root/releases/1.8.1/0/options.h.dist

Revision 459, 5.7 KB (checked in by pennmush, 2 years ago)

PennMUSH 1.7.7p30 Archival

Line 
1/* options.h */
2
3#ifndef __OPTIONS_H
4#define __OPTIONS_H
5
6/* *********** READ THIS BEFORE YOU MODIFY ANYTHING IN THIS FILE *********** */
7/* WARNING:  All options in this file have the ability to significantly change
8 * the look and feel and sometimes even internal behavior of the program.
9 * The ones shipped as the default have been extensively tested.  Others have
10 * been tested to a (usually) lesser degree, and therefore might still have
11 * latent bugs.  If you change any of them from the default, PLEASE check
12 * to make sure that you know the full effects of what you are changing. And
13 * if you encounter any errors or compile time problems with any options
14 * other than the default settings, PLEASE inform
15 * pennmush-bugs@pennmush.org
16 * immediately, so that they can be fixed.  The same goes for any other bug
17 * you might find in using this software.  All efforts will be made to fix
18 * errors encountered, but unless given a FULL description of the error,
19 * (IE telling me that logging in doesn't work is insufficient.  telling
20 * me that logging in with WCREAT undefined still gives you the registration
21 * message is a lot better.  MOST effective would be a full dbx trace, or a
22 * patch for the bug.)  Enjoy using the program.
23 */
24/***************************************************************************/
25
26/*---------------- Internals with many options ------------------------*/
27
28/* Malloc package options */
29/* malloc() is the routine that allocates memory while the MUSH is
30 * running. Because mallocs vary a lot from operating system to operating
31 * system, you can choose to use one of the mallocs we provide instead of
32 * your operating system's malloc.
33 * Set the value of MALLOC_PACKAGE  to one of these values:
34 *  0 -- Use my system's malloc. Required for Win32 systems.
35 *       Recommended for FreeBSD, Linux, Mac OS X/Darwin, and other OS's
36 *       where you think the malloc routines are efficient and debugged.
37 *       Otherwise, use only as a last resort.
38 *  1 -- Use the CSRI malloc package in normal mode.
39 *       Recommended for most operating systems where system malloc is
40 *       suspect. Known to work well on SunOS 4.1.x.
41 *  2 -- Use the CSRI malloc package in debug mode.
42 *       Only use this if you're tracking down memory leaks. Don't use
43 *       for a production MUSH - it's slow.
44 *  5 -- Use the GNU malloc (gmalloc) package.
45 *       Doesn't work on Alpha processors or FreeBSD systems, and
46 *       reportedly flaky on Linux. Requires an ANSI compiler.
47 *       Otherwise, similar to CSRI malloc.
48 *  3, 4, 6 -- Same as 0, kept for compatibility.
49 */
50#define MALLOC_PACKAGE 0
51
52/* What type of attribute compression should the MUSH use?
53 * Your options are:
54 * 1 - the default Huffman compression which has been in use for a
55 *     long time. In theory, this should be the best compression,
56 *     possibly at the cost of some speed. It is also 8-bit clean,
57 *     and thus suitable for locales that use extended character sets.
58 *     Sometimes has trouble on some linux systems for some reason.
59 * 2 - Same as 1, for backwards compability.
60 * 3 - Nick Gammon's word-based compression algorithm.
61 *     In theory, this should be considerably faster than Huffman
62 *     when decompressing, and considerably slower when compressing.
63 *     (But you decompress a lot more often). Compression ratio
64 *     is worse than Huffman for small dbs (<1.5Mb of text), but
65 *     better for larger dbs. Win32 systems must use this.
66 * 4 - Raevnos's almost 8-bit clean version of the word-based algorithm.
67 *     Prefer 3 unless you need extended characters. This algorithm
68 *     can encode all characters except 0x06.
69 * 0 - No compression at all. Very fast, but your db in memory
70 *     will be big - at least as large as your on-disk db.
71 *     Possibly suitable for the building stages of a small MUSH.
72 *     This should be 8-bit clean, too.
73 * You can change this at any time, with no worries. It only affects
74 * the in-memory compression of attribute/mail text, not the disk
75 * db compression. Recommend to keep it at 1. When in doubt, try them
76 * all, and check @uptime's memory usage stats for the most efficient
77 * choice among those that are stable for you. When using word-based
78 * compression, you can also #define COMP_STATS to get some detailed
79 * information in @stats/tables.
80 */
81#define COMPRESSION_TYPE 1
82
83
84/*------------------------- Other internals ----------------------*/
85
86/* If defined, use the info_slave to get information from identd,
87 * instead of having the MUSH do it directly.  This may help reduce lag
88 * from new logins.  This does _not_ work under Win32.
89 */
90#define INFO_SLAVE /* */
91
92/* Windows NT users may uncomment this define to get the native network i/o
93 * thread model instead of the bsd socket layer, for vastly better
94 * performance. Doesn't work on Win 95/98. By Nick Gammon
95 */
96/* #define NT_TCP /* */
97
98/*------------------------- MUSH Features ----------------------*/
99
100/* Many MUSHes want to change the +channels to =channels. That's
101 * annoying. So we've got this CHAT_TOKEN_ALIAS, which allows + as well
102 * as = (or whatever) channels. If you want this, define it to be
103 * the character you want to use in addition to +, enclosed in
104 * single quotes, as in '=' or '.' or whatever. Don't define it to '+'!
105 */
106/* #define CHAT_TOKEN_ALIAS '=' /* */
107
108
109/*------------------------- Cosmetic Features --------------------*/
110
111/* If you're using the email registration feature, but want to
112 * use a mailer other than sendmail, put the full path to the mailer
113 * program here. The mailer must accept the -t command-line
114 * argument ("get the recipient address from the message header To:").
115 * If it doesn't, you could probably write a wrapper for it.
116 * Example: #define MAILER "/full/path/to/other/mailer"
117/* #define MAILER /* */
118
119
120#endif
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