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.
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
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.
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.
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.
I *think* the reason I'm occasionally seeing toasts about not finding a
move is that when the engine's interrupted by there being a UI event in
the queue that error is posted. Instead try posting only when at the end
of the search nothing's been found.
Ideally the comms module wouldn't go through its connecting routine in
order to join a game. To that end I added a join() method to relay.py
and code to call it. Joins happen (pairing games, starting new ones,
etc.), but after that communication doesn't. First part of fixing that
would be to make cookieID persistent and transmit it back with the rest
of what join sends (since it's used by all the messages currently sent
in a connected state), but I suspect there's more to be done, and even
that requires a fair number of changes on the relay side. So all that's
wrapped in #ifdef RELAY_VIA_HTTP (and turned off.)
If I want to move relaycon into common so Android can use it (assuming
the jni code starts including json-c and libcurl so it can handle
networking) I'll need a replacement for GSList. This is a start.
I'm seeing assertions when a game gets into a state I don't fully
understand: host receives messages that need a channelNo assigned but
the game's full. With luck they're duplicates and can be ignored,
because that's all I can do.
New classes implement custom alert and its view, where most of the logic
for putting up one button per tile, hiding and showing buttons based on
what's left, etc. lives. Rough, but works well until rotated, when gets
redrawn without spaces for the buttons that could come back.
Got a crash opening games where tile pick was on and first player was a
robot. Cause: non-robot player's tiles were being assigned before the
robot's, and the move stack didn't like the out-of-order assignments.
Now we assign tiles in order as before, but pause each time we find a
non-robot that needs to pick its own.
Make face-up tile picker util method return void and add mechanism for
passing in selected tiles asynchronously, as has been done recently with
the rest of the once-blocking util callbacks. Works perfectly in the gtk
case. Likely crashes in curses (if picking face-up option is on.) In
java all the callbacks are there but rather than put up a UI we pretend
the user says "pick 'em for me" each time. Putting up a UI is next.
Back in August I "fixed" timers running after the board was cleared but
didn't realize that util contexts were shared by snapshot
boards. Clearing those timers when the board's destroyed was stopping
timers for a visible board as well. So I added a boolean indicating
whether to clear timers. Ref counting or similar would be better, but a
lot of work given the concept isn't really in the common/ code at
all (outside of dicts...)
Continue conversion of alerts that required blocking the JNI thread. Now
board_commitTurn() takes a second boolean indicating whether phonies
found have been approved by user. Common code informs user, and if he
approves client code calls board_commitTurn() again. In case where
turn's lost there's no call to make back, but there's the undesirable
change that if a robot moves next its move will be reported on top of
the turn-lost alert. Ideally new alerts would appear under, not on top
of, those that have not yet been dismissed.
Next step in converting util_ methods that required blocking: blank tile
assignment. Now post a query and add a method that the client code can
call when the user's decided. Include enough state (col, row, and
playerNum) so that it's probably pretty safe.
Probably breaks curses build, but for gtk and Android
turn move and trade confirmation into a two-step process, making
board_commitTurn() non-interactive when called with a second
parameter. The old blocking util methods now return void and it's up to
the client code to interact (on the main thread) then re-call
board_commitTurn() if appropriate.
First attempt to stop blocking the jni thread: instead of returning a
password from a util_ method, have it include enough state that the UI
can return, put up a dialog, and then pass that state and the password
back and have them matched up again. I think this will work for the
remaining blocking Alerts too.
An edge case, but: doing "new from" on a game without any connection
types crashed because of an assertion in comms that assumed
addr_setType() was being called on zero-initialized flags, which
shouldn't have been a requirement. Pulled that as well as java code that
added RELAY-type connectivity to any game that had none. If a game has
none, leave it that way.
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.
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.
Toward something that should work with android: pass a potentially
unique draw context into new method that creates a new board just for
the draw and makes its scoreboard and tray disappear.
