Fixes issue where losing focus after pressing alt-tab would end up
blocking the F4 button (which is used for turning the PCSX2 FrameLimiter
on and off).
Fixes: https://github.com/PCSX2/pcsx2/issues/1797
Adds quick setup that allows for quickly setting up all the default pad
buttons without having to click on each one separately.
Hides special inputs(inputs that aren't available on a PS(2) controller) by default.
ICO uses a depth of field effect for the fog. Depth is extracted
into the alpha channel of a texture. And then used as blending factor.
You need a 1:1 texture/pixel mapping otherwise you will line at boundaries.
In order to extract the DoF, ICO moves the depth buffer around the GS
memory. Memory moves are implemented in the not-scaled world. It means
that we can't have the above 1:1 ratio. And we don't know anymore that
data are coming from the current depth buffer.
The solution: I reused an HLE channel shader to read the depth buffer directly.
This way I have the guarantee that pixel/depth are aligned.
Close#1816
Otherwise you have a write before read typical race condition. It works
most of the time because textures are stored in temporary buffers (aka
texture cache). So the race condition requires texture invalidation in the mix.
I hope the perf impact will be small enough.
Fix#1691
Blood Will Tell: gray scale effect description
Frame is renderer in 0x700
Sync 0x700 (RT will be used as input)
Foreach page of frame
// The missing Sync was this one. You can't copy new data to 0x2800
// until you finish the rendering that use 0x2800 as input texture
// (AKA end of this foreach loop)
Sync 0x2800 (not the first iteration, texture will be used as a RT)
Copy page from 0x700+offset to 0x2800
Sync 0x2800 (RT will be used as input)
Render Effect line1 from 0x2800 to 0x700
Alpha test should only be disabled when writes to all of the alpha bits in the Framebuffer are masked. Fixes a regression in Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 3 scouter image rendering.
It allow to do the division before the size multiplication
It avoid a float overflow if T is too big.
Old behavior: (T * size) / Q
New behavior: (T / Q) * size
Performance Note:
* Rcp was replaced by a slow division (more accurate)
* At least we avoid a 2nd loop on the vertex buffer
It helps on Pro Soccer Club and Galerians Ash rendering
Tric Note:
SPRITE must be handled differently because the 'q' of first vertex could
be invalid
Bilinear applies to all renderer
* Common code done in GSVertexTrace
* Extend it with forced but sprite (trade-off between linear/upscale glitches)
* Linux GUI option was moved at the top with the renderer selection
Trilinear is moved to OGL hack
close#1837
Thanks to Flatout for the review and feedback.
It will take care to update the Window GUI :)
Fixes "project out of date" issue for wx_config on VS2017.
Fixes whole program optimisation possibly not being applied on release
builds for USBqemu (it may have been applied, but I can't actually tell,
and now it at least shows properly in the VS property editor).
Typical bug, missing/wrong texture on the SW renderer but working fine on the HW renderer
Debugged on ATV Quad Power Racing 2 but I suspect couple of game are impacted
Bug description:
GSdx flatten the Q value of sprite. So m_vt.m_eq.q is true when Q(2N+1) are the same.
Q(2N) values could be random. The fix replaces Q0 by Q1 for the uniform Q value.
Previously, the NTSC saturation was also applied for double scan mode (Interlaced and Frame) where the developers send double the height to the DISP registers, saturation shouldn't be performed at such cases as the developers could send a value of 780 while the real size of the output would be 390 due to double scan mode. Doing the saturation later after identifying the real size also seems a bit counter-intuitive as we haven't discovered any cases where double scan games require the NTSC saturation hack. So let's just apply the saturation only for Interlaced (Field) Mode and omit the saturation step for other modes.
Isolate all the hacks into a separate subroutine and properly document about them, should make it easier for people to understand the display rectangle setup code, the hacks were totally messing up the readability of the function earlier.
The buffer contains extra room to avoid a segmentation fault due to an overflow.
Unfortunately the end of the buffer wasn't initialized which can lead to unexpected behavior.
Based on issue #1806 it could impact Guilty Gear X2
Mesa AMD was updated :)
all drivers[1] that support GL_ARB_shader_image_load_store got GL_ARB_clear_texture
[1] Intel driver misses others extensions to run GSdx
Rendering will be corrupted (for advance effects) if the driver doesn't support it.
