Version 0.2b, Treaty of Babel Revision 7 This is the source code for babel, the Treaty of Babel analysis tool. Most of this code is (c) 2006 by L. Ross Raszewski The following files are public domain: zcode.c glulx.c executable.c level9.c magscrolls.c agt.c hugo.c advsys.c misc.c alan.c adrift.c treaty.h treaty_builder.h The following files are Copyright (C) 1999, 2000, 2002 Aladdin Enterprises: md5.c md5.h And are used in accordance with their licenses. All other files are (c) 2006 by L. Ross Raszewski and are released under the Creative Commons Attribution2.5 License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 543 Howard Street, 5th Floor, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA. To build babel: 1. compile all the source files in this directory 2. link them together 3. the end For folks who find makefiles more useful than generalizations, there is a makefile provided for babel. The makefile is currently configured for Borland's 32-bit C compiler. Comment out those lines and uncomment the block which follows for gcc. To compile babel-get, first compile babel, then do the same thing in the babel-get directory. To compile ifiction-aggregate, ifiction-xtract, babel-list, and simple-marry, first compile babel, then compile the relevant C file in the extras/ directory (These may rely on #include files from the babel directory, so, for example, to compile ifiction-aggregate, "gcc -c -I.. ifiction-aggregate.c"), then link the opbject file to the babel and ifiction libraries (babel.lib and ifiction.lib under Windows, babel.a and ifiction.a most everywhere else. eg. "gcc -o ifiction-aggregate ifiction-aggregate.o ../babel.a ../ifiction.a") Babel is intended to accept contributions in the form of treaty modules as defined by the treaty of babel section 2.3.2. These modules should use the declarations made in treaty.h. The file treaty_builder.h generates a generic framework which simplifies the task of writing treaty modules. Its use is not required for treaty compliance, but it should prove useful. Parts of babel are intended for use in other programs. When adapting babel's source, the files babel.c, babel_story_functions.c and babel_ifiction_functions.c will probably not prove useful. However, you may wish to use babel_handler, which provides a framework for loading a story file, selecting the proper treaty modules, and seamlessly handling blorb-wrapped files.