All formatting are individual per registers and they all have one option to go back to their original hexadecimal form.
- GPR: signed integer, unsigned integer, float
- FPR: double
Also happened to come accross an issue where editing the PFR would ignore the higher 32 bits of the new value, this had to be fixed for the format to work.
This removes a Dolphin-specific patch to the wxWidgets3 code
for the following reasons:
* Calling wxWindowGTK::DoSetSize on a top-level window can end up
calling wxTopLevelWindowGTK::DoMoveWindow, which triggers an assert
because it is not supposed to be called for a top-level wxWindow.
* We should not be patching the wxWidgets code because that means the
toolbars will still be broken if someone builds without using the
WX that is in our Externals.
Instead, we now use a derived class for wxAuiToolBar and override
DoSetSize() to remove the problematic behaviour to get the same effect
(fixing toolbars) but without changing Externals code and without
causing asserts and other issues.
For step over, it was updating twice which actually made the red display on the register view (when a register changes since) malfunction. Since it doesn't seem to be usefull to update before AND after the run, the one before the run was removed.
For step out, well, because there was no chances given for the thread to run as it is single stepping all the time, I only added a call to update after it was done.
Dolphin no longer lowers itself below the top window when opening.
Dolphin no longer draws garbage lines all over the game list.
Use the correct platform macros so Dolphin can actually find the
translation catalogs on Unix.
Both those in the code window and the ones that appears when the user select edit perpective. The one that isn't fixed by this is in edit perspective mode, when the user drags a panel out and it becomes a floating window.
The 'revert' functionality is some very old left-over and isn't even working properly (read: could break Wiimote mapping). As no dialog features any cancel and revert functionality it is removed.
The original code assumed that we would always find a button in
control_buttons. However, this is incorrect, since the iterator can and
will be control_buttons.end() if the button that triggered the iterate
code is not in control_buttons, which happens when it's in an
exclude list.
When 5.0-211 updated wxWidgets to 3.1.0, some entries in the
wxLanguage enum were moved and added, changing the wxLanguage
values. Because we save Dolphin's interface language to disk
as a wxLanguage, the language you have set will mean something
different depending on whether you have the updated wx version
or not. For instance, setting the language to English with the
updated version and then using an older version will make
Dolphin use Dutch. Because we can't rely on the enum anymore,
I'm replacing the "Language" setting with a "LanguageCode"
setting that uses standard ISO 639 codes.
Add the CCodeWindow to the constructor of the memoryWindow so it can call the notify update of the breakpoint list.
Add the case of breakpoint update when receiving an event (the update command was issued, but wasn't managed before).
Run clang format and renamed the code window names.
Let's stop pretending that we support Triforce emulation.
Keeping this code around just in case someone will make
major improvements in the future isn't really worth it.
I'm keeping the Triforce game INIs so users will know that
the compatibility rating for Triforce games is 1 star (broken).
OSD messages other than these one and a half aren't translated,
and OSD only supports ASCII. (Also, that "Wiimote %i %s" uses %s
like it does is bad for translation, but that's easy to fix.)
The default size might be too big for some screens. This allows
the user to modify the window as they see fit and has Dolphin
remember those settings. People who are happy with the default
size and position will not be affected
There is no reason to prevent the user from closing the config dialog
if the device is not found. It's not very good UX…
Also fixes ExpressionParser to return NO_DEVICE if the device doesn't
exist instead of SUCCESS.
This adds RemoveDevice() to ControllerInterface, fixes ExpressionParser
and some other code to support device removals without crashing,
and adds an IsValid() method to Device, to prepare for hotplugging.
Pausing emulation requires to access the CPU thread, which might be blocked
waiting for inputs by netplay. Accessing it in this state would cause the
whole GUI to hang for set timeout (10s).
Once a tab is selected the focus can be set directly from the page
changed event. However once the tab was shown, the first tab order
control element was given the focus by default. This was fixed by
delaying the action and setting the focus after the default focus
had been assigned.
* Focus "Hash Code" / "IP address" text box by default in "Connect"
* Focus game list in "Host" tab
* RETURN keypress now host/join depending on selected tab
* Remember last hosted game
* Remove PanicAlertT:
* Simply log message to netplay window
* Remove them when they are useless
* Show some netplay message in OSD
* Chat messages
* Pad buffer changes
* Desync alerts
* Stop the game consistently when another player disconnects / crashes
* Prettify chat textbox
* Log netplay ping to OSD
Join scenario:
* Copy netplay code
* Open netplay
* Paste code
* Press enter
Host scenario:
* Open netplay
* Go to host tab
* Press enter
This is something that was quite confusing for me while trying to get
netplay to work for me; once the Connect/Host buttons were pressed,
the UI would hang, only to work again a few seconds later, but with
no error message or explanation *at all*.
