Commit Graph

17 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
nhkeni
33a6a9a765 add optionally-built file nhlua to .gitignore 2026-03-04 16:52:04 -05:00
nhmall
a654d08c3b save/restore changes - part 3
This is the third of a series of savefile-related changes.

    This adds early-days experimental support for a completely optional
    'sfctool' utility (savefile conversion tool), to be able to export
    a savefile's contents into a more portable format. There are likely
    to be bugs at this stage. In this initial first-attempt, the export
    format is a very simple ascii output.

    NetHack can be built entirely, without also building this tool.
    NetHack has no dependencies on the tool.

    Attempts were made to minimize duplication of existing NetHack code.
    To achieve that, unfortunately, #ifdef SFCTOOL and #ifndef SFCTOOL
    had to be sprinkled around through some of the existing NetHack
    source code, so that it could be re-used for building the utility.

    The process for building the sfctool typically recompiles the source
    files with #define SFCTOOL and a distinct object file with SF- is
    produced.

sfctool notes:

    Universal ctags is used and required to produce the sfctool utility.

    Some targets were added to the Unix and Windows Makefiles to
    facilitate the build process.

         make sfctool

    That should build a copy in util.

    Note: At present, the Unix Makefiles do not copy sfctool over to the
          NetHack playground during 'make install' or 'make update'.
          Until that gets resolved by someone, The tool will
          have to be manually copied there by the builder/admin if
          desired.
          cp util/sfctool ~/nh/install/games/lib/nethackdir/sfctool

    Also, a separate Visual Studio sfctool.sln solution was written and
    placed in sys/windows/vs. That has has only very limited testing.

    Usage:

      i)  To convert an existing savefile to an exportascii format
          that co-resides with the savefile:

          sfctool -c savefile

          That *must* be executed on the same platform / architecture /
          data model that produced the save file in the first place.

     ii)  To unconvert an existing exportascii format export file to a
          historical format savefile that can then be used by NetHack:

          sfctool -u savefile

          That must be executed on the same target platform / architecture /
          data model that was used to build the NetHack that will
          utilize the save file that results.

     A Windows example:

          sfctool -c Fred.NetHack-saved-game

          That should result in creation of Fred.NetHack-saved-game.exportascii
          from existing savefile:
              %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\NetHack\3.7\Fred.NetHack-saved-game

     A Unix example:

          sfctool -c 1000wizard

          That should result in creation of 1000wizard.exportascii.gz
          from existing savefile in the playground save directory:
              1000wizard.gz

  Current Mechanics:
     1. Makefile recipe, or script uses universal ctags to produce
        util/sf.tags.

     2. util/sftags is built and executed to read util/sf.tags and
        generate: include/sfproto.h and src/sfdata.c.

     3. util/sfctool is built from the following:
        generated file compiled with -DSFCTOOL:
                    src/sfdata.c       -> sfdata.o
        existing files compiled with -DSFCTOOL:
                    util/sfctool.c     -> sfctool.o
                    util/sfexpasc.c    -> sfexpasc.o
                    src/alloc.c        -> sf-alloc.o
                    src/monst.c        -> sf-monst.o
                    src/objects.c      -> sf-objects.o
                    src/sfbase.c       -> sfbase.o
                    src/sfstruct.c     -> sfstruct.o
                    src/nhlua.c        -> sf-nhlua.o
                    util/panic.c       -> panic.o
                    src/date.c         -> sf-date.o
                    src/decl.c         -> sf-decl.o
                    src/artifact.c     -> sf-artifact.o
                    src/dungeon.c      -> sf-dungeon.o
                    src/end.c          -> sf-end.o
                    src/engrave.c      -> sf-engrave.o
                    src/cfgfiles.c     -> sf-cfgfiles.o
                    src/files.c        -> sf-files.o
                    src/light.c        -> sf-light.o
                    src/mdlib.c        -> sf-mdlib.o
                    src/mkmaze.c       -> sf-mkmaze.o
                    src/mkroom.c       -> sf-mkroom.o
                    src/o_init.c       -> sf-o_init.o
                    src/region.c       -> sf-region.o
                    src/restore.c      -> sf-restore.o
                    src/rumors.c       -> sf-rumors.o
                    src/sys.c          -> sf-sys.o
                    src/timeout.c      -> sf-timeout.o
                    src/track.c        -> sf-track.o
                    src/version.c      -> sf-version.o
                    src/worm.c         -> sf-worm.o
                    src/strutil.c      -> strutil.o
2025-05-25 20:38:17 -04:00
nhmall
f4a6da2e52 save/restore changes - part 2
This is the second of a series of changes related to save/restore.

