handful of variables in one place, effectively preventing any compiling optimization.
Windows will now use the same internally defined structure for all MIDI processing which only for actual submission to the system player will be converted to the internal format.
Both files can now be included independently without causing problems.
This also required moving some inline functions into separate files and splitting off the GC definitions from dobject.h to ensure that r_defs does not need to pull in any part of the object hierarchy.
Most of those which still rely on ZDoom's own definition should be gone, unfortunately the code in files that include Windows headers is a gigantic mess with DWORDs being longs there intead of ints, so this needs to be done with care. DWORD should only remain where the Windows type is actually wanted.
- block creation of actors with the 'new' instruction. Unlike the above these cannot be made abstract because without ConstructNative they cannot be serialized.
This is one of two places that unconditionally pulled in all Windows headers into the GL code.
We also do not need the cruft for defining the standard integer types. GZDoom is C++11 which means that stdint.h will be present. So the madness with the definitions should be avoided to ensure that the types are always the same.
The code for constants was not optimal because the first operand of the instructions cannot be constant. This was solved by swapping it with the second choice which will always be non-constant.
The code for local variables did not allocate a new destination register and would overwrite the first parameter's variable.