Commit graph

113 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
8fc2c0ffa2 Update copyright notice
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2021-01-17 21:24:29 +01:00
ada4678128 config: Enlarge configuration tables that have variable size
Configuration tables product, sect-chr, ship-chr, plane-chr, land-chr,
nuke-chr have a bit of extra space deities can use for customizing
their games.  Give them more: enlarge product from 23 to 31
entries (plus one sentinel), sect-chr from 39 to 63, ship-chr from 47
to 127, plane-chr from 47 to 127, land-chr from 31 to 127, and
nuke-chr from 20 to 63.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2021-01-17 21:24:28 +01:00
e379edc648 config: Drop configuration table size macros
Macros LND_TYPE_MAX, N_MAXNUKE, PLN_TYPE_MAX, P_MAX, SCT_TYPE_MAX,
SHP_TYPE_MAX are only used to size a single array each.  Eliminate.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2021-01-17 21:24:28 +01:00
4a1ec06364 Update copyright notice
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2021-01-05 10:41:28 +01:00
8de59d0014 ship: Drop misleading comment
Left behind by comment c0c5822, v4.3.33.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2021-01-05 07:25:18 +01:00
d111522fe8 Update copyright notice
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
2018-04-29 10:33:19 +02:00
2bcd875715 Spell BTU and ETU consistently
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2017-08-07 10:08:31 +02:00
afe5001a23 Update copyright notice
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2017-08-07 09:38:32 +02:00
549561ff03 Include "file.h" where it's needed
Several headers define macros that use ef_ptr() without including
"file.h".  Fix that.  Drop redundant inclusions elsewhere.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2017-08-06 20:08:31 +02:00
2a87a8d240 include: Bury dead remnants of TREATIES and SAIL
Left behind by commit a109de9 and commit dc73207, v4.3.33.

While there, drop a declaration of nonexistent function xedit() that
crept into commit afa65c8, v4.2.20.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2017-08-06 19:59:59 +02:00
da05484d8b config: Generalize unit build materials storage
Use a single array member instead of multiple scalar members.  Only
the array elements that replace scalar members are can be non-zero for
now.

This is a first step to permitting more build materials.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2017-08-06 14:05:11 +02:00
68c7c08a58 config: Make work to build units independently configurable
The work required for build and repairs is traditionally a function of
build materials: 20 + lcm + 2*hcm for ships, planes and land units,
and (lcm + 2*hcm + oil + rad)/5 for nukes.  Make it independently
configurable instead, via new ship-chr, plane-chr, land-chr, nuke-chr
selector bwork, backed by new struct mchrstr member m_bwork, struct
plchrstr member pl_bwork, struct lchrstr member l_bwork, struct
nchrstr member n_bwork.  Keep the required work exactly the same for
now.

Clients that compute work from materials need to be updated.  Easy,
since build work is now exposed in xdump.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2017-08-06 14:04:32 +02:00
bae3f5447e Update copyright notice
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2017-07-02 17:45:44 +02:00
beedf8dced retreat: Rewrite automatic retreat code to fix its many bugs
Much of the retreat code duplicates navigate and march code.  Worse,
retreat's version is full of bugs:

* Land units can sometimes retreat when they couldn't march: while on
  the trading block (forbidden with march since 4.0.9), crewless
  (likewise since 4.0.0), kidnapped in a foreign sector (inconsistent
  since land units were added in Chainsaw 3), loaded on a ship
  (likewise) or a land unit (inconsistent since trains were added in
  4.0.0).

* Ships can retreat while on the trading block (forbidden with
  navigate since 4.0.9)

* Land units can't retreat into foreign sectors even though they could
  march there, namely when sector is allied or the land unit is a spy.
  They can march there since 4.0.0.

* Land units keep their fortification on retreat.  Has been that way
  since retreat was added in Chainsaw.

Then there's group retreat.  It's basically crazy:

* It triggers retreat for everyone in the same fleet or army, one
  after the other, regardless of retreat path, conditions (including
  group retreat), or even location.  The latter is quite abusable
  since retreats aren't interdicted.  Has been that way since retreat
  was added in Chainsaw.