Turns out this is because panic alerts are shown in the netplay window
instead during netplay, even before it is even shown.
This fixes it by "piping" the alerts to the netplay chat only if the
netplay window is visible.
(regression introduced in #3823)
This makes the links explicitly vertically centered in the DolphinWX
About dialog. It is not needed on Windows, because the links have the
same height as text (and look just like text links). However, this is
required on other platforms or the links would look misaligned.
At first there weren't many enums in Volume.h, but the number has been
growing, and I'm planning to add one more for regions. To not make
Volume.h too large, and to avoid needing to include Volume.h in code
that doesn't use volume objects, I'm moving the enums to a new file.
I'm also turning them into enum classes while I'm at it.
The Setting class was used for both numeric values and booleans, and
other parts of the code had hacks to make it work with booleans.
By splitting Setting into NumericSetting and BooleanSetting, it is
clear which settings are numeric, and which are boolean, so there is
no need to guess by checking the default values or anything like that.
Also, booleans are stored as booleans in config files, instead of 1.0.
This changes Refresh() to use the existing scanning thread to scan for
devices, instead of running the scan on the UI thread and blocking it.
Also makes the UI thread not block when Continuous Scanning is disabled
and removes duplicated code.
Should fix issue 8992.
Under the hood:
* The scanning thread is now always active, even when continuous
scanning is disabled.
* The initialize code which waits for Wiimotes to be connected also
uses the scanning thread instead of scanning on yet another thread.
* The scanning thread now always checks for disconnected devices, to
avoid Dolphin thinking a Wiimote is still connected when it isn't. So
we now check if we need new Wiimotes or a Balance Board at scan time.
This makes it clear that sending a signal a second time will force stop
Dolphin (which is useful in case the GUI is deadlocked or otherwise
unable to react to the signal).
This makes DolphinWX shut down cleanly, just like it would with
File->Exit when it receives a SIGINT, SIGTERM (Unix) or some signals
on Windows.
The default signal handler will be restored after a first shutdown
signal so a second signal will exit Dolphin forcefully.
When Movie was calling ChangeDisc, it was moving execution to
the host thread just to then make the host thread the CPU thread.
We can simply run the code directly on the CPU thread instead.
From wxWidgets master 81570ae070b35c9d52de47b1f14897f3ff1a66c7.
include/wx/defs.h -- __w64 warning disable patch by comex brought forward.
include/wx/msw/window.h -- added GetContentScaleFactor() which was not implemented on Windows but is necessary for wxBitmap scaling on Mac OS X so it needs to work to avoid #ifdef-ing the code.
src/gtk/window.cpp -- Modified DoSetClientSize() to direct call wxWindowGTK::DoSetSize() instead of using public wxWindowBase::SetSize() which now prevents derived classes (like wxAuiToolbar) intercepting the call and breaking it. This matches Windows which does NOT need to call DoSetSize internally. End result is this fixes Dolphin's debug tools toolbars on Linux.
src/osx/window_osx.cpp -- Same fix as for GTK since it has the same issue.
src/msw/radiobox.cpp -- Hacked to fix display in HiDPI (was clipping off end of text).
Updated CMakeLists for Linux and Mac OS X. Small code changes to Dolphin to fix debug error boxes, deprecation warnings, and retain previous UI behavior on Windows.
Small cleanup by using std::shared_ptr and getting rid of
ciface.Devices() which just returned the m_devices (which defeats the
point of making m_devices protected).
Incidentally, this should make the code safer when we have
different threads accessing devices in the future (for hotplug?).
A lot of code use Device references directly so there is
no easy way to remove FindDevice() and make those unique_ptrs.
Fully opt-in, reports to analytics.dolphin-emu.org over SSL. Collects system
information and settings at Dolphin start time and game start time.
UI not implemented yet, so users are required to opt in through config editing.
Cleanup code style.
Move ActionReplay code->INI saving into ActionReplay namespace.
Threadsafety Cleanup: ActionReplay is accessed from the Host, Emu
and CPU Threads so the internal storage needs to be protected by a
lock to prevent vectors/strings being deleted/moved while in use by
the CPU Thread.
