This header doesn't actually make use of MathUtil.h within itself, so
this can be removed. Many other source files used VideoCommon.h as an
indirect include to include MathUtil.h, so these includes can also be
adjusted.
While we're at it, we can also migrate valid inclusions of VideoCommon.h
into cpp files where it can feasibly be done to minimize propagating it
via other headers.
This isn't used anywhere, so it can be removed. This also potentially
fixes an underlying compilation error waiting to happen, given DECSTAT
could have potentially been used, someone disables statistics (for
whatever reason), then gets a compilation error due to the #else case
not containing an empty definition of DECSTAT.
Makes the global variable follow our convention of prefixing g_ on
global variables to make it obvious in surrounding code that it's not a
local variable.
Rather than making Statistics' member functions operate on the global
variable instance of itself, we can make these functions member
functions and operate on a by-instance state, removing the direct
dependency on the global variable itself.
This also makes for less reading, as there's no need to repeat "stats."
for all variable accesses.
Normalizes all variables related to statistics so that they follow our
coding style.
These are relatively low traffic areas, so this modification isn't too
noisy.
Now that the floating point members are assigned in bulk, we can remove
their setter macro. While we're at it, we can also remove the setter for
unsigned int, given it's not used.
ImGui::Text() assumes that the incoming text is intended to be
formatted, but we don't actually use it to format anything. We can be
explicit by using the relevant function.
This also has a plus of not needing to go through the formatter itself,
but the gains from that are probably minimal.
This fixes the problem where OBS game capture only grabs the region
inside an ImGui window whenever one is open, when using the OpenGL
backend. Shouldn't have any negative effects, as the scissor would've
been something completely arbitrary anyways.
This may affect other capture software that uses the same hooking
method, but I've only tested OBS.
Previously, this array potentially wouldn't be placed within the
read-only segment, since it wasn't marked const. We can make the lookup
table const, along with any other nearby variables.
Avoids dragging in IniFile, EXI device and SI device headers in this header which is
quite widely used throughout the codebase.
This also uncovered a few cases where indirect inclusions were being
relied upon, which this also fixes.
Since C++17, non-member std::size() is present in the standard library
which also operates on regular C arrays. Given that, we can just replace
usages of ArraySize with that where applicable.
In many cases, we can just change the actual C array ArraySize() was
called on into a std::array and just use its .size() member function
instead.
In some other cases, we can collapse the loops they were used in, into a
ranged-for loop, eliminating the need for en explicit bounds query.
We can use u32 instead of unsigned int to shorten up these definitions
and make them much nicer to read.
While we're at it, change the size array to house u32 elements
to match the return value of the function.
We can use u32 instead of unsigned int to shorten up these definitions
and make them much nicer to read.
While we're at it, change the size array to house u32 elements to match
the return value of the function.
This is only ever used to retrieve a raw view of the given UID data
structure, however it's already valid C++ to retrieve a char/unsigned
char view of an object for bytewise inspection.
u8 maps to unsigned char on all platforms we support, so we can just do
this directly with a reinterpret cast, simplifying the overall
interface.
Zero-initialization zeroes out all members and padding bits, so this is
safe to do. While we're at it, also add static assertions that enforce
the necessary requirements of a UID type explicitly within the ShaderUid
class.
This way, we can remove several memset calls around the shader
generation code that makes sure the underlying UID data is zeroed out.
Now our ShaderUid class enforces this for us, so we don't need to care about
it at the usage sites.
Greatly simplifies the overall interface when it comes to compiling
shaders. Also allows getting rid of a std::string overload of the same
name. Now std::string and const char* both go through the same function.
Makes VertexLoader_Normal completely stateless, eliminating the need for
an Init() function, and by extension, also gets rid of the need for the
FifoAnalyzer to have an Init() function.
Many of the arrays defined within this file weren't declared as
immutable, which can inhibit the strings being put into the read-only
segment. We can declare them constexpr to make them immutable.
While we're at it, we can use std::array, to allow bounds conditional
bounds checking with standard libraries. The declarations can also be
shortened in the future when all platform toolchain versions we use
support std::array deduction guides. Currently macOS and FreeBSD
builders fail on them.
Ensures that the destruction logic is kept local to the translation unit
(making it nicer when it comes to forward declaring non-trivial types).
It also doesn't really do much to define it in the header.
Given we're simply storing the std::string into a deque. We can emplace
it and move it. Completely avoiding copies with the current usage of the
function.
If bounding box is enabled when a UID cache is created, then later disabled,
we shouldn't emit the bounding box portion of the shader.
