Grab and store the local device's mac address. Add p2p as a type of
address, represented by the mac address of the recipient. Include the
local device's address in invitations sent when specified by user. Now
the WifiDirectService class is being passed a packet and the address of
the recipient; it will next need to set up sockets with every device it
encounters and map them to their mac addresses so that it can do a send.
commented-out logging of drawCell, with flags; debug-build checks that
static rects passed to java draw code aren't being used by multiple
threads at once.
Crash occurs when creating new game: because there's no turn set yet the
jboolean has no set value (whatever was on the stack). Apparently the
java runtime accepts only 1 and 0 for jbooleans.
There are some screen dimensions, especially with dual-pane mode, where
the board is just bit narrower than the screen. Rather than have narrow
white borders, allow the cells to take up the slack. The API takes an
upper bound on the ratio of width to height so things shouldn't get too
odd looking.
Rare crashes are happening inside the jni, in game_dispose(), when a
game's double-disposed. Adding a jni call to check if the thread about
to do a game_dispose() will fail then asserting its result in java
allows useful stack traces to come via Crittercism. Or should.
When a gtk3 window's shutting down it appears we can't get a cairo_t*
for it. This change makes it possible to turn that fact into aborting
the whole draw operation.
Fixes, or at least makes extremely unlikely, race condition where one
thread makes use of an existing JNIThread instance then releases it
before the thread that created it has had a chance to call configure()
to actually load the game.
whose lifespan matches its, e.g. the gameptr and gi. This is a big
change, and there are still some bugs/crashes, but it's worth
committing this snapshot.
once instead of at every call site. There's probably a performance
penalty to making bunch of extra calls back into java, but the code's
much cleaner. Will pay attention to performance changes.
game_dispose()). There was one that had been undetected for years. The
int is still passed into the jni, and each call site has to pull it
from the wrapper. Better would be to pass the wrapper, but I'm worried
about the performance hit of making a call back into the java world
from every jni entrypoint. Will test....
count them, and do so based on new msgNo passed from comms that's
concatenation of channelNo and msgID so that duplicates (over multiple
transports) aren't counted twice.
side translate that into showing the sender's name in
notification. Not yet done: replacing silly "not me" in chat listing
with same, but now it should be easy.
Conflicts:
xwords4/android/XWords4/archive/R.java
side translate that into showing the sender's name in
notification. Not yet done: replacing silly "not me" in chat listing
with same, but now it should be easy.
works between linux and Android clients. Required renaming so struct
names and names of fields within match in c and java code. The point
is to test this as the foundation of rematch: now you have to type in
a deviceID in order to invite, which clearly sucks for users. Either
that goes away, or it's replaced with something that scans existing
games and lists past opponents as possible invitees.