The only two devices that do this are Mesa software rasterizer and Intel Ironlake(With a few hacks).
Basically since it doesn't support OpenGL 3.0, it can't grab the version the new way.
So failing that, it sets to GL 2.1, and continues.
Further along, on Ironlake at least, it tries grabbing the extensions the new GL 3.0 way and fails.
So have a fallback that grabs the extensions string the old way, in probably the most elegant way possible.
The old way was to use big switch/case statements based on a type of buffer.
The new one is to use inheritance.
This change prohibits us to change the buffer type while running, but I doubt we'll ever do so.
Performance should also be a bit better. Also a nice cleanup.
Added some comments about this different kind of buffers.
This is a bit slower on map_and_* because of flushing and _very_ much slower on buffer(sub)?data because of a new memcpy.
But this design allow us to decode directly into a gpu buffer, eg vertexloader will profit :)
gl.h and glext.h provide most of the function pointer typedefs and defines for extensions and core features.
The only one it doesn't provide is GL 1.1 function typedefs, but this is to be expected.
If anything needs defines or typedefs in their header in the future, that's as easy as before.
Prior to this commit it was possible to assign the same keycode to more than one button.
ie. Say I assigned Open with the hotkey Ctrl+O; well, it was possible to also add it to another function as well, which leads to hotkey clashing.
Now, say I assign Open with Ctrl+O, but then assign that same hotkey to Refresh List; it will unbind the hotkey from Open and then assign it to refresh list.
This one was introduced to reduce the glBindTexture and glActiveTexture calls. But it was quite a bit of logic and only an improvment on uploading/creating a texture, which is done rarely.
This adds xfb support to the videosoftware backend, which increases it's
accuracy and more imporantly, enables the usage of many homebrew apps
which write directly to the xfb on the videosoftware backend.
Conflicts:
Source/Core/VideoBackends/Software/SWRenderer.cpp
Source/Core/VideoBackends/Software/SWmain.cpp
I give up. Merging the ppc_fp branch has caused issues in numerous games
and I can't find the bug. I'm leaving this merged to enable easy
recompilation for people who would like to play games that benefit from
non-IEEE mode emulation (e.g. Starfox Assault).
This branch is the final step of fully supporting both OpenGL and OpenGL ES in the same binary.
This of course only applies to EGL and won't work for GLX/AGL/WGL since they don't really support GL ES.
The changes here actually aren't too terrible, basically change every #ifdef USE_GLES to a runtime check.
This adds a DetectMode() function to the EGL context backend.
EGL will iterate through each of the configs and check for GL, GLES3_KHR, and GLES2 bits
After that it'll change the mode from _DETECT to whichever one is the best supported.
After that point we'll just create a context with the mode that was detected
As we do lots of writes to *Iptr, the compiler isn't allowed to cache any shared variable (neither index nor Iptr itself).
This commit inlines Iptr + index into the index generator functions, so the compiler know that they are const.
We are used to render them out of order as long as everything else matches, but rendering order does matter, so we have to flush on primitive switch. This commit implements this flush.
Also as we flush on primitive switch, we don't have to create three different index buffers. All indices are now stored in one buffer.
This will slow down games which switch often primitive types (eg ztp), but it should be more accurate.
add the GL include (back) to Base.props
use a similar technique to GLX.cpp (by Sonic) in WGL.cpp to get
wglSwapIntervalEXT without the WGLEW check
Conflicts:
Source/Core/VideoBackends/OGL/OGL.vcxproj
Source/Core/VideoBackends/OGL/OGL.vcxproj.filters
Source/VSProps/Base.props
This "u32 components" is a list of flags which attributes of the vertex loader are present.
We are used to append this variable to lots of vertex generation functions, but some of them don't need it at all.
The usual way to handle this kind of request is to rise a flag which the gpu thread polls.
The gpu thread itself either generates the result or just write zeros if disabled.
After this, it rise another flag which says that this work is done.
So if disabled, we still have the cpu-gpu round trip time. This commit just returns 0 on the cpu thread
instead of playing ping pong...
Move enums for max SI and EXI devices to their respective .h file, and rename them.
Use only those enums in BootManager.cpp. Same thing in Movie.cpp
Change one instance of MAX_BBMOTES to MAX_WIIMOTES in Movie.cpp, since movies do not support balance board.
Some information on this bug since this isn't quite true.
Seemingly with the v53 driver, Qualcomm has actually fixed this bug. So we can dynamically access UBO array members.
