These were only compiled in on Windows and x86_32.
They provided "optimized" copies and compares based on blocksizes for the AMD Athlon and Duron CPU families.
The code was taken from something that AMD provides with a as-is license.
Just get rid of this crap.
For whatever reason, the hardware doesn't do a full divide by 255, but
instead uses an approximation with shifting, similar to the way it is done
in TEV.
For quite a while this has been causing integer division to generate a warning as error, blocking shader compiling. This means probably no one has even been running D3D in debug builds...
I tried disabling the warning with a #pragma, but it doesn't seem to apply when this flag is used.
We need to pull in function pointers for OpenGL 3.0 in order to use glAttribIPointer.
This isn't too big of an issue, and this code will be gone in the future when we change over to libepoxy.
Just need to push code upstream to libepoxy to support Android with GLES and GL first.
This matches how ARM handles their naming in their drivers for different models.
Really it's that way because both Mali-T6xx and Mali-T7xx fall under Midgard.
While everything else (except Mali-55) fall under Utgard.
We need to explicitly round when converting colors from float to uint
because multiplying a normalized float by 255 might not result in a whole
number. (The exact result here may vary depending on your
drivers/hardware.)
Ideally, we shouldn't be using floating point here, but fixing that is a
much more complicated patch.
Fixes gxtest TEV tests using Intel HD 4000.
They are similar enough that they will share bugs with their drivers, so make them fall under the same Mali-Txxx umbrella of bug issues.
If there is ever a need in the future for having separate bugs depending on family, we can support that then.
This is the only way we can determine the video driver version with mali.
Really it's a good thing that they only push driver updates once every two years, makes it easy to determine what driver anybody is running.
CreateInputLayout requires a shader as an input, but it only cares about
the signature; we don't need to recompute it for different shaders with
the same inputs.
GLSL ES 3.10 adds implicit support for the binding layout qualifier that we use.
Changes our GLSL version enums to bit values so we can check for both ES versions easily.
Trying to use GetDepthMatrixProgram outside of
TCacheEntry::FromRenderTarget is a bad idea, so don't. Instead, use a
shader which only copies the input.
Fixes lens flare depth test in Twilight Princess. See
http://code.google.com/p/dolphin-emu/issues/detail?id=5999 .
The variable is already dereferenced both before and after this
check which means that if this variable would ever be zero it would
have crashed dolphin already.
Our defines were never clear between what meant 64bit or x86_64
This makes a clear cut between bitness and architecture.
This commit also has the side effect of bringing up aarch64 compiling support.
Fifoplayer depends on the old behaviour of videosoftware (and the other
hardware backends in non virtual/real xfb modes) where the framebuffer
gets rendered directly to the screen.
Really fifoplayer should call BeginFrame/EndFrame when it finished
rendering a frame, but adding this hack back in is simpler.
- remove unused variables
- reduce the scope where it makes sense
- correct limits (did you know that strcat()'s last parameter does not
include the \0 that is always added?)
- set some free()'d pointers to NULL
If there is an issue with a reported extension, disable it instead of failing out entirely.
Fixes an issue with buffer_storage that I had overlooked as well.
This changes from using logical and to bitwise and, which causes the compile time to drop from an absurd amount of time to around five seconds on my
crappy laptop.
This structure fields should match byte-to-byte the layout of MMIO registers:
it is addressed using the MMIO reg address when doing a CP MMIO read. This was
unfortunately not the case, causing CP reads to be mostly broken with the
software renderer.
This option was known to break every second game and only boost a bit.
It also seems to be broken because of streaming into pinned memory and buffer storage buffers.
v2: also remove dlc_desc
Older Qualcomm drivers rotated the framebuffer 90 degrees and this fix didn't work.
Now for some obscene reason it rotates a full 180 degrees.
This can at least be worked around by flipping around the image on our end.
On Windows, nvidia don't give us their driver version, so we can't workaround any issues.
As buffer_storage is broken on some drivers, we wanted to disble it for them.
So we can't.
Luckyly only "some" released driver versions are affected as this extension is only available since some months. Let's hope that nobody have to use one of this driver version, else they will get a black screen ...
OSX has their own driver, so performance issues aren't shared with the nvidia driver (unlike the closed source linux and windows nvidia driver). So now they'll also use the MapAndSync backend like all other osx drivers.
fixes issue 6596
I've also cleaned up the if/else block selecting the best backend a bit.
The only two devices that do this are Mesa software rasterizer and Intel Ironlake(With a few hacks).
Basically since it doesn't support OpenGL 3.0, it can't grab the version the new way.
So failing that, it sets to GL 2.1, and continues.
Further along, on Ironlake at least, it tries grabbing the extensions the new GL 3.0 way and fails.
So have a fallback that grabs the extensions string the old way, in probably the most elegant way possible.
The old way was to use big switch/case statements based on a type of buffer.
The new one is to use inheritance.
This change prohibits us to change the buffer type while running, but I doubt we'll ever do so.
Performance should also be a bit better. Also a nice cleanup.
Added some comments about this different kind of buffers.
This is a bit slower on map_and_* because of flushing and _very_ much slower on buffer(sub)?data because of a new memcpy.
But this design allow us to decode directly into a gpu buffer, eg vertexloader will profit :)
gl.h and glext.h provide most of the function pointer typedefs and defines for extensions and core features.
The only one it doesn't provide is GL 1.1 function typedefs, but this is to be expected.
If anything needs defines or typedefs in their header in the future, that's as easy as before.
This one was introduced to reduce the glBindTexture and glActiveTexture calls. But it was quite a bit of logic and only an improvment on uploading/creating a texture, which is done rarely.
This adds xfb support to the videosoftware backend, which increases it's
accuracy and more imporantly, enables the usage of many homebrew apps
which write directly to the xfb on the videosoftware backend.
Conflicts:
Source/Core/VideoBackends/Software/SWRenderer.cpp
Source/Core/VideoBackends/Software/SWmain.cpp