english (us): 1 change by 2TallTyler
estonian: 49 changes by siimsoni
korean: 1 change by telk5093
hungarian: 45 changes by baliball
finnish: 12 changes by hpiirai
spanish: 1 change by JohnBoyFan
In FluidSynth 2.2.0 an extra state was added to denote stopping. To transition
from this state to a stopped state the rendering needs to be running. Since
04ce1f07 locking was added that skipped the rendering when something else held
a lock, so the state would never get to stopped and join would never return.
This avoids the need to custom memory management and additional members.
This also resolves use-after-free if modifying copied layouts, so presumably nobody has ever done that.
Under normal circumstances the server's ID is 32 characters excluding '\0', however this can be changed at the server. This ID is sent to the server for company name hashing. The client reads it into a statically allocated buffer of 33 bytes, but fills only the bytes it received from the server. However, the hash assumes all 33 bytes are set, thus potentially reading uninitialized data, or a part of the server ID of a previous game in the hashing routine.
It is still reading from memory assigned to the server ID, so nothing bad happens, except that company passwords might not work correctly.
If a viewport sign straddles the top of a viewport, a crash will occur if the viewport height is zero. This is resolved by simply not attempting to draw the viewport in this situation, consistent with other widgets.
Previously noted by a comment, this does not need to be guarded against as non-powers of 2 will not cause issues beyond the choice of results being reduced.
One could join a network game from within an already running network game. This would call a NetworkDisconnect, but keeps the UI alive. If, during that process the join is aborted, e.g. by cancelling on a password dialog, you would still be in your network game but also get shown the server list.
Solve all the underlying problems by falling back to the main UI when (re)connecting to a(nother) server.
Scaling is not expensive, but it does not change either, and this avoids the need for a virtual method call. This cascades back to all GetCharacterHeight(FS_xxx) and FONT_HEIGHT_xxx calls.
Replaces constant pixel values with values scaled based on font size.
This allows the industry chain to maintain a consistent look across
different sizes. Previously all except cargo line height were fixed.
YAPF was constantly measuring its performance, but only at
certain debug-levels this information was shown.
Now after years, I sincerely wonder if anyone still knows about this
feature and who still use it. Especially with the new framerate window,
this detailed performance is not as meaningful anymore as it once
was.
This means that pressing Refresh button and adding servers manually
now uses TCP.
The master-server and initial scan are still UDP as they will be
replaced by Game Coordinator; no need to change this now.
If we query a server that is too old, show a proper warning to the
user informing him the server is too old.
In case a character was encoded in multiple bytes, but required fewer bytes to be encoded, the first byte would be copied to the output leaving an invalid Utf8 encoded string. Later uses of the validated string would use the same decode logic, which would yield a question mark and just read a single byte, so nothing dangerous happened.
Furthermore, because the next byte would not be a first byte of an encoded Utf8 character, the last few valid characters could be removed by the validation as well.
* Fix: 'Cache' top and bottom lines of textfile viewer to avoid overdraw.
The text file viewer calculated the number of lines required to set the scrollbar, but did not retain this information, so this was recalculated on every draw operation. This includes overdrawing text outside the bounds of the current scroll position.
With this change the top and bottom lines for each line of text are remembered, and reflowing is avoided where possible. Text outside the current scroll bounds is not drawn.
Additionally the scroll interval is now based on text lines instead of pixel lines, which increases the text capacity depending on the font size.
* Fix: Limit text viewer to showing 64k lines.
Text files with more than 64k wrapped lines would exceed the scrollbar capacity and cause an assert. This is harder to reach now that the scrollbar counts lines instead of pixels.
This happens if the bounding dimensions are changed so that each item is the same size, as happens on the railtype/roadtype dropdown lists, as the vertical offset was calculated before this dimension is changed.
The idea is that if you query an older server that does not support
this packet yet, the client receives an error. The assumption was
that on every "illegal packet" the connection would be closed. This
turns out to be false.
Now CLIENT_GAME_INFO aligns with the old PACKET_CLIENT_NEWGRFS_CHECKED,
which does a pre-check (which fails), and an error is sent back
and the connection is closed.
