The sections of the dumplog can be broadly organized into two
categories: 'current state' and 'game overview'. Current state includes
information about what exactly was happening when the game ended: the
map, recent messages, current inventory, and current attributes. Game
overview is more like a history of the game up to that point: vanquished
monsters, extinct species, conducts, and dungeon overview.
All the current state sections are listed first, followed by the game
overview sections -- I'm not sure if this was a deliberate move to break
the dumplog into two distinct 'chapters', but it's convenient for
readers who may only want to know the circumstances of a death without
seeing the nitty-gritty details of the entire game up to that point.
The one section that wasn't ordered with its category was major events,
which was positioned near the top of the 'current state' group, above
the inventory listing. This commit moves it into the 'game overview'
group. I put it at the top, since it can serve as a sort of summary of
the game for those who are interested but don't care about some of the
details of monsters killed, etc.
This replaces the old pushq/saveq arrays (which were used to save
the keys pressed by the user for repeating a previous command)
with a new command queue. This means there's no hard-coded limit
to the saved keys, and it can repeat extended commands which are
not bound to any key.
Make potions of healing and extra healing more useful in the early
game, by upping the average amount of health restored.
Make amulet of life saving restore between 60 and 170 health,
depending on constitution. Previously life saving was the best way
to heal back up to full, even if you had thousands of hp.
Implement the suggestion by entrez to avoid "while helpless" in the
reason for the second death if hero gets killed, life-saved, and
killed again at the same time. Life saving sets 'multi' to -1 which
prevents the hero from moving again until next turn and is intended
to make the sequencing of "you survived that attempt on your life"
work if you're being interrupted during some multi-turn activity.
It used to behave differently when the first death occurred while
engaged in some voluntary multi-turn activity. I've removed that
because I couldn't figure out why; it might need to be put back.
Use 'fuzzymatch(,," -",)' when checking whether the name specified
in a player's wish text matches an artifact name so that extra or
omitted spaces and dashes are ignored. Wishing for "firebrand" will
yield "Fire Brand" and "demon bane" will yield "Demonbane".
Life-saving has been setting u.uhpmax to max(2 * u.ulevel, 10)
and if it took place during level drain that could make u.uhpmax
increase instead of decrease, confusing healing which gets applied
to a monster who has drained the hero with Stormbringer or the
Staff of Aesculapius. Change the setting to be max(u.ulevel, 10)
(removing the times two part) and also have level drain force it
to be set back to previous value if/when it gets increased.
Max HP loss due to strength trying to drop below 3 or to fire trap
or to being hit by Death now uses a mininum max HP of u.ulevel
rather than 1. They don't have the alternate minimum of 10; I'm
uneasy that there are still two different minimum values.
I changed adjattrib() to set the flag to request a status update
before it gave its optional message rather than after so that the
new characteristic value would be visible during the message. That
resulted in not updating status when eating royal jelly changed HP
or max HP after boosting strength. But the same missing update
would have occurred--or rather, failed to occur--without the change
in sequencing if the strength boost causes a change in encumbrance.
Requested by k21971 (hardfought admin): classify the gameover event
as something other than achievement so that live-logging can exclude
it in order to use the xlogfile end-of-game entry instead.
It had been classified as an achievement because that was the only
category being treated as 'major' so written to final dumplog. Give
is a new classification 'dump' which is distinct from achievement
and intended to explicitly request that an event go into dumplog.
The gameover event is the only one in that category, at least for now.
Add a bunch of other classifications besides achievement and dump to
be treated as 'major' for dumplog. The new list is
wish, achieve, umonst (death of unique monster), divinegift,
lifesave (via amulet, not explore-/wizard-mode decline to die),
artifact, genocide, dump
and may still need further tuning. Currently excluded are
conduct (first violation of any conduct), killedpet, alignment
(changed, either via helmet or conversion), minorac (minor
achievement such as level gain or entering the mines), and spoiler
(currently only applies to finding Mines' End luckstone which is
also 'achieve' so will be in dumplog).
This doesn't remove the reference to unimplemented LLC_TURNS that is
mentioned in the template sysconf.
Closes#688
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
Some changes to fix things I noticed in the dumplog referenced by
github issue #687 about showing all logged events under the header
"major events". (This doesn't address that. I figured it was
intentional while #chronicle is having any bugs worked out.)
Sequencing: show the event corresponding to an achievement for
entering a dungeon branch before the livelog-specific event of
entering a level for the first time. You enter the branch before
arriving at the new level.
Missing feedback: the you-won achievement didn't produce any
"ascended" event. That turned out to be a side-effect to suppressing
achievements that take place after the gameover flag has been set
(so blind-from-birth and/or nudist when applicable plus duplicate
obtained-amulet and ascended due to manipulation to reposition the
amulet achievement to be right before ascended so that the alternate
wording it has in the achievements listing looks better). Instead of
just forcing the ascended achievement to produce an ascended event,
this adds a more general game-over event.