Fixes pipeline creation errors on D3D12 backend for this case.
Since the copy X and Y coordinates/sizes are 10-bit, the game can configure a
copy region up to 1024x1024. Hardware tests have found that the number of bytes
written does not depend on the configured stride, instead it is based on the
size registers, writing beyond the length of a single row. The data written
for the pixels which lie outside the EFB bounds does not wrap around instead
returning different colors based on the pixel format of the EFB.
This suggests it's not based on coordinates, but instead on memory addresses.
The effect of a within-bounds size but out-of-bounds offset
(e.g. offset 320,0, size 640,480) are the same.
As it would be difficult to emulate the exact behavior of out-of-bounds reads,
instead of writing the junk data, we don't write anything to RAM at all for
over-sized copies, and clamp to the EFB borders for over-offset copies.
When looking into the Faron Woods fifolog, I noticed this code was quite
high in the profile (~10%). Clearing 4096 entries from the vector isn't
needed every draw, we only need to do this when the cache was actually
valid in the first place.
Should provide a slight general performance boost.
This was causing the depth buffer to be discarded as well, which
has an effect on mobiles (doesn't get loaded into tile memory).
If we find this is hindering performance (remember, the EFB is
only a 640x528 texture), it may be worth changing the interface to
support discarding only the colour buffer.
for this kind of footage carrying alpha information makes no sense, and it additionally complicates things by hugely damaging compatibility of the resulting video. after this change alone the video becomes compatible with VfW/WinAPI and tools that rely on it (avisynth, virtualdub).
fixes https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11141 and https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/10193
Unnecessary since b93b7ec. It was needed before that commit becase
RenderBase.cpp only was checking the value of aspect_mode, not
suggested_aspect_mode.
This way we don't end up with artifacts of the EFB's alpha values in
frame dumps. XFB copies loaded from RAM also set the alpha to 1, so this
will match.
Due to the current design, any of the GL state can be mutated after
calling this function, so we can't assume that the tracked state will
match if we call SetPipeline() after ResetAPIState().
Since we use the common pipelines here and draw vertices if a batch is
currently being built by the vertex loader, we end up trampling over its
pointer, as we share the buffer with the loader, and it has not been
unmapped yet. Force a pipeline flush to avoid this.
It doesn't feel great to let the value from a previous emulation session
linger around considering that the GC aspect ratio heuristic can use
the previous value of m_aspect_wide when calculating m_aspect_wide.
The Metal shader compiler fails to compile the atomic instructions
when operating on individual components of a vector. Spltting it
into four variables shouldn't make any difference for other
platforms, as they are accessed independently.
The path to the MoltenVK library can be specified by the
LIBMOLTENVK_PATH environment variable, otherwise it assumes it is
located in the application bundle's Contents/MacOS directory.
floatindex is clamped to the range [0, 9]. For non-negative numbers
floor() is equivalent to trunc(). Truncation happens implicitly when
converting to uint, so the floor() is unnecessary.
This avoids out-of-bounds warnings when replaying FIFO captures.
The value of XF_REGS_SIZE is written into the DFF header and we only
read the min of XF_REGS_SIZE and the header value, so this change is
backward compatible and doesn't break forward compatibility for old
Dolphin versions either.
The current approach results in the UI thread creating a graphics device
whilst the core is running, leading to races on function pointers, and
potentially crashing.
This fixes severe image flickering in some cutscenes of Twin Snakes. The game appears to sometimes load a previously made XFB copy as a texture before it is actually rendered to the screen, which we took as an invitation to invalidate the XFB copy.
If, for whatever reason, the XFB has to be loaded from console memory, it's possible that the texture is returned at native resolution instead of EFB-scaled resolution. In this case, our xfb_rect.right adjustment must also happen at native resolution instead of scaled resolution.
This was causing a warning in the shader compiler, as the rgb components
were not initialized. Which shouldn't be an issue, as the rgb is not
used in the blend equation, only the alpha. However, the lack of
initialization causes crashes in Intel's D3D shader compiler, so we'll
play nice and initialize all the channels.
Our usage of glFinish() can cause driver crashes and/or lockups.
Please note that this disables the background shader compilation (i.e.
all shaders will be compiled on boot). There is no way around this.
AVFormatContext::filename was deprecated in lavf 58.7.100 in favor
of AVFormatContext::url. Instead of adding version-checking logic,
just use the passed-in dump path instead.
We want this setting to invalidate the cache because it may affect the appearance of textures in the rendered scene, therefore one would expect changing it while the game is running to have the expected effect immediately.
