I polymorphed into something wimpy and became overloaded or even
overtaxed so I dropped everything. The status line still showed
overloaded or overtaxed until my next move. That didn't happen in
3.6.x or 3.4.3 but I didn't pursue trying to figure out what caused
this misbehavior.
I wanted to add an encumber_msg() call to freeinv() but that would
cause message sequencing issues. Instead, add a call to it in a
few places where items are leaving hero's inventory, particularly
for the chain of calls for dropping stuff. I've left it off in a
bunch of other potential places.
Also add a few missing (void) casts where the return value of
existing encumber_msg() calls is being ignored.
Reported by k21971, the dumplog section labeled "major events" showed
all logged events rather than just the ones classified as major.
Filter out the non-major ones when writing dumplog.
At the moment only a couple of ones other than achievements are major.
Probably various other types should be too.
The #chronicle command still lists all logged events unless they're
flagged as 'spoiler'. So far the mines' end luckstone is the only
one flagged that way. Unfortunately a player with access to live
logging could still learn whether or not the gray stone that has just
been picked up on the last mines level is the target luckstone by
viewing the log from outside of the game.
The #chronicle command would be more useful if it gathered all the
categories of events present and put up a menu allowing the player to
choose which ones to view. I haven't attempted to implement that.
Closes#687
Move a bunch of stuff out of main() into new early_options(): '-dpath'
playground directory handling, '-s ...' show scores instead of playing,
and the 'argcheck()' options: --version, --showpaths, --dumpenums,
and --debug (not to be confused with -D). Also introduce
| --nethackrc=filename
| --no-nethackrc
to control RC file without using NETHACKOPTIONS so that that is still
available for setting other options. They can start with either one
or two dashes. --no-nethackrc is just --nethackrc=/dev/null under the
hood. '-dpath' can now be '--directory=path' or '--directory path'
but the old syntax should still work. '-s ...' can be '--scores ...'.
Basic call sequence in unixmain relating to options is now
|main() {
| early_options(argc, argv[]);
| initoptions(); /* process sysconf, .nethackrc, NETHACKOPTIONS */
| process_options(possibly_modified_argc, possibly_modified_argv[]);
|}
Options processed by early_options() that don't terminate the program
are moved to the end of argv[], with argc reduced accordingly. Then
process_options() only sees the ones that early_options() declines to
handle.
Most early options were using plain exit() instead of nh_terminate()
so not performing any nethack-specific cleanup. However, since they
run before the game starts, there wasn't much cleanup being overlooked.
chdirx() takes a boolean as second argument but all its callers were
passing int (with value of 1 or 0, so it still worked after being
implicitly fixed by prototype). Change them to pass TRUE or FALSE.
argcheck() was refusing (argc,argv[]) with count of 1 but then it was
checking 0..N-1 rather than 1..N-1, so it tested whether argv[0] was
an argument instead of skipping that as the program name. Change to
allow count of 1 with modified argv that has an option name in argv[0].
That happens to fit well with how early_options() wanted to use it.
I wanted to be able to specify -windowtype:foo on the command line so
that I didn't have to use "NETHACKOPTIONS='windowtype:foo' nethack"
and it turned out that such an option already exists, as "-wfoo".
I either never knew about that or had completely forgotten it. Anyway,
this makes specifying windowtype be more versatile.
"-wX11" still works; now "-w X11", "-windowtype=X11", "-windowtype:X11"
work too, with "--" variations of the latter too also supported. The
long name can be truncated to any leading substring of "windowtype",
although it has to be at least "wi" for "--"; "--w" is rejected.
Also, any errors reported while processing the command line are
treated like config file processing errors rather than just delivered
with raw_printf(). On tty at least, they used to vanish when the
screen cleared to start the game, with no chance to read them. Here's
an example from after this change. It sets windowtype to tty and then
overrides that with X11.
|% ./nethack --w:Qt --win tty -wX11 -windowtype
|
|
| * Unknown option: --w:Qt.
| * Window type [nothing] not recognized. Choices are: tty, curses, X11, Qt.
|
|2 errors on command line.
|
|
|Hit return to continue:
This should probably be better integrated with argcheck() or vice
versa but the only change to that was a couple of formatting bits.
Anything that already worked should continue to work just the same,
aside from the improvement to the error feedback.
If the first monster the hero kills is killed by the hero's first hit
with a wielded weapon, report the hit first and kill second instead of
the other way around. Not as hard to manage as I feared, but bound to
be more fragile than the simpler handling that produced the odd order.