While in there, change the classification of attaining level 14 from
minor livelog event to major since questing keys off of it.
Handle thrown or kicked object that's in transit for hangup save and
panic save in addition to normal end of game. Affects ball and chain
placement too, if they've been temporarily taken off the map.
MONITOR_HEAP+heaputil pointed out some unreleased memory. The livelog
stuff wasn't being freed. Not surpringly the data used for collecting
and formatting build-options that just got changed from strdup() to
dupstr() wasn't being freed. And a couple of date/version bits.
Log game events, such as entering a new dungeon level, breaking
a conduct, or killing a unique monster, in a new "Major events"
chronicle. The entries record the turn when the event happened.
The log can be viewed with #chronicle -command, and the entries
also show up in the end-of-game dump, if that is available.
This feature is on by default, but can be disabled by
defining NO_CHRONICLE compile-time option.
This also contains "live logging", writing the events as they
happen into a single livelog-file. This is mostly useful for
public servers. The livelog is off by default, and must be
compiled in with LIVELOG, and then turned on in sysconf.
Mostly this a version of livelogging from the Hardfought server,
with some changes.
This fixes the broken code that was using a boolean as an integer.
I didn't try to track down when it changed or what it looked like
before the change. The intended effect is fairly straightforward;
just padding a bold line with spaces. I've no idea why someone
deciced that that was useful though.
It also fixes something I broke six years ago: tty_exit_nhwindows()
releases the termcap data needed for turning bold on and off, so
raw_print_bold() used by topten() stopped working on tty then.
Not fixed: the code in really_done() for dealing with topten() vs
the 'toptenwin' option really ought to be redone.
There are no longer distinct gendered versions of monsters, so femalenum
is unused (i.e. set to NON_PM) for all roles and races. Take a pass at
removing all uses of/references to femalenum, and rename 'malenum' to
'mnum' since it no longer has any particular association with
gender or sex.
Instead of returning 0 or 1, we'll now use ECMD_OK or ECMD_TURN.
These have the same meaning as the hardcoded numbers; ECMD_TURN
means the command uses a turn.
In future, could add eg. a flag denoting "user cancelled command"
or "command failed", and should clear eg. the cmdq.
Mostly this was simply replacing return values with the defines
in the extended commands, so hopefully I didn't break anything.
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 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.
level-drained below level 1. No "you die" or equivalent, just
straight to being life-saved or to "do you want your possessions
identifed?". Change it to issue "Goodbye level 1." The fact
that it is has been fatal will become obvious. An issue comment
on github pointed out where the fix was needed.
Fixes#511
If the killer and the paralyzer are the same monster, truncate
that to "Killed by a foo, while paralyzed". When not the same,
spell out the paralyzer's monster type instead of using generic
"monster". "Killed by a fox, while paralyzed by a ghoul", or
"Killed by a ghoul, while paralyzed by a ghoul" *if* they were
two different ghouls.
When panictrace feedback occurs due to catching a signal rather
than controlled panic, the backtrace is useless when running the
curses interface unless the terminal gets reset first. Let's
just hope that the signal triggering a panictrace doesn't occur
while resetting the terminal.
Whitelist all the verified existing triggers:
makedefs.c: In function ‘name_file’
attrib.c: one compiler balks at a ? b : c for fmtstring
cmd.c: In function ‘extcmd_via_menu’
cmd.c: In function ‘wiz_levltyp_legend’
do.c: In function ‘goto_level’
do_name.c: In function ‘coord_desc’
dungeon.c: In function ‘overview_stats’
eat.c: one compiler balks at a ? b : c for fmtstring
end.c: one compiler balks at a ? b : c for fmtstring
engrave.c: In function ‘engr_stats’
hack:c one compiler balks at a ? b : c for fmtstring
hacklib.c: one compiler balks at a ? b : c for fmtstring
insight.c: one compiler balks at a ? b : c for fmtstring
invent.c: In function ‘let_to_name’
light.c: In function ‘light_stats’
mhitm.c: In function ‘missmm’
options.c: In function ‘handler_symset’
options.c: In function ‘basic_menu_colors’
options.c: In function ‘optfn_o_autopickup_exceptions’
options.c: In function ‘optfn_o_menu_colors’
options.c: In function ‘optfn_o_message_types’
options.c: In function ‘optfn_o_status_cond’
options.c: In function ‘optfn_o_status_hilites’
options.c: In function ‘doset’
options.c: In function ‘doset_add_menu’
options.c: In function ‘show_menu_controls’
options.c: In function ‘handle_add_list_remove’
pager.c: In function ‘do_supplemental_info’
pager.c: In function ‘dohelp’
region.c: In function ‘region_stats’
rumors.c: sscanf usage
sounds.c: In function ‘domonnoise’
spell.c: In function ‘dospellmenu’
timeout.c: In function ‘timer_stats’
topten.c: In function ‘outentry’, fscanf, sscanf, fprintf usage
windows.c: In function ‘genl_status_update’
zap.c: one compiler balks at a ? b : c for fmtstring
win/curses/cursstat.c: In function ‘curses_status_update’
win/tty/wintty.c: In function ‘tty_status_update’
win/win32/mswproc.c: In function ‘mswin_status_update’
add MALE, FEMALE, and gender-neutral names for individual monster species
to the mons array. The gender-neutral name (NEUTRAL) is mandatory, the
MALE and FEMALE versions are not.
