Duplicate messages early on, which happened only in the test script
but could have anywhere, broke connectivity. So don't kill address
records when a duplicate shows up. Dupes only escape message ID
checking early (before channel is established). I used to remove
address records when a message was rejected, but don't understand why
so removed that, though asserts show it's not mattering except for
those early messages.
Remove legacy relay-inspired logic around comms addressing. Now when a
device creates a game it's required to provide its "self address," and
if it's a client, the address of the host (which it presumably got
through the invitation in response to which the game is being
created.) Then as registration messages come in from clients, the host
gathers their addresses as always.
It's awkward for platform code to create a dictionary prior to opening a
game whose data contains the information about what dict to open. So add
a dutil method to fetch a dict, and call it from inside game opening
code. Makes linux code better at least.
This is meant to replace the relay eventually, but for now it's a new
option, like BT or SMS, to be chosen. Protocol is handled in common/
code for the first time, meaning that linux and android interact without
the need to keep two platforms in sync. Linux uses lib-mosquitto, and
Android uses eclipse's Paho client (the generic java version, not the
one that uses four-year-old Service patterns and so crashes for SDK >=
26.)
I was getting an occasional crash using a stale env to delete a dict's
resources because the dict was cacheing the env that created it. Dumb!
Using the thread->env mapping stuff worked, but that felt risky and so I
tried just passing it in. It's safe, and involves an amount of change I
can tolerate. So likely going that way.
Turns out the host, when inviting a remote device, needs to know how
many players are on it (since more than one is supported and the script
currently generates that case.) So pass to --server devices an array,
one per remote -- but don't bother when all entries are "1";
With reject-phonies set this will trigger the reject path.
Also init CommonPrefs in jni land since its makePhonyPct, left unitialized,
causes the robot to deliberately reverse every turn, firing an assertion that the
robot's moves are legal.
Currently detects the same as tiles not in a line and calls out to a new
util method that's currently parameter-less. On Android the option only
appears in d variants.
I don't know why, but in my tests the relay seems to be delivering
messages to the wrong device. The linux device detects this. It used to
assert, but now just drops the message. If this is happening on Android
it might be why I'm seeing crashes...