However it allow to run with Mesa software emulation (or inside a virtual machine)
Note: mesa still requires an override of the buffer storage extension
MESA_EXTENSION_OVERRIDE=GL_ARB_buffer_storage
Previously, the combobox will reach an indeterminate state whenever it's passed with a value out of range via ComboBoxInit(). To avoid such cases, let's initialize the current selection of the combobox with the front element of the settings vector whenever we detect an out of range value which is not declared in the vector.
To reproduce the issue, set "Renderer" to some sort of crazy value like 50 in the GSdx.ini file and it'll mess up the whole GSdx plugin dialog really bad. This patch prevents such undesirable behavior by simply selecting the front element in the vector when we read an unsupported value.
Previously, the auto output circuit selection of the GSdx wasn't good, it simply defaulted to the second output circuit even when the first output circuit is also enabled. The new algorithm for auto selecting returns the merged rectangle dimensions when both of the output circuits are enabled and if the condition for merge is not satisfied then it returns the bigger output circuit.
The "L3 Toggles Turbo" hack has been removed and been replaced by a
bindable Turbo button on the Pad tabs. The Turbo function in the input
configuration has been renamed Rapid Fire.
Removes Ignore Key(hasn't functioned since LilyPad 0.9.9 (PCSX2 0.9.6)),
and "Send escape on window close" hack (unnecessary for PCSX2 and caused
issues with other emulators).
This new option on the pad tabs disables an input so it will be ignored
when trying to bind another input. This is helpful when binding controls
for a device with an input that's difficult to center like an
accelerator, or just always active like a faulty button or analog stick.
I didn't fix all the warnings (purpose was to realign code with "recent" update)
Linux note: only miss 2 major items
* res/tfx.cl loading
* device descriptor
* And various bug fixes ;)
Previously, when F8 was triggered multiple times in a single second, the latest captured image would replace the previous captured one as it has the same name as the previous image.
The following patch detects such cases and adds a number along with the filename when new image capture is requested under the same time as the previous capture.
This reverts commit
d6383e6c21
It created a regression in Everybody's Golf 4/Hot Shots Golf 4, breaking the renderering when depth emulation is disabled/when using a Direct3D Hardware renderer.
The code is now a mirror of the ::add. So 1 insert == 1 erase
This way it won't crash on future update. And it will support future GS
memory wrapping improvement.
ZoE2:
RemoveAt overhead plummet to 0.5%. It was 17% !
However insertion is a bit slower. Due to the begin() after the push_front
v2: use std:: for lists and arrays
Removes Alpine Racer 3 hack. Issue has been resolved.
Moves NanoBreaker hack. Issue has been resolved for OpenGL and hack has
been moved to DX only.
Moves Tri-Ace games hacks. Hacks are also necessary for OpenGL with "Partial" CRC Hack Level to prevent massive slowdown.
Move Tales Of Legendia hack back as it's also necessary for OpenGL with "Partial" CRC Hack Level to prevent graphical issues.
Close: https://github.com/PCSX2/pcsx2/issues/1698
Added PAL and NTSC-U CRC's for Ar tonelico II.
Unfortunately it requires at least GCC6. If a nice guy can check the generated code on GCC6.
I don't know clang status.
Here the only example, I have found on the web
https://developers.redhat.com/blog/2016/02/25/new-asm-flags-feature-for-x86-in-gcc-6/
Current generated code in GSTextureCache::SourceMap::Add
38b3: bsf eax,esi
38b6: add esp,0x10
38b9: test esi,esi
38bb: jne 387e <GSTextureCache::SourceMap::Add(GSTextureCache::Source*, GIFRegTEX0 const&, GSOffset*)+0x6e>
BSF already set the Z flag when input (esi) is 0. So it would be better
to not put a silly add before the jump and to skip the test operation.
OMG, Zone of Ender got a speed boost from 11 fps to 45 fps
Seriously, the goal is to allow benchmarking GSdx without too much overhead of the main renderer draw call
Note: unlike the null renderer, texture/vertex uploading, 2D draw, texture conversions are still done.
* move the post-processing frame into the OSD tab
* Rename Global Settings to Renderer Settings
* put monitor and indicator check box on the same line
At least we have a similar number of options by tab
This reverts commit f77c1900fa.
Conflicts:
plugins/GSdx/GSTextureCache.cpp
Another fix was done later for Jak cut scene (or FMV). One game got a regression (don't remember which)
It's only ever updated after the queue is updated, so its state will
always lag slightly behind it. It's sufficient to just use empty().