replace code uses of the mname field of permonst with one of the three
potentially-available gender-specific names.
consolidate some separate mons entries that differed only by species into a
single mons entry (caveman, cavewoman and priest,priestess etc.)
consolidate several "* lord" and "* queen/* king" monst entries into
their single species, and allow both genders on some where it makes some
sense (there is probably more work and cleanup to come out of this at some
point, and the chosen gender-neutral name variations are not cast in stone
if someone has better suggestions).
related function or macro additions:
pmname(pm, gender) to get the gender variation of the permonst name. It
guards against monsters that haven't got anything except NEUTRAL naming
and falls back to the NEUTRAL version if FEMALE and MALE versions are
missing.
Ugender to obtain the current hero gender.
Mgender(mtmp) to obtain the gender of a monster
While the code can safely refer directly to pmnames[NEUTRAL] safely in the
code because it always exists, the other two (pmnames[MALE] and
pmnames[FEMALE] may not exist so use:
pmname(ptr, gidx)
where -ptr is a permonst *
-gidx is an index into the pmnames array field of the
permonst struct
pmname() checks for a valid index and checks for null-pointers for
pmnames[MALE] and pmnames[FEMALE], and will fall back to pmnames[NEUTRAL] if
the pointer requested if the requested variation is unavailable, or if the
gidx is out-of-range.
Allow code to specify makemon flags to request female or male (via MM_MALE
and MM_FEMALE flags respectively)to makedefs, since the species alone doesn't
distinguish male/female anymore. Specifying MM_MALE or MM_FEMALE won't
override the pm M2_MALE and M2_FEMALE flags on a mons[] entry.
male and female tiles have been added to win/share/monsters.txt.
The majority are duplicated placeholders except for those that were
separate mons entries before. Perhaps someone will contribute artwork in the
future to make the male and female variations visually distinguishable.
tilemapping via has the MALE tile indexes in the glyph2tile[]
array produced at build time. If a window port has information that the
FEMALE tile is required, it just has to increment the index returned
from the glyph2tile[] array by 1.
statues already preserved gender of the monster through STATUE_FEMALE
and STATUE_MALE, so ensure that pmnames takes that into consideration.
I expect some refinement will be required after broad play-testing puts it to
the test.
consolidate caveman,cavewoman and priest,priestess monst.c entries etc
This commit will require a bump of editlevel in patchlevel.h because it alters
the index numbers of the monsters due to the consolidation of some. Those
index numbers are saved in some other structures, even though the mons[] array
itself is not part of the savefile.
Window Port Interface Change
Also add a parameter to print_glyph to convey additional information beyond
the glyph to the window ports. Every single window port was calling back to
mapglyph for the information anyway, so just included it in the interface and
produce the information right in the display core.
The mapglyph() function uses will be eliminated, although there are still some
in the code yet to be dealt with.
win32, tty, x11, Qt, msdos window ports have all had adjustments done to
utilize the new parameter instead of calling mapglyph, but some of those
window ports have not been thoroughly tested since the changes.
Interface change additional info:
print_glyph(window, x, y, glyph, bkglyph, *glyphmod)
-- Print the glyph at (x,y) on the given window. Glyphs are
integers at the interface, mapped to whatever the window-
port wants (symbol, font, color, attributes, ...there's
a 1-1 map between glyphs and distinct things on the map).
-- bkglyph is a background glyph for potential use by some
graphical or tiled environments to allow the depiction
to fall against a background consistent with the grid
around x,y. If bkglyph is NO_GLYPH, then the parameter
should be ignored (do nothing with it).
-- glyphmod provides extended information about the glyph
that window ports can use to enhance the display in
various ways.
unsigned int glyphmod[NUM_GLYPHMOD]
where:
glyphmod[GM_TTYCHAR] is the text characters associated
with the original NetHack display.
glyphmod[GM_FLAGS] are the special flags that denote
additional information that window
ports can use.
glyphmod[GM_COLOR] is the text character
color associated with the original
NetHack display.
