Changes:
* Fix indentation.
* Pass strings by const reference.
* Merge Strfnd and WStrfnd into one class instead of copying them.
* Remove trailing spaces.
* Fix variable names.
* Move to util.
* Other miscellaneous style fixes.
* No function overloading
* Adhere coding style and with method names following
lowercase_underscore_style
* Use std::string in external API, handling these is
much more fun
This adds a chat console the server owner can use for administration
or to talk with players.
It runs in its own thread, which makes the user interface immune to
the server's lag, behaving just like a client, except timeout.
As it uses the same console code as the f10 console, things like nick
completion or a scroll buffer basically come for free.
The terminal itself is written in a general way so that adding a
client version later on is just about implementing an interface.
Fatal errors are printed after the console exists and the ncurses
terminal buffer gets cleaned up with endwin(), so that the error still
remains visible.
The server owner can chose their username their entered text will
have in chat and where players can send PMs to.
Once the username is secured with a password to prevent anybody to
take over the server, the owner can execute admin tasks over the
console.
This change includes a contribution by @kahrl who has improved ncurses
library detection.
* Rename everything.
* Strip J prefix.
* Change UpperCamelCase functions to lowerCamelCase.
* Remove global (!) semaphore count mutex on OSX.
* Remove semaphore count getter (unused, unsafe, depended on internal
API functions on Windows, and used a hack on OSX).
* Add `Atomic<type>`.
* Make `Thread` handle thread names.
* Add support for C++11 multi-threading.
* Combine pthread and win32 sources.
* Remove `ThreadStarted` (unused, unneeded).
* Move some includes from the headers to the sources.
* Move all of `Event` into its header (allows inlining with no new includes).
* Make `Event` use `Semaphore` (except on Windows).
* Move some porting functions into `Thread`.
* Integrate logging with `Thread`.
* Add threading test.
This bypass had to be re-enabled as some users reported issues,
even after the iconv build fix.
While utf8_to_wide works well, wide_to_utf8 is quite broken
on android, for some reason, and some devices (unrelated from build
configuration).
Multiplying by a factor of 1/1000.f (rather than dividing by 1000.f) directly
introduces an error of 1 ULP. With this patch, an exact comparison of a
floating point literal with the deserialized F1000 form representing it is now
guaranteed to be successful.
In addition, the maxmium and minimum safely representible floating point
numbers are now well-defined as constants.
Before, our libiconv build was a joke. We first called configure for our own build host system,
then called make, before we executed a Android.mk script we provided as patch. The first "native make"
always failed, and the LIBICONV_LIB file setting in our Makefile didn't match the built one,
resulting in an always-rebuild of iconv.
This commit cleans up this total mess, removes the double-build, and the Android.mk, and properly calls
./configure with the according target platform, and uses a built toolchain.
As we have to deal with the android bug "NDK: Support for prebuild libs with full sonames"
https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=55868
as the 2013 patch
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/libtool-patches/2013-06/msg00002.html
by Google's David Turner wasn't inside the 2011 libtool, we pass -avoid-version to
libtool.
Thanks to the proper build, wide_to_utf8 works for android now, removing us of the need to disable it.
Use wide_to_utf8 and utf8_to_wide instead of wide_to_narrow and narrow_to_wide at almost all places.
Only exceptions: test functions for narrow conversion, and chat, which is done in a separate commit.