* Group retreat fails to trigger when the originally retreating ship
  or land unit has no retreat path left when it's done.  Broken in
  commit b860123.

Finally, the reporting to the owner is sub-par:

* When a retreat is cut short by insufficient mobility or
  obstructions, its end sector isn't reported, leaving the player
  guessing.

* Non-retreats can be confusingly reported as retreat to the same
  sector.  Can happen when the retreat path starts with 'h' (obscure
  feature to suppress a single retreat), or when a group retreat
  includes a ship or land unit without retreat orders.

* Interaction with mines during retreat is reported before the retreat
  itself, which can be quite confusing.

* Sweeping landmines isn't reported at all.

* Much code and much bulletin text is dedicated to reporting what
  caused the retreat, even though it should be perfectly obvious.

Rewrite this on top of common navigate and march code.  Reuse of
common code fixes the "can retreat when it couldn't navigate/march"
and the "can't retreat into sectors it could navigate or march into"
bugs, and improves the reporting.

One special case isn't a bug fix but a rule change: mountains.  The
old code forbids that explicitly, and it's clearly intentional, if
undocumented.  The new code allows it by not doing anything special.

Turn group retreat into an actual group retreat: everyone in the same
fleet and sector with the the same retreat path and group retreat
condition joins the group.  The group retreats together, just like in
navigate and march.

Take care to always report the end sector.  When retreat is
impossible, report "can't retreat".  When retreat is partial, report
"and stays in X,Y".  When it's complete, report "stopped at X,Y".

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-03-02 08:20:48 +01:00
74a71aa007 subs: Rename shp_nav(), lnd_mar()
... to shp_nav_stay_behind(), lnd_mar_stay_behind(), to better reflect
their purpose.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-03-02 08:20:47 +01:00
24000b4855 navigate march: Fix use-after-free and other bugs
unit_move() is too big and has too many paths through its loop.
Maintenance of the (unspoken) loop invariant isn't obvious.  In fact,
it isn't maintained on some paths.  I found several bugs:

* We check prerequisite conditions for moving before the first move
  and around prompts.  When a condition becomes wrong on the move,
  movement continues all the same until the next prompt.  I believe
  the only way this can happen is loss of crew due to hitting a mine.

* We cache ships and land units in a list of struct ulist.  When a
  ship or land unit gets left behind, its node is removed from the
  list and freed.

  We keep pointer flg pointing to the flagship in that list for
  convenience.  However, the pointer isn't updated until the next
  prompt.  It's referenced for automatic radar and all sub-commands
  other than the six directions and 'h'.  Use after free when such a
  sub-command gets processed after a flagship change without a prompt.
  Same for land units.  For instance, navigating a pair of ships "jh"
  where the flagship has no mobility leaves the flagship behind, then
  attempts to radar automatically using the ship in the freed list
  node.  Likewise, marching a similar pair of land units "jl" examines
  the land unit in the freed list node to figure out how to look.

* We cache mobility in the same list to support fractional mobility
  during movement.  Movement deducts from cached mobility and writes
  the result back to the ship or land unit.

  If something else charges it mobility while it's in this list, the
  cache becomes stale.  shp_nav() and lnd_nav() reload stale caches,
  but don't run often enough.  For instance, when a ship hits mines,
  the mine damage makes the cache stale.  If a direction or 'h'
  follows directly, the stale mobility is written back, clobbering the
  mine hit's mobility loss.

This mess dates back to Empire 2, where it replaced a different mess.
There may be more bugs.

unit_move()'s complex control flow makes reasoning about its loop
invariant too error-prone.  Rewrite the mess instead, splitting off
sensible subroutines.

Also fixes a couple of minor annoyances:

* White-space can confuse the parser.  For instance, "jg l" is
  interpreted like "jgll".  Fix to reject the space.  Broken in commit
  0c12d83, v4.3.7.

* The flagship uses radar automatically before any sub-command (since
  Chainsaw), and all ships use it automatically after a move (since
  4.2.2).  Make them all use it before and after each sub-command,
  whether it's a move or not.

* Land units don't use radar automatically.  Make them use it just
  like ships.

* Always report a flagship / leader change right when it happens, not
  only before and after a prompt.

