The OV bit is non-sticky. Therefore, after an overflow-enabled
instruction executes, if an overflow does *not* occur, then OV is
cleared. SO is sticky however, so it staying set in this case is
correct.
With this, JitAsm code doesn't have any reliance on the JIT global
variable. This means the core JIT64 code no longer relies on said
global at all. The Jit64 common code, however, still has some offenders.
Notably, EmuCodeBlock and Jit64AsmCommon are the remaining places in the
common code that make use of the global variable.
The AutoUpdate module is a generic update checker mechanism which can be
used by UI backends to trigger an auto-update check as well as the
actual update process.
Currently only configurable through .ini and the Qt implementation is
completely placeholder-y -- blocking the main thread on a network
request on startup, etc.
Ensures that upon construction of a JitBase instance, that all
underlying members within the option and state structs are guaranteed
to be initialized.
This prevents potentially using a member uninitialized in some form.
Also amends the condition that was being checked. Previously it was
checking if the destination register value was 0x80000000, however it's
actually the source register that should be checked.
This macro (that has unfortunately become the de-facto way of
introducing targets) has a lot of disadvantages that outweigh the fact
that you avoid writing two extra lines of CMake script.
- It encourages the use of variables. In a build system the last thing
we want to care about is mutable state that can be avoided.
- It only handles linking in the libraries and nothing else. It's a
laziness macro.
- We should be explicit about what we're doing by introducing the target
first, not last.
This gets the ball rolling by migrating Core off the macro. Note that
this is essentially 1-to-1 unrolling of the macro, therefore we're
still linking in all libraries as public, even though that may not be
necessary.
This can be revisited once everything is off the macro for a quicker
transition period.
Trims the direct usages of the global by making the code go through the
JIT interface (where it should have been going in the first place).
This also removes direct JIT header dependencies from the breakpoints as
well. Now, no code uses the JIT global other than JIT code itself, and
the unit tests.
All of these with the record bit set update condition register 1 with the
contents of the FPSCR's FX, FEX, VX and OX bits.
Helper_UpdateCR1() does exactly that, so we use it here to perform this
for us.
This is only ever memset to zero and never used again.
This also gets rid of an instance of undefined behavior considering the
draft standard for C++17 (N4659) states at [dcl.type.cv] paragraph 5:
"
The semantics of an access through a volatile glvalue are implementation-defined.
If an attempt is made to access an object defined with a volatile-qualified type
through the use of a non-volatile glvalue, the behavior is undefined.
"
This prevents Dolphin from crashing when the emulated software crashes.
AFAIK, there is absolutely no performance to enabling this with the
x64 JIT.
Eventually, we should probably just remove bMMU
(https://github.com/dolphin-emu/dolphin/pull/1831). We can't do that
yet because of the ARM JIT.
A very basic hardware test shows that the ARMMSG doesn't change until
IOS replies. (People could have disassembled IOS to verify this too...)
Console:
sending request at 00034640 - ARMMSG 133e0fa0
00000000000000000000000000000010(ack) - ARMMSG 133e0fa0
00000000000000000000000000000100(reply) - ARMMSG 00034640
Dolphin, prior to this fix:
sending request (00034640) - ARMMSG 133e0fa0
00000000000000000000000000000011(ack) - ARMMSG 00034640
00000000000000000000000000000100(reply) - ARMMSG 00034640
Dolphin, after this fix:
sending request at 00034640 - ARMMSG 133e0fa0
00000000000000000000000000000011(ack) - ARMMSG 133e0fa0
00000000000000000000000000000100(reply) - ARMMSG 00034640
(Yes, note that the X1 bit is still set. This is a bug that I will
fix in the next commit.)
The IPC interrupt is triggered when IY1/IY2 is set and Y1/Y2 is written
to even when this results in clearing the bit.
This shouldn't change anything in practice but it's a difference
that Dolphin wasn't taking into account, which made me waste some time
when I was writing a hwtest :/
This adjusts IOS IPC timing to be closer to actual hardware:
* Emulate the IPC interrupt delay. On a real Wii, from the point of
view of the PPC, the IPC interrupt appears to fire about 100 TB ticks
after Y1/Y2 is seen.
* Fix the IPC acknowledgement delay. Dolphin was much, much too fast.
* Fix Device::GetDefaultReply to return more reasonable delays. Again,
Dolphin was way too fast. We now use a more realistic, average reply
time for most requests.
Note: the previous result from https://dolp.in/pr6374 is flawed.
GetTicketViews definitely takes more than 25µs to reply.
The reason the reply delay was so low is because an invalid
parameter was passed to the libogc wrapper, which causes it to
immediately return an error code (-4100).
* Fix the response delay for various replies that come from the kernel:
fd table full, unknown resource manager / device, invalid fd,
unknown IPC command.
Source: https://github.com/leoetlino/hwtests/blob/af320e4/iostest/ipc_timing.cpp
While the code is namespaced out properly, the files weren't separated
into their own directory. This moves the files so that introducing a general
interface is easier in the future for supporting other architectures.
This enables shaders to be compiled while the game is starting, instead
of blocking startup. If a shader is needed before it is compiled,
emulation will block.
This saves us from having to call GetPath when the same file is being
read over and over. (GetPath is more expensive than GetOffset due to
it iterating through parts of the file system and creating strings.)
