Transfusion 1.1 beta3
Moderator: General Discussion Moderators
-
- Shadow Warrior
- Posts: 412
- Joined: Tue Aug 10, 2004 09:40 am
- Location: Blue Mountains, Australia
- Contact:
Transfusion 1.1 beta3
It's finally up. Transfusion 1.1 beta3 has finally been put together and released to the public. Major changes include updated models and weapons, various textures, code changes, plus some cleaning out and repackaging. I don't have a precise list of changes onhand, so you'll have to take a look for yourself.
The download is located in the Files section of the SourceForge site (http://blood.sourceforge.net), which is also accessible from the main site itself (http://transfusion.deathmask.net/files).
Feedback would be appreciated. It is a beta release after all!
The download is located in the Files section of the SourceForge site (http://blood.sourceforge.net), which is also accessible from the main site itself (http://transfusion.deathmask.net/files).
Feedback would be appreciated. It is a beta release after all!
- Fiend:Kamikaze
- A LUMBERJACK!
- Posts: 114
- Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2004 03:29 pm
- Location: United States
It's dated July 21, 2004Toddd wrote:What Darkplaces build are you using?
I dont know if we had the latest version, there were maps that Predator and -ED were working on as well, but we wern't able to get ahold of them over the weekend to have them included. We'll have to set a deadline in the future, sorry about htat guysFiend:Kamikaze wrote:I though e3m1 was going to be in this release, though.
There was a bug Mathieu found about 2 seconds after release as well, so we will probably have updates posted here on the forum soon. Remeber it's still a beta so there's still lots of work to do. We will have a number of Betas out befor the final 1.1 is compleated.
Last edited by DustyStyx on Wed Sep 08, 2004 12:17 am, edited 1 time in total.
How do I install?
I looked in the zip-file for the 1.3 beta, and I found a file without an fileextension. How do I install this?
Re: How do I install?
I think you're talking about "transfusion-glx"? It's the Linux executable (for i386 CPUs). If you don't have Linux on your PC, you can delete it, it's useless.Loevet wrote:I looked in the zip-file for the 1.3 beta, and I found a file without an fileextension. How do I install this?
It doesn't work
What I had downloaded was the 1.3 beta zip, which consisted of one file, whick turned out to pe a compressed library of the windows version. Since I use linux, that wasn't for me. But I tried to run the 1.0 version, but then I get the error message:
"Transfusion Linux 13:28:15 Oct 22 2002
Error: ./transfusion/pak0.pak is not a packfile"
What can I do about this?
"Transfusion Linux 13:28:15 Oct 22 2002
Error: ./transfusion/pak0.pak is not a packfile"
What can I do about this?
Re: It doesn't work
OK. It looks like you mixed up the 2 versions... Anyway, let's start from scratch.Loevet wrote:What I had downloaded was the 1.3 beta zip, which consisted of one file, whick turned out to pe a compressed library of the windows version. Since I use linux, that wasn't for me. But I tried to run the 1.0 version, but then I get the error message:
"Transfusion Linux 13:28:15 Oct 22 2002
Error: ./transfusion/pak0.pak is not a packfile"
What can I do about this?
Get the 1.1 beta3 release (a ZIP file, 52MB or so). Unzip it on your Linux machine.
IMPORTANT: you must have the latest zlib installed (Transfusion will look for the dynamic library "libz.so"). I think all Linux distributions have it but you may want to check that the symbolic link "libz.so" is actually there.
Then, go into the new directory, named "transfusion-1.1-beta3" if I remember correctly. Change "transfusion-glx" permissions to make it runnable ("chmod 0755 transfusion-glx" in a shell), and run it. That should be good.
Elric: It would be a lot easier if we provided a .tar.gz for the linux users. A .tar.gz
would preserve the permission. A .sh script to launch the executable would also be interesting. I once wrote one for Transfusion so that I can start it by clicking on a symbol
BTW: I told people to set the permissions for the -glx file correctly:
http://www.happypenguin.org/
http://www.linux-gamers.net/modules/news/
But I suppose many of today's linux users don't even know what file permissions are so I think a Linux installer for the final 1.1 would be a good idea...
would preserve the permission. A .sh script to launch the executable would also be interesting. I once wrote one for Transfusion so that I can start it by clicking on a symbol
BTW: I told people to set the permissions for the -glx file correctly:
http://www.happypenguin.org/
http://www.linux-gamers.net/modules/news/
But I suppose many of today's linux users don't even know what file permissions are so I think a Linux installer for the final 1.1 would be a good idea...
Actually, when you build a ZIP archive on Linux, it stores the files permissions correctly in the archive. Having a ZIP distribution is useful because you know anyone can unpack it, whatever his machine is. It's the safest choice.
I made a Linux installer for the 1.0rc5 release candidate (you can still see it on http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/blood/, it's transfusion-1.0rc5-linux.i386.sh). But when I released TF 1.0, I finally decided to not rebuild it for this version, because it would have meant 40 more MB to upload for me, + support which is something I didn't want to do at this time. Also, Linux users are supposed to be tech-savy enough to know how to unpack a ZIP file. Well, at least they were at this time.
As for the shell script, I don't really see the point frankly. What would it do? Just launch the executable?
I made a Linux installer for the 1.0rc5 release candidate (you can still see it on http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/blood/, it's transfusion-1.0rc5-linux.i386.sh). But when I released TF 1.0, I finally decided to not rebuild it for this version, because it would have meant 40 more MB to upload for me, + support which is something I didn't want to do at this time. Also, Linux users are supposed to be tech-savy enough to know how to unpack a ZIP file. Well, at least they were at this time.
As for the shell script, I don't really see the point frankly. What would it do? Just launch the executable?
Then someone must have packed it from his Windows box because in the current zip, permissions are not stored for some reason.Elric wrote:Actually, when you build a ZIP archive on Linux, it stores the files permissions correctly in the archive. Having a ZIP distribution is useful because you know anyone can unpack it, whatever his machine is. It's the safest choice.
Yeah, that's what it should do. I remember how long it took for me to find out how to execute a program in Linux since the first time I downloaded a binary directly. Up until that point, I always compied the programs and used make install to have the binaries in /usr/bin. But this program came with the binary and some other files and I did not know were to put the rest. Some hours later I had figured out that I just had to type ./name-of-the-program in the console to run it. Damn, typing ./transfusion-glx in the console is not self-explenatory. Having a shell script that just executes the binary might help because this way, you can just click on the script in KDE/Gnome/whatever and the program is startet. It's quiet easy and helps out a lot.Elric wrote:As for the shell script, I don't really see the point frankly. What would it do? Just launch the executable?
And a Linux installer for the final game would help a lot more.
Actually, the urge for Linux installers is so great that a whole community was built around it: http://liflg.sourceforge.net/
A possibility for the final 1.1 would be to have a .sh install package and a normal zip file in wich the windows and the linux binaries are included.