Also while testing it I knocked something into a polymorph trap and it
changed form without any feedback. Give foo-changes-into-bar message
if the hero is moving and can see it happening. It isn't needed with
a monster moves deliberately into a polymorph trap but probably would
be useful when that's is unintentional.
The "<hero> enters the dungeon" log message had a trailing period but
other log messages don't have sentence punctuation, so take that off.
If you want to declare a pointer which the address pointed to is constant,
you should declare it as like `static const char *const var = "...";`.
This commit supplies missing `const` and prevents some programming
error in the future.
moveloop() has been calling restore_attrib() every turn, and
restore_attrib() loops through all six characteristics every time
to check for ones that have temporary adjustments timing out. But
ATIME(characteristic) is never set anywhere and no time outs would
occur. So delete the call to restore_attrib() from moveloop().
This leaves that no-longer-called routine in place and updates it
to handle Wounded_legs properly in case it ever does get used.
Also, add a comment about "restore ability" not fixing temporarily
lost characteristics due to hunger or wounded legs. And update
unfixable_trouble_count() to check for those so that restore ability
won't say "you feel great" when it fails to fix them.
This fixes the messages displayed when, e.g., the hero becomes
unburdened as a consequence of a corpse rotting away. (There are no
gameplay changes; the effective burden level is fixed between turns
under both the old and new mechanisms, and any other use of it will
recalculate it prior to using it.)
Not changed: the interaction of overexert_hp with burden changes due
to timeout. You were holding the corpse during your turn, so even if
it rots away at the end of the turn, you can still pass out from the
exertion you applied during that turn.
'moves' is actually turns and there hasn't been any straightforward
way to track actual hero moves. Add hero_seq for that. It isn't a
counter but is distinct each time the hero makes a move. I wanted
it for curses ^P support but so far use it for checking stethoscope
usage and for shopkeeper behavior when items in a shop are broken by
the hero.
Increment EDITLEVEL due to change in save file contents.
Teleporting a monster only updated the map. Give a message
so blind players can get the same information.
Making a monster invisible gives the same message, if you
cannot detect invisible.
Several other places where monsters teleported themselves
now also give the same message.
The hero in an aquatic polyform loses HP for time spent out of the
water; allow magical breathing to prevent this, just as it allows the
hero in her non-aquatic natural form to breathe underwater.
Also add a similar rule for monster fish-out-of-water HP loss, even
though currently monsters can't use amulets of magical breathing and
there's no non-breathing fish/eel -- just in case this changes at some
point.
When using a menu to drop or put in items into a container,
allow putting in the item (or items) you picked up previously,
by selecting the 'P' entry from the item class menu
Inspired by the itemcat patch by Stanislav Traykov.
Invalidates saves and bones.
It's redundant with g.moves, so there is no more need for it.
Way, way back, it looks like g.moves and g.monstermoves can and did
desync, where g.moves would track the amount of moves the player had
gotten (and would therefore increase faster if the player were hasted)
and g.monstermoves would track the amount of monster move cycles, aka
turns. But this has not been the case for a long time, and they both
increment together in the same location in allmain.c. There are no
longer any cases where they will not be the same value.
This is a save-breaking change because it changes struct
instance_globals, but I have not updated the editlevel in this commit.
Object bypass flag is used to check if an object was already
handled in an iteration loop, in cases where the linked list order
may change during iteration. The flags should never stay set
past a turn, if any were used.
Reset the bypass flags at the beginning of the main loop, without
checking g.context.move -flag; that flag gets reset if hero lifesaved.
The code has been assuming that time_t is some number of seconds.
That's valid for traditional Unix systems and for Posix compliant
systems but is not something guaranteed by the C standard. (We ran
into a long time ago when trying out an alternate way to calculate
phase of moon. That code made a similar assumption and broke one
of the ports.)
'ubirthday' also warrants being re-done but I've run out of energy.
This evolves and hopefully eases the game-build requirements by
removing game-compile dependencies on any header files generated
by the makedefs utility, including:
date.h dependency and its inclusion is removed and comparable functionality
is produced at runtime via new file src/date.c.
pm.h dependency and its inclusion is removed and comparable functionality is
produced by moving the monster definitions from monst.c into new header
file called monsters.h and altering them slightly. The former pm.h header
file #define PM_ values are now replaced with appropriate emitted enum
entries during the compiler preprocessing.
onames.h dependency and its inclusion is removed and comparable functionality
is produced by moving the object definitions from objects.c into new header
file called objects.h and altering them slightly. The former onames.h header
file #define values are now replaced with appropriate emitted enum entries
during the compiler preprocessing.
artilist.h has been slightly altered, and the former onames.h artifact-related
header file #define ART_ values are now replaced with appropriate emitted enum
entries during the compiler preprocessing.
makedefs can still produce date.h (makedefs -v), pm.h (makedefs -p), and
onames.h (makedefs -o) for reference purposes. They won't be used during
the compiler.