Support for including the glyphmod info in the display glyph buffer
alongside the glyph itself was added and is the default operation.
That can be turned off by defining UNBUFFERED_GLYPHMOD at compile time.
With UNBUFFERED_GLYPHMOD operation, a call will be placed to map_glyphmod()
immediately prior to every print_glyph() call.
For farlook description of a monster, and for "killed by monster"
when game ends, include an indication of the monster's health:
uninjured full health
barely wounded 95%+ health
slightly wounded 80%+
wounded 20%..80%
heavily wounded 20%-
nearly deceased 5%-, or 1HP for really weak monsters
These descriptions and the criteria for choosing which one will
probably need some tuning.
Messages referring to the monster, including combat, do not
include the extra verbosity.
When SCORE_ON_BOTL is enabled, you could tell how much gold is
inside a container with unknown contents by having 'showsore' On
and watching how much the score changed on the status line when
picking the container up.
With to-be-3.7, if game ends without any achievements, the conduct
disclosure prompt is the same as it has always been
Do you want to see your conduct?
If it ends after attaining one achievement (probably entering the
mines or acquiring the second rank title when gaining Xp level 3)
you're asked
Do you want to see your conduct and achievement?
which looks awkward after the fact if 'y' reveals multiple conducts.
Instead of deciding whether to pluralize "conduct(s)", simplify the
prompt when one or more achievements have been attained to be
Do you want to see your conduct and achievements?
That works even when there is only one achievement.
When a zombie (or lich) kills a monster in melee without a weapon,
the monster can rise few turns later as a zombie.
The only creatures that can be zombified are ones that actually have
a zombie counterpart monster. A zombie cannot turn a jackal into
a zombie, for instance. But it could turn a shopkeeper into a human
zombie, or a dwarf king into a dwarf zombie.
Zombies will fight with monsters that can be turned into zombies.
Originally this was a SliceHack feature, but this is based on xNetHack
version of it, with some modifications.
The end of game disclosure for inventory was passing want_reply==True
to the inventory display routine. I don't know why because you can't
select anything. This resulted in Qt disclosure showing inventory
with the [Ok] button disabled and blank boxes instead of object
glyphs beside the inv letters. Changing to want_reply==False fixes
both aspects of that.
It has no apparent effect on tty or curses; on X11 (where [Ok] was
already enabled) it disables the [Search] button, a plus. I don't
know whether it might mess up final disclosure for inventory on
WindowsGUI. Or whether any interface which uses perm_invent window
for final inventory disclosure (if there are any) will be adversely
affected.
Tin handling code used tin->cknown to indicate that the variety
(soup, deep fried, pureed, &c) was known, but neither object
identification nor end of game disclosure was setting cknown for
that type of object.
^I behaves as if cknown is set, so the problem was hidden during
times when anyone was likely to be paying attention.
Try to make the tracebacks generated via PANICTRACE's libc method
be more readable. There tends to be a lot of blank space in the
middle of lines, depending on the length of the program's or
libraries' file names, which can make lines wrap and the whole
thing sometimes be harder to make out. Narrow it by squeezing out
some spaces from each line before writing to reduce the chance of
line wrapping. That isn't guaranteed to make things ledgible but
seems to help quite a bit. Also, force the line number inserted
by nethack to be two digits so when spanning from line 9 to line 10
it doesn't cause the field positions to shift by a column. (Using
'#panic' doesn't have enough stack frames to illustrate that.)
I think the original libc formatting was designed for the address
column to hold a 32-bit value ('0x' prefix and 8 hex digits), and
eventually extending that to handle 64 bits ('0x' prefix and 16 hex
digits) made things wider than intended. But the gradual increase
in the length of function names we use is also a factor.
Instead of an assortment of bits, assign numeric indices to the
potential achievements and keep an array of those in the order they
were attained. So disclosure might show the same subset occurring
differently in different games depending on the player's actions.
The encoded field in xlogfile doesn't care about that and remains
the same.
Modifies 'struct u', so EDITLEVEL has been incremented and existing
save files are invalidated.
Move enlightenment and conduct from cmd.c to insight.c. Also move
vanquished monsters plus genocided and/or extinct monsters from end.c
to there. And move the one-line stethoscope/probing feedback for
self and for monsters from priest.c to there.
Achievement feedback has been overhauled a bit. When no achievements
have been recorded, the header for them (after conducts) won't be
shown, and when at least one has been recorded, make the prompt for
asking whether to disclose conduct be about disclosing conduct and
achievements. Also, describe achievements in the Guidebook.
I ran out of gas before updating Guidebook.tex; it will catch up to
Guidebook.mn eventually.
Some of the MS-DOS Makefiles haven't been updated yet so linking
without insight.{o,obj} will break there.