ES.cpp was becoming pretty huge. This commit splits the ES code into
several files:
* Main ES (launch, UID, current title directory and title ID, etc.)
* Device identity and encryption (ID and cert, keys, encrypt/decrypt)
* Title management (imports, exports, deletions)
* Title contents (open/close/read/seek)
* Title information (titles, stored contents, TMDs)
* Views (for tickets and TMDs)
This prevents truncation when assigning to this member in the
constructor. This isn't size-critical code, so opting for the more
straightforward assignment is fine here.
Advantages:
* Simpler code in general
* No extra volume objects created
* Now actually notices if the disc or partition gets
changed while the core is running
* No longer picks up on disc access done by the GUI
(it used to do so as long as the core was running)
* Gets rid of a Core dependency in DiscIO
There are two performance disadvantages:
* FileMonitor is now a bit slower when used with VolumeDirectory
because FileMonitor now always uses the FileSystemGCWii code
for finding filenames instead of VolumeDirectory finding the
filename on its own and directly hooking into FileMonitor.
But this isn't such a big deal, because it's happening on the
DVD thread, and my currently unmerged file system PR will make
FileSystemGCWii's file finding code about as fast as
VolumeDirectory's.
* FileMonitor's creation of the file system object is now
done on the CPU thread instead of the DVD thread, and
it will be done even if FileMonitor logging is disabled.
This will be fixed in the next commit.
PR #3582 removed VolumeIsValid, then PR #3582 added a call
to VolumeIsValid, then both PRs were merged without either
of them being rebased on top of the other.
There's no point in creating a volume without a blob,
since essentially all the functionality of a volume
requires a blob to be used.
Also, VolumeCreator doesn't support creating volumes
without blobs (it can't even figure out the volume type
unless it gets a blob), so it's currently impossible
for a volume to be created without a blob.
Given none of these are used outside of the DSPEmitter class (nor does
it really make sense to allow them to be used outside of the class),
these should all be made private.
Using DiscIO's NAND content loader is the wrong way to get the ticket
for a title, because it checks whether the TMD is present and the
validity check fails if it isn't. This is not the correct behaviour:
we should just read the ticket from /ticket without caring about TMDs.