The issue that is cropping up is actually converting our attribute 'fposmtx' to an integer.
int posmtx = int(fpostmtx);
This line causes some seemingly garbage values to enter in to the posmtx variable.
Not sure exactly why it is failing, probably them just not actually converting the float to an integer and just handling the float directly as a integer.
So the bug is going to stay active with Qualcomm devices until we convert this vertex attribute from a float to a integer.
Let's talk a bit about this bug. 12nd oldest bug not fixed in Dolphin, it was a
lot of fun to debug and it kept me busy for a while :)
Shoutout to Nintendo for framework.map, without which this could have taken a
lot longer.
Basic debugging using apitrace shows that the heat effect is rendered in an
interesting way:
* An EFB copy texture is created, using the hardware scaler to divide the
texture resolution by two and that way create the blur effect.
* This texture is then warped using indirect texturing: a deformation map is
used to "move" the texture coordinates used to sample the framebuffer copy.
Pixel shader: http://pastie.org/private/25oe1pqn6s0h5yieks1jfw
Interestingly, when looking at apitrace, the deformation texture was only 4x4
pixels... weird. It also does not have any feature that you would expect from a
deformation map. Seeing how the heat effect glitches, this deformation texture
being wrong looks like a good candidate for the problem. Let's see how it's
loaded!
By NOPing random calls to GXSetTevIndirect, we find a call that when removed
breaks the effect completely. The parameters used for this call come from the
results of methods of JPAExTexShapeArc objects. 3 different objects go through
this code path, by breaking each one we can notice that the one "controlling"
the heat effect is the one at 0x81575b98.
Following the path of this object a bit more, we can see that it has a method
called "getIndTexId". When this is called, the returned texture ID is used to
index a map and get a JPATextureArc object stored at 0x81577bec.
Nice feature of JPATextureArc: they have a getName method. For this object, it
returns "AK_kagerouInd01". We can probably use that to see how this texture
should look like, by loading it "manually" from the Wind Waker DVD.
Unfortunately I don't know how to do that. Fortunately @Abahbob got me the
texture I wanted in less than 10min after I asked him on Twitter.
AK_kagerouInd01 is a 32x32 texture that really looks like a deformation map:
http://i.imgur.com/0TfZEVj.png . Fun fact: "kagerou" means "heat haze" in JP.
So apparently we're not using the right texture object when rendering! The
GXTexObj that maps to the JPATextureArc is at offset 0x81577bf0 and points to
data at 0x80ed0460, but we're loading texture data from 0x0039d860 instead.
I started to suspect the BP write that loads the texture parameters "did not
work" somehow. Logged that and yes: nothing gets loaded to texture stage 1! ...
but it turns out this is normal, the deformation map is loaded to texture stage
5 (hardcoded in the DOL). Wait, why is the TextureCache trying to load from
texture stage 1 then?!
Because someone sucked at hex.
Fixes issue 2338.
At the moment, custom textures with:
- invalid mipmap size
- invalid aspect ratio
- non-fractional scaling factors
are allowed. But they can't be loaded fine by the backend, so generate a warning if someone trys to load them.
fixes issue 6898
OpenGL defaults are GL_REPEAT, which is even more unlikely than GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE.
As I can't test the behavoir of the real hardware, I changed it to how it works before,
but I guess just clip the texture makes more sense.
Some settings that bootmanger reads from game ini can be changed while a game is running, so we don't have to revert these back to what they were when starting the game, unless they were actually changed by the game ini.
Fix signed/unsigned warnings that pauldacheez pointed out.
It didn't make sense. The math was nonsensical. Calibration data was somehow applied twice. I don't even.
This reverts commit 4dad640d5f.
Fixed issue 6702.
SSE do support non-vector instructions, but they _all_ overwrite the dest register
if the src location isn't a register. (wtf?)
So we have to load the src into a temporay register :(
Parsing Gecko codes (in any manner) is much like parsing HTML with regex
- that w̷a̶y̸ l̵i̷e̴s̵ m̴̲a̵͈d̵̝n̵̙ę̵͎̞̼̙̼͔̞͖͎̝s̵̨̬̱͍͓͉̠̯̤͙̝s̷͍̲̲̭̼͍͎͖̤̭̘. Luckily, with the embedded codehandler.bin,
the monstrosity may remain at only one implementation. Anyway, removing
the inserted_asm_codes thing probably speeds up the interpreter a bit.
