NetBSD/gnu/games/chess/DOCUMENTATION/CHANGES

363 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext

GNU CHESS HISTORY
(#include "../version.h")
August 1, 1989 -- Jay Scott
He proofread the opening book and made
corrections.
June 21, 1989 -- Hes @log-se.sv
He contributed new move generation routines (move.c move.h) to speedup
move generation and the overall program, by about 15-30%
June 9, 1989 -- Tim Radzy (unet!nplab4!radz@ames.arc.nasa.gov)
He fixed a bug in xchess/board.c. In a post-game new-game situation,
castling wouldn't be permitted under circumstances. Tim made
it possible to castle again.
May 12, 1989 -- Joe Garbarini (garbarini%kegger@circus.llnl.gov)
Recommended changes to documentation vis a vis chesstool usage.
May 5, 1989 -- Jouko Holopainen (jhol@tolsun.oulu.fi)
Wrote code to support underpromotion.
Changed interface to accept ECO/Informator style moves.
April 30, 1989 -- Various GNU contributors
setlinebuf() modification for xchess/chesstool.
check for zero division in time printout.
January 17, 1989 -- Anders Thulin
Provided extensive addition to the opening book for his
favorite opening the Vienna Game. This was drawn from ECO.
November 23, 1988 -- Stuart Cracraft
Installed new version of Xchess that is better debugged, works on
the next version of X. Thanks to Wayne Christopher and Arturo Perez.
August 28, 1988 -- Stuart Cracraft
Removed a sacrifice line from the Giuoco Piano entry in the opening
book; the program didn't seem to like the positions it got from this line.
December 30, 1987 -- John Stanback
Wrote a short blurb on the heuristics contained in GNU Chess. It resides
in the subdirectory DOCUMENTATION as the file HEURISTICS.
December 17, 1987 -- John Stanback
Modified criteria for positional evaluation in quiescence search
to include positions in which the estimated score lies within
the alpha-beta window; fixed a bug in the king proximity to pawns heuristic;
fixed a bug involving passed pawn heuristics;
December 16, 1987 -- Stuart Cracraft
Added automatic 'list' upon exit (both in display, non-display, and
chesstool mode); command-line setting of tournament time controls
bug fixed.
December 14, 1987 -- John Stanback
GNU defeated the commercial product 'Fidelity Excellence' 5.5-4.5 in
a 10-game match. It was running at about 500 nodes per second (typical
of its speed on a VAX 8650) and this would indicate its strength
would be about USCF 1875-1900.
December 4, 1987 -- John Stanback
Man page added. Command line arguments now specify regular clock
settings if so desired (useful for SUN players). Thinking
on opponent's time is now disabled by default. Estimated
rating is 1850 at 500 nodes per second.
October 20, 1987 -- Stuart Cracraft
Fixed GNU/SUN interaction. Chesstool and its features now
seem to fully work.
October 5, 1987 -- Ken Thompson
GNU beat Belle (actually drew due to a bug, but
Ken kept GNU playing through to the win) while
running on a Cray XMP-48. In this 3-1 time handicap game
Belle outsearched Cray GNU by 10-1 (even with the handicap).
September 26, 1987 -- John Stanback at HP
Hash table functioning. Thinking on opponent's
time functioning.
August 20, 1987 -- Mike Meyer at Berkeley
Mike ran GNU Chess on a Cray 1 supercomputer.
The system was very heavily loaded, so the
program was not as speedy as with the Cray below.
August 16, 1987 -- David Goldberg at SUN
He added "chesstool" support so that this
version of GNU Chess can run under the
display manager "chesstool".
August 15, 1987 -- John Stanback at HP
Hash tables, more heuristics, a modified
search which is more efficient. He also
discovered a bug in the piece-exchanger. This
would cause the program to exchange pieces suboptimally.
With this fix, the program should play much
more strongly.
