This unit test compares ApprovedInis.json with the contents of the GameSettings folder to verify that every patch marked allowed for use with RetroAchievements has a hash in ApprovedInis.json. If not, that hash is reported in the test logs so that the hash may be updated more easily.
Prototype of a system to whitelist known game patches that are allowed to be used while RetroAchievements Hardcore mode is active. ApprovedInis.txt contains known hashes for the ini files as they appear in the repo, and can be compared to the local versions of these files to ensure they have not been edited locally by the player. ApprovedInis.txt is hashed and verified similarly first, with its hash residing as a const string within AchievementManager.h, ensuring ApprovedInis and the hashes within cannot be modified without editing Dolphin's source code and recompiling completely.
The challenge popups have proven to be excessive and are no longer useful thanks to the achievements hotkey. Instead, those events will ask for an immediate RP-level update to the achievements dialog, which will among other things re-sort the dialog to show challenges on top faster.
This way, by pressing Continue on top of a breakpoint, the emulation will actually continue (like on Cached Interpreter and JIT), instead of doing nothing.
Before:
1. In theory there could be multiple, but in practice they were (manually) cleared before creating one
2. (Some of) the conditions to clear one were either to reach it, to create a new one (due to the point above), or to step. This created weird behavior: let's say you Step Over a `bl` (thus creating a temporary breakpoint on `pc+4`), and you reached a regular breakpoint inside the `bl`. The temporary one would still be there: if you resumed, the emulation would still stop there, as a sort of Step Out. But, if before resuming, you made a Step, then it wouldn't do that.
3. The breakpoint widget had no idea concept of them, and will treat them as regular breakpoints. Also, they'll be shown only when the widget is updated in some other way, leading to more confusion.
4. Because only one breakpoint could exist per address, the creation of a temporary breakpoint on a top of a regular one would delete it and inherit its properties (e.g. being log-only). This could happen, for instance, if you Stepped Over a `bl` specifically, and pc+4 had a regular breakpoint.
Now there can only be one temporary breakpoint, which is automatically cleared whenever emulation is paused. So, removing some manual clearing from 1., and removing the weird behavior of 2. As it is stored in a separate variable, it won't be seen at all depending on the function used (fixing 3., and removing some checks in other places), and it won't replace a regular breakpoint, instead simply having priority (fixing 4.).
Dolphin currently fails to build when the Linux system building it includes headers/pkgconfigs for minizip-ng built in both minizip-ng mode and legacy compat mode (the minizip API).
This is because minizip-ng is checked for in cmake however the code is not actually compatible against minizip-ng built in non-legacy mode. Until that is rectified Dolphin should just check for a pkgconfig for minizip. If the system has a pkgconfig for minizip with a version >= 4 then the system package is minizip-ng built in compat mode which is exactly what we want.
Now it actually does what it says on the name, instead of creating a breapoint and doing nothing else (not even updating the widget).
Also, it now can't be selected if emulation isn't running.
Closes https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/13532
Change misleading names.
Fix function usage: Intepreter and Step Out will not check breakpoints in their own wrong way anymore (e.g. breaking on log-only breakpoints).
By request from delroth, I changed the name of our Transifex
organization so it's named after the Dolphin project rather than after
him. This broke old links and the .tx/config file.
There are two pieces of functionality to be added here. One, we want to disallow pausing too frequently, as it may be used as an artificial slowdown. This is handled within the client, which can tell us if a pause is allowed. Two, we want to call rc_client_idle on a periodic basis so the connection with the server can be maintained even while the emulator is paused.