These help us keep track of relevant metadata information about
overrides, so that we know what they are when we update a pack.
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
This parses the pack format ID and the description from the local file,
from both a ZIP and a folder, and hooks it into the model.
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
In order to access the ModFolderModel from the ModFolderPage, i created
a new m_model for the correct type, shadowing the m_model of type
ResourceFolderModel. This creates two shared_ptr references to the same object,
but since they will have the same lifetime, it doesn't generate a memory
leak.
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
This aims to continue decoupling other types of resources (e.g. resource
packs, shader packs, etc) from mods, so that we don't have to
continuously watch our backs for changes to one of them affecting the
others.
To do so, this creates a more general list model for resources, based on
the mods one, that allows you to extend it with functionality for other
resources.
I had to do some template and preprocessor stuff to get around the
QObject limitation of not allowing templated classes, so that's sadge :c
On the other hand, I tried cleaning up most general-purpose code in the
mod model, and added some documentation, because it looks nice :D
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
This allows us to create other resources that are not Mods, but can
still share a significant portion of code.
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
* Initial Ely.by support
* Fix profile pictures for Ely.by
* Disable upload and delete skin buttons for Ely.by accounts
* Port UltimMC's authlib injector to PollyMC
This allows us to define custom painting for list view items. In
particular, this is applied to the mod downloader, in order to allow
displaying both the mod name and mod description, and settings their
effects (like bold or underline) independent of each other.
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
This subclasses the Review mods dialog to make a "Update review" one.
Also, all the necessary components built until now are put together in a
coherent unity that checks and generates metadata on-the-fly and checks for
mod updates, while giving and receiving feedback to the user.
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
Those tasks take a list of mods and check on the mod providers for
updates. They assume that the mods have metadata already.
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
This task is responsible for checking if the mod has metadata for a
specific provider, and create it if it doesn't.
In the context of the mod updater, this is not the best architecture,
since we do a single task for each mod. However, this way of structuring
it allows us to use it later on in more diverse scenarios.
This way we decouple this task from the mod updater, trading off some performance
(though that will be mitigated when we have a way of running arbitrary tasks
concurrently).
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
Calls added:
- Get version from hash
- Get versions from hashes
- Latest version of a project from a hash, loader(s), and game version(s)
- Latest versions of multiple project from hashes, loader(s), and game version(s)
Some of those are not used yet, but may be of use later on, so we have
it if we need it :)
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
This is a variation of a Sequential Task, in which a subtask failing
will prompt the next one to execute, and a subtask being successful will
stop the task.
This way, this can be used for easily managing fallbacks with tasks. :D
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
Allows you to prompt the user for choosing a (mod) provider. This should
be fairly independent of the mod updater logic, so it can be used for
other ends later down the road :^)
Signed-off-by: flow <flowlnlnln@gmail.com>
Integrates support for Feral Gamemode, discrete GPU support for Mesa and the proprietary Nvidia driver and MangoHud support
Signed-off-by: Jan200101 <sentrycraft123@gmail.com>
Previously, the Shaders, Texture packs and Resource packs tabs had as
parent the ModFolderPage, making it so that making changes only to the
Mods page would require checking the id of the page for the correct one.
This was hackish and error-prone.
Now, those pages all inherit from a single class, ExternalResourcesPage,
that handles the basic behaviour of all of them, while allowing for
individual modification in code.
This is still not a clear separation, since internally, all those
resources are derived from Mods, so for now there's still some awkward
common code :/
* Use the bulk endpoint on mod resolution for faster download
* Search on modrinth for api blocked mods
* Display a dialog for manually downloading blocked mods
- Very basic wizard just to allow the user to choose whether to keep
their old paste settings or use the new default settings.
- People who used custom 0x0 instances would just be kept on those
settings and won't see the wizard.
(Hopefully) this makes implementing updaters using external libraries easier on other platforms. To implement an updater on a new platform, create a new class that implements the pure virtual methods from `ExternalUpdater` and add code in the `UpdateChecker` initializer to initialize the new class.
To actually get automatic updates going, all that needs to happen is that `SparkleUpdater` needs to be initialized.
The rest of the functions can be connected to elements in the UI.
Things that don't work / work poorly (there's more for sure but those
are the evident ones):
- Icons are broken in the import dialog
- No way to search for private packs
- Icons are not downloaded when downloading a mod
- No support for multiple download URLs
- Probably a lot more...
This hopefully makes it easier to the user to know that their changes
will only apply after hitting the search button.
I tried setting the background color, but it seems more unreliable on
cross-platform than underlining. Also, it could be worse for daltonic people,
so I don't know what to do :(