OpenGFX+ Airports ----------------------------------- This version: OpenGFX+ Airports v5744 (e278cf17c1dc) Contents: 1 About 2 Quickstart 3 This NewGRF in detail 4 Building from source 4.1 Requirements 4.2 Obtaining the source 5 License 6 Credits ------- 1 About ------- OpenGFX+ Airports enhances the default airports by terrain awareness and adding rotations Name of this Repo: OpenGFX+ Airports v5744 (e278cf17c1dc) Repository version: 5744 GRF_ID: MD5 sum: {{GRF_MD5}} -------------- 2 Quickstart -------------- Copy the grf in your data dir and activate it. You'll need OpenTTD r22518 / 1.2.0 or better in order to use this NewGRF. ----------------------- 3 This NewGRF in detail ----------------------- no configuration options ---------------------- 4 Building from source ---------------------- Requirements for running this Makefile successfully: NML gcc md5sum (or md5 on Mac) make mercurial (recommended) python (recommended) If you want to bundle the grf, you'll need additionally tar zip bzip2 unix2dos (optional) Windows only: On Windows systems this means that you'll need to install MinGW and MSys in order to obtain a posix compatible environment. Then the makefile can be called the very same way as it is on linux and mac systems. MinGW/MSys contain the above mentioned programmes (except renum and grfcodec of course) and can be obtained from http://www.mingw.org/ That site also features an excellent walk-through o how to install it. If you use for OpenTTD data folder a non-default path or Windows with a non-English localization make sure to copy Makefile.local.sample to Makefile.local and edit the line with INSTALLDIR = accordingly so that it shows the full path to your OpenTTD / TTDP data directory. If the Makefile is too slow, you may try different dependency checks or skip those completely. Available options for dependency generation are: mdep: uses a python script. Default when used in a hg repository normal: uses gcc and bash to scan for dependencies none: disable the dependency generation (mostly) Makefile.local allows to choose the method via the declaration of DEP_CHECK_TYPE. The Makefile offers different targets. A brief overview is given here: all: This is the default target, if also no parameter is given to make. It will simply build the grf file, if it needs building depend: Re-run the dependency check. Usually not manually needed. docs: Build the documentation files bundle: This target will create a directory called "-nightly" and copy the grf file there and the documentation files, readme.txt, changelog.txt and license.txt bundle_zip This will zip the bundle directory into one zip for distribution bundle_tar This will tar the bundle directory into a tar archive for distribution or upload to bananas bundle_src Creates a source bundle install: This will create a tar archive (like bundle_tar) and copy it into the INSTALLDIR as specified in Makefile.local (or the default dir, if that isn't defined). Don't rely on a good detection of the default installation directory. It's especially bound to fail on windows machines. distclean: This phony target cleans everything from a source bundle which wasn't shipped. clean: This phony target will delete all files which this Makefile will create mrproper: This phony target will delete also all directories created by different Makefile targets remake: It's a shortcut for first cleaning the dir and then making the grf anew. addcheck: Check whether there are some files required but not part of the repository. check: Check the md5sum of the built newgrf against the supplied md5sum (Intended to be used when building from tar balls) 4.1 Requirements ---------------- In order to build this newgrf from source you need: - python 2.5+ with yacc, pil modules installed - NML r1323 or newer - make 3.80+ - gcc as pre-processor - some small shell tools: cat, sed and optionally: - unix2dos possibly for conversion of the documentation files - tar for creating bundles - zip for creating bundles 4.2 Obtaining the source ---------------------- The source code can be obtained from the #openttdcoop DevZone at http://dev.openttdcoop.org/projects/airportsplus or via mercurial checkout hg clone http://hg.openttdcoop.org/airportsplus --------- 5 License --------- OpenGFX+ Airports for OpenTTD Copyright (C) 2010-2013 by the OpenGFX+ Airports team (see below) This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 (or, at your discretion, any later version) as published by the Free Software Foundation. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 1 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. --------- 6 Credits --------- Authors: Lead programmer: Thijs Marinussen (aka Yexo) General coding: David Nicholls (aka zero.eight) General coding: Ingo von Borstel (aka planetmaker) Availability parameter: Supercheese Graphics: generally zero.eight original OpenGFX: Skidd13, Zephyris large airport depots: 2006TTD small airport depot facing viewer with backside: planetmaker 180° preview small airport: planetmaker 0° preview small airport: Rubidium Translations: Africaans: telanus Croatian: Voyager One Dutch: Alberth, Yexo English (US): Supercheese Finnish: juzza1 French: arikover German: planetmaker Hungarian: zaza Indonesian: UseYourIllusion Korean: Telk Norwegian (bokmal) Trond Portuguese: vesgo Russian: akasoft, Kraks, FlameSing, George Scottish Gaelic: GunChleoc Spanish: Terkhen, SilverSurferZzZ Traditional Chinese: 2006TTD Special thanks to #openttdcoop and especially Ammler who provides and works a lot on maintaining the Development Zone where this repository is hosted and who also frequently gives much valuable input. Thanks also to Alberth, Terkhen Yexo, Rubidium and Ammler who frequently give valuable input in form of advice and patches to this project. Last but not least thanks to all the NewGRF authors whose NewGRFs can be my playground for this project.