This is not a nice solution, but it is the best we got.
spanish (mexican): 40 changes by absay
english (us): 1 change by 2TallTyler
korean: 3 changes by telk5093
german: 1 change by danidoedel
finnish: 1 change by hpiirai
catalan: 1 change by J0anJosep
portuguese: 45 changes by azulcosta
portuguese (brazilian): 44 changes by Vimerum
The lobby of a server requested some parts via UDP and some via
TCP. This is strictly seen fine, but for future extensions it
is a lot easier if just one protocol is used.
Currently we use default OS timeout for TCP connections, which
is around 30s. 99% of the users will never notice this, but there
are a few cases where this is an issue:
- If you have a broken IPv6 connection, using Content Service is
first tried over IPv6. Only after 30s it times out and tries
IPv4. Nobody is waiting for that 30s.
- Upcoming STUN support has several methods of establishing a
connection between client and server. This requires feedback
from connect() to know if any method worked (they have to be
tried one by one). With 30s, this would take a very long time.
What is good to mention, is that there is no good value here. Any
value will have edge-cases where the experience is suboptimal. But
with 3s we support most of the stable connections, and if it fails,
the user can just retry. On the other side of the spectrum, with 30s,
it means the user has no possibility to use the service. So worst case
we annoy a few users with them having the retry vs annoying a few
users which have no means of resolving the situation.
They are likely not working as expected on Windows, so prevent their usage.
Winsock does not set errno and strerror does not return anything useful for Winsock error numbers.
english (us): 39 changes by 2TallTyler
korean: 44 changes by telk5093
german: 43 changes by danidoedel
russian: 7 changes by Ln-Wolf
finnish: 39 changes by hpiirai
norwegian (bokmal): 4 changes by Anolitt
spanish (mexican): 3 changes by absay
japanese: 60 changes by scabtert, 38 changes by Azusa257
english (us): 3 changes by 2TallTyler
korean: 3 changes by telk5093
russian: 4 changes by Ln-Wolf
finnish: 3 changes by hpiirai
slovak: 20 changes by FuryPapaya
NewGRF spec says that base payment rate is 32 bits, but it was loaded into a 16 bit variable. This value is loaded into Money variable after inflation is applied.
Especially if there are many players online, trying to chat with
the right one can be a visual challenge. This can be solved by
highlighting the row you are on. This visual cue is often enough
for humans to find the right row.
The GUI now more clearly shows some basic information about the
server you joined, your client name (and the ability to change it),
and what players are in which company.
It also contains useful buttons to press to join companies, chat
with other people, and for admins to kick/ban people.
Additionally, renamed "advertised" to "visibility"; this has to
do with future additions, but also because it is more clear in
wording.
korean: 2 changes by telk5093
russian: 3 changes by Ln-Wolf
finnish: 1 change by hpiirai
spanish: 1 change by MontyMontana
polish: 1 change by pAter-exe
hindi: 62 changes by ss141309
* Codechange: Use std::string in console commands and aliases registration
* Codechange: Use std::map to register console commands
* Codechange: Use std::map to register console aliases
* Cleanup: Remove now unused function
This so names from other clients are known valid in the client as well, instead allowing some compromised/bad server to potentially crash clients upon certain expectations.
Unfinished translations are not auto-picked from the locale.
In release builds, unfinished translations are not offered in the GUI.
Unfinished translations are available in non-release builds, or by editing openttd.cfg.
Minigraphs did not adjust size to accomodate large text, either by font size or font zoom, leading to cropped labels.
Minigraphs and spacing are now scaled by font zoom, as this seems to behave better than gui zoom in this instance.
Line height defaults to the resize height of the relevant widget, which is
set in all cases. Therefore it is not necessary to specify this value every time.
Additionally fixes scrolled padding for the framerate window.
This struct is defined in geometry_type but not used by any geometry-related
code, only for subsidy code where both parameters are cast from int to
NewsReferenceType.
Strictly seen the comment is true, as it says 'e.g.', but it is
misleading. The server name is just that: the name of the server
as configured. No need to mention advertising.
When ever you saw this debug lines (which you never should), they
showed an empty address. It is also not very useful to have, as it
always points to a known server anyway.
