When playing a game on OS X, although the screen does not go to
sleep, the screensaver is still enabled, and therefore, during
gameplay, the screensaver may start running, which is not in
accordance to the behaviour on other other environments (Windows
and X11). It can be argued that the screensaver interrupting
gameplay is a nuissance to many players.
The changes in this commit are intended to allow Dolphin to disable
the screensaver during gameplay, just as intended on other platforms.
The changes have been tested on OS X 10.11 (El Capitan).
Also removes the unused Event_Adapter event stub which did nothing. It
wasn't even hooked up to wx's event system.
Allows removing several includes from the header file and moving them to
the cpp file. Prevents includes being dumped into other source files
that include the header.
This uncovered an indirect include in Main for MsgHandler utilities.
I replaced "1x IR" with "native internal resolution" because
the IR setting never says "1x" or "IR", and I also did some
minor rewording and normalized the sentence-ending spaces.
Rather than destroy and reinitialize the dialog whenever it's closed,
and opened this dialog can just be hidden from view when it's not
needed, and shown again when it is needed.
Also, a dialog should really not be managing any live instances of
itself, including the one directly in the main frame.
This gets rid of another usage of the main frame global.
Instead of allowing unknown ioctlvs and faking success for both unknown
and unimplemented ioctlvs, which can possibly result in nasty, hard to
debug bugs (if the emulated software behaves unexpectedly), we should
reject unknown ioctlvs and log known, but unimplemented ioctlvs.
Some widescreen hacks (see below) properly force anamorphic output, but
don't make the last projection in a frame 16:9, so Dolphin doesn't
display it correctly.
This changes the heuristic code to assume a frame is anamorphic based on
the total number of vertex flushes in 4:3 and 16:9 projections that
frame. It also adds a bit of "aspect ratio inertia" by making it harder
to switch aspect ratios, which takes care of aspect ratio flickering
that some games / widescreen hacks would be susceptible with the new
logic.
I've tested this on SSX Tricky's native anamorphic support, Tom Clancy's
Splinter Cell (it stayed in 4:3 the whole time), and on the following
widescreen hacks for which the heuristic doesn't currently work:
Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (Gecko widescreen code from Nintendont)
C202F310 00000003
3DC08042 3DE03FD8
91EEF6D8 4E800020
60000000 00000000
04199598 4E800020
C200F500 00000004
3DE08082 3DC0402B
61CE12A2 91CFA1BC
60000000 387D015C
60000000 00000000
C200F508 00000004
3DE08082 3DC04063
61CEE8D3 91CFA1BC
60000000 7FC3F378
60000000 00000000
The Simpsons: Hit & Run (AR widescreen code from the wiki)
04004600 C002A604
04004604 C09F0014
04004608 FC002040
0400460C 4082000C
04004610 C002A608
04004614 EC630032
04004618 48220508
04041A5C 38600001
04224344 C002A60C
04224B1C 4BDDFAE4
044786B0 3FAAAAAB
04479F28 3FA33333
Fixes bug #10183 [0] introduced by 3bd184a / PR #4467 [1].
TextureCacheBase was no longer calling `entry->Load` for custom textures
since the compute shader decoding logic was added. This adds it back in.
It also slightly restructures the decoding if-group to match the one
below, which I think makes the logic more obvious.
(recommend viewing with `git diff -b` to ignore the indentation changes)
[0]: https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/10183
[1]: https://github.com/dolphin-emu/dolphin/pull/4467
This is only ever queried and not set outside of the Core.cpp, so this
should just be hidden internally and just have a function exposed that
allows querying it.
wxQueueEvent/wxPostEvent are useful when the event is being dispatched
to another separate window, but aren't really necessary when the event
will be handled by the same window it's dispatched from.
GetEventHandler() is unnecessary here for the same reason. It's an event
intended to be handled by the dialog itself.
As all UI controls are essentially constructed with new expressions, the
type is already visible on the right-hand side, so repeating the type
twice isn't necessary.
This is an implementation detail that does not have to be exposed.
It was used in WII_IPC whenever the IPC gets reset, but that does not
make much sense to me: the only time when IOS loses state and the IPC
registers are set up again is when it's reloaded. And reloading IOS
already calls Reset() indirectly.
Also, an IPC reset from the PPC definitely should not close all opened
devices!
This also gets rid of a special case for clear_devices, which is now
completely unneeded.
This clashes with X11's preprocessor define named Success (because using
non-prefixed lowercase identifiers in C was apparently a fantastic idea
at some point), causing compilation errors.
Amends the TAS callbacks to internally store functions using
std::function instead of raw function pointers. This allows binding
extra contextual state via lambda functions, as well as keeping the
dialogs internal to the main frame (on top of being a more flexible
interface).