The original reason I wanted to do this was so that we can replace
the Android-specific code with this in the future, but of course,
just deduplicating between DolphinWX and DolphinQt2 is nice too.
Fixes:
- DolphinQt2 showing the wrong size for split WBFS disc images.
- DolphinQt2 being case sensitive when checking if a file is a DOL/ELF.
- DolphinQt2 not detecting when a Wii banner has become available
after the game list cache was created.
Removes:
- DolphinWX's ability to load PNGs as custom banners. But it was
already rather broken (see https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/10365
and https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/10366). The reason I removed
this was because PNG decoding relied on wx code and we don't have any
good non-wx/Qt code for loading PNG files right now (let's not use
SOIL), but we should be able to use libpng directly to implement PNG
loading in the future.
- DolphinQt2's ability to ignore a cached game if the last modified
time differs. We currently don't have a non-wx/Qt way to get the time.
This commit changes devices to always return IPCCommandResult rather
than just a return code for Open() and Close() in order to be able
to better emulate reply timing.
In hindsight, I should have considered we would want to emulate
timing when I cleaned up the device interface, but alas.
This rectifies that mistake.
The option is named DisableCopyToVRAM under the Hacks section in
GFX.ini. It is intentionally not exposed to the GUI, as users should not
need to use it under normal circumstances. The main use is debugging
issues in the EFB-to-RAM shaders.
- Smplification of graphics backend startup/shutdown.
- Don't send complete message until CPU is ready to execute.
- Remove redundant stop message.
- Remove OSD message with backend name.
There are two reasons for this change:
1. It removes many repetitive lines of code.
2. I think it's a good idea to enable the use of old-style section
names even for settings that previously haven't been settable in game
INIs. Mixing the two styles in INIs (using the new style only for new
settings) is not ideal, and people on the forums don't even seem to
know that the new style exists (nobody knew a way to set ubershader
settings per game, for instance). Encouraging everyone to start using
only the new style might work long-term, but it would take take time
and effort to make everyone get used to it. Considering that this commit
*reduces* the amount of code by adding the ability to use old-style
names for more settings, I'd say that adding this ability is worth it.
Some homebrew expect exception handlers to be present -- which is
almost always the case on console, since most of the time homebrew are
launched from either a libogc or SDK title) -- and break if they are
not. To fix this, we just need to include default, dummy handlers.
Set HID0, HID4, GPR1 to values that are used by libogc for
initialisation. This makes boots more similar to a launch
from the HBC or another loader, since normally the registers
have already been initialised by the loader.
This fixes a crash in homebrew that assume GPR1 points to a correct
location and attempt to use it before initialising registers.
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.
This was causing an issue where DolphinQt couldn't save graphics options
(DolphinWX doesn't hit this code path), because this function was being
called before the in-memory config was flushed to disk.
With this PR, the in-memory config isn't reset, and only SYSCONF-related
variables may get changed.
7f0834c9 moved the locations of the Real XFB (now XFB to RAM) and
Disabled XFB (now Immediate Mode) settings. There are programs
other than Dolphin that parse DTM headers, so this is not good.
Note that Immediate XFB actually is the inversion of Disabled XFB.
I hope that's not too much of a problem...
This lets Dolphin know if a configured GameCube Controller should actually
be treated as connected or not.
Talked to @JMC47 a bit about this last night. My use-case is that all of
my controllers are the same hardware (Xbox One controllers) so share the
same configuration (modulo device number). Treating them all as always
connected isn't a problem for most games, but in some (Smash Bros.) it
forces me to go find a keyboard/mouse and unconfigure any controllers
that I don't actually have connected. Hotplugging devices (works on macOS,
at least) + this patch remove my need to ever touch the Controller Config
dialog while in a game.
This patch makes the following changes:
- A new `BooleanSetting` in `GCPadEmu` called "Always Connected", which
defaults to false.
- `ControllerEmu` tracks whether the default device is connected on every
call to `UpdateReferences()`.
- `GCPadEmu.GetStatus()` now sets err bit to `PAD_ERR_NO_CONTROLLER` if
the default device isn't connected.
- `SIDevice_GCController` handles `PAD_ERR_NO_CONTROLLER` by imitating the
behaviour of `SIDevice_Null` (as far as I can tell, this is the only use
of the error bit from `GCPadStatus`).
I wanted to add an OSD message akin to the ones when Wiimotes get
connected/disconnected, but I haven't yet found where to put the logic.
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.
The main problem was that the volume of the mixer wasn't savestated.
The volume is typically 0 at the beginning of a game, so loading a
savestate at the beginning of a game would lead to silent DTK audio.
I also added savestating to StreamADPCM.cpp.
Nowadays that Dolphin detects regions of discs properly and doesn't
force programs with unknown regions (such as homebrew) into running
under a certain region, the "Force Console as NTSC-J" option is
practically useless for making anything run correctly. Enabling it
is however an easy way to totally break many non-Japanese games.
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.
Unlike VEN, the endpoint is determined by the value at 8-12.
If it's non-zero, HID submits the request to the interrupt OUT
endpoint. Otherwise, the request is submitted to the IN endpoint.
This commit changes HIDv5 to keep track of endpoints (like IOS does)
and use them when submitting interrupt transfers.