The original idea was that people could find a server they could
talk in their native language on. This isn't really used in that
way. There are several reasons for removing this:
- the client also sends his "language" to the server, but nothing
is doing anything with this.
- flags are a bad way to represent languages, and over the years
we had several (rightfully) complaints about this.
- most servers have their language set to "All", and prefix the
servername with the language it is about. This is a much more
efficient way to do the same.
All in all, this feature should go back to the drawing board.
Maybe it could work in another form, but this form is not it.
The idea back in the days was nice, but it never resulted in
anything useful. Most servers either read "(loaded game)" or
"Random Map", neither being useful. It was meant for heightmaps,
so you could find a server that was using a specific one .. but
there are many things wrong with that idea. Mostly, servers tend
to save and load savegames from time to time, after which the
original heightmap used was lost.
All in all, removing map_name all together is just better.
Existing layout included a blank widget above the group list to align with the vehicle list, however since then an additional sort-by row was added.
Group list size tweaks to match normal row size (at least with normal gui and text size.)
Removed reduction of 2 rows in the group list <- main culprit of odd sizing.
Removed fill attribute on buttons which gave strange sizes, and put it on the group info widget instead.
Tweaked various soft-padding values to line up (centreing text with a 1px offset does not make centred text.)
The server information panel was scaled by GUI scale, which could result in a panel that is longer than the server list. This height difference is then maintained when the window is resized to fill the screen.
Instead, specify the minimum size by number of text lines and (summed total) padding.
norwegian (bokmal): 2 changes by Anolitt
english (us): 2 changes by 2TallTyler
korean: 3 changes by telk5093
german: 2 changes by danidoedel
romanian: 35 changes by kneekoo
finnish: 2 changes by hpiirai
spanish: 4 changes by MontyMontana
french: 3 changes by glx22
portuguese: 4 changes by azulcosta
"Hardware acceleration" was not aligned with its checkbox. So instead
of drawing the labels left and the options right, now draw settings
one by one with a spacer between label and option to get the right
spacing.
Also, use SetPIP instead of repeating a SetPadding for all but
last element.
Vsync should be off by default, as for most players it will be
better to play without vsync. Exception exist, mainly people who
play in fullscreen mode.
An invalid starting year causes all sorts of weird behaviour and crashes in map generation.
Now just set the appropriate setting via IConsoleSetSetting so the validation
and, if needed, clamping is performed on the starting year value.
Font glyphs between 33 and 39 pixels wide, in the Win32 font system, used wrong alignment and caused glyphs to appear broken.
When in the 33 to 39 pixel range, glyphs without AA were rounded down to 32 pixel pitch, instead of up to 64 pixel pitch.
Handle printable input only when the matching WM_CHAR message is incoming.
Without an edit box, do the handling in keydown as usual to support hotkeys.
english (us): 3 changes by 2TallTyler
korean: 3 changes by telk5093
russian: 32 changes by Ln-Wolf
spanish: 1 change by JohnBoyFan
french: 4 changes by arikover
portuguese: 10 changes by azulcosta
Debian now provides a default soundfont for FluidSynth via its alternatives system.
In short, FluidSynth is configured to look for `/usr/share/sounds/sf3/default-GM.sf3` as its default soundfont, and each soundfront package (FluidR3, OPL-3, MuseScore...) may provide or override this symlink. By default, FluidSynth is installed on Debian with the `TimGM6mb` soundfont by default due to its limited size.
See https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=929185 for further details.
Use status >= STATUS_AUTHORIZED as the state criteria for all cases
where updates about other clients are sent.
This avoids the case where a client is informed that another client
has joined but not informed when it later quits, resulting in
stale entries in the client list window.