August 13, 1987 -- Ken Thompson at Bell Labs
Ken ran GNU Chess on a Cray XMP supercomputer
(among other processors). The program got
about 3000-4000 chess positions per second
which is comprable to today's fastest bit-slice
commercial machines. Also, he had GNU Chess
play two games against Belle.
July 19, 1987 -- Jay Scott & John Stanback
Many positional heuristics have been added.
July 18, 1987 -- Stuart Cracraft
Improvements have been made to the opening
book. It is mostly an MCO book, containing
major variations from many of the major openings
and particularly in-depth on Sicilian.
May 11, 1987 -- John Stanback at HP
He donated his chess program, a fairly mature
and strong program.
May 1, 1987 -- Stuart Cracraft
He added several bug fixes various people
had reported. He also changed makemove() so that
the calling syntax is makemove(movelist,index,board)
rather than makemove(move,board). Having the latter
tickled a bug in at least one manufacturer's C-compiler,
so rather than write fancy code, we simplified it.
April 25, 1987-- Jim Aspnes at MIT
He added all sorts of useful capabilities,
including positional evaluation in the tree
search using a table-driven algorithm,
modifying transposition table code in order
to work properly, though it doesn't improve
speed too much, checkmates/stalemates detected
in the search, en passant captures allowed,
detect repeated positions, iterative deepening,
quicker quiescence search, tournament time controls,
sqattacked sped up by a factor of 4, compile-time
debugging options.
January 2, 1987 -- Stuart Cracraft
He added a few more Tal games to the collection.
January 2, 1987 -- Jim Aspnes at MIT
He contributed MCO variations for the Catalan,
Queen's Indian, and Reti openings.
December 29, 1986 -- Jim Aspnes at MIT
He contributed all MCO variations of the Najdorf
to the opening book. He also contributed a LISP
macro (written in GNU Emacs Lisp) to convert
xchess game formats to GNU Chess opening book
format.
December 14, 1986 -- Ken Thompson at Bell Labs
He contributed almost 200 games by Tal to
our collection of Tal-games, bringing the
total number of Tal positions in the book
to 10,692. Total book positions now 13,207.
These reside in bookin, bookin.bdg, bookin.tal.
Note that presently, only bookin and bookin.tal
can be used. The new Tal positions came in a
slightly different format, which we have chosen
to adopt as our standard format. All book
games in bookin and bookin.bdg will gradually
change into the new standard format.
December 11, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Added "averages" for node-count per move,
cpu per move, rate per move to list_history
and write_history.
New version of Xchess installed.
Started typing in Tal games into "bookin.tal".
Added "total book positions" printout to "book"
and "enter" statistics printout.
December 10, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Implemented aspiration search in normal
alpha-beta search. Speedups of 3% to 40%
have been noticed in most positions.
Occasionally a slower search will result,
but it is thought these are worth the
usual speedups.
December 9, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Fixed minor bug in write_history()
Added another Tal game, 2nd game of 1st world
championship match with Botvinnik, a Benoni.
December 9, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Enhanced parallelism. All parallel processors
now communicate via a shared data file and
are kept running (in idle loops watching the
shared data file). This saves us a few seconds
on each move since the 'rsh' need not be invoked
more than once (at the beginning). Since the
shared data file is now implemented, we will
next work towards a "parallel anarchy" in which
any processor can use any other processor in
order to reduce its search. The current scheme
with the program being only as fast as its slowest
processor, is quite inefficient.
December 1, 1986 -- Jim Aspnes at MIT
Added a couple of Master games from
Modern Chess Openings 12 (a Fischer game,
and a Matanovic game).
November 30, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Added parallelism. Can now handle multiple
processors (sharing same disk). Later we will
add the capability to use processors not sharing
the same disk. Modified README and MAN-PAGE.
November 26, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Fixed a few bugs in book-mailing mechanism.
Fixed a bug regarding situations where only
one move is available.
Fixed a bug in read_history() that caused
Black queenside castles to be mishandled.