This implements /dev/usb/hid v5, found in IOS57, IOS58 and IOS59.
This is an initial implementation that ignores some differences
with VEN because I lack understanding of what IOS is actually doing
sometimes. These are documented on the WiiBrew article:
https://wiibrew.org/wiki//dev/usb/hid_(v5)
One major difference that this implementation handles is about IDs.
It turns out Nintendo has decided to include the interface number in
the top byte of HIDv5 device IDs, unlike VEN -- even though everything
else about ioctl 1 is otherwise the same!
USBv5 IOS resource managers share most of their code. Some ioctls
are even completely the same! So let's separate the common code
from the VEN specific stuff to make HIDv5 easier to implement.
The descriptor copy code is not actually the same in HIDv4 and VEN,
so it did not make a lot of sense to put it in USB/Common.cpp.
Separate and move it to HIDv4 and VEN.
This cleanup is important because there are even more differences
between HIDv4 and HIDv5.
Fix the device ID struct to reflect the actual structure used by IOS.
It turns out that offset 2 is the internal device index. The reason
that field seemed to be "0x1e - interface_number" is that IOS only
keeps track of 32 devices and always looks for free entries from
the end of the internal array. With each USB interface being exposed
as a separate USBv5 device, "0x1e - interface_number" was mostly
correct... but wrong!
We also made the assumption that the interface number can be
identified from just a USBV5 device ID, which is definitely not true.
VEN (and HID) keep track of the interface number in the internal struct
instead of "reconstructing" it from the device ID (which is normally
not possible if we were generating IDs correctly)
This commit fixes all of these inaccuracies.
This reverts commit 1fc910b3ea,
replacing the old INI setting EFBScale with a new INI setting
called InternalResolution, which has a simpler mapping:
| EFBScale | InternalResolution
----------------- | -------------------- | --------------------
Auto (fractional) | 0 |
Auto (integral) | 1 | 0
1x | 2 | 1
1.5x | 3 |
2x | 4 | 2
2.5x | 5 |
3x | 6 | 3
4x | 7 | 4
5x | 8 | 5
6x | 9 | 6
All the fractional IRs were removed in f090a943.
It is not possible to tell whether DLC contents are supposed to be
present on the NAND or not, because they're treated as "optional".
So this commit changes the NAND check to not consider missing
contents for DLC titles as an issue.
Because the Wii NAND size is finite, mark titles that were installed
only for booting as temporary, and remove them whenever we need to
install another title (to make room). This is exactly what the
System Menu does for temporary SD card title data.
This commit removes the last usage of NANDContentManager in IOS code.
Another cleanup change is that loading ARM (IOS) binaries is now done
by the kernel in the BootIOS syscall, instead of being handled as a
special case in the MIOS code. This is more similar to how console
works and lets us easily extend the same logic to other IOS binaries
in the future, if we decide to actually load them.
This removes the hack that enables directly booting from WADs
without installing them first for the following reasons:
1. It makes the NAND content handling much more complicated than what
it should be and makes future changes like permissions or booting
NAND titles without a WAD more annoying to implement.
Because of this hack, we needed an extra level of abstraction
(NANDContent*) which has to read tons of things from the NAND, even
most of the time it's useless. This in turn forces us to have
caching, which is known to break titles and requires manual cache
invalidations. Annoying and error prone.
2. It prevents the WAD boot code from being easily accurate. With this
change, we can simply reuse the existing launch code, and ask IOS
to launch the title from the NAND.
3. The hack did not work that well since it did not cover a lot of ES
commands. And it works even less since the ES accuracy fixes.
This results in Dolphin returning inconsistent results: a
lot of the ES "DI" commands will just fail because the active title
is not installed on the NAND. uid.sys is not changed, etc.
And I'm not even talking about FS stuff -- where this would still
totally fail, unless we add even more unnecessary hacks.
This is not just theoretical -- the system menu and the Wii Shop are
known to behave strangely because the hack damages the NAND
structure, and we've already had several users report issues.
This commit makes it so WADs are always installed prior to launching.
A future commit will remove any code that was there only for the hack.
The GameCube's sample rate is slightly different due to a hardware bug.
The exact numbers are (54000000 / 1124) for GameCube and (54000000 / 1125)
on Wii. I also modified 32KHz mode. This fixes audio desyncs in several
GameCube games and severe issues in Sonic Mega Collection.
A bunch of changes, looks mainly like bug fixes and code cleanup.
Notable changes:
- `cubeb_get_min_latency`'s signature was changed to take params via
pointer, requiring Dolphin code to be tweaked in two places.
- A fix for kinetiknz/cubeb#320, as reported by @shuffle2
- Fixed build on FreeBSD (kinetiknz/cubeb#344), as contributed by @endrift
Change the repair logic to fix issues more aggressively by deleting bad
titles. This is necessary because of a bug in Dolphin's WAD boot code.
The UI code was updated to inform the user about titles that will be
deleted if they continue a repair, before deleting anything.
Old versions of Dolphin are so broken regarding NAND handling that
we need this to repair common issues and avoid issues with titles
like the System Menu or the Wii Shop.
This isn't an exhaustive check, but this will catch most issues
and offer to fix them automatically (if possible).
