Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
Moderator: Do_Checkor
Yes you can. But the result of the Direct-IP-Server will be mixed within the servers that come from the trackers.
You can use the following bug/feature:
Enter your IP and Port in the input field. In the meantime, the tracker list will show up.
After the tracker list had shown, click on \"scan for local games\". This will only show you local games (in LAN). Surely their aren't any, so this will flush the whole list (for about 20 seconds).
Now press 'Enter' in the input field (or click on 'search for games at address'. Then your specified server will show up.
Sorry that this is a bit confusing. It's an artefact I had to build in because Descent can't handle server lists with more than 12 servers very well.
Someone asked how this gamebrowser is able to show internet games. Well ok:
When Descent tries to find gameservers in LAN, it sends a \"is anyone here serving descent?\"-Message to the network broadcast address (255.255.255.255). Usually this Message will be routed to all computers in LAN. If a gameserver is running somewhere in LAN and gets this message, it responds to the sender with \"my name is VEX-Server, I'm running on IP 123.45.67.89, my mission is Ascent ...\" (you get the idea).
Your Internet Service provider will not route those broadcast messages, as this would mean to send it to all those billions machines on the internet. Thats why this gamebrowser does not work with internet servers.
So it's just a problem of routing.
Fortunatly, there are servers in the internet how know where descent3 gameservers are running. They are called \"trackers\". One of them is http://d3.descent.cx.
Now, what d3fix does is: with its packet filter it can detect when the \"is anyone here\"-broadcast message is send from your gamebrowser. When this happens, it connects to the d3.descent.cx-tracker and gets a list of running internet gameservers. It then creates identical \"is anyone here\"-messages which are then send to these internet gameservers (knowing there IP).
The gameserver will respond that message to the origin containing his server details. Descent receives these responses, and displays them in the gamebrowser serverlist.
You can use the following bug/feature:
Enter your IP and Port in the input field. In the meantime, the tracker list will show up.
After the tracker list had shown, click on \"scan for local games\". This will only show you local games (in LAN). Surely their aren't any, so this will flush the whole list (for about 20 seconds).
Now press 'Enter' in the input field (or click on 'search for games at address'. Then your specified server will show up.
Sorry that this is a bit confusing. It's an artefact I had to build in because Descent can't handle server lists with more than 12 servers very well.
Someone asked how this gamebrowser is able to show internet games. Well ok:
When Descent tries to find gameservers in LAN, it sends a \"is anyone here serving descent?\"-Message to the network broadcast address (255.255.255.255). Usually this Message will be routed to all computers in LAN. If a gameserver is running somewhere in LAN and gets this message, it responds to the sender with \"my name is VEX-Server, I'm running on IP 123.45.67.89, my mission is Ascent ...\" (you get the idea).
Your Internet Service provider will not route those broadcast messages, as this would mean to send it to all those billions machines on the internet. Thats why this gamebrowser does not work with internet servers.
So it's just a problem of routing.
Fortunatly, there are servers in the internet how know where descent3 gameservers are running. They are called \"trackers\". One of them is http://d3.descent.cx.
Now, what d3fix does is: with its packet filter it can detect when the \"is anyone here\"-broadcast message is send from your gamebrowser. When this happens, it connects to the d3.descent.cx-tracker and gets a list of running internet gameservers. It then creates identical \"is anyone here\"-messages which are then send to these internet gameservers (knowing there IP).
The gameserver will respond that message to the origin containing his server details. Descent receives these responses, and displays them in the gamebrowser serverlist.
Thanks Munk, I'll do that. I just had a frustrating time last night trying to connect to my friend. At first I loaded d3fixd with D3 which showed all the internet games and then tried putting his ip in. I couldn't find it in the list so I reloaded the game without d3fixd but then I couldn't get ANY games to show up, whether my friend's or any other internet game when I typed it in the ip field. It was very strange.
It is maybe so, that when you kill (signal KILL, STOP) the d3fixd, it cannot clear the kernels ip filter rules.
try \"# iptables -t mangle -L\" to show the relevant filter rules used by d3fixd. If there are some lines containing port 2092, and d3fixd is _not_ running (i.e. crashed or killed), then you should run \"# iptables -t mangle -F\", which will flush the mangle table. Otherwise all packets addressed to the descent port 2092 will remain in the ip packet queue and wait there forever since there is no d3fixd which handles them.