Left for another day, marked FIXME: BTU charging is unclean.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-03-02 08:20:47 +01:00
2a23660e68 subs: Factor shp_may_nav() out of shp_nav()
shp_may_nav() uses sp->shp_own rather than actor, but that's okay,
shp_nav() ensures they're the same.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-02-28 16:21:35 +01:00
b14f5276ab Update copyright notice
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-02-28 16:21:34 +01:00
a024dbb8a3 navigate: Require all ships to start in the same sector
The capability to navigate ships spread over several sectors is
obscure and rarely useful.  Accidental use is probably more frequent
than intentional use.  Issues:

* Interactive prompts show only the flagship's position, and give no
  clue that some ships are actually elsewhere.

* Path finding is supported only when all navigating ships are in
  the same sector.

* Interdiction becomes rather complex.  For each movement, every
  sector entered is interdicted independently.  This means the same
  fort, ship, land unit or plane can interdict multiple times.
  Interdiction order depends on the order the code examines
  ships. which the player can control.  This is all pretty much
  undocumented.

* Complicates the code and its maintenance.  Multiplies the number of
  test cases needed to cover navigate.

I feel we're better off without this feature.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-02-28 16:13:14 +01:00
c70d9375ef subs: Make shp_check_nav() more like lnd_check_mar()
No functional change.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-02-28 16:12:54 +01:00
6e386d101a subs: Give shp_nav_put(), lnd_mar_put() internal linkage
With autonav and SAIL gone, shp_nav_put() isn't used externally
anymore.  lnd_mar_put() never was; it got external linkage just for
symmetry.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-02-28 16:12:02 +01:00
dc73207a99 sail: Remove option SAIL
SAIL has issues:

* Sail orders are executed at the update.  Crafty players can use them
  to get around the update window.

* The route is fixed at command time.  You can't let the update find
  the best route, like it does for distribution.

* The info pages documenting it amount to almost 100 non-blank lines
  formatted.  They claim you can follow friendly ships.  This is
  wrong.  They also show incorrect follow syntax.  Unlikely to be the
  only errors.

* Few players use it.  Makes it a nice hidey-hole for bugs.  Here are
  two nice ones:

  - If follow's second argument is negative, the code attempts to
    follow an uninitialized ship.  Could well be a remote hole.

  - If ship #1 follows #2 follows #3 follows #2, the update goes into
    an infinite loop.

* It's more than 500 lines of rather crufty code nobody wants to
  touch.  Thanks to a big effort in Empire 2, it shares some code with
  the navigation command.  It still duplicates other navigation code.
  The sharing complicates fixing the bugs demonstrated by
  navi-march-test.

Reviewing, fixing and testing this mess isn't worth the opportunity
cost.  Remove it instead.  Drop commands follow, mquota, sail and
unsail.  Drop ship selectors mquota, path, follow.

struct shpstr shrinks some more, on my system from 160 to 120 bytes.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-02-28 16:11:28 +01:00
48e656c057 autonav: Remove the feature
The autonavigation feature has issues:

* Autonavigation orders are executed at the update.  Crafty players
  can use them to get around the update window.

* Usability is poor:

  - The order command is overly complex, not least because it can do
    five different things: clear, suspend, resume, declare route, set
    cargo levels.

  - Unlike every other command involving movement, order does not let
    you specify routes, only destination sectors.

  - Setting cargo levels can silently swap start and end point of a
    circular route, because "this keeps the load_it() procedure
    happy".  Maybe it does, but it surely keeps players confused.

  - Setting "start" cargo levels actually sets the "end" levels, and
    vice versa.  Has always been broken that way.

  - Predicting what exactly autonavigation will do at the update isn't
    easy.

* The info pages documenting it amount to almost 400 non-blank lines
  formatted.  They claim only merchant ships can be given orders.
  This is wrong.  Unlikely to be the only error.

* Few players use it, and its workings at the update a fairly opaque.
  Makes it a nice hidey-hole for bugs.  Here are two:

  - Unlike the scuttle command, autonavigation happily scuttles trade
    ships while they're on the trading block.

  - Unlike the load command, autonavigation can load in friendly and
    allied sectors.

