In the previous code, the threads were created and destroyed in the base
class constructor and destructor, so the threads could potentially be
active while the object is in a partially constructed or destroyed state.
The thread however, relies on a virtual function to process the queue
items, and the vtable might not be in the desired state when the object
is partially constructed or destroyed.
This probably only matters during object destruction - no items are in
the queue during object construction so the virtual function won't be
called, but items may still be queued up when the destructor is called,
so the virtual function can be called. It wasn't an issue because all
uses of the thread explicitly waited for the queues to be empty before
invoking the destructor.
Adjust the constructor to take a std::function parameter, which the
thread will use instead to process queue items, and avoid inheriting
from the GSJobQueue class. This will also eliminate the need to
explicitly wait for all jobs to finish (unless there are other external
factors, of course), which would probably make future code safer.
The previous implementation of HPO adds an offset on vertex position. It
doesn't always work beside it moves the rendering window.
The new implementation will add a texture offset so that instead to sample
the middle of the GS texel, we will sample the middle of the real texture texel.
It must be manually enabled with
* UserHacks_HalfPixelOffset_New = 1 (keep a small offset as intended by GS effect)
* UserHacks_HalfPixelOffset_New = 2 (no offset)
v2: always apply a 0.5 offset in case of float coordinates (Tales of Abyss)
Might break other games but few of them uses float coordinates to read
back the target
Doesn't fully work yet
* Unknown stack frame
* Outside any known module
Potential root cause:
* Nvidia driver
* VU code as ebp is required for emulation so likely no frame
* Use POD type to avoid SSE/AVX compilation dependency
* global object to reduce cache miss
* dynamically object so give a chance to allocate below 2GB (allow x64
optimization)
Fixes Coverity CID 127721: Program hangs
Change the sleep to a condition variable wait, which has the added
benefit of allowing the plugin to close ever so slightly faster if
there's no disc in the drive.
tex address is a3
vm address is a1
Could help to avoid REX prefix
Reduce prologue/epilogue register copy
Byte code size 41893 => 38912 (on my testcase)
* bin2hex.h is removed
* vptest/vpblendvb YMM support integrated upsteam
* better support of rip for 64 bits
* AVX512 support (only miss the CPU now)
Local change: add BSD3 clause
It will requires a generic (register naming) linear interpolation to use it properly
Gather instruction requires an extra mask register therefore all registers name will be shuffled
Perf wise, initial haswell implementation seems to be microcode emulated.
Based on Gabest's work.
* Miss mipmap
Note: dithering info
It is a bit tricky as a2 on linux was rdx register which overlap with fzm (dh/dl)
It might require dedicated windows code
The main FindMinMax methods is perf critical so instead I created a separate function
to ensure the constness of the depth
Fix letter regression on Xenosaga3
Also refactor the default drive selection and GUI code so optical drive
detection is shared.
Note: This breaks the current config, but there's only one setting
anyway.
Don't use a RAW_READ_INFO struct when only the LARGE_INTEGER member is
used. Use SetFilePointerEx which is slightly simpler and doesn't require
checking GetLastError() in some circumstances to check whether the read
has actually failed.
Also use a mutex to prevent simultaneous access from both the read
thread and the keepalive thread to prevent overlapping SetFilePointerEx
calls from causing the wrong data to be read.
And print error messages should a failure occur.
Also set the max drive speed to 4x DVD and 24xCD (down from 8x DVD and
36x CD) - it seems to reduce pausing slightly since the drive doesn't
require as much time to spin up to the desired speed.
Also set the disc speed at the correct time - CDROM SET SPEED only stays
in effect till the disc is removed.
Also fix a memleak in CDVDopen when the drive cannot be accessed.
It's rather unnecessary to use the same ioctls multiple times per disc
when the info returned doesn't change. Just use each ioctl once and
read/calculate all the necessary info all at onace.
This also fixes an issue where the IOCTL_DVD_START_SESSION ioctl is
repeatedly used if the returned session ID is 0. The previous code
assumed that 0 was not a valid session ID and would repeatedly use the
ioctl to obtain a non-zero session ID. However, 0 is a valid session ID,
and it seems IOCTL_DVD_START_SESSION can repeatedly return a 0 session
ID even if the corresponding IOCTL_DVD_END_SESSION has not been called.
In our case, a DVD session is only necessary for DVD detection and
reading the physical format information. This fix seems to alter drive
speed behaviour.
There doesn't seem to be any issues calling CreateFile with
GENERIC_WRITE access (which is necessary for SPTI) on a standard user
account, so the SPTI code should work in all cases.
Adds separate bindings for each of the pad types (DualShock2,
Guitar,Pop'n Music). This allows the user to change the button
configuration to better suit the Guitar and Pop'n Music pads without
messing up the bindings already setup for the DS2.
Close#1576.
* Explicitly cast w_pages and h_pages into uint32.
* Prevent signed/unsigned comparison by converting lod into unsigned integer, honestly how coud a mipmapping level be negative?