Clamping each sample value to half the available range could cause
unnecessary premature clipping with lots of sounds playing. This change
does not affect the actual volume level.
swedish: 1 change by DonaldDuck313
norwegian (bokmal): 1 change by Anolitt
english (us): 1 change by 2TallTyler
chinese (simplified): 8 changes by RichardYan314
german: 1 change by danidoedel
romanian: 115 changes by kneekoo
finnish: 1 change by hpiirai
spanish: 2 changes by MontyMontana
polish: 3 changes by yazalo
english (us): 23 changes by 2TallTyler
luxembourgish: 63 changes by phreeze83
ukrainian: 72 changes by StepanIvasyn
catalan: 5 changes by J0anJosep
turkish: 5 changes by nullaf
english (us): 7 changes by HAJDog247
czech: 18 changes by PatrikSamuelTauchim
luxembourgish: 99 changes by phreeze83
serbian: 4 changes by nkrs
catalan: 20 changes by J0anJosep
french: 1 change by arikover
portuguese: 30 changes by azulcosta
swedish: 30 changes by kustridaren
spanish (mexican): 1 change by absay
japanese: 13 changes by Azusa257
vietnamese: 1 change by KhoiCanDev
estonian: 12 changes by siimsoni
czech: 6 changes by PatrikSamuelTauchim, 2 changes by tomas-vl
chinese (simplified): 88 changes by clzls
arabic (egypt): 16 changes by AviationGamerX
luxembourgish: 4 changes by phreeze83
korean: 34 changes by telk5093
italian: 16 changes by AlphaJack
german: 1 change by danidoedel, 1 change by Wuzzy2
slovak: 30 changes by FuryPapaya
catalan: 35 changes by J0anJosep
tamil: 16 changes by Aswn
dutch: 32 changes by Afoklala
portuguese (brazilian): 14 changes by Greavez, 5 changes by jpsl00
Before this commit, it scaled to map-height-limit. Recently this
could also be set to "auto", meaning players don't really know
or care about this value.
This also means that if a player exported a heightmap and wanted
to import it again, looking like the exact same map, he did not
know what value for "highest peak" to use.
This opens up the true power of the TGP terrain generator, as it
is no longer constrainted by an arbitrary low map height limit,
especially for extreme terrain types.
In other words: on a 1kx1k map with "Alpinist" terrain type, the
map is now really hilly with default settings.
People can still manually limit the map height if they so wish,
and after the terrain generation the limit is stored in the
savegame as if the user set it.
Cheats still allow you to change this value.
This better reflects what it is, and hopefully removes a bit of
the confusion people are having what this setting actually does.
Additionally, update the text on the setting to better inform
users what it is doing exactly, so they can make an educated
decision on how to change it.
Next commit will introduce an "auto" value, which should be the
new default. The rename has as added benefit that everyone will
start out on the "auto" value.
This setting influence the max heightlevel, and not as the name
suggests: the height of the generated map.
How ever you slice it, it is a very weird place to add this
setting, and it is better off being only in the settings menu.
Commits following this commit also make it more useful, so users
no longer have to care about it.
This is an indication value; the game tries to get as close as it
can, but due to the complex tropic rules, that is unlikely to be
exact.
In the end, it picks a height-level to base the desert/tropic
line on. This is strictly seen not needed, as we can convert any
tile to either. But it is the simplest way to get started with
this without redoing all related functions.
Setting the snow coverage (in % of the map) makes a lot more sense
to the human, while still allowing the niche player to set (by
finding the correct %) a snow line height they like. This makes for
easier defaults, as it decoupled terrain height from amount of snow.
Maps can never be 100% snow, as we do not have sprites for coastal
tiles.
Internally, this calculates the best snow line height to approach
this coverage as close as possible.
This used to work by accident: originally the code checked if
GenerateWorld was threaded. If not, it would abort the function.
This worked for placing trees, because it was also returning false
when it was not active.
With the recent changes, that check got removed, and this crash
started to happen. So now check if we have a modal window, which
is a very solid indication we are generating the world.
chinese (simplified): 2 changes by clzls
korean: 2 changes by telk5093
slovak: 9 changes by FuryPapaya
catalan: 4 changes by J0anJosep
polish: 4 changes by pAter-exe
swedish: 1 change by kustridaren
estonian: 1 change by siimsoni
russian: 5 changes by Ln-Wolf, 3 changes by SecretIdetity
ukrainian: 7 changes by StepanIvasyn
lithuanian: 31 changes by devbotas
portuguese: 54 changes by azulcosta
english (us): 8 changes by 2TallTyler
estonian: 16 changes by siimsoni
korean: 5 changes by telk5093
italian: 32 changes by AlphaJack
german: 5 changes by Wuzzy2
danish: 15 changes by achton
lithuanian: 89 changes by devbotas
spanish: 3 changes by MontyMontana
french: 8 changes by arikover
portuguese (brazilian): 3 changes by Greavez
polish: 17 changes by yazalo, 2 changes by pAter-exe
For example, if you have a config that defines OpenGFX as baseset
but for some reason you have no basesets anymore. In that case
bootstrap downloads OpenGFX for you, but it will still show the
error that "OpenGFX was not found" after the bootstrap. This was
an error generated before the bootstrapped kicked in.
