Some genius decided to put the entire MainWindow class into main.h and
main.cpp, which is not only horrific practice but also completely
destroys clangd beyond repair. Please, just don't do this.
(this will probably merge conflict to hell and back)
Also, fixes a bunch of issues with Ryujinx save data link:
- Paths with spaces would cause mklink to fail
- Add support for portable directories
- Symlink detection was incorrect sometimes(????)
- Some other stuff I'm forgetting
Furthermore, when selecting "From Eden" and attempting to save in Ryujinx, Ryujinx would destroy the link for... some reason? So to get around this we just copy the Eden data to Ryujinx then treat it like a "From Ryujinx" op
Signed-off-by: crueter <crueter@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/2929
Reviewed-by: Lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-by: CamilleLaVey <camillelavey99@gmail.com>
This adds an action to the Game List context menu that lets users link
save data from Eden to Ryujinx, or vice versa.
Unfortunately, this isn't so simple to deal with due to the way Ryujinx's saves work. Ryujinx stores its saves in the... config directory... in `bis/user/save`. Unlike Yuzu, however, it doesn't store things by TitleID, instead it's just a bunch of directories from 000...01 to 000...0f and so on. The way it *maps* TitleID to SaveID is via `imkvdb.arc` in `bis/system/save/8000000000000000/0/` and also an identical copy in the `1` directory for... some reason. `imkvdb.arc` is handled by `FlatMapKeyValueStore` in LibHac, which, as the name implies, is a key-value storage system that `imkvdb.arc`, and seemingly `imkvdb.arc` alone, uses. The way this class is written is really weird, almost as if it's designed to accommodate more types of kvdbs... but for now we can safely assume that there aren't gonna be any other `kvdb` implementations added to HorizonNX.
Regardless, the file format is ridiculously simple so I didn't actually need to do a deep dive into C# code... of which I can basically only read Avalonia. A simple `xxd` on the `imkvdb.arc` is all that's needed, and here's everything that matters:
- The `IMKV` magic header (4 bytes)
- 8 bytes that don't really have anything useful to us, except for a size byte (presumably a `u32`) strewn at offset `0x08` from the start of the file, which is useless to us
- Then we start the `IMEN` list. I don't know what the `IM` stands for, but `IMEN` is just, well, an ENtry. Offsets shown are relative to the start of the `IMEN` header.
* 4-byte `IMEN` magic header at 0x0
* 8 bytes of filler data. It contains two `0x40` bytes, but I'm not really sure what they do
* TitleID (u64) at `0xC`, for example `00a0 df10 501f 0001` for Legends: Arceus (the byte order is swapped)
* 0x38 bytes of filler starting at offset 0x14
* SaveID (u64) at `0x4C`, for example `0a00 0000 0000 0000` for my Legends: Arceus save
* 0x38 bytes of filler starting at offset 0x54
Full example for Legends: Arceus:
```
000001b0: 494d 454e 4000 0000 4000 0000 00a0 df10 IMEN@...@.......
000001c0: 501f 0001 0100 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 P...............
000001d0: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0100 0000 ................
000001e0: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................
000001f0: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0a00 0000 ................
00000200: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................
00000210: 0000 0000 0100 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................
00000220: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................
00000230: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 494d 454e ............IMEN
```
Ultimately, the size of the `IMEN` sits at 0x8C or 140 bytes. With this knowledge reading all the TitleID -> SaveID pairs is basically free, and outside of validation and stuff is like 15 lines of relevant code. Some interesting caveats, though:
- There are two entries for some TitleIDs for... some reason? Ignoring the second one seems to work though.
- Within each save directory, there are directories `0` and `1`... and only `0` ever seems used??? It's where Ryujinx points you to for save, so I just chose to use that.
Once everything is parsed, the rest of the implementation is extremely trivial:
- When the user requests a Ryujinx link, match the current program_id to the corresponding SaveID in `imkvdb`
- If it doesn't exist, just error out (save data is probably nonexistent)
- If it does though, give the user the option to use Eden's current save data OR Ryujinx's current save data.
Old save data is deleted depending on which one you chose.
Signed-off-by: crueter <crueter@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/2815
Reviewed-by: Lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-by: MaranBr <maranbr@eden-emu.dev>
This adds a "Data Manager" dialog to the Tools menu. The Data Manager allows for the following operations:
- Open w/ system file manager
- Clear
- Export
- Import
On any of the following directories:
- Save (w/ profile selector)
- UserNAND
- SysNAND
- Mods
- Shaders
TODO for the future:
- "Cleanup" for each directory
- TitleID -> Game name--let users clean data for a specific game if applicable
Signed-off-by: crueter <crueter@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/2700
Reviewed-by: MaranBr <maranbr@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-by: Lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
This is part of a series of PRs made in preparation for the QML rewrite. this PR specifically moves a bunch of utility functions from main.cpp into qt_common, with the biggest benefit being that QML can reuse the exact same code through ctx passthrough.
Also, QtCommon::Frontend is an abstraction layer over several previously Widgets-specific stuff like QMessageBox that gets used everywhere. The idea is that once QML is implemented, these functions can have a Quick version implemented for systems that don't work well with Widgets (sun) or for those on Plasma 6+ (reduces memory usage w/o Widgets linkage) although Quick from C++ is actually anal, but whatever.
Other than that this should also just kinda reduce the size of main.cpp which is a 6000-line behemoth rn, and clangd straight up gives up with it for me (likely caused by the massive amount of headers, which this DOES reduce).
In the future, I probably want to create a common strings lookup table that both Qt and QML can reference--though I'm not sure how much linguist likes that--which should give us a way to keep language consistent (use frozen-map).
TODO: Docs for Qt stuff
Co-authored-by: MaranBr <maranbr@outlook.com>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/94
Reviewed-by: MaranBr <maranbr@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-by: Shinmegumi <shinmegumi@eden-emu.dev>