This updates `fmt` to the latest version and moves to just being a copy
of their repo to make updating easier (no editing their cmake / figuring
out which files to minimally include).
The motivation for this is now that we switched to C++ 20, there were a
ton of deprecated function usages that is going away in future compiler
versions. This gets rid of all those warnings.
The logger used in `goalc` tries to print an already-formatted string
`message` using `fmt::print(message);` Usually this doesn't cause
problems, but if you try to print, for example, an exception that has
special characters (notably `{`) it will try to do another round of
formatting/replacements, despite not having any args to replace with,
which ends up throwing another exception. This is why errors when
parsing custom level JSON cause the REPL to exit.
I've hopefully identified all the various instances of this across the
codebase
- started documenting the files I glossed over, some are totally done,
others are just partially done
- I changed the decompiler to automatically initialize the
art-group-info from the json file. This makes updating gsrc, even a
single file at a time, have consistent naming
- Though I disabled this functionality for jak 1, as I have no idea if
using the ntsc art groups will cause a regression for different versions
- fix indentation for docstrings -- it still doesn't look great, but
this is now a formatting concern, rather than the docstring having a
bunch of happen-stance leading whitespace.
Two main problems fixed here:
- offline tests will fail on a comparison failure (a mistake from the
re-write)
- art-group-info is committed to the repo and shared with every thread
(running the tests with 1 thread, for example on the CI, and locally
were producing different results)
art files are still not provided to the jak2 offline tests:
- `*-ag` files are not being output
- `art-elts.gc` is not complete, as a handful of files claim to be
missing stuff
lastly, in jak1's offline tests we were also running `tpage` and `*-vis`
files through the decompiler. This omits that (they came from the
`all_objs.json` file) -- is this an issue?
This solves two main problems:
- the looming threat of running out of memory since every thread would
consume duplicate (and probably not needed) resources
- though I will point out, jak 2's offline tests seem to hardly use any
memory even with 400+ files, duplicated across many threads. Where as
jak 1 does indeed use tons more memory. So I think there is something
going on besides just the source files
- condense the output so it's much easier to see what is happening / how
close the test is to completing.
- one annoying thing about the multiple thread change was errors were
typically buried far in the middle of the output, this fixes that
- refactors the offline test code in general to be a lot more modular
The pretty printing is not enabled by default, run with `-p` or
`--pretty-print` if you want to use it
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/13153231/205513212-a65c20d4-ce36-44f6-826a-cd475505dbf9.mp4