Of course, if you just close the d3fixd (signal INT) by hitting CTRL-C or calling \"kill\" without an explicit signal, it should clean up by himself, as he prints \"stopping filter.
try \"# iptables -t mangle -L\" to show the relevant filter rules used by d3fixd. If there are some lines containing port 2092, and d3fixd is _not_ running (i.e. crashed or killed), then you should run \"# iptables -t mangle -F\", which will flush the mangle table. Otherwise all packets addressed to the descent port 2092 will remain in the ip packet queue and wait there forever since there is no d3fixd which handles them.
Of course, if you just close the d3fixd (signal INT) by hitting CTRL-C or calling \"kill\" without an explicit signal, it should clean up by himself, as he prints \"stopping filter.
Sorry for my late response. This forum might be stucked. This thread never bubbles up in the thread list when a new post arrives, nor does it show the correct date of last post (just shows \"Sat Mar 25, 2006 2:30 pm\"). The mail notify doesn't work also... so there's no real chance to see when something is posted here.
I'm sorry Xamindar, D3-Retribution or Mercenary does not run on VEX-Servers. Don't know why it's not running - so no checksums for that mission.
I'm sorry Xamindar, D3-Retribution or Mercenary does not run on VEX-Servers. Don't know why it's not running - so no checksums for that mission.
Amazing work on this.
I installed this a while ago, but only a couple weeks ago got it working--it turned out that there was a version incompatibility with the perl Storable module. It may or may not be because I have a 64-bit system, but either way the checksum file didn't work for me.
I found a way to convert it, though, so if anyone has any problems mentioning \"Storable,\" try downloading this checksum file instead.
http://carolnrob.net/~jol/checksums
Thanks to Munk for his great work.
I installed this a while ago, but only a couple weeks ago got it working--it turned out that there was a version incompatibility with the perl Storable module. It may or may not be because I have a 64-bit system, but either way the checksum file didn't work for me.
I found a way to convert it, though, so if anyone has any problems mentioning \"Storable,\" try downloading this checksum file instead.
http://carolnrob.net/~jol/checksums
Thanks to Munk for his great work.
There's a version ready which can run on a linux gameserver to allow all those windows-users to join.Nosferatu wrote:I was wondering if this could be used, or sometime in the future be used, to run a linux server that does allows other windows games to connect to it.
Unfortunatly since my ubuntu upgrade, my perl compiler broke. So what I can give you is the perl script - no binary.
If you are brave enough to install a approx. dozen of perl modules by hand, you could try it. Just PM me for instructions.
- FunkyStickman
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linux server
Hi.
Did you manage to get the linux server fix to work? I would really appreciate it if you could upload it, me and a couple of friends have recently discovered descent3 and we play it at least an hour a day
Thanks in advance!
/MoonSire
Did you manage to get the linux server fix to work? I would really appreciate it if you could upload it, me and a couple of friends have recently discovered descent3 and we play it at least an hour a day
Thanks in advance!
/MoonSire
You can try the 2.0 version with server support by running it in perl:
http://munk.vex-server.de/d3fix/d3fixd.pl
I have no working perl compiler anymore, so basically you will need to install the perl modules by hand.
http://munk.vex-server.de/d3fix/d3fixd.pl
I have no working perl compiler anymore, so basically you will need to install the perl modules by hand.
- Do_Checkor
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- Contact:
Checksum generator
Hi.
Thanks for your tool! It's really good, but I need the checksum generator program, I have some levels that I would like to add.
/MoonSire
Thanks for your tool! It's really good, but I need the checksum generator program, I have some levels that I would like to add.
/MoonSire
Well, I've written a small perl script you can run to add checksums for new missions to the database.
http://munk.vex-server.de/d3fix/d3fixadd.pl
(you will need perl and have to install the Storable module: http://search.cpan.org/CPAN/authors/id/ ... .16.tar.gz)
How to add new checksums of a mission to the database: (it's a bit tricky)
0. Make sure d3fixd is not running, by killing it gently (with SIGTERM).
1. Find or setup a Windows Descent3 Server (or Mac) running that specific mission.
2. Fire up d3fixd without sending it to background (by omitting the \"&\"), so you can see it's output in the console.
3. Start your Loki Descent and try to connect to that server. If you get the \"Levels Don't Match\" error message, quit (or minimize) Loki to see at the output of d3fixd. It will tell you the catched checksum by the message \"read Checksum 12345\". This is the checksum as it is reported from the windows server.
