This helps avoid a potential chicken-and-egg scenario
with the system configuration file (sysconf).
If sysconf wasn't accessible at the expected location, it
caused an immediate exit, without relaying any helpful
information. That happened even when using:
'nethack --showpaths'
That's particularly unhelpful, because the --showpaths
output might have been useful towards understanding where
NetHack was looking for such things.
That left you without an easy recourse to identify where
the game is looking for the sysconf file. That might be
especially troublesome if you didn't build the game
yourself.
Be more consistent in the use of path separators.
Add a second version of Makefile variables that contain paths,
one with a trailing separator, and one without (prefixed with R_
for use in Makefile rules).
Also, in dat/luahelper,
Updates due to correspond to the Makefile.nmake changes.
Add Makefile variable AWK to use $(AWK) instead of hardcoded awk.
There was a transcription error in the comments in cstd.h for
the standard list of header files, where only the description
remained for <stdlib.h>, not the name of the file itself.
Remove several extraneous inclusions of the standard C99 headers.
Tested on the following afterwards:
Linux (using hints/linux.370) including tty, curses, qt6, and X11
macOS (using hints/macOS.370) including tty, curses, qt5, and X11
Windows MSYS2 using sys/windows/GNUmakefile
Windows Visual Studio using sys/windows/Makefile.nmake
msdos cross-compile on Ubuntu using djgpp cross-compiler
This build command will include line number info, gdb.exe or nhgdb.bat in the package:
make CROSS_TO_MSDOS=1 WANT_DEBUG=1 package
This build command will not include line number info, gdb.exe or nhgdb.bat in the package:
make CROSS_TO_MSDOS=1 package
The WANT_DEBUG=1 will cause the cross-compile to include line
number information in the NetHack executable, useful for
backtraces and gdb debugging sessions.
How a developer can use the optional deploy-to-dosbox target:
make CROSS_TO_MSDOS=1 WANT_DEBUG=1 dosbox=/mnt/c/dosbox deploy-to-dosbox
where dosbox= points to the directory which will be mounted for
your drive in dosbox
THe deploy-to-dosbox recipe ensures that a target copy of gdb.exe
ends up alongside nethack.exe at the target, including:
- placing the source code that gdb requires on the target
in the nhsrc subfolder.
- an nhgdb.bat that supplies the right switches to gdb
for locating the NetHack sources.
ENHANCED_SYMBOLS is defined by default in config.h.
The msdos build tried to #undef ENHANCED_SYMBOLS
in tilemap.c, but doing it in there created a mismatch
between the data struct definition for glyph_map in wintype.h
and the initializers generated in tilemap.c
Move the msdos build catch for ENHANCED_SYMBOLS to
one single place in config1.h so that the code and data agree.
GNU make looks first for a file called GNUmakefile, ahead of
looking for Makefile and then makefile.
Renaming sys/windows/Makefile.mingw32 to sys/windows/GNUmakefile
allows:
o src/GNUmakefile (for use by GNU make) and src/Makefile (for use
Microsoft nmake) to both reside in the src folder during build.
o src/GNUmakefile will be used by GNU make, without having to
explicitly specify "-f GNUmakefile" on the GNU make command line.
o src/Makefile will be used by Microsoft nmake, without having to
explicitly specify "-f Makefile" on the Microsoft nmake command line.
For the gcc build, the movemement of sys/windows/GNUmakefile needs
to be copied to src/GNUmakefile as part of the build process (see
sys/windows/build-msys2.txt).
For the Microsoft Visual Studio command line build with nmake,
sys/windows/Makefile.nmake needs to be copied to src/Makefile as
part of the build process (see sys/windows/build-nmake.txt).
They are both copied to the src folder from their respective
repository source file names when the nhsetup.bat file is used.
There was an issue with Windows mingw build because the function
prototypes were not available. Place them into a distinct
header file nhregex.h and include it from extern.h, and
available for cppregex.cpp to include without the rest of
extern.h (which can give some problems with c++).
gcc has recognized various "magic comments" for white-listing
occurrences of implicit fallthrough in switch statements for
a long time:
The range and shape of "falls through" comments accepted are
contingent upon the level of the warning. (The default level is =3.)
-Wimplicit-fallthrough=0 disables the warning altogether.
-Wimplicit-fallthrough=1 treats any kind of comment as a "falls through" comment.
-Wimplicit-fallthrough=2 essentially accepts any comment that contains something
that matches (case insensitively) "falls?[ \t-]*thr(ough|u)" regular expression.
-Wimplicit-fallthrough=3 case sensitively matches a wide range of regular
expressions, listed in the GCC manual. E.g., all of these are accepted:
/* Falls through. */
/* fall-thru */
/* Else falls through. */
/* FALLTHRU */
/* ... falls through ... */
etc.
-Wimplicit-fallthrough=4 also, case sensitively matches a range of regular
expressions but is much more strict than level =3.
-Wimplicit-fallthrough=5 doesn't recognize any comments.
Plenty of other compilers did not recognize the gcc comment convention,
and up until now the compiler warning for detecting unintended
fallthrough had to be suppressed on other compilers. That's because the code
in NetHack has been relying on the gcc approach, and only the gcc approach.
The C23 standard introduces an attribute [[fallthrough]] for the
functionality, when implicit fallthrough warnings have been enabled.
Several popular compilers already support that, or a very similar attribute
style approach, today, even ahead of their C23 support:
C compiler whitelist approach
--------------------------- -------------------------------------
C23 conforming compilers [[fallthrough]]
clang versions supporting
standards prior to
C23 __attribute__((__fallthrough__))
Microsoft Visual Studio
since VS 2022 17.4.
The warning C5262 controls
whether the implict
fallthrough is detected and
warned about with
/std:clatest. [[fallthrough]]
This adds support to NetHack for the attribute approach by inserting a
macro FALLTHROUGH to the existing cases that require white-listing, so
other compilers can analyze things too.
The definition of the FALLTHROUGH macro is controlled in include/tradstdc.h.
The gcc comment approach has also been left in place at this time.
In case someone switches from NetHack-3.6 to NetHack-3.7 and does
'make spotless' after the switch instead of before, get rid of out
of date lev_comp and dgn_comp.
To update, run "perl DEVEL/nhgitset.pl"
Fixes:
- "nhcommit -a" has been fixed
- NHDT was hardwired in places
- no longer complain about a missing dat directory outside of the
NetHack source tree
- make update of gitinfo atomic
- Replace some hardwired directory separators with OS-dependent constructs
Backwards Incompatibilities:
- NH_DATESUB's DATE() is now Date() to match the other variables
- MSYS2 requires an additional Perl package - the MSYS2 docs have
been updated
New Help System:
- git nhhelp
This command mirrors "git help" for nh* commands.
- See git nhhelp nhsub for general help on substitution variables
New Substitution Variables:
-Brev()
An aBREViation of $PREFIX-Branch$:$PREFIX-Revision$ - this
may help get line length under control in file headers.
-Assert(TYPE=VALUE)
If TYPE does not match VALUE, do not substitute on this line.
TYPE P checks VALUE against nethack.substprefix
-Project(arg)
Returns nethack.projectname if there is no arg and an uppercase
version if arg is uc.
Other New Features:
- Add nethack.projectname
- Documentation updates - see "git nhhelp nhsub"
- On checkout or merge of a branch, check for nhgitset version updates
and provide an optional message to the user.
- Move NH_DATESUB substitutions here from cron job to keep dates in sync
- PREFIX-* keywords now available in NH_DATESUB templates
- Support use of nhgitset.pl from a different repo; note that update
checks will be dependent on keeping the original source repo up-to-date
and in the same location.