Simply muting all errors during bootstrap solves this; as we cannot
show them anyway, this is fine. Any errors that remain after
bootstrap will be generated again anyway.
There are various of ways bootstrap can fail:
- Failing network connection
- Incomplete download
- No write permissions
- Disk full
- (others I forgot)
They all result in a screen with no windows. To ensure we at least
always show something when anything bad happens, if the bootstrap
is not successful, show a screen what the next step for the human
should be.
english (us): 7 changes by 2TallTyler
estonian: 17 changes by siimsoni
hungarian: 100 changes by pnpBrumi
ukrainian: 8 changes by StepanIvasyn
dutch: 24 changes by Afoklala
spanish: 338 changes by MontyMontana
french: 29 changes by MalaGaM
portuguese (brazilian): 1 change by Greavez
This means if you execute a script from a script from a script, ..
for more than 10 times, it bails out now. This should be sufficient
for even the most complex scripts.
MaskWireBits always returns its input unchanged if the input
has only 0 or 1 track bits set.
Having only 0 or 1 track bits sets (i.e. non junction tiles)
is by far the most common case.
Examining the state of neighbouring tiles and the subsequent
masking logic is relatively expensive and can be omitted in this case.
It didn't sit well to me, how I wrote the commit initially. First
casting a variable into another, only to write it back into the
originally feels wrong.
This flow makes a bit more sense to me.
Otherwise that might cause calls to the video-driver, which are
already shut down by now. This causes, depending on the video-driver
crashes or weird effects.
Basically, modal windows had their own thread-locking for what
drawing was possible. This is a bit nonsense now we have a
game-thread. And it makes much more sense to do things like
NewGRFScan and GenerateWorld in the game-thread, and not in a
thread next to the game-thread.
This commit changes that: it removes the threads for NewGRFScan
and GenerateWorld, and just runs the code in the game-thread.
On regular intervals it allows the draw-thread to do a tick,
which gives a much smoother look and feel.
It does slow down NewGRFScan and GenerateWorld ever so slightly
as it spends more time on drawing. But the slowdown is not
measureable on my machines (with 700+ NewGRFs / 4kx4k map and
a Debug build).
Running without a game-thread means NewGRFScan and GenerateWorld
are now blocking.
gui_zoom was never clamp'd between zoom_min/zoom_max.
zoom_min controls how zoomed-in we load sprites. For a value of 1,
no quad-sizes sprites are loaded. If gui_zoom would be 0, meaning
it wants quad-sized sprites to display, it was printing random
stuff to the screen, which could or could not result in crashes.
Otherwise both the draw-thread and game-thread can do it both
at the same time, which gives rather unwanted side-effects.
Calling it from the draw-thread alone is sufficient, as we just
want to create some unpredictable randomness for the player. The
draw-thread is a lot more active (normally) than the game-thread,
so it is the best place of the two to do this.
Additionally, InteractiveRandom() mostly has to do with visuals
that are client-side-only, so more related to drawing than to
game.
v->tile for aircrafts is always zero when in the air. Only when
it starts its landing (or take-off) patterns it becomes a sane
value.
So instead, base the news on the last x/y coordinates of the plane.
english (us): 18 changes by 2TallTyler
korean: 17 changes by telk5093
german: 13 changes by danidoedel, 4 changes by Wuzzy2
finnish: 17 changes by hpiirai
catalan: 17 changes by J0anJosep
lithuanian: 33 changes by devbotas
spanish: 17 changes by MontyMontana
portuguese (brazilian): 20 changes by Greavez
polish: 9 changes by yazalo
This because video-drivers might need to make changes to their
context, which for most video-drivers has to be done in the same
thread as the window was created; main thread in our case.
This allows drawing to happen while the GameLoop is doing an
iteration too.