The loop was allocating one-too-many levels, as well as incorrect sizes
for each level. Probably not an issue as mipmapped render targets aren't
used, but the logic should be correct anyway.
This was a regression from the remove-everything-static-from-renderer
PR. As the comment indicates, it would be nice to move all of this logic
out of the Renderer constructor, but this is a much larger change.
This is currently unused and shouldn't actually be a part of the frame's
public interface. The event system should be used instead to dispatch
messages to the game list control if necessary.
This keeps all of the return codes in the same place and exposed
publicly (as they are not internal to ES).
I have also added proper IOSC error codes and renamed some codes
for more consistency. (Unix ones have an E prefix, others do not.)
A set of small changes to handle title imports more accurately.
* Clean up the import directory after an import, exactly like IOS.
This should prevent the title directory from having useless leftover
contents, which could confuse the emulated software.
* More robust failsafe in case an import does not complete normally.
IOS checks for stale imports and handles them appropriately on boot.
We now do the same.
* Create all directories as IOS does. This includes the data directory.
This may fix LIBUSB_ERROR_NOT_FOUND whenever devices end up being in
an unconfigured state. We don't need anything more than the first
config descriptor anyway.
This was a regression introduced by 4d8d045. stored_stack_pointer within
PPCSTATE was being accessed before the PPCSTATE (RBP) register was
initialized.
Fixes warnings like:
```
dolphin/Source/Core/Core/PowerPC/JitArm64/JitArm64_Integer.cpp:132:37: warning: declaration shadows a local variable [-Wshadow]
reg_imm(a, s, inst.UIMM, [](u32 a, u32 b) { return a | b; }, &ARM64XEmitter::ORRI2R);
^
/Users/michaelmaltese/Downloads/dolphin/Source/Core/Core/PowerPC/JitArm64/JitArm64_Integer.cpp:122:7: note: previous declaration is here
u32 a = inst.RA, s = inst.RS;
^
```
Fixes warnings:
```
../Source/Core/DiscIO/VolumeGC.cpp: In member function 'virtual u8 DiscIO::CVolumeGC::GetDiscNumber() const':
../Source/Core/DiscIO/VolumeGC.cpp:178:10: error: 'disc_number' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
return disc_number;
^
../Source/Core/DiscIO/VolumeWiiCrypted.cpp: In member function 'virtual u8 DiscIO::CVolumeWiiCrypted::GetDiscNumber() const':
../Source/Core/DiscIO/VolumeWiiCrypted.cpp:258:10: error: 'disc_number' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
return disc_number;
^
../Source/Core/DiscIO/VolumeWiiCrypted.cpp: In member function 'virtual IOS::ES::TMDReader DiscIO::CVolumeWiiCrypted::GetTMD() const':
../Source/Core/DiscIO/VolumeWiiCrypted.cpp:123:20: error: 'tmd_address' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
tmd_address <<= 2;
^
```
As the name is immediately stored into a class member, a move here is a
better choice.
This also moves the constructor implementations into the cpp file to
avoid an otherwise unnecessary inclusion in the header. This is also
likely a better choice as Section contains several non-trivial members,
so this would avoid potentially inlining a bunch of setup and teardown
code related to them as a side-benefit.
New Super Mario Bros on PAL still renders at 60 fps, but skips every 5th XFB copy.
So our detection of "per frame" fails, and we require twice the amound of texture objects.
But our pool frees unused textures after 3 frames, so half of them needs to be reallocated
every few frames.
This commit removes the lock for render targets. It was introduced to not update a texture
while it is still in use. But render targets aren't updated while rendering, so this
lock isn't needed. Non-rendertarget textures however aren't as dynamic, so the lock should
have no performance update.
Fixes warnings:
```
dolphin/Source/Core/Core/PowerPC/BreakPoints.cpp:246:89: warning: format specifies type 'int' but the argument has type 'unsigned long' [-Wformat]
debug_interface->GetDescription(pc).c_str(), write ? "Write" : "Read", size * 8,
^~~~~~~~
dolphin/Source/Core/Core/PowerPC/BreakPoints.cpp:245:50: warning: field width should have type 'int', but argument has type 'unsigned long' [-Wformat]
NOTICE_LOG(MEMMAP, "MBP %08x (%s) %s%zu %0*x at %08x (%s)", pc,
~~~^
```
Fixes https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/10159 "Emulated Wii remote
options not working correctly," which was introduced by PR #4856: "Move
'Background Input' out of individual controller configurations."
Instead of each component allocating their own memory, we instead allocate
the memory once and divvy that up among the components as required. This
ensures that relative memory offsets remain within architecture limits.
Constants are copied into this pool so that they live at a memory
location that is close to the code that references it. The pool allocates
memory from a provided X64CodeBlock to use.
