Member nws_uid is unused since the commit before previous. Remove it.
Member nws_seqno is of marginal value, because we write news only
through ncache[], and thus aren't prone to the errors sequence numbers
can catch. Remove it.
Make timestamp selector virtual, computing nws_when + nws_duration,
and remove member nws_timestamp. Impact:
* In ncache(), the removed timestamp equals nws_when + nws_duration,
both for new news and updated news. No change.
* delete_old_news() becomes invisible. Before, its move of unexpired
news to the beginning of the news file touched all the timestamps.
That was unwanted, because the move does not change news, only their
storage. Improvement.
* empdump no longer flags the imported news changed via the timestamp.
This is somewhat unfortunate. Document as bug.
With these members removed, struct nwsstr no longer matches struct
emptypedstr, so clear news table flag EFF_TYPED and remove union
empobj_storage member news. This loses the automatic maintenance of
member ef_type via struct emptypedstr. Remove ef_type as well.
This shrinks struct nwsstr from 20 to 12 bytes on common 32 bit
machines, and from 32 to 16 bytes on common 64 bit machines. Since
the server doesn't map the whole news file (EFF_MAP is off), this
reduces I/O, while the table's memory use remains the same.
Historical note: struct nwsstr is now pretty much what it was back in
BSD Empire 1.1. Members ef_type and nws_uid go back to Empire 3 (for
C_SYNC?). v4.3.12 added member nws_timestamp, which doubled the size
on common 64 bit machines. v4.3.15 added nws_seqno.
--- How to build the info pages ---
Make remakes info pages, table of contents and index automatically.
This requires Perl 5 and troff. To remake just formatted info pages,
run make info.
To remake HTML info, run make html. This is not done by default. The
recommended start page is TOP.html, but you may also like all.html.
--- How to add a new info page ---
To create a new info page, follow these steps:
1. Decide which chapter to put your info page in:
Commands - Empire Commands
Concepts - Game concepts
Introduction - General info about playing Empire
Server - Info about the server
2. Decide what to call your info page:
- If it's an Empire command, give it the same name as the command
as listed in lib/player/empmod.c
- Info names are case-insensitive. Make sure there isn't another
one that differs only in case.
- Make sure your info page doesn't have the same name as an existing
subject or chapter.
3. Format your info page.
The file name for a page NAME must be NAME.t. It's easiest to start
with an existing file.
The first line must be a title header:
.TH arg1 arg2
- arg1 should be the chapter, one of: Command, Concept,
Introduction, Server
- arg2 is the title of your page. If it contains more than one
word, make sure it's in double quotes
- if the info page is for an Empire command, then arg2 must be the
command name in ALL UPPERCASE.
The second line must be a name header:
.NA arg1 arg2
- arg1 must be the name
- arg2 is a one-line description of the info page which will be
put on the Subject page that your info page belongs to. It should
be in double quotes
The third line must be a level header:
.LV arg
- arg must be a level, one of Basic, Expert
The last line should be a see also:
.SA "item1, item2, ..., subject1, subject2"
- the stuff in quotes is a list of other info pages which are
related to this page and info Subjects to which this page belongs.
- the stuff in quotes must all be on the same line
- You must include at least one subject (see the Subjects
subdirectory) in the list (at the end of the list by convention).
The lines in between can contain troff requests. The following
additional requests are available:
Empire command syntax:
.SY "command <ARGS>"
An Empire command example:
.EX "command args"
No Formatting:
.NF
this stuff
won't be formatted
.FI
Begin paragraph:
.s1
Item in a description:
.L
Fancy troff magic is prone to break HTML output.
4. Format your info page, update table of contents and index
Run make info html. If it fails, peruse the error messages and fix
your info page.
==APPENDIX A - What exactly the Perl scripts do==
The scripts read all of the info pages and create a two-level table of
contents for them, organized by subject. An info page belongs to a
subject if that subject appears as an entry in the .SA ("SEE ALSO")
field of the info page _and_ that entry is not the name of another
info page.
For example, the .SA field of headlines.t contains the entries
"newspaper" and "Communication". Since there's already an info page
called "newspaper.t", but there is no "Communication" info page, then
the headlines info page is considered to be a member of the
Communication
subject.
The output of these script is a bunch of .t files. The file TOP.t is
the top-level table of contents and lists all of the subjects. Then
for each SUBJECT, a SUBJECT.t file is created, listing all of the info
pages that belong to it.
==APPENDIX B - The checklist.pl script==
FIXME This does not work at the moment
This little perl script compares the "list" of legal Empire commands
in your server with the Empire commands documented in info. To run
it, login to your game and type:
[##:##]% list > list.out
Then, move the list.out file to this directory and run checklist.pl.