It wouldn't impact performance until at least one memcheck is enabled. Because of this, it can be used in release builds without much impact, the only thing that woudl change is the use of HasAny method instead of preprocessor conditionals. Since the perforamnce decrease comes right when the first memcheck is added and restored when the last is removed, it basically is all beneficial and works the same way.
The min-heap provides no ordering when the key is the same on 2
nodes. Disambiguate identical times by tracking the order items
were added into the queue.
Some games will set q to a different value than 1.0 through
texture matrix manipulations. It seems the console will still
do the division in that case.
This removes a Dolphin-specific patch to the wxWidgets3 code
for the following reasons:
* Calling wxWindowGTK::DoSetSize on a top-level window can end up
calling wxTopLevelWindowGTK::DoMoveWindow, which triggers an assert
because it is not supposed to be called for a top-level wxWindow.
* We should not be patching the wxWidgets code because that means the
toolbars will still be broken if someone builds without using the
WX that is in our Externals.
Instead, we now use a derived class for wxAuiToolBar and override
DoSetSize() to remove the problematic behaviour to get the same effect
(fixing toolbars) but without changing Externals code and without
causing asserts and other issues.
Now that our timings are much more accurate it doesn't look like we
need it anymore. And the instant ARAM DMA mode + scheduling fixes
ctually breaks ATV: Quad Power Racing 2 (causing all sorts of werid
bugs).
Fundamentally, all this does is enforce the invariant that we always
translate effective addresses based on the current BAT registers and
page table before we do anything else with them.
This change can be logically divided into three parts. The first part is
creating a table to represent the current BAT state, and keeping it up to
date (PowerPC::IBATUpdated, PowerPC::DBATUpdated, etc.). This does
nothing by itself, but it's necessary for the other parts.
The second part (mostly in MMU.cpp) is simply removing all the hardcoded
checks for specific untranslated addresses, and consistently translating
addresses using the current BAT configuration. Very straightforward, but a
lot of code changes because we hardcoded assumptions all over the place.
The third part (mostly in Memmap.cpp) is making the fastmem arena reflect
the current BAT configuration. We do this by redoing the mapping (calling
memmap()) based on the BAT table whenever it changes.
One additional minor change is that translation can fail in two ways:
either the segment is a direct store segment, or page table lookup failed.
The difference doesn't usually matter, but the difference affects cache
instructions, like dcbz.
Init cannot be called more than once because it registers the
CoreTiming callbacks, that trips the assertions and will cause
anyone with PanicAlerts disabled to crash.
CoreTiming gets restored before ExpansionInterface so CoreTiming
events need to already be registered before the save state loading
begins. This means that the callbacks must be registered
unconditionally instead of on-demand.