Sadly, not much drawing currently can be done while the GameLoop
is running, as for example PollEvent() or UpdateWindows() can
influence the game-state. As such, they first need to acquire a
lock on the game-state before they can be called.
Currently, the main advantage is the time spend in Paint(), which
for non-OpenGL drivers can be a few milliseconds. For OpenGL this
is more like 0.05 milliseconds; in these instances this change
doesn't add any benefits for now.
This is an alternative to the former "draw-thread", which moved
the drawing in a thread for some OSes. It has similar performance
gain as this does, although this implementation allows for more
finer control over what suffers when the GameLoop takes too
long: drawing or the next GameLoop. For now they both suffer
equally.
Drawing in a thread is a bit odd, and often leads to surprising
issues. For example, OpenGL would only allow it if you move the
full context to the thread. Which is not always easily done on
all OSes.
In general, the advise is to handle system events and drawing
from the main thread, and do everything else in other threads.
So, let's be more like other games.
Additionally, putting the drawing routine in a thread was only
done for a few targets.
Upcoming commit will move the GameLoop in a thread, which will
work for all targets.
The video drivers using the OpenGL backend are currently our only
accelerated drivers. The options defaults to off for macOS builds and
to on everywhere else.
Co-authored-by: Michael Lutz <michi@icosahedron.de>
chinese (traditional): 5 changes by benny30111
estonian: 1 change by siimsoni
italian: 1 change by AlphaJack
ukrainian: 4 changes by StepanIvasyn
tamil: 37 changes by Aswn
portuguese (brazilian): 19 changes by Greavez
Reworked how the screenshot command works while keeping it backwards
compatible. It can now more freely understand arguments, and has
the ability to make SC_DEFAULTZOOM screenshots.
In other words, it should only (!) return true if A comes for B.
This promise was broken for the situation where two values are
identical. It would return true in these cases too. This is of
course not possible: if two values are identical, neither come
before the other. As such, the sorter was not imposing strict
weak ordering relations.
libstdc++ handled this scenario just fine, but libc++ crashes
badly on this, as it allowed comparing of [begin, end] instead
of [begin, end).
libc++ considered this not a bug (and by specs, they are correct;
just this way of crashing is of course a bit harsh):
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47903
english (us): 4 changes by 2TallTyler
italian: 4 changes by troccoli
serbian: 251 changes by nkrs
german: 6 changes by ebla71, 2 changes by Wuzzy2
romanian: 3 changes by ALEX11BR
russian: 11 changes by Ln-Wolf
ukrainian: 2 changes by StepanIvasyn
lithuanian: 15 changes by devbotas
spanish: 2 changes by perezdidac
The bootstrap has the _switch_mode to SM_MENU, and never leaves
this mode. Neither is it considered a modal window (while in some
sense it really is). So .. we need to add another "draw anyway"
exception, to make sure bootstrap is being drawn.
When you are downloading a map, all the commands are queued up
for you. Clients joining/leaving is done by the network protocol,
and as such are processed immediately. This means that by the
time you are processing the commands, a client that triggered
it, might already have left.
So, all commands that do something with ClientID, shouldn't
error on an invalid ClientID when DC_EXEC is set, but
gracefully handle the command anyway, to make sure the
game-state is kept in sync with all the clients that did
execute the DoCommand while the now-gone client was still
there.
Additionally, in the small chance a client disconnects between
the server validating a DoCommand and the command being
executed, also just process the command as if the client was
still there. Otherwise, lag or latency can cause clients that
did not receive the disconnect yet to desync.
Strictly seen, there are "N" people -waiting- in front of you
in the queue, but it is nicer to show "N + 1" for the person that
is currently downloading the map. Avoids it showing:
"0 clients in front of you". That just feels a bit off.
swedish: 60 changes by kustridaren
norwegian (bokmal): 12 changes by buzzCraft
czech: 82 changes by PatrikSamuelTauchim, 1 change by tomas-vl
italian: 86 changes by AlphaJack, 9 changes by federico1564S
german: 16 changes by ebla71
romanian: 10 changes by ALEX11BR
ukrainian: 3 changes by StepanIvasyn
spanish: 1 change by MontyMontana