UI Consistency: Make ARCodes behave like Gecko Codes - only apply
changes when Apply is pressed. Save changes to INI from CheatsWindow.
ISOProperties/CheatsWindow now synchronize with each other.
ISOProperties loads codes using ActionReplay::LoadCodes which actually applies
the codes to the global state. If a game is running then that games receives
all the codes (and ACTIVE status) from the second game being shown in
ISOProperties which is not desirable.
EndPlayInput runs on the CPU thread so it can't directly call
UpdateWantDeterminism. PlayController also tries to ChangeDisc
from the CPU Thread which is also invalid. It now just pauses
execution and posts a request to the Host to fix it instead.
The Core itself also did dodgy things like PauseAndLock-ing
from the CPU Thread and SetState from EmuThread which have been
removed.
Fix Frame Advance and FifoPlayer pause/unpause/stop.
CPU::EnableStepping is not atomic but is called from multiple threads
which races and leaves the system in a random state; also instruction
stepping was unstable, m_StepEvent had an almost random value because
of the dual purpose it served which could cause races where CPU::Run
would SingleStep when it was supposed to be sleeping.
FifoPlayer never FinishStateMove()d which was causing it to deadlock.
Rather than partially reimplementing CPU::Run, just use CPUCoreBase
and then call CPU::Run(). More DRY and less likely to have weird bugs
specific to the player (i.e the previous freezing on pause/stop).
Refactor PowerPC::state into CPU since it manages the state of the
CPU Thread which is controlled by CPU, not PowerPC. This simplifies
the architecture somewhat and eliminates races that can be caused by
calling PowerPC state functions directly instead of using CPU's
(because they bypassed the EnableStepping lock).
This commit does 4 things:
* It increases the default small size of the NetPlay window to a larger
and more appealing size.
* It cleans up and reorganizes a bit of the NetPlay Setup UI code.
* It moves the Direct or Transversal Selector to be more appealing and
nice looking.
* The Direct or Transversal also gets a label and nicer text, and a
spacer.
DriveReader::m_size was never initialized which was indirectly
causing CGameListCtrl to crash Dolphin when it tried to insert a
character at a negative index in a string.
Reading one sector at a time is very inefficient and appears to
be causing timing issues during boot so SectorReader has been
enhanced to support batching.
SectorReader has been given a working cache system.
Closing Dolphin's main frame and clicking "no" does not clear
m_bClosing which means that pressing the "stop" button triggers
OnClosed which suddenly and unexpectedly closes the main frame.
This was done because showing a column was broken:
Showing a column repopulates the column with no regard for the sorted
order. This results in a seemingly random order.
(actually the order of m_ISO_FILES)
The D3D backend was always forcing Anisotropic filtering when that is enabled regardless of how the game chose to configure the texture filtering registers; this causes the same issues as "Force Filtering" without Anisotropy, such as causing game UI elements to no longer line up adjacent correctly. Historically, OpenGL's Anisotropy support has always worked "better" than D3D's due to seeming to not have this problem; unfortunately, OpenGL's Anisotropy specification only gives GL_LINEAR based filtering modes defined behavior, with only the mipmap setting being required to be considered. Some OpenGL implementations were implicitly disabling Anisotropy when the min/mag filters were set to GL_NEAREST, but this behavior is not required by the spec so cannot be relied on.
Fast depth is now more accurate than slow depth and should always be used.
The option will be kept in a different form as it is still used as a hack to fix some games.
Also, the slow depth code path will still be relied upon by cards that don't support GL_ARB_clip_control.
This is only queried, there's no need to expose it for writing.
Even if it was written to, a data member shouldn't be part of
your public API unless its part of a dumb object or trivial struct.
The dumb wxAUI stuff isn't fully implemented for GTK. So the wxAuiToolBar doesn't properly deduce the size it needs to be when it contains a
wxSearchCtrl object.
Force the manager to set its minimum size to something reasonable.
When there are no games to display in the game list, DolphinWX shows a
message instead. Clicking the message will perform an action. If the game
list truly is empty, the message and action are for opening a browse
dialog, but if the user has hidden some games, they are instead for
unhiding all games. However, the condition for checking which message to
display lacked some parts that are in the condition for checking which
action to use, so the two could be different in rare cases. This PR fixes
that by breaking out the two conditions to a new unified function.
Dolphin has supported the recalibration shortcut (X+Y+Start) for quite a long while. So if someont's axises are terrible, you could easily
recalibrate.
Games even get the initial calibration upon boot(Most of the time).