The newer title dumpers don't clobber tickets anymore (that's good!),
which means personalised tickets still have the console specific data
used to decrypt the title key in them. Dolphin should ignore that data
when importing WADs, because the title key has already been decrypted,
and we must not try to decrypt it *again*.
There are two special cases that the DSP accelerator handles in a
special way: when the end address is of the form xxxxxxx0 or
xxxxxxx1.
For these two cases, the normal overflow handling doesn't apply.
Instead, the overflow check is different, the ACCOV exception never
fires at all, the predscale register is not updated, reads are not
suspended, and if the end address is 16-byte aligned, the DSP loops
back to start_address + 1 instead of the regular start_address.
When an ACCOV is triggered, the accelerator stops reading back anything
and updating the current address until the YN2 register is set.
This is kept track of internally by the DSP; this state is not exposed
via any register.
However, we need to emulate this behaviour correctly because some
ucodes rely on it (notably AX GC); failure to emulate it will result
in reading past the end and start address for non-looped voices.
When the current address is xxxxxxxf, after doing the standard ADPCM
decoding and incrementing the current address as usual to get the
next address, the DSP will update the predscale register by reading
2 bytes from memory, and add two to get the next address.
This means xxxxxx10 cannot be a current address, as the DSP goes
from 0f to 12 directly.
A more serious issue with the old code is that if the start address
is 16-byte aligned, some samples will always be skipped, even when
that should not be the case.
An easy way to test whether this behaviour is correct is to check
the current address register and the predscale after each read.
Old code:
...
ACCA=00000002, predscale=<value>
ACCA=00000003, predscale=<value>
...
ACCA=0000000f, predscale=<value>
ACCA=00000010, predscale=<another value>
ACCA=00000013, predscale=<another value>
ACCA=00000014, predscale=<another value>
...
New code (and console):
...
ACCA=00000002, predscale=<value>
ACCA=00000003, predscale=<value>
...
ACCA=0000000f, predscale=<value>
ACCA=00000012, predscale=<another value>
ACCA=00000013, predscale=<another value>
...
Slightly cleaner, allows DSP accelerator behaviour to be
added to both HLE and LLE pretty easily, and makes the accelerator
easier to unit test.
I chose to include all accelerator state as private members, and
to expose state that is accessible via registers with getters/setters.
It's more verbose, yes, but it makes it very clear what is part of
the accelerator state and what isn't (e.g. coefs).
This works quite well for registers, since the accelerator can do
whatever it wants internally. For example, the start/end/current
addresses are masked -- having a getter/setter makes it easier to
enforce the mask.
The logic is entirely the same; only the inputs and outputs are
different, so deduplicating makes sense.
This will make fixing accelerator issues easier.
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.
Based on hardware tests, masking occurs for the accelerator registers.
This fixes Red Steel and Far Cry Vengeance, which rely on this behavior
when reading back the current playback position from the DSP.
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.
Within Cleanup(), it is called at *every* end of the block. This generates bigger code,
but it is the only way to handle blocks with multiple exit nodes.
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.
Prevents resource managers that shouldn't be visible from being exposed
to titles.
This adds a new function to get features for an IOS version, and also
moves the version checks from the modules themselves to VersionInfo.
This hopefully documents some of the differences between IOS better
and should be slightly cleaner than having random version checks.
* IOCTL_WFSI_PREPARE_DEVICE -> IOCTL_WFSI_IMPORT_TITLE_INIT
(equivalent of ES_ImportTitleInit, also the official name)
* IOCTL_WFSI_IMPORT_TITLE -> IOCTL_WFSI_IMPORT_TITLE_CANCEL
(equivalent of ES_ImportTitleCancel)
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.
to get bigger, breaking an optimization. This forces the emitter to use a
32bit pointer instead of an 8bit one, fixing the issue at the expense of
efficiency.
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...
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.
This helpers are not for general CR calculation, they are just for the
common case of the sign extended result of integer instructions if the
rc bit is set.
They must not be used by other instructions like cmp, so there is no
need to be as flexible.
cmpi shall compare two signed 32 bit values. The used difference a-b
may overflow and so the resulting 32 bit value can't represent it.
A correct way would be cr = s64(a) - s64(b) and it should be done in
this way in the JITs, but the Interpreter shall implement the most
readable way.
Also drops the now unused helper function.
Since we don't want users to have to configure the region manually
and always enforce one automatically, we should fall back to a region
that was likely to be chosen by the user instead of always using
PAL whenever the title region cannot be detected.
Dolphin doesn't mess with installed NAND titles like the system menu,
so it is a reliable indicator of what region the user wants.
* Add missing Language setting loading/saving. This was added after the
original OnionConfig PR, which is why support for it was missing.
* Change MovieConfigLoader to reuse ConfigInfos. Less duplication.
* Extract MovieConfigLoader::Save into SaveToDTM. The DTM should use
the current config and not just the movie layer. This makes more
sense than just saving the movie layer, which may not always exist,
and also fixes a crash that would happen when creating a new
recording because the movie layer wouldn't exist in that case.
(Plus, having to get the loader from the layer and call ChangeDTM
on it manually is not very pretty.)
Not really used anywhere yet, but useful for not having to duplicate
config locations and for getting rid of conflicts when I get around
to rebase my Main.Core and Main.DSP porting PR.