* It's more than 700 lines of rather crufty code nobody wants to
  touch.  Thanks to a big effort in Empire 2, it shares code with the
  navigation command.  It still duplicates load code.  The sharing
  complicates fixing the bugs demonstrated by navi-march-test.

Reviewing, fixing and testing this mess isn't worth the opportunity
cost.  Remove it instead.  Drop commands order, qorder and sorder.
Drop ship selectors xstart, xend, ystart, yend, cargostart, cargoend,
amtstart, amtend, autonav.

xdump ship sheds almost half its columns.  struct shpstr shrinks, on
my system from 200 to 160 bytes.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-02-28 16:10:22 +01:00
7548337e73 subs: Rename shp_put() to shp_nav_put()
For consistency with lnd_mar_put().

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-01-17 15:25:24 +01:00
b5ffc1ca49 subs: Split unit_put() into shp_put() and lnd_put() again
Commit d94d269 combined them into unit_put(), but that has turned out
not to be useful.  Split them again.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-01-17 15:25:16 +01:00
fe42e6e8dd subs: Factor shp_insque() out of shp_sel(), shp_missdef(), ...
... nav_ship(), fltp_to_list().

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2015-01-14 19:08:46 +01:00
c03db4c5ef shpsub: Make shp_check_nav() return more useful information
Some callers have to second-guess shp_check_nav() to figure out
whether CN_LANDLOCKED means "too big to fit into the canal" or "can't
go there at all".

Fix that by returning d_navigation.  CN_LANDLOCKED becomes either
NAV_CANAL or NAV_NONE, CN_CONSTRUCTION becomes either NAV_02 or
NAV_60, and CN_NAVIGABLE becomes NAVOK.

The CN_NAVIGABLE, ... codes are now unused.  Drop them.

Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2014-02-16 13:19:25 +01:00
a0cdd157f1 shpsub: Move declarations to ship.h
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2014-02-16 13:19:25 +01:00
bb467c335d Update copyright notice
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@pond.sub.org>
2014-01-02 14:33:48 +01:00
e51b3fb842 Use int instead of long for flags
As long as symbol_by_value(), show_capab() and togg() support only
int, flags need to fit into int.

Not a problem in practice, because no machine capable of running
Empire has int narrower than 32 bits, and 32 bits suffice.

Some flags members are long instead of int: struct lchrstr member
l_flags, struct natstr member nat_flags, struct mchrstr member m_flags
are long.  Waste of space on machines with long wider than int.
Change them to int.

Rearrange struct lchrstr and struct natstr to avoid holes.
2013-05-08 06:57:51 +02:00
df4925d696 Update copyright notice 2013-01-12 17:45:01 +01:00
1118f1c0ca Update copyright notice 2012-06-10 10:52:22 +02:00
98cd2a3a70 Update known contributors comments 2011-04-14 20:21:23 +02:00
9be4f57ad5 Clean up superfluous include of queue.h in land.h, ship.h 2011-04-14 19:46:05 +02:00
7e2008e7f4 License upgrade to GPL version 3 or later
Why upgrade?  I'm not a lawyer, but here's my take on the differences
to version 2:

* Software patents: better protection against abuse of patents to
  prevent users from exercising the rights under the GPL.  I doubt
  we'll get hit with a patent suit, but it's a good move just on
  general principles.

* License compatibility: compatible with more free licenses, i.e. can
  "steal" more free software for use in Empire.  I don't expect to steal
  much, but it's nice to have the option.

* Definition of "source code": modernization of some details for today's
  networked world, to make it easier to distribute the software.  Not
  really relevant to us now, as we normally distribute full source code.

* Tivoization: this is about putting GPL-licensed software in hardware,
  then make the hardware refuse to run modified software.  "Neat" trick
  to effectively deny its users their rights under the GPL.  Abuse was
  "pioneered" by TiVo (popular digital video recorders).  GPLv3 forbids
  it.  Unlikely to become a problem for us.

* Internationalization: more careful wording, to harden the license
  outside the US.  The lawyers tell us it better be done that way.

* License violations: friendlier way to deal with license violations.
  This has come out of past experience enforcing the GPL.

* Additional permissions: Probably not relevant to us.

