Commit Graph

972 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Allen 53843934c0 Update to v106r84 release.
byuu says:

Changelog:

  - fixed a few TLCS900H CPU and disassembler bugs
  - hooked up a basic Neo Geo Pocket emulator skeleton and memory map;
    can run a few instructions from the BIOS
  - emulated the flash memory used by Neo Geo Pocket games
  - added sourcery to the higan source archives
  - fixed ternary expressions in sfc/ppu-fast [hex_usr]
2019-01-21 16:27:24 +11:00
Tim Allen 37b610da53 Update to v106r83 release.
byuu says:

Changelog:

  - reverted nall/inline-if.hpp usage for now, since the
    nall/primitives.hpp math operators still cast to (u)int64_t
  - improved nall/primitives.hpp more; integer8 x = -128; print(-x) will
    now print 128 (unary operator+ and - cast to (u)int64_t)
  - renamed processor/lr35902 to processor/sm83; after the Sharp SM83
    CPU core [gekkio discovered the name]
  - a few bugfixes to the TLCS900H CPU core
  - completed the disassembler for the TLCS900H core

As a result of reverting most of the inline if stuff, I guess the
testing priority has been reduced. Which is probably a good thing,
considering I seem to have a smaller pool of testers these days.

Indeed, the TLCS900H core has ended up at 131KiB compared to the M68000
core at 128KiB. So it's now the largest CPU core in all of higan. It's
even more ridiculous because the M68000 core would ordinarily be quite a
bit smaller, had I not gone overboard with the extreme templating to
reduce instruction decoding overhead (you kind of have to do this for
RISC CPUs, and the inverted design of the TLCS900H kind of makes it
infeasible to do the same there.)

This CPU core is bound to have dozens of extremely difficult CPU bugs,
and there's no easy way for me to test them. I would greatly appreciate
any help in looking over the core for bugs. A fresh pair of eyes to spot
a mistake could save me up to several days of tedious debugging work.

The core still isn't ready to actually be tested: I have to hook up
cartridge loading, a memory bus, interrupts, timers, and the micro DMA
controller before it's likely that anything happens at all.
2019-01-19 12:34:17 +11:00
Tim Allen 2d9ce59e99 Update to v106r82 release.
byuu says:

Half of the disassembler is implemented now. Well, the decoding half
anyway. I'm splitting the decoding and string building into separate
components this time around, on account of the instruction encoding
being in reverse order. The string building portion hasn't been written
yet, either.

We're up to 112KiB now, compared to 128KiB for the 68K.
2019-01-18 10:59:49 +11:00
Tim Allen 559a6585ef Update to v106r81 release.
byuu says:

First 32 instructions implemented in the TLCS900H disassembler. Only 992
to go!

I removed the use of anonymous namespaces in nall. It was something I
rarely used, because it rarely did what I wanted.

I updated all nested namespaces to use C++17-style namespace Foo::Bar {}
syntax instead of classic C++-style namespace Foo { namespace Bar {}}.

I updated ruby::Video::acquire() to return a struct, so we can use C++17
structured bindings. Long term, I want to get away from all functions
that take references for output only. Even though C++ botched structured
bindings by not allowing you to bind to existing variables, it's even
worse to have function calls that take arguments by reference and then
write to them. From the caller side, you can't tell the value is being
written, nor that the value passed in doesn't matter, which is terrible.
2019-01-16 13:02:24 +11:00
Tim Allen 25145f59cc Update to v106r80 release.
byuu says:

Any usage of natural and integer cast to 64-bit math operations now.
Hopefully this will be the last of the major changes for a bit on
nall/primitives, at least until serious work begins on removing implicit
conversion to primitive types.

I also completed the initial TLCS900H core, sans SWI (kind of a ways off
from support interrupts.) I really shouldn't say completed, though. The
micro DMA unit is missing, interrupt priority handling is missing,
there's no debugger, and, of course, there's surely dozens of absolutely
critical CPU bugs that are going to be an absolute hellscape nightmare
to track down.

It was a damn shame, right up until the very last eight instructions,
[CP|LD][I|D](R), the instruction encoding was consistent. Of course,
there could be other inconsistencies that I missed. In fact, that's
somewhat likely ... sigh.
2019-01-16 00:09:50 +11:00
Tim Allen 17fc6d8d51 Update to v106r79 release.
byuu says:

This WIP is just work on nall/primitives ...

Basically, I'm coming to the conclusion that it's just not practical to
try and make Natural/Integer implicitly castable to primitive signed and
unsigned integers. C++ just has too many edge cases there.

I also want to get away from the problem of C++ deciding that all math
operations return 32-bit values, unless one of the parameters is 64-bit,
in which case you get a 64-bit value. You know, so things like
array[-1] won't end up accessing the 4 billionth element of the array.
It's nice to be fancy and minimally size operations (eg 32-bit+32-bit =
33-bit), but it's just too unintuitive. I think all
Natural<X>+Natural<Y> expessions should result in a Natural<64> (eg
natural) type.

nall/primitives/operators.hpp has been removed, and new
Natural<>Natural / Integer<>Integer casts exist. My feeling is that
signed and unsigned types should not be implicitly convertible where
data loss can occur. In the future, I think an integer8*natural8 is
fine to return an integer64, and the bitwise operators are probably all
fine between the two types. I could probably add
(Integer,Natural)+Boolean conversions as well.

To simplify expressions, there are new user-defined literals for _b
(boolean), _n (natural), _i (integer), _r (real), _n# (eg _n8),
_i# (eg _i8), _r# (eg _r32), and _s (nall::string).

In the long-term, my intention is to make the conversion and cast
constructors explicit for primitive types, but obviously that'll shatter
most of higan, so for now that won't be the case.

