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>
Using the Qt::WindowStaysOnTopHint flag allows these dialogs to show up on top while running in fullscreen. However, if yuzu goes out of focus (by alt-tabbing or otherwise), this flag does not seem to have an effect.
The context menu was removed in Mjölnir Part 1 as part of the input rewrite as we were unaware of it's usage statistics.
However, as this was the only way to clear the inputs of individual buttons, this PR will re-add it back in.
Now that the GPU is initialized when video backends are initialized,
it's no longer needed to query components once the game is running: it
can be done when yuzu is booting.
This allows us to pass components between constructors and in the
process remove all Core::System references in the video backend.
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.
Due to the way Qt performs destruction of parent/child widgets, we need
to make the lifetime of the input subsystem shared across the main
window and the render window.
Abstracts most of the input mechanisms under an InputSubsystem class
that is managed by the frontends, eliminating any static constructors
and destructors. This gets rid of global accessor functions and also
allows the frontends to have a more fine-grained control over the
lifecycle of the input subsystem.
This also makes it explicit which interfaces rely on the input subsystem
instead of making it opaque in the interface functions. All that remains
to migrate over is the factories, which can be done in a separate
change.
The extended logging option is automatically disabled on boot but can be enabled afterwards, allowing the log file to go up to 1 GB during that session.
This commit also fixes a few errors that are present in the general debug menu.
Migrates a remaining common file over to the Common namespace, making it
consistent with the rest of common files.
This also allows for high-traffic FS related code to alias the
filesystem function namespace as
namespace FS = Common::FS;
for more concise typing.
Creates a new entry in the Emulation menu called "Configure Current Game..." that is only available if a game is currently being executed in yuzu. When selected, it opens the game properties dialog for the current game.
Thanks to @BSoDGamingYT for reminding me to do this.
We can query the given object name directly from the widget itself. This
removes any potential for forgetting to change the name if the widget
gets renamed and makes the API much simpler (just pass in the widget,
and not worry about its name).
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.
Oddly enough the scan that feeds the manual content provider is hardcoded to scan 2 nested directories deep.
This effectively rendered the scan subdirectories setting useless as the manual content provider cannot find any games located more than 2 nested directories deep.
Furthermore, this behavior causes game files to be picked up by the manual content provider even if scan subdirectories is disabled.
FIx this by utilizing the behavior described when populating the game list for populating the content provider.
Hides the following options when the title id is 0:
- Open Save Location
- Open Mod Data Location
- Open Transferable Shader Cache
- All removal options except Remove Custom Configuration
This picks a default directory and file name. If on Windows and save-as screenshot saving is enabled, it asks the user, first defaulting to the default screenshot path, and with a default filename in the format `[title_id]_[year-mt-dy_hr-mn-sc-msc].png`. Otherwise, or on Linux for now, it simply saves a file in that directory with that file name.
This adds two options to the General -> UI tab. The first disables picking a place to save the file. The second chooses a default directory for saving screenshots.
The way the configurations are set up, it is not trivial to do this. I'll leave it as is, but the API selection, and the background color and volume slider selectors are kind of not following the style.
I noticed some of the code could be reduced to just passing the function an int, since I was doing the same thing over and over. Also clang-formats configure_graphics
Sets up initial support for implementing colored tristate functions. These functions color a QWidget blue when it's overriding a global setting, and discolor it when not. The lack of color indicates it uses the global state, replacing the Qt::CheckState::PartiallyChecked state with the global state.
Another error that got pass me and only noticed when I was doing the per-game settings UI rework. This prevents asynchronous GPU emulation from being disabled while multi core is enabled as a result of a poorly put together per-game config.
This is likely an oversight during a rebase. Guards use_multi_core to be only set when the global value is in use. It should not make a difference given the current code base, but makes the code sensible.
Provides the buildbot with one builder that is always tracking the
latest version of the C++ standard, allowing us to progressively rectify
our code and amend any differences between standards over time instead
of waiting for a complete standard change, potentially breaking a lot of
code all at once.
Key issues fixed:
- Progress dialog showing up as white/hanging/getting stuck/unresponsive.
Key changes:
- Progress dialog now shows progress as a function of all files instead of per nca within a file.