4. Open a second console, and run d3fixadd.pl with \"d3fixadd.pl 12345 +1\".
It will alter the d3fixd checksum database to report a new checksum to your Loki client which is 1 higher (hence the \"+1\").
You do not need to restart d3fixd, it will load the new checksums by itself.
5. Try again connecting with Loki to the Gameserver. Hopefully you can now connect.
If you cannot, repeat step 4 with a different adjustment (i.e. try \"-1\", \"+2\", \"-2\", ...).
The adjustments to the checksums are typically small (up to about +/- 4), but smaller adjustmends have higher probability of success, so start with the lower ones.
6. If you can connect, well done!... But: This checksum will only work for this specific ship you selected. So you need to do it again with Pyro-GL, Phoenix, Magnum-AHT and Black-Pyro.
Both, Checksum and Adjustment will change for each ship, so after changing the ship you need a look at d3fixd to get the new checksum, and then try new adjustments to it. (first try as adjustment +0, maybe you do not need one).
7. If you cannot find a suitable adjustment, ask a friend to setup a Loki Descent 3 Server with the same mission. Connect to it, and look at the output of d3fixd. It will now report (as you connect to a Linux Descent3 Server) the Linux checksum. The Difference <Linux Checksum> - <Windows Checksum> is the adjustment you need to specify to d3fixadd.pl.
8. Finally if you managed to get all adjustments for the specific mission and for all 4 ships (or at least the 3 basic ships without Black-Pyro), you can mail me <munk@vexclan.de> your checksum database (located at /usr/local/share/d3fix/checksums), and I will put it on my website.
P.S.: Maybe step 7 is the fastest way to get to the checksums, but you need lots of ressources, (since you cannot run loki client and loki server at the same time on the same machine).
P.P.S.: You should run d3fixadd.pl as root user, since it needs to modify /usr/local/share/d3fix/checksums, which is write-protected. Also for d3fixd to reload his checksums, it needs to send SIGHUP to d3fixd. Since d3fixd is owned by root, only root can do that.
http://munk.vex-server.de/d3fix/d3fixadd.pl
(you will need perl and have to install the Storable module: http://search.cpan.org/CPAN/authors/id/ ... .16.tar.gz)
How to add new checksums of a mission to the database: (it's a bit tricky)
0. Make sure d3fixd is not running, by killing it gently (with SIGTERM).
1. Find or setup a Windows Descent3 Server (or Mac) running that specific mission.
2. Fire up d3fixd without sending it to background (by omitting the \"&\"), so you can see it's output in the console.
3. Start your Loki Descent and try to connect to that server. If you get the \"Levels Don't Match\" error message, quit (or minimize) Loki to see at the output of d3fixd. It will tell you the catched checksum by the message \"read Checksum 12345\". This is the checksum as it is reported from the windows server.
4. Open a second console, and run d3fixadd.pl with \"d3fixadd.pl 12345 +1\".
It will alter the d3fixd checksum database to report a new checksum to your Loki client which is 1 higher (hence the \"+1\").
You do not need to restart d3fixd, it will load the new checksums by itself.
5. Try again connecting with Loki to the Gameserver. Hopefully you can now connect.
If you cannot, repeat step 4 with a different adjustment (i.e. try \"-1\", \"+2\", \"-2\", ...).
The adjustments to the checksums are typically small (up to about +/- 4), but smaller adjustmends have higher probability of success, so start with the lower ones.
6. If you can connect, well done!... But: This checksum will only work for this specific ship you selected. So you need to do it again with Pyro-GL, Phoenix, Magnum-AHT and Black-Pyro.
Both, Checksum and Adjustment will change for each ship, so after changing the ship you need a look at d3fixd to get the new checksum, and then try new adjustments to it. (first try as adjustment +0, maybe you do not need one).
7. If you cannot find a suitable adjustment, ask a friend to setup a Loki Descent 3 Server with the same mission. Connect to it, and look at the output of d3fixd. It will now report (as you connect to a Linux Descent3 Server) the Linux checksum. The Difference <Linux Checksum> - <Windows Checksum> is the adjustment you need to specify to d3fixadd.pl.
