Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Patric Stout
7634553d22 Feature: opt-in survey when exiting a game
On first start-up, the game will ask if you want to participate
in our automated survey. You have to opt-in, and can easily opt-out
(via the Options) at any time.

When opt-in, whenever you exit a game, a JSON blob will be send
to the survey server hosted by OpenTTD. This JSON blob contains
information that gives a global picture of the game just played:
- What settings were used
- How many humans vs AIs
- How long the game has been played
- Basic information about the OS / CPU

All this information is kept very generic, so there is no
chance we send private information to our survey server.
Nothing in the JSON blob could identify you as a person; it
mostly tells about the game played. At any time you can see
what the JSON blob includes, by pressing the "Preview Survey
Results" button in-game.
2023-05-14 23:22:02 +02:00
Patric Stout
05df7996a4
Feature: [Actions / CMake] support for generic linux builds (#8641)
These bundles can be opened on any "modern" Linux machine with
a driver that SDL2 supports.

Machines needs at least glibc 2.15, which was released 10 years ago.
It is build with CentOS 7 as base, and only assumes the following
libraries are available on the system:
- libc
- libdl
- libgcc_s
- libpthread
- librt
- libstdc++

All other libraries the game depends on are bundled together with
the game, so users don't need any library installed to use this
bundle. The downside of course is that this increases the binary
size a bit: 30 MiB of libraries are in this bundle.

RPATH is used to make ld-linux find the folder libraries are
stored in; however, system libraries are always used before these,
in the assumption libraries on the user system are more up-to-date.

Using -DOPTION_PACKAGE_DEPENDENCIES=ON switches on packaging
of libraries in the "lib" folder. This requires CMake 3.16 to
be installed; otherwise it will fail.
2021-02-05 12:31:27 +01:00
Patric Stout
d15dc9f40f Add: support for emscripten (play-OpenTTD-in-the-browser)
Emscripten compiles to WASM, which can be loaded via
HTML / JavaScript. This allows you to play OpenTTD inside a
browser.

Co-authored-by: milek7 <me@milek7.pl>
2020-12-15 15:46:39 +01:00
glx22
d1fa6b129c Add: [CMake] Option to only build tools/docs 2020-12-13 22:46:46 +01:00
glx22
a06fe8e8a7 Fix: [CMake] cross-compiling requires native tools 2020-12-04 09:49:31 +00:00
Charles Pigott
348c231e12 Codechange: Make codestyle for CMake files consistent for 'control' statements 2020-09-25 14:43:13 +01:00
glx22
97592c4093 Add: [CMake] Allow renaming of openttd binary 2020-07-02 21:18:14 +02:00
Dan Villiom Podlaski Christiansen
0d46e20bd4 Add: add option for forcing coloured compiler output (useful for Ninja) 2020-06-30 09:43:00 +01:00
Dan Church
506598a80a Fix: [CMake] Fix install paths using GNUInstallDirs 2020-06-18 21:18:53 +01:00
glx22
0b86bd8b03 Fix: CMake option values should be ON/OFF 2020-06-08 09:49:26 +01:00
glx22
3d76677594 Fix: Generate windows installer only for stable releases 2020-06-08 09:49:26 +01:00
Patric Stout
56d54cf60e Add: introduce CMake for project management
CMake works on all our supported platforms, like MSVC, Mingw, GCC,
Clang, and many more. It allows for a single way of doing things,
so no longer we need shell scripts and vbs scripts to work on all
our supported platforms.

Additionally, CMake allows to generate project files for like MSVC,
KDevelop, etc.

This heavily reduces the lines of code we need to support multiple
platforms from a project perspective.

Addtiionally, this heavily improves our detection of libraries, etc.
2020-06-05 19:36:05 +02:00