MSVC's implementation of numeric_limits currently generates incorrect
signaling NaNs. The resulting values are actually quiet NaNs instead.
This commit is based off of a solution by shuffle2. The only
difference is a template specialization for floats is also added
to cover all bases
This is an oversight from pr https://github.com/dolphin-emu/dolphin/pull/3266 . Thanks to degasus for pointing this out.
It's possible that MAX_TEXTURE_BINARY_SIZE can be optimised, but i wanted to play it safe considering the 5.0 stable release.
Reading uninitalized memory is non-deterministic. We used to only
clear the memory when using EmulatedBS2_GC or FifoPlayer, but we
now do it during Memory::Init instead so it always gets done.
Drivers that don't support GL_ARB_shading_language_420pack require that
the storage qualifier be specified even when inside an interface block.
AMD's driver throws a compile error when "centroid in/out" is used within
an interface block.
Our previous behavior was to include the storage qualifier regardless, but
this wasn't working on AMD, therefore we should check for the presence of
the extension and include based on this, instead.
I'm not entirely sure what is happening, but this optimisation is causing an issue in Sonic Riders: Zero Gravity. Apparently the issue would also be fixed by PR#3747, but this PR should also fix similar issues.
Games that use partial updates might get slower with this, so some performance regression testing would be nice. Games like New Super Mario Bros, RS2, Zelda TP and Silent Hill. Testing with high graphics settings makes sense, since this would mostly end up in more work for the GPU.
Previously the default queryed the controller 4500 times a second,
Wasn't really a problem for most games as they set it to a sane
value. But fifoplayer didn't, and so in my profile dolphin spends
12% of the cpu time reading the controllers.
This new default value (I just took what the gamecube bios set)
drops that to 1.2% of cpu time and increase the framerate of the
silent hill fifo by 10-12%
The D3D backend was always forcing Anisotropic filtering when that is enabled regardless of how the game chose to configure the texture filtering registers; this causes the same issues as "Force Filtering" without Anisotropy, such as causing game UI elements to no longer line up adjacent correctly. Historically, OpenGL's Anisotropy support has always worked "better" than D3D's due to seeming to not have this problem; unfortunately, OpenGL's Anisotropy specification only gives GL_LINEAR based filtering modes defined behavior, with only the mipmap setting being required to be considered. Some OpenGL implementations were implicitly disabling Anisotropy when the min/mag filters were set to GL_NEAREST, but this behavior is not required by the spec so cannot be relied on.
Events scheduled more than 4.12 seconds in the future (2.96 seconds for
Wii games) would overflow the sign bit and get scheduled in the past
instead, causing them to fire instantly.
Previously GlobalTimer was only updated at the end of each slice
when CoreTiming::Advance() was called, so it could be upto 20,000
cycles off.
This was causing huge problems with games which made heavy use of
the time base register, such as OoT (virtual console) and Pokemon
puzzle.
I've also made it so event scheduling will be accurate to the jit
block level, instead of accurate to the slice.
instead, leave all the management with the NANDContentLoader.
for file data (directly on the NAND), this opens the file on-demand and
returns the requested chunk when asked for it.
for on-the-fly decrypted WAD data, we just keep the decoded buffer in
memory, like we've done before - except that we don't give away any objects
we don't want to.
this fixes the crashes, but leaves the "else" part of ES_READCONTENT
temporarily broken until the next commit.
WAD access that are performed on the encrypted WAD will most likely fail
with this commit.
only fixes half the issues, since we still cache a pointer from
SContentAccess.m_pContent to SNANDContent.m_data (which is free'd along
with the rest of the NAND data cached inside the CNANDContentManager when
ClearCache is called)
- remove an outdated comment about the efb to ram and scaled efb restriction
- when upscaling efb copies, mark the new texture as efb copy
- dx12 fixes for the src box, especially the number of layers for 3D
This isn't necessary, as the member functions are deleted.
If someone tries to perform a copy, the compiler will now
indicate that the member functions/constructors are deleted,
rather than inaccessible.
OS X's shader compiler has a bug with interface blocks where interface block members don't properly inherit the layout qualifier from the interface
block.
Work around this limitation by explicitly stating the layout qualifier on both the interface block and every single member inside of that block.
miniupnp commit c4991916e5c12a7754e935e71a5313e75af6aeb9 introduced a
4th statusCode parameter to miniwget function. This parameter is set
to a value returned by the UPnP device. We have to check if it's set
to 200 to make sure the result is a success. Also, we now have to check
if descXML is set in the error case and free it.
Seems like NVidia just ignores the forward compatible flag.
Additionally, they neither enable any extension which was designed later...
So either compatible profile, or a huge list of core profiles....
As confirmed by a hardware test if we are using the texgen type of COLOR_STRGBC0/STRGBC1 then it sets the texture coordinates to those values
regardless of what the input form or source row is.
Thanks to Ornox for testing again
Removes a couple asserts in the vertex shader gen when dealing with the input form.
Typically input form ABC1 is used, so it'll pull in the first three elements and always set the fourth to 1.0
The other input form available is AB11, which sets the last two components to 1.0 (Theoretically).
No titles actually use this input form that we know of except for Project M, but it can have some fairly drastic visual differences.
Confirmed correct by hardware test