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  • Home > Linux > Games > TBS

    Diplomacy Automated Email Judge 1.7.6

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    Downloads: 510  View global page NEW!  Tell us about an update
    User Rating:
    Rated by:
    Fair (2.5/5)
    14 user(s)
    Developer:

    License / Price:

    Last Updated:

    Category:
    Millis Miller | More programs
    Other/Proprietary Li... / FREE
    August 25th, 2006, 17:06 GMT
    ROOT / Games / TBS

     Read user reviews (0)  Refer to a friend  Subscribe

    Diplomacy Automated Email Judge description

    Njudge is an automated judge for Diplomacy games, based on Ken Lowe software.

    Njudge is an automated judge for Diplomacy games, based on Ken Lowe software.

    Installation:

    1. Create a system user account (i.e. 'judge') and its home directory
    (i.e. /home/judge) It is recommended to lock the password for this
    account as you should never need to login as this user.

    2. `cd' to the directory containing the package's source code and type
    `./configure' to configure the package for your system. If you're
    using `csh' on an old version of System V, you might need to type
    `sh ./configure' instead to prevent `csh' from trying to execute
    `configure' itself.

    By default it will set up the judge in /home/judge as user judge with
    an email address of judge@localhost and sendmail in /usr/sbin.
    If you chose a different user and directory in step 1, or if judge
    email should come from a different domain, you can give the configure
    script flags to override the defaults. The flags are:

    --with-dir=DIR
    --with-user=NAME
    --with-domain=DOMAIN
    --with-sendmail=SENDMAIL

    for example to set up the judge in /home/jaldhar/dip as user
    jaldhar and email judge@braincells.com and sendmail in /usr/ucb, you
    would do:

    ./configure --with-dir=/home/jaldhar/dip --with-user=jaldhar --with-domain=braincells.com --with-sendmail=/usr/ucb

    There are many other flags you can give (type './configure --help'
    for a full list) but these are the main ones you're likely to use.

    Running `configure' takes awhile. While running, it prints some
    messages telling which features it is checking for.

    3. Type `make' to compile the package.

    4. If this is a new install:

    Type `make install' to install the programs, any data files and
    documentation. You will have to edit a few configuration files
    before the judge will become operation.

    If this is an upgrade from an older version;

    Type 'make upgrade' to install the new programs only.

    *Note* compiled programs will not be stripped of debug and other extra
    information. If you want to make compiled programs a little smaller,
    you can type 'make install-strip' or 'make upgrade-strip' instead. This
    may give a few harmless errors (when it tries to strip scripts) but you
    can ignore them.

    If you just want to rebuild the map files (because e.g. you added a new
    variant,) type 'make remap'.


    5. You can remove the program binaries and object files from the
    source code directory by typing `make clean'. To also remove the
    files that `configure' created (so you can compile the package for
    a different kind of computer), type `make distclean'.

    What's New in This Release:

    · Major bugfixes



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    TAGS:

    automated judge | email judge | Diplomacy games | Diplomacy | automated | email



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