This isn't used anywhere, so it can be removed. This also potentially
fixes an underlying compilation error waiting to happen, given DECSTAT
could have potentially been used, someone disables statistics (for
whatever reason), then gets a compilation error due to the #else case
not containing an empty definition of DECSTAT.
Makes the global variable follow our convention of prefixing g_ on
global variables to make it obvious in surrounding code that it's not a
local variable.
Rather than making Statistics' member functions operate on the global
variable instance of itself, we can make these functions member
functions and operate on a by-instance state, removing the direct
dependency on the global variable itself.
This also makes for less reading, as there's no need to repeat "stats."
for all variable accesses.
Normalizes all variables related to statistics so that they follow our
coding style.
These are relatively low traffic areas, so this modification isn't too
noisy.
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.
This isn't as serious as copying global INIs into user game INIs,
but still not good. We want to be able to remove settings from
default game INIs and have those removals apply.
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.