This commit attempts to improve error handling for device opening by
reducing panic alert spam when opening one or several devices fails.
Currently, Dolphin shows a panic alert for every device that we fail
to open, and another panic alert at the end if no usable device was
found. That is certainly a bit excessive -- we should only keep the
very last panic alert (the one that is shown if everything fails)
and we can just put the error for the last device open operation there.
This also changes the PanicAlert to a CriticalAlert to ensure the
message is visible even if the user has disabled regular panic alerts.
The message has also been reworded and should hopefully be clearer.
This is related to https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/10958 which
uses Qt to clear out the window so the game list isn't displayed
while the core is booting. Instead, we use the video backend to
render a black screen, which means Qt doesn't have to flip between
paint engines.
Without included header build fails on gcc-10 as:
```
[ 52%] Building CXX object Source/Core/Core/CMakeFiles/core.dir/DSP/DSPTables.cpp.o
../../../../Source/Core/Core/DSP/DSPTables.cpp: In function 'const char* DSP::pdname(u16)':
../../../../Source/Core/Core/DSP/DSPTables.cpp:492:3: error: 'sprintf' was not declared in this scope
492 | sprintf(tmpstr, "0x%04x", val);
| ^~~~~~~
```
Signed-off-by: Sergei Trofimovich <slyfox@gentoo.org>
Without included header build fails on gcc-10 as:
```
[ 13%] Building CXX object Source/Core/AudioCommon/CMakeFiles/audiocommon.dir/CubebUtils.cpp.o
In file included from ../../../../Source/Core/AudioCommon/CubebUtils.cpp:13:
../../../../Source/Core/Common/StringUtil.h: In function 'bool TryParse(const string&, T*)':
../../../../Source/Core/Common/StringUtil.h:84:20: error: 'numeric_limits' is not a member of 'std'
84 | if (value < std::numeric_limits<LimitsType>::min() ||
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
Signed-off-by: Sergei Trofimovich <slyfox@gentoo.org>
On Windows, Qt's default system font (MS Shell Dlg 2) is outdated.
Dolphin previously used over 15 lines of code to compute a font
closer to the proper font, but with an approximately correct font size.
Using the QMenu font directly is both more concise and more elegant
(in my opinion).
So far in all our uses of ScopeGuard, the type of the callable is
usually just a lambda or a function pointer, so there is no need
to rely on std::function's type erasure.
While the cost of using std::function is probably negligible, it still
causes some unnecessary overhead that can be avoided by making
ScopeGuard a templated class. Thanks to class template argument
deduction in C++17 most existing usages do not even need to be changed.
See https://godbolt.org/z/KcoPni for a comparison between
a ScopeGuard that uses std::function and one that doesn't
Some locales (e.g. fr_FR.UTF-8 on ArchLinux) don't split the string stream on a space. As such, when extracted formatted data from te stream, it will return the two numbers as one for the first call, effectively overflowing the u32 variable, then will do an out-of-bounds read for the second call. Forcing the use of the C locale on the streams where it would cause a problem allows to workaround this behavior.
It seems that the newer version of fmt gets tripped up by bitfields
within structs. However, we can just specify the intended type where
necessary to get around this.
This changes channel syncing to happen when the operating system is
Android TV rather than when TvMainActivity is launched. (You can run
TvMainActivity on a phone by specifying a launch activity manually
in Android Studio, which I do sometimes for testing purposes. Without
this change, you get an exception when channel syncing runs.)
This fixes CreateFullPath to not create directories when it is known
that they already exist, instead of calling CreateDirectory anyway
and checking if the error is AlreadyExists. (That doesn't work
now that we have an accurate implementation of CreateDirectory
that performs permission checks before checking for existence.)
I'm not sure what I was thinking when I wrote that function.
Also adds some tests for CreateFullPath.
Fixes a regression from #8539.
CreateDirectory was the correct function to use for creating
directories since parent directories already exist and are
not owned by the system menu.
This is only used on Apple and Unix-like machines, so we can enclose the
prototype with an ifdef like the implementation is. This prevents
false-positives about an unimplemented function prototype.
Files cannot be given a different file name, only moved across
directories.
Add a test for that behaviour and fix the existing
RenameWithExistingTargetFile test.
Now that all FS functions that create new inodes are properly
implemented, we can make GetMetadata actually return correct file
metadata rather than giving fixed information. The hack for the DQX
installer can also be removed now since our ES and FS keep track of
caller UID/GIDs now.
With the CreateFile/CreateDirectory fix and this commit, we can
finally return correct results in ReadDirectory and the sorting
hack -- whose purpose was to prevent certain versions of the
System Menu from crashing -- can be removed too.
CreateDirectory does not create missing parent directories. If that
behaviour is desired, CreateFullPath should be used instead.
(These small misuses went unnoticed since the previous implementation
of CreateDirectory automatically created parent directories.)
