SPDX standardizes how source code conveys its copyright and licensing
information. See https://spdx.github.io/spdx-spec/1-rationale/ . SPDX
tags are adopted in many large projects, including things like the Linux
kernel.
An unfortunately large single commit that deglobalizes the DSP code.
(which I'm very sorry about).
This would have otherwise been extremely difficult to separate due to
extensive use of the globals in very coupling ways that would result in
more scaffolding to work around than is worth it.
Aside from the video code, I believe only the DSP code is the hairiest
to deal with in terms of globals, so I guess it's best to get this dealt
with right off the bat.
A summary of what this commit does:
- Turns the DSPInterpreter into its own class
This is the most involved portion of this change.
The bulk of the changes are turning non-member functions into member
functions that would be situated into the Interpreter class.
- Eliminates all usages to globals within DSPCore.
This generally involves turning a lot of non-member functions into
member functions that are either situated within SDSP or DSPCore.
- Discards DSPDebugInterface (it wasn't hooked up to anything,
and for the sake of eliminating global state, I'd rather get rid of
it than think up ways for this class to be integrated with
everything else.
- Readjusts the DSP JIT to handle calling out to member functions.
In most cases, this just means wrapping respective member function
calles into thunk functions.
Surprisingly, this doesn't even make use of the introduced System class.
It was possible all along to do this without it. We can house everything
within the DSPLLE class, which is quite nice =)
Allows callers to std::move strings into the functions (or automatically
assume the move constructor/move assignment operator for rvalue
references, potentially avoiding copies altogether.
Less C-like and conveniently fixes a build issue caused by strcmp
not being declared for some reason.
Converting to std::string is safe because the argument count is
checked every time so the char* cannot be a nullptr.
We can just use a vector of a vector, which also has the benefit of
keeping the size accounted for as well, allowing us to get rid of a
count parameter for CodesToHeader().
Instead of using an out-reference, we can modernize these to return the
std::string directly. While we're at it, also remove the unused name
parameter.
- Moves all test code from DSPTool into UnitTests/Core/DSPAssemblyTest.
- Converts test files (which could only be loaded if they were in the
shell's working directory, so basically never) into C++ values.
- Enables most of the commented-out tests.
- Removes non-deterministic random code test.
Disassemble code without the additional text for humans, like the
current PC and opcode hex values, so that it can be reassembled.
I'm not updating any commented-out tests here.