Something I can do in the future is allow implicit conversion and
casting to (u)int64_t. That may be a nice balance.
2019-01-15 15:33:20 +11:00
Tim Allen 6871e0e32a Update to v106r78 release.
byuu says:

I've implemented a lot more TLCS900H instructions. There are currently
20 missing spots, all of which are unique instructions (well, MINC and
MDEC could be considered pairs of 3 each), from a map of 1024 slots.

After that, I have to write the disassembler. Then the memory bus. Then
I get to start the fun process of debugging this monstrosity.

Also new is nall/inline-if.hpp. Note that this file is technically a war
crime, so be careful when opening it. This replaces ternary() from the
previous WIP.
2019-01-14 17:16:28 +11:00
Tim Allen bb1dd8c609 Update to v106r77 release.
byuu says:

So this turned out to be a rather unproductive ten-hour rabbit hole, but
...

I reworked nall/primitives.hpp a lot. And because the changes are
massive, testing of this WIP for regressions is critically important. I
really can't stress that enough, we're almost certainly going to have
some hidden regressions here ...

We now have a nall/primitives/ subfolder that splits up the classes into
manageable components. The bit-field support is now shared between both
Natural and Integer. All of the assignment operator overloads are now
templated and take references instead of values. Things like the
GSU::Register class are non-copyable on account of the function<>
object inside of it, and previously only operator= would work with
classes like that.

The big change is nall/primitives/operators.hpp, which is a really
elaborate system to compute the minimum number of bits needed for any
operation, and to return a Natural<T> or Integer<T> when one or both of
the arguments are such a type.

Unfortunately, it doesn't really work yet ... Kirby's Dream Land 3
breaks if we include operators.hpp. Zelda 3 runs fine with this, but I
had to make a huge amount of core changes, including introducing a new
ternary(bool, lhs, rhs) function to nall/algorithm to get past
Natural<X> and Natural<Y> not being equivalent (is_integral types get a
special exemption to ternary ?: type equivalence, yet it's impossible to
simulate with our own classes, which is bullshit.) The horrifying part
is that ternary() will evaluate both lhs and rhs, unlike ?:

I converted some of the functions to test ? uint(x) : uint(y), and
others to ternary(test, x, y) ... I don't have a strong preference
either way yet.

But the part where things may have gotten broken is in the changes to
where ternary() was placed. Some cases like in the GBA PPU renderer, it
was rather unclear the order of evaluations, so I may have made a
mistake somewhere.

So again, please please test this if you can. Or even better, look over
the diff.

Longer-term, I'd really like the enable nall/primitives/operators.hpp,
but right now I'm not sure why Kirby's Dream Land 3 is breaking. Help
would be appreciated, but ... it's gonna be really complex and difficult
to debug, so I'm probably gonna be on my own here ... sigh.
2019-01-13 17:25:14 +11:00
Tim Allen c9f7c6c4be Update to v106r76 release.
byuu says:

I added some useful new functions to nall/primitives:

    auto Natural<T>::integer() const -> Integer<T>;
    auto Integer<T>::natural() const -> Natural<T>;

These let you cast between signed and unsigned representation without
having to care about the value of T (eg if you take a Natural<T> as a
template parameter.) So for instance when you're given an unsigned type
but it's supposed to be a sign-extended type (example: signed
multiplication), eg Natural<T> → Integer<T>, you can just say:

    x = y.integer() * z.integer();

The TLCS900H core gained some more pesky instructions such as DAA, BS1F,
BS1B.

I stole an optimization from RACE for calculating the overflow flag on
addition. Assuming: z = x + y + c;

    Before: ~(x ^ y) & (x ^ z) & signBit;
    After: (x ^ z) & (y ^ z) & signBit;

Subtraction stays the same. Assuming: z = x - y - c;

    Same: (x ^ y) & (x ^ z) & signBit;

However, taking a speed penalty, I've implemented the carry computation
in a way that doesn't require an extra bit.

Adding before:

    uint9 z = x + y + c;
    c = z & 0x100;

Subtracting before:

    uint9 z = x - y - c;
    c = z & 0x100;

Adding after:

    uint8 z = x + y + c;
    c = z < x || z == x && c;

Subtracting after:

    uint8 z = x - y - c;
    c = z > x || z == x && c;

I haven't been able to code golf the new carry computation to be any
shorter, unless I include an extra bit, eg for adding:

    c = z < x + c;

But that defeats the entire point of the change. I want the computation
to work even when T is uintmax_t.

If anyone can come up with a faster method, please let me know.

Anyway ... I also had to split off INC and DEC because they compute
flags differently (word and long modes don't set flags at all, byte mode
doesn't set carry at all.)

I also added division by zero support, although I don't know if it's
actually hardware accurate. It's what other emulators do, though.
2019-01-11 12:51:18 +11:00
Tim Allen 95d0020297 Update to v106r75 release.
byuu says:

So tired ... so much left to do still ... sigh.

If someone's up for some code golf, open to suggestions on how to handle
the INTNEST control register. It's the only pure 16-bit register on the
system, and it breaks my `map`/`load`/`store<uint8,16,32>` abstraction.
Basically what I suspect happens is when you access INTNEST in 32-bit
mode, the upper 16-bits are just undefined (probably zero.) But
`map<uint32>(INTNEST)` must return a uint32& or nothing at all. So for the
time being, I'm just making store(ControlRegister) check if it's the
INTNEST ID, and clearing the upper bits of the written byte in that
case. It's hacky, but ... it's the best I can think of.