This seems to fix some caching issues that were noticeable on Skylake
CPUs (#998).
In the previous code, the worker thread would notify the MTGS thread
while the mutex is still locked, which could cause the MTGS thread to
wake up and immediately go back to sleep again since it can't lock the
mutex.
Use a separate mutex for waiting, which avoids the issue.
Some PSX games seem to store image data of the drawing results in an undeterminate area out of range from the current context buffer. At such cases, calculate the height of both the frame memory rectangles combined.
What happens on "Crash bash" -
* At first draw, scissoring is limited to SCAY0- 0 & SCAY1- 255
* At second draw, scissoring is limited to SCAY0- 255 & SCAY0-511
Previously, we limited the height to the value of one single output texture, so instead of that let's calculate the total height of both the two buffers combined to prevent such issues.
Previously, we only calculated the width of a single output circuit which lead to missing a single pixel from the other output circuit which in turn causes offset issues in Persona games, I have customized GetDisplayRect() to now also calculate the dimensions of the merged rectangle when both the output circuits are enabled through the PMODE register, so this hack is no longer needed. :)
TL;DR - The above commit of mine accurately handles the offset issues by calculating union of the rects, removing this stupid hack. (not insulting any other developers, this stupid hack was mine :)
Passes the merged output circuit as the base size for texture cache scaling code. Helps fixing scaling issues where games use both of the output circuits for rendering.
Future Note: Alter the behavior of IsEnabled() check always preferring the second output circuit for some weird reason. I plan on changing it to a better auto-output circuit selection mechanism but that could probably be done some time in the future.
* Upgrade the counter to signed 32 bits. 16 bits is too small to contains the 64K value.
* Read ThreadProc/m_count when the mutex is locked
* Use old value of the fetch instead to read back the new value
Avoid reading past the end of the disk.
Avoid waiting when there are prefetches remaining.
Fix the maths so that the first prefetch after a request attempts to
read the next block of sectors and not the block of sectors that was
just read (which will just be skipped anyway because the data has just
been cached).
Avoid potential prefetch after disk is swapped (though disc swap doesn't
work properly if you just eject and insert a different disk).
Stop prefetching on disk read failure (Suikoden hits this case - 2048
byte reads are requested, but only 2352 byte reads will succeed).
Also reduce the read retry count to 2.
Use a reinterpret_cast instead of casting the function pointer address
to a void** and dereferencing it.
Also remove an unnecessary (void) and avoid including stdafx.h.
Don't adjust 'image' and just use an additional offset.
'success' was kinda unnecessary when true or false could just be
directly returned.
Move 'compression' clamping out to GSPng::Save instead.
And throw in a whole bunch of const for good measure.
Adds a device select option that hides bindings and disables binding new
inputs from all non-selected devices on the bindings list. This also
avoids input conflict issues when one controller is recognized as
several devices through different APIs.
Updates the UI by reducing the height of the plugin window. This has
been achieved by removing some buttons below the diagnostics and
bindings list and incorporating those functions into the
lists(accessible by right-clicking in the list). The binding
configurations on the Pad tabs have been moved to a separate page, like
the Forcefeedback bindings, to separate the configuration from the
bindings.
Adds a skip deadzone option to the Pad tabs.
With the normal deadzone, if the control input value is below the
deadzone threshold, the input is ignored.
However, some controllers also benefit from shortening the input range
by skipping a deadzone.
JMMT uses a bigger display height on NTSC progressive scan mode, which is not really unusual hence adjust the saturation hack to only take effect on interlaced NTSC mode.
However, the whole double screen issue on FMV still exists. As a bit of information, this game has the second output disabled but seems to have some valid data inside of it, maybe the second output data is leaked into the first one? most likely a bug in the frambuffer data management rather than a CRTC issue (needs to be investigated)
Previously, the height of the frame offset was also considered for the total height of the texture which was obviously wrong as the portion before the offset value isn't part of the frame memory.
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?
Previously the dedicated custom resolution scaling equation was ignored for the second SetScale() call, generalizing the equations will also fix the DMC scaling issue on custom resolution. Also remove unnecessary checks for null on scale factors. The possibility for having a null scale factor value only exists on custom resolution and it will only happen on cases where the output circuit isn't ready yet. So the ideal way would be to handle all the required conditions of output circuit on "m_renderer->CanUpscale()" itself.