Settings that come from the SYSCONF are now included in Dolphin's
config system as part of the base layer. They are handled in a
special way compared to other settings to make sure they are only
loaded from and saved to the SYSCONF (to avoid different, possibly
contradicting sources of truth).
This could cause the first branch of the bootucode procedure, which
takes its parameters from the AX registers, to run during the ROM init
sequence. Since the ROM doesn't set any of the AX registers, the values
aren't meaningful, and can cause bad DMA transfers and crashes.
Writing to 0x60 does actually not "init exception[s]" or anything like
that. Not at all. Rather, it *breaks* a check in Nintendo's SDK, which
makes it fail to realise that the hook hasn't been set up.
This prevents the SDK initialisation routines from writing the rest of
the hook instructions (total: 0x20 bytes), which in turn causes an
anti-piracy check to fail in some Ubisoft games (including Tintin).
Dolphin can be really amazing sometimes.
No clue where people got the 0 value from, or why it's labelled as
"time". As far as I can tell, it is always set to 0xffffffff by
official NAND titles, including the system menu.
It's not specific to WADs. The BS2 emulation boot code will also need
to update the state file.
Move the struct to Boot and add a helper function that will handle
reading + computing the checksum + writing the state file.
This lets VolumeDirectory/DirectoryBlob skip implementing
various volume functions like GetGameID, GetBanner, etc.
It also lets us view extracted discs in the game list.
This ends up breaking the boot process for Wii
DirectoryBlobs due to workarounds being removed from the
boot process, but that will be fixed later by adding
proper DirectoryBlob support for things like TMDs.
We now expect the directories to be laid out in a certain
format (based on the format that WIT uses) instead of requiring
the user to set the DVD root and apploader path settings.
The old approach to detecting DOL/ELF files doesn't fit
with the new way of implementing extracted discs.
The game list is already doing it in a way that's similar
to the approach that this commit uses.
The Config::AddLoadLayer functions call Load on the layer
explicitly, but Load is already called in the constructor,
so they'd cause the loader's Load function to be called twice,
which is potentially expensive considering we have to read an INI
from the host filesystem.
This commit removes the Config::AddLoadLayer functions because
they don't appear to be necessary.
This was mainly included for debugging, but could end up being confusing
for users, as well as polluting the GL program cache with a mix of uber
and specialized shaders if the option was changed.
This add support for SD protocol 2 while staying compatible with protocol 1.01.
Most of this is quite hacky, but it seems to be working well.
The original implementation was quite confusing, so I didn't touch most of the stuff I did not understand.
This makes the EGL interface select OpenGL|ES contexts over "desktop"
OpenGL ones.
Possibly not useful for anyone outside my own debugging, but you never
know
Same as the previous commit, except I'm copying strings
in the other direction because the DolphinWX variants
of these strings could use some improvement.
The section is 0x461 bytes long, not 0x460. The config data is also now
initialised to zero to avoid garbage being written to the SYSCONF.
Because our handling has been wrong forever, we discard older BT.DINF
section backups as using them would result in the section being the
wrong size / incomplete again.
It turns out that the last byte of array entries isn't unused (as we
thought); instead, it looks like it's actually part of the main data,
and the length stored next to the name is in fact the length minus one.
Getting it wrong and always storing a null byte in there won't affect
most entries (since the last byte is zeroed most of the time), except:
- IPL.NIK: the length is stored in the last byte, and it must be kept.
- BT.DINF: u8 unknown[0x45] should be another Bluetooth device entry.
- Possibly other unknown affected entries.
I don't know who thought it would be a good idea to put the Wiimote
connect code as part of the Host interface, and have that called
from both the UI code and the core. And then hack around it by having
"force connect" events whenever Host_ConnectWiimote is called
from the core...
BluetoothEmu had its own bdaddr_t type which is a old style C struct
and typedef, which makes comparisons and copies a bit ugly.
On the other hand, BTReal had its own btaddr_t type using std::array.
To make things very slightly nicer, this commit changes the Bluetooth
code to use a single type (std::array<u8, 6>) for all BT addresses.
Imports/exports don't always use the title key. Exporting a title and
importing it back uses the PRNG key (aka backup key handle or key #5),
not the title key (at all).
To make things even more fun, some versions of IOS have a bug that
causes it to use a zeroed key instead of the PRNG key. When Nintendo
decided to fix it, they added checks to keep using the zeroed key only
in affected titles to avoid making existing exports useless.
(Thanks to tueidj for drawing my attention to this.
I missed this edge case during the initial implementation.)
This commit implements these checks so we are using the correct key
in all of these cases.
We now also use IOSC for decryption/encryption since built-in key
handles are used. And we now reject any invalid common key index,
just like ES.
Core::PauseAndLock requires all calls to it to be balanced, like this:
const bool was_unpaused = Core::PauseAndLock(true);
// do stuff on the CPU thread
Core::PauseAndLock(false, was_unpaused);
Aside from being a bit cumbersome, it turns out all callers really
don't need to know about was_unpaused at all. They just need to do
something on the CPU thread safely, including locking/unlocking.
So this commit replaces Core::PauseAndLock with a function that
makes both the purpose and the scope of what is being run on the
CPU thread visually clear. This makes it harder to accidentally run
something on the wrong thread, or forget the second call to
PauseAndLock to unpause, or forget that it needs to be passed
was_unpaused at the end.