I added LDX, which is a 900H-only instruction, and the control register
map is for the 900/H CPU. I found the detailed differences between the
CPUs, and it doesn't look likely that I'm gonna support the 900 or
900/H1 at all. Not that there was a reason to anyway, but it's nice to
support more stuff when possible. Oh well.

The 4-byte instruction fetch queue is going to have to get implemented
inside fetch, or just not implemented at all ... not like I'd be able to
figure out the details of it anyway.

The manual isn't clear on how the MULA flags are calculated, but since
MUL doesn't set any flags, I assume the flags are based on the addition
after the multiplication, eg:

    uint32 a = indirect<int16>(XDE) * indirect<int16>(XHL);
    uint32 b = reg16; //opcode parameter
    uint32 c = a + b; //flags set based on a+b

No idea if it's right or not. It doesn't set carry or half-carry, so
it's not just simply the same as calling algorithmAdd.

Up to almost 70KB, not even halfway done, don't even have a disassembler
started yet. There's a real chance this could overtake the 68K for the
biggest CPU core in higan, although at this point I'm still thinking the
68K will end up larger.
2019-01-10 13:21:18 +11:00
Tim Allen 41148b1024 Update to v106r74 release.
byuu says:

So I spent the better part of eight hours refactoring the TLCS900H core
to be more flexible in light of new edge cases.

I'm now including the size information inside of the types (eg
Register<Byte>, Memory<Word>) rather than as parameters to the
instruction handlers. This allows me to eg implement RETI without
needing template arguments in all the instructions. pop(SR), pop(PC) can
deduce how much to pop off of the stack. It's still highly templated,
but not unrolling the 3-bit register indexes and instead going through
the switch table to access registers is going to hurt the performance a
good deal.

A benefit of this is that Register{A} != Register{WA} != Register{XWA}
anymore, despite them sharing IDs.

I also renamed read/write to load/store for the CPU core, because
implicit conversions are nasty. They all call the virtual read/write.

I added more instructions, improved the memory addressing mode support,
and some other things.

I got rid of Byte, Word, Long because there's too many alternate sizes
needed: int8, int16, uint24, etc.

Ran into a really annoying C++ case ...

    struct TLCS900H {
      template<typename T> auto store(Register<T> target, T source) -> void;
    };

If you call store(Register<uint32>(x), uint16(y)); it errors out since
the T types don't match. But you can't specialize it:

    template<typename T, typename U> auto store(Register<T>, U) -> void;
    template<typename U> auto TLCS900H::store<uint32, U>(Register<uint32>, U) -> void;

Because somehow it's 2019 and we still can't do partial template
specialization inside classes ...

So as a result, I had to make T source be type uint32 even for
Register<uint8> and Register<uint16>. Doesn't matter too much, just
annoying.
2019-01-09 10:36:03 +11:00
Tim Allen dbee893408 Update to v106r73 release.
byuu says:

This probably won't fix the use of register yet (I imagine ruby and hiro
will complain now), but ... oh well, it's a start. We'll get it
compiling again eventually.

I added JP, JR, JRL, LD instructions this time around. I'm also starting
to feel that Byte, Word, Long labels for the TLCS900H aren't really
working. There's cases of needing uint24, int8, int16, ... it may just
be better to name the types instead of trying to be fancy.

At this point, all of the easy instructions are in. Now it's down to a
whole lot of very awkward bit-manipulation and special-use instructions.
Sigh.
2019-01-07 18:59:04 +11:00
Tim Allen cb86cd116c Update to v106r72 release.
byuu says:

For this WIP, I added more TLCS900H instructions. All of the
ADC,ADD,SBB/SBC,SUB,AND,OR,XOR.CP,PUSH,POP instructions are in.

Still an incredible amount of work left to do on this core ... it has all kinds
of novel instructions that aren't on any other processors.

Still no disassembler support yet, so I can't even test what I'm doing. Fun!
2019-01-05 18:04:27 +11:00
Tim Allen 1a889ae232 Update to v106r71 release.
byuu says:

I started working on the Toshiba TLCS900H CPU core today.

It's basically, "what if we took the Z80, added in 32-bit support, added
in SPARC register windows, added a ton of additional addressing modes,
added control registers, and added a bunch of additional instructions?"
-- or in other words, it's basically hell for me.

It took several hours just to wrap my head around the way the opcode
decoder needed to function, but I think I have a decent strategy for
implementing it now.

I should have all of the first-byte register/memory address decoding in
place, although I'm sure there's lots of bugs. I don't have anything in
the way of a disassembler yet.
2019-01-05 11:35:26 +11:00
Tim Allen 79be6f2355 Update to v106r70 release.
byuu says:

Changelog:

  - Interface::displays() -> vector<Display> → Interface::display() -> Display
  - <Platform::videoRefresh(display>, ...) → <Platform::videoFrame>(...)
  - <Platform::audioSample>(...) → <Platform::audioFrame>(...)
  - higan, icarus: use AboutDialog class instead of ad-hoc
    implementations
      - about dialog is now modal, but now has a clickable website URL
  - icarus: reverted if constexpr for now
  - MSX: implemented basic CPU, VDP support

I took out the multiple displays support thing because it was never
really implemented fully (Emulator::Video and the GUIs both ignored it)
or used anyway. If it ends up necessary in the future, I'll worry about
it then.

There's enough MSX emulation now to run Mr. Do! without sound or input.
I'm shipping higan with C-BIOS 0.29a, although it likely won't be good
enough in the future (eg it can't do BASIC, floppy disk, or cassette
loading.) I have keyboard and (not working) AY-3-8910 support in a
different branch, so that won't take too long to implement. Main problem
is naming all the darned keyboard keys. I think I need to change
settings.bml's input mapping lines so that the key names are values
instead of node names, so that any characters can appear inside of them.

