Since LTCG is enabled now, we don't have to define every function inside
the headers for ~xXx super speed xXx~, which means we can strip the
headers down to their bare minimum and reduce interdependencies and
therefore recompilation times by a lot.
The available gamepads are distributed automatically among players.
This also implements controller hot-plugging: It is possible to start a
game without a controller and plug it in later, and to reconnect a
controller after plugging it out.
Deserializing players neglected to turn an enumerated proplist back into
a live one. This would explode later during player initialization when
someone didn't check that the deserialized value was a real, live
proplist.
The C++ standard library comes with perfectly fine implementations of
these functions, so there's no point in reimplementing them just for the
hell of it.
As discussed in http://forum.openclonk.org/topic_show.pl?tid=2917, I
have merged all copyright notices into a single file and referenced that
merged file from each source file.
For the updated source files, the timeline has been split into three
parts:
1. Pre-RWD code (before 2001)
2. RWD code (2001 through 2009)
3. OpenClonk code (2009 and later)
All pre-RWD copyright notices have been left intact, as have RWD-era
copyright notices where the file did not have a RedWolf design copyright
notice but only individual author ones. All copyright notices of the
OpenClonk era have been replaced by a single notice ranging from the
first recorded year to the current year (2013). Mape code did not get a
OpenClonk Team copyright notice because it is somewhat separate from the
main OpenClonk codebase and has only been touched by Armin Burgmeier.
Instead of sending pre-composed C4Script code across the network, make
player self-management (surrendering, team changes etc.) send a
dedicated control packet. This means less network traffic, and also a
smaller attack vector for malicions C4Script injection.
Part of #936.
Change OnOwnerRemoved engine callback to also pass the ally selected as successor for the dead player.
The flag had a callback OnOwnerChange implemented. However, we already have OnOwnerChanged in the engine to do the same thing.