This is a lot of changes in a lot of code because nothing here was abstracted into the sound system. :(
Hopefully most of the affected code here can be tossed out soon, it's not pretty.
Note: enet uses 'malloc' and 'free' as field names in a struct - this does not work with any compiler using some sort of heap instrumentation that #defines these names!
This had to be changed to allow MSVC debug builds to compile again.
- consolidated Polymost precaching and removed precaching for static tiles because they now are always loaded.
- removed cache configurability. On modern systems this is relatively pointless - allocating 50 or 100 MB is a non-issue - and the cache is due for replacement anyway.
Sorry, but having a globally writable pointer to every texture is just insane and makes any functional management impossible.
This is merely a preparation for adding a real texture manager. That cannot be done if any code can write over the data at will. For that, it now has to make the texture writable first or create a writable empty texture.
These will have to do some texture management bookkeeping so directly changing the values is problematic.
This required changing the parameter interface in polymost.cpp because a few places hacked around with the global state to pass parameters to subfunctions.
Renamed all elements still referring to zdoom.
removed the frontend specific resource data.
fixed startup dialog to accept ANSI date despite building as Unicode. This needed a bit of hackery because the macros in windowsx.h are not character set sensitive.
Using that higher precision, interpolate at a higher granularity.
Further, truncate the target interpolation time to vertical blank boundaries to avoid producing temporal artifacts.
Fix issues caused by interpolation calculations being handled differently in multiple places (and fix cases where smoothratios were being thrown away only to be redone without checking all proper conditions).
Ensure ClockTicks changes do not break other targets (EKenBuild, VoidSW), but note any interpolation there is not similarly updated.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@8050 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
# Conflicts:
# source/build/src/build.cpp
# source/build/src/sdlayer.cpp
This automatically saves the dependencies used for a given object file during the first compilation, then uses the generated data for each subsequent compile to determine if the object needs to be rebuilt. Why? Because if I see one more warning about the C++ One Definition Rule, I'm going to fucking snap.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@7839 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
Additionally, raise minimum number of stencil buffer bits to accomodate future use of the stencil buffer.
git-svn-id: https://svn.eduke32.com/eduke32@7736 1a8010ca-5511-0410-912e-c29ae57300e0
# Conflicts:
# source/build/include/build.h
# source/build/src/polymer.cpp
# source/build/src/polymost.cpp
# source/kenbuild/src/game.cpp