NV_transform_feedback, NV_transform_feedback2 and
ARB_transform_feedback3 with NV_transform_feedback interactions allows
implementing transform feedbacks as dynamic state.
Maxwell implements transform feedbacks as dynamic state, so using these
extensions with TransformFeedbackStreamAttribsNV allows us to properly
emulate transform feedbacks without having to recompile shaders when the
state changes.
This avoids using Nvidia's ASTC decoder on OpenGL.
The last time it was profiled, it was slower than yuzu's decoder.
While we are at it, fix a bug in the texture cache when native ASTC is
not supported.
Previously we were disabling compute shaders on Intel's proprietary driver due to broken compute. This has been fixed in the latest Intel drivers. Re-enable compute for Intel proprietary drivers and remove the check for broken compute.
Geometry shaders built from Nvidia's compiler check for bits[16:23] to
be less than or equal to 0 with VSETP to default to a "safe" value of
0x8000'0000 (safe from hardware's perspective). To avoid hitting this
path in the shader, return 0x00ff'0000 from S2R INVOCATION_INFO.
This seems to be the maximum number of vertices a geometry shader can
emit in a primitive.
Avoid copying to a staging buffer on non-granular memory addresses.
Add a callable argument to StreamBufferUpload to be able to copy to the
staging buffer directly from ReadBlockUnsafe.
Stop ignoring image swizzles on depth and stencil images.
This doesn't fix a known issue on Xenoblade Chronicles 2 where an OpenGL
texture changes swizzles twice before being used. A proper fix would be
having a small texture view cache for this like we do on Vulkan.
While Vulkan was assuming we had no negative viewports, OpenGL code
was assuming we had them. Port the old code from Vulkan to OpenGL,
checking if the first viewport is negative before flipping faces.
This is not a complete implementation since we only check for the first
viewport to be negative. That said, unless a game is using Vulkan,
OpenGL and NVN games should be fine here, and we can always compare with
our Vulkan backend to see if there's a difference.
The check to flip faces when viewports are negative were a left over
from the old OpenGL code. This is not required on Vulkan where we have
negative viewports.
Hardware S2R special registers match gl_Thread*MaskNV. We can trivially
implement these using Nvidia's extension on OpenGL or naively stubbing
them with the ARB instructions to match. This might cause issues if the
host device warp size doesn't match Nvidia's. That said, this is
unlikely on proper shaders.
Refer to the attached url for more documentation about these flags.
https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL/extensions/NV/NV_shader_thread_group.txt
Some operations like atomicMin were ignored because they returned were
being stored to RZ. This operations have a side effect and it was being
ignored.
Drop the std::list hack to allocate memory indefinitely.
Instead use a custom allocator that keeps references valid until
destruction. This allocates fixed chunks of memory and puts pointers in
a free list. When an allocation is no longer used put it back to the
free list, this doesn't heap allocate because std::vector doesn't change
the capacity. If the free list is empty, allocate a new chunk.