NOTE: The explicit std::string() conversions later are needed. Otherwise,
gcc-9.2.0 throws all sorts of errors because it can't find a matching
operator+() function.
"ppcState{}" is stored in the .data segment, which means the full ~4 MB
is stored in the executable.
"ppcState" is stored in the .bss segment, which means it only stores a
note that tells it to allocate and zero ~4 MB at runtime.
string_view is a thin wrapper around C strings, so it's more efficient
for constant strings than C++ strings.
The unordered_set<> also adds extra runtime overhead. For small arrays,
a simple linear search works. For larger arrays, std::binary_search()
works better than linear but without the unordered_set<> overhead.
ShouldBeDualLayer(): Removed a duplicate "SK8X52" entry.
This fixes Old AX Wii games having no audio when compiled under VS2019.
This also includes some minor code cleanup and moving a function to
avoid duplication.
The frame number is incremented before the first frame is swapped out.
Fixes ffmpeg creating invalid video files on output if the emulator only
runs for a single frame, e.g. FifoCI.
See the discussion in https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11930.
(This probably doesn't really fix that issue, but it's something
I thought would make sense anyway.)
This was causing a race which was crashing the FifoCI runners. The main
thread called Stop() which in turn called ResetAllWiimotes() while the
emu thread was still exiting, also shutting down the Wiimote class.
By shifting the reset to the emu thread, all cleanup operations happen
on the same thread where they were initialized.
Now that we have an actual interface to manage things, we can stop
duplicating the calls to to the pixel shader manager and remove the
need to remember to actually do so when disabling or enabling the
bounding box.
Rather than expose the bounding box members directly, we can instead
provide an interface for code to use. This makes it nicer to transition
from global data, as the interface function names are already in
place.
Now that we've extracted all of the stateless functions that can be
hidden, it's time to make the index generator a regular class with
active data members.
This can just be a member that sits within the vertex manager base
class. By deglobalizing the state of the index generator we also get rid
of the wonky dual-initializing that was going on within the OpenGL
backend.
Since the renderer is always initialized before the vertex manager, we
now only call Init() once throughout the execution lifecycle.