* Currently there is no DEBUGFAST configuration. Defining DEBUGFAST as a preprocessor definition in Base.props (or a global header) enables it for now, pending a better method. This was done to make managing the build harder to screw up. However it may not even be an issue anymore with the new .props usage.
* D3DX11SaveTextureToFile usage is dropped and not replaced.
* If you have $(DXSDK_DIR) in your global property sheets (Microsoft.Cpp.$(PlatformName).user), you need to remove it. The build will error out with a message if it's configured incorrectly.
* If you are on Windows 8 or above, you no longer need the June 2010 DirectX SDK installed to build dolphin. If you are in this situation, it is still required if you want your built binaries to be able to use XAudio2 and XInput on previous Windows versions.
* GLew updated to 1.10.0
* compiler switches added: /volatile:iso, /d2Zi+
* LTCG available via msbuild property: DolphinRelease
* SDL updated to 2.0.0
* All Externals (excl. OpenAL and SDL) are built from source.
* Now uses STL version of std::{mutex,condition_variable,thread}
* Now uses Build as root directory for *all* intermediate files
* Binary directory is populated as post-build msbuild action
* .gitignore is simplified
* UnitTests project is no longer compiled
SDL2.0 removed SDL_HAPTIC_SQUARE because of ABI issues (see comment #7 on issue
6491 by Ryan C. Gordon from the SDL project). It will be reintroduced again in
2.1, so keep the code and #ifdef it away.
This reverts commit cce809ac90.
The code was actually correct: "expr" is never allocated when an error is
returned. This means when the expression parser fails, deleting "expr" means
deleting an uninitialized pointer.
Without clearing out the "accumulator" for the backtick parsing,
our control name was full of junk (the previous device name) causing
us to not correctly find the control.
Ensure that always we clear the "accumulator" string during backtick
parsing.
Otherwise, valid control names like "Cursor X+" would be incorrectly
tokenized as "`Cursor` `X` +", causing the parser to first abort trying to
find a control named `Cursor` rather than aborting with invalid syntax on
the bad binop.
We could also do this by resolving devices lazily, but since simple
control name bindings are going to be 90% of usecases, just look for these
first.
Yeah, yeah, it's possible that some guy would try to build DInput
without XInput, but they're crazy, and I doubt it would have worked
since the header file mess was so fragile anyway. Always exclude
DInput devices when we don't have XInput.
If an expression can't be parsed normally, we then look to see if it's a
simple device name. This keeps backwards compatibility with simple input
ocnfigurations, where people just used the Detect button.