This no longer converts from sRGB to linear for the reference mip
downsample - even if the original mipmap creation tool used an sRGB
colorspace (which isn't really guaranteed, and may even change per
game), this is a "fast" heuristic that's only an estimate anyway.
The average diff is also now stored in a u64, avoiding floating point
calculations in the per-pixel hot loop.
This should speed up the detection significantly, hopefully fixing
jank when loading in new textures.
Makes the values strongly-typed and gets more identifiers out of the
global namespace.
We are forced to use anything that is not "None" to mean none, because
X11 is garbage in that it has:
\#define None 0L
Because clearly no one else will ever want to use that identifier for
anything in their own code (and is why you should prefix literally
any and all preprocessor macros you expose to library users in public
headers).
This is much better as prefixed double underscores are reserved for the
implementation when it comes to identifiers. Another reason its better,
is that, on Windows, where __forceinline is a compiler built-in, with
the previous define, header inclusion software that detects unnecessary
includes will erroneously flag usages of Compiler.h as unnecessary
(despite being necessary on other platforms). So we define a macro
that's used by Windows and other platforms to ensure this doesn't
happen.
Instead of globbing things under an ambiguous Common.h header, move
compiler-specifics over to Compiler.h. This gives us a dedicated home
for anything related to compilers that we want to make functional across
all compilers that we support.
This moves us a little closer to eliminating Common.h entirely.
Fairly trivial to resolve, we just initialize the std::array with two
sets of braces (one set to create the array, the other to start and end the
aggregate data that we'll end up returning)
Coherent mappings have a lower overhead and less GL codes.
So enables coherent mapping by default for all drivers.
Both Qualcomm and ARM performs very bad with explicit flushing, so this change helps them as well.
AFAIK there was one GPU generation which was slower on coherent mapping: nvidia tesla
So Geforce 200 and 300 series should be tested with this PR before merging.
As this was last tested many years ago, this issue might have been fixed as well.
Those GPUs are close to 10 years old and not supported any more by nvidia.
D3D11 cannot handle block compressed textures where the first mip level
is not a multiple of the block size. The simple fix for texture pack
authors: leave these textures uncompressed. You can still use a .dds
container.
Using 8-bit integer math here lead to precision loss for depth copies,
which broke various effects in games, e.g. lens flare in MK:DD.
It's unlikely the console implements this as a floating-point multiply
(fixed-point perhaps), but since we have the float round trip in our
EFB2RAM shaders anyway, it's not going to make things any worse. If we
do rewrite our shaders to use integer math completely, then it might be
worth switching this conversion back to integers.
However, the range of the values (format) should be known, or we should
expand all values out to 24-bits first.
Also ensure that all members of the class are initialized on
construction as well. Previously the bool indicating if options are
dirty wouldn't be initialized, which could be read uninitialized if an
instance was constructed and then IsDirty() is called.
Given this is a base class, we should clearly state what the parameters
to the functions in its exposed interface actually mean or represent.
This avoids needing to hunt for the definition of the functions in cpp
files.
While we're at it, normalize said parameter names so they follow our
naming guidelines.
Hopefully this better matches the user's view of a texture - as large changes in
colour should be weighted higher than lots of very small changes
Note: This likely invalidates the current heuristic threshold default
This makes it possible to use enums as the config type.
Default values are now clearer and there's no need for casts
when calling Config::Get/Set anymore.
In order to add support for enums, the common code was updated to
handle enums by using the underlying type when loading/saving settings.
A copy constructor is also provided for conversions from
`ConfigInfo<Enum>` to `ConfigInfo<underlying_type<Enum>>`
so that enum settings can still easily work with code that doesn't care
about the actual enum values (like Graphics{Choice,Radio} in DolphinQt2
which only treat the setting as an integer).
Also move it to MathUtils where it belongs with the rest of the
power-of-two functions. This gets rid of pollution of the current scope
of any translation unit with b<value> macros that aren't intended to be
used directly.
Also makes y_scale a dynamic parameter for EFB copies, as it doesn't
make sense to keep it as part of the uid, otherwise we're generating
redundant shaders.
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.
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.
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.
Minimizes repetition.
std::minmax_element can be used for the 256 * 2 case, as it's only performing byte comparisons
and thus, there will always be an element smaller than 0xffff, so it doesn't need to be included
in the set of compared values.
Skip ubershader mode works the same as hybrid ubershaders in that the
shaders are compiled asynchronously. However, instead of using the
ubershader to draw the object, it skips it entirely until the
specialized shader is made available.
This mode will likely result in broken effects where a game creates an
EFB copy, and does not redraw it every frame. Therefore, it is not a
recommended option, however, it may result in better performance on
low-end systems.