We also don't need comments to indicate code X is being run on the
CPU thread anymore, as the function name makes it obvious.
The region mismatch check that we used can give false positives.
Skipping the check won't lead to any harm - games will ignore
save files that have a non-matching fourth game ID character.
Showing the Wii remote connection status leads to inconsistent UX,
because we don't do anything like that for GameCube controllers
or with Bluetooth passthrough.
It's also questionable how useful it is given that:
* it doesn't print the number of connected remotes, just that one
remote is connected, connecting or not connected, so the only info
it provides is actually wrong when using multiple remotes;
* this user-facing feature is actually broken in master and no one has
complained AFAIK, which means people don't really rely on it;
* the status bar isn't visible most of the time unless the user is
using render to main or deliberately keeping the main window's
status bar visible by moving the render window and they're not too
far away from their screen;
* emulated Wii remotes now reconnect on input, which means that there
is less of a need to actually know at all times whether a remote
is connected, since pressing any button will reconnect it and provide
immediate, visible feedback via OSD messages and the Wii remote
pointer appearing.
Rather than returning 0 / not creating an expected SI interrupt. You can
test this by running VBA-M in a debugger and stopping it while it's
connected to Dolphin: on current master, Dolphin will freeze-up until it
gets a response. With this PR, Dolphin will gracefully disconnect the device, and reconnect if it starts responding again.
Tracking a buffer's size manually and storing it under a name that
does not make it obvious it is related to the buffer is really... meh.
Also gets rid of the need to manually manage its capacity and
new/delete an array.
This commit merges the import and export contexts into a single context
because this is what IOS does, which means we can only reproduce its
behaviour correctly if we use a single context for both operations.
The other reason is that having two separate and very similar structs
is not really a good idea.
While working on this commit, I was notified that our handling of
ImportTmd/ExportTitleInit is not correct. In particular, we always use
the title key for both importing and exporting, which is wrong. To make
this easier to fix in a follow-up PR, the context now also has a title
key field, just like ES. This also lets us avoid computing it every
single time in ImportContentDone.
Allows them to be reused easily. Still a bit too much duplicated code
in my opinion (OpenContent/SeekContent/ReadContent should just call
FS code), but this is a start.
I think I do not need to explain why hardcoding space usage for two
random directories when we can calculate it and when IOS doesn't
actually do that is wrong.
There are some cases where overriding the opening.bnr names
isn't desirable, such as when someone has several modded
versions of a game that differ in names but not game IDs.
Changes:
- `ShowDevelopmentWarning` is now under the '[Interface]' group in
Dolphin.ini, with other interface-related settings. So, whoever uses
DolphinQt will have to edit that manually again. Sorry!
- Game search paths and the last file are now shared properly with
DolphinWX
- Qt-only preferences like "Preferred View: list/table" are now
stored using the platform's native settings storage, rather than in
UI.ini
struct GekkoOPTemplate was implemented differently in different
compilation units, which breaks the ODR and could end up causing issues
as symbols exported from one compilation unit could end up being used by
another even if they have different implementations.
This puts them in an anonymous namespace, restricting any generated
symbols to the single compilation unit.
Some code was calling more than one of these functions in a row
(in particular, FileUtil.cpp itself did it a lot...), which is
a waste since it's possible to call stat a single time and then
read all three values from the stat struct. This commit adds a
File::FileInfo class that calls stat once on construction and
then lets Exists/IsDirectory/GetSize be executed very quickly.
The performance improvement mostly matters for functions that
can be handling a lot of files, such as File::ScanDirectoryTree.
I've also done some cleanup in code that uses these functions.
For instance, some code had checks like !Exists() || !IsDirectory(),
which is functionally equivalent to !IsDirectory(), and some
code was using File::GetSize even though there was an IOFile
object that the code could call GetSize on.
While setting up a proper NAND for Wii emulation has become much easier
now that disc and online system updates work, they still require users
to have a recent disc game, certificates extracted from IOS or a NAND
dump for online updates to work and to really get all system titles.
This commit adds the ability to do an online update right from
Dolphin itself, which solves that usability issue.
Allows reusing the WAD import logic more easily, whereas UICommon
code can only be used from UICommon and UI.
And managing what's on the NAND is the Core's responsability, not UI.
* IOS: WiiRoot shutdown was moved to HW.
* Movie: Don't call UpdateWantDeterminism() if we're not running yet,
because this will automatically be done during the boot process.
Not doing this will result in two NANDs being created.
This is larger than I thought I would be, but unfortunately it's quite
hard to split fixes like this when the handling is wrong in tons of
different places.
The content table is limited in size. It can only hold 16 entries.
Three consequences:
* Since the table cannot grow indefinitely, instead of using a std::map
we use a std::array as we should.
* Remove a hack where the CFD was cleared back to 0 on IPC close (wtf?)
* The CFD now doesn't keep increasing to infinity. It's unknown if this
would fix anything at all, but some issues in the past were caused
by CFDs being excessively large.
Other minor changes:
* Simplify save state logic.
* Keep track of the UID like ES does. Not sure how useful this is, but
we can do this very easily so why not.
* Remove the guesswork and use the actual error codes.
* Add more error checking to make Dolphin less likely to crash.
Something that should be done in the future: deduplicate the filesystem
logic. Something that takes one line in the actual ES code takes
10+ lines in our implementation... while duplicating the FS logic...
