- 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 Those have been replaced by an #include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.
Instead of using index() macro defined to strchr, use C99 strchr.
Instead of using rindex() macro defined to strrchr, use C99 strrchr.
If you want to try building on a platform that doesn't offer those
two functions, these are available:
define NOT_C99 /* to make some non-C99 code available */
define NEED_INDEX /* to define a macro for index() */
define NEED_RINDX /* to define a macro for rindex() */
Issue #838 from clausecker, relayed by copperwater: old workarounds
for lack of type 'time_t' from pre-standard days aren't suitable any
more. One of the instances was incorrect (diagnosed by entrez) and
no one had noticed for years (or possibly just ignored a compiler
warning).
Remove most of the old cruft from hacklib.c and some from system.h
but put in commented workarounds in unixconf.h in case someone needs
to resurrect it. It would have been better to do things this way
back in the old days.
Resurrecting some non-Unix port might need to clone the unixconf.h
bits in its own *conf.h, but that probably won't be necessary for a
standard C compliant system.
Closes#838
Eliminate a couple of compile warnings produced when DEF_PAGER is
defined: unixmain.c: g.catmore=DEF_PAGER; wintty.c: fd=open(...).
Override its use when DLB is also defined since an external pager
could access 'license' but not 'history', 'opthelp', &c when those
are in the dlb container file.
In the commented out value for DEF_PAGER, show a viable value for
the default configuration these days.
Provide a hook to inhibit unixconf.h from defining SUSPEND
without the need to modify it: #define NOSUSPEND in config.h
or add -DNOSUSPEND to CFLAGS. Similar to long-standing NOSHELL
for inhibiting SHELL.
roll parts of pr385 into source tree
This does not take the PR as is.
Unlike the PR, this streamlines and minimizes the integration somewhat:
- use hints/include mechanism instead of creating alternative
Makefile.dat, Makefile.src, Makefile.top, Makefile.utl in sys/lib;
those would have been a maintenance nightmare.
- don't have alternative mkmkfile.sh and setup.sh in sys/lib.
- sys/lib/libnethackmain.c differed from sys/unix/unixmain.c by
very little, so just place a small bit of conditional code at the
top of sys/unix/unixmain.c instead.
- changed the conditional code bits from __EMSCRIPTEN__ to
CROSS_TO_WASM.
- You should be able to build the wasm result by:
cd sys/unix ; sh setup.sh hints/linux.2020 ; cd ../..
make fetch-lua (<-one time)
make WANT_LIBNH all
- You should be able to build LIBNBH by:
cd sys/unix ; sh setup.sh hints/linux.2020 ; cd ../..
make fetch-lua (<-one time)
make CROSS_TO_WASM=1 all
As it is currently coded, winshim.c requires C99.
Redo the UCHAR_P handling from df84da3ec2
(5 weeks ago) and 02b21865fd followup.
The earlier #define was happening too late in the #include sequence;
tradstdc.h is processed before global.h+(vmsconf.h,unixconf.h,...).
Also, DEC C in 'common' mode complains about indented '#' starting a
line but not in column 1. Putting #pragma in column 2 was deliberate
in case of an ancient compiler which doesn't understand that directive.
Splitting the difference via non-indented '# pragma' may or may not
mollify the latter when it's bypassing conditionally excluded code.
When setting up an alternate definition for UCHAR_P to accommodate
DEC C's non-ANSI mode(s), leave the default definition to tradstdc.h.
DEC C's VAXC mode will end up expecting 'unsigned char' rather than
either 'int' or 'unsigned int'. Not applicable for Unix but this
makes similar change there as is being made for VMS.
Suppress Isaac64 on VAX were there isn't an easy way to do 64-bit
arithmetic. (Hard way isn't worth it for just an alternate RNG.)
Eliminate or suppress some diagnostics:
1) In strict ANSI mode, DEC C was reporting that '$' in identifier is
an extension (one time for each file in sys/vms/*.c). (It doesn't do
that for the default 'relaxed ANSI' mode.)
2) DEC C uses WIDENED_PROTOTYPES but widens uchar (unsigned char)
differently depending upon the mode it is operating in. (Applies to
Unix as well as VMS; based on documentation rather than testing.)
Update the comment in tradstdc.h about WIDENED vs UNWIDENED_PROTOTYPES.
An old comment in config1.h about a problem with the earliest version
of DEC C was probably based on an incorrect assumption of what was
really going, but I have no way to go back in time to verify that....
We aren't defining BSD for OSX but we probably should be. This doesn't
go that far, just changes a couple of __APPLE__ for MACOSX (set up in
config1.h) and defines DEV_RANDOM as "/dev/random".
Rand() was typically defined to random() or to rand().
gcc seems to provide a random() to link to on linux
when sys/share/random.c is linked in, but other platforms
such as Windows got an undefined refence to random()
when RANDOM wasn't defined.
