When that mode is enabled (see below for caveats), wall textures that have a
non-power-of-two height (call it 'h') will be modified to look like in classic:
Let 'H' be the next power of two greater than 'h'. The texture will be uploaded
with height 'H', made up from 'h' hlines of the original texture, followed by
'H'-'h' first hlines of the same.
No panning "corrections" will take place. The mode is disabled by default.
Caveats/notes:
* the mode requires that r_hightile is disabled
* it is not implemented in Polymer
* in the Lunatic build, it is ineffective when a VX map is loaded, as those
display walls with NPOT height textures correctly
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4498 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
... and cull code that is dead with the X*alloc() versions since they never
return NULL on requesting memory.
Use something like
git grep '[^Xx]\(m\|c\|re\)alloc *('
and
git grep '[^Xx]strdup *('
to see places where I left the B*alloc() calls intact.
BUILD_LUNATIC.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4491 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
These wrap the x*alloc or xstrdup functions in compat.c. The handler gets passed
__FILE__, __LINE__ and __func__ (if available) in debugging builds.
Terminating the application process immediately in case of allocation failure
will let us prune many error handling paths and simplify a good portion of code.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4490 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
- in mdloadskin() and gloadtile_hi(), use new function check_nonpow2()
(bit-twiddling) instead of loop
- Replace a couple of missed literals with CACHEAD_* enum labels
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4488 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
Note: in polymer.c, this was buggy (but harmless) because .r is a char:
if ((uint32_t)hictinting[MAXPALOOKUPS-1].r & 0xFFFFFF00) != 0xFFFFFF00)
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4487 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
Specifically, the handling of one-way walls ([1] in Mapster32) was slightly
different.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4484 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
Mostly, these are rendering-related variables. We keep *writing* them to
mapster32.cfg so that older Mapster32 versions can be used side-by-side
for now.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4462 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
This mode does not take a sector's visibility values into account for uniform
darkening of a texture. It is more faithful to classic with respect to
fog/visibility *distances*, but may be less so as far as the "tint" of the
texture due to visibility attenuation is concerned.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4459 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
That is, for every for palette (now, even ones created by the user) the last
shade is the (or rather, a color close to the) full fog color by construction.
In loadpalette(), reject a PALETTE.DAT with only one shade level.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4458 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
Concretely, for all 1 <= i <= 255, make graypalookup[31][i] := graypalookup[31][0].
Also document 'fogpal' in the Lunatic doc.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4456 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
Also,
- add a static assertion to engine.c
- gameexec.c: compile out an unused function in Lunatic builds
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4451 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
This makes the game not process as many ticks as have elapsed during the saving
afterwards.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4450 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
The extended PALETTE.DAT format can now carry a trailing byte, called
'lognumalphatables'. If it is present, the engine assumes that alpha blending
tables are loaded at blend indices 1 to 1<<lognumalphatables and handles
rotatesprite's alpha and spriteext[].alpha accordingly.
The ability to save this new byte is added to engine.lua:savePaletteDat()
and the corresponding convenience functions in shadexfog.lua.
Examples test/screentext.con and test/sprite_access.con are updated for
demonstration purposes.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4426 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
The overall situation is thus as follows:
- in C and from Lua, that member is called 'fogpal'
- In CON (both C-CON and LunaCON), it's 'fogpal' with 'alignto' being an alias;
'filler' wasn't available before, either.
- In m32script, it's 'fogpal' or 'alignto' ('filler' is not available any more)
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4416 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
That is, if that member has a nonzero value, that one is taken for the color of
the GL fog instead of (most of the time) sector[].floorpal. "Sky sectors", that
is, skyboxes or simply parallaxed floors/ceilings are *not* handled.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4415 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
Also, extend the documentation for r_usenewshading a little. Specifically,
note when the different modes were introduced. BUILD_LUNATIC.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4410 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
It was plainly noticeable in the editor's tile info display, for
example.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@4409 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0