8. Finally if you managed to get all adjustments for the specific mission and for all 4 ships (or at least the 3 basic ships without Black-Pyro), you can mail me <munk@vexclan.de> your checksum database (located at /usr/local/share/d3fix/checksums), and I will put it on my website.
P.S.: Maybe step 7 is the fastest way to get to the checksums, but you need lots of ressources, (since you cannot run loki client and loki server at the same time on the same machine).
P.P.S.: You should run d3fixadd.pl as root user, since it needs to modify /usr/local/share/d3fix/checksums, which is write-protected. Also for d3fixd to reload his checksums, it needs to send SIGHUP to d3fixd. Since d3fixd is owned by root, only root can do that.
- FunkyStickman
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Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
Sorry for the bump, but can anyone mirror the fix? Munk's site 404s and I'd love to play something other than the campaign!
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
I'm ashamed it's 404, i have no clue how that happened (VEX changed servers twice since the release).
Searching the web I found the perl script
http://odf.sourceforge.net/downloads/descent3/d3fixd.pl
but you will also need the checksum database.
Things on my todo list (after finishing studies in a month) is a better version of that fix based on LD_PRELOAD hacks instead of IP mangling. It would not need any root privileges...
If you can wait a few weeks, I would need some help in testing.
Searching the web I found the perl script
http://odf.sourceforge.net/downloads/descent3/d3fixd.pl
but you will also need the checksum database.
Things on my todo list (after finishing studies in a month) is a better version of that fix based on LD_PRELOAD hacks instead of IP mangling. It would not need any root privileges...
If you can wait a few weeks, I would need some help in testing.
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
Thanks flip. Now to get it working... having trouble getting IPTables::IPv4 to install properly >_<
Munk, I'd be happy to assist you in testing. Gmail: Arcalyth
Go ahead and send me some mail when you're ready.
Munk, I'd be happy to assist you in testing. Gmail: Arcalyth
Go ahead and send me some mail when you're ready.
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
NP, over the last 6 years I think I downloaded everything Descent related I could find on the web
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
I haven't been able to get d3fixd working because IPTables::IPv4 module refuses to install. Since I'm impatient, I figured I'd try to write a python version since the iptables module for python works. To do so, I need the original checksums file. I tried to use Storable to deserialize the one in the .tar.gz, but the new version of Storable can't read it and the old one that you linked on Page 2 won't compile either.
So, do you have the original non-serialized checksums?
So, do you have the original non-serialized checksums?
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
No, it doesn't look like it, just those 2.
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
If you are referring to this link ( http://munk.vex-server.de/d3fix/checksums ), there is one instance of it in the Wayback Machine ( http://archive.org/ ) in 2007.
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
I'm taking a stab at this bug from the other direction by hacking at the linux binary's x86/x87 machine code. The following python script can be applied to both the statically and the dynamically linked linux binaries to reconcile the "sqrt" bug:
It looks like that when loading the *.dlv file, at some point D3 calculates the normal vectors for a series of surfaces, presumably walls and such, but I haven't dug deep enough yet to figure out what for sure. It then normalizes these vectors to unit length, which is when sqrt() is applied. The windows binary returns the result of this sqrt() in "long double", i.e., in an x87 80-bit precision register, whereas the linux binary first rounds the result to "float" by popping from an x87 register to a 32-bit precision stack location, then pushing back into the x87 register. The checksum is somehow a function of these unit-length normal vectors. The above patch removes the linux binary's rounding of the sqrt() result.
I've tested this patch on a number of popular levels. The results are below. The first Y/N is whether the checksums agreed before the above patch. The second Y/N is whether they agreed after the patch.
abend 2: N Y
ascent: N Y
burning indika 3: Y Y
halcyon: Y Y
kata 1.2: N Y
pyroglyphic: Y Y
skybox: Y Y
stadium: Y Y
subway dancer: N N
The good news is that this patch hasn't introduced any regressions in my testing. Moreover, it reconciles the checksums for a number of levels. Subway Dancer, however, still produces disparate checksums, and I suspect some others untested may as well.
This means that the "sqrt" bug wasn't the only bug.