    No EDITLEVEL bump has been included, because although the code
    is changed extensively by this, the content of the savefiles have
    not been changed.

    Push the use of the structlevel bwrite() and mread() function use
    out of the core and into sfstruct.c. This is groundwork for upcoming
    changes.

    In the core, replace the bwrite() and mread() calls with the
    use of type-specific savefile output (Sfo) and savefile
    input (Sfi) macros.  The macros are defined in a new header file
    savefile.h, which also contains the prototypes for the sfo_* and
    sfi_* functions that the macros ultimately expand to. The functions
    themselves are in src/sfbase.c.

    On C99, each Sfo or Sfi macro expansion refers directly to the
    corresponding  type-specific sfo_* or sfi_* function.

    If C23 or later is is use, the majority (all but 3 types) of the
    macros refer to a single _Generic output routine sfo(nhfp, dt, tag),
    and a single _Generic input routine sfi(nhfp, dt, tag), which handles
    the dispatch of the type-specific underlying functions. This was
    somewhat experimental, but turned out to be practical because the
    compiler would gripe if the type for a variable was not included in
    the _Generic when passed as an argument, so it could be fixed.

    This alters the savefile verication process by having a common set
    return values for the related functions such as uptodate(),
    check_version(), etc. The new return values return more information
    about savefile incompatibilities, beyond failure/sucess. The
    additional information will be useful for an upcoming addition.
    The expanded return values are:
     SF_UPTODATE                     (0) everything matched and looks good
     SF_OUTDATED                     (1) savefile is outdated
     SF_CRITICAL_BYTE_COUNT_MISMATCH (2) critical size count mismatch
     SF_DM_IL32LLP64_ON_ILP32LL64    (3) Windows x64 savefile on x86
     SF_DM_I32LP64_ON_ILP32LL64      (4) Unix 64 savefile on x86
     SF_DM_ILP32LL64_ON_I32LP64      (5) x86 savefile on Unix 64
     SF_DM_ILP32LL64_ON_IL32LLP64    (6) x86 savefile on Windows x64
     SF_DM_I32LP64_ON_IL32LLP64      (7) Unix 64 savefile on Windows x64
     SF_DM_IL32LLP64_ON_I32LP64      (8) Windows x64 savefile on Unix 64
     SF_DM_MISMATCH                  (9) some other mismatch
    The callers in the core have been adjusted to deal with the expanded
    return values.

    Other miscellaneous inclusions:

       - go.oracle_loc -> svo.oracle_loc.
       - add a bit (1UL << 30) to  called SFCTOOL_BIT as groundwork
         for changes to follow.
2025-05-25 15:03:13 -04:00
nhmall
bddca2ded5 musl libc build, rather than glibc
We've had reports of a couple of issues building against musl libc.

Issues reported:
  - build procedures utilize cat for Guidebook-creation, and cat
    is deprecated in distros that use musl libc.

  - some of the CRASHREPORT code is using library functions that
    are not available in the musl libc environment. The reported
    functions were backtrace() and backtrace_symbols(), which use
    header file /usr/include/execinfo.h.

So we'll try to accommodate this. Since we don't have a means of
autodetecting the musl libc situation during the build (as of yet), the
builder will have to specify 'make musl=1' on the make command line.

Specifying 'musl=1' on the make command line will:
1. ensure that NOCRASHREPORT gets defined in the C preprocessor.
2. set COLCMD to be '../util/stripbs' instead of 'col -bx'.

