Without included header build fails on gcc-10 as:
```
[ 13%] Building CXX object Source/Core/AudioCommon/CMakeFiles/audiocommon.dir/CubebUtils.cpp.o
In file included from ../../../../Source/Core/AudioCommon/CubebUtils.cpp:13:
../../../../Source/Core/Common/StringUtil.h: In function 'bool TryParse(const string&, T*)':
../../../../Source/Core/Common/StringUtil.h:84:20: error: 'numeric_limits' is not a member of 'std'
84 | if (value < std::numeric_limits<LimitsType>::min() ||
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
Signed-off-by: Sergei Trofimovich <slyfox@gentoo.org>
So far in all our uses of ScopeGuard, the type of the callable is
usually just a lambda or a function pointer, so there is no need
to rely on std::function's type erasure.
While the cost of using std::function is probably negligible, it still
causes some unnecessary overhead that can be avoided by making
ScopeGuard a templated class. Thanks to class template argument
deduction in C++17 most existing usages do not even need to be changed.
See https://godbolt.org/z/KcoPni for a comparison between
a ScopeGuard that uses std::function and one that doesn't
Add a function that safely returns whether a character is printable
i.e. whether 0x20 <= c <= 0x7e is true.
This is done in several places in our codebase and it's easy to run
into undefined behaviour if the C version defined in <cctype>
is used instead of this one, since its behaviour is undefined
if the character is not representable as an unsigned char.
This fixes MemoryViewWidget.
Due to the way the ModRM encoding works on x86, memory addressing
combinations involving RBP or R13 need an additional byte for an 8-bit
displacement of zero.
However, this was also applied in cases where it is unnecessary,
effectively wasting a byte.
- MatR with RSP or R12
8B 44 24 00 mov eax,dword ptr [rsp]
8B 04 24 mov eax,dword ptr [rsp]
- MRegSum with base != RBP or R13
46 8D 7C 37 00 lea r15d,[rdi+r14]
46 8D 3C 37 lea r15d,[rdi+r14]
- MComplex without offset
8B 4C CA 00 mov ecx,dword ptr [rdx+rcx*8]
8B 0C CA mov ecx,dword ptr [rdx+rcx*8]
A small, nonexhaustive set of warning fixes. The DiscIO Volume change
is a workaround for a GCC bug [1] that causes returning an unengaged
std::optional to emit annoying -Wmaybe-uninitialized warnings.
This last change alone fixes pages upon pages of warnings since
Volume.h is included from several files.
-Wstringop-truncation is another irrelevant warning for us, but
unfortunately there seems to be no way to disable it without
adding ugly pragmas wherever the warning appears.
Removed conditional use of std::mutex instead of std::shared_mutex on MacOS.
Because MacOS < 10.12 did not support std::shared_mutex, a previous commit
naïvely substituted std::mutex, which does not have the same behavior.
Reverses PR #8273, which substitues std::mutex for std::shared_mutex on
macOS, and results in several bugs that seem to only affect MacOS
- https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11919
- https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11842
- https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11845
This change eliminates conditional code for MacOS in the core configuration
layer code and enables the use of modern language features that are more
secure and thread-safe.
Previously the logging was a in a little bit of a disarray. Some things
were in namespaces, and other things were not.
Given this code will feature a bit of restructuring during the
transition over to fmt, this is a good time to unify it under a single
namespace and also remove functions and types from the global namespace.
Now, all functions and types are under the Common::Log namespace. The
only outliers being, of course, the preprocessor macros.