The only direct use seems to be in get_rnd_txt() these
days, in rumors.c
Under the USE_ISAAC64 config, neither srandom()
nor srand() are being invoked to seed those routines,
and it really should be using isaac64 when USE_ISAAC64
is defined anyway.
move some system-specific seed-related stuff from hacklib.c to
a system-specific source file and #define SYS_RANDOM_SEED to
utilize it during build.
Windows changes for random seed generation using
crypto next gen (CNG) api routines.
Corresponding vms changes due to disentangling of VMS and
unix when the unix seed bits got moved (untested).
Linux and BSD system have random number source devices that can be used
as source for a unguessable seed source.
Other platforms fall back to generate the seed with gettime().
Since no one has come up with a better fix for has_colors() being
implicitly declared, add a hack for suppressing a compiler complaint
about has_colors() on linux and/or sco unix that use sufficiently old
<curses.h>.
Report was right after release of 3.6.0 but my fix at the time broke
compile when using more recent <curses.h>.
Changes to be committed:
modified: doc/fixes36.1
modified: include/unixconf.h
modified: sys/share/ioctl.c
github pull request #19 made reference to resulting code behaviour
being better when windows were resized when USE_WIN_IOCTL was defined.
The logic for including the necessary enabling code in the build in
sys/share/ioctl.c was an explicit "opt-in" strategy, so anything not
deliberately and explicitly listed was not able to take advantae
of the potentially useful code. The need to add #defines to that
list would have been perpetual as new platforms came online, and
unnecessarily restrictive for everything else.
This switches the logic to include the code by default now,
and thus
unless there is an explicit "opt-out" by uncommenting
AVOID_WIN_IOCTL in include/unixconf.h
Some platforms, and we have no way of knowing which ones, may have
to ensure that AVOID_WIN_IOCTL is #define'd.
Incorporate some git information into NetHack so that it
is potentially visible to a player. That's useful when
collecting details about the version that they are
running and, if the gitinfo is present, it can tie the
code to a specific git commit in the repository.
This modifies 'makedefs -v' to check for the presence of a data file
called dat/gitinfo.txt and if it is there, parse out its
contents, then write additional lines to include/date.h beyond
what 'makedefs -v' was previously putting in there, similar to
this sample:
#define NETHACK_GIT_SHA "0c84e564c78e2024e562d39539376ce2e21eec8e"
#define NETHACK_GIT_BRANCH "NetHack-3.6.0"
The contents of an appropriate dat/gitinfo.txt are as follows,
and trailing/leading whitespace is not significant:
githash = 0c84e564c78e2024e562d39539376ce2e21eec8e
gitbranch = NetHack-3.6.0
It also adjusts the contents of the 'v' version information to
include the additional git info when available.
Also adds some hooks DEVEL/hooksdir and a perl file to DEVEL
for simplifying and automating the deposit of dat/gitinfo.txt
so that it generally reflects the most current git commit.
DEVEL/gitinfo.pl can be used to build dat/gitinfo.txt at any
time without doing a commit, merge, or checkout.
perl DEVEL/gitinfo.pl
command line --version and -version support
To complement the extra information being provided in the
version by the 'v' command, this also adds support for the
following new command line arguments:
--version
-version Output the NetHack version string then exit.
--version:paste Output the NetHack version string and also copy it to
-version:paste the platform's paste buffer for insertion somewhere,
then exit.
If the paste variation of -version is requested on a platform that
hasn't incorporated any support for the capability, it will deliver
the version info then an error message, prior to exiting.
To support the extended -version:paste variation, a port needs to:
- provide a port-specific routine to perform
the paste buffer copy in a port code file.
- #define RUNTIME_PASTEBUF_SUPPORT in the include/portconf.h header file.
--skeleton--
void port_insert_pastebuf(buf)
char *buf;
{
/* insert code to copy the version info from buf into
platform's paste buffer in a supported way */
}
macosx and Windows have both added support for RUNTIME_PASTEBUF_SUPPORT
It's occasionally important for public servers to notify
all the players. Sending a mail is not reliable, as not everyone
wants to break conduct, or have mail on.
This adds a compile-time defined filename, which NetHack
will monitor. The contents of the file are in the same
format as SIMPLE_MAIL: "sender:message" on one line.
I tracked down the widest lines, which sometimes occur due to mis-indent
of block comments (see tradstdc.h for an example), and fixed those up.
For the files affected, I also converted tabs to spaces.
I did my best to exempt some of the bigger aligned blocks from the reformatting
using the /* clang-format off */ and /* clang-format on */ tags. Probably some
that shouldn't have been formatted were anyway; if you encounter them, please
fix.
The clang-format tags were left in on the basis that it's much easier to prune
those out later than to put them back in, and it means that, modulo my custom
version of clang-format, I should be able to run clang-format on the source tree
again without changing anything, now that Pat has fixed the VA_DECL issues.
If you run a server, then you know of the somewhat annoying perm_lock
errors that creep up, requiring your attention before anyone else can
start a game.
This patch properly implements fcntl(2) locking on systems that can
handle it (*nix systems), that results in the lock being automatically
released on program termination, whether abnormal or not.
