anyways this should remove a bunch of redundant code/stack usage for response builders (ahem, msvc)
SHOULD help games that use IPC heavily like PKZA and whatnot
biblical levels of performance greed
Signed-off-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/3774
Reviewed-by: CamilleLaVey <camillelavey99@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Maufeat <sahyno1996@gmail.com>
- our logging code was bigger than spdlog itself, why???? just keep it simple
- fix issues when logging before logging system is even started
- removes the "initialized logging twice" issue
- removes uneeded indirection in file logging
- uses direct formatting instead of jumping hoopla-around the fmt::format() ressult
- code duplication and dead code removal as usual
I did explore dup2() but I think it's not worth the hassle
I did try `fwopen()` but it's better if things are just kept as-is.
there is a lot of noise because I removed a bunch of redundant files on logging and just put everything in one file
now normally this wouldn't be a good idea, however consider: the complexity of logging; it's less than 500 lines... does it really need a whole subsystem?!?!?! ