Cargo payments were stored as unsigned integer, but cast to int64 during
application of inflation. However, then being multiplied with a uint64
making the result uint64. So in the end the payment that should have been
negative becomes hugely positive.
"my_client" wasn't always free'd when a game ended. "my_client"
keeps a reference inside the PT_NCLIENT pool. The rest of the
code assumes that when you are not in a game, it can freely
reset this pool.
In result: several ways to trigger a use-after-free.
english (us): 15 changes by 2TallTyler
korean: 12 changes by telk5093
russian: 3 changes by Ln-Wolf
portuguese: 12 changes by azulcosta
polish: 98 changes by pAter-exe
TURN is a last resort, used only if all other methods failed.
TURN is a relay approach to connect client and server together, where
openttd.org (by default) is the middleman.
It is very unlikely either the client or server cannot connect to
the STUN server, as they are both already connected to the Game
Coordinator. But in the odd case it does fail, estabilishing the
connection fails without any further possibility to recover.
INT64_MIN negated is above INT64_MAX, and would overflow.
Instead, when negating INT64_MIN make it INT64_MAX.
This does mean that -(-(INT64_MIN)) != INT64_MIN.
Before 8a2da49 the NewGRF names were synchronized using UDP packets, however
those have been removed. With this a new version of the GameInfo packet is
introduced that allows to specify the type of serialisation happens for
NewGRFs. Either only the GRF ID and checksum, or those two plus the name of
the NewGRF.
On this request for local servers will send the NewGRFs names.
The Game Coordinator will get the names on the first registration, and after
that only the GRF ID and checksum.
These were filled with "<Unknown>" (before 8a2da49) and later their name would get filled via UDP requests to the server. These UDP packets do not exist anymore, so they will always remain "<Unknown>".
Remove that logic and just use the generic translated error GRF UNKNOWN string instead.
This method doesn't require port-forwarding to be used, and works for
most common NAT routers in home setups. But, for sure it doesn't work
for all setups, and not everyone will be able to use this.
spanish (mexican): 4 changes by absay
english (us): 13 changes by 2TallTyler
korean: 5 changes by telk5093
german: 13 changes by Wuzzy2
portuguese: 4 changes by azulcosta
hindi: 6 changes by ritwikraghav14
Now you can use things like `set server_game_type public` instead of having to
guess the number, which would not be written into the configuration file nor
would it be shown when doing `set server_game_type`.