HOWTO-Engines
Introduction
This page is meant as a mini-HOWTO which roughly outlines the steps needed to add a new engine to ScummVM. It does not tell you how to create an engine for a given game; rather it is meant to tell a developer how to properly "hook" into ScummVM.
I will assume that you are at least roughly familiar with ScummVM, and have a fresh checkout of our Subversion repository. Note that it's strongly adviced to base your work on the current development version of ScummVM, and not on a release version. This will ease integration of your work.
Overview
Essentially, you will have to implement a subclass of the Engine class. Our Doxygen documentation is your friend and should hopefully explain enough about this, see here: http://scummvm.org/docs/doxygen/html/classEngine.php .
You also must hook yourself into the regular ScummVM main build system. Actually, some ports use custom build system, but their maintainers will usually add your new engine once it has been added to ScummVM.
Finally, you need to make ScummVM aware of your new engine by updating a couple source files (see below).
Steps
In the following I assume your engine is called "quux".
- Add a new directory engines/quux/
- Add engines/quux/module.mk (take a look at module.mk files of 2-3 existing engines to understand the content).
- Add engines/quux/quux.h and engines/quux/quux.cpp; this will contain your Engine subclass (or at least parts of it). It will also contain the plugin interface code (more on that in the next section).
- Modify engines/module.mk by adding your engine. It should be clear what to do by looking at what is done for the other engines there.
- Modify configure; you'll have to add your engine in multiple places. Again, just check out what is done for the existing engines.
- Modify base/plugins.cpp; in particular, you have to add your engine to the list in PluginManager::loadPlugins.
That's it. The difficult part is of course writing the Engine subclass. More on that in the next section!
Important note: Use a C++ namespace for all your work, e.g. "namespace Quux" in this case.
File name conventions
Since of the course of its existance, many people will have to deal with the source code of a given engine (be it to fix bugs in it, modify it to still compile after changes made to tbe backend code, or to simply add new functionality), it is useful to adhere to various conventions used throughout all engines. Besides source code conventions (see Code Formatting Conventions), this affects filenames. We suggest you use the following names for specific parts of your engine:
ENGINENAME.h | Contains your (primary) Engine subclass. |
ENGINENAME.cpp | Contains at least the constructor and destructor of your (primary) Engine subclass, as well as the implementations of the mandatory (i.e. pure virtual) Engine methods. |
plugin.cpp | The implementation of the plugin interface, as described in base/plugins.h (can also be in ENGINENAME.cpp)
|
detection.cpp | Code related to game detection (usually contained in plugin.cpp or ENGINENAME.cpp, but can be factored out if necessary) |
saveload.cpp | Code related to savegames |
debug.cpp, debugger.cpp | (console) debugger |
gfx.cpp (alt: graphics.cpp) | Graphics code |
sound.cpp | Sound code |
inter.cpp, logic.cpp, script.cpp | Game logic, resp. script/bytecode interpreter |
Subclassing Engine
TODO: We should probably give some sample code, maybe even provide a full (empty) Engine demo class. Maybe even provide a real mini engine project somewhere on our site which demonstrates using events, drawing, etc. ? Not sure whether this would be worth the effort, though.
TODO: At the very least, describe the plugin interface: I.e. which functions *must* be implemented, and what they are supposed to do. Once again, sample code would be nice.
Important: If you're using the ScummVM GUI (g_gui and stuff) you have always to call g_gui.handleScreenChanged() if you recived a OSystem::EVENT_SCREEN_CHANGED event, else it could be that your gui looks strange or even crashes ScummVM.
Example: engines/quux/quux.h
#ifndef QUUX_H #define QUUX_H #include "base/engine.h" #include "gui/debugger.h" namespace Quux { // our engine debug levels enum { kQuuxDebugExample = 1 << 0, kQuuxDebugExample2 = 1 << 1 // next new level must be 1 << 2 (4) // the current limitation is 32 debug levels (1 << 31 is the last one) }; class QuuxEngine : public Engine { public: QuuxEngine(OSystem *syst); ~QuuxEngine(); virtual int init(GameDetector &detector); virtual int go(); private: Console *_console; }; // Example console class Console : public GUI::Debugger { public: Console(QuuxEngine *vm); virtual ~Console(void); }; } // End of namespace Quux #endif
Example: engines/quux/quux.cpp
#include "common/stdafx.h" #include "backends/fs/fs.h" #include "base/gameDetector.h" #include "base/plugins.h" #include "quux/quux.h" static const GameSettings quux_setting[] = { { "quux", "Quux the Example Module", 0 }, { "quuxcd", "Quux the Example Module (CD version)", 0 }, { 0, 0, 0 } }; GameList Engine_QUUX_gameList() { GameList games; const GameSettings *g = quux_setting; while (g->gameid) { games.push_back(*g); g++; } return games; } DetectedGameList Engine_QUUX_detectGames(const FSList &fslist) { DetectedGameList detectedGames; // Iterate over all files in the given directory for (FSList::const_iterator file = fslist.begin(); file != fslist.end(); ++file) { if (!file->isDirectory()) { const char *gameName = file->displayName().c_str(); if (0 == scumm_stricmp("README", gameName)) { // You could check the contents of the file now if you need to. detectedGames.push_back(quux_setting[0]); break; } } } return detectedGames; } Engine *Engine_QUUX_create(GameDetector *detector, OSystem *syst) { // At this point you may want to perform a sanity check on the // values in 'detecetor'. return new Quux::QuuxEngine(syst); } REGISTER_PLUGIN(QUUX, "Quux the Example Module"); namespace Quux { QuuxEngine::QuuxEngine(OSystem *syst) : Engine(syst) { // Put your engine in a sane state, but do nothing big yet; // in particular, do not load data from files; rather, if you // need to do such things, do them from init(). // Do not initialize graphics here // However this is the place to specify all default directories File::addDefaultDirectory(_gameDataPath + "sound/"); // Here is the right place to set up the engine specific debug levels Common::addSpecialDebugLevel(kQuuxDebugExample, "example", "this is just an example for a engine specific debug level"); Common::addSpecialDebugLevel(kQuuxDebugExample2, "example2", "also an example"); printf("QuuxEngine::QuuxEngine\n"); } QuuxEngine::~QuuxEngine() { // Dispose your resources here printf("QuuxEngine::~QuuxEngine\n"); // Remove all of our debug levels here Common::clearAllSpecialDebugLevels(); } int QuuxEngine::init(GameDetector &detector) { // Initialize graphics using following template // You have to use transactions _system->beginGFXTransaction(); // This is handled by base Engine class and processes command // line parameters _vm->initCommonGFX(detector); // Specify dimensions of game graphics window _system->initSize(width, height); _system->endGFXTransaction(); // Create debugger console. It requires GFX to be initialized _console = new Console(this); // Additional setup. printf("QuuxEngine::init\n"); return 0; } int QuuxEngine::go() { // Your main even loop should be (invoked from) here. printf("QuuxEngine::go: Hello, World!\n"); // This test will show up if -d1 and --debugflags=example are specified on the commandline debugC(1, kQuuxDebugExample, "Example debug call"); // This test will show up if --debugflags=example or --debugflags=example2 or both of them and -d3 are specified on the commandline debugC(3, kQuuxDebugExample | kQuuxDebugExample2, "Example debug call two"); return 0; } } // End of namespace Quux
Example: engines/quux/module.mk
MODULE := engines/quux MODULE_OBJS := \ quux.o MODULE_DIRS += \ engines/quux # This module can be built as a plugin ifdef BUILD_PLUGINS PLUGIN := 1 endif # Include common rules include $(srcdir)/common.rules