SDL2.0 removed SDL_HAPTIC_SQUARE because of ABI issues (see comment #7 on issue
6491 by Ryan C. Gordon from the SDL project). It will be reintroduced again in
2.1, so keep the code and #ifdef it away.
If we don't do this, then when the game starts we'll send out the
buffer size to clients being a super large value of junk, and they'll
hang forever trying to accumulate an input buffer a size that they'll
never ever reach in a million years.
This never manifested in release builds for some reason.
The MS INI parser and most other INI parsing libraries APIs only support
comments at the beginning of lines. Right now, some Game INI files use sections
like:
[OnFrame]#Add memory patches here
But these section headers are parsed separately, so this should not break
them.
This reverts commit cce809ac90.
The code was actually correct: "expr" is never allocated when an error is
returned. This means when the expression parser fails, deleting "expr" means
deleting an uninitialized pointer.
It's possible to configure to use the vertex color as lightning source without enabling the vertex color at all.
The old implementation will use zero, but it seems to be wrong (prooven by THPS3), more likely is to disable
the lightning and just return the global color.
This fixes THPS3 on OpenGL, but it isn't verifed on hardware
This would allow a new socket to be created with the same port after
we close it. However, we can't reuse it immediately because of the TCP
TIME-WAIT state.
This should be transparent, but it may cause regressions.
The idea here is that now all players, including the host of the server,
talk to the server through TCP/IP networking. This significantly reduces
our codepaths through netplay, and will prevent strange local-only bugs
from happening.
The cleanup isn't 100% finished yet. The NetPlay dialog still drives the
server through private APIs. I eventually want to sanction off the server
entirely, so all communication is done through TCP/IP. This will allow us
to have high-traffic public servers that can relay multiple games and
lobbies at a time, and split off channel and game management to people
other than the host.
This is all still just a pipe dream, though.