Reproduced via 'groupsolver -v 5i:l5_2b5h' (thanks to Arun Giridhar
for the report).
We had filled in subsolver.names, but then called
latin_solver_alloc(&subsolver), which nulled out that pointer again.
Solution: do those two things in the opposite order.
Having stated the principle in the previous commit, I should apply it
consistently. A source file linked into the Puzzles library of common
support code should not also define a main() under ifdef.
This commit only goes as far as the _library_ support modules. It
would be a much bigger job to do the same for all the actual _puzzles_
that have test main()s or standalone-solver main()s. And it's not
necessary, because modifying one of those source files only triggers a
rebuild of _one_ puzzle, not absolutely everything. (Not to mention
that it's quite likely the puzzle and the test main() will need to be
modified in conjunction anyway.)
As in the previous commit, this has required exposing a few internal
API functions as global, and maybe editing them a bit. In particular,
the one-shot internal function that divvy_rectangle() loops on until
it succeeds is now exposed as divvy_rectangle_attempt(), which means
the test program doesn't have to condition a failure counter into the
real function.
I've thrown away penrose-vector-test completely, because that didn't
look like a test program with any ongoing use at all - it was surely
vestigial, while James was getting the vector representation up and
running in the first place.
After Ben fixed all the unwanted global functions by using gcc's
-Wmissing-declarations to spot any that were not predeclared, I
remembered that clang has -Wmissing-variable-declarations, which does
the same job for global objects. Enabled it in -DSTRICT=ON, and made
the code clean under it.
Mostly this was just a matter of sticking 'static' on the front of
things. One variable was outright removed ('verbose' in signpost.c)
because after I made it static clang was then able to spot that it was
also unused.
The more interesting cases were the ones where declarations had to be
_added_ to header files. In particular, in COMBINED builds, puzzles.h
now arranges to have predeclared each 'game' structure defined by a
puzzle backend. Also there's a new tiny header file gtk.h, containing
the declarations of xpm_icons and n_xpm_icons which are exported by
each puzzle's autogenerated icon source file and by no-icon.c. Happily
even the real XPM icon files were generated by our own Perl script
rather than being raw xpm output from ImageMagick, so there was no
difficulty adding the corresponding #include in there.
I noticed commit db3b531e2cab765a00475054d2e9046c9d0437d3 in the history
where Simon added a bunch of "static" qualifiers. That suggested that
consistently marking internal functions "static" is desirable, so I
tried a build using GCC's -Wmissing-declarations, which requires prior
declaration (presumed to be in a header file) of all global functions.
This commit makes the GTK build clean under GCC's
-Wmissing-declarations. I've also adding "static" to a few obviously
internal objects, but GCC doesn't complain about those so I certainly
haven't got them all.
In the setup phase of the centralised latin.c solver, we start by
going over the input grid containing already-placed clue numbers, and
calling latin_solver_place to enter each on into the solver's data
structure. This has the side effect of ruling out each number from the
rest of the row and column, and _also_ checking by assertion that the
number being placed is not ruled out.
Those are a bad combination, because it means that if you give an
obviously inconsistent input grid to latin_solver_alloc (e.g. with two
identical numbers in a row already), it will fail an assertion. In
that situation, you want the solver run as a whole to return
diff_impossible so that the error is reported cleanly.
This assertion failure could be provoked by giving either Towers or
Group a manually-constructed game description inconsistent in that
way, and hitting Solve. Worse, it could be provoked during live play
in Unequal, by filling in a number clashing with a clue and then
pressing 'h' to get hints.
I've only just realised that there's a false-positive bug in the
latin.c solver framework.
It's designed to solve puzzles in which the solution is a latin square
but with some additional constraints provided by the individual
puzzle, and so during solving, it runs a mixture of its own standard
deduction functions that apply to any latin-square puzzle and extra
functions provided by the client puzzle to do deductions based on the
extra clues or constraints.
But what happens if the _last_ move in the solving process is
performed by one of the latin.c built-in methods, and it causes a
violation of the client puzzle's extra constraints? Nothing will ever
notice, and so the solver will report that the puzzle has a solution
when it actually has none.
