There were two issues with block linear copies. First the swizzling was
wrong and this commit reimplements them.
The other issue was that these copies are generally used to download
render targets from the GPU and yuzu was not downloading them from
host GPU memory unless the extreme GPU accuracy setting was selected.
This commit enables cached memory reads for all accuracy levels.
- Fixes level thumbnails in Super Mario Maker 2.
This makes it more inline with its currently unavailable standardized
analogue std::derived_from.
While we're at it, we can also make the template match the requirements
of the standardized variant as well.
Previously the constructor for all of these would run at program
startup, consuming time before the application can enter main().
This is also particularly dangerous, given the logging system wouldn't
have been initialized properly yet, yet the program would use the logs
to signify an error.
To rectify this, we can replace the literals with constexpr functions
that perform the conversion at compile-time, completely eliminating the
runtime cost of initializing these arrays.
- In `SetCurrentThreadName`, when on Linux, truncate to 15 bytes, as (at
least on glibc) `pthread_set_name_np` will otherwise return `ERANGE` and
do nothing.
- Also, add logging in case `pthread_set_name_np` returns an error
anyway. This is Linux-specific, as the Apple and BSD versions of
`pthread_set_name_np return `void`.
- Change the name for CPU threads in multi-core mode from
"yuzu:CoreCPUThread_N" (19 bytes) to "yuzu:CPUCore_N" (14 bytes) so it
fits into the Linux limit. Some other thread names are also cut off,
but I didn't bother addressing them as you can guess them from the
truncated versions. For a CPU thread, truncation means you can't see
which core it is!
On DragonFly and NetBSD build fails with
src/common/virtual_buffer.cpp
src/common/virtual_buffer.cpp:16:10: fatal error: sys/sysinfo.h: No such file or directory
#include <sys/sysinfo.h>
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We can add a helper function to make creation of these files nicer.
While we're at it, we can eliminate an unnecessary std::array copy in
the constructor. This makes the overhead on some of these functions way
less intensive, given some arrays were quite large.
e.g. The timezone location names are 9633 bytes in size.
In some rare instances, the patch manager is not able to find a control nca, fallback to the previous method of parsing a control nca through the loader if this occurs.
Previously NAND/SDMC installed titles would open device saves when they are supposed to be user saves. This is due to the control nca not being read and thus returns 0 for both GetDefaultNormalSaveSize() and GetDeviceSaveDataSize(). Fix this by utilizing the patch manager to read the control nca.
Previously the map of entries was being cleared while looping through each game directory, this resulted into all game directories except the last game dir to lose content metadata information. Fix this by clearing the entries only once.