It turns out my MSX set uses .rom for the file extensions ... gods. So,
icarus can't really import them like this. I may have to re-design
icarus' importer to stop caring about the file extension and instead ask
you what kind of games you are importing. There's no way icarus can
heuristically guess what systems the images belong to, because many
systems don't have any standardized magic bytes.

I'm struggling with where to put SG-1000, SC-3000, ColecoVision, Coleco
Adam stuff. I think they need to be split to two separate higan
subfolders (sg and cv, most likely ...) The MS/GG share a very
customized and extended VDP that the other systems don't have. The Sega
and Coleco older hardware share the same TMS9918 as the MSX, yet have
very different memory maps and peripherals that I don't want to mix
together. Especially if we start getting into the computer-variants
more.
2019-01-03 21:05:20 +11:00
Tim Allen cac3858f65 Document that we now require GCC7 and/or C++17 features. 2019-01-03 20:43:08 +11:00
Tim Allen 1fd6d983da Build with Ubuntu LTS instead of Debian Stable.
Debian has served us well, but byuu would like to start using C++17 features
which generally requires GCC7. Debian Stable only has GCC6 right now, while
Ubuntu LTS has the required version, so that should get things going again.
2019-01-03 20:37:30 +11:00
Tim Allen aaf094e7c4 Update to v106r69 release.
byuu says:

The biggest change was improving WonderSwan emulation. With help from
trap15, I tracked down a bug where I was checking the wrong bit for
reverse DMA transfers. Then I also emulated VTOTAL to support variable
refresh rate. Then I improved HyperVoice emulation which should be
unsigned samples in three of four modes. That got Fire Lancer running
great. I also rewrote the disassembler. The old one disassembled many
instructions completely wrong, and deviated too much from any known x86
syntax. I also emulated some of the quirks of the V30 (two-byte POP into
registers fails, SALC is just XLAT mirrored, etc) which probably don't
matter unless someone tries to run code to verify it's a NEC CPU and not
an Intel CPU, but hey, why not?

I also put more work into the MSX skeleton, but it's still just a
skeleton with no real emulation yet.
2019-01-02 10:52:08 +11:00
Tim Allen 3159285eaa Update to v106r68 release.
byuu says:

Changelog:

  - nall: converted range, iterator, vector to 64-bit
  - added (very poor) ColecoVision emulation (including Coleco Adam
    expansion)
  - added MSX skeleton
  - added Neo Geo Pocket skeleton
  - moved audio,video,resource folders into emulator folder
  - SFC heuristics: BS-X Town cart is "ZBSJ" [hex_usr]

The nall change is for future work on things like BPA: I need to be able
to handle files larger than 4GB. It is extremely possible that there are
still some truncations to 32-bit lurking around, and even more
disastrously, possibly some -1s lurking that won't sign-extend to
`(uint64_t)0-1`. There's a lot more classes left to do: `string`,
`array_view`, `array_span`, etc.
2018-12-22 21:28:15 +11:00
Tim Allen 90da691717 Update to v106r67 release.
byuu says:

Changelog:

  - added all pre-requisite to make install rule (note: only for higan,
    icarus so far)
  - added SG-1000 emulation
  - added SC-3000 emulation (no keyboard support yet)
  - added MS graphics mode 1 emulation (SC-1000)
  - added MS graphics mode 2 emulation (F-16 Fighter)
  - improve Audio::process() to prevent a possible hang
  - higan: repeat monaural audio to both left+right speakers
  - icarus: add heuristics for importing MSX games (not emulated in
    higan yet in this WIP)
  - added DC bias removal filter [jsd1982]
  - improved Audio::Stream::reset() [jsd1982]

I was under the impression that the 20hz highpass filter would have
removed DC bias ... if not, then I don't know why I added that filter to
all of the emulation cores that have it. In any case, if anyone is up
for helping me out ... if we could analyze the output with and without
the DC bias filter to see if it's actually helping, then I'll enable it
if it is. To enable it, edit
higan/audio/stream.cpp::addDCRemovalFilter() and remove the return
statement at the top of the function.
2018-12-21 11:01:14 +11:00
Tim Allen 598076e400 Fix typo in CI script, introduced in commit 23dd28. 2018-12-20 19:58:33 +11:00
Tim Allen 075f540ec4 The libretro core is broken after v106, we know it's broken, no need to test. 2018-12-20 16:12:43 +11:00
Tim Allen 41eccf6ec4 Update .gitignore.
At some point, higan moved system metadata from higan/profile to higan/systems.
Also, higan's Super Famicom core added config options of its own, which it now
writes out.
2018-12-20 12:15:34 +11:00
Tim Allen 4c4e79aa0e Update to v106r66 release.
byuu says:

Changelog:

  - moved to GCC 8.2 and C++17
  - fixed compilation under FreeBSD 12.0
  - don't read beyond the file size in
    SuperFamicom::Cartridge::loadMemory
  - add missing I/O cycle HuC6280::instructionImmediate
  - serialize Mega Drive's Game Genie state
  - serialize SPC7110::Thread information
  - enable 30-bit color depth support under the GLX/OpenGL 2.0 driver
    (doesn't work with OpenGL 3.2 yet)

The 30-bit color depth option isn't super useful, but why not? I need to
update ruby to detect that the display is actually capable of it before
exposing an option that can result in the driver failing to initialize,
however.
2018-12-20 11:55:47 +11:00
Tim Allen 0b44399c0a docs: Review and update docs for v107.
Changes include:

