Compiling Amiga NetHack 3.4 Last Revision: 21 February 2002 for NetHack 3.4.2 We would like to thank each and every one of the people who took the time and effort to report bugs to us. THANK YOU! (And keep up the good work!) I. Introduction The Amiga-specific documentation has been split since the 3.1.3 release - please read the file Install.ami for information specific to the Amiga port before continuing. If you have problems with compilation, installation, or think you have found a bug in the game, please report it by electronic mail to the development group at nethack-bugs@nethack.org, where it will be routed to the appropriate person. Include your configuration, the version of NetHack you are playing (use the 'v' command or see include/patchlevel.h), and as much specific information as possible. As NetHack runs on many different machines, be sure to mention that you are playing the Amiga version and also mention if you are using the version for mc68k or ppc. If you want to find out about distributing NetHack, read the license (in NetHack:license or type ?i during the game). II. Compiling Amiga NetHack 3.4 II.A. Compilation Overview Compiling NetHack is not very hard - basically you do a little configuration and start make. It does, however, require a good amount of disk space and time. It also needs a good bit of memory, especially for linking. II.B. Basic Compilation NetHack can be built with SAS/C version 6.5x. The commercial version of DICE might work, but NetHack version 3.2.2 or later haven't been compiled with it. The "official" compiler for NetHack 3.4 is SAS/C 6.58 - we have dropped support for SAS/C 5.x. The Manx/Aztec port has not been tested recently and is certainly broken. Anyone managing to compile NetHack with this compiler is encouraged to submit context diffs of the required changes. When last tested, NetHack required version 5.0B of that compiler. Compiling with gcc should also work. II.B.1. Introduction to Compiling NetHack Before doing any compilation, read the README files distributed with the source. These should familiarize you with the source tree layout and what files are shared with what computers; everything in the sys/amiga directory is used exclusively by the Amiga. The makefile (sys/amiga/Makefile.ami) depends on certain assignments, providing the developer with a fairly flexible environment. See sys/amiga/Makefile.ami for assignment assumptions. DICE users should see section II.B.3 for information on creating a DMakefile usable with DMake. Edit config.h to your liking and system configuration. The defaults should be satisfactory for most systems. Read VERY CAREFULLY through the Makefile to familiarize yourself with which assignments are assumed. Otherwise, you're going to get something like "Insert NH: in any drive." You will need uudecode, and, if you need to modify dgn_comp or lev_comp, flex, and bison. The first thing Makefile.ami does is build makedefs, which handles a variety of data file generation, and then lev_comp and dgn_comp which compile the special levels. Makedefs will then be run to create a few files, followed by a roughly alphabetically sorted compilation of the entire source tree. This process will compile selected files from the sys/amiga, sys/share, win/tty, and src directories, eventually creating sbin/nethack. After building the main binary, a make install will build the auxiliary files including help files, special levels, icons, and the font files and will put these files into their final positions - most will be in dlb archives (if DLB was defined in config.h). The first make run should be done in NH:obj and the make install should be done in NetHack:; for both runs, the makefile is NH:sys/amiga/Makefile.ami (or NH:sys/amiga/DMakefile for DMake and NH:sys/amiga/Makefile.agc for gcc). Note that not all the source is simple C code. If you are modifying lev_comp or dgn_comp you may need bison and/or flex (depending on what modifications you are making). You do not need any of these tools to simply build NetHack - all the C output files are provided in the source distribution. Also, the ifchange script requires a version of diff that produces standard Unix format context diffs for proper operation - the version shipped with SAS/C is not sufficient. If you do not have bison and flex, copy the files from sys/share. The include files go in include/ and the C files go in util/. If the compile fails due to prototype errors for malloc and realloc, try deleting the first line of lev_comp.c and dgn_comp.c. II.B.2. Compiling NetHack with SAS/C version 6.58 NOTE WELL - Amiga NetHack has dropped support for SAS/C version 5. This version of NetHack was developed with SAS/C 6.58. Earlier versions than version of the compiler are known to cause problems - don't use them. A couple of notes and warnings from the SAS/C users on the team: * Included in the SAS/C port is code for generating a SnapShot.tb file upon catching various internal disasters. That is why the debug=l flag is in the makefile. This adds about 270K to the disk image, but it does not increase the run time memory requirements. * The 5.10b optimizer did not produce correct code for NetHack. The current optimizer has not been tested. II.B.3. Compiling NetHack with the commercial version of DICE IMPORTANT NOTE: If you are using DMake, you need to create DMakefile from Makefile.ami. Do the following: cd NH:sys/amiga edit from Makefile.ami to DMakefile with mkdmake opt w255 Some versions of DMake have been known to crash horribly on the makefile - if this happens, you'll need to download another make utility, such as AMake (ftp://ftp.dragonfire.net/amiga/utils/amake), which will run in DMake-compatibility mode if invoked with the -C switch (e.g. "amake -C -f NH:sys/amiga/DMakefile", or just "alias dmake amake -C"). SECOND IMPORTANT NOTE: The score list is currently disabled when compiling under DICE, due to an as-yet-unknown problem which causes system crashes when displaying the score list. NetHack can be compiled using the commercial version of DICE only. The registered shareware version had a bug in it which resulted in odd- aligned procedures. (It is possible to patch DC1 to fix this problem; however, this is not recommended, and you should upgrade to the commercial version.) DICE 3.0 (the first commercial release) has a couple of bugs in it which turn up in several of the NetHack sources; the DCC30_BUG define fixes them. If you have a more recent version of the compiler, you may be able to compile without this (and get slightly more efficient code) by commenting out the define in amiconf.h. During compilation, DICE will output a lot of warnings; they can be safely ignored.