Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tillmann Karras d05e205a24 FPURoundMode: revert use of enums in bit-fields
The workaround of using fixed underlying types produces lots of warnings
in GCC because now the bit-fields are too small for the value range used
for conversion semantics.
2014-03-09 15:24:35 +01:00
Ryan Houdek 4f02132f93 Make our architecture defines less stupid.
Our defines were never clear between what meant 64bit or x86_64
This makes a clear cut between bitness and architecture.
This commit also has the side effect of bringing up aarch64 compiling support.
2014-03-04 09:36:59 -06:00
Tillmann Karras 315a8ba1c0 Various changes suggested by cppcheck
- remove unused variables
- reduce the scope where it makes sense
- correct limits (did you know that strcat()'s last parameter does not
  include the \0 that is always added?)
- set some free()'d pointers to NULL
2014-02-28 12:43:20 +01:00
Tillmann Karras 1a428de189 x64FPURoundMode: move things around a bit 2014-02-28 12:28:21 +01:00
Pierre Bourdon 311caef094 Merge pull request #25 from Tilka/ppc_fp
Fix non-IEEE mode
2014-02-23 04:15:37 +01:00
Pierre Bourdon 83b7bb64aa Make Common/ mostly IWYU clean (and fix errors in rest of the project detected by this change). 2014-02-22 23:37:29 +01:00
Lioncash 2afe215271 Convert all includes to relative paths. 2014-02-18 02:19:10 -05:00
Tillmann Karras 1f34ed2c25 Re-enable non-IEEE mode support 2014-02-12 23:12:16 +01:00
Tillmann Karras db196d8c5b Jit64[IL]: fix float conversions
Floating-point is complicated...

Some background: Denormals are floats that are too close to zero to be
stored in a normalized way (their exponent would need more bits). Since
they are stored unnormalized, they are hard to work with, even in
hardware.  That's why both PowerPC and SSE can be configured to operate
in faster but non-standard-conpliant modes in which these numbers are
simply rounded ('flushed') to zero.

Internally, we do the same as the PowerPC CPU and store all floats in
double format. This means that for loading and storing singles we need a
conversion. The PowerPC CPU does this in hardware. We previously did
this using CVTSS2SD/CVTSD2SS. Unfortunately, these instructions are
considered arithmetic and therefore flush denormals to zero if non-IEEE
mode is active. This normally wouldn't be a problem since the next
arithmetic floating-point instruction would do the same anyway but as it
turns out some games actually use floating-point instructions for
copying arbitrary data.

My idea for fixing this problem was to use x87 instructions since the
x87 FPU never supported flush-to-zero and thus doesn't mangle denormals.
However, there is one more problem to deal with: SNaNs are automatically
converted to QNaNs (by setting the most-significant bit of the
fraction). I opted to fix this by manually resetting the QNaN bit of all
values with all-1s exponent.
2014-02-12 23:12:15 +01:00
Tillmann Karras 21b0252e27 Jit64: disable non-IEEE mode emulation
I give up. Merging the ppc_fp branch has caused issues in numerous games
and I can't find the bug. I'm leaving this merged to enable easy
recompilation for people who would like to play games that benefit from
non-IEEE mode emulation (e.g. Starfox Assault).
2014-01-19 09:36:08 +01:00
Jasper St. Pierre 34692ab826 Remove unnecessary Src/ folders 2013-12-31 14:03:19 -05:00