- The "Library" menu was replaced with the "Systems" menu
- The "Settings" menu was reorganised
- Game Boy rumble is now under the MBC5 "controller" for the cartridge "port",
  instead of being presented as a part of the base console
- Import instructions now mention that icarus ships with some firmware files,
  and describe the "Firmware" directory that icarus will use for firmware
  it needs.
- Apparently the correct name is "MSU1", not "MSU-1"
- v107 changes the way MSU1 data is stored in game folders
- PowerFest '94 import instructions removed, since I can't get it to work
  with v107
- Links to the official forum have been replaced with links to the unofficial
  forum archive, since the official forum is shutting down
- Links to Mercurial Magic updated to point at qwertymodo's archive, since
  hex_usr is no longer developing it
- Links to nSide updated, since hex_usr no longer uses GitHub.
- Windows build instructions now describe a compiler that is actually
  maintained, instead of stale TDM64-GCC.
- Linux build instructions now mention higan requires SDL 2.0.
- minor wording changes, typos, broken links fixed, etc.
2018-11-16 16:09:30 +11:00
Tim Allen 23dd28952b Update build instructions.
The latest WIP renames icarus/database and icarus/firmware to
icarus/Database and icarus/Firmware (in title case).

Also, somewhere along the line we stopped building icarus for higan/Linux,
which seems an oversight.
2018-10-04 22:17:49 +10:00
Tim Allen 03b06257d3 Update to v106r65 release.
byuu says:

This synchronizes bsnes/higan with many recent internal nall changes.

This will be the last WIP until I am situated in Japan. Apologies for the
bugfixes that didn't get applied yet, I ran out of time.
2018-10-04 20:12:11 +10:00
Tim Allen 336d20123f Update to v106r64 release.
byuu says:

Changelog:

  - sfc: completed BS Memory Cassette emulation (sans bugs, of course --
    testing appreciated)
  - bsnes: don't strip - on MSU1 track names in game ROM mode
    [hex_usr]

I'm going with "metadata.bml" for the flash metadata filename for the
time being, but I'll say that it's subject to change. I'll have to make
a new extension for it to be supported with bsnes.
2018-09-13 21:13:00 +10:00
Tim Allen c58169945c Update to v106r63 release.
byuu says:
Changelog:

  - gb/mbc7: rewrote the 93LCx6 EEPROM emulation
  - sfc/slot/bsmemory: rewrote the flash emulation for Satellaview
    cartridges

As of this release, flash-based BS Memory cartridges will be writable.
So without the bsnes patch to disable write limits, some games will lock
out after a few plays.
2018-09-11 21:16:58 +10:00
Tim Allen c2d0ed4ca8 Update to v106r62 release.
byuu says:

Changelog:

  - sfc/cx4: added missing instructions [info from Overload]
  - sfc/cx4: added instruction cache emulation [info from ikari]
  - sfc/sa1: don't let CPU access SA1-only I/O registers, and vice versa
  - sfc/sa1: fixed IRQs that were broken from the recent WIP
  - sfc/sa1: significantly improved bus conflict emulation
      - all tests match hardware now, other than HDMA ROM↔ROM, which
        is 0.5 - 0.8% too fast
  - sfc/cpu: fixed a bug with DMA→CPU alignment timing
  - sfc/cpu: removed the DMA pipe; performs writes on the same cycles as
    reads [info from nocash]
  - sfc/memory: fix a crashing bug due to not clearing Memory size field
    [hex_usr]
  - bsnes/gb: use .rtc for real-time clock file extensions on the Game
    Boy [hex_usr]
  - ruby/cgl: compilation fix [Sintendo]

Now let's see if I can accept being off by ~0.65% on one of twelve SA1
timing tests for the time being and prioritize much more important
things or not.
2018-09-10 12:11:19 +10:00
Tim Allen 3d34517f3e Update to v106r61 release.
byuu says:

This release adds ikari's Cx4 notes to bsnes. It fixes the MMX2 intro's
boss fight sequence to be frame perfect to real hardware. It's also very
slightly faster than before.

I've also added an option to toggle the CPU↔coprocessor cycle
synchronization to the emulation settings panel, so you don't have to
recompile to get the more accurate SA1 timings. I'm most likely going to
default this to disabled in bsnes, and *maybe* enabled in higan out of
the box.

StaticRAM (wasn't used) and MappedRAM are gone from the Super Famicom
core. Instead, there's now ReadableMemory, WritableMemory, and
ProtectedMemory (WritableMemory with a toggle for write protection.)
Cartridge::loadMap now takes a template Memory object, which bypasses an
extra virtual function call on memory accesses, but it doesn't really
impact speed much. Whatever.
2018-09-04 15:44:35 +10:00
Tim Allen a3e0f6da25 Update to v106r60 release.
byuu says:

I added (imperfect) memory conflict timing to the SA1.

Before:

  - WRAM↔↔ROM ran 7% too fast
  - ROM↔↔ROM ran 100% too fast
  - WRAM↔↔IRAM ran 7% too fast
  - ROM↔↔IRAM ran 7% too fast
  - IRAM↔↔IRAM ran 287% too fast
  - BWRAM↔↔BWRAM ran 100% too fast
  - HDMA ROM↔↔ROM ran 15% too fast
  - HDMA WRAM↔↔ROM ran 15% too fast
  - DMA ROM↔↔ROM ran 100% too fast

After:

  - ROM↔↔ROM runs 14% too fast
  - HDMA WRAM↔↔ROM runs 7% too fast
  - DMA ROM↔↔ROM runs 4% too fast

If you enable this with the fast PPU + DSP, your framerate in SA1 games
will drop by 51%. And even if you disable it, you'll still lose 9% speed
in SA1 games, and 2% speed in non-SA1 games, because of changes needed
to make this support possible.

By default, I'm leaving this off. Compile with `-DACCURATE_SA1` (or
uncomment the line in sfc/sfc.hpp) if you want to try it out.