Is there some reason why Subway Dancer might still be affected, i.e., does it use some feature that perhaps the other levels don't? I've already tried stripping its *.gam file and other customizations from its *.mn3 (neither of which actually appear to even be checksummed...), and it still fails. It may just be hitting some other rounding issue...
Note to programmers: don't use floating point arithmetic for anything where an '==' comparison might matter. Unless your compiler is C99 conforming (AFAIK Microsoft's isn't), where the compiler rounds floating point arithmetic is undefined.
Maybe something simpler than tracking down the other discrepancy(s) is to just jump around the checksum check all together. Would the community care if I did this? It could theoretically be used by linux users for cheating, but I think there are already a dozen easier ways of doing that. The checksum is still a nice sanity check to make sure you aren't accidentally using the wrong version of a level though...
Code: Select all
# obsolete, see post below
I've tested this patch on a number of popular levels. The results are below. The first Y/N is whether the checksums agreed before the above patch. The second Y/N is whether they agreed after the patch.
abend 2: N Y
ascent: N Y
burning indika 3: Y Y
halcyon: Y Y
kata 1.2: N Y
pyroglyphic: Y Y
skybox: Y Y
stadium: Y Y
subway dancer: N N
The good news is that this patch hasn't introduced any regressions in my testing. Moreover, it reconciles the checksums for a number of levels. Subway Dancer, however, still produces disparate checksums, and I suspect some others untested may as well.
This means that the "sqrt" bug wasn't the only bug.
Is there some reason why Subway Dancer might still be affected, i.e., does it use some feature that perhaps the other levels don't? I've already tried stripping its *.gam file and other customizations from its *.mn3 (neither of which actually appear to even be checksummed...), and it still fails. It may just be hitting some other rounding issue...
Note to programmers: don't use floating point arithmetic for anything where an '==' comparison might matter. Unless your compiler is C99 conforming (AFAIK Microsoft's isn't), where the compiler rounds floating point arithmetic is undefined.
Maybe something simpler than tracking down the other discrepancy(s) is to just jump around the checksum check all together. Would the community care if I did this? It could theoretically be used by linux users for cheating, but I think there are already a dozen easier ways of doing that. The checksum is still a nice sanity check to make sure you aren't accidentally using the wrong version of a level though...
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
Good work, very nice !
I know for sure that the selected player ship is included into the checksum. Subway dancer uses modified game content, which could also be included.
I know for sure that the selected player ship is included into the checksum. Subway dancer uses modified game content, which could also be included.
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
I've found where the checksums are kept in memory. Both keep it as a 32-bit int stored in statically allocated memory: Windows keeps it at 0x5a6648, whereas linux keeps it at 0x82c0484. Knowing this makes it a lot easier to debug this issue. I've also found where the checksums are checked, but I don't think we will need to disable that, as I've found another floating point rounding discrepancy that accounts for the mismatch I was still seeing.
This discrepancy was the opposite case: Windows rounded from 80-bit to 32-bit precision when linux didn't. The fix for this discrepancy resolves the mismatch with, e.g., Subway Dancer. The following script can be used to patch either the statically or the dynamically linked linux binaries, and it's also comprehensive, including the patch from my earlier post:
Note: This patch will fail if you've already patched using the script from my earlier post--restore the backup first!
This should now be ready for mass consumption. All levels that I've tested now produce consistent checksums. If anyone finds levels that mismatch despite using the above patch, please report them.
edit: Attached script for download below.
edit #2: Cleaned up python, but patch itself is unchanged.
edit #3: Fixed for statically linked binary.
