The SGI extension does not define calling SwapInterval with a parameter
of zero as valid. It was just lucky that drivers interpreted this as
vsync off. The EXT_swap_control extension defines zero as a valid value.
Mesa does not appear to support the EXT variant, so we fall back to
MESA_swap_control here, which also supports zero.
This fix the awkwardness of having the symbols detection, parsing and loading related logs be in OS HLE while they don't have anything to do with that.
These are only used internally. This also allows us to eliminate some
symbols that get dumped into the exposed Gen namespace.
By extension this also hides the Write[X] functions from OpArg's public
interface. This is only used internally by XEmitter, so they shouldn't
be usable by anything else.
This replaces usages of the non-standard __FUNCTION__ macro with the standard
mandated __func__ identifier.
__FUNCTION__ is a preprocessor definition that is provided as an
extension by compilers. This was the only convenient option to rely on
pre-C++11. However, C++11 and greater mandate the predefined identifier
__func__, which lets us accomplish the same thing.
The difference between the two, however, is that __func__ isn't a
preprocessor macro, it's an actual identifier that exists at function
scope. The C++17 draft standard (N4659) at section [dcl.fct.def.general]
paragraph 8 states:
"
The function-local predefined variable __func__ is defined as if a
definition of the form
static const char __func__[] = "function-name ";
had been provided, where function-name is an implementation-defined
string. It is unspecified whether such
a variable has an address distinct from that of any other object in the
program.
"
Thankfully, we don't do any macro or string concatenation with __FUNCTION__
that can't be modified to use __func__.
Some locales use non-breaking spaces as separators, so getting the
encoding right is important. If DolphinWX gets a string that isn't
valid UTF-8, it flat out won't display the string.
There is code below that assumes the presence of those macros (by #undef'ing them), but none of the included headers provided them.
This fixes a build failure on OpenBSD where the undef'd macros _do_ get picked up later on in a compilation unit (through which include, I don't know), and thus shadow the Common::swap* functions.
Trying to force the XSI version by undefining _GNU_SOURCE can lead
to compilation errors on some systems because of headers expecting
that _GNU_SOURCE is defined.
This commit uses define checks to detect which version we have.
I tried making an overloaded function (int and const char*) instead,
but that led to a warning about one of the variants being unused.
The PC offset ADRP() path takes a s32 value, but the input offset was
being tested as abs(ptr) < 0xFFFFFFFF. This caused values between
0x80000000 and 0xFFFFFFFF to incorrectly use this path, despite the
offsets not being representable in an s32.
This caused a crash in the VertexLoader on android 8.1 immediate in wind
waker (and possibly all other apps on android 8.1) as the jit and data
sections happened to be loaded 4gb apart in virtual memory, causing some
pointers to hit this
These three instructions use the B field (bits 16-20 of the opcode)
to determine what the operand register is. However, the code was
using the path that uses the C field (bits 21-25).
This amends the code to use the B field (and also fixes the 64-bit PPC
opcodes, because why not?).
Fixes issue 10683.
Currently, a simple typo in the system name will trigger an assert
message that complains about a "programming error". This is not
user friendly and misleading.
So this changes GetSystemFromName to return an std::optional, which
allows for callers to check whether the system exists and handle
failures better.
Originally, Layer contained a std::map of Sections, which containted a std::map
containing the (key, value) pairs. Here we flattern this structure so that only
one std::map is required, reducing the number of indirections required and
vastly simplifying the code.
No code is relying on this unexplained null byte check, since
the only code that calls UTF16ToUTF8 on non-Windows systems
is UTF16BEToUTF8, which explicitly strips null bytes.
The earlier code always tried to use TitleDatabase for getting
title names, but that didn't work for disc-based games, because
there was no way to get the maker ID.
Fixes a regression which broke running several Dolphin instances at the
same time on Windows. Thanks to exjam for spotting the issue
pretty much immediately. Sorry about that!
Also changes the file names to be more consistent on all platforms.
Assign a name to the CreateFileMapping handle on Win32 so third party
applications can read from Dolphin's memory and integrate with the
current emulation.
Built and tested, multiple sessions are still possible without
collisions.
