This is possible now that EmitBackpatchRoutine lets the caller choose
addr register.
Note: The removed MOV is actually traded for one added MOV in farcode.
When EmitBackpatchRoutine emits slow access code for a load, RS must not
be in scratch_gprs/scratch_fprs if we have memchecks (otherwise the
memcheck exit won't be able to save RS properly), and RS must be in
scratch_gprs/scratch_fprs if we don't have memchecks (otherwise RS will
be restored to the value it had before the load, overwriting the result
of the load). Let's save callers from having to think about this by
embedding the relevant logic inside EmitBackpatchRoutine.
This cuts down on how much callers have to think about what registers
EmitBackpatchRoutine is using. Also, by allocating registers dynamically
instead of using a fixed set of registers, we improve codegen in cases
where the fixed registers are taken but other registers are free.
(These improvements don't apply to the emitting_routine == true case,
where everything still works like before by necessity.)
Preparation for the next commit, which will make EmitBackpatchRoutine
allocate registers on its own. Because the register allocation will
change during the call to EmitBackpatchRoutine, the set of GPRs/FPRs to
push can't be computed prior to the call, so let's compute them during
the call instead.
Probably a copy-paste error from layout-ldrtl/list_item_setting.xml.
This error made it so a long setting name could overlap with the
checkbox next to it if Dolphin was running with right-to-left layout.
The incorrect ID was apparently also causing the app:lintVitalRelease
build task to fail. I guess we're not running that build task, because I
only heard of this from someone building Dolphin locally.
Results in a "MSVC_RUNTIME_LIBRARY value 'MultiThreadedDLL' not known for this ASM compiler" otherwise, and zstd doesn't support the relevant ASM code for MSVC anyway.
There's no guarantee that directory initialization has completed by this
point, so we can't safely use NativeLibrary.
I'm making this change because of a crash being reported in Google Play
Console. The exact way it's crashing is mysterious to me, so I'm not
sure if this commit fixes the crash, but I think this commit is
a reasonable change to make even if it doesn't fix the crash. Backtrace
from Google Play Console:
#00 pc 0x0000000000469074 /data/app/~~m0kqybFNfeqnDenQFc53XQ==/org.dolphinemu.dolphinemu-Mtaw0lU8DVUQbte2ZjBp3w==/lib/arm64/libmain.so (std::__ndk1::pair<std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>> const, std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>>::pair[abi:nn180000]<char const* const&, char const* const&, 0>(char const* const&, char const* const&)) (BuildId: 64cfebf5b574b6729ebc51799aa94ccc3238cbcc)
#01 pc 0x0000000000468e9c /data/app/~~m0kqybFNfeqnDenQFc53XQ==/org.dolphinemu.dolphinemu-Mtaw0lU8DVUQbte2ZjBp3w==/lib/arm64/libmain.so (std::__ndk1::pair<std::__ndk1::__tree_iterator<std::__ndk1::__value_type<std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>, std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>>, std::__ndk1::__tree_node<std::__ndk1::__value_type<std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>, std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>>, void*>*, long>, bool> std::__ndk1::__tree<std::__ndk1::__value_type<std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>, std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>>, std::__ndk1::__map_value_compare<std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>, std::__ndk1::__value_type<std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>, std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>>, std::__ndk1::less<std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>>, true>, std::__ndk1::allocator<std::__ndk1::__value_type<std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>, std::__ndk1::basic_string<char, std::__ndk1::char_traits<char>, std::__ndk1::allocator<char>>>>>::__emplace_unique_impl<char const* const&, char const* const&>(char const* const&, char const* const&)) (BuildId: 64cfebf5b574b6729ebc51799aa94ccc3238cbcc)
#02 pc 0x0000000000462f08 /data/app/~~m0kqybFNfeqnDenQFc53XQ==/org.dolphinemu.dolphinemu-Mtaw0lU8DVUQbte2ZjBp3w==/lib/arm64/libmain.so (Common::Log::LogManager::GetLogTypes()) (BuildId: 64cfebf5b574b6729ebc51799aa94ccc3238cbcc)
#03 pc 0x000000000044339c /data/app/~~m0kqybFNfeqnDenQFc53XQ==/org.dolphinemu.dolphinemu-Mtaw0lU8DVUQbte2ZjBp3w==/lib/arm64/libmain.so (Java_org_dolphinemu_dolphinemu_NativeLibrary_GetLogTypeNames+56) (BuildId: 64cfebf5b574b6729ebc51799aa94ccc3238cbcc)
#04 pc 0x000000000031456c /data/misc/apexdata/com.android.art/dalvik-cache/arm64/boot.oat (art_jni_trampoline+108)
#05 pc 0x0000000000781508 /apex/com.android.art/lib64/libart.so (nterp_helper+152)
#06 pc 0x00000000002d94d4 /data/app/~~m0kqybFNfeqnDenQFc53XQ==/org.dolphinemu.dolphinemu-Mtaw0lU8DVUQbte2ZjBp3w==/base.apk (org.dolphinemu.dolphinemu.features.settings.ui.SettingsFragmentPresenter.<clinit>+16)
[...]
Previously, PerformanceTracker registered a callback to be updated on
emulation state changes. PerformanceTrackers live in a global variable
(g_perf_metrics) within libvideocommon. The callback was stored in a
global variable in libcore. This created a race condition at shutdown
between these libraries, when the PerfTracker's destructor tried to
unregister the callback.
Notify the PerfTracker directly from libcore, without callbacks, since
Core.cpp already references g_perf_metrics explicitly. Also rename
Core::CallOnStateChangedCallbacks to NotifyStateChanged to better
reflect what it's doing.
Extracted games contain a boot.bin file that contains the disc header.
These boot.bin files are considered valid volumes by Dolphin, since
Dolphin only checks the disc header to determine if something is a valid
GC/Wii disc. Running them doesn't make any sense, though.
boot.bin files used to not be scanned by Dolphin due to their file
extension, but .bin was added to the list of file extensions to scan for
in 494e2c0. To stop them from showing up in the game list, let's update
the ShouldHideFromGameList mechanism.