Allows setting CPU accuracy to Accurate or Unsafe per-game, as well as
the accuracy options for Unsafe. Debug is not allowed here as a per-game
CPU accuracy.
- This is a developer-only setting and no longer needs to be enabled by default.
- Also adds "use_auto_stub" setting to SDL frontend while we are here.
- Supersedes #1340.
Several issues have been reported with the borderless windowed fullscreen mode on *nix platforms. Default to exclusive fullscreen mode on these platforms for now.
The borderless windowed fullscreen mode solves several issues with the presentation of the overlay dialogs and on-screen keyboard in exclusive fullscreen mode, and also has other benefits such as smoother gameplay, lower latency and a significant reduction in screen tearing.
Co-authored-by: Its-Rei <kupfel@gmail.com>
Auto-stub is an experimental debugging feature that may cause unforseen bugs. This adds a toggle to only allow auto-stubbing unimplemented functions when explicitly enabled when yuzu is launched.
Due to BindBufferRangeNV limitations and poor quality code emission from
our side, assembly shaders are currently slower than GLSL. Their build
time and feature advantages are still relevant, but they are outweighted
by their runtime performance.
This tab of the settings is already extremely bloated and the setting itself is quite useless.
With a gamelist of almost 30 games, the cache directory is smaller than 1MB for me and therefore I don't see why it needs to be configurable.
Removes all remaining usages of the global system instance. After this,
migration can begin to migrate to being constructed and managed entirely
by the various frontends.
A vibration device is an input device that returns an unsigned byte as status.
It represents whether the vibration device supports vibration or not.
If the status returns 1, it supports vibration. Otherwise, it does not support vibration.
Allows for enabling and modifying vibration and vibration strength per player.
Also adds a toggle for enabling/disabling accurate vibrations.
Co-authored-by: Its-Rei <kupfel@gmail.com>
This allows setting the vibration strength percentage anywhere from 1% to 100%.
Also hooks up the remaining motion button and checkbox in the Controller Applet.
This commit aims to implement the NVDEC (Nvidia Decoder) functionality, with video frame decoding being handled by the FFmpeg library.
The process begins with Ioctl commands being sent to the NVDEC and VIC (Video Image Composer) emulated devices. These allocate the necessary GPU buffers for the frame data, along with providing information on the incoming video data. A Submit command then signals the GPU to process and decode the frame data.
To decode the frame, the respective codec's header must be manually composed from the information provided by NVDEC, then sent with the raw frame data to the ffmpeg library.
Currently, H264 and VP9 are supported, with VP9 having some minor artifacting issues related mainly to the reference frame composition in its uncompressed header.
Async GPU is not properly implemented at the moment.
Co-Authored-By: David <25727384+ogniK5377@users.noreply.github.com>
This allows toggling motion on or off, and allows access to the motion configuration.
Also changes the [waiting] text for motion buttons to Shake! as this is how motion is connected to a player.