Re-generating MMAPs IS required. Partially reverts995a443da2. Having 2 different slope angles of 55° and 85° created too many polygons to fit in the current mmtile structure. This caused some polygons to become disconnected from each other, creating the old "invisible walls" effect. Because of this and because of the performance hit when loading a mmtile caused by the increase of polygon numbers, this commit reverts the recent changes and sets by default the slope angle to 55°. Feel free to restore the previous behaviour by running .\mmaps_generator --maxAngle 85 --maxAngleNotSteep 55 , specifying the map id as number if a single map should have different slope values. This is the last commit that will change MMAPs version to force re-generating them. Any future change that will affect only the generation settings will be optional (but recommended). (cherry picked from commit3947e4cb57)
TrinityCore (master)
- Build Status
- Introduction
- Requirements
- Install
- Reporting issues
- Submitting fixes
- Copyright
- Authors & Contributors
- Links
Build Status
| master | 3.3.5 |
|---|---|
Introduction
TrinityCore is a MMORPG Framework based mostly in C++.
It is derived from MaNGOS, the Massive Network Game Object Server, and is based on the code of that project with extensive changes over time to optimize, improve and cleanup the codebase at the same time as improving the in-game mechanics and functionality.
It is completely open source; community involvement is highly encouraged.
If you wish to contribute ideas or code, please visit our site linked below or make pull requests to our Github repository.
For further information on the TrinityCore project, please visit our project website at TrinityCore.org.
Requirements
Software requirements are available in the wiki for Windows, Linux and macOS.
Install
Detailed installation guides are available in the wiki for Windows, Linux and macOS.
Reporting issues
Issues can be reported via the Github issue tracker.
Please take the time to review existing issues before submitting your own to prevent duplicates.
In addition, thoroughly read through the issue tracker guide to ensure your report contains the required information. Incorrect or poorly formed reports are wasteful and are subject to deletion.
Submitting fixes
C++ fixes are submitted as pull requests via Github. For more information on how to properly submit a pull request, read the how-to: maintain a remote fork. For SQL only fixes, open a ticket; if a bug report exists for the bug, post on an existing ticket.
Copyright
License: GPL 2.0
Read file COPYING.
Authors & Contributors
Read file AUTHORS.