The purpose of the pool is to overcome the 32-bit offset limitation that
RIP-relative addressing has.`
Proper semantics.
IOS only cares about the TMD and nothing else, so we should use
FindInstalledTMD, instead of reading/parsing/decrypting a bunch of
useless stuff, which is slow *and* causes issues because of the cache.
If the delimiters of a memory aren't exactly the same as an address, but their size includes the memory breakpoint delimiter, the break will not go through. This makes it so that you can specify a search for a memory breakpoint with a data size and will check if the data fits with that size on all memory breakpoints so the breaks go through.
Dolphin assumes that content 0 is opening.bnr, without checking
whether content 0 exists or if it is even supposed to be there (it's
only there for channels). This results in sometimes reading garbage.
This adds a check to only try to read names from content 0's header
if the title is a channel (channel, system channel or game channel).
Trying to return to the Wii Menu from a game is the easiest
way to trigger this error. Just saying 0000000100000002
when that happens doesn't mean much to most users.
The Tools > Load System Menu option displays the version of the
installed Wii Menu. This commit changes the way we display that
version, like so: "Load System Menu 514P" -> "Load System Menu 4.3E"
The numbers are from http://wiibrew.org/wiki/System_Menu
The FrameBufferManager::CreateTexture (from the OpenGL backend) method introduced by commit 69cedf41 incorrectly compares the texture variable (which contains a name provided by glGenTextures) against GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY and GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE.
It should instead use the texture_type variable for this (as done in the first branch of the if).
5.0-2712 made ES's code for setting the game ID use the
title ID converted to hex (except for disc titles) instead
of using a 6-char game ID like before. Then, 5.0-2830 made
us use that code even when loading game INIs. This breaks the
expectations of both users and the game INIs we ship with.
This commit makes Dolphin use 6-char game IDs for all
titles (unless the 6-char ID would contain unprintable
characters, which is the case with e.g. the Wii Menu).
I'm also putting unprintability checks in VolumeWad
for consistency.
Places all of the SI code under the SerialInterface namespace instead of
only the main source file. This keeps all SI code under a common name,
as well as out of the global namespace
This commit should have zero performance effect if SSBOs are supported.
If they aren't (e.g. on all Macs), this commit alters FramebufferManager
to attach a new stencil buffer and VertexManager to draw to it when
bounding box is active. `BBoxRead` gets the pixel data from the buffer
and dumbly loops through it to find the bounding box.
This patch can run Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door at almost full
speed (50–60 FPS) without Dual-Core enabled for all common bounding
box-using actions I tested (going through pipes, Plane Mode, Paper
Mode, Prof. Frankly's gate, combat, walking around the overworld, etc.)
on my computer (macOS 10.12.3, 2.8 GHz Intel Core i7, 16 GB 1600 MHz
DDR3, and Intel Iris 1536 MB).
A few more demanding scenes (e.g. the self-building bridge on the way
to Petalburg) slow to ~15% of their speed without this patch (though
they don't run quite at full speed even on master). The slowdown is
caused almost solely by `glReadPixels` in `OGL::BoundingBox::Get`.
Other implementation ideas:
- Use a stencil buffer that's separate from the depth buffer. This would
require ARB_texture_stencil8 / OpenGL 4.4, which isn't available on
macOS.
- Use `glGetTexImage` instead of `glReadPixels`. This is ~5 FPS slower
on my computer, presumably because it has to transfer the entire
combined depth-stencil buffer instead of only the stencil data.
Getting only stencil data from `glGetTexImage` requires
ARB_texture_stencil8 / OpenGL 4.4, which (again) is not available on
macOS.
- Don't use a PBO, and use `glReadPixels` synchronously. This has no
visible performance effect on my computer, and is theoretically
slower.
GCMemcard.h has quite a bit of different classes implemented within it
that could likely be split up into other files to make it a little
easier to read. However, they should be moved into their own folder
first so that they don't clutter up the base HW directory.
Defaulting to SSL verification off, *and* forcing it to be off even
when the emulated software asks us to enable it is very bad behaviour,
inaccurate and insecure.
Because the old option defaulted to off, we have to change the INI
option name to force the new default to be used. Unfortunate,
but without this we cannot ensure our users' security.
LoadPatches was apparently never being called when booting
Wii discs. Maybe this will fix the recent regression with
cheat codes not getting loaded? I don't know how this
managed to work to begin with, though...
(The call was also moved for WADs, just for consistency.)
ES.cpp was becoming pretty huge. This commit splits the ES code into
several files:
* Main ES (launch, UID, current title directory and title ID, etc.)