MemArena mmaps the emulated memory from a file in order to get the same
mapping at multiple addresses. A file which, formerly, was located at a
static filename: it was unlinked after creation, but the open did not
use O_EXCL, so if two instances started up on the same system at just
the right time, they would get the same memory. Naturally, this caused
extremely mysterious crashes, but only in Netplay, where the game is
automatically started when the client receives a broadcast from the
server, so races are actually quite likely.
And switch to shm_open, because it fits the bill better and avoids any
issues with using /tmp.
This flag wasn't cleared at all, so we set our constants dirty every time...
This could fix some performance regressions because of revision 6798a4763e
Real xfb didn't provide any read_stride, so there is a division by zero.
This commit calculates the correct read_stride for real_xfb, so there is also no hack for texture vs xfb needed.
This removes the redundant code and also implements this feature for OSX and Wayland.
But so it's dropped for non-wx builds...
imo DolphinWX still isn't the best place for this, but now it's in the same file as all other hotkeys. Maybe they'll be moved to InputCommon sometimes at once ...
This is done with a pixel buffer object. We still have to stall the GPU, but
we only do it once per efb2ram call.
As the cpu can't access the vram, it has to queue a memcpy for the gpu and
wait for the gpu to finish this copy. We did this for every cache line which
is just stupid. Now we copy the complete texture into a pbo and readback this
at once. So we don't have to wait for lots of round-trip-times.
Also use attributeless rendering. But we need the src rect, so set it by uniform.
If there is a slowdown here (I doubt as the driver likely has a fast path to update uniforms)
then we should check if this rect changes and only then update the uniform.
We use attributeless rendering, so officially we have to bind _any_ VAO.
As the state of this VAO doesn't matter, we don't have to switch it.
Also fix an AMD issue as they don't like to render from an empty VAO.
We neither scale nor render from subimages, so we by using gl_Position, we don't have to generate _any_ vertices for this converting.
Also remove the glTexSubImage optimization as every driver does it when needed. But there are some workflows (eg on APU) where it's better to realloc this texture instead of a second memcpy or stall.
This fixes Real XFB Jaggies in OpenGL on games which use yscaling, such
as most PAL games.
This fixes the last of the "Real XFB Macroblocking" issues for opengl,
see issue #6503
Seems OpenGL ES 3 Requires you must have an lod argument, while Desktop
versions require you must not have a lod argument if you are using a
Sampler2DRect (which doesn't do Mipmapping).
The pal version of SSBB has a 640x568 xfb, which is larger than the efb.
Increase the size of the static textures and put in some runtime checks
to prevent buffer overruns.
Lots of x86 instructions are different on memory vs registers.
So to generate code, we often have to check if a ppc register is already bound to a x86 register.
Revision ddaf29e039 introduced a register
corruption bug (#6825). Since fmrx/MOVSD only modifies ps0 but we save
both ps0 and ps1 in one xmm register, not loading the previous value
when binding to a x64 register trashed ps1.
But hey, a good opportunity to shave off one more instruction ;)
Now OGL doesn't rely on WX for PNG saving.
FlipImageData supports (pixel data len > 3) now.
TextureToPng is now in ImageWrite.cpp/h
Video Common depends on zlib and png.
D3D no longer depends on zlib and png.
bDAZ is now called bFlushToZero to better reflect what it's actually
used for.
I decided not to support any hardware-based flush-to-zero on systems
that don't support this for both inputs _and_ outputs. It makes the code
cleaner and the intersection of CPUs that support SSE2 but not DAZ
should be very small.
Revert "Actually, filename really does need to be a parameter because of some random debug thing."
Revert "fix non-HAVE_WX case"
Revert "Handle screenshot saving in RenderBase. Removes dependency on D3DX11 for screenshots (texture dumping is still broken)."
This reverts commits 00fe5057f1, 74b5fb3ab4, cd46138d29 and 5f72542e06 because taking screenshots in D3D still crashed for me so there was no point in the code changes (which I found ugly anyway).
The Dolphin development team is incapable of providing sufficient replacement for its previous usage in Dolphin and the advantages of dropping the dependency do not justify the removal of screenshots and texture dumping.
From now on, d3dx11.h, d3dx11async.h, d3dx11core.h and d3dx11tex.h are required to be stored somewhere in the header include path. I don't know if this is the case for anyone else than me, but I can't really say that I care after having people randomly merge unfinished branches into master.
This reverts commit 6cece6b486.
In fact, there was a _huge_ speedup on lots of games (mostly on nvidia+ogl), but there are some crashes on D3D.