November 25, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Added two pawn heuristics. Reward pawns moving into
a phalanx of pawns. A phalanx is two or more
horizontally-connected pawns. Likewise, penalize
pawns leaving a phalanx of pawns. The penalty for
leaving is a little more than the reward for
entering.
November 24, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
A user reported an unbelievable bug. Investigation
of this bug led to the discovery that GNU Chess was
not picking the move judged best by the tree search
in all cases. This resulted in the bug showing
itself which further showed that the program was
selecting an inferior move. This may result in an
improvement to the program's play.
November 24, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Added two heuristics. Penalize king moves if
the king hasn't castled yet. Also, penalize pawn
moves which produce doubled pawns. Should
probably have something for isolated pawns
too.
November 23, 1986 -- Wayne Christopher at Berkeley
New version of X chess display front-end.
Fixed bugs include multiple pieces, runs
on SUNS & Bobcats, loads saved games.
November 23, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Cleaned up some minor bugs regarding history.
Added "Illegal command" error message at Wayne's
request.
November 22, 1986 -- David Goldberg at SUN Microsystems
He complained that GNU Chess was memory-hungry.
A few minor modifications to hash.c reduced
uninitialized data space 87% and text space
12%. This should make it easier for GNU Chess
to run on small computers.
November 22, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
"read" command was working, but needed
additional tweaking so that history
array would be printed by list_history().
November 19, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Added "read" command which reads a history
file (game listing) and restores the board
to as if the person was still playing that.
particular game. Generally cleaned up
history mechanism, made it more orthogonal.
Revised README. Added doc to MAN-PAGE.
November 16, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
More opening book bugs found and fixed.
Added capability to accept abbreviated-algebraic notation
for entering "book" games from files.
Added approximately 2500 new positions to
opening book from games involving the
opening called Blackmar-Diemer Gambit,
a hoary line developed by Diemer in
Germany years ago.
November 15, 1986 -- Wayne Christopher at Berkeley
He modified the move generator, resulting in
a 28% speedup.
November 14, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
He documented a lot of the GNU Chess modules
with brief comments for each function. More
extensive internal documentation may go in
later.
November 14, 1986 -- Wayne Christopher at Berkeley
He created the Xchess interface for
GNU Chess to have windowing with X windows.
November 14, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
He added a "randomization" feature to
the opening book. This will cause the
program to select randomly from alternate
variations whenever -DBEST is removed
from Makefile's CFLAGS. If this is not
removed, the opening play selects the
first move found in the book as it appears
"in order" in the human-readable book.
November 14, 1986 -- David Goldberg at SUN Microsystems
He responded to a query about dbm(3) which
eventually resulted in the fixing of a subtle
bug in the book code which was causing the
program to sometimes hash to the incorrect
address and thereby produce a book move which
didn't even exist in the book. Thanks David!
November 14, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
He added the "oboard" routine in util.c. This
is the reverse of the already extant "iboard"
(same module). These two routines translate
between GNU Chess internal format and
Forsythe notation.
November 10, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
He added the "enter" command. This causes
the current game to be entered in the book.
Then, GNU Chess tries to mail this new entry
to the book maintainers (for inclusion in
the master copy of the book).
November 9, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
He added code for an opening book. MAN-PAGE
and README were modified accordingly.
November 8, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Checks and mates are now noticed at ply-1.
This is a more complete fix to the Oct 31 fix.
October 31, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
First attempt at fix to bug which causes
program to check human's king when program
itself is in check.
October 31, 1986 -- Mly at MIT
Reported a bug which caused program to crash
when an illegal human move was played. Fixed.
Also, program was unable to play as White. Fixed.
October 22, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Pps now rewards moves which liberate bishops.
October 19, 1986 -- Stuart Cracraft
Added bitmapper routines to distribution.
Added version notice.
October 19, 1986 -- David Goldberg at SUN Microsystems
Interfaced GNU Chess with SUN's chesstool.
October 18, 1986 -- Initial release date.