Making changes to ConfigManager.h has always been a pain, because
it means rebuilding half of Dolphin, since a lot of files depend on
and include this header.
However, it turns out some includes are unnecessary. This commit
removes ConfigManager includes from files which don't contain
SConfig or GPUDeterminismMode or GPU_DETERMINISM (which means the
ConfigManager include is not used).
(I've also had to get rid of some indirect includes.)
I know there is already #3521, but it currently needs a rebase and I
needed to add something to IPC_HLE_Device properly, that is, without
putting everything in the header, so this commit cleans up
IPC_HLE_Device first. (And only IPC_HLE_Device: the rest will still
be handled by #3521.)
Also fixes a few indirect includes (removing unused header includes
from IPC_HLE_Device.h broke building)
This is something that was copy-pasted across the IPC_HLE code
(because it's often used). Since all of the duplicated pieces of code
do the same thing as the previous EnqueueReply, except that they also
write to command_address + 0 and + 8 (to write the correct reply type),
this commit changes EnqueueReply to do that instead of having it
duplicated all over IPC HLE.
It was apparently causing heavy slowdowns on game even though it wouldn't spam much, probably caused by the amount of additional check caused by the logs levels changes.
When the emulated BT device is created, m_HCIEndpoint (which is a
CtrlBuffer)'s m_cmd_address is not initialised to 0. So it ends up
being a random value. This is normally not an issue… but the
emulated Bluetooth code relies on m_cmd_address to know whether the
HCI endpoint is still valid.
This is a problem with ES_Launch, because the bt_emu class is
destructed and re-constructed, and while m_cmd_address is still
uninitialised, the ES_Launch code disconnects all Wii remotes,
which triggers a HCI event and hence the bug.
Load all the inis at once, choose which one to write to, and save them all
at the same time. This allows us to modify settings from different files
on the same settings page.
Instead of resetting two command buffers, now we only have to call
vkResetCommandPool once at the start of a frame.
NV's recommends using one pool per frame/thread. May offer a very small
boost in performance on some systems.
%n writes to a pointer that's provided as a parameter.
We didn't have a custom implementation of this before,
meaning that %n would trigger a write to the host
memory instead of the emulated memory!
The bounds checks in IOCtl were using 0x200 as the size of
m_Registers, which is more than the actual size, 0x200 / 4.
This commit turns m_Registers into an std::array to allow
for a correct and obvious way of getting its size.
anv seems to set this to zero, which is fine according to the spec, but
we were using it as a maximum, which was resulting in a swap chain
without any buffers being created.