EmulationActivity has an instance of Settings. If you go to
SettingsActivity from EmulationActivity and change some settings,
the changes get saved to disk, but EmulationActivity's Settings
instance still contains the old settings in its map of all
settings (assuming the EmulationActivity was not killed by the
system to save memory). Then, once you're done playing your
game and exit EmulationActivity, EmulationActivity calls
Settings.saveSettings. This call to saveSettings first overwrites
the entire INI file with its map of all settings (which is
outdated) in order to save any legacy settings that have changed
(which they haven't, since the GUI doesn't let you change legacy
settings while a game is running). Then, it asks the new config
system to write the most up-to-date values available for non-legacy
settings, which should make all the settings be up-to-date again.
The problem here is that the new config system would skip writing
to disk if no settings changes had been made since the last time
we asked it to write to disk (i.e. since SettingsActivity exited).
NB: Calling Settings.loadSettings in EmulationActivity.onResume
is not a working solution. I assume this is because
SettingsActivity saves its settings in onStop and not onPause.
The config version should always be incremented whenever config is
changed, regardless of callbacks being suppressed or not.
Otherwise, getters can return stale data until another config change
(with callbacks enabled) happens.
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 =)
The enumerated LOG_TYPE "OSREPORT" is currently used in both EXI_DeviceIPL.cpp and HLE_OS.cpp. In many games, the multitude of game functions detected by HLE_OS.cpp for OSREPORT logging results in poor log readability. This Pull Request remedies that by adding a new enumerated LOG_TYPE "OSREPORT_HLE" for log usage in HLE_OS.cpp.
In the future, further changing how logging in HLE_OS.cpp works may be desirable. As it is, game functions are detected that send a single character to the log. This is a major source of poor readability.
Adds a flag to File::Delete and File::DeleteDir functions to control
whether a console warning is emitted when the file or directory doesn't
exist. The flag is optional and true by default to match current behavior.
Makes File::DeleteDir return true when attempting to delete a
nonexistent path.
The purpose of DeleteDir is to ensure the path doesn't exist after the
call, which is better reflected by the new return value. Additionally,
none of the current callers actually check the return value so this
won't break any existing code.
On Windows, when the Rename function fails to replace an existing file
it will now retry the operation multiple times with increasingly long
delays between attempts. This fixes transient rename failures.
I've been getting sporadic yet annoyingly frequent errors saying:
'IOS_FS: Failed to rename temporary FST file'
These typically appear on startup but I've also gotten them randomly.
Investigation shows this happens when the Windows ReplaceFile function
returns the error ERROR_UNABLE_TO_REMOVE_REPLACED. That happens in the
context of using ReplaceFile to perform an atomic file overwrite, which
is required when saving updates to a file to avoid corruption. The
error mainly happens with the /Wii/fst.bin file but I've seen it
happen with multiple other files as well.
I haven't been able to definitively pin down why the error occurs,
though online discussions suggest antivirus scanning may be a major
culprit. That said, I've excluded the Dolphin folder from Windows
Defender scans to no avail and don't have any other antivirus running,
so this is likely to be a problem others are experiencing as well.
The number and duration of retry delays is arbitrary but I feel like a
combined second or so in the worst case is an acceptable tradeoff for
the reduction (actually elimination in my experience) of those errors.
This is even more true when you consider the time it takes to read and
dismiss the error dialogs.
The way Config::Get works in master, it first calls
Config::GetActiveLayerForConfig which searches for the
setting in all layers, and then calls Config::Layer::Get
which searches for the same setting again within the given
layer. We can remove this second search by combining the
logic of Config::GetActiveLayerForConfig and
Config::Layer::Get into one function.
Unfortunately, {fmt} allows passing too many arguments to a format call
without raising any runtime or compile-time error [1].
As this is a common source of bugs since we started migrating to {fmt},
this commit adds some custom logic to validate the number of
replacement fields in format strings in addition to {fmt}'s own checks.
[1] https://github.com/fmtlib/fmt/issues/492
Adds an interface that uses fmt under the hood, which is much more
flexible than printf, particularly for localization purposes, given fmt
supports positional formatters in a cross-platform manner out of the box
with no configuration necessary.
Noticed missing include as a build failure on gcc-11:
```
[ 15%] Building CXX object Source/Core/Common/CMakeFiles/common.dir/Config/Config.cpp.o
Source/Core/Common/Config/Config.cpp:23:24:
error: 'unique_lock' in namespace 'std' does not name a template type
23 | using WriteLock = std::unique_lock<std::shared_mutex>;
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
Source/Core/Common/Config/Config.cpp:11:1:
note: 'std::unique_lock' is defined in header '<mutex>';
did you forget to '#include <mutex>'?
```
Signed-off-by: Sergei Trofimovich <slyfox@gentoo.org>
Much of these classes are operating on integral types and are pretty
standard behavior as far as vectors go. Some member functions can be
made constexpr to make them more flexible and allow them to be used in
constexpr contexts.
Provides a basic extension to the interface to begin migration off of
the printf-based logging system.
Everything will go through macros with the same style naming as the old
logging system, except the macros will have the _FMT suffix, while the
migration is in process.
This allows for peacemeal migration over time instead of pulling
everything out and replacing it all in a single pull request, which
makes for much easier reviewing.
Common shouldn't be depending on APIs in Core (in this, case depending
on the PowerPC namespace). Because of the poor separation here, this
moves OSThread functionality into core, so that it resolves the implicit
dependency on core.
CommandLineParse expects UTF-8 strings. (QApplication, on the
other hand, seems to be designed so that you can pass in the
char** argv untouched on Windows and get proper Unicode handling.)
Fixes a critical regression where 95945a0 made us unable to
start emulation on Android 10 and newer. Android is restricting
direct access to /dev/ashmem starting with the new SDK version,
but we can use the new (and simpler) ASharedMemory API instead.
We have to keep using the /dev/ashmem approach on old versions
of Android, though.
The functions with "UTF" in the name use "modified UTF-8" rather
than the standard UTF-8 which Dolphin uses, at least according
to Oracle's documentation, so it is incorrect for us to use them.
This change fixes the problem by converting between UTF-8 and
UTF-16 manually instead of letting JNI do it for us.
This function does *not* always convert from UTF-16. It converts
from UTF-16 on Windows and UTF-32 on other operating systems.
Also renaming UTF8ToUTF16 for consistency, even though it
technically doesn't have the same problem since it only was
implemented on Windows.
Also added a IsRunning function as it was impossible to know whether it had been started or not (I will use it in later PRs but it should be there anyway)
`std::abs(x - y)` where x and y are unsigned integers fails to compile
with an "call of overloaded 'abs(unsigned int)' is ambiguous" error
on GCC, and even if it did compile, that expression still wouldn't
give the correct result since `x - y` is unsigned.
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.