Would be cool to see the patch supported for ARM processors in the future.
For example run a mohaa server on a raspberry pi, a colocation for a raspberry pi costs 1.50€/month here so would be a nice way to host a mohaa server.
Depends ofcourse how good the performance will be on a raspberry pi.
Again this shouldn't be the first priority, would just be awesome to have this in the future!
Last edited by Appelpitje; September 18th, 2014 at 05:36 AM.
I know its an old thread, but just to give more information on this...
At badassdummies.nl I'm running Medal Of Honor Allied Assault (Reborn 1.12) linux server on a raspberry pi 3, so it is possible.
First I wanted to reverse engineer a quake3 installation for the Raspberry Pi and hack a MOHAA server of it. Making a mohaa client connect to a 'hacked' quake3 server was quite easy, but than slowly the shit started.. I've started to look into this ever since the Raspberry Pi could run a version of quake3. But no great success. Also the open mohaa was not my favorite..
Finally I found a company that makes, for the first time ever, it possible to emulate a x86 on a ARM in a really nice, quick and stable way. It's called Exagear. (It than even could run Netflix)
From that point on it's really too easy, you install Moh:AA Reborn 1.12 on the Raspberry Pi and start the linux version. It actually ran mohaa in client mode quite nice and even better, for me, a dedicated mohaa server. (Dit not take a look at the mohaa fps count on the pi in client mode.. Will take a look into that..)
This Pi now runs Mohaa, vspstats for mohaa, teamspeak 2 and 3, the BadAssDummies clan website and many more things like being a NAS and so on...
The server lag is quite minimal. With 10 players I could notice some small lags of about 100ms every 5 minutes or so, but than again that could be from the other things running on the Pi.
All possible thanks to Moh:AA Reborn 1.12 and Exagear.
Thanks for your repsonse about this topic!
I saw Exagear back in those times, but dunno why i would pay almost the same price for a raspberry pi 3 to run x86 applications.