This commit ensures cond var threads act exactly as they do in the real
console. The original implementation uses an RBTree and the behavior of
cond var threads is that at the same priority level they act like a
FIFO.
While DEPBAR is stubbed it doesn't change anything from our end. Shading
languages handle what this instruction does implicitly. We are not
getting anything out fo this log except noise.
Nvidia has sane default output values for varyings, but the other
vendors don't apply these. To properly emulate this we would have to
analyze the shader header. For the time being, apply the same default
Nvidia applies so we get the same behaviour on non-Nvidia drivers.
This commit corrects the behavior of cancel synchronization when the
thread is running/ready and ensures the next wait is cancelled as it's
suppose to.
format_lookup_table: Drop bitfields
format_lookup_table: Use std::array for definition table
format_lookup_table: Include <limits> instead of <numeric>
Use a large flat array to look up texture formats. This allows us to
properly implement formats with different component types. It should
also be faster.
Abstracted ComponentType was not being used in a meaningful way.
This commit drops its usage.
There is one place where it was being used to test compatibility between
two cached surfaces, but this one is implied in the pixel format.
Removing the component type test doesn't change the behaviour.
Maintains implementation parity between QueryApplicationPlayStatistics
and QueryApplicationPlayStatisticsByUid.
These function the same behaviorally underneath the hood, with the only
difference being that one allows specifying a UID.
This properly handles unicode-based paths on Windows, while opening a
raw stream doesn't out-of-the-box.
Prevents file creation from potentially failing on Windows PCs that make
use of unicode characters in their save paths (e.g. writing to a user's
AppData folder, where the user has a name with non-ASCII characters).
Since the introduction of this library, numerous improvements have been
made. Notably, many of the warnings we would get by simply including the
library header have now been fixed. This makes it much easier to make
conversion warning an error.
Uncovered a bug within Thread's SetCoreAndAffinityMask() where an
unsigned variable (ideal_core) was being compared against "< 0", which
would always be a false condition.
We can also get rid of an unused function (GetNextProcessorId) which contained a sign
mismatch warning.
Quite frequently there have been cases where code has been merged into
the core that produces warning. In order to prevent this from occurring,
we can make the compiler flag these cases and allow our CI to flag down
any code that would generate these warnings.
This is beneficial given silent conversions from signed/unsigned can
result in logic bugs. This forces one writing changes to be explicit
about when signedness conversions are desirable, rather than leaving it
up to readers' interpretation.
Currently the codebase isn't in a state where it will build successfully
with this change applied, but this will be addressed in subsequent
follow-up changes. This set of changes will focus on making it build
properly with these changes for MSVC as a starting point for basic
coverage.
`boost::make_iterator_range` is available when `boost/range/iterator_range.hpp` is included.
Also include `boost/icl/interval_map.hpp` and `boost/icl/interval_set.hpp`.
Avoids potential allocations due to the usage of std::string on strings
that we know at compile time. Most of these might fit in SSO, but it
adds complexity that can be easily avoided with string views.
Emulates negative y viewports with ARB_clip_control. This allows us to
more easily emulated pipelines with tessellation and/or geometry shader
stages. It also avoids corrupting games with transform feedbacks and
negative viewports (gl_Position.y was being modified).
Update src/video_core/shader/control_flow.cpp
Co-Authored-By: Mat M. <mathew1800@gmail.com>
Update src/video_core/shader/control_flow.cpp
Co-Authored-By: Mat M. <mathew1800@gmail.com>
Update src/video_core/shader/control_flow.cpp
Co-Authored-By: Mat M. <mathew1800@gmail.com>
Update src/video_core/shader/control_flow.cpp
Co-Authored-By: Mat M. <mathew1800@gmail.com>
Update src/video_core/shader/control_flow.cpp
Co-Authored-By: Mat M. <mathew1800@gmail.com>
Update src/video_core/shader/control_flow.cpp
Co-Authored-By: Mat M. <mathew1800@gmail.com>
- This does not actually seem to exist in the real kernel - games reset these automatically.
# Conflicts:
# src/core/hle/service/am/applets/applets.cpp
# src/core/hle/service/filesystem/fsp_srv.cpp
Nvidia's OpenGL driver maps gl(Named)BufferSubData with some requirements
to a fast. This path has an extra memcpy but updates the buffer without
orphaning or waiting for previous calls. It can be seen as a better
model for "push constants" that can upload a whole UBO instead of 256
bytes.
This path has some requirements established here:
http://on-demand.gputechconf.com/gtc/2014/presentations/S4379-opengl-44-scene-rendering-techniques.pdf#page=24
Instead of using the stream buffer, this commits moves constant buffers
uploads to calls of glNamedBufferSubData and from my testing it brings a
performance improvement. This is disabled when the vendor is not Nvidia
since it brings performance regressions.
Originally on the last commit I thought TLD4 acted the same as TLD4S and
didn't have a mask. It actually does have a component mask. This commit
corrects that.