Original patch by Drew Streib, update by Edoardo Spadolini
Some time ago we received a patch submission which attempted to
handle the Alt key for terminals or emulators which transmit two char
sequence "ESC c" when Alt+c is pressed, but I can't find it. I don't
remember the details but recall that it had at least once significant
problem (perhaps just that it was unconditional, although it may have
been implemented in a way which interferred with using ESC to cancel).
This patch reimplements the desired fix, making the new behavior be
conditional on a boolean option: altmeta. That option already exists
for the Amiga port, where it deals with low-level keyboard handling but
essentially affects the same thing: whether Alt+key can be used as a
shortcut for various extended commands. This one affects how the core
processes commands, and is only available if ALTMETA is defined at
compile time. I've defined that for Unix and VMS; other ports don't
seem to need it. (I'm not sure whether "options" created by makedefs
ought to mention it. So far, it doesn't since this isn't something
users are expected to tweak. The setting of the non-Amiga altmeta
option doesn't get saved and restored, so won't affect saved data if
someone does toggle ALTMETA and then rebuild.)
When [non-Amiga] altmeta is set, nethack's core will give special
handling to ESC, but only during top level command processing. If ESC
is seen while reading a command, it will be consumed and then the next
character seen will have its meta bit set. This introduces a potential
problem: typing ESC as a command will result in waiting for another
character instead of reporting that that isn't a valid command. Since it
isn't a valid command, this shouldn't be a big deal, but starting a count
intended to prefix your next command and then typing ESC after deciding
to abort that count runs into the same situation: nethack will wait for
another character to complete the two character sequence expected for
"ESC c". There's not much that can be done with this, other than have
the Guidebook mention that an extra ESC is needed to cancel the pending
count, because digits followed by ESC could actually be a numeric prefix
for Alt+something rather than an attempt to abort the count.
Add SHELLERS - people allowed to use ! command with same syntax as WIZARDS.
Add new hints file for 10.5, since the rules and commands for groups changed
(new commands introduced in 10.4, old ones removed in 10.5; creating a new
user under 10.4 gave you a matching group, in 10.5 it doesn't). Also move
shared build into roughly right place in file system when being installed
for root - don't use ~root.
Makefile.top - don't remove ./-p unless it exists (that's always annoyed me).
fix error invoking macosx.sh
build system.
Anyone who wants to do a build from sys/unix and doesn't want to figure this
out just needs to do:
sh setup.sh hints/unix
instead of:
sh setup.sh
and then continue on as usual.
New files:
sys/unix/NewInstall.unx - the new directions
sys/unix/hints/* - the hints files. There will be more later.
sys/unix/mkmkfile.sh - helper for setup.sh
Summary of changes:
see NewInstall.unx for info on the new build system
introduction of various preprocessor symbols to turn options off that
are defaulted on historically
comment out nethackrc (and similar) entries that still use the old symbol
syntax.
commenting out of Makefile.* lines that now come from hints/unix
GAMEDIR is replaced with HACKDIR so the Makefiles and the C source agree.
Note that I have NOT changed the docs and/or Makefiles for be, msdos, os2,
vms, or winnt. If port maintainers don't then I will, but I can't test
those ports.
nethack.sh now handles the font path automatically
Clean up the preprocessing associated with the
loadable symbol stuff.
Base it on new LOADSYMSETS, rather than on the
previously existing ASCIIGRAPH preprocessor define.
- tile2x11 would not build because drawing.c now depended on strcmpi which
was (via STRNCMPI not being defined) defined to strncmpi which is
implemented in hacklib.c which needs panic which is defined in... I gave up
on tracking down all the loose ends and changed the strcmpi to strcmp,
which means the handling is case sensitive, but it avoids a bunch of
changes to the way the util/Makefile.
- the symhandling changes introduced a chicken and the egg problem for
ASCIIGRAPH on Unix platforms, which was getting the defn from tcap.h but
that does not get included earlier enough nor often enough. I added a defn
to unixconf.h to mimic ntconf.h, since ASCIIGRAPH is normally defined on Unix.
- options.c included an unused decl for a function named graphics_opts
- Unix Makefile was not installing "symbols". I'm assuming this isn't
supposed to get the DLB treatment.
This is an initial round of SAFERHANGUP hangup changes. It introduces
SAFERHANGUP, provides the core framework, and enables it for UNIX.
Window-port changes are provided for win/tty, win/X11 and win/gnome. Qt
changes should be forthcoming after having Warwick look at them.
window.doc is updated so windowport maintainers have an clue what needs to
be done to support SAFERHANGUP.
Finally got around to installing OpenBSD (rev 3.3) in a vmware partition.
Found that several #if BSD's were inappropriate for modern BSD's. Haven't
installed FreeBSD or NetBSD, but based on reading their man pages,
these changes are needed there too. Mostly due to POSIX time() signature.
Switch the default Linux build behavior to use random instead of lrand48,
since lrand48 exhibits some obviously non-random behavior. random() has
been in glibc for a long time. Even if no other changes are made to
nethack's random number generator, this will improve the Linux behavior.