The other uses for makedefs remain. They are used to prepare external
file content that the game utilizes, not prerequisite code for the
compile:
makedefs -d (database)
makedefs -r (rumors)
makedefs -h (oracles)
makedefs -s (epitaphs, engravings, bogusmons)
date.c
Pull the code for date/time stamping from mdlib.c into date.c.
Set date.o to be dependent on source files, header files, and .o files
so that date.o is rebuilt from date.c when any of those changes, thus
ensuring an accurate date/time stamp. It also includes git sha
functionality formerly done by makedefs writing #define directives
into include/date.h. For unix it passes the git info on
the compile line for date.c (via sys/unix/hints/linux.2020, macOS.2020)
nethack --dumpenums (optional, but on by default)
Allow developer to obtain some internal enum values from NetHack
without having to resort to an external utility such as
makedefs.
Uncomment #define NODUMPENUMS in config.h to disable this.
The updates to sys/windows/Makefile.gcc have not been tested yet.
Adds the following lua functions:
- nh.pushkey("x")
Pushes a key into the command queue. Support is spotty,
currently only the keys handled in rhack.
- nh.doturn()
Runs one turn of main loop, or if optional boolean param
is true, until g.multi == 0
- nh.monster_generation(false)
Disable monster generation, and kill off all monsters.
Adds a testmove.lua script to test hero movement. Currently
covers only hjklyubn and HJKLYUBN.
Allows the fire-command to autowield a launcher; it will now
do either swapweapon or wield an appropriate launcher, if you
have ammo quivered.
This assistance can be turned off with the fireassist boolean option.
Adds a rudimentary command queue, which allows the code to add keys
or extended commands into the queue, and they're executed as if
the user did them. Time passes normally when doing the queue,
and the queue will get cleared if hero is interrupted.
Adds possible callbacks for "start_new_game", "restore_old_game",
"moveloop_turn", and "game_exit" which when defined, will be called
from core code at the appropriate time.
Adds lua hooks for dump_fmtstr (only if DUMPLOG), dnum_name, u.moves,
u.uhave_amulet, and u.depth.
If 'perm_invent' is preset in player's options, have X11 show the
persistent inventory window from the start instead of waiting for
an 'i' command. moveloop() prolog needed a tweak do deal with it
cleanly.
Require WC_PERM_INVENT in order to honor the perm_invent option.
X11 and curses already set that, tty and curses don't support it,
so only Windows GUI needed to be updated for it.
Use a linked list to store stair and ladder information, instead
of having fixed up/down stairs/ladders and a single "special" (branch)
stair.
Breaks saves and bones.
Adds information to migrating objects and monsters for the dungeon
and level where they are migrating from.
A check into github issue 364 confirmed that
ba6edbe5dc
had incorrectly updated the bwrite sizeof entry for sysflags.
The SYSFLAGS and MFLOPPY code is all in the outdated part of the tree, so just
remove it rather than re-correct it.
Closes#364Closes#207
Handling botl updates for 'time' was inconsistent. Set the flag to
do that when moves is incremented (where the update is suppressed if
running) or when running stops short.
losehp() would cancel running/traveling if called when in normal form
but not if called when polymorphed, so theoretically you could take
damage and keep on running. I don't have a test case to verify that.
Provide a way to communicate additional behaviors and/or appearances
desired from NetHack window port menus.
This is foundation work for changes to follow at a future date.
There are two executables int the windows binary, each of which
have different options and capabilities. Sharing of one dat/options
file hasn't really been an accurate approach.
Produce that information dynamically for the Windows exe files.
This impacts alt-v results.
Report complained that having autoopen not work when fumbling was
inconvenient and mentioned that the "ouch! you bump into a door"
result didn't take any time. This updates the documentation to
state that autoopen won't work while fumbling (so the inconvenient
behavior persists) but changes movement so that bumping into a door
now takes time. (Despite "ouch!", it doesn't inflict any damage.)
Also, document the recently added autounlock option.
When the hero has random clairvoyance, the code used
| (moves % 15) == 0 && rn2(2) != 0
(where 'moves' is actually the turn number) to decide when it would
kick in and show a portion of the map. If the hero was fast enough
to get an extra move when the turn value met the (moves % 15) == 0
condition then clairvoyance could happen twice (or more if poly'd)
on the same turn.
The changes (one new field, reordering a few others) in 'struct
context' invalidate existing 3.7.0-x save files.
