'nethack --show' is rejected, which is ok, but the feedback is
'prscore: bad arguments (2)' which is pretty confusing.
Reject any --s unless it's the start of --scores or --showpath[s].
'nethack --show' will be rejected as "Unknown option: --show."
'nethack -show' is still accepted and will report that it can't find
any scores for how as it always has (assuming that there aren't any
score entries for "how" :-).
This does not fix the actual problem that is causing the warnings.
It merely suppresses the hundreds of warnings until the actual
problem is corrected.
If there is no NROFF_FLAGS defined in a hints file, there should be
no change in behavior.
At this time, only sys/unix/hints/linux.370 sets NROFF_FLAGS.
Having source files with the same name in different subdirectories
won't work because their object files would conflict, but don't allow
the failure to be because depend.awk left out the conflicting rules.
No change in behavior from the most recent commit.
When calling panic() or impossible(), create the option
of opening a browser window with most of the fields
already populated. Code for MacOS and linux is included;
other ports are affected by argument change to early_init
which are done but not tested.
To enable, define CRASHREPORT in config.h and set
CRASHREPORTURL in sysconf to (for the moment at least)
http[s]://www.nethack.org/common/contactcr.html
Adds --grep-defined option to makedefs for Makefiles.
Adds "bid" (binary identifier), an MD4 of the main nethack
binary. This is ONLY for helping (in the future) contact.html
to set the "NetHack from" field automatically for our own
binaries. This can be faked, but the user can lie so nothing
lost. There's nothing magic about MD4; other ports can use
anything that prodcues a long apparently random string we can
match against.
- new option --bidshow for us to get the MD4 of a
released binary so I can add it to the website.
Only available in wizard mode and not in nethack.6.
- typo macos -> macosx in hints file
No support for packaging builds as I'm not sure what that
would look like.
Adds a javascript helper for MacOS.
Adds a lua helper for linux (and builds and installs
nhlua).
The dependencies in util/Makefile duplicate those in src/Makefile for
objects.o and monst.o but the latter got changed last year and the
change wasn't replicated.
There was an error:
../win/Qt/qt_main.cpp:767:37: error: attempt to use a deleted function
action->setData(actchar);
^
/usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt6/QtCore/qvariant.h:199:5: note: 'QVariant<char *, false>' has been explicitly marked deleted here
QVariant(T) = delete;
^
1 error generated.
I'm hoping the fix applied is the correct one for the error.
Instead of adding extra complexity to deal with something that had
become too complicated, simplify. Having veryold() conditionally
close the lock file made sense when the usage was just
'if (veryold()) goto gotlock;' but didn't after that became
'if (veryold() && clearoldlocks()) goto gotlock;'. Have veryold()
always leave the file open and getlock() always close it.
Fix another analyzer complaint, about potentially calling close(fd)
for a file descriptor number that has already been closed. This time
it was right, although I think nothing bad would happen if that
occurred.
With the original code, veryold() might succeed and close the file,
then clearoldlocks() fail so skip 'goto gotlock'. Then the already
closed file would passed to close() again.
Normal usage still works. No testing using failure conditions has
been done.
The curses interface was using genl_putmixed() which doesn't
preserve the symbol actually used for a glyph on the display.
This is a first-attempt at implementing curses_putmixed().
On Linux you'll need to distribute the Makefiles again
sh sys/unix/setup.sh sys/unix/hints/linux.370
On macOS, you'll need to distribute the Makefiles again
sh sys/unix/setup.sh sys/unix/hints/macOS.370
A bunch of new warnings appeared by default on macOS compiler provided with Xcode,
including on every usage of sprintf(). Suppress those for now.
The issues with utilizing WANT_ASAN=1 on the make command line with macOS seem
to be resolved in this latest version, so allow it to be specified. Don't specify
it if using a problematic clang version.
- Move secondary preprocessor defines down further in config.h
so that they can be overridden via [platform]conf.h which is
included from global.h, specifically:
LIVELOGFILE when LIVELOG is defined
DUMPLOG_FILE when DUMPLOG is defined
- Minimize platform-specific, or compiler-specific code in hack.h and decl.h.
- reorganize src/decl.c to align with include/decl.h.
- a new header file cstd.h added, containing calls to C99
standard header files.
- hack.h, decl.h, and decl.c have been cleaned up and had code
moved so that things line up as follows:
hack.h defines values that are available to all
NetHack source files, contains enums for use in all
NetHack source files, and contains a number of
struct definitions for use in all NetHack source files.
It does not contain variable declarations or variable
definitions.
decl.h contains the extern declarations for variables that
are defined in decl.c. These variables are global and
available to all NetHack source files. The location of
the variables within decl.h was random, so give it some
order for now.
decl.c contains the definition of the variables declared in
decl.h, and initializes them where appropriate. The
variable definitions are laid out in much the
same order as their declarations in decl.h.
- wintty.h: There were some varying terminal-related prototypes in
system.h, and that was the only thing left that demanded that
system.h be included. Those have been replaced by an #include
<term.h> in include/wintty.h to get the more current (and hopefully
more correct) prototypes, rather than hardcoding them in NetHack
sources.
For edge-case platform compatiblity, there is no #include <term.h>
if the build defines NO_TERMCAP_HEADERS. In that case one set of
hardcoded prototypes is still used in include/wintty.h.
The added #include "term.h" is also bypassed for NO_TERMS builds (builds
that don't link to terminfo/termcap at all, but still present a tty
interface using platform or window-port specific functions to fulfill
the same role as that of terminfo/termcap).
- some scattered, unnecessary #include "integer.h" were removed from
various files, since that's always included in current NetHack-3.7
sources, either directly from config.h or indirectly from #include
"hack.h".
- system.h references removed.
- new cstd.h added; the #include "system.h" references in Makefiles
and project files (Xcode, visual studio), were replaced
with #include "cstd.h" references. A "make depends" is probably
warranted.
Also:
- Use of <term.h>, which defines clear_screen() as a macro, conflicts
with an actual function with that name in win/tty/termcap.c. The most
straight-forward course of action was to rename the NetHack function,
and change the references to it, from clear_screen() to
term_clear_screen(), so that was done.
When the address sanitizer is in use for gcc, clang, or visual studio,
(-fsanitize=address) define the NetHack preprocessor symbol USING_ADDRESS_SANITIZER.
make[1]: *** No rule to make target `../util/uudecode', needed by `/Users/testuser/nethack/NHsource/bundle/NetHackTerm.app/Contents/Resources/NetHackTerm.icns'. Stop.
make: *** [bundle] Error 2