Remove trailing spaces, and remove tabs from the files that had
trailing spaces.
Also, rndorcname() was using a random value to terminate a loop
and was recalculating a new one each iteration.
I think this is needed to avoid inevitable questions/confusion.
Having the git hash in the version string of official binaries
is a very good thing, however.
installing the hooks first
NHgithook.pm: add some warnings if nhversioning can't open files
make sure nhversioning fails before opening gitinfo.txt if it can't get valid
data
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
I've sometimes seen
, and basic NetHack features.
as the last line of the features section from '#version'. I thought
it was due to the way feature phrases were split into individual words
by makedefs, but it turned out to be due to inserting pattern matching
method at run-time. That dynamic options update had a second problem:
if the final phrase "and basic NetHack features" was split across two
lines, the run-time substitution didn't find it and the pattern matching
entry ended up being left out. This fixes both problems, but if future
dynamic entries become more complex, the phrase-splitting/word-wrapping
being done by makedefs may need to be moved into nethack.
Also, add entries for XLOGFILE and PANICLOG to makedefs' options and
re-order a couple of existing ones alphabetically (a failry hopeless
endeavor).
Take the 4-5 line Debian patch and turn it into six dozen lines of
new code. The submitted patch introduces use of several C library
routines that aren't presently in use, so would need testing by all
functional or nearly-functional ports to verify that it wouldn't
break anything. It also switched the formatted build date+time
from localtime to UTC. This makes the code conditional so it can
be ignored by anybody and avoid the risk of breakage. And a lot of
the increase in size is comments attempting to explain what the new
conditional is for: when REPRODUCIBLE_BUILD is defined, makedefs
will use getenv("SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH") (whose value is an integer
representing seconds since 1-Jan-1970) instead of current date+time
when generating date.h. The purpose is to be able to rebuild at a
later date and produce an identical program, which doesn't happen
when compile time gets incorporated into the binary.
I've added some sanity checking to try to make sure the getenv()
value obtained isn't bogus. And the version string put into date.h
will be slightly different, allowing someone who sees date.h or 'v'
output to tell whether SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH was involved: showing
"<port> NetHack <version> last revision <date>" instead of the
usual "... last build <date>".
To test, checkout a new branch for building, make any local edits
to unixconf.h and config.h, including enabling REPRODUCIBLE_BUILD,
git add+commit them, then use
SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH=`git log -1 --pretty=%ct` make install
Other ports will need a bit more work to set up the environment,
but can still use git to track file dates and supply the latest.
Building with alternate configurations could be accomplished by
using tags instead of 'log -1' or by using distinct build branches
where nothing is commited/merged/rebased after completed build.
Unresolved issue: BUILD_DATE, VERSION_ID, and COPYRIGHT_BANNER_C
contain formatted date+time but omit timezone. SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH
is assumed to be UTC but the formatted values don't say so, so it
might appear to be incorrect when compared with local time. We
definitely don't want to start mucking about with timezones within
nethack, so I think we just live with this. It's not an issue for
default configruation where REPRODUCIBLE_BUILD is left disabled.
In light of the recent 'bad options' feedback issue where \r messed
up message display, try to to make newline handling be more consistent.
I'm sure there are lots of places that still handle \n manually, but
it's a start.
The automated reformatting put a space in casts of the form
'(type)(expression)', yielding '(type) (expression)', but it didn't
do that for '(typedef)(expression)'. There are lots of instances of
'(boolean)(expression)'; (uchar) and (xchar) also occur. I haven't
noticed other types, but I haven't looked in very many files yet.
Guard against the possibility of BETA_INFO (or other fields used to
construct the one-line version string) having a percent sign that would
be misinterpreted during pline processing.
I started out cleaning up a bit of lint in the recent run-time options
handling and discovered that pmatchregex wasn't finished. Finish it and
also deal with the version lint. Argument declarations for function
definitions in pmatchregex.c have been switched to K&R style. (The ones
in posixregex.c have been left in ANSI style.)
There wasn't any build rule for pmatchregex.o; now there is (for Unix).
posixregex.o is still the default.
There isn't any build rule for cppregex.o (again, for Unix); the change
to cppregex.cpp is untested.
Changes to be committed:
modified: src/version.c
modified: sys/share/cppregex.cpp
modified: sys/share/pmatchregex.c
modified: sys/share/posixregex.c
modified: util/makedefs.c
Some options in 3.6.0 are determined by what you link with.
The choice of regex support is one.
Let #version show that linked option along with the compile-time options.
I'll push a formatting guide at some point. There may still be
outstanding changes, but please feel free to resolve those as you arrive
a them.
To the best of my knowledge, there is no changes to the actual code
content, but the formatter does have the occasional bug. If you run into
an issue, please fix it!
Show the 'v' output (full version number plus build date-time) as
the first line of '#version' output (build time configuration settings).
It isn't simple to do that when generating dat/options (there's some
port-specific tweaking going), so do it at run-time by processing that
file one line at a time instead of passing it through a pager routine.
This also inserts an "About NetHack" entry as the first choice in
the menu for '?', the way that most Windows programs have interactive
help organized. Picking that gives the same output as using #version.
'make depend' manually updated for Unix and VMS (add dlb.h to version.*).
Move the code to use a nethack menu for restoring a saved game. It
was inline in tty_askname() but is now a separate routine, restore_menu()
in restore.c. There was no port-specific code and only a small amount of
tty-specific code; it should be useable by anyone (but Qt doesn't have to
switch over if it doesn't want to).
The original behaved strangely if there were exactly 26 saved chars;
the "start new game" menu entry ended up using "{" as selection character.
There wasn't any comparable problem at 52; it was limiting the menu to 51
games. Now it will allow 52 (with "start a new game" bumped into "#" if
there are that many), and adds an explicit quit entry (unless there are
52 or more games so that # is already used by new-game, then quit remains
implicit rather than resort to some other none-of-the-above character).
<Someone> complained that his compiler was giving these
two warnings:
weapon.c:835: warning: `static' is not at beginning of declaration
version.c:132: warning: `static' is not at beginning of declaration
The CE ports use makedefs hosted on another platform,
so the version string generated at build time isn't really
appropriate.
Add a way to add information to the version string
at runtime for such ports.
<Someone> wrote:
> Linux, Redhat 7.1 nethack 3.4.0
>
>Please see attached patch file.
>
>I'm attempting to move more stuff into the "read-only" area, in
>preparation for a port to another OS.
makedefs has been listing TIMED_DELAY as one of the options which
affects save file contents even though that hasn't been the case for
a long time. Unfortunately, simply fixing that by itself would break
save file compatibility for anyone who has been building with it set.
This workaround prevents the fix from doing that. And now folks can
rebuild after toggling TIMED_DELAY without unnecessarily invalidating
save and bones files.
Several flags added since 3.4.0 were destined for flags
(to be saved with the game) but were placed in iflags for
savefile compatibility. These include:
boolean lootabc; /* use "a/b/c" rather than "o/i/b" when looting */
boolean showrace; /* show hero glyph by race rather than by role */
boolean travelcmd; /* allow travel command */
int runmode; /* update screen display during run moves */
This patch has no effect unless you define this in your port's
XXconf.h file.
#define SAVEFILE_340_CONVERT /* allow moving of some iflags fields to flags
without destroying savefile compatibility */
Without it, the new flags remain in "iflags." With it, the flags are moved to
"flags" and the structures are converted when the save file is read. There
is no reverse compatibility. If you save the game after conversion, you
can't load the savefile on 3.4.0, only 3.4.1.