This wouldn't be much of a data reader if it can't access the
read-only data pointer in read-only contexts. Especially if it
can get a writable equivalent in contexts that aren't read-only.
It's questionable to not return a reference to the instance being
assigned to. It's also quite misleading in terms of expected behavior
relative to everything else. This fixes it to make it consistent with
other classes.
Allows the default constructor to be defaulted and ensures the default
values are associated with the member variables directly.
Also corrects a prefixed underscore in the two parameter constructor.
Given that this only contains functions from the VideoBackendBase class,
it makes more sense to move these to the relevant cpp file to keep them
all together.
This is only ever memset to zero and never used again.
This also gets rid of an instance of undefined behavior considering the
draft standard for C++17 (N4659) states at [dcl.type.cv] paragraph 5:
"
The semantics of an access through a volatile glvalue are implementation-defined.
If an attempt is made to access an object defined with a volatile-qualified type
through the use of a non-volatile glvalue, the behavior is undefined.
"
Currently, when immediately compile shaders is not enabled, the
ubershaders will be placed before any specialized shaders in the compile
queue in hybrid ubershaders mode. This means that Dolphin could
potentially use the ubershaders for a longer time than it would have if
we blocked startup until all shaders were compiled, leading to a drop in
performance.
- In D3D, shaders could be compiled on the main thread, blocking
startup.
- Reduced the latency between a pipeline being requested and used in all
backends in hybrid ubershader mode, when no shader stages were present.
- Fixed a case where async compilation could cause the same UID to be
appended multiple times to the UID cache.
- Fix incorrect number of threads being used when immediately compile
shaders was enabled.
Lowest hanging fruit I could find with a profiler.
Not sure this stuff actually needs to be done, but assuming it is, why
not do it quickly? 10x faster, goes from 1% CPU to 0.09%.
This enables shaders to be compiled while the game is starting, instead
of blocking startup. If a shader is needed before it is compiled,
emulation will block.
As these are stored in a map, operator< will become a hot function when
doing lookups, which happen every frame. std::tie generated a rather
large function here with quite a few branches.
tl;dr: This PR speedups dolphin on mobiles with the Mali GPU and ES 3.2
drivers by a factor of 10 by using the method with the biggest overhead.
Please keep care not to buy this shit!
The ARM driver team seems to care very well about their customers. But
bad luck, users and open source developers are *not* their customers. So
even device-independent feature requests are just ignored for *years*:
https://community.arm.com/graphics/f/discussions/4645/gl_ext_buffer_storage-support
The bad point, they neither implement any of the other common ways to
stream dynamic content in unextented GL:
- They just ignore the GL_MAP_UNSYNCHRONIZED_BIT flag
- They don't support on-device buffer updates and just stall with
glBufferSubData
It seems like no benchmark is using any dynamic content - and like no
customer cares about anything but benchmarks, or users...
We have a flag to disable the glBufferSubData way, this PR adds the flag
to also disable the unsychronized mapping way. The second one is
available since their ES 3.2 update, but slow as hell.
So how to continue? The last remaining technical way to stream dynamic
content at all is to alloc a new buffer per draw call with glBufferData.
This is very gross, but still a factor 10 speedup compared to stalling
the GPU. Small tests shows that you can expect another 3-5 times speedup
with EXT_buffer_data, so Mali would be on pair with Adreno here. So if
you have bought such a device unfortunately, please try to make noise on
your vendor forums/support and ask for this extension. If you are going
to buy a new mobile, I'd recormend to avoid *any* mobile with a Mali GPU
in it.
We now differentiate between a resize event and surface change/destroyed
event, reducing the overhead for resizes in the Vulkan backend. It is
also now now safe to change the surface multiple times if the video thread
is lagging behind.
The option is named DisableCopyToVRAM under the Hacks section in
GFX.ini. It is intentionally not exposed to the GUI, as users should not
need to use it under normal circumstances. The main use is debugging
issues in the EFB-to-RAM shaders.
The console appears to behave against standard IEEE754 specification
here, in particular around how NaNs are handled. NaNs appear to have no
effect on the result, and are treated the same as positive or negative
infinity, based on the sign bit.
However, when the result would be NaN (inf - inf, or (-inf) - (-inf)),
this results in a completely fogged color, or unfogged color
respectively. We handle this by returning a constant zero for the A
varaible, and positive or negative infinity for C depending on the sign
bits of the A and C registers. This ensures that no NaN value is passed
to the GPU in the first place, and that the result of the fog
calculation cannot be NaN.