This allows avoiding two copies of the executable data being created in
the following scenario (using pseudocode):
some_function()
{
std::vector<u8> data = ...;
DolReader reader{data};
...
}
In this scenario, if we only use the data for passing it to DolReader,
then we have to perform a copy, as the constructor takes the std::vector
as a constant reference -- you cannot move from a constant reference,
and so we copy data into the DolReader, and perform another copy in the
constructor itself when assigning the data to the m_bytes member
variable. However, we can do better.
Now, the following is allowable as well:
some_function()
{
std::vector<u8> data = ...;
DolReader reader{std::move(data)};
...
}
and now we perform no copy at any point in the reader's construction, as
we just std::move the data all the way through to m_bytes.
In the case where we *do* want to keep the executable data around after
constructing the reader, then we can just pass the vector without
std::move-ing it, and we only perform a copy once (as we'll std::move
said copy into m_bytes). Therefore, we get a more flexible interface
resource-wise out of it.
Not only it colors the entire row instead of just the address, but if the pc is the selected row, the pc color will overwrite the selection, this is done via a stylesheet.
This commit makes the colors hardcoded except when there is no symbols loaded, in which case, it uses the theme colors, except for the PC which is hardcoded to black on green. This makes a compromise between making use of the corespoinding theme color and the text being nicely readable on all themes.
This aligns the values to the right since It looks odd to be aligned to the left with any format other than hexadecimal. It also sets the font tot he debugger font and disallow selection as a previous commit made the selection pointless since it now relies on the current item.
It seemed impossible to SELECT an item, however, when right clicking, the CURRENT item is set to the appropriate cell, this commit makes the view use thta cell instead of the first selected one.
This makes it possible to use enums as the config type.
Default values are now clearer and there's no need for casts
when calling Config::Get/Set anymore.
In order to add support for enums, the common code was updated to
handle enums by using the underlying type when loading/saving settings.
A copy constructor is also provided for conversions from
`ConfigInfo<Enum>` to `ConfigInfo<underlying_type<Enum>>`
so that enum settings can still easily work with code that doesn't care
about the actual enum values (like Graphics{Choice,Radio} in DolphinQt2
which only treat the setting as an integer).
Dolphin doesn't use any of the WC24 files, so this can be done when
actually starting emulation in WiiRoot. The benefit of moving the
copy is that we don't need to handle temporary NANDs in a special way.
{Initialize,Shutdown}WiiRoot should only be responsible for setting the
SESSION_WII_ROOT or managing the temporary NAND directory.
Move all the content manipulation out of these functions to ensure
separation of concerns and call them after/before WiiRoot init/shutdown
to make sure they operate on the correct root.
If we don't flush the values, they persist in the register cache,
potentially resulting in the values being out of sync with PPCSTATE.
This was causing random crashes in games, mainly booting, when certain
JIT instructions were disabled, or forced to fall back to interpreter.
This excludes the second argument from template deduction.
Otherwise, it is required to manually cast the second argument to
the ConfigInfo type (because implicit conversions won't work).
e.g. to set the value for a ConfigInfo<std::string> from a string
literal, you'd need a ugly `std::string("yourstring")`.
This can be considered a hack, but it essentially neuter the bias applied on boot for both console on the RTC. This avoids having the time on boot be changes significantly while the user would want a specific RTC and it also avoids possible underflow of the RTC if it is near the epoch.
GetHandle() should really not even be part of IOFile's interface, but
since it is (for the time being), we can cull unnecessary usages of it.
In this case, the WriteBytes() function does what we need without using
the underlying handle directly.
This allows getting rid of casts. We can also leverage std::min to allow
making relevant variables const. Also make the "empty" table const to
allow it to be read-only.
Converts them from 0 == success, 1 == failure to using the built-in
standard bool. Also while we're at it, const qualify write_sector's
"sector" parameter, since nothing in the function modifies the data
being pointed to.
Avoids needing to iterate and append the characters in one case. This also
alters the function to not need to construct a temporary std::string
(QString's toUtf8() is sufficient, as QByteArray exposes iterators).
toStdString() is equivalent to retrieving the QString's underlying
QByteArray via calling QString's .toUtf8 member function and then
calling .toStdString() on the result of it (discarding the QByteArray
afterwords), so this just trims off an unnecessary step in the process.
This is also somewhat more indicative of the conversions going on:
toStdString() converts the underlying character sequence of a
QString to UTF-8, not strict ASCII, so we're really using a superset of
ASCII.
Also move it to MathUtils where it belongs with the rest of the
power-of-two functions. This gets rid of pollution of the current scope
of any translation unit with b<value> macros that aren't intended to be
used directly.
Change SettingsHandler to take a buffer instead of assuming that the
setting file to read is always on the host filesystem for more
flexibility and make it possible to use the new filesystem interface.
Given bit conversions between types are quite common in emulation
(particularly when it comes to floating-point among other things) it
makes sense to provide a utility function that keeps all the boilerplate
contained; especially considering it makes it harder to accidentally
misuse std::memcpy (such as accidentally transposing arguments, etc).
Another benefit of this function is that it doesn't require separating
declarations from assignments, allowing variables to be declared const.
This makes the scenario of of uninitialized variables being used less
likely to occur.
Keeps them all next to each other and deduplicates a few constants,
notably the PPC UIDs. Apparently I forgot that I already added them
for SetupStreamKey.
As of VS 15.7, these seem to have been removed. Given we shouldn't have
been using these for some time, just replace them with the standard
library equivalent.
This fixes building on Windows with VS 15.7
It was off by about 8 years because it was actually the same as the GC epoch, however, the reason it worked all this time was because the default RTC counter bias of the Wii was not 0, but a value that is about 8 years in seconds. This broke custom RTC as a custom RTC of the gc epoch was underflowing b ecause the wii epoch was thought to be much later.