Previously, the FS root directory would get created as a side
effect of calling CreateDirectory during boot (since the
implementation was sloppy and used File::CreateFullDir).
Since CreateDirectory no longer does that, it is necessary to ensure
that the FS root directory does exist by creating it explicitly.
Some official titles rely on implementation details of Nintendo's
FS sysmodule and will not work properly if those are changed.
Notably, some games and older versions of the System Menu appear
to be relying on the order of files returned by FS::ReadDirectory
and will either fail to find their save data (for Bolt) or
outright crash (for the System Menu).
Some titles also actually expect filesystem metadata to be correct.
One title that has been confirmed to do this is DQX, which generates
paths based on the GID of files within its own title directory.
While it is easy to make workarounds for these issues -- and in fact
we already do have some for the sysmenu and DQX, having hacks
is obviously nonideal and adding yet another hack would be required
to fix Bolt -- one that would be even uglier.
Furthermore, while it is currently unknown whether any official
title cares about permissions, the lack of FS metadata means that
we are unable to implement them if that turns out to be desirable
or necessary.
By adding a FST, we can implement things correctly and solve all
those problems without hacks.
Apart from DQX, the sysmenu and Bolt, this changeset also fixes
the Photo Channel complaining about corrupted system files
on the initial launch.
This first commit adds the basic structures and functions that
are necessary to load, save, query and update our version of the FST.
For simplicity, a binary format that is inspired from Nintendo's FST
structure was chosen for serialization. It is not expected to ever
receive an update.
PS: an update on the NAND image backend:
A long time ago I had planned to add another FS backend which would
be using a NAND image/blob as the storage. While I have already
written an implementation that has been tested, solves all the
aforementioned issues and more, produces images that are fully
compatible with IOS's FS driver, I feel like NAND images raise too
many issues: savestate sizes, code complexity and maintenance cost.
Since many fixes and additions that are part of that implementation
(e.g. FS timings, utility structures, FST) have already been merged
or will be submitted as part of this changeset, I will likely not
submit the branch.
Migrates the shader generator off the use of a global array, eliminating
the use of some global state. This also allows us to move the shader
generation over to using fmt in a subsequent change.
Add a function that safely returns whether a character is printable
i.e. whether 0x20 <= c <= 0x7e is true.
This is done in several places in our codebase and it's easy to run
into undefined behaviour if the C version defined in <cctype>
is used instead of this one, since its behaviour is undefined
if the character is not representable as an unsigned char.
This fixes MemoryViewWidget.
Otherwise, a line that's too wide for the log widget will cause the horizontal scroll bar to appear, which reduces the vertical height, and causes the most recent line to be off screen. Since that line is off screen, the log widget no longer scrolls as new lines appear, unless it's manually scrolled to the very bottom again.
This is an alternative to PR 8557 and PR 8558. The way this PR solves
the problem is essentially the same as what we had before PR 8394
(except the code we had back then only worked because it was broken).
Currently, we do not display every second frame in 25fps/30fps games
which run to vsync. This improves performance as there's less rendering
for the GPU to perform, but when combined with vsync, could cause frame
pacing issues.
This commit adds an option to force every frame generated by the console
to be displayed to the host, which may improve pacing for these games.
This works around Linux drivers for DS4 (Playstation 4) controllers splitting the device into three separate event nodes which makes configuration difficult.
To prevent collisions of input names in combined devices more descriptive names are now used when possible.
Due to the way the ModRM encoding works on x86, memory addressing
combinations involving RBP or R13 need an additional byte for an 8-bit
displacement of zero.
However, this was also applied in cases where it is unnecessary,
effectively wasting a byte.
- MatR with RSP or R12
8B 44 24 00 mov eax,dword ptr [rsp]
8B 04 24 mov eax,dword ptr [rsp]
- MRegSum with base != RBP or R13
46 8D 7C 37 00 lea r15d,[rdi+r14]
46 8D 3C 37 lea r15d,[rdi+r14]
- MComplex without offset
8B 4C CA 00 mov ecx,dword ptr [rdx+rcx*8]
8B 0C CA mov ecx,dword ptr [rdx+rcx*8]
Test the behavior of OpArg::WriteRest by using MOV with the various
addressing modes (MatR, MRegSum, etc.) in the source operand.
Both the instruction and the instruction length are validated.
This updates the lint script to require clang-format 9 and reformats
existing source code. Since VS2019 ships with clang-format 9 this
should make auto reformats less painful.
This also updates the clang-format configuration to set
BraceWrapping.AfterCaseLabel to true to ensure consistent brace
style; otherwise clang-format 9+ defaults to putting braces on
the same line as switch case labels.
Was checking over this old code, and saw a comment calling me out for a lack of documentation.
It might be half a decade late, but better late then never.
The old logic would always emit LEA when both sources are in a register
and OE is disabled. However, ADD is still preferable when one of the
sources matches the destination.
Before:
45 8D 6C 35 00 lea r13d,[r13+rsi]
After:
44 03 EE add r13d,esi
The ES sysmodule in IOS62 (v6430) has an exception for the
Wii U Transfer Tool in the SetUid function.
If the active title is the Wii U Transfer Tool, then calling SetUid
is always allowed. (The UID is still checked first, though.)
Fixes https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/10985
Partitions are Wii-exclusive, and don't happen at the DVDInterface level in
IOS. This isn't quite the cleanest fix, but it gets rid of the assumption that
a partition is open on starting the game at least.
The various ioctls sometimes have different arguments than the DI command
registers, though they generally overlap. There are also a bunch of ioctls
that don't even normally go into DVDInterface, just returning various data.
Some of the implemented ioctls are new to Dolphin.
A small, nonexhaustive set of warning fixes. The DiscIO Volume change
is a workaround for a GCC bug [1] that causes returning an unengaged
std::optional to emit annoying -Wmaybe-uninitialized warnings.
This last change alone fixes pages upon pages of warnings since
Volume.h is included from several files.
-Wstringop-truncation is another irrelevant warning for us, but
unfortunately there seems to be no way to disable it without
adding ugly pragmas wherever the warning appears.
- Refactor the Config::System::Main check so we check system once,
then we check for the section.
- Use an std::array<> instead of std::vector<>.
- Use an array of pointers instead of an array of ConfigLocation.
The latter contains two std::string objects, whereas pointers
are only 8 bytes (on 64-bit).
Code size comparison: (64-bit Linux, gcc-9.2.0, release build)
text data bss dec hex filename
16136 0 40 16176 3f30 IsSettingSaveable.cpp.o [before]
3933 720 0 4653 122d IsSettingSaveable.cpp.o [after]
-12203 +720 -40 -11523 -2d03 Difference
NOTE: The explicit std::string() conversions later are needed. Otherwise,
gcc-9.2.0 throws all sorts of errors because it can't find a matching
operator+() function.
"ppcState{}" is stored in the .data segment, which means the full ~4 MB
is stored in the executable.
"ppcState" is stored in the .bss segment, which means it only stores a
note that tells it to allocate and zero ~4 MB at runtime.
string_view is a thin wrapper around C strings, so it's more efficient
for constant strings than C++ strings.
The unordered_set<> also adds extra runtime overhead. For small arrays,
a simple linear search works. For larger arrays, std::binary_search()
works better than linear but without the unordered_set<> overhead.
ShouldBeDualLayer(): Removed a duplicate "SK8X52" entry.
This was a huge speedup with disabled fastmem, but it still requires the fastmem arena.
So let's disable it for now, even if this commit has a huge performance hit with disabled fastmem.
This fixes Old AX Wii games having no audio when compiled under VS2019.
This also includes some minor code cleanup and moving a function to
avoid duplication.
Removed conditional use of std::mutex instead of std::shared_mutex on MacOS.
Because MacOS < 10.12 did not support std::shared_mutex, a previous commit
naïvely substituted std::mutex, which does not have the same behavior.
Reverses PR #8273, which substitues std::mutex for std::shared_mutex on
macOS, and results in several bugs that seem to only affect MacOS
- https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11919
- https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11842
- https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11845
This change eliminates conditional code for MacOS in the core configuration
layer code and enables the use of modern language features that are more
secure and thread-safe.
The frame number is incremented before the first frame is swapped out.
Fixes ffmpeg creating invalid video files on output if the emulator only
runs for a single frame, e.g. FifoCI.
See the discussion in https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11930.
(This probably doesn't really fix that issue, but it's something
I thought would make sense anyway.)
This was causing a race which was crashing the FifoCI runners. The main
thread called Stop() which in turn called ResetAllWiimotes() while the
emu thread was still exiting, also shutting down the Wiimote class.
By shifting the reset to the emu thread, all cleanup operations happen
on the same thread where they were initialized.
Now that we have an actual interface to manage things, we can stop
duplicating the calls to to the pixel shader manager and remove the
need to remember to actually do so when disabling or enabling the
bounding box.
Rather than expose the bounding box members directly, we can instead
provide an interface for code to use. This makes it nicer to transition
from global data, as the interface function names are already in
place.
Now that we've extracted all of the stateless functions that can be
hidden, it's time to make the index generator a regular class with
active data members.
This can just be a member that sits within the vertex manager base
class. By deglobalizing the state of the index generator we also get rid
of the wonky dual-initializing that was going on within the OpenGL
backend.
Since the renderer is always initialized before the vertex manager, we
now only call Init() once throughout the execution lifecycle.
We can use if constexpr with the template functions that pass in a
non-type template parameter, allowing the removal of branches that
aren't taken at compile time.
