Render.Vulkan <Error> video_core/renderer_vulkan/renderer_vulkan.cpp:CreateInstance:131: Presentation not supported on this platform
Render.Vulkan <Error> video_core/renderer_vulkan/renderer_vulkan.cpp:CreateSurface:378: Presentation not supported on this platform
Core <Critical> core/core.cpp:Load:199: Failed to initialize system (Error 5)!
Pad FixedPipelineState's size to 384 bytes to be a multiple of 16.
Compare the whole struct with std::memcmp and hash with CityHash. Using
CityHash instead of a naive hash should reduce the number of collisions.
Improve used type traits to ensure this operation is safe.
With these changes the improvements to the hashable pipeline state are:
Optimized structure
Hash: 89 ns
Comparison: 103 ns
Construction*: 164 ns
Struct size: 384 bytes
Original structure
Hash: 148 ns
Equal: 174 ns
Construction*: 281 ns
Size: 1384 bytes
* Attribute state initialization is not measured
These measures are averages taken with std::chrono::high_accuracy_clock
on MSVC shipped on Visual Studio 16.6.0 Preview 2.1.
Avoids unnecessary reference count increments where applicable and also
avoids reallocating a vector.
Unlikely to make a huge difference, but given how trivial of an
amendment it is, why not?
Nvidia recently introduced a new memory type for data streaming
(awesome!), but yuzu was assuming that all heaps had enough memory
for the assumed stream buffer size (256 MiB).
This worked fine on AMD but Nvidia's new memory heap was smaller than
256 MiB. This commit changes this assumption and allocates a bit less
than the size of the preferred heap, with a maximum of 256 MiB (to avoid
allocating all system memory on integrated devices).
- Fixes a crash on NVIDIA 450.82.0.0
Some variables aren't used, so we can remove these.
Unfortunately, diagnostics are still reported on structured bindings
even when annotated with [[maybe_unused]], so we need to unpack the
elements that we want to use manually.
Implement indexed quads (GL_QUADS used with glDrawElements*) with a
compute pass conversion.
The compute shader converts from uint8/uint16/uint32 indices to uint32.
The format is passed through push constants to avoid having different
variants of the same shader.
- Used by Fast RMX
- Used by Xenoblade Chronicles 2 (it still has graphical due to
synchronization issues on Vulkan)