If using hints file sys/unix/hints/linux.370 or sys/unix/hints/macOS.370
allow the majority of the boilerplate compile switches to reside in a
compiler response file, instead of on the command line.
Include one of the following on your make command line:
make response=1
or
make resp=1
It can be combined with other make command line options. See
sys/unix/README-hints for further information about those.
The response files that it uses are:
CC (clang or gcc) src/nethack_cc.rsp
CXx (clang++ or g++) src/nethack_cxx.rsp
Note: I think the reduced clutter should actually become the default,
and the override should be noresponse=1 to NOT use it, but I'm
not sure how others feel, so for now, it requires
make resp=1
Feedback on whether that should become the default or not
is welcome.
Tested on Linux with gcc-15 and on Linux with clang-20.
I haven't had a chance to test it on macOS yet.
OpenSUSE Tumbleweed ncurses 6.5 requires the one in
/usr/include/ncursesw/curses.h, if ncursesw is being used.
Otherwise, several needed function prototypes are not there.
Fixes#1427
There are warnings within the qt6 header files if c++20 is not used, for example:
usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt6/QtCore/qfuturesynchronizer.h:21:5: warning: use of the 'nodiscard' attribute is a C++20 extension [-Wc++20-attribute-extensions]
21 | Q_NODISCARD_CTOR_X("Use future.waitForFinished() instead.")
| ^
/usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt6/QtCore/qcompilerdetection.h:972:43: note: expanded from macro 'Q_NODISCARD_CTOR_X'
972 | # define Q_NODISCARD_CTOR_X(message) [[nodiscard(message)]]
| ^
1 warning generated.
qmake6 --version
QMake version 3.1
Using Qt version 6.8.3 in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu
GCC15 switched its default to -std=gnu23 and there's a bug in
pdcursesmod as a result. That impacts MSYS2/Mingw64 NetHack builds.
See: https://github.com/Bill-Gray/PDCursesMod/issues/333
The suggestion there is to force --std=gnu17 as a workaround.
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