These disc images are only used on dev units and not retail units.
There are two important differences compared to normal Wii disc images:
- The data starts 0x8000 bytes into each partition instead of 0x20000
- The data of a partition is stored unencrypted and contains no hashes
Our old implementation was just guesswork and doesn't work at all.
According to testing by GerbilSoft, this commit's implementation
is able to read and extract files in the filesystem correctly,
but the tested game still isn't able to boot. (It's thanks to their
info about unencrypted disc images that I was able to make this commit.)
Initialising Wii filesystem contents should be done after Boot and
not in HW to ensure that we operate with the correct title context
and to make sure required title directories exist (so that Movie and
Netplay code can copy data from and to the temporary NAND).
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.
Executing a supervisor-level instruction in user mode is supposed to
cause a program exception to occur.
The following supervisor instructions are present:
- dcbi
- mfmsr
- mfspr
- mfsr
- mfsrin
- mtmsr
- mtspr
- mtsr
- mtsrin
- rfi
- tlbie
- tlbsync
In 0337ca116a checks within mfspr and
mtspr were added. This change adds the trivial checks to the other
instructions.
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.
Keeps signed values out of bit arithmetic (not that there's any issues
that could arise from it in these situations, but it does look more
consistent, and silences compiler warnings)
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.
Keeps all of the interpreter-specific exception handling functions
together in a reusable way across translation units, similar to
FPUtils.h for reusable floating-point functions.