This is the client for the [Cadre][cadre] AI framework. It can play multiple different games, though you will probably only be interested in one at a time.
In general, try to stay out of the joueur/
folder, it does most of the heavy lifting to play on our game servers.
Each AI, and the game objects it manipulates are all in games/game_name/
, with your very own AI living in games/game_name/ai.hpp
and games/game_name/ai.cpp
files for you to make smarter.
This client has been tested and confirmed to work on the Campus rc##xcs213 Linux machines, but it can work on your own Windows/Linux/Mac machines if you desire.
Also make sure NOT to try to compile this in your Missouri S&T S-Drive. This is not a fault with the client, but rather the school's S-Drive implementation changing some file permissions during run time. We cannot control this. Instead, we recommend cloning your repo outside the S-Drive and use an SCP program like WinSCP to edit the files in Windows using whatever IDE you want if you want to code in Windows, but compile in Linux.
make
./testRun MyOwnGameSession
Linux does not have any dependencies beyond a C++ compiler and build system. You will need make
and cmake
to build, and gcc
for compiling.
There are two ways to get this client working on Windows.
- You will need to install a recent version of Visual Studio with VC++.
- Add VC++ to the command line by running
vcvarsall.bat
. By default this is found atC:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 14.0\VC\vcvarsall.bat
. - Install CMake for Windows, and during installation have it added to your PATH.
- If you make a make system, you can now just run
make
to build the project, or... - If you want to work in Visual Studio run the script
make_vs_proj.bat
, then, in the newly createdbuild/
directory use thatsln
file generated.
You'll also need to use the following command line arguments when running the client to connect to our game server:
GAME_NAME -s game.siggame.io
MinGW is another solution on Windows if you do not wish to use Visual Studio or VC++ compilers, and instead would prefer a compiler like GCC (but then why are you not on Linux?).
- Install MinGw
- Have the MinGW Installation Manager, and install the base, make, and gcc packages.
- Ensure the
MinGW/bin/
directory is added to your PATH so you can use the packages from the command line - Install CMake
- Compile this client by navigating to where you cloned this repo and running
make
orming32-make
.
Notes: You may have to set the cc
environmental variable to the C++ compiler of your choice (gcc.exe probably)
Always use the ->
operator to access member variables and functions of each class instead of the dot operator .
.
The only file you should ever modify to create your AI are the ai.cpp
and ai.hpp
files. All the other files are needed for the game to work. In addition, you should never be creating your own instances of the Game's classes, nor should you ever try to modify their variables. Instead, treat the Game and its members as a read only structure that represents the game state on the game server. You interact with it by calling the game functions.
Most importantly, stay out of the impl/ directories.