Had an assert fire when a message ID was reused with a different count.
It was likely because of messages crossing between two variants, but
still, fix: delete what's been saved so far when a new count shows up.
Handles case where the app receives only a subset of the SMS messages
into which a larger game-level message has been broken. Now when it
restarts and the remaining parts come in the whole can be reassembled.
And use in linux client. Goal here is to reproduce then improve the
Android SMS pre- and post-processing stuff with a common/ implementation
that can be tested on linux and used wherever.
My linux sms hack used inotify and didn't check for messages that were
there when the app launched. Replace inotify with a simple glib periodic
timer. A bit of latency mimics SMS better anyway. Update test script to
support SMS, and add params to and otherwise fix linux client so
everything works.
So now all jni code uses a single dutil context, but also a single
mempool and jniutil instance instead of new instances of the latter two
per game and dict-iteration.
Trying to separate what's game-specific from what can be app/device
specific (i.e. with a long lifespan, and available when a game isn't
open.)
Android will be broken after this commit and fixed after the next
A number of jni calls were "stateless", which meant they allocated their
own vtmgr and mpool instances each time invoked. Instead invoke them
with the global jni closure and add to it vtmgr (already has mpool) and
use these instead of allocating/freeing each time. To make sure no race
conditions are introduced (mpool, though debug-only, is probably not
thread-safe), guard these new uses with an in-use flag. If that fires
I'll need a mutex or something.
Once the pool count drops to 0, start showing the number of tiles left
in the user's tray. This prevents there being a long time when nothing
seems to be changing *and* the script from exiting early because it
thinks all games are hung.
Somehow I got a wordlist into a location different from what was
recorded in the DB table and since the delete command matched on
location as well as name it was never deleted (which meant the checksum
was never updated and so upgrading never seemed to succeed.) Removing
the match on location fixed that problem, and since I don't see any harm
in cacheing only one version of a wordlist will simply leave it that
way.
Did a bunch of cleanup as well.
I'm seeing several IllegalStateException crashes due to e.g. having an
alert posted when app's in the background. Need to fix them, but the
debug build crashing isn't helpful. Log.e() instead.
The pesky thing is back. When app's in the background with an
unconnected game open displaying the "resend/wait" alert and the game
connects get IllegalStateException because the fragment stack's being
modified after onSaveInstanceState() (or, because the dialog fragment,
saved as an instance variable in BoardDelegate, dates from an earlier
state. Anyway, catching and dropping the exception and elsewhere failing
silently to rebuild the alert seems to fix the problem, but the right
fix is likely different. I suspect hanging onto that iVar is wrong, and
that the dialog should go away when onStop() is called and then be
rebuilt later from saved state. But for now, not crashing is good.
Got a report of crashes due to corrupt move records. Given I rarely see
them I wondered if it's because the hint- and robot-generated moves I
work with have tiles in order. So now on debug builds tiles in moves
from those sources are randomly rearranged (as if the user had formed
the word in random order.) The bug isn't showing up, but I figure the
test's worth keeping.
Stuff I'm doing with invitation resends is making the relay loop
inifintely. Let's assert a small loop count instead: better to crash and
restart than loop forever unable to process requests.
Remove a bunch of duplicated code, replacing with implementation in
XWService. Fixes duplicate invitation and game opening policies being
slightly different.
The fix I made earlier for this relied on a callback that was skipped in
release builds. Now always take the path that involves making the
callback when one is provided. Also remove an optimization that was
trying to eliminate possible moves based on scores prior to doing the
more expensive full check. In 2018 I prefer simplicity, and can make the
remaining code faster if that's required.
Try some funky layout shite to get, within a horizontal linear layout,
the first text field trucated if necessary so that the second (holding
the score) can be fully displayed. Tested on exactly one emulator so
far.
Try some funky layout shite to get, within a horizontal linear layout,
the first text field trucated if necessary so that the second (holding
the score) can be fully displayed. Tested on exactly one emulator so
far.
I think there's a bug in Weblate because I've seen this before: where
the English provides only an <other> the translation comes back with
only a <one>. That's wrong. Try adding a <one> in the English case to
see if that makes a difference.
I think there's a bug in Weblate because I've seen this before: where
the English provides only an <other> the translation comes back with
only a <one>. That's wrong. Try adding a <one> in the English case to
see if that makes a difference.