This will likely harder to fix though, so I'm leaving that
for another time.
Before these changes each value of latency were actually 5ms, with a
minimum latency of ~10 ms. If it was set to 4 ms on the UI, the actual
latency was 10 + 5 * 4 = 30 ms.
Now 30 ms on the UI means 30 ms on the backend.
This seems like an oversight in the old code, because
what's the point of loading user files if the titles
in them are going to be ignored for nearly all games?
This commit fixes the issue by making the first LoadMap
variant not overwrite entries and making the constructor
do everything in the opposite order. An alternative solution
would be to make the second LoadMap variant overwrite entries.
The sanity check runs *before* finalising the import, so at that time
the whole title directory is still in /import and not in /title.
This means we should check for contents there, not in /title. Whoops.
The efficient function (that is nearly the same as
https://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#DetermineIfPowerOf2)
replaces one loop based instance (which also reused the xx variable
afterwards, whereas it should have used htabmask instead) and one
instance using the population count a.k.a. Hamming weigth.
This adds a check to ImportTitleDone to make sure all required contents
that are listed in the TMD have been imported before allowing to finish
the import. Not checking for this could allow titles to be left in an
inconsistent state.
There seems to be a race condition between a peripheral device
connecting to the bluetooth controller and it being ready to use.
It's very short and it depends upon the controller, some appear to
connect synchronously and block until the device is ready, others
report the device upon discovery but do not allow communication straight
away. I don't know which is the correct behaviour, or whether it depends
on the peripheral, controller or both. Anyway, Dolphin waits for a
remote to appear and immediately attempts to open the communication
channels, this can fail because the device isn't ready yet, delay, try
again, and it works.
There are other (unlikely) chances the device is busy at random
moments after this initial race condition so it loops around try to
reconnect.
This was inspired by an earlier patch, see here:
https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/5997#note-20
I can confirm that it works perfectly for me on a bluetooth
controller where otherwise it's impossible to connect (Dell 380
Bluetooth 4.0).
So, a FifoRecorder instance is instantiated as a file-local variable and
used as a singleton (ugh). Most users likely don't regularly use the
FIFO player/FIFO recorder, so this is kind of a substantial waste of
memory.
FifoRecorder's internal RAM and ExRAM vectors are 33554432 and 67108864
bytes respectively, which is around 100.66MB in total.
Just on the game list view on a clean build with nothing loaded, this
knocks debug build memory usage down from ~232.4MB to ~137.5MB, and
release build memory usage down from ~101MB to ~5.7MB.
The GameCube IPL sounds the same when using the free ROM as it does when
using the official ROM (and in Audacity, I couldn't visually distinguish
between the waveforms). It has a reference to an unimplemented function
at 0x8644 which seems to only be used in an inlined version of the CARD
ucode.
This rewrites the SysConf code for several reasons:
* Modernising the SysConf class. The naming was entirely cleaned up.
constexpr for constants.
* Exposing less stuff in the header.
* Probably less efficient parsing and writing logic, but much simpler
to understand and use in my opinion. No more hardcoded offsets.
No more duplicated code for the initial SYSCONF generation.
* More flexibility. It is now possible to add and remove entries,
since we rebuild the file. This allows us to stop spamming
"section not found" panic alerts; we can now use and insert
default entries.
On a real Wii, the title list is not in any particular order. However,
because of how the flash filesystem works, titles such as 1-2 are
*never* in the first position. We must keep this behaviour, or some
versions of the System Menu may break.
Will be used from several functions to verify the signatures for
different containers (TMDs, tickets, device signed blobs).
An option was added to disable signature checks, because that could be
useful for people trying to import unsigned stuff.
Instead of expecting callers to know how the size of directory file infos
relates to which files are in which directories, filesystems now offer a
GetRoot() method, and file infos offer a way to get their children. As
a bonus, m_FileInfoVector no longer has to be created and kept around
in RAM. Only the file info objects that actually are used are created.
Some callers already have the file info, making the relatively slow
FindFileInfo calls unnecessary. Callers that didn't have the file info
will now need to call FindFileInfo on their own.
Some callers (i.e. ISOProperties) don't want the full path, so giving them
it is unnecessary. Those that do want it can use GetPathFromFSTOffset.
Not storing full paths everywhere also saves a small bit of RAM and is
necessary for a later commit. The code isn't especially pretty right now
(callers need to use FST offsets...) but it'll become better later.
Too much boilerplate that is duplicated if we use curl directly.
Let's add a simple wrapper class that hides the implementation details
and just allows to simply make HTTP requests and get responses.
Makes it slightly less likely to forget a check and end up doing an
out-of-bounds access. Also makes it obvious that we *are* indeed
checking whether the handle is valid, instead of hiding it in
HasOwnership (which won't handle the root key handle case properly).
I don't see why we need to call ShutdownWiiRoot on InitializeWiiRoot.
Also, atexit? Really? Not only is this unnecessary, it will also cause
ShutdownWiiRoot to be called twice in rapid succession for no reason.
The config must only be restored after the HW has shut down, not while
it is still running, because the HW can still query the config, which
can lead to inconsistent states.
This fixes WiiRoot not being able to copy back saves on shutdown.
This ioctlv is used to get an IOSC decrypt handle for a title.
