Jimmie Johnson's Anything with an Engine is known to use texture coordinate 7 (and only texture coordinate 7) in some cases. There are a lot of possible edge-cases, so this test brute-forces all combinations with coordinates 0, 1, and 2.
This test fails with the non-JIT vertex loader due to an issue fixed in a later commit in this PR. (Note that the non-JIT vertex loader is only used on machines where no JIT is available or if COMPARE_VERTEXLOADERS is enabled in VertexLoaderBase.cpp.)
DataReader is generally jank - it has a start and end pointer, but the end pointer is generally not used, and all of the vertex loaders mostly bypassed it anyways.
Wrapper code (the vertex loaer test, as well as Fifo.cpp and OpcodeDecoding.cpp) still uses it, as does the software vertex loader (which is not a subclass of VertexLoader). These can probably be eliminated later.
This currently fails for direct with NormalIndex3 enabled (see https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/12952). The goal of this test is to be able to confidently say that that bug has been fixed.
We have one that does a similar thing, but only to measure speed and uses indices. This one verifies accuracy (and uses the largest possible input size by using direct components).
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.
[conv.fpint]/1:
> A prvalue of a floating-point type can be converted to a prvalue of
> an integer type. The conversion truncates; that is, the fractional
> part is discarded. The behavior is undefined if the truncated value
> cannot be represented in the destination type.
Additionally, VCacheEnhance has been added to UVAT_group1. According to YAGCD, this field is always 1.
TVtxDesc also now has separate low and high fields whose hex values correspond with the proper registers, instead of having one 33-bit value. This change was made in a way that should be backwards-compatible.
Keeps all of the floating-point utility functions in their own file to
keep them all together. This also provides a place for other
general-purpose floating-point functions to be added in the future,
which will be necessary when improving the flag-setting within the
interpreter.
Fixes warning:
```
../Source/UnitTests/VideoCommon/VertexLoaderTest.cpp:222:15: error: variable 'f' may be uninitialized when used here [-Werror,-Wconditional-uninitialized]
ExpectOut(f * scale);
^
../Source/UnitTests/VideoCommon/VertexLoaderTest.cpp:198:12: note: initialize the variable 'f' to silence this warning
float f, g;
^
= 0.0
../Source/UnitTests/VideoCommon/VertexLoaderTest.cpp:223:15: error: variable 'g' may be uninitialized when used here [-Werror,-Wconditional-uninitialized]
ExpectOut(g * scale);
^
../Source/UnitTests/VideoCommon/VertexLoaderTest.cpp:198:15: note: initialize the variable 'g' to silence this warning
float f, g;
^
= 0.0
```
They are used to remove the flush amounts, but as we don't
flush anymore on vertex loader changes (only on native
vertex format right now), this optimization is now unneeded.
This will allow us to hard code the frac factors within the
vertex loaders.
videoBuffer -> s_video_buffer
size -> s_video_buffer_write_ptr
g_pVideoData -> g_video_buffer_read_ptr (impl moved to Fifo.cpp)
This eradicates the wonderful use of 'size' as a global name, and makes
it clear that s_video_buffer_write_ptr and g_video_buffer_read_ptr are
the two ends of the FIFO buffer s_video_buffer.
Oh, and remove a useless namespace {}.