This'll almost certainly cause some SA1 regressions, so I guess we'll
tackle those as they arise.
2018-09-03 00:06:41 +10:00
Tim Allen bd814f0358 Update to v106r59 release.
byuu says:

Changelog:

  - fixed bug in Emulator::Game::Memory::operator bool()
  - nall: renamed view<string> back to `string_view`
  - nall:: implemented `array_view`
  - Game Boy: split cartridge-specific input mappings (rumble,
    accelerometer) to their own separate ports
  - Game Boy: fixed MBC7 accelerometer x-axis
  - icarus: Game Boy, Super Famicom, Mega Drive cores output internal
    header game titles to heuristics manifests
  - higan, icarus, hiro/gtk: improve viewport geometry configuration;
    fixed higan crashing bug with XShm driver
  - higan: connect Video::poll(),update() functionality
  - hiro, ruby: several compilation / bugfixes, should get the macOS
    port compiling again, hopefully [Sintendo]
  - ruby/video/xshm: fix crashing bug on window resize
      - a bit hacky; it's throwing BadAccess Xlib warnings, but they're
        not fatal, so I am catching and ignoring them
  - bsnes: removed Application::Windows::onModalChange hook that's no
    longer needed [Screwtape]
2018-08-26 16:49:54 +10:00
Tim Allen f9adb4d2c6 Update to v106r58 release.
byuu says:

The main thing I worked on today was emulating the MBC7 EEPROM.

And... I have many things to say about that, but not here, and not now...

The missing EEPROM support is why the accelerometer was broken. Although
it's not evidently clear that I'm emulating the actual values
incorrectly. I'll think about it and get it fixed, though.

bsnes went from ~308fps to ~328fps, and I don't even know why. Probably
something somewhere in the 140KB of changes to other things made in this
WIP.
2018-08-21 13:17:12 +10:00
Tim Allen 9a6ae6dacb Update to 20180809 release.
byuu says:

The Windows port can now run the emulation while navigating menus,
moving windows, and resizing windows. The main window also doesn't try
so hard to constantly clear itself. This may leave a bit of unwelcome
residue behind in some video drivers during resize, but under most
drivers, it lets you resize without a huge amount of flickering.

On all platforms, I now also run the emulation during MessageWindow
modal events, where I didn't before.

I'm thinking we should probably mute the audio during modal periods,
since it can generate a good deal of distortion.

The tooltip timeout was increased to ten seconds.

On Windows, the enter key can now activate buttons, so you can more
quickly dismiss MessageDialog windows. This part may not actually work
... I'm in the middle of trying to get messages out of the global
`Application_windowProc` hook and into the individual `Widget_windowProc`
hooks, so I need to do some testing.

I fixed a bug where changing the input driver wouldn't immediately
reload the input/hotkey settings lists properly.

I also went from disabling the driver "Change" button when the currently
active driver is selected in the list, to instead setting it to say
"Reload", and I also added a tool tip to the input driver reload button,
advising that if you're using DirectInput or SDL, you can hit "Reload"
to rescan for hotplugged gamepads without needing to restart the
emulator. XInput and udev have auto hotswap support. If we can ever get
that into DirectInput and SDL, then I'll remove the tooltip. But
regardless, the reload functionality is nice to have for all drivers.

I'm not sure what should happen when a user changes their driver
selection while a game is loaded, gets the warning dialog, chooses not
to change it, and then closes the emulator. Currently, it will make the
change happen the next time you start the emulator. This feels a bit
unexpected, but when you change the selection without a game loaded, it
takes immediate effect. So I'm not really sure what's best here.
2018-08-10 15:02:59 +10:00
Tim Allen 1e4affe5f9 Update to 20180808 release.
byuu says:

This release fixes the XAudio 2.1 and WASAPI drivers on Windows, and
extends XAudio to support device selection (eg headphones, speakers,
monitor, etc.) It also adds DRC to XAudio, however it's not currently
working.

The code is courtesy of Talarubi, I just botched it somewhere upon
porting it to the newer version of ruby.
2018-08-09 14:16:46 +10:00
Tim Allen 93a6a1ce7e Update to v106r57 release.
byuu says:

I've added tool tips to hiro for Windows, GTK, and Qt. I'm unsure how to
add them for Cocoa. I wasted am embarrassing ~14 hours implementing tool
tips from scratch on Windows, because the `TOOLTIPS_CLASS` widget just
absolutely refused to show up, no matter what I tried. As such, they're
not quite 100% native, but I would really appreciate any patch
submissions to help improve my implementation.

I added tool tips to all of the confusing settings in bsnes. And of
course, for those of you who don't like them, there's a configuration
file setting to turn them off globally.

I also improved Mega Drive handling of the Game Genie a bit, and
restructured the way the Settings class works in bsnes.

Starting now, I'm feature-freezing bsnes and higan. From this point
forward:

  - polishing up and fixing bugs caused by the ruby/hiro changes
  - adding DRC to XAudio2, and maybe exclusive mode to WGL
  - correcting FEoEZ (English) to load and work again out of the box

Once that's done, a final beta of bsnes will go out, I'll fix any
reported bugs that I'm able to, and then v107 should be ready. This time
with higan being functional, but marked as v107 beta. v108 will restore
higan to production status again, alongside bsnes.
2018-08-08 18:46:58 +10:00
Tim Allen 3b4e8b6d75 Update to v106r56 release.
byuu says:

I fixed all outstanding bugs that I'm aware of, including all of the
errata I listed yesterday.

And now it's time for lots of regression testing.

After that, I need to add Talarubi's XAudio2 DRC code, and then get a
new public bsnes WIP out for final testing.

