The workaround was added in 0446a58.
The underlying problem is that we must not destroy the surface
while the video backend is initializing, otherwise the video
backend may reference nullptr.
I've also cleaned up the logic for when to destroy the surface.
Note that the comment in EmulationFragment.java about only being
able to destroy the surface when emulation is running is not true
anymore (due to de632fc, it seems like).
This wasn't changed when halfline counts were changed to 0-based. Also
included is a diagram showing an understanding of how the values in the VI
timing registers maps to the video signal.
Datel's Wii Freeloaders set m_PictureConfiguration.WPL to 0 for
a while. Not sure if the fix in this commit is a proper fix or
just a hack, since I'm not very familiar with this code.
With this change, it's possible to run a Wii Freeloader if you
are running an old enough version of the Wii Menu, but the
"coloured bars" that Datel reference in their documentation
never show up. The screen just freezes for a few seconds instead.
This is done by:
1) Implementing said protocol in a new controller input class CemuHookUDPServer.
2) Adding functionality in the WiimoteEmu class for pushing that motion input to the emulated Wiimote and MotionPlus.
3) Suitably modifying the UI for configuring an Emulated Wii Remote.
Bug 1: subcommand 1 of 0xE1 does not actually reset the current position; it just stops playback. 0xE2 returns the same value it would have before stopping playback (other than reporting that the stream is stopped).
Bug 2: subcommand 3 of 0xE2 was incorrectly dividing the length by 4; while this makes sense for positions (which are multiplied by 4 earlier to get a byte offset), it is not correct for lengths.
Fixes a bug where if you loaded a fifo before opening the fifo
player window (which you can do by dragging a .dff onto dolphin's
main window) then the player's widgets wouldn't be initilized
correctly.
Importantly, the object range widgets would be broken.
- Re-organize VideoInterface::Update() to count half-lines starting at 0 instead of 1
- Use horizontal position when checking if we should assert some display interrupt
- Add some more descriptive comments
With the SI poll line count fixed, pretty much all games are polling
twice per frame anyways, making this option superfluous. Since it's a
bit of a gross hack and makes DTMs incompatible with console, let's
just bin it.
This new setting is like Override Language on NTSC Games, except
instead of only applying to the GameCube language setting,
it also applies to the Wii language setting.
Fixes https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11299
Previously, IR calibration data with an invalid checksum was used, because the calibration produced a strange offset. I've replaced it with calibration data that encodes the same values as the data Nintendo falls back to when the checksum is bad.
Allows callers to std::move strings into the functions (or automatically
assume the move constructor/move assignment operator for rvalue
references, potentially avoiding copies altogether.
Continues the migration over to using fmt. Given fmt is also compatible
with std::string and std::string_view, we can convert some parameters
over to std::string_view, such as the message parameter for
StopMessage() and the name parameter for an overload of SaveScreenShot()
Since Dolphin can do NUS downloads over plain HTTP, we really don't
want people to be able to silently disable signature verification
indefinitely. Removing the setting shouldn't have any significant
negative impact now that signature verification always is disabled
when installing WAD files.
Apparently nobody is using good dumps, meaning that the warning
is a nuisance rather than useful information for most people.
Especially so for people who don't install WADs permanently.
It is still possible to verify the signature using the Verify
tab of the game properties, which matches how Dolphin handles
checking the signatures of Wii discs.
The old implementation of this was not able to distinguish between
a title that had the common key index set to 1 because it actually
was Korean and a title that had the common key index set to 1 due to
fakesigning. This new implementation solves the problem by
decrypting a content with each possible common key and checking
which result matches the provided SHA-1 hash.
The problem that the old implementation causes has only been reported
to affect a certain pirated WAD of Chronos Twins DX (WC6EUP), but it's
possible that the problem would start affecting more WADs if we add
support for the vWii common key (which uses index 2). Adding support
for the vWii common key would also prevent us from using the simpler
solution of always forcing the index to 0 if the title is not Korean.
...in addition to the existing function CreateVolume
(renamed from CreateVolumeFromFilename).
Lets code easily add constraints such as not letting the user
select a WAD file when using the disc changing functionality.
This lets us convert CalculateVertexElementSizes() from a function using
an out pointer into one that simply returns the array data as a return
value.
It also lets us dehardcode some values, as we can just query
std::array's size() member function instead.
Fix up the calculation of the length fields and check that the returned
response is the expected length. This touches many files because it
converts a parameter name from the SI_Device interface from 'length' to
'request_length'. Prior, this field seemed to be used as request length
sometimes, as response length sometimes, and usually just totally ignored.
At its only usage point, its return value is stored into a u32, and the
default implementation returns 0xFFFFFFFF (-1), which would be an
unsigned integer. Given all of the bits are used to determine a color,
it makes slightly more sense to treat this as an unsigned value as
opposed to a signed one.
We're allowed (by the standard) to forward declare types within
std::vector, so we can replace direct includes with forward declarations
and then include the types where they're directly needed.
While we're at it, we can remove an unused inclusion of <cstring>, given
nothing in the header uses anything from it. This also revealed an
indirect inclusion, which this also resolves.
Previously u32 was being used for part of the interface and unsigned int
was being used for other parts. This makes the interface fully consistent by
using only one type.
We opt for u32 here given they communicate the same thing (for platforms
we care about where int is 32-bit), while also being less to read.
While we're at it, we can also default the constructor and destructor of
inheriting classes in their respective cpp file to prevent the
construction and destruction of non-trivial types being inlined into
other regions of code.
This was in DolphinWX but not DolphinQt. It's useful for telling if
users who post screenshots have an up-to-date version of Dolphin.
The old implementation of this prepended the version in DolphinWX code
rather than Core code, but I thought it'd be simpler to do it in Core.
IOLinux.cpp should include <sys/select.h> as it uses select() functionality.
On certain platforms it's included implicitly by other headers, which is why
it compiled before. This makes it also work on musl platforms.
libusb transfer callbacks might be called immediately during transfer
submission in some cases. (libusb doesn't even specify what thread
the callback is invoked on.) In other words, it is possible to reach
the transfer callback from the CPU thread, and not just from the
USB event handling thread.
So CoreTiming::FromThread::NON_CPU is incorrect and should instead
be ANY.
Unfortunately, it appears that using libusb's synchronous transfer API
from several threads causes nasty race conditions in event handling and
can lead to deadlocks, despite the fact that libusb's synchronous API
is documented to be perfectly fine to use from several threads (only
the manual polling functionality is supposed to require special
precautions).
Since usbdk was the only real reason for using a single libusb context
and since usbdk (currently) has so many issues with Dolphin, I think
dropping support for it in order to fix other backends is acceptable.