- Overwrite existing files will overwrite all files in the selection.
* Switch game settings to use a pointer
In order to add full per-game settings, we need to be able to tell yuzu to switch
to using either the global or game configuration. Using a pointer makes it easier
to switch.
* configuration: add new UI without changing existing funcitonality
The new UI also adds General, System, Graphics, Advanced Graphics,
and Audio tabs, but as yet they do nothing. This commit keeps yuzu
to the same functionality as originally branched.
* configuration: Rename files
These weren't included in the last commit. Now they are.
* configuration: setup global configuration checkbox
Global config checkbox now enables/disables the appropriate tabs in the game
properties dialog. The use global configuration setting is now saved to the
config, defaulting to true. This also addresses some changes requested in the PR.
* configuration: swap to per-game config memory for properties dialog
Does not set memory going in-game. Swaps to game values when opening the
properties dialog, then swaps back when closing it. Uses a `memcpy` to swap.
Also implements saving config files, limited to certain groups of configurations
so as to not risk setting unsafe configurations.
* configuration: change config interfaces to use config-specific pointers
When a game is booted, we need to be able to open the configuration dialogs
without changing the settings pointer in the game's emualtion. A new pointer
specific to just the configuration dialogs can be used to separate changes
to just those config dialogs without affecting the emulation.
* configuration: boot a game using per-game settings
Swaps values where needed to boot a game.
* configuration: user correct config during emulation
Creates a new pointer specifically for modifying the configuration while
emulation is in progress. Both the regular configuration dialog and the game
properties dialog now use the pointer Settings::config_values to focus edits to
the correct struct.
* settings: split Settings::values into two different structs
By splitting the settings into two mutually exclusive structs, it becomes easier,
as a developer, to determine how to use the Settings structs after per-game
configurations is merged. Other benefits include only duplicating the required
settings in memory.
* settings: move use_docked_mode to Controls group
`use_docked_mode` is set in the input settings and cannot be accessed from the
system settings. Grouping it with system settings causes it to be saved with
per-game settings, which may make transferring configs more difficult later on,
especially since docked mode cannot be set from within the game properties
dialog.
* configuration: Fix the other yuzu executables and a regression
In main.cpp, we have to get the title ID before the ROM is loaded, else the
renderer will reflect only the global settings and now the user's game specific
settings.
* settings: use a template to duplicate memory for each setting
Replaces the type of each variable in the Settings::Values struct with a new
class that allows basic data reading and writing. The new struct
Settings::Setting duplicates the data in memory and can manage global overrides
per each setting.
* configuration: correct add-ons config and swap settings when apropriate
Any add-ons interaction happens directly through the global values struct.
Swapping bewteen structs now also includes copying the necessary global configs
that cannot be changed nor saved in per-game settings. General and System config
menus now update based on whether it is viewing the global or per-game settings.
* settings: restore old values struct
No longer needed with the Settings::Setting class template.
* configuration: implement hierarchical game properties dialog
This sets the apropriate global or local data in each setting.
* clang format
* clang format take 2
can the docker container save this?
* address comments and style issues
* config: read and write settings with global awareness
Adds new functions to read and write settings while keeping the global state in
focus. Files now generated per-game are much smaller since often they only need
address the global state.
* settings: restore global state when necessary
Upon closing a game or the game properties dialog, we need to restore all global
settings to the original global state so that we can properly open the
configuration dialog or boot a different game.
* configuration: guard setting values incorrectly
This disables setting values while a game is running if the setting is
overwritten by a per game setting.
* config: don't write local settings in the global config
Simple guards to prevent writing the wrong settings in the wrong files.
* configuration: add comments, assume less, and clang format
No longer assumes that a disabled UI element means the global state is turned
off, instead opting to directly answer that question. Still however assumes a
game is running if it is in that state.
* configuration: fix a logic error
Should not be negated
* restore settings' global state regardless of accept/cancel
Fixes loading a properties dialog and causing the global config dialog to show
local settings.
* fix more logic errors
Fixed the frame limit would set the global setting from the game properties
dialog. Also strengthened the Settings::Setting member variables and simplified
the logic in config reading (ReadSettingGlobal).
* fix another logic error
In my efforts to guard RestoreGlobalState, I accidentally negated the IsPowered
condition.
