You may want to read the PR #2047 comments before reading this.
Dolphin attempts to support an unencrypted type of Wii discs
that apparently is identified by a 4-byte integer at 0x60
being non-zero. I don't know what discs (if any) would be
using that format, so I haven't been able to test Dolphin's
support for it, but it has probably been broken for a while.
The old implementation is very short but also strange.
In CreateVolumeFromFilename, we read a 4-byte integer from
0x60, and if it's non-zero, we create a CVolumeGC object
instead of a CVolumeWiiCrypted object. This might seem like
it makes no sense, but it presumably worked in the past
because IsVolumeWiiDisc used to check the volume type by
reading the magic word for Wii straight from the disc,
meaning that CVolumeGC objects representing unencrypted Wii
discs would be treated as Wii discs by pretty much all of
Dolphin's code except for the volume implementation code.
(It wasn't possible to simply use CVolumeWiiCrypted, because
that class only handled encrypted discs, like the name says.)
However, that stopped working as intended because of ace0607.
And furthermore, bb93336 made it even more broken by making
parts of Dolphin expect that data read from Wii discs needed
to be decrypted (rather than the volume implementation
implicitly deciding whether to decrypt when Read was called).
Disclaimer: Like I said before, I haven't been able to test
any of this because I don't have any discs that use this
unencrypted Wii disc format, so this is all theoretical.
Later, PR #2047 tried to remove Dolphin's support for
the unencrypted Wii disc format because seemingly no
discs used it, but the PR got closed without being merged.
At the end of that PR, I said that I would make a new PR
with a better implementation for the format after PR #2353
was merged. Now that PR #2353 is merged (two years later...)
and PR #5521 is merged, the new implementation was easy to
make, and here it is!
Untested.
Normal users don't care about it. In fact, people care so
little about it that the Wii implementation of it was broken
starting from when it was implemented (eb65601) to 7 years
later (e0a47c1), apparently without anyone reporting it.
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 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.
The whole NANDContentLoader stuff is truly awful and will be removed
as soon as possible.
For now, this fixes a bug that was exposed by std::optional::operator*.
gcc complains that the printf %x formatting instruction expects an
'unsigned int' but we pass a 'size_t'. We add the 'z' length formatting
specifier used for 'size_t'
This file is pretty small now that it doesn't handle Wii
partitions anymore, so let's move its contents to Volume.cpp.
This is also more consistent with how blob creation works.
This happened to work without any problems because the only way for a
file system to be invalid was to not have the right GC/Wii magic word
in the unencrypted area, and a volume could not be created without
having the right GC/Wii magic word there. Now that file systems read
the magic word from a partition instead, a fix is needed.
I replaced m_OffsetShift with m_Wii in bb93336 to support
the decrypt parameter for read functions. Doing that is no
longer necessary, so m_offset_shift is now used like before.
By removing mutable state in VolumeWiiCrypted, this change makes
partition-related code simpler. It also gets rid of other ugly things,
like ISOProperties's "over 9000" loop that creates a list of
partitions by trying possible combinations, and DiscScrubber's
volume swapping that recreates the entire volume when it needs to
change partition.
Direct access to the WAD bytes is required to read contents with proper
padding data (since they can sometimes end up being outside of the
data app section). Allowing the whole buffer to be accessed directly
would be error prone, so this commit adds GetContent() to WiiWAD
for getting raw content data by index.
Just like DeleteTitle, Using CNANDContentManager is overkill,
inefficient and useless. And it results in a few failures in
situations where a delete should just always work.
But here it gets bonus points, because it manages to actually use
the TMD for deleting contents, when IOS does none of that and just
deletes files ending with .app in the title content directory. :)
Fixes warning:
```
Source/Core/DiscIO/NANDImporter.cpp:55:17: warning: format specifies type 'unsigned long' but the argument has type 'u64' (aka 'unsigned long long') [-Wformat]
file.GetSize(), NAND_BIN_SIZE);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1 warning generated.
```