This implements ES_VerifySign which is notably used by the system menu
when importing saves.
Now *all* ES commands that are actually used by titles are implemented.
- Move all of the ec functions into the Common::ec namespace.
- Give the public functions better names and some usage information.
- Move all of the "elt" related functions into an "elt" class including
all of the arithmetic operations, so that the logic becomes clearer
and feels less like assembly.
This also makes it much more obvious what the parameters are, instead
of only using unsigned char* (which doesn't tell anything about what
the pointer is used for or the size).
- Similarly, add a new "Point" class and move point functions there.
Overload the arithmetic operators to make calculations easier to read
The loops relied on unsigned integer overflow, which is not immediately
obvious. Replace them with less clever variants that are clearer.
Also implement bn_compare using std::memcmp.
This function in both JITs is only ever called by passing the JIT's code
buffer into it. Given this is already accessible, since the functions
are part of the respective JIT class, we can just remove this parameter.
This also cleans up accesses with the new code buffer, as we don't need
to do janky looking dereference-then-index expressions.
This class effectively acted as a "discount vector", that would simply
allocate memory and then delete it in the destructor when it goes out of
scope.
We can just use a std::vector directly to reduce this boilerplate.
ImportTitleDone only checks if all required contents have been imported
for system titles.
This fixes the system menu not being able to recreate title directories
to copy a save back to the NAND by using title import functionality.
Given this is a bitmask, we should be using an unsigned type to store it
(especially given it's outside the range an int can represent properly
without being considered negative).
No behavior change is caused by this, it just silences a sign conversion
warning.
Because it wasn't parented properly, it would show briefly the widget in its own window when creating an ARCodeWidget or a GeckoCodeWidget which would occur when accessing the game properties page or when the state changes to pause/running.
PowerPC.h at this point is pretty much a general glob of stuff, and it's
unfortunate, since it means pulling in a lot of unrelated header
dependencies and a bunch of other things that don't need to be seen by
things that just want to read memory.
Breaking this out into its own header keeps all the MMU-related stuff
together and also limits the amount of header dependencies being
included (the primary motivation for this being the former reason).
This fixes 2 crashes with the pause function. One is when spamming the pause hotkey and the other is to press pause and step hotkeys at the same time. It does disable the screensaver getting disabled when the emulator is running, but paused, though, a better solution would have to be done without introducing these crashes.
Github didn't detect conflicts here, however, since the float handling
functions were moved into the Common namespace, this would cause a build
failure.
Ideally none of these macros would exist (long-term goal), however in
the meantime at least make sure expressions always evaluate correctly
(thankfully no current usages rely on this).
Given we're operating with flags and bit representations, lets avoid
signed values here. It lessens the amount of sign conversion warnings
and lessens the amount of things to think about screwing you over when
making changes to the interpreter among other things.
These can be expressed in a slightly cleaner manner without so many
casts. While we're at it, also get rid of unnecessary indexing (we
already have the result nearby).
Extracts the self-contained code into its own function to clean up the
flow of Jit() a little more.
This also introduces a helper function to HLE.h that will be used to
reduce the boilerplate here and in the interpreter and Jit64 in the
following commits.
This function performs all of the preliminary checks required prior to
attempting to hook/replace a function at a given address. The function then
calls a provided object that satisfies the FunctionObject concept in the
C++ standard library. This can be a lambda, a regular function pointer,
an object with an overloaded function call operator, etc. The only
requirement is that the function return a bool, indicating whether or
not the function was replaced, and that it can take parameters in the
form: fn(u32 function, HLE::HookType type)
Gets rid of a second pair of ifdefs in the constructor. This also makes
sure the fd on Unix/BSD platforms is uniformly initialized. Previously
fd would be in an inconsistent state on FreeBSD or OpenBSD due to the
BSD OS checks not being present in the #elif within the constructor.
Previously, the entirety of CEXIETHERNET was exposed publically, which
wasn't necessary. We simply make the thread function part of the
internal interface, which gives it access to internal data members,
while keeping everything else outside of it.
Given these HLE classes inherit from a common base with a virtual
destructor, override is more appropriate here, as virtual propagates to
these destructors anyway.
This is also safer. If the base class' destructor is ever made
non-virtual, then these classes will cause a compilation error if they
aren't taken into account, as they'd be overriding a non-virtual
function (the destructor).
This is to avoid several issue with using 2 actions and switching between them. This commit will instead have one action get his property changed on pause and play.
Paired single (ps) instructions can call asm_routines that try to update
PowerPC::ppcState.pc. At the time the asm_routine is built, emulation has
not started and the PC is invalid (0). If the ps instruction causes an
exception (e.g. DSI), SRR0 gets clobbered with the invalid PC.
This change makes the relevant ps instructions store PC before calling out
to asm_routines, and prevents the asm_routine from trying to store PC
itself.
Moves the codebuffer access variables closer to their first use, and
gets rid of multiple indexing expressions. We already know which op
we're accessing in particular, so just make a reference to it and access
it instead of duplicating the expression all over the place.
A call like ReplaceAddress(address, 0) is pretty ambiguous; so is
ReplaceAddress(address, false), so use an enum class that tells people
straight-up what the replacer is.
This also gets rid of the really weird naming, where if 'blr' is true,
we'd be replacing the address with a NOP, rather than an actual BLR
instruction, so we invert that so it actually makes sense. There's no
actual bug fixed here though, considering the OnInsert functions
specified the correct values; it's literally just weird naming.
Without this macro, if any signals or slots were attempted to be used,
they wouldn't work; neither would various other features of the Qt
meta-object system. This can also lead to weird behavior in other
circumstances. Qt's documentation specifically states:
"Therefore, we strongly recommend that all subclasses of QObject use the
Q_OBJECT macro regardless of whether or not they actually use signals,
slots, and properties."
on its page for "The Meta-Object System", which can be seen here:
https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/metaobjects.html
Let's opt for "always do the right thing", and keep the code extensible
for the future and not have random things blow up on us.