videoBuffer -> s_video_buffer
size -> s_video_buffer_write_ptr
g_pVideoData -> g_video_buffer_read_ptr (impl moved to Fifo.cpp)
This eradicates the wonderful use of 'size' as a global name, and makes
it clear that s_video_buffer_write_ptr and g_video_buffer_read_ptr are
the two ends of the FIFO buffer s_video_buffer.
Oh, and remove a useless namespace {}.
This state will be used to calculate sizes for skipping over commands on
a separate thread. An alternative to having these state variables would
be to have the preprocessor stash "state as we go" somewhere, but I
think that would be much uglier.
GetVertexSize now takes an extra argument to determine which state to
use, as does FifoCommandRunnable, which calls it. While I'm modifying
FifoCommandRunnable, I also change it to take a buffer and size as
parameters rather than using g_pVideoData, which will also be necessary
later. I also get rid of an unused overload.
VertexLoader::VertexLoader was setting loop_counter, a *static*
variable, to 0. This was nonsensical, but harmless until I started to
run it on a separate thread, where it had a chance of interfering with a
running vertex translator.
Switch to just using a register for the loop counter.
- Lazily create the native vertex format (which involves GL calls) from
RunVertices rather than RefreshLoader itself, freeing the latter to be
run from the CPU thread (hopefully).
- In order to avoid useless allocations while doing so, store the native
format inside the VertexLoader rather than using a cache entry.
- Wrap the s_vertex_loader_map in a lock, for similar reasons.
Renamed various commands to refer to ISO instead of GCM for consistency,
as the commands are used for both Wii and GameCube files.
CompressGCM --> CompressISO
DeleteGCM --> DeleteISO
MultiCompressGCM --> MultiCompressISO
MultiDecompressGCM --> MultiDecompressISO
SetDefaultGCM --> SetDefaultISO
Fixed COMPRESSISO
Fixed missing "COMPRESSISO"
Fixed more COMPRESSISO
Final fix for COMPRESSISO
Detects a situation where the game is writing to the dcache at the address being DMA'd. As we do not have dcache emulation, invalid data is being DMA'd causing audio glitches. The following code detects this and enables the DMA to complete instantly before the invalid data is written.
Added accurate ARAM DMA transfer timing.
Removed the addition of DSP exception checking.
Updated ARAM DMA and FIFO write exception checking to uses these types.
Conflicts:
Source/Core/Core/PowerPC/Interpreter/Interpreter_Tables.cpp
Source/Core/Core/PowerPC/PPCTables.h
This helps us avoid accidentally clobbering flags between two instructions
when the flags are expected to be maintained. Dolphin will of course crash
immediately, but at least it will crash loudly and alert us of the mistake,
instead of forcing hours of bisecting to find the subtle way in which the JIT
has managed to sneak a flag-modifying instruction where there shouldn't be one.
That commit reorganized fastmem a bit; I wrote it before the patch to
support fastmem in JitIL landed, and forgot to edit it to account for
the fact. Since JitILBase now derives from Jitx86Base, the HandleFault
override can just be removed.
Also correct behavior with regards to which bits in XER are treated as zero
based on a hwtest (probably doesn't affect any real games, but might as well
be correct).
This should dramatically reduce code size in the case of blocks with
lots of branches, and certainly doesn't hurt elsewhere either.
This can probably be improved a good bit through smarter tracking of register
usage, e.g. discarding registers that are going to be overwritten, but this
is a good start and should help reduce code size and register pressure.
Unlike that sort of change, this is a "safe" patch; it only flushes registers,
which can't affect correctness, unlike actually discarding data.
As part of this, refactor PPCAnalyst to support distinguishing between
float and integer registers (to properly handle instructions that access
both, like floating-point loads and stores).
Also update every instruction in the interpreter flags table I could find
that didn't have all the correct flags.
When a game was running and someone opened the video dialog, it would crash. This is because the preprocessor macro should have been __APPLE__ not _APPLE_
Fixes issue 7644.
These ID values would clash with the window parent IDs of all the actual debugger panes (they are in the 350 range as well).
For example, attempting to show and then close the memory window would cause an assertion, because it would attempt to destroy the text control for searching through memory, rather than destroying the actual parent window it's attached to.
These IDs are only used locally, so their value doesn't matter.
This is inconsistent with how other containers are used (i.e. with Do()), but making std::array be used with Do() seems rather confusing when there's also a DoArray available.