New errata: when setting an icon (nall::image) larger than a Canvas on
Windows, it's not centering the image, so you end up seeing the overscan
area in the state manager previews, and the bottom of the image gets cut
off. I also need to forcefully disable the Xlib screensaver disable
support. I think I'll remove the GUI option to bypass it as well, and
just force screensaver disable always on with Windows. I'll improve it
in the future to toggle the effect between emulator pauses.
2018-08-06 17:46:00 +10:00
Tim Allen b2b51d544f Make genius and icarus also ignore dynamically-generated dependencies. 2018-08-06 17:41:55 +10:00
Tim Allen 5da4532771 Update to v106r55 release.
byuu says:

Everything *should* be working again, but of course that won't
actually be the case. Here's where things stand:

  - bsnes, higan, icarus, and genius compile and run fine on FreeBSD
    with GTK
  - ruby video and audio drivers are untested on Windows, macOS, and
    Linux
  - hiro is untested on macOS
  - bsnes' status bar is not showing up properly with hiro/qt
  - bsnes and higan's about screen is not showing up properly with
    hiro/qt (1x1 window size)
  - bsnes on Windows crashes often when saving states, and I'm not sure
    why ... it happens inside Encode::RLE
  - bsnes on Windows crashes with ruby.input.windows (unsure why)
  - bsnes on Windows fails to show the verified emblem on the status bar
    properly
  - hiro on Windows flickers when changing tabs

To build the Windows bsnes and higan ports, use

    ruby="video.gdi audio.directsound"

Compilation error logs for Linux will help me fix the inevitable list of
typos there. I can fix the typos on other platforms, I just haven't
gotten to it yet.
2018-08-05 19:00:15 +10:00
Tim Allen 552d385031 Fix ST018 firmware hashes. 2018-08-05 09:06:51 +10:00
Tim Allen 0595e9e866 Remove redundant use of "classic". 2018-08-05 09:02:30 +10:00
Tim Allen 23da4e4e91 Don't mention console dates in the documentation.
The WonderSwan Color came out in 2000 and the GBA in 2001, so technically
they're not "video-game consoles of the 1980s and 1990s". Since there's no
elegant way to talk about the 2000-2009 timespan, let's just not mention
dates at all.
2018-08-04 21:45:44 +10:00
Tim Allen 41e127a07c Update to v106r54 release.
byuu says:

Changes to hiro will break all but the GTK target. Not that it matters
much given that the only ruby drivers that function are all on BSD
anyway.

But if you are fortunate enough to be able to run this ... you'll find
lots of polishing improvements to the bsnes GUI. I posted some
screenshots on Twitter, if anyone were interested.
2018-08-04 21:44:00 +10:00
Tim Allen 5d135b556d Update to v106r53 release.
byuu says:

Okay, so the WIPs-within-WIPs thing wasn't achieving its desired effect,
and it ended up causing me to have to redo some work on hiro since my
last local snapshot was of r52. So, heck it. I'll just do mostly
non-functional WIPs for a bit, and worry about the fallout years later
when I'm trying to find an emulation regression and cursing that the
WIPs aren't compiling.

I ported all of the ruby input drivers to the new syntax, as well as the
OpenAL driver. If you patch the ruby drivers for Linux with this in
mind, bsnes should compile and run there again.

Also, the bsnes program icon has returned, now that the new hiro layout
code is mature enough and I can simply add and remove the icon as a
Canvas instead of having to try and render into a viewport. The icon
shows up instantly with the main window.
2018-08-01 19:07:28 +10:00
Tim Allen 2335bb0df8 Update to 20180731 release.
byuu says:

I've completed moving all the class objects from `unique_pointer<T>` to
just T. The one exception is the Emulator::Interface instance. I can
absolutely make that a global object, but only in bsnes where there's
just the one emulation core.

I also moved all the SettingsWindow and ToolsWindow panels out to their
own global objects, and fixed a very difficult bug with GTK TabFrame
controls.

The configuration settings panel is now the emulator settings panel. And
I added some spacing between bold label sections on both the emulator
and driver settings panels.

I gave fixing ComboButtonItem my best shot, given I can't reproduce the
crash. Probably won't work, though.

Also made a very slight consistency improvement to ruby and renamed
driverName() to driver().

...

An important change ... as a result of moving bsnes to global objects,
this means that the constructors for all windows run before the
presentation window is displayed. Before this change, only the
presentation window was constructed first berore displaying it, followed
by the construction of the rest of the GUI windows.

The upside to this is that as soon as you see the main window, the GUI
is ready to go without a period where it's unresponsive.

The downside to this is it takes about 1.5 seconds to show the main
window, compared to around 0.75 seconds before.

I've no intention of changing that back. So if the startup time becomes
a problem, then we'll just have to work on optimizing hiro, so that it
can construct all the global Window objects quicker. The main way to do
that would be to not do calls to the Layout::setGeometry functions for
every widget added, and instead wait until the window is displayed. But
I don't have an easy way to do that, because you want the widget
geometry values to be sane even before the window is visible to help
size certain things.
2018-07-31 20:56:45 +10:00
Tim Allen 212da0a966 Update to 20180730 release.
byuu says:

These WIPs-within-WIPs are getting more and more broken ... this isn't
going the way I wanted.

But ... this time around, I've revamped the entire ruby API again, to
solve a bunch of tough problems that have always made using ruby really
clunky.

But there are *so many* ruby drivers that it's going to take a long
time to work through them all. This WIP is only going to run bsnes, and
only on FreeBSD, and only with some drivers.

hiro's Application::initialize() now calls hiro::initialize(), which you
define inside of your hiro apps. This lets you call
Application::setName(...) before anything else in hiro runs. This is
essential on Xorg to set program icons, for instance.