It is known to be used internally by the WFS modules, but it can also
be used from the PPC under some conditions.
Brings us down to 2 essentially unimplementable ioctlvs (syscalls which
seem to return kernel thread priorities...), and 1 known but
unimplemented ioctlv (VerifySign).
In the future, NAND filesystem access will be limited to one IOS
instance, for safety reasons and to make it possible to consider
supporting NAND images. This means that any code accessing the NAND
filesystem must go through the FS device, both for code that is
external to IOS and internal.
Because we don't want to introduce any singleton, this requires
internal IOS code that needs NAND access to be part of an IOS device
class, so they can access the FS device easily.
Making some of the internal ES implementation functions member
functions also prevents them from being (mis)used outside of IOS,
since they cannot be called everywhere anymore.
They have been broken since 2 years and no one has noticed,
which shows that no one really cares.
And it's arguable whether showing the CPU info is really useful.
I don't see any reason to disable loading the IPL if bHLE_BS2 is
disabled. bHLE_BS2 should only cause us not to run the IPL, but not
skip loading it in the first place. More importantly, without always
loading it, this causes issues when trying to launch only the GC IPL
while having bHLE_BS2 = false.
They're essentially the same. To achieve this, this commit unifies
DolReader and ElfReader into a common interface for boot executable
readers, so the only remaining difference between ELF and DOL is
how which volume is inserted.
* Move out boot parameters to a separate struct, which is not part
of SConfig/ConfigManager because there is no reason for it to
be there.
* Move out file name parsing and constructing the appropriate params
from paths to a separate function that does that, and only that.
* For every different boot type we support, add a proper struct with
only the required parameters, with descriptive names and use
std::variant to only store what we need.
* Clean up the bHLE_BS2 stuff which made no sense sometimes. Now
instead of using bHLE_BS2 for two different things, both for storing
the user config setting and as a runtime boot parameter,
we simply replace the Disc boot params with BootParameters::IPL.
* Const correctness so it's clear what can or cannot update the config.
* Drop unused parameters and unneeded checks.
* Make a few checks a lot more concise. (Looking at you, extension
checks for disc images.)
* Remove a mildly terrible workaround where we needed to pass an empty
string in order to boot the GC IPL without any game inserted.
(Not required anymore thanks to std::variant and std::optional.)
The motivation for this are multiple: cleaning up and being able to add
support for booting an installed NAND title. Without this change, it'd
be pretty much impossible to implement that.
Also, using std::visit with std::variant makes the compiler do
additional type checks: now we're guaranteed that the boot code will
handle all boot types and no invalid boot type will be possible.
I didn't know better back then, but the boot type is only supposed to
be used for the actual boot params. It shouldn't be used or changed
after booting.
- coef: Explicitly set 23 different values that are used by GBA UCode,
and tweaked overall parameters to more closely match those 23 values.
- irom: Moved a few functions to their proper places, updated BootUCode
to configure DMA transfers using AX registers as well as IX registers
(the GBA UCode uses this to do two sequential transfers in one call),
and added partial functions used by GBA UCode.
All functions were reverse-engineered solely based off of observed
effects on the virtual machine: register states before-and-after, dmem
interactions, and DMA transfers. The specific coefficients were observed
being read from dmem, and must be exactly those values to function
properly. I have no knowledge of how the official ROM implements these
functions, or how it is implemented overall.
Tested with The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures, Final Fantasy
Crystal Chronicles, and Billy Hatcher and the Giant Egg (to download
ChuChu Rocket!).
`P_REG1C` had the same value as `P_ACCL`, so was causing spurious errors
when used with ACCM registers. Gcdsptool (which calls this `P_ACCLM`)
gives it the value `P_REG | 0x1c10` instead, and handles errors in the
same block as other REG## enums.
This makes the interface slightly cleaner and a bit more consistent
with the other getters. Still not fully the same, since the others
don't really handle failures with std::optional; but at least the
value is returned by value now, as opposed to having the function
take a pointer to a u64.
This gets rid of some assumptions that non-DiscIO code was making about
volume types. It's better to encapsulate as many of the volume type
differences as possible in DiscIO.
Made possible by PR #2353.
This is more reliable, as this guarantees subsystems will be
shut down in the same order they were initialised (if they were
initialised). It also allows us to stop keeping track of what needs to
be shut down manually and just return in case of errors.
This should prevent the emulator from getting totally stuck when
the boot process does fail.
This makes it hard to support different boot params for different boot
types. We should not be making the assumption that Dolphin will
always be booting directly from a file (and in particular, only
using a string).
It's incompatible with future changes that will allow Dolphin to boot
a NAND title properly from well, the NAND, as opposed to booting from
WADs. (And no, treating the title TMD as a "bootable" path doesn't
count. Especially when that approach won't work with NAND images
or IOS LLE.)
And it's confusing to expose this functionality from the UI. It's
pretty bad for UX to change the play button's behaviour depending on
whether the user has launched something before, configured a default
file to boot, added a directory to their game paths.
This commit moves the write function to where it should be (IOS),
especially when ES::ImportTicket() is the only place to use it.
Prevents misusing the ticket import function, and removes one unsafe
direct write to the NAND that does not go through IOS.
This also fixes the destination path: the session root is the one which
should be used for determining the ticket path, not the configured one.