The general convention is to return a reference to the object that was
acted on, otherwise you can get into situations with errors because the
type wasn't being propagated properly
Adjusts Common to use the ICONV_LIBRARIES variable directly and doesn't
append it to the LIBS variable.
After this, there's only one remaining usage where libraries are added
to the LIBS variable, after which it can be removed once the rest of
the targets are migrated off add_dolphin_library
These are bit manipulation functions, so they belong within BitUtils.
This also gets rid of duplicated code and avoids relying on compiler
reserved names existing or not existing to determine whether or not we
define a set of functions.
Optimizers are smart enough in GCC and clang to transform the code to a
ROR or ROL instruction in the respective functions.
This is the large change in the branch.
This lets us use either the host filesystem or (in the future) a NAND
image exactly the same way, and make sure the IPC emulation code
behaves identically. Less duplicated code.
Note that "FileIO" and "FS" were merged, because it actually doesn't
make a lot of sense to split them: IOS handles requests for both
/dev/fs and files in the same resource manager, and as it turns out,
/dev/fs commands can *also* be sent to non /dev/fs file descriptors!
If we kept /dev/fs and files split, there would be no way to
emulate that correctly. I'm not aware of anything that does that (yet?)
but I think it's important to be correct.
This adds a lightweight, easy to use std::variant wrapper intended to
be used as a return type for functions that can return either a result
or an error code.
Makes our libraries explicitly link in which libraries they need.
This makes our dependencies explicit and removes the reliance on the
LIBS variable to contain the libraries that they need.
The SGI extension does not define calling SwapInterval with a parameter
of zero as valid. It was just lucky that drivers interpreted this as
vsync off. The EXT_swap_control extension defines zero as a valid value.
Mesa does not appear to support the EXT variant, so we fall back to
MESA_swap_control here, which also supports zero.
This fix the awkwardness of having the symbols detection, parsing and loading related logs be in OS HLE while they don't have anything to do with that.
These are only used internally. This also allows us to eliminate some
symbols that get dumped into the exposed Gen namespace.
By extension this also hides the Write[X] functions from OpArg's public
interface. This is only used internally by XEmitter, so they shouldn't
be usable by anything else.
This replaces usages of the non-standard __FUNCTION__ macro with the standard
mandated __func__ identifier.
__FUNCTION__ is a preprocessor definition that is provided as an
extension by compilers. This was the only convenient option to rely on
pre-C++11. However, C++11 and greater mandate the predefined identifier
__func__, which lets us accomplish the same thing.
The difference between the two, however, is that __func__ isn't a
preprocessor macro, it's an actual identifier that exists at function
scope. The C++17 draft standard (N4659) at section [dcl.fct.def.general]
paragraph 8 states:
"
The function-local predefined variable __func__ is defined as if a
definition of the form
static const char __func__[] = "function-name ";
had been provided, where function-name is an implementation-defined
string. It is unspecified whether such
a variable has an address distinct from that of any other object in the
program.
"
Thankfully, we don't do any macro or string concatenation with __FUNCTION__
that can't be modified to use __func__.
Some locales use non-breaking spaces as separators, so getting the
encoding right is important. If DolphinWX gets a string that isn't
valid UTF-8, it flat out won't display the string.