* configure_audio: set toggle_stretched_audio to tristate
* fixed custom rtc and rng seed overwriting the global value
* clang format
* rebased
* clang format take 4
* address my own review
Basically revert unintended changes
* settings: literal instead of casting
"No need to cast, use 1U instead"
Thanks, Morph!
Co-authored-by: Morph <39850852+Morph1984@users.noreply.github.com>
* Revert "settings: literal instead of casting
"
This reverts commit 95e992a87c898f3e882ffdb415bb0ef9f80f613f.
* main: fix status buttons reporting wrong settings after stop emulation
* settings: Log UseDockedMode in the Controls group
This should have happened when use_docked_mode was moved over to the controls group
internally. This just reflects this in the log.
* main: load settings if the file has a title id
In other words, don't exit if the loader has trouble getting a title id.
* use a zero
* settings: initalize resolution factor with constructor instead of casting
* Revert "settings: initalize resolution factor with constructor instead of casting"
This reverts commit 54c35ecb46a29953842614620f9b7de1aa9d5dc8.
* configure_graphics: guard device selector when Vulkan is global
Prevents the user from editing the device selector if Vulkan is the global
renderer backend. Also resets the vulkan_device variable when the users
switches back-and-forth between global and Vulkan.
* address reviewer concerns
Changes function variables to const wherever they don't need to be changed. Sets Settings::Setting to final as it should not be inherited from. Sets ConfigurationShared::use_global_text to static.
Co-Authored-By: VolcaEM <volcaem@users.noreply.github.com>
* main: load per-game settings after LoadROM
This prevents `Restart Emulation` from restoring the global settings *after* the per-game settings were applied. Thanks to BSoDGamingYT for finding this bug.
* Revert "main: load per-game settings after LoadROM"
This reverts commit 9d0d48c52d2dcf3bfb1806cc8fa7d5a271a8a804.
* main: only restore global settings when necessary
Loading the per-game settings cannot happen after the ROM is loaded, so we have to specify when to restore the global state. Again thanks to BSoD for finding the bug.
* configuration_shared: address reviewer concerns except operator overrides
Dropping operator override usage in next commit.
Co-Authored-By: LC <lioncash@users.noreply.github.com>
* settings: Drop operator overrides from Setting template
Requires using GetValue and SetValue explicitly. Also reverts a change that broke title ID formatting in the game properties dialog.
* complete rebase
* configuration_shared: translate "Use global configuration"
Uses ConfigurePerGame to do so, since its usage, at least as of now, corresponds with ConfigurationShared.
* configure_per_game: address reviewer concern
As far as I understand, it prevents the program from unnecessarily copying strings.
Co-Authored-By: LC <lioncash@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Morph <39850852+Morph1984@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: VolcaEM <volcaem@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: LC <lioncash@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit: Implements CPU Interrupts, Replaces Cycle Timing for Host
Timing, Reworks the Kernel's Scheduler, Introduce Idle State and
Suspended State, Recreates the bootmanager, Initializes Multicore
system.
Occurs when doing a local compile in MSVC build. The compiler I'm using is as below:
Microsoft Visual Studio Community 2019 Preview
Version 16.6.0 Preview 5.0
Fixes this error:
CVTRES : fatal error CVT1100: duplicate resource. type:MANIFEST, name:1, language:0x0409
LINK : fatal error LNK1123: failure during conversion to COFF: file invalid or corrupt
I have put 0 since previous name was 1. If have other names in mind, please let me know.
Co-Authored-By: dragios <dragios@users.noreply.github.com>
Previously, we were reading the keys everytime a KeyManager object was created, causing yuzu to reread the keys file multiple hundreds of times when loading the game list.
With this change, it is only loaded once.
On my system, this decreased game list loading times by a factor of 20.
Patch the RomFS with the selected updates before dumping. Previously the resulting RomFS only contained data from the original title.
To dump the RomFS without updates the user can disable the update under Properties before choosing Dump RomFS.
Allows reporting more cases where logic errors may exist, such as
implicit fallthrough cases, etc.
We currently ignore unused parameters, since we currently have many
cases where this is intentional (virtual interfaces).
While we're at it, we can also tidy up any existing code that causes
warnings. This also uncovered a few bugs as well.