Compilers will generally do this by default, however, we now give a
gentle prodding to the compiler if this would otherwise not be the case.
These don't rely on any of the static members within the IndexGenerator
class, so we can make all of these functions fully internal to the
translation unit.
We can make use of if constexpr in several scenarios here to allow
compilers to exise the relevant code paths out.
Technically a decent compiler would do this already, but now we can give
compilers a little more nudging here in the event that isn't the case.
cmd2 is a u32, so any bitwise arithmetic on it with a type of the same
size or smaller will result in a u32 value. This is also implicitly
converted to an unsigned type in the if statement as well, given that
size_t * int -> size_t.
This is just more explicit about the operations occurring and also
likely silences a sign conversion warning.
We only use these string streams to output into a final std::string
instance, we don't read into types with them. Because of this, we can
just make use of std::ostringstream, rather than the fully-fledged
std::stringstream.
No behavioral change. This is intended to make the transition to fmt
less noisy in subsequent changes by combining insertions of multiple
string literals into one where applicable.
Begins the conversion of the shader generators over to using fmt
formatting specifiers.
This also has a benefit over the older StringFromFormat-based API in
that all formatted data is appended to the existing buffer rather than
creating a completely separate string and then appending it to the
internal string buffer.
Two of these arrays were stored within the save state when the exact
same data is constructed all the time.
We can just build this into the binary rather than the save state,
shrinking a little bit of the save state's overall size.
Fixes https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/11911 and makes the range of
values when using touch controls correct. Also affects the range of
values for physical controllers in a way that may or may not be
desirable, depending on the controller model. (If there are
undesirable effects, they would be that the range of inputs is too
small, especially diagonally.) Such is our messy Android input system.
Should be an improvement on the whole for physical controllers, though.
Previously the logging was a in a little bit of a disarray. Some things
were in namespaces, and other things were not.
Given this code will feature a bit of restructuring during the
transition over to fmt, this is a good time to unify it under a single
namespace and also remove functions and types from the global namespace.
Now, all functions and types are under the Common::Log namespace. The
only outliers being, of course, the preprocessor macros.
We must set Java_GCAdapter.manager before the GC adapter thread (C++)
starts. We used to set it at emulation start, which was fine until
9f3f45a made the GC adapter thread start much earlier.
Fixes using DirectoryBlob on extracted games that were unencrypted
prior to being extracted.
(One day I'll make DirectoryBlob actually support raw reads and then
the order of these two won't matter...)
Continues the migration to using fmt.
Notably, this allows safely converting a map within USBUtils over to
containing string view instances, rather than std::string instances, as
fmt safely handles the formatting of string views.
Migrates most of VideoCommon over to using fmt, with the exception being
the shader generator code. The shader generators are quite large and
have more corner cases to deal with in terms of conversion (shaders have
braces in them, so we need to make sure to escape them).
Because of the large amount of code that would need to be converted, the
conversion of VideoCommon will be in two parts:
- This change (which converts over the general case string formatting),
- A follow up change that will specifically deal with converting over
the shader generators.
Because trying to fit a 3:1 banner into a circle looks very awkward.
Also move the banner below the title/description now that it
takes up more space horizontally.
Provides the same semantics of a C array, but is much nicer to work
with.
Notably, it makes all cases of performing comparisons with said arrays
significantly less reading-involved.
DSP thread is considered "idle" when it signals s_ppc_event and waits for s_dsp_event,
without putting it in this state when m_dsp_thread_mutex is locked it was possible to
create a deadlock between a DSP thread, emulation thread and Qt thread by accessing
Config menu immediately after booting up the game
Trims out unnecessary includes to avoid unnecessary header dependencies.
This also resolves indirect inclusions of <optional> within
IMUAccelerometer.h and IMUGyroscope.h
Given all conditional bodies only contain a return, the use of else here
isn't necessary.
This has the benefit of consistently vertically aligning the names.
When using motion controls, it's useful to be able to lock the screen
to a certain orientation so that Android won't interpret game motions
as an intent to change the screen orientation. To this end, I've
changed the existing orientation lock setting in the following ways:
- A portrait lock mode has been added in addition to the existing
landscape lock mode and unlocked mode.
- The landscape lock mode now locks to regular landscape rather than
letting you change between the two possible landscape orientations.
- The setting is now accessed during emulation rather than outside.
Not that this has much relation to the rest of the PR, but it's an
easy fix that we might as well throw in while we're already
overwriting everyone's WiimoteNew.ini.
Previously, only Mii data was written. Additionally, the file containing mii data was shared for all Wiimotes, which made it a lot less useful.
Additionally, the file was read/written on each Wiimote read, even though the whole EEPROM was kept in memory. This was bad for performance and not particularly necessary (it did enforce that the data was properly shared between all Wiimotes, but that's not something I want).