This implements texture cube arrays with shadow comparisons but doesn't
fix the asserts related to it.
Fixes out of bounds reads on swizzle constructors and makes them use
bounds checked ::at instead of the unsafe operator[].
Previous to this commit, the tests were using operator[] from
unordered_map to query elements but this silently inserts empty elements
when they don't exist. If all threads were executed without concurrency,
this wouldn't be an issue, but the same unordered_map could be written
from two threads at the same time. This is a data race and makes some
previously inserted elements invisible for a short period of time,
causing them to insert and return an empty element. This default
constructed element (a zero) was used to index an array of fibers that
asserted when one of them was nullptr, shutting the test session off.
To address this issue, lock on thread id reads and writes. This could be
a shared mutex to allow concurrent reads, but the definition of
std::this_thread::get_id is fuzzy when using non-standard techniques
like fibers. I opted to use a standard mutex.
While we are at it, fix the included headers.
* A regression was in 39c8d18 and token verification function was
broken.
* The reason being `httplib` now requires OpenSSL 1.1+ API while
LibreSSL 2.x provided OpenSSL 1.0 compatible API.
* The bundled LibreSSL has been updated to 3.2.2 so it now provides
OpenSSL 1.1 compatible API now.
* Also the path hint has been added so that it will find the correct
path to the CA certs on *nix systems.
* An option is provided so that *nix system distributions/providers can
use their own SSL implementations when compiling Yuzu/Citra to
(hopefully) complies with their maintenance guidelines.
* LURLParse is also removed since `httplib` can handle
`scheme:host:port` string itself now.
This commit aims to implement the NVDEC (Nvidia Decoder) functionality, with video frame decoding being handled by the FFmpeg library.
The process begins with Ioctl commands being sent to the NVDEC and VIC (Video Image Composer) emulated devices. These allocate the necessary GPU buffers for the frame data, along with providing information on the incoming video data. A Submit command then signals the GPU to process and decode the frame data.
To decode the frame, the respective codec's header must be manually composed from the information provided by NVDEC, then sent with the raw frame data to the ffmpeg library.
Currently, H264 and VP9 are supported, with VP9 having some minor artifacting issues related mainly to the reference frame composition in its uncompressed header.
Async GPU is not properly implemented at the moment.
Co-Authored-By: David <25727384+ogniK5377@users.noreply.github.com>
It turns out that after a controller is disconnected, there is a chance that events from the previous controller are sent/processed after it has been disconnected.
This causes the previously disconnected controller to reappear as connected due to GetSDLJoystickBySDLID() emplacing this controller back to the map.
Fix this by only returning an SDLJoystick if and only if it exists in the map.
These compiler flags aren't shared with clang, so specifying these flags
unconditionally can lead to a bit of warning spam.
While we're in the area, we can also enable -Wunused-but-set-parameter
given this is almost always a bug.
This emulates the behavior we get on GLSL with regular SSBOs with a
pointer + length pair. It aims to be consistent with the crashes we
might get.
Out of bounds stores are ignored. Atomics are ignored and return zero.
Reads return zero.
Previously, the lower bound wasn't being used and zero was being used as
the lower bound every time this function was called.
This affects the outcome of some of the randomized entries a little bit,
for example, the lower-bound for beard and mustache flags was supposed
to be 1, not 0.
Aside from these cases, the bug didn't affect anything else.
Previously, disconnecting a controller still leaves a null SDLJoystick entry within the vector of SDLJoysticks mapped by GUID.
When a DirectInput device of the same GUID is reconnected, it adds that device to a new port causing non-detectable input.
Furthermore, opening the "Configure" menu would cause yuzu to crash since it first tries to resolve the name of a null SDLJoystick entry that was not removed.
Resolve this by properly erasing the SDLJoystick entry from the vector.
Locks on GetCurrentHostThreadID were causing performance issues
according to Visual Studio's profiler. It was consuming twice the time
as arm_interface.Run(). The cost was not in the function itself but in
the lockinig it required.
Reimplement these functions using atomics and static storage instead of
an unordered_map. This is a side effect to avoid locking and using linked
lists for reads.
Replace unordered_map with a linear search.
Makes our error coverage a little more consistent across the board by
applying it to Linux side of things as well. This also makes it more
consistent with the warning settings in other libraries in the project.
This also updates httplib to 0.7.9, as there are several warning
cleanups made that allow us to enable several warnings as errors.
Vulkan has requirements for primitive topologies that don't play nicely
with yuzu's. Since it's only 4 bits, we can move it to fixed state
without changing the size of the pipeline key.
- Fixes a regression on recent Nvidia drivers on Fire Emblem: Three
Houses.
RDNA devices seem to crash when using VK_EXT_extended_dynamic_state in
the latest 20.9.2 proprietary Windows drivers. As a workaround, for now
we block device names corresponding to current RDNA released products.
TMML takes an array argument that has no known meaning, this one appears
as the first component in gpr8 followed by s, t and r. Skip this
component when arrays are being used. Also implement CUBE texture types.
- Used by Pikmin 3: Deluxe Demo.