Was dropping invitations that were posted before I connected to the
remote broker. Now they're kept, and sent until the broker says
publish succeeded. Better would be to have comms resend when mqtt
connects, but I'm not set up for that.
Server needs to not rematch if any device has more than one
player (for now, as I'm too lazy to fix this rare condition.) I'm
moving toward having the linux client write status to a unix socket on
exit rather than having the test script parse the log file for
status. GameOver is there now. Tile counts should follow.
Because only the host/inviter knows the addresses of all the devices
in a game it's hard for guests to rematch (unless it's a 2-device
game, as they know the host's address.) So now, as part of telling
guests the game is ready to play, include the addresses of other
guests. It's usually only 9 bytes per device, and only happens when
more than two devices are in a game.
No point in sending the old-topic-format MQTT messages to clients that
know about the new one, and in fact it's harmful. Devices in a game
already agree on the stream version to use and communicate it, so pass
that into comms once it's known and from there on to the device code
that builds mqtt messages.
This is probably a temporary fix for Linux not being aggressive enough
about calling comms_resendAll() when opening a game. For now, though,
test scripts fail without it.
To prevent deleted games' ghost invitations from remaining as
persisted on a topic and so being received over and over, have
recipient of invitation send an empty message on the same topic to
remove them. Any message sent once the game start would have replaced
the invitation, but sometimes if the sender is deleted at the right
time there's none.