With the ruby rewrite and the change to hiro, I can get away from the
need to make everything in bsnes/higan pointers to objects, and can now
just declare them as regular objects.
2018-07-31 12:23:12 +10:00
Tim Allen 5deba5cbc1 Update to 20180729 release.
byuu wrote:

Sigh ...

asio.hpp needs #include <nall/windows/registry.hpp>

[Since the last WIP, byuu also posted the following message. -Ed.]

ruby drivers have all been updated (but not tested outside of BSD), and
I redesigned the settings window. The driver functionality all exists on
a new "Drivers" panel, the emulator/hack settings go to a
"Configuration" panel, and the video/audio panels lose driver settings.
As does the settings menu and its synchronize options.

I want to start pushing toward a v107 release. Critically, I will need
DirectSound and ALSA to support dynamic rate control. I'd also like to
eliminate the other system manifest.bml files. I need to update the
cheat code database format, and bundle at least a few quark shaders --
although I still need to default to Direct3D on Windows.

Turbo keys would be nice, if it's not too much effort. Aside from
netplay, it's the last significant feature I'm missing.

I think for v107, higan is going to be a bit rough around the edges
compared to bsnes. And I don't think it's practical to finish the bsnes
localization support.

I'm thinking we probably want another WIP to iron out any critical
issues, but this time there should be a feature freeze with the next
WIP.
2018-07-29 23:24:38 +10:00
Tim Allen 716c95f279 Update to 20180728 release.
byuu says:

Sigh, I seem to be spiraling a bit here ... but the work is very
important. Hopefully I can get a solid WIP together soon. But for now...

I've integrated dynamic rate control into ruby::Audio via
setDynamic(bool) for now. It's very demanding, as you would expect. When
it's not in use, I realized the OSS driver's performance was pretty bad
due to calling write() for every sample for every channel. I implemented
a tiny 256-sample buffer and bsnes went from 290fps to 330fps on my
FreeBSD desktop. It may be possible to do the same buffering with DRC,
but for now, I'm not doing so, and adjusting the audio input frequency
on every sample.

I also added ruby::Video::setFlush(bool), which is available only in the
OpenGL drivers, and this causes glFinish() to be called after swapping
display buffers. I really couldn't think of a good name for this, "hard
GPU sync" sounds kind of silly. In my view, flush is what commits queued
events. Eg fflush(). OpenGL of course treats glFlush differently (I
really don't even know what the point of it is even after reading the
manual ...), and then has glFinish ... meh, whatever. It's
setFlush(bool) until I come up with something better. Also as expected,
this one's a big hit to performance.

To implement the DRC, I started putting helper functions into the ruby
video/audio/input core classes. And then the XVideo driver started
crashing. It took hours and hours and hours to track down the problem:
you have to clear XSetWindowAttributes to zero before calling
XCreateWindow. No amount of `--sync`, `gdb break gdk_x_error`, `-Og`,
etc will make Xlib be even remotely helpful in debugging errors like
this.

The GLX, GLX2, and XVideo drivers basically worked by chance before. If
the stack frame had the right memory cleared, it worked. Otherwise it'd
crash with BadValue, and my changing things broke that condition on the
XVideo driver. So this has been fixed in all three now.

Once XVideo was running again, I realized that non-power of two video
sizes were completely broken for the YUV formats. It took a while, but I
managed to fix all of that as well.

At this point, most of ruby is going to be broken outside of FreeBSD, as
I still need to finish updating all the drivers.
2018-07-28 21:25:42 +10:00
Tim Allen 876b4be1d2 Update to 20180726 release.
byuu says:

Once again, I wasn't able to complete a full WIP revision.

This WIP-WIP adds very sophisticated emulation of the Sega Genesis
Lock-On and Game Genie cartridges ... essentially, through recursion and
a linked list, higan supports an infinite nesting of cartridges.

Of course, on real hardware, after you stack more than three or four
cartridges, the power draw gets too high and things start glitching out
more and more as you keep stacking. I've heard that someone chained up
to ten Sonic & Knuckles cartridges before it finally became completely
unplayable.

And so of course, higan emulates this limitation as well ^-^. On the
fourth cartridge and beyond, it will become more and more likely that
address and/or data lines "glitch" out randomly, causing various
glitches. It's a completely silly easter egg that requires no speed
impact whatsoever beyond the impact of the new linked list cartridge
system.

I also designed the successor to Emulator::Interface::cap,get,set. Those
were holdovers from the older, since-removed ruby-style accessors.

In its place is the new Emulator::Interface::configuration,configure
API. There's the usual per-property access, and there's also access to
read and write all configurable options at once. In essence, this
enables introspection into core-specific features.

So far, you can control processor version#s, PPU VRAM size, video
settings, and hacks. As such, the .sys/manifest.bml files are no longer
necessary. Instead, it all goes into .sys/configuration.bml, which is
generated by the emulator if it's missing.

higan is going to take this even further and allow each option under
"Systems" to have its own editable configuration file. So if you wanted,
you could have a 1/1/1 SNES menu option, and a 2/1/3 SNES menu option.
Or a Model 1 Genesis option, and a Model 2 Genesis option. Or the
various Game Boy model revisions. Or an "SNES-Fast" and "SNES-Accurate"
option.

I've not fully settled on the syntax of the new configuration API. I
feel it might be useful to provide type information, but I really quite
passionately hate any<T> container objects. For now it's all
string-based, because strings can hold anything in nall.

I might also change the access rules. Right now it's like:
emulator→configure("video/blurEmulation", true); but it might be nicer
as "Video::Blur Emulation", or "Video.BlurEmulation", or something like
that.
2018-07-26 20:36:43 +10:00