* Add missing Language setting loading/saving. This was added after the
original OnionConfig PR, which is why support for it was missing.
* Change MovieConfigLoader to reuse ConfigInfos. Less duplication.
* Extract MovieConfigLoader::Save into SaveToDTM. The DTM should use
the current config and not just the movie layer. This makes more
sense than just saving the movie layer, which may not always exist,
and also fixes a crash that would happen when creating a new
recording because the movie layer wouldn't exist in that case.
(Plus, having to get the loader from the layer and call ChangeDTM
on it manually is not very pretty.)
Settings that come from the SYSCONF are now included in Dolphin's
config system as part of the base layer. They are handled in a
special way compared to other settings to make sure they are only
loaded from and saved to the SYSCONF (to avoid different, possibly
contradicting sources of truth).
Must be 9 characters at most; otherwise the serial number will be
rejected by SDK libraries, as there is a check to ensure the string
length is strictly lower than 10.
The Config::AddLoadLayer functions call Load on the layer
explicitly, but Load is already called in the constructor,
so they'd cause the loader's Load function to be called twice,
which is potentially expensive considering we have to read an INI
from the host filesystem.
This commit removes the Config::AddLoadLayer functions because
they don't appear to be necessary.
On Windows, File::GetTempFilenameForAtomicWrite returns a path
somewhere in C:\Users\XXX\AppData\Local\Temp\{UUID here}\
in which all writes just fail.
Just use the SYSCONF path + ".tmp" for the temporary file name.
This makes the EGL interface select OpenGL|ES contexts over "desktop"
OpenGL ones.
Possibly not useful for anyone outside my own debugging, but you never
know
The spec says it should have an EXT not OES suffix, as it's enabled as
an interaction with GL_EXT_multi_draw_arrays.
On some drivers GetProcAddress() returns NULL, which causes the
GLExtensions init to fail
This 'happened' to work if GetProcAddress() doesn't return NULL on missing
functions (as allowed in EGL) - as the function appears to never be called so
this would not have been noticed.
Mesa also (incorrectly?) exports the EXT version, so this would all
happen to work there, but appears to be contrary to the spec.
This invalid prefix even ended up in the upstream khronos registry, the
issue was reported here:
https://github.com/KhronosGroup/OpenGL-Registry/issues/81
It turns out that the last byte of array entries isn't unused (as we
thought); instead, it looks like it's actually part of the main data,
and the length stored next to the name is in fact the length minus one.
Getting it wrong and always storing a null byte in there won't affect
most entries (since the last byte is zeroed most of the time), except:
- IPL.NIK: the length is stored in the last byte, and it must be kept.
- BT.DINF: u8 unknown[0x45] should be another Bluetooth device entry.
- Possibly other unknown affected entries.
It's a bit confusing to get a yes/no dialogue box without any indication
of what yes or no will do in this situation, so add a short explanatory
sentence.
Some code was calling more than one of these functions in a row
(in particular, FileUtil.cpp itself did it a lot...), which is
a waste since it's possible to call stat a single time and then
read all three values from the stat struct. This commit adds a
File::FileInfo class that calls stat once on construction and
then lets Exists/IsDirectory/GetSize be executed very quickly.
The performance improvement mostly matters for functions that
can be handling a lot of files, such as File::ScanDirectoryTree.
I've also done some cleanup in code that uses these functions.
For instance, some code had checks like !Exists() || !IsDirectory(),
which is functionally equivalent to !IsDirectory(), and some
code was using File::GetSize even though there was an IOFile
object that the code could call GetSize on.
It didn't work when there were non-ASCII characters
in the directories argument, but it worked fine with
non-ASCII characters in names of found files and folders.
c5fa470 made the extension check discard directories, but
only in the new code that currently only is used on Windows.
Let's add an equivalent check in the old code so that the
behavior is consistent across platforms.
This fixes the global-static fifo object causing infinite hangs in some
cases. Notably, failure to initialize a graphics backend would result in
BlockingLoop::Prepare being called but never executing Run(), leaving the
object in a bad state.
This one verifies bitmasks where low bits are set to 1 (hence the name).
Any stray 0 among the lower ones or any stray 1 among the higher zeros
renders the mask invalid.
The edge cases of all zeros and all ones are considered valid masks.
It uses an efficient implementation. It's the counterpart of
https://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#DetermineIfPowerOf2
This allows the user to go through the Wii Menu first boot setup
screen when they launch the System Menu for the first time.
Most useful on a clean profile, after doing a full system update,
to configure settings like the console country.
This rewrites the SysConf code for several reasons:
* Modernising the SysConf class. The naming was entirely cleaned up.
constexpr for constants.
* Exposing less stuff in the header.
* Probably less efficient parsing and writing logic, but much simpler
to understand and use in my opinion. No more hardcoded offsets.
No more duplicated code for the initial SYSCONF generation.
* More flexibility. It is now possible to add and remove entries,
since we rebuild the file. This allows us to stop spamming
"section not found" panic alerts; we can now use and insert
default entries.
stat() returns an error code in errno on both POSIX compliant
platforms and Windows.
This means we should always use errno instead of GetLastErrorMsg
which uses GetLastError() (Win32) on Windows.
POSIX allows one or more trailing slashes for directories.
From POSIX.1-2008, section 3.271 (Base Definitions / Pathname):
> A pathname can optionally contain one or more trailing <slash>
> characters. Multiple successive <slash> characters are considered to
> be the same as one <slash>, except for the case of exactly two
> leading <slash> characters.
On Windows, the extra trailing slashes are ignored for directories too.
Too much boilerplate that is duplicated if we use curl directly.
Let's add a simple wrapper class that hides the implementation details
and just allows to simply make HTTP requests and get responses.