Also changed all "if (this==NULL) return;"s.
Fixes some -Wtautological-undefined-compare warnings.
Quoting Clang:
"'this' pointer cannot be null in well-defined C++ code; comparison may
be assumed to always evaluate to false"
Thanks @SLAwww
(The first parameter to _assert is actually the message, not the
expression to evaluate, so "false &&" doesn't belong in there.)
Conflicts:
Sources/EntitiesMP/Summoner.es
except for EntitiesMP/Fish.es which I'm not sure about, and in
Computer.cpp the weird "if (_iActiveMessage < _acmMessages.Count()==0)"
construct whichs intention I didn't fully grasp, either.
many unused functions and variables are now commented out
You'll still get tons of warnings, which should mostly fall in one of
the following categories:
1. Unnecessary variables or values generated from .es scripts
2. Pointers assigned to from functions with side-effects: DO NOT REMOVE!
Like CEntity *penNew = CreateEntity_t(...); - even if penNew isn't
used, CreateEntity() must be called there!
the builtins are only used when using GCC or clang, of course, otherwise
the usual shifting is done.
Them being inline functions instead of macros increases type safety
and gets rid of problems with signed shifts.
Changed two places in the code that swapped bytes in 32bit ints to use
BYTESWAP32_unsigned() instead - in case of PrepareTexture() this has
probably even fixed issues with signed shifts
Sometimes pointers are casted to ULONG just to get an ID or tag - this
is fine for 32bit pointers, but 64bit pointers will truncate which might
result in not being so unique after all.
CRC-ing the pointer should yield a more likely to be unique 32bit value.
NULL is a special case that yields 0 instead of the CRC, so code that
handles IDs/Tags with value 0 differently will continue to work.
For 32bit builds, it just returns the pointer as ULONG.
turns out that using UINTPTR_MAX is a pain on several systems like
FreeBSD or even older Linux/glibc systems, so maybe let's not do that
anymore.
Now I check for known CPU-architectures instead.
I also added some sanity checks to make sure the detection was
correct.
The code used to store the world pointer as a console variable
"pwoCurrentWorld" of type INDEX (int32) - that won't work for 64bit, so
I added CShell::SetCurrentWorld() and CShell::GetCurrentWorld() and
store it as a pointer.
introduced PLATFORM_32BIT and PLATFORM_64BIT macros, so you can do
#ifdef PLATFORM_64BIT if you need to.
I needed that for CDrawPort::GetID() to properly CRC a pointer.
Also added a sanity check in Engine/Base/Types.h that makes sure that
uintprt_t and size_t have the same size, as the code uses size_t to
store pointers (or cast from pointer to int) all over the place.
Made some "tags" from Engine/Templates/BSP_internal.h size_t instead of
ULONG - they're used to store pointers to identify vertices and such,
so they'd better be big enough to actually store a pointer.
Some more are still missing.
* FloatToInt() should now round correctly ot nearest, even for
negative numbers
* Log2() now calls log2f() instead of log10()*3.321 - no idea what the
previous code was about, I doubt it's faster (and the ASM code uses
something like log2, too).
* FastLog2() (for integers) now uses __builtin_clz() when building with
GCC/clang - the resulting ASM should be pretty similar to the inline
ASM below. I wonder why that function takes signed ints, log2(-1) in
reality is an irrational number (but the function returns 31)..
Also, both the inline ASM and my version return 0 for Log2(0), but
INT_MIN would be closer to the truth
* commented out FastMaxLog2(), it's unused.
* implemented _rotl() using a fast(er) trick from
http://blog.regehr.org/archives/1063
Touches a lot of code to remove long constants like "1L", so this patch is
large and ugly, but I think it makes all those Clamp() calls look nicer in
the long run.
Most of the game is 64-bit clean, since we can build without assembly code
now. I've marked the things that are obviously still wrong with STUBBED lines.
That being said: a 64-bit build can already run the demos mostly correctly,
so we're actually almost there!
There are a few obvious things that are obviously wrong, to be fixed.