Also include myself in the list of principal authors.
2011-04-12 21:20:58 +02:00
b1a36aebf7 Tidy up whitespace in macro replacement lists 2010-06-20 18:39:31 +02:00
25d29c8f8f Convert tab after #define to space 2010-06-20 18:38:54 +02:00
73e25ff21e Update copyright notice 2010-01-19 08:40:17 +01:00
2fa5f65257 Generation numbers to catch write back of stale copies
Oops when a stale copy is written back, i.e. the processor was yielded
since the copy was made.  Such bugs are difficult to spot.  Sequence
numbers catch them when they do actual harm (they also catch different
bugs).  Generation numbers catch them even when they don't.

New ef_generation to count generations.  Call new ef_make_stale() to
increment it whenever the processor may be yielded.

New struct emptypedstr member generation.  To conserve space, make it
a bit-field of twelve bits, i.e. generations are only recorded modulo
2^12.  Make sure all members of unit empobj_storage share it.  It is
only used in copies; its value on disk and in the cache is
meaningless.  Copies with generation other than ef_generation are
stale.  Stale copies that are a multiple of 2^12 generations old can't
be detected, but that is sufficiently improbable.

Set generation to ef_generation by calling new ef_mark_fresh() when
making copies in ef_read() and ef_blank().  nav_ship() and
fltp_to_list() make copies without going through ef_read(), and
therefore need to call ef_mark_fresh() as well.  Also call it in
obj_changed() to make check_sect_ok() & friends freshen their argument
when it is unchanged.

New must_be_fresh() oopses when its argument is stale.  Call it in
ef_write() to catch write back of stale copies.
2010-01-19 08:36:01 +01:00
358aee203e Store sequence numbers more compactly
Store them and ef_type in bit-fields.

Allocate eight bits for ef_type.  Values range from 0 to EF_GAME
(currently 16), so this is plenty.

Allocate twelve bits for sequence numbers.  Sequence number mismatches
are now missed when the numbers are equal modulo 2^12.  Still
sufficiently improbable.

Common machines store the bit-fields in a 32 bit word.  There are
twelve bits left in that word for future use.  Total savings 16 bits,
which is exactly what the previous commit spent on wider uids on
common machines.
2010-01-19 08:31:10 +01:00
ba2044be18 Store uids as int to support more sectors and units
Before, they were stored as short.  Wider uids use more space, but the
next commit will recover it by narrowing other members.

The use of short has always limited the number of ships, planes, land
units and nukes to SHRT_MAX (commonly 32768).  Only the most extreme
games ever came close.

Commit 49780e2c (v4.3.12) added struct sctstr member sct_uid to make
struct empobj member uid work for sectors.  This made the limit apply
to sectors as well.  We've had games with more than 32768 sectors.
2010-01-19 08:26:42 +01:00
c528fcbe3e Update known contributors comments 2009-12-13 17:34:28 +01:00
3a4b50b815 Comment fix 2009-12-12 16:28:52 +01:00
35ef345ecb Update copyright notice 2009-02-08 09:33:18 +01:00
d702068457 Fix trailing whitespace 2008-09-17 21:31:40 -04:00
3e370da58c Get rid of ship and land unit load counters
Load counters are redundant; they can be computed from the carrier
uids.  Keeping them up-to-date as the carriers change is a pain, and
we never got that quite complete.

Computing load counters straight from the carrier uids every time we
need them would be rather inefficient, but computing them from cargo
lists is not.  So do that.

Remove the load counters: struct shpstr members shp_nplane,
shp_nchoppers, shp_nxlight, shp_nland, and struct lndstr members
lnd_nxlight and lnd_nland.

Don't compute/update load counters in build_ship(), build_land(),
land(), ldump(), load_plane_ship(), load_land_ship(),
load_plane_land(), load_land_land(), lstat(), sdump(), shi(), sstat(),
tend_land(), check_trade(), put_combat(), pln_oneway_to_carrier_ok),
pln_newlanding(), fit_plane_on_ship(), fit_plane_on_land(),
unit_list().