I have to fix this crash and then I'll commit something like this again :-)
Conflicts:
Source/Core/VideoCommon/Src/TextureCacheBase.cpp
We often need the same native texture objects for new textures. This commit
try to avoid destroying and creation of this textures by pooling them.
This should be a big performance gain for some efb2ram games as they may
overwrites partially a cached texture (which would be deleted) and afterwards
try to read it.
Creating/destroying sounds like an easy task, but it isn't. eg the nvidia ogl
driver synchonize their threads do avoid use-after-free issues.
- Add support for std::set and std:pair.
- Switch from std::is_pod to std::is_trivially_copyable, to allow for
types that have constructors but trivial copy constructors. Easy,
except there are three different nonstandard versions of it required
on different platforms, in addition to the standard one.
D3D doesn't allow bigger viewports than rendertargets. But flipper does, so the viewport will be clipped and the transformation matrix will be changed.
This was done in the D3D backend itself. This is now moved into VideoCommon. This don't reduce code, but in this way, VideoCommon doesn't depend on the backends.
This isn't needed for both OGL+D3D11 as they support sample shading directly. So we
could use the common MSAA util shaders instead of writing custom ones.
* Currently there is no DEBUGFAST configuration. Defining DEBUGFAST as a preprocessor definition in Base.props (or a global header) enables it for now, pending a better method. This was done to make managing the build harder to screw up. However it may not even be an issue anymore with the new .props usage.
* D3DX11SaveTextureToFile usage is dropped and not replaced.
* If you have $(DXSDK_DIR) in your global property sheets (Microsoft.Cpp.$(PlatformName).user), you need to remove it. The build will error out with a message if it's configured incorrectly.
* If you are on Windows 8 or above, you no longer need the June 2010 DirectX SDK installed to build dolphin. If you are in this situation, it is still required if you want your built binaries to be able to use XAudio2 and XInput on previous Windows versions.
* GLew updated to 1.10.0
* compiler switches added: /volatile:iso, /d2Zi+
* LTCG available via msbuild property: DolphinRelease
* SDL updated to 2.0.0
* All Externals (excl. OpenAL and SDL) are built from source.
* Now uses STL version of std::{mutex,condition_variable,thread}
* Now uses Build as root directory for *all* intermediate files
* Binary directory is populated as post-build msbuild action
* .gitignore is simplified
* UnitTests project is no longer compiled
Note that before pushing those changes, they were initially tested in a branch, and passed the compilation testing. Sorry that I didn't catch this before.
It was disabled because of issue 182, but as this game depeneds on FPRF, it was just 'fixed' because of the fallback to interpreter (which implements FPRF by default).
Also enables FPRF for this game via GameIni, so that the issue is still workaround.
If there are any regressions because of this commit, please try to enable FPRF in GameIni.
D3D9 only supports 8 texcoords. But we need a new one for ppl, so we just store it in the first 4 texcoords in the free 4th component.
This isn't needed for both d3d11 and ogl3, so just remove it.
This isn't needed in VertexShaderManager as it's still in the old dirty flag way.
But it's very importend for PixelShaderManager as some float4s aren't initialized as 0.0f
The old way was to use a dirty flag per setter. Now we just update the const buffer per setter directly.
The old optimization isn't needed any more as the setters don't call the backend any more.
The follow parts are rewritten:
Alpha
ZTextureType
zbias
FogParam
FogColor
Color
TexDim
IndMatrix
MaterialColor
FogRangeAdjust
Lights
The upload in the backend isn't done, it's just pushed by the mostly removed SetMulti*SConstant4fv.
Also no optimizations was done on VideoCommon side, but I can start now :-)
Sorry for the hacky way, but I think this is a nice (working) snapshot for a much bigger change.
(Read_Opcode_JIT and Write_Opcode_JIT read/write from unrelated memory
areas.* Rename the latter and refactor.)
*except at the one specific exception handler where it doesn't. I
have no idea what this is supposed to do, but it probably doesn't do
it correctly. For now, remove the exception.
(1) The alternative doesn't compile.
(2) Despite "unlimited" sounding like a hack, it's actually
significantly more correct then the alternative, which is no
emulated icache.
(3) Easier to wrap my head around.
This implements a partial JITIL based off of the JIT64IL. It's enough to run most games, albiet at a slow speed.
Implementing instructions for this IL is really simple since it basically is just enabling based on what is already in JIT64IL, and then enabling each individual IL instruction.