This discrepancy was the opposite case: Windows rounded from 80-bit to 32-bit precision when linux didn't. The fix for this discrepancy resolves the mismatch with, e.g., Subway Dancer. The following script can be used to patch either the statically or the dynamically linked linux binaries, and it's also comprehensive, including the patch from my earlier post:
Code: Select all
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Patches either the statically or the dynamically linked D3 Loki executables
# to resolve multiplayer level checksum mismatches with the Windows version
# By Jeff250
PATCHES = [
(
[
(0, '\x55\x89\xe5\x83\xec\x18\x8b\x45\x08\xd9\x00\xd9\x40\x04\xd9\xc9\xd8\xc8\xd9\xc9\xd8\xc8\xde\xc1\xd9\x40\x08\xd8\xc8\xde\xc1\xd9\xfa\xd9\x5d\xfc\xd9\x45\xfc\x89\xec\x5d\xc3'),
],
[
(33, '\x90\x90\x90\x90\x90\x90'),
]
),
(
[
(0, '\x55\x89\xe5\x83\xec\x3c\x57\x56\x53\x8b\x75\x0c\xd9\xee\x31\xc9\x39\xf1\x7d\x76\x8b\x5d\x10\x8d\x41\x02\x99\xf7\xfe\x8b\x7d\x14\x0f\xbf\x04\x53\x8d\x04\x40\x8d\x04\x87\x50\x8b\x7d\x10\x8d\x59\x01\x89\xd8\x99\xf7\xfe\x0f\xbf\x04\x57\x8b\x55\x14\x8d\x04\x40\x8d\x04\x82\x50\x0f\xbf\x04\x4f\x8d\x04\x40\x8d\x04\x82\x50\x8d\x45\xf4\x50\xdb\x7d\xd0\xe8'),
(4, '\x83\xc4\x10\xdb\x6d\xd0\xd8\xd1\xdf\xe0\x80\xe4\x05\x74\x18\xdd\xd8\x8b\x45\xf4\x8b\x55\x08\x89\x02\x8b\x45\xf8\x89\x42\x04\x8b\x45\xfc\x89\x42\x08\xeb\x02\xdd\xd9\x89\xd9\x39\xf1\x7c\x8a\xdc\x1d'),
(4, '\xdf\xe0\x80\xe4\x45\x80\xfc\x01\x74\x06\xb0\x01\xeb\x04\x89\xf6\xb0\x00\x8d\x65\xb8\x5b\x5e\x5f\x89\xec\x5d\xc3'),
],
[
(83, '\xd9\x5d\xd0'),
(8, '\xd9\x45\xd0'),
],
),
]
def patch(path):
try:
with open(path, 'rb') as f:
buf = f.read()
except IOError:
print '[-] Cannot read %s' % path
exit(1)
print '[+] Read %s' % path
patched = list(buf)
for i, (before, after) in enumerate(PATCHES):
first_skip, first_find = before[0]
start = 0
found = 0
while True:
start = buf.find(first_find, start + first_skip) - first_skip
if start < 0:
break
offset = start + first_skip + len(first_find)
for skip, find in before[1:]:
offset += skip
offset = buf.find(find, offset, offset + len(find))
if offset < 0:
break
offset += len(find)
if offset >= 0:
for skip, replace in after:
start += skip
patched[start:start + len(replace)] = replace
start += len(replace)
print '[+] Offset #%d to patch found at %#x' % (i + 1, start)
found += 1
else:
start += 1
if found < 1:
print '[-] Cannot find offset #%d to patch' % (i + 1)
exit(1)
backup_path = path + '.old'
try:
with open(backup_path, 'wb') as f:
f.write(buf)
except IOError:
print '[-] Cannot save backup to %s' % backup_path
exit(1)
print '[+] Saved backup to %s' % backup_path
try:
with open(path, 'wb') as f:
f.write(''.join(patched))
except IOError:
print '[-] Cannot write patches to %s' % path
exit(1)
print '[+] Wrote patch to %s' % path
if __name__ == '__main__':
import sys
if len(sys.argv) != 2:
sys.stderr.write('Usage: %s EXECUTABLE\n' % sys.argv[0])
exit(1)
patch(sys.argv[1])
This should now be ready for mass consumption. All levels that I've tested now produce consistent checksums. If anyone finds levels that mismatch despite using the above patch, please report them.
edit: Attached script for download below.
edit #2: Cleaned up python, but patch itself is unchanged.
edit #3: Fixed for statically linked binary.