Fixes#266
Some support of new code #defines to faciliate cross-compiling:
OPTIONS_AT_RUNTIME If this is defined, code to support obtaining
the compile time options and features is
included. If you define this, you'll also have
to compile sys/mdlib.c and link the resulting
object file into your game binary/executable.
CROSSCOMPILE Flags that this is a cross-compiled NetHack build,
where there are two stages:
1. makedefs and some other utilities are compiled
on the host platform and executed there to generate
some output files and header files needed by the
game.
2. the NetHack game files are compiled by a
cross-compiler to generate binary/executables for
a different platform than the one the build is
being run on. The executables produced for the
target platform may not be able to execute on the
build platform, except perhaps via a software
emulator.
The 2-stage process (1. host, 2.target) can be done
on the same platform to test the cross-compile
process. In that case, the host and target platforms
would be the same.
CROSSCOMPILE_HOST Separates/identifies code paths that should only be
be included in the compile on the host side, for
utilities that will be run on the host as part of
stage 1 to produce output files needed to build the
game. Examples are the code for makedefs, tile
conversion utilities, uudecode, dlb, etc.
CROSSCOMPILE_TARGET Separates/identifies code paths that should be
included on the build for the target platform
during stage 2, the cross-compiler stage. That
includes most of the pieces of the game itself
but the code is only flagged as such if it must
not execute on the host.
If you don't define any of those, things should build as before.
One follow-on change that is likely required is setting the new dependency
makedefs has on src/mdlib.c in Makefiles etc.
More information about the changes:
makedefs
- splinter off some of makedefs functionality into a separate file
called src/mdlib.c.
- src/mdlib.c, while included during the compile of makedefs.c
for producing the makedefs utility, can also be compiled
as a stand-alone object file for inclusion in the link step
of your NetHack game build. The src/mdlib.c code can then
deliver the same functionality that it provided to makedefs
right to your NetHack game code at run-time.
For example, do_runtime_info() will provide the caller with
the features and options that were built into the game.
Previously, that information was produced at build time on the
host and stored in a dat file. Under a cross-compile situation,
those values are highly suspect and might not even reflect the
correct options and setting for the cross-compiled target
platform's binary/executable. The compile of those values and
the functionality to obtain them needs to move to the target
cross-compiler stage of the build (stage 2).
- date information on the target-side binary is produced from
the cross-compiler preprocessor pre-defined macros __DATE__
and __TIME__, as they reflect the actual compile time of the
cross-compiled target and not host-side execution of a utility
to produce them. The cross-compiler itself, through those
pre-defined preprocessor macros, provides them to the target
platform binary/executable. They reflect the actual build
time of the target binary/executable (not values produced
at the time the makefiles utility was built and the
appropriate option selected to store them in a text file.)
- most Makefiles should not require adding the new file
src/mdlib.c because util/makedefs.c has a preprocessor
include "../src/mdlib.c" to draw in its contents. As previously
stated though, the Makefile dependency may be required:
makedefs.o: ../util/makedefs.c ../src/mdlib.c
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Add
--showpaths
early option to show where NetHack is expecting to find certain files
without starting up a game. It exits afterwards.
Windows sample (for illustration only, locations may differ for you):
Variable playground locations:
[hackdir ]="C:\Users\JohnDoe\NetHack\3.6\"
[leveldir ]="C:\Users\JohnDoe\AppData\Local\NetHack\3.6\"
[savedir ]="C:\Users\JohnDoe\AppData\Local\NetHack\3.6\"
[bonesdir ]="C:\ProgramData\NetHack\3.6\"
[datadir ]="C:\personal\nhdev\363\test\binary\"
[scoredir ]="C:\ProgramData\NetHack\3.6\"
[lockdir ]="C:\ProgramData\NetHack\3.6\"
[sysconfdir]="C:\ProgramData\NetHack\3.6\"
[configdir ]="C:\Users\JohnDoe\NetHack\3.6\"
[troubledir]="C:\Users\JohnDoe\NetHack\3.6\"
Your system configuration file (in sysconfdir):
"C:\Users\JohnDoe\NetHack\3.6\sysconf"
Your system symbols file (in sysconfdir):
"C:\Users\JohnDoe\NetHack\3.6\symbols"
Your personal configuration file (in configdir):
"C:\Users\JohnDoe\NetHack\3.6\.nethackrc"
Linux (for illustration only, locations may differ for you):
Your system configuration file:
"/home/johndoe/nh/install/games/lib/nethackdir/sysconf"
Your system symbols file:
"/home/johndoe/nh/install/games/lib/nethackdir/symbols"
Your personal configuration file:
"/home/johndoe/.nethackrc"