Closes #1393
2025-03-10 17:14:24 -04:00
Keni
55eed7c19a Ignore lua .dll files. 2024-09-06 12:03:18 -07:00
nhmall
d292ad7d17 update util/.gitignore 2023-12-20 18:48:17 -05:00
nhmall
86368148bf soundlib in the Makefile hints updated
Move pieces of the Makefile hints sound-related changes that
are not macOS-specific from sys/unix/hints/macOS.370 to some new
include files. The WANT_MACSOUND block stays in
sys/unix/hints/macOS.370 because it is system-specific.

Before this change, the various Makefiles were assembled via
hints files macOS.370 or linux.370. Both were using included
portions from the following files in the sys/unix/hints/include
directory, in this sequence:

    -INCLUDE multiw-1.370
    -INCLUDE multiw-2.370
    -INCLUDE compiler.370
    -INCLUDE multiw-3.370
    -INCLUDE cross-pre.370
    -INCLUDE gbdates-pre.370
    -INCLUDE gbdates-post.370
    -INCLUDE cross-post.370

After this change, the various Makefiles will still be assembled
via hints files macOS.370 or linux.370. They will continue to use
included portions from the following files in the
sys/unix/hints/include directory, but with three additional
include files related to sound and soundlibs. This is the new
sequence:

    -INCLUDE multiw-1.370
    -INCLUDE multiw-2.370
    -INCLUDE compiler.370
    -INCLUDE multiw-3.370
+   -INCLUDE multisnd1-pre.370
    -INCLUDE cross-pre.370
    -INCLUDE gbdates-pre.370
+   -INCLUDE multisnd2-pre.370
    -INCLUDE gbdates-post.370
+   -INCLUDE multisnd-post.370
    -INCLUDE cross-post.370

The include mechanism continues to allow common portions that can
be shared between macOS and Linux to be maintained in a single
place only, with minimal duplication. Now, that has been extended
to include Makefile lines related to sounds and soundlib.
2023-01-28 22:43:48 -05:00
nhmall
c67783dfd5 trailing whitespace 2021-09-20 09:32:40 -04:00
nhmall
02c43fc927 Merge branch 'NetHack-3.6' 2019-12-15 18:03:19 -05:00
nhmall
a2a000656f mistake file 2019-12-15 17:59:48 -05:00
nhmall
ff39e44276 resolve 48 warning building on Mac OS X 2019-11-28 22:48:57 -05:00
Ray Chason
8dbaafbb7b Ignore Win32 build products 2018-09-10 21:13:10 +03:00
PatR
8f0252c5d8 update util/.gitignore
Tell git to ignore the presence of the heaputil program in util/.
(It lives in NHinternal/devteam/util/heaputil.c but working with it
from there is inconvenient.)
2015-11-09 18:37:00 -08:00
PatR
23a671147f tiles-related build stuff
* Add missing entry for include/tile.h to (top)/Files; also
  add new entry for generated file util/tiletxt.c (Unix only);
* Add several missing entries for tile utility programs that
  can be built by sys/unix/Makefile.utl to util/.gitignore;
* Update sys/unix/Makefile.utl to build 'tilemap' differently so
  that it won't leave behind an unwanted subdirectory tree under OSX:
    util/tilemap.dSYM/
    util/tilemap.dSYM/Contents/
    util/tilemap.dSYM/Contents/Info.plist
    util/tilemap.dSYM/Contents/Resources/
    util/tilemap.dSYM/Contents/Resources/DWARF/
    util/tilemap.dSYM/Contents/Resources/DWARF/tilemap
  It now generates util/tiletxt.c on the fly, to be compiled into
  tiletxt.o, so that tilemap.c can be compiled in the ordinary
  manner and tilemap.o can be kept around for dependency checking.
  (Creating real source file win/share/tiletxt.c would be a little
  bit cleaner, but it's effectively two lines long so seems silly
  to be in the source distribution.)  I looked to see whether I
  could find a linker or compiler option to suppress that stuff but
  failed.  I'm sure something of the sort must exist but didn't
  pursue it.  Someday I might actually learn about how OSX works....
2015-05-03 00:47:10 -07:00
Pasi Kallinen
ee5002210f Fix gitignored 2015-04-13 08:30:47 +03:00
keni
b598c83767 Update .gitignore files. 2015-02-26 16:35:55 -05:00
warwick
0e46369056 Ignore generated files. 2002-01-18 02:50:06 +00:00