- Attachments
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- d3-loki-checksum-patch.py.txt
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Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
Been trying to patch descent3 and descent3.dynamic with d3-loki-checksum-patch.py.txt (renamed to not txt)
descent3.dynamic patches fine (or says it does) but doesn't launch when called, before or after being patched. just does this:
do i need a symlink somewhere?
when attempting to patch descent3, this happens:
any idea why this won't patch?
it looks like other people have had success with this.
i just wanna play!
btw, the loki port works flawlessly for me, with the exception of not being able to render in 1920x1080. 1600x1200 works well enough on this display so it's still MUCH better than through wine!
descent3.dynamic patches fine (or says it does) but doesn't launch when called, before or after being patched. just does this:
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: /usr/local/games/descent3/descent3$ ./descent3.dynamic
./descent3.dynamic: error while loading shared libraries: libSDL-1.2.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
:/usr/local/games/descent3$ locate libSDL-1.2.so.0
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libSDL-1.2.so.0
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libSDL-1.2.so.0.11.4
:/usr/local/games/descent3$ sudo ~/Downloads/descent3/./d3-loki-checksum-patch.py descent3.dynamic
[sudo] password for theantibob:
[+] Read descent3.dynamic
[+] Offset #1 to patch found at 0x20e327
[+] Offset #2 to patch found at 0x134608
[+] Saved backup to descent3.dynamic.old
[+] Wrote patch to descent3.dynamic
:/usr/local/games/descent3$ ./descent3.dynamic
./descent3.dynamic: error while loading shared libraries: libSDL-1.2.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
when attempting to patch descent3, this happens:
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$ sudo ./d3-loki-checksum-patch.py /usr/local/games/descent3/descent3
[+] Read /usr/local/games/descent3/descent3
[+] Offset #1 to patch found at 0x211a77
[-] Cannot find offset #2 to patch
it looks like other people have had success with this.
i just wanna play!
btw, the loki port works flawlessly for me, with the exception of not being able to render in 1920x1080. 1600x1200 works well enough on this display so it's still MUCH better than through wine!
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
Oops, I've fixed the script in my earlier post to again work with the statically linked binary.wishIwas_theAntiBob wrote:when attempting to patch descent3, this happens:Code: Select all
$ sudo ./d3-loki-checksum-patch.py /usr/local/games/descent3/descent3 [+] Read /usr/local/games/descent3/descent3 [+] Offset #1 to patch found at 0x211a77 [-] Cannot find offset #2 to patch
The dynamically linked binary didn't work before the patch either, right? In order to get the dynamically linked binary to work, you need to hunt down the dependencies for it. For instance, right now it's complaining about not having libsdl, so you'll need to get that. (On Ubuntu, "sudo apt-get install libsdl1.2debian:i386".)wishIwas_theAntiBob wrote:descent3.dynamic patches fine (or says it does) but doesn't launch when called, before or after being patched. just does this:
[...]
do i need a symlink somewhere?
-
- DBB Cadet
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Sat Nov 23, 2013 6:31 pm
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
Thanks for the update! Both descent3 and descent3.dynamic were successfully patched.
Works great and I can FINALLY play d3 online... (not like there's really anyone out there to play) I do have a stash of win98 pentiumIII boxes that may get used for a lanparty, though.
but now it just gives me sig11. I'm not really too concerned.
Thanks for all your help and effort...
and thank you, SpiffyBruin for letting me be theAntiBob again.
Works great and I can FINALLY play d3 online... (not like there's really anyone out there to play) I do have a stash of win98 pentiumIII boxes that may get used for a lanparty, though.
No, it wasn't working before... did:The dynamically linked binary didn't work before the patch either, right? In order to get the dynamically linked binary to work, you need to hunt down the dependencies for it. For instance, right now it's complaining about not having libsdl, so you'll need to get that. (On Ubuntu, "sudo apt-get install libsdl1.2debian:i386".)
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$sudo apt-get install libsdl1.2debian:i386 libsmpeg0:i386
Thanks for all your help and effort...
and thank you, SpiffyBruin for letting me be theAntiBob again.
Re: Fix for Linux Loki Checksum bug
descent3.dynamic tends to not play nice on newer systems with newer versions of the libraries it links against. The Outrage or Loki folks probably assumed something about an API that they weren't supposed to and that got changed at some point. But like you say, there's no reason to be concerned about it as long as the statically linked binary works. One caveat with the statically linked binary is that it has a version of libsdl built in that is hardcoded to use OSS, the old linux sound system, so you need to run it through the appropriate emulation layer for sound to work. For pulseaudio:theAntiBob wrote:but now it just gives me sig11. I'm not really too concerned.
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padsp /usr/local/games/Descent3/descent3 -n # and rest of args
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aoss /usr/local/games/Descent3/descent3 -n # and rest of args