gcc complains that the printf %x formatting instruction expects an
'unsigned int' but we pass a 'size_t'. We add the 'z' length formatting
specifier used for 'size_t'
This adds the WARNPC directive from xkas/asar to complement the existing ORG
directive. A common useful idiom is "WARNPC 0xXXXX\nORG 0xXXXX," which only
seeks forward and raises an error if you've already written to that part
of the file.
Fixes https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/10265 (Star Wars: The Clone
Wars hangs on loading screen with DSP-HLE and JIT Recompiler).
The Clone Wars hangs upon initial boot if this interrupt happens too
quickly after submitting a command list. When played in DSP-LLE, the
interrupt lags by about 160,000 cycles, though any value greater than or
equal to 814 will work. In other games, the lag can be as small as 50,000
cycles (in Metroid Prime) and as large as 718,092 cycles (in Tales of
Symphonia!).
All credit to @hthh, who put in a heroic(!) amount of detective work and
discovered that The Clone Wars tracks a "AXCommandListCycles" variable
which matches the aforementioned 160,000 cycles. It's initialized to ~2500
cycles for a minimal, empty command list, so that should be a safe number
for pretty much anything a game does (*crosses fingers*).
These settings are already loaded and saved to the SYSCONF. The INI
load/saves are redundant and do not work anyway because they are
overwritten by SYSCONF.
This file is pretty small now that it doesn't handle Wii
partitions anymore, so let's move its contents to Volume.cpp.
This is also more consistent with how blob creation works.
This happened to work without any problems because the only way for a
file system to be invalid was to not have the right GC/Wii magic word
in the unencrypted area, and a volume could not be created without
having the right GC/Wii magic word there. Now that file systems read
the magic word from a partition instead, a fix is needed.
I replaced m_OffsetShift with m_Wii in bb93336 to support
the decrypt parameter for read functions. Doing that is no
longer necessary, so m_offset_shift is now used like before.
By removing mutable state in VolumeWiiCrypted, this change makes
partition-related code simpler. It also gets rid of other ugly things,
like ISOProperties's "over 9000" loop that creates a list of
partitions by trying possible combinations, and DiscScrubber's
volume swapping that recreates the entire volume when it needs to
change partition.
- Makes DSP-LLE code checksums the same as those from DSP-HLE. I'm
assuming DSP-HLE was doing it correctly, since there are numerous
references to these pre-endian-swapped checksums (including in
DSPHost.cpp itself).
- Fixes disassembly when dumping code from DSP-LLE, which was using the
wrong endianness and giving totally bogus output.
- Reveals error messages of the format, "Bah! ReadAnnotatedAssembly
couldn't find the file ../../docs/DSP/DSP_UC_AX_07F88145.txt," which
seems to be intended behavior that was previously hidden.
This change centralizes all of the path handling and file writing logic
in DumpDSPCode. DSP-HLE also gains the feature of DSP-LLE to
automatically disassemble dumped code and write it to an accompanying
text file.
With the relocation of DumpDSPCode to DSPCodeUtils, the only remaining
function in DSPLLETools is DumpCWCode. This function 1) is not used
anywhere (not even in DSPTool), 2) doesn't seem to really do anything,
and 3) has a single comment saying "TODO make this useful :p"
This is something that should be the responsibility of the frontend
booting the game. Making this part of the host 'interface' inherently
requires frontends to leak internal details (much like the other
UI-related functions in the interface).
This also decouples more behavior from the debugger and the
initialization process in the wx frontend. This also eliminates several
usages of the parent menubar in the debugger code window.
VolumeDirectory doesn't support necessities like TMDs,
so thanks to 5.0-2172 (18968ab), EmulatedBS2_Wii crashes
when the inserted disc is a VolumeDirectory.
This commit fixes that.
This commit makes our DOL booting code very similar to our
ELF booting code. One exception is that the DOL booting
code still always calls SetupBAT. (Note that EmulatedBS2_GC
calls SetupBAT even if no disc is inserted.) I'm not sure
if there's a point to the difference, but I thought I'd
better avoid changing it so that I don't break anything.
For thread safety reasons, the currently inserted volume must
only be accessed by the DVD thread (or by the CPU thread if it
calls DVDThread::WaitUntilIdle() first). After this commit,
only DVDThread.cpp can access the volume, which prevents code in
other files from accessing the volume in a non-threadsafe way.
Direct access to the WAD bytes is required to read contents with proper
padding data (since they can sometimes end up being outside of the
data app section). Allowing the whole buffer to be accessed directly
would be error prone, so this commit adds GetContent() to WiiWAD
for getting raw content data by index.
These cannot be booted, so it is bad UX to show them in the UI as if
they were regular titles, and yet have different behaviour for them.
And technically, there is no reason to allow them to be used to boot
in the first place.
Another reason they should not be shown is that Dolphin fails
spectacularly with WADs that have a valid boot content index, but are
not PPC titles (e.g. IOS WADs). The only reliable way to avoid this
is to check for the title type and only show channels, just like
the Wii System Menu.
Mistakenly used the wrong TMD to clean up the import.
The original TMD is the one that is supposed to be used when
cancelling an import, but I forgot it's in the /import directory after
starting an import.
This exposes all ES title management ioctlvs to avoid duplicating IOS
code everywhere and to make it easier to reuse (since this way it's
not unnecessarily tied to the PPC IPC mechanism anymore) and unit test.
Some functions were also renamed for consistency with the other names,
*and* with official names.
It's better to just let the calling code provide a volume
object instead of needing one SetVolume for each way of
creating a volume. This simplifies InsertDiscCallback and
is needed for the following commits.
Just like DeleteTitle, Using CNANDContentManager is overkill,
inefficient and useless. And it results in a few failures in
situations where a delete should just always work.
But here it gets bonus points, because it manages to actually use
the TMD for deleting contents, when IOS does none of that and just
deletes files ending with .app in the title content directory. :)
This enables constructing an IOS instance that is not tied to emulation
and that can be simply used for internal purposes (ES, FS).
NAND root initialisation was moved to IOS since we cannot rely on HW
doing that for us anymore, and technically the NAND is entirely managed
by IOS anyway.