Ideally Common.h wouldn't be a header in the Common library, and instead be renamed to something else, like PlatformCompatibility.h or something, but even then, there's still some things in the header that don't really fall under that label
This moves the version strings out to their own version header that doesn't dump a bunch of other unrelated things into scope, like what Common.h was doing.
This also places them into the Common namespace, as opposed to letting them sit in the global namespace.
CNTVCT_EL0 is force-enabled on all linux plattforms.
Windows is untested, but as this is the best way to get *any* low
overhead performance counters, they likely use it as well.
This apparently fixes https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/10499 somehow.
The first changed line of this commit is just for performance - the
second changed line is where the difference in behavior is.
Since all queues are FIFO data structures, the name wasn't informative
as to why you'd use it over a normal queue. I originally thought it had
something to do with the hardware graphics FIFO.
This renames it using the common acronym SPSC, which stands for
single-producer single-consumer, and is most commonly used to talk about
lock-free data structures, both of which this is.
The class NonCopyable is, like the name says, supposed to disallow
copying. But should it allow moving?
For a long time, NonCopyable used to not allow moving. (It declared
a deleted copy constructor and assigment operator without declaring
a move constructor and assignment operator, making the compiler
implicitly delete the move constructor and assignment operator.)
That's fine if the classes that inherit from NonCopyable don't need
to be movable or if writing the move constructor and assignment
operator by hand is fine, but that's not the case for all classes,
as I discovered when I was working on the DirectoryBlob PR.
Because of that, I decided to make NonCopyable movable in c7602cc,
allowing me to use NonCopyable in DirectoryBlob.h. That was however
an unfortunate decision, because some of the classes that inherit
from NonCopyable have incorrect behavior when moved by default-
generated move constructors and assignment operators, and do not
explicitly delete the move constructors and assignment operators,
relying on NonCopyable being non-movable.
So what can we do about this? There are four solutions that I can
think of:
1. Make NonCopyable non-movable and tell DirectoryBlob to suck it.
2. Keep allowing moving NonCopyable, and expect that classes that
don't support moving will delete the move constructor and
assignment operator manually. Not only is this inconsistent
(having classes disallow copying one way and disallow moving
another way), but deleting the move constructor and assignment
operator manually is too easy to forget compared to how tricky
the resulting problems are.
3. Have one "MovableNonCopyable" and one "NonMovableNonCopyable".
It works, but it feels rather silly...
4. Don't have a NonCopyable class at all. Considering that deleting
the copy constructor and assignment operator only takes two lines
of code, I don't see much of a reason to keep NonCopyable. I
suppose that there was more of a point in having NonCopyable back
in the pre-C++11 days, when it wasn't possible to use "= delete".
I decided to go with the fourth one (like the commit title says).
The implementation of the commit is fairly straight-forward, though
I would like to point out that I skipped adding "= delete" lines
for classes whose only reason for being uncopyable is that they
contain uncopyable classes like File::IOFile and std::unique_ptr,
because the compiler makes such classes uncopyable automatically.
Seems like I was wrong that ANDI2R doesn't require a temporary register here.
There is *one* case when the mask won't fit in the ARM AND instruction:
mask = 0xFFFFFFFF
But let's just use MOV instead of AND here for this case...
Given a relatively recent proposal (P0657R0), which calls for deprecation of putting stuff into the global namespace when using C++ headers, this just futureproofs our code a little more.
Technically this is what we should have been doing initially, since an
implementation is allowed to not provide these types in the global
namespace and still be compliant.
ifstream::read() sets the failbit if trying to read over the end, which
means that (!input) would be hit for the 'last' block if it wasn't
exactly BSIZE (1024) bytes.
Makes it easier to turn off general IOS messages that can be
distracting (e.g. /dev/net/ssl being opened hundreds of time...)
without losing the ability to view WFS messages.
The opagent library was (incorrectly) marked as a dependency for "Core"
instead of "Common".
When linked with --as-needed, any symbols the linker can tell are not
used are discarded. As the link is done in command-line order, and the
Core library (and dependencies) are processed before Common, it would
link in Core, then opagent, but as at that point no opagent symbols are
used the whole opagent library would be discarded.
Moving the opagent library to be a dependency of Common fixes this, as
after the Common library is linked, there *are* opagent symbols used.