Done in a way that won't work for Android just to try out the gtk
way. Tweaks and reuses the existing draw context and board, which is
precisely what the android version can't easily do.
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.
only) mpool. I'm getting assertions about failure to free now that
multiple threads are accessing open games, but I think they're bogus:
due to multiple threads modifying the leak-detection counters. This
seems to fix the assertions I was seeing in mpool_destroy().
left of tray divider (without moving divider) it may still be included
in hinted moves. Fix is to reset engine whenever the set of tiles left
of divider changes.
treatment of the final 8 bits. I'll need to release a version that
still produces the incorrect hash for compatibility with existing
clients that expect it, but that also looks for the correct hash. When
that's out there I can do a new release that sends the correct hash.
stack, go down the stack looking for a match. If it's found, pop down
to that point then apply the move. This fixes stalls in the test
engine when undo is enabled, and so I assume that undos and turns are
somehow coming in out-of-order. Should be rare that this happens.
can happen when somebody does an undo, since the ordering of undos and
moves is not assured. The result is a temporary (I think) stall, where
a move is rejected because the hash doesn't match, but that will be
accepted later when the undo's been processed and the hash will now
match.
that's real data. This fixes assertions that after popping a move off
the move stack the hash is the same as before it was pushed. It may or
may not be sufficient to fix reported stalls, but it's certainly
necessary.
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.
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where you do "hint", then "prev hint" and get told there are no moves
found only to have the next "prev hint" succeed. This is a hack, but
the right fix is eluding me, and will certainly be riskier.
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.
been set up. Fixes assertion firing when SMS messages go to wrong app
(normal vs CrossDbg), though the right fix is to have the two apps
using different ports so they don't get each other's messages.
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.
the case where one of several guests wants to rematch is a hard
problem for later.) Requires passing old-style relayIDs (connname plus
device index) when devIDs aren't available, which they may not always
be.
for Rematch): works for linux version, provided you know the relayID
of the device you're inviting. Added to common/ a stream-saving
version of java's NetLaunchInfo I'll probably want to use there too
for cross-platform compatibility (there being no jni support for
json.)
partway through a game. Problem was that once a channel was working
with one means we wouldn't fall back to default addressing for the
means for which we didn't have a return address yet. (NOTE: Not yet
fully tested...)
Note: because the substitution is done in common code I can't use the
positional specifiers (%1$s vs %s) and so this breaks the generated
"translations". The scripts that do the generation need to be fixed to
understand the formatted="false" attribute.
quantity through to java world, use it, convert English <string>
resources to <plurals> (using python script) based on parallel changes
in French, and modify callsites to call getQuantityString() where
R.string.xxx became R.plurals.xxx.
almost unique 16-bit quantity. 1 in 2^16 new games will fail because
its connID will match, but that's ok in part because it can only
happen during the time between when this is released and follow-on
version that assumes all older versions are gone.
what's going on when multiple participants in a single game are on the
same device. But for a couple of strings passed into the jni the
changes are only in DEBUG code.
server or guest so that sender can tell when it receives a message
from itself (and reject it.) This fixes a lot of confusion in testing
where both participants in a networked game are on the same device,
but might also work around e.g. relay bugs.
inform of number of missing even when it hasn't dropped to 0 (so
second invite can be sent for 3+ device games); take down older alerts
before posting new (again since number of missing may have changed)
needs to save it there on receipt of an invitation (doesn't create
full game with comms until later.) Passes discon2 tests and seems to
work on a single Android device. (Haven't tested inviting on Android
yet.)
An invitation works with relay and (fake) SMS on, and the invited
client connects successfully using both (the second to arrive being
correctly identified as a dupe.) While the game can be played after,
only SMS messages are being received. And opening a saved game
crashes.
Works for large numbers of relay games in test, but will not yet
actually hold more than one value. Should be safe to merge to main
branch once stream upgrade is verified.