While changing over the GCAdapter code, I was testing to make sure the reset and calibration shortcuts still worked, turns out they didn't work at
all.
Looking in to the problem, we capture the combination properly, and we wait three seconds until we actually fire that off recalibration.
The problem is for Nintendo's SDK to properly handle recalibrating, we need to send back data saying that it needs to recalibrate.
On hardware this is done as part of the 64bits of data the controller sends back to us.
On holding of the controller, bit 61 of the return value is set, which the Nintendo SDK catches, and then signals immediately afterwards a CMD_ORIGIN
command in order to recalibrate the controller.
We were outright ignoring this bit, so the library wasn't ever recalibrating. I suspect in the past the class itself used to use the calibration data
to to offset the data, but somewhere along the lines it got munged out of existence.
The Gamecube adapter does this shortcut in a bit of a unique way, instead of sending the command and having the library support it and what have you.
Once holding the shortcut for the amount of time, the adapter reports back that the controller has actually been disconnected. Then when you let go of
the combination, the adapter states that a new device has been connected to that port, and the recalibration happens because a new device is
"connected."
This fixes controller calibration for both emulated GC controllers and also the Wii Gamecube Adapter.
We don't throttle by frames, we throttle by coretiming speed.
So looking up VI for calculating the speed was just very wrong.
The new ini option is a float, 1.0f for fullspeed.
In the GUI, percentual values are used.
The Wii U Gamecube controller adapter setup has always been a bit weird. It tries to be as automatic as possible to make the user experience as easy
as possible.
The problem with this approach is that it brings a large disconnect in the user experience because you have the Gamecube controller setup with regular
gamepads and then for some reason below that you have a "direct connect" option which will cause the Gamecube Adapter to overwrite the regular inputs
if something was connected.
While this works and allows the user to only click one checkbox to get the device working, it breaks the user's experience because they don't really
know what "direct connect" means and won't look it up to figure out what it is. Just expecting the device to work (At least one occurence of this in
the IRC channel in the last week).
This way around also had the terrible nature of making the code more filthy than it needed to be. The GCAdapter namespace was parasitic and hooked in
to the regular GC Controller SI class to overwrite the data that it was getting from the default configuration.
Now instead we have a specific SIDevice class for the Wii U Gamecube adapter. This class is fairly simple and is a child of the regular SI Gamecube
Pad device and only reimplements what it needs to.
This also gives the ability to configure controllers individually, which allows the user to configure rumble individually per pad input.
Overall the code is cleaner, and it fits more in line with how the rest of Dolphin works.
Using the XPM format for images has become a maintenance problem because
people don't know how to create them. This commit removes all XPM images
and all C files that contain PNG images. DolphinWX now uses the PNGs
in the Resources folder instead, just like DolphinQt and DolphinQt2 do.
Lets the user set the following in intervals of 10 between 10 and 100;
- Stick/Radius (default 100,000000)
- Triggers/Threshold (default 90,000000)
- Tilt/Modifier/Range (default 50,000000) + mapped Tilt/Modifier button
to the configurations for wiimotes & nunchuks
This reverts commit 81414b4fa2, reversing
changes made to b926061f64.
Conflicts:
Source/Core/DolphinWX/Frame.cpp
Source/Core/VideoCommon/VideoConfig.cpp
Source/Core/VideoCommon/VideoConfig.h
It's so that the string in ControllerConfigDiag will match the string
in GameCubeConfigPane. Right now, it unnecessarily appears twice in
the list of strings to translate.
Commit 33487ab5f2 introduced a regression
where items would vanish from the toolbar. This adds a call to Realize()
after the reinsertions of the play/pause button as required per
documentation.
Thanks to Simonwayneee for noticing this!
This fixes changing the play/pause button's label depending on the
emulation state. Before, wxToolBarToolBase's SetLabel() function was
used. This function, however, is not implemented in wxGTK which leads to
the label not changing on linux when the button is clicked. Although the preferred
method (according to the wxWidgets documentation) to change the properties
of a tool is to use the toolbar's setters, there is no such setter for
the label. Therefore, this implements a workaround where the
button is deleted and readded afterwards with the updated properties.
Thanks to linkmauve for noticing this!
Rather than rely on the developer to do the right thing,
just make the default behavior safely deallocate resources.
If shared semantics are ever needed in the future, the
constructor that takes a unique_ptr for shared_ptr can
be used.
fileplatform is moved so it's in the same place as the other platform
icons, and nobanner is moved just because it fits better in Resources.
Both of them were identical in all of Dolphin's themes.