Uh... so I've never actually used GitHub before this. But I'll try to explain everything going on here.
Sorry for my messy code. It's why I was skeptical about making this open source, but you know what, the code runs fine in the end.
If you're just here to use GDBrowser locally because the site is down or blocked or restricted or god knows what, this is the only part you really need to read
To run GDBrowser locally:
- Install node.js if you don't already have it
- Clone/download this repository
- Open cmd/powershell/terminal in the main folder (with index.js)
- Type
npm i
to flood your hard drive with code that's 99% useless - Type
node index
to run the web server - GDBrowser is now running locally at http://localhost:2000
If you want to disable rate limits, ip forwarding, etc you can do so by modifying settings.js
. Doing this is probably a good idea if you feel like obliterating Rob's servers for some reason. (please don't)
I mean, sure. Why not.
Hold up, wait a minute... private servers are an official feature now!
If you would like to add your GDPS to GDBrowser, simply reach out to me on Twitter and I'll be happy to add it (provided the server is relatively large and active)
If you 100% insist on adding a private server to your own magical little fork, you can do so by adding it to servers.json. Simply add a new object to the array with the following information:
name: The display name of the server
link: The server's website URL (unrelated to the actual endpoint)
author: The creator(s) of the server
authorLink: The URL to open when clicking on the creator's name
id: An ID for the server, also used as the subdomain (e.g. something
would become something.gdbrowser.com
)
endpoint: The actual endpoint to spam send requests to (e.g. http://boomlings.com/database/
- make sure it ends with a slash!)
There's also a few optional values for fine-tuning. I'll add more over time
[string] timestampSuffix: A string to append at the end of timestamps. Vanilla GD uses " ago"
[string] demonList: The URL of the server's Demon List API, if it has one (e.g. http://pointercrate.com/
- make sure it ends with a slash!)
[bool] downloadsDisabled: (Greys out all forms of downloading on the frontend (daily, weekly, analysis, etc). I love you too RobTop <3
[bool] onePointNine: Makes a bunch of fancy changes to better fit 1.9 servers. (removes orbs/diamonds, hides some pointless buttons, etc)
[bool] weeklyLeaderboard: Enables the lost but not forgotten Weekly Leaderboard, for servers that still milk it
[object] substitutions: A list of parameter substitutions, because some servers rename/obfuscate them. (e.g. { "levelID": "oiuyhxp4w9I" }
)
[object] overrides: A list of endpoint substitutions, because some servers use renamed or older versions. (e.g. { "getGJLevels21": "dorabaeChooseLevel42" }
)
GDBrowser has a lot of folders. [citation needed]
I pride myself in keeping my files neat, without doing the whole src/main/data/stuff/code/homework/newfolder/util/actualcode
garbage
Most folders contain exactly what you'd expect, but here's some in-depth info in case you're in the dark.
This is where all the backend stuff happens! Yipee!
They're all fairly similar. Fetch something, parse the response, and serve it in a crisp and non-intimidating JSON. This is probably what you came for.
The odd one out is icon.js, which is for generating GD icons. The code here is horrendous, so apologies in advance. Improvements to it would be greatly appreciated! (and i will love you forever)
Assets! Assets everywhere!
All the GD stuff was ripped straight from the GD spritesheets via Absolute's texture splitter hack. If you want a nice categorized version, I've done all the dirty work for you.
I'd explain what's in all the subfolders but it's pretty obvious. I tried my best to organize everything nicely.
What's a class you ask? Good question.
I guess the best way to put it is uh... super fancy functions???
Level.js parses the server's disgusting response and sends back a nice object with all the level info
XOR.js encrypts/decrypts stuff like GD passwords
The HTML files! Nothing too fancy, since it can all be seen directly from gdbrowser. Note that profile.html and level.html (and some parts of home.html) have [[VARIABLES]] (name, id, etc) replaced by the server when they're sent.
comingsoon.html was used while the site was still in development, I just left it in there as a nice little throwback
It's GJ_Gamesheet02 but split into a much more intimidating cluster of a million files. These icons are put together and colored in the monstrosity that is icon.js
parseIconPlist.js reads GJ_GameSheet02-uhd.plist and magically transforms it into gameSheet.json. Props to 101arrowz for helping make this
colors.json is a list of the player colors in GD. Fairly straight forward
forms.json is a list of the different icon forms, their ingame filenames, and their index in responses from the GD servers
offsets.json is a bunch of hardcoded offsets. Desperate times call for desperate measures
Inevitable misc folder
Level Analysis Stuff (in a separate folder)
blocks.json - The object IDs in the different 'families' of blocks
colorProperties.json - Color channel cheatsheet
initialProperties.json - Level settings cheatsheet
objectProperties.json - Object property cheatsheet. Low budget version of AlFas' one
objects.json - IDs for portals, orbs, triggers, and misc stuff
Everything Else
achievements.json - List of all GD/meltdown/subzero/etc achievements. parseAchievementPlist.js
automatically creates this file
achievementTypes.json - An object containing different categories of achievements (stars, shards, vault, etc) and how to identify them
colors.json - List of icon colors in RGB format
credits.json - Credits! (shown on the homepage)
dragscroll.js - Used on several pages for drag scrolling
music.json - An array of the official GD tracks (name, artist)
parseAchievementPlist.js - A script that reads GD's achievement .plist files and converts it into achievements.json
sampleIcons.json - A pool of icons, one of which will randomly appear when visiting the icon kit. Syntax is [Name, ID, Col1, Col2, Glow],
secretStuff.json - GJP goes here, needed for level leaderboards. Not included in the repo for obvious reasons
settings.js - Tweak small settings here, mainly for local use or GDPS'es
shops.js - A hardcoded list of all the shop icons in GD
sizecheck.js - Excecuted on most pages. Used for the 'page isn't wide enough' message, back button, and a few other things
happy gdbrowsing and god bless.