Nothing left in fit_plane_off_ship(), fit_plane_off_land(), so remove
them.

load_land_ship(), load_land_land(), check_trade(), pln_newlanding(),
put_plane_on_ship(), take_plane_off_ship(), put_plane_on_land(),
take_plane_off_land() no longer change the carrier, so don't put it.

Remove functions to recompute the load counters from carrier uids:
count_units(), lnd_count_units(), count_planes(), count_land_planes(),
pln_fixup() and lnd_fixup(), along with the latter two's private
copies of fit_plane_on_ship() and fit_plane_on_land().

New cargo list functions to compute load counts: unit_cargo_count()
and unit_nplane(), with convenience wrappers shp_nplane(),
shp_nland(), lnd_nxlight(), lnd_nland().

Use them to make ship selectors nplane, nchoppers, nxlight, nland
virtual.  They now reflect what is loaded, not how the load uses the
available slots.  This makes a difference when x-light planes or
choppers use plane slots.

Use them to make land unit selectors nxlight and nland virtual.

Use them to get load counts in land(), ldump(), load_plane_ship(),
load_land_ship(), load_plane_land(), load_land_land(), sdump(), shi(),
tend_land(), fit_plane_on_land(), trade_desc(), unit_list().

Rewrite fit_plane_on_ship() and could_be_on_ship() to use
shp_nplane().  could_be_on_ship() now takes load count arguments, as
computed by shp_nplane(), so it can be used for checking against an
existing load as well.
2008-09-08 21:32:56 -04:00
536ef0b0a2 Add sequence numbers to game state
This oopses on output dependency violations, e.g. two threads doing a
read-modify-write without synchronization, or the one thread nesting
several read-modify-writes.  Such bugs are difficult to spot, and tend
to be abusable.  I figure we have quite a few of them.

New struct emptypedstr member seqno.  Make sure all members of unit
empobj_storage share it.  Initialize it in files: main() and
file_sct_init().  Set it in ef_blank() and new ef_set_uid() by calling
new get_seqno().  Use ef_set_uid() when copying objects: swaps(),
doland(), doship(), doplane(), dounit(), delete_old_news().  Step it
in ef_write() by calling new new_seqno().

Factor do_read() out of fillcache() to make it available for
get_seqno().
2008-05-17 22:50:30 +02:00
3b4de2feb1 Remove option FUEL
The abstract idea of tying ships and land units to a logistical tether
is sound, the concrete implementation as option FUEL is flawed.  It
adds too much busy-work to the game to be enjoyable.  It hasn't been
enabled in a public game for years.  The code implementing it is ugly,
repetitive, and a burden to maintain.

Remove selector fuel from ship_ca[] and land_ca[], and selectors
fuelc, fuelu from mchr_ca[] and lchr_ca[].  Remove fields fuelc, fuelu
from ship.config and land.config.

Remove command fuel from player_coms[].

Deprecate edit key 'B' in doship(), dounit(), and don't show it in
pr_ship(), pr_land().

Drop opt_FUEL code from build_ship(), shi(), sdump(), ship_damage(),
show_ship_stats(), do_mob_ship(), nav_ship(), build_land(), land(),
ldump(), land_damage(), show_land_stats(), do_mob_land(),
resupply_all(), resupply_commod(), get_minimum(), has_supply(),
unit_list(), vers().

Remove opt_FUEL, fuel_mult, struct shpstr member shp_fuel, struct
mchrstr members m_fuelc and m_fuelu, M_OILER, struct lndstr member
lnd_fuel, struct lchrstr members l_fuelc and l_fuelu, fuel(), and
auto_fuel_ship().
2008-05-12 09:25:20 +02:00
0dd6702df1 Update known contributors comments 2008-03-14 20:25:44 +01:00
a680c81110 Put a timestamp into struct emptypedstr
Make sure all members of unit empobj_storage share it.

Add matching timestamp member to struct comstr, struct empobj, struct
gamestr, struct lonstr, struct natstr, struct nwsstr, struct trdstr,
struct trtstr.  The timestamp isn't yet set for these.  To be fixed.

Move the timestamp member to the right place in struct lndstr, struct
loststr, struct realmstr, struct nukstr, struct plnstr, struct sctstr,
struct shpstr.
2008-03-14 20:25:43 +01:00