An example is the Group game id 12i:m12b9a1zd9i6d10c3y2l11q4r . This
was reported by 'groupsolver -g' as being ambiguous. But if you look
at the two 'solutions' reported in the verbose diagnostics, one of
them is arrant nonsense: it has no identity element at all, and
therefore, it fails associativity all over the place. Actually that
puzzle _does_ have a unique solution.
This bug has been around for ages, and nobody has reported a problem.
For recursive solving, that's not much of a surprise, because it would
cause a spurious accusation of ambiguity, so that at generation time
some valid puzzles would be wrongly discarded, and you'd never see
them. But at non-recursive levels, I can't see a reason why this bug
_couldn't_ have led one of the games to present an actually impossible
puzzle believing it to be soluble.
Possibly this never came up because the other clients of latin.c are
more forgiving of this error in some way. For example, they might all
be very likely to use their extra clues early in the solving process,
so that the requirements are already baked in by the time the final
grid square is filled. I don't know!
Anyway. The fix is to introduce last-minute client-side validation:
whenever the centralised latin_solver thinks it's come up with a
filled grid, it should present it to a puzzle-specific validator
function and check that it's _really_ a legal solution.
This commit does the plumbing for all of that: it introduces the new
validator function as one of the many parameters to latin_solver, and
arranges to call it in an appropriate way during the solving process.
But all the per-puzzle validation functions are empty, for the moment.
This is the main bulk of this boolification work, but although it's
making the largest actual change, it should also be the least
disruptive to anyone interacting with this code base downstream of me,
because it doesn't modify any interface between modules: all the
inter-module APIs were updated one by one in the previous commits.
This just cleans up the code within each individual source file to use
bool in place of int where I think that makes things clearer.
This commit removes the old #defines of TRUE and FALSE from puzzles.h,
and does a mechanical search-and-replace throughout the code to
replace them with the C99 standard lowercase spellings.
Oops! This was left over from an early development version of commits
4408476b7 and 000ebc507, in which I initially arranged for each
adjacency list to be terminated with the sentinel value -1 instead of
separately storing an array of the lists' lengths.
I later changed the representation to make randomising the algorithm
easier (it's much easier to shuffle an array uniformly at random if
you _don't_ have to faff endlessly to work out its length). But this
write of a no-longer- needed sentinel value in the client code must
have survived the rewrite by mistake, and also somehow evaded all my
pre-commit testing with valgrind and asan.
A user reported that the Towers Javascript version was crashing on
startup, and I think this is the cause, because it seems to fix it for
me.
The new client code is a lot smaller and nicer, because we can throw
away the col[] and num[] permutations entirely.
Of course, this also means that every puzzle that incorporated latin.c
now has to link against matching.c instead of maxflow.c - but since I
centralised that secondary dependency into Recipe a few commits ago,
it's trivial to switch them all over at once.
In solver_show_working mode, we were logging all the deductions,
guesswork and backtracking, but not printing out the actual solution
(if any) reached at the end of each branch of the tree.
Hitori. One infrastructure change in the process: latin.c has
acquired a utility function to generate a latin rectangle rather
than a full square.
[originally from svn r8828]
introduced to mimic similar macros in solo.c, in case Solo ever
moved over to being based on the latin.c solver framework; but even
Solo has long since lost those macros, so latin.c has no need to
keep them.
[originally from svn r8827]
their coordinate from 1 rather than 0, for consistency with Solo.
(My geek instincts would rather work from 0, but I've generally
found that puzzle users sending me email tend to prefer 1.)
[originally from svn r8795]
programs having to clone the latin_solver() function and insert
their own extra deduction routines, they can now just _call_
latin_solver with enough parameters to let it fit its own deductions
into their difficulty framework and call a set of provided function
pointers to do user deductions. Modified Unequal to work in the new
world, of course.
[originally from svn r8791]
- missing static in filling.c
- better robustness in execute_move() in filling.c
- remove side effects in assert statements
- remove rogue diagnostic in galaxies.c
- remove // comment in map.c
- add more stylus-friendly UI to Pattern
- bias Unequal towards generating inequality clues rather than numeric
[originally from svn r7344]
is mostly done with ifdefs in windows.c; so mkfiles.pl generates a
new makefile (Makefile.wce) and Recipe enables it, but it's hardly
any different from Makefile.vc apart from a few definitions at the
top of the files.
Currently the PocketPC build is not enabled in the build script, but
with any luck I'll be able to do so reasonably soon.
[originally from svn r7337]