For a while we had made the temporary rapid-fire anti-cheat optional on
master, but had removed it entirely on the refactor branch. The
modification on master was acidentally only applied to the regular
(non-projectile) combat handler, while the removal on refactor removed
both that and the projectile check.
When the refactor branch was merged, that resulted in the removal of
only the projectile rapid-fire check, while the conditional regular
combat rapid-fire check was kept.
This change restores the projectile rapid-fire check such that it is
conditional, just like for regular combat.
Get rid of `iConditionBitFlag` in favor of a system of individual buff
objects that get composited to a bitflag on-the-fly.
Buff objects can have callbacks for application, expiration, and tick,
making them pretty flexible. Scripting languages can eventually use
these for custom behavior, too.
TODO:
- Get rid of bitflag in BaseNPC
- Apply buffs from passive nano powers
- Apply buffs from active nano powers
- Move eggs to new system
- ???
Was getting frustrated by the inconsistency in our include statements,
which were causing me problems. As a result, I went through and manually
re-organized every include statement in non-core files.
I'm just gonna copy my rant from Discord:
FOR HEADER FILES (.hpp):
- everything you use IN THE HEADER must be EXPLICITLY INCLUDED with the exception of things that fall under Core.hpp
- you may NOT include ANYTHING ELSE
FOR SOURCE FILES (.cpp):
- you can #include whatever you want as long as the partner header is included first
- anything that gets included by another include is fair game
- redundant includes are ok because they'll be harmless AS LONG AS our header files stay lean.
the point of this is NOT to optimize the number of includes used all around or make things more efficient necessarily. it's to improve readability & coherence and make it easier to avoid cyclical issues
Storing certain things in appearance data and others in their own fields
was gross. Now everything is stored on the same level and functions have
been added to generate appearance data when it's needed by the client.
In our original implementation, quest item drops were rolled on the
spot, so the chances of getting two quest items for different missions
in a single kill (where both missions have you kill the same mob) were
independent of each other.
When we made quest item drop chances shared between group members so
players doing missions together would progress at the same rate, we
accidentally linked the quest item odds of different missions together.
This change makes it so that the odds are per-task, so they're shared
between different group members doing the same tasks, but distinct for
different tasks being done by the same player.
Couldn't get a reliable repro, but this is probably what that bug was.
It's not very throughly investigated, but we'll be tweaking those parts
of the codebase anyway, so we can examine if there's a deeper issue
later.
Explanation: it was uncertain whether mobs could perform critical hits, since the color of damage numbers didn't change at all. However, I found that male characters will actually use a different sound effect when receiving a crit (I confirmed this SFX appeared in old FF videos), so I went ahead and re-enabled it.
ChatManager -> Chat
MissionManager -> Missions
NanoManager -> Nanos
TransportManager -> Transport
ChunkManager -> Chunking
BuddyManager -> Buddies
GroupManager -> Groups
RacingManager -> Racing
ItemManager -> Items
NPCManager and PlayerManager remain.
Note: You can use git log --follow src/file.cpp to trace the history of
a file from before it was renamed.
All packet handlers and helper functions that are only used in the
source file they're declared in have been taken out of the namespaces in
the corresponding header files, have been marked static, and have been
reordered to avoid the need for declarations at the top of each source
file.
Each source file now contains a "using namespace" directive so that the
static functions don't need to prefix the source file's symbols with
their namespace. All redundant namespace prefixes found have been
removed.
An unused nano power resetting function in NanoManager has been removed.
This is terrible. It was a mistake to do this before cleaning up the
actual code. It might be better not to use this commit and to do this
refactor in a different order or something.