* Device identity and encryption (ID and cert, keys, encrypt/decrypt)
* Title management (imports, exports, deletions)
* Title contents (open/close/read/seek)
* Title information (titles, stored contents, TMDs)
* Views (for tickets and TMDs)
This prevents truncation when assigning to this member in the
constructor. This isn't size-critical code, so opting for the more
straightforward assignment is fine here.
Advantages:
* Simpler code in general
* No extra volume objects created
* Now actually notices if the disc or partition gets
changed while the core is running
* No longer picks up on disc access done by the GUI
(it used to do so as long as the core was running)
* Gets rid of a Core dependency in DiscIO
There are two performance disadvantages:
* FileMonitor is now a bit slower when used with VolumeDirectory
because FileMonitor now always uses the FileSystemGCWii code
for finding filenames instead of VolumeDirectory finding the
filename on its own and directly hooking into FileMonitor.
But this isn't such a big deal, because it's happening on the
DVD thread, and my currently unmerged file system PR will make
FileSystemGCWii's file finding code about as fast as
VolumeDirectory's.
* FileMonitor's creation of the file system object is now
done on the CPU thread instead of the DVD thread, and
it will be done even if FileMonitor logging is disabled.
This will be fixed in the next commit.
PR #3582 removed VolumeIsValid, then PR #3582 added a call
to VolumeIsValid, then both PRs were merged without either
of them being rebased on top of the other.
There's no point in creating a volume without a blob,
since essentially all the functionality of a volume
requires a blob to be used.
Also, VolumeCreator doesn't support creating volumes
without blobs (it can't even figure out the volume type
unless it gets a blob), so it's currently impossible
for a volume to be created without a blob.
Given none of these are used outside of the DSPEmitter class (nor does
it really make sense to allow them to be used outside of the class),
these should all be made private.
Using DiscIO's NAND content loader is the wrong way to get the ticket
for a title, because it checks whether the TMD is present and the
validity check fails if it isn't. This is not the correct behaviour:
we should just read the ticket from /ticket without caring about TMDs.
* IOS doesn't rely on the number of contents indicated in the TMD.
Instead, it checks whether the contents *do* exist on the NAND.
* Implement ES_GetTMDStoredContents (and the count ioctlv).
* Drop a hack in ES_GetStoredContents, which is unnecessary now that
we do it properly.
This is slightly safer than writing contents to /title directly.
We still cannot rename everything in one go atomically, but this allows
implementing AddTitleCancel very easily.
Also, this ensures that when a title import fails, no incomplete files
will be left in the title directory, which can mess up the system menu.
Regression introduced in e99cd57 / 4935: VideoBackends: Set the maximum
range when the depth range is oversized[1]. The NV_depth_buffer_float
extension is not part of OpenGL 3.0, and requiring it causes a hard
crash when it's not supported (e.g. macOS).
[1]: https://github.com/dolphin-emu/dolphin/pull/4935
Most of the Volume code was written before this
convenience function was added. Let's use it more.
Also deleting m_pReader nullptr checks that are
unnecessary because of Read (which ReadSwapped calls)
already having a nullptr check.
This stops the virtual method call from within the Renderer constructor.
The initialization here for GL had to be moved to VideoBackend, as the
Renderer constructor will not have been executed before the value is
required.
This adds a check to the SSL code to make sure we are using the correct
client certificate and key (and root CA).
Now, instead of silently failing, the user will be notified whenever a
file is missing or when it is invalid, i.e. when the hash does not
match; this is likely to happen for existing users as the program
linked in the network guide extracted the wrong certs :(
This partially restores a hack which causes ES to fake ticket views for
IOS titles.
This is necessary because we still allow users to boot games from the
game list, so, with no way of making sure the required IOSes are
installed beforehand, games may OSPanic() when they try to reload to
some IOS version and just find out that the IOS is not installed
(something which *never* happens on the real console, of course).
A warning is printed in the logs to make sure technical users know the
IOS titles are being faked. To try and keep things accurate in all
other cases, this hack is only active when it is needed (when the
current title is a disc title which was launched from the game list).
Depending upon the desktop colour scheme, the light/dark
GameList backgrounds can cause the always white text
to become unreadble.
Use the common luminance approximation algorithm to
determine whether black text should be used instead.
This adds a hash check for imported contents. IOS does it for security;
we do it for a somewhat different reason, to catch content decryption
bugs before incorrectly decrypted contents get written to the NAND,
which can cause titles to be corrupted.
Either way, we should have been doing this check in all cases.
const, when used on value type parameters in the declaration,
is superfluous. This doesn't really convey any information to take note
of when using the function. This only matters in the definition when you
want to prevent accidental modification.
e.g.
// Header
void CalculateSomething(int lhs, int rhs);
// Definition
void CalculateSomething(const int lhs, const int rhs)
{
// lhs and rhs can't accidentally be modified
}