Reply 220 of 227, by rcblanke
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Sorry, didn't think about that 😉
Qbix: ...the partial screenupdates is comparable to kronutz work. Although it should be even faster...
Sorry, didn't think about that 😉
Qbix: ...the partial screenupdates is comparable to kronutz work. Although it should be even faster...
Hi all!
Sorry to bother, but before becoming completely creasy (I've already spend almost one hour on the net to find an answer), I decided to ask the question here: I got a "dosbox-optscalers-20051213.diff.txt" file...but I don't know what I have to do with it, and seem not to find any instruction anywhere 🙁 Under WinXP, I can recompile whatever I want (using VC6 or VC7), but I really don't have a clue on how to include a "diff" file to dosbox project (if only the two are linked). Can someone help me?
Hello Mamoru.kun.
Answer number one: If you get a current CVS source of dosbox, functionality like that offered by Kronuz's patch is already included. No need to mess with the patch then. I don't know how to do a CVS checkout in Windows though, but I guess you need a CVS client or a CVS plugin for VC++.
Answer number two: To apply a ".diff" type patch, you need the "patch" program. The situation is as usual: It's standard on Unix, while on Windows you'll have to find it yourself. I assume that it's included in cygwin, at least. Probably you can also grab the sources from a GNU mirror, maybe it will even compile out of the box on Windows.
tearex
Thank you very much for the explanations TeaRex. So finding a "CVS" source of dosbox would be enough for me, after a compilation, to have a patched version of dosbox, did I get it right? But what is a "CVS" version? I can't find such a version in the download page of dosbox.sourceforge.net...
EDIT: OK, one of my college (our "Unix man") told me about CVS thing, and after thinking, I came to the conclusion that it would perhaps be easier for me to ask...if someone already has a WinXP compiled verion of Dosbox (or dlls, whatever is patched) with this patch? 😀
CVS means "concurrent versioning system" and is basically a way of storing source code in a way so that multiple persons can work on it. You can find dosbox's cvs page here:
http://sourceforge.net/cvs/?group_id=52551
Either you have to check out the source yourself (pointers to software that does this are given on that page) and then compile it, or you have to download a (recent! as in "done in the last few days") "CVS build", basically an unofficial release of dosbox that somebody else compiled and is offering for download. See this thread:
tearex
Wonderfull, thank you! With all those data, I'll turn my Winshit (oups, sorry) dosbox version into an optimized-scalablility version! (why haven't I already installed Linux?!?) 😉
I haven't had the time to check the new cvs version with the functionality of my patch implemented, but I'll check it as soon as I get home by the 22nd (I'm on vacations and out of town). I'm very interested in testing it 😀
Kronuz
"Time is of the essence"
You download the latest version of DosBox (0.65) from the DosBox website. The patch is already included.