mirror of https://github.com/bsnes-emu/bsnes.git
0b4e7fb5a5
byuu says: Changelog: - tomoko: re-hid the video sync option¹ - tomoko: removed " Settings" duplication on all the individual settings tab options - ruby/audio/wasapi: finished port to new syntax; adapted to an event-driven model; support 32-bit integral audio² - ruby/video/sdl: ported to new syntax; disabled driver on FreeBSD³ ¹: still contemplating a synchronize submenu of {none, video, audio}, but ... the fact that video can't work on PAL, WonderSwan games is a real limitation for it ²: this driver actually received a ton of work. There's also a new ring-buffer queue, and I added special handling for when exclusive mode fails because the latency requested is lower than the hardware can support. It'll pick the closest latency to the minimum that is possible in this case. On my Audigy Rx, the results for non-exclusive mode are the same. For exclusive mode, the framerate drops from 60fps to ~50fps for smaller buffers, and ~55fps for larger buffers (no matter how big, it never hits 60fps.) This is a lot better than before where it was hitting ~15fps, but unfortunately it's the best I can do. The event system used by WASAPI is really stupid. It just uses SetEvent at some arbitrary time, and you have to query to see how many samples it's waiting on. This makes it unknowable how many samples we should buffer before calling `WaitForSingleObject(INFINITE)`, and it's also unclear how we should handle cases where there's more samples available than our queue has: either we can fill it with zeroes, or we can write less samples. The former should prevent audio looping effects when running too slowly, whereas the latter could potentially be too ambitious when the audio could've recovered from a minor stall. It's shocking to me how there's as many ways to send audio to a sound card as there are sound card APIs, when all that's needed is a simple double buffer and a callback event from another thread to do it right. It's also terrifying how unbelievably shitty nearly all sound card drivers apparently are. Also, I don't know if cards can output an actual 24-bit mode with three byte audio samples, or if they always just take 32-bit samples and ignore the lower 8-bits. Whatever, it's all nonsense for the final output to be >16-bits anyway (hi, `double[]` input from ruby.) ³: unfortunately, this driver always crashes on FreeBSD (even before the rewrite), so I'll need someone on Linux to test it and make sure it actually works. I'll also need testing for a lot of the other drivers as well, once they're ported over (I don't have X-video, PulseAudio, ALSA, or udev.) Note that I forgot to set `_ready=true` at the end of `initialize()`, and `_ready=false` in `terminate()`, but it shouldn't actually matter beyond showing you a false warning message on startup about it failing to initialize. |
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