Makes popup texts more compact and clear and also links our quickstart guide now.
Also removes OnMenuSelectEmulatedDirectory from the File dropdown, as the action already exists in the Filesystem tab and provides better visual feedback there.
Presentation context always has GL_DRAW_FRAMEBUFFER_BINDING as zero.
There is no need to bind the default framebuffer constantly.
According to Nsight this was using ~0.7ms per frame and it broke
renderdoc captures.
Should fixcitra-emu/citra#4593.
As the issue might not be entirely clear, I'll offer a short explanation from what I understood from it and found from experimentation.
Currently yuzu offers the user the option to change the text that's displayed in the "Name" column in the game list. Generally, it is expected that the items are sorted based on the displayed text, but yuzu would sort them by title instead.
Made it so that an access to SortRole returns the same as DisplayRole.
There shouldn't be any UI changes, only change in behaviour.
Also fixes a bug with directory sorting, where having the directories out of order would enable you to try to "move up" to the addDirectory button, which would crash the emulator.
Co-Authored-By: Vitor K <vitor-k@users.noreply.github.com>
Changes the GraphicsContext to be managed by the GPU core. This
eliminates the need for the frontends to fool around with tricky
MakeCurrent/DoneCurrent calls that are dependent on the settings (such
as async gpu option).
This also refactors out the need to use QWidget::fromWindowContainer as
that caused issues with focus and input handling. Now we use a regular
QWidget and just access the native windowHandle() directly.
Another change is removing the debug tool setting in FrameMailbox.
Instead of trying to block the frontend until a new frame is ready, the
core will now take over presentation and draw directly to the window if
the renderer detects that its hooked by NSight or RenderDoc
Lastly, since it was in the way, I removed ScopeAcquireWindowContext and
replaced it with a simple subclass in GraphicsContext that achieves the
same result
This commit disables the Boxcat backend by default for new users of yuzu.
There's several reasons as to why this is done:
1. Boxcat currently only actually has an impact on 3 games and doesn't influence any core mechanics of them
2. It causes a plethora of issues when enabled such as games like Crash Team Racing, Diablo 3 and Tales of Vesperia not booting at all or hanging
3. It causes https://github.com/yuzu-emu/yuzu/issues/2957 to happen. This makes the configuration menu totally unusable for many Linux users of yuzu
I think those points show that currently the negative impact of Boxcat outweighs its benefits and should therefore be disabled by default.
For users who are eager to use the extra features provided by it, they can still just turn it on in the settings.
This removes the "exit lock" popup from yuzu when pausing a game.
Motivation
The exit lock feature is broken in many ways and doesn't work properly in a lot of games, causing it to appear every time you want to pause the game or stop it, even in places where it wouldn't on Switch.
Additionally, the feature of pausing a game doesn't exist like this on Switch and yuzu should be guaranteed to be deterministic anyway, so pausing the emulation shouldn't be able to interrupt any critical processes in any way.
An implementation of the cemuhook motion/touch protocol, this adds the
ability for users to connect several different devices to citra to send
direct motion and touch data to citra.
Co-Authored-By: jroweboy <jroweboy@gmail.com>
MakeCurrent is a costly (according to Nsight's profiler it takes a tenth
of a millisecond to complete), and we don't have a reason to call it
because:
- Qt no longer signals a warning if it's not called
- yuzu no longer supports macOS
With all of the trivial parts of the memory interface moved over, we can
get right into moving over the bits that are used.
Note that this does require the use of GetInstance from the global
system instance to be used within hle_ipc.cpp and the gdbstub. This is
fine for the time being, as they both already rely on the global system
instance in other functions. These will be removed in a change directed
at both of these respectively.
For now, it's sufficient, as it still accomplishes the goal of
de-globalizing the memory code.
Emulates negative y viewports with ARB_clip_control. This allows us to
more easily emulated pipelines with tessellation and/or geometry shader
stages. It also avoids corrupting games with transform feedbacks and
negative viewports (gl_Position.y was being modified).
- This does not actually seem to exist in the real kernel - games reset these automatically.
