Done with the following script:
```ruby
Dir["Source/**/*.{h,c,cc,cpp,hpp}"].each do |path|
v = File.read(path)
next if !v.include?("uint32_t") || v.include?("cstdint")
lines = v.lines
line_num = if lines[2].start_with?(" *")
lines.index { |l| l.start_with?(" */") } + 3
else
3
end
lines.insert(line_num, "#include <cstdint>\n")
File.write(path, lines.join(""))
end
```
then fixed-up manually
* Synchronize item placement in player's backpack
* Synchronize item remove from player's backpack
* Synchronize item placement and removal from player's belt
* Set up loopback network provider for failing tests
The format is almost identical to CL2, except it uses the frame header
to store frame width and height instead of 5 32-line offsets.
This means we always have access to frame dimensions, so we can use it
as an on-disk format for our graphics as well.
Additionally, we may be able to optimize the rendering even more
in the future now that we have guaranteed knowledge of frame dimensions.
libmpq is a much simpler alternative to StormLib for reading MPQ archives.
We use our own fork of libmpq: https://github.com/diasurgical/libmpq
Impact:
* DevilutionX is now a lot more portable. Unlike StormLib, libmpq only
needs platform-specific code for Windows.
* Locks around file access **removed** (instead we duplicate the file descriptor for streamed audio only).
* RAM usage is **300 KiB** lower than StormLib.
* Stripped release linux_x86_64 binary is **32 KiB** smaller.
* Amiga build now hangs instead of crashing.
Tthis code simply logs the save time of a multiplayer game in the
register database, this was likly done as part of an anti cheat scheme
(the key was "Video Player"), but appears to have since been disabled.
Probably to allow moving save games between PC's which was supported
when better Windows 2000 support was added.