This is one of the conditions for an alignment exception documented in
the 750CL architecture reference manual in section 4.5.6, which also
applies to the Gekko microprocessor.
This is an exception condition documented within section 4.5.6 in the
architecture reference manual for the PPC 750CL, which also applies to
the Gekko microprocessor.
Also moves dcbz_l's implementation out of Interpreter_Paired and beside
dcbz where it belongs.
The effective address given to these instructions must be word (4 byte) aligned,
and if the address is not aligned like that, then an alignment exception
gets triggered.
We currently don't update the DSISR in this case properly, since we
didn't really handle alignment exceptions outside of ecowx and eciwx,
and even then the handling of it isn't really that great, considering
the DAR isn't updated with the address that caused the exception to
occur.
The DSISR will eventually be amended to be properly updated.
Prior to this change, it's possible for m_wake_me_up_again to be used
while it's in an uninitialized state from the exposed API.
e.g.
- Using SetEnable after construction would perform an uninitialized read.
- Using PushEvent would perform an uninitialized read by way of operator |=.
internally, an uninitialized read can happen if PullEventsInternal() is
executed before other functions.
Just to avoid the whole possibility of performing uninitialized reads,
we just give the class member a default value of false.
If the copy assignment operator is deleted, then the copy constructor
should be deleted as well, otherwise it's a hole in the API where copies
can be made (and if this were an intended case, it should be
documented).
So we delete the copy constructor and explicitly default the move
assignment and move constructor to signify this is intended to be a
move-only type.
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
This way, if we load a UID cache where the data was incomplete (e.g.
Dolphin crashed), we don't lose the existing UIDs which were previously
at the beginning.
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.
The only place this library is needed (core) is already linked in the core target.
Also make the linkage private to create linkage failures if the dependency isn't
explicitly linked in elsewhere where it should be.
Reduces the dependency on the LIBS variable.
Return a FileHandle which will automatically close the FD when
the handle goes out of scope. For the rare cases where this behaviour
is undesirable, the FD can be released from the handle.
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.
Now that we have a proper filesystem interface, it makes more sense
to return it instead of the emulated IOS device (which isn't
really usable for any purpose other than emulated IPC).
Extract the existing FS code into a HostBackend implementing
the filesystem interface.
Compared to the original code, this uses less static state.
The open host files map is now a member variable
as it should have been. Filesystem handles are now also easier
to savestate. Some variable names and log messages were cleaned up.
Nothing else has been changed.
Add a new FileSystem class that can be used to perform operations
on the emulated Wii filesystem.
This will allow separating the IPC code (reading from and writing to
memory to handle IOS FS commands) and the actual filesystem code
in a much better way.
This also paves the way for implementing another filesystem backend
in the future -- NAND images for more complete emulation, including
filesystem metadata like permissions or file orders, which some games
and homebrew actually care about -- without needing to make any more
changes to the other parts of the codebase, in addition to making
filesystem behaviour tests easier to write.
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.
This will create a merge conflict if two PRs try to increment the
cache version at the same time, which makes it noticeable that the
PR that gets merged last needs to increment the cache version again.
We already use this for savestates and the game list cache.
Regression from 1f1dae3.
This problem doesn't happen in DolphinWX as far as I know, but if
you've ran into the problem in DolphinQt2, it will carry over to
DolphinWX because of the shared game list cache.