# Conflicts:
# src/core/hle/service/am/applets/applets.cpp
# src/core/hle/service/filesystem/fsp_srv.cpp
These two colorful themes are based on the Default and Dark themes, and contain icons that are colored rather than black and white. These icons come from icons8.com and they have been slightly revised by me. I'm pretty sure I was licensed to use them for Citra.
Co-Authored-By: Pengfei Zhu <zhupengfei321@sina.cn>
The speed limiter being a frame limiter is an implmentation detail and can be changed in the future. What user care about is that it limit the emulation speed in genenral (not just graphics but also audio+input)
Co-Authored-By: Weiyi Wang <wwylele@gmail.com>
We can simply enable CMAKE_AUTOUIC and let CMake take care of handling
the UI code generation for targets.
As part of letting CMake automatically handle the header file parsing,
we must not name includes with "ui_*" unless they're related to the
output of the Qt UIC compiler. Because of this, we need to rename
ui_settings, given it would conflict with this restriction.
The JIT is mature enough that this setting can be removed, falling back
to Unicorn only on unsupported architectures. Any missing features from
Unicorn (of which there are extremely few), are mostly
developer-oriented, which most users don't care about.
Features should be coordinated with the JIT, not the interpreter,
anyhow.
Previously, a translated string was being appended onto another string
in a manner that doesn't allow the translator to control where the
appended text is placed. This can be a nuisance for languages where
grammar and text ordering differs from English.
We now append the strings via the format strings themselves, which
allows translators to reorder where the text will be placed.
A normal user shouldn't change this, as it will slow down the emulation and can lead to bugs or crashes. The renaming is done in order to prevent users from leaving this on without a way to turn it off from the UI.
This is more representative of what actually occurs, as web does support remote URLs which wouldn't need a romfs callback. This paves for easy future support of this with a call like 'OpenPageRemote' or similar.
To prepare for translation support, this makes all of the widgets
cognizant of the language change event that occurs whenever
installTranslator() is called and automatically retranslates their text
where necessary.
This is important as calling the backing UI's retranslateUi() is often
not enough, particularly in cases where we add our own strings that
aren't controlled by it. In that case we need to manually refresh the
strings ourselves.
Enforces the use of the proper URL resolution functions. e.g.
url = some_local_path_string;
should actually be:
url = QUrl::fromLocalPath(some_local_path_string);
etc.
This makes it harder to cause bugs when operating with both strings and
URLs at the same time.
Other overloads of start() are considerably much safer to use if we ever
need this in the future and need to pass arguments to the program, given
it contains separate parameters for the program path and the arguments
themselves, whereas this unsafe overload contains both as a single
string.
Given the alternatives are much safer, we can disable this.
We can make this message more meaningful by indicating the location the
screenshot has been saved to. We can also log out whenever a screenshot
could not be saved (e.g. due to filesystem permissions or some other
reason).
Treating it as a u16 can result in a sign-conversion warning when
performing arithmetic with it, as u16 promotes to an int when aritmetic
is performed on it, not unsigned int.
This also makes the interface more uniform, as the layout interface now
operates on u32 across the board.
We can just pass a pointer to GMainWindow directly and make it a
requirement of the interface. This makes the interface a little safer,
since this would technically otherwise allow any random QWidget to be
the parent of a render window, downcasting it to GMainWindow (which is
undefined behavior).
Stays consistent in our code with using Qt's provided mechanisms, and
also properly handles Unicode paths (which file streams on Windows don't
do very well).
Qt uses a signed value to represent indices. We should follow this
convention where applicable to avoid unnecessary sign-conversion
warnings, as well as making it easier to interoperate with other aspects
of Qt.
While we're at it, we can also make a sign-conversion explicit.
critical() is intended for critical/fatal errors that threaten the
overall stability of an application. A user entering a conflicting key
sequence is neither of those.
1. This is something that should be solely emitted by the hotkey dialog
itself
2. This is functionally unused, given there's nothing listening for the
signal.
The previous code was all "smushed" together wasn't really grouped
together that well.
This spaces things out and separates them by relation to one another,
making it easier to visually parse the individual sections of code that
make up the constructor.
A checkbox is able to be tri-state, giving it three possible activity
types, so in the connect call here, it would actually be truncating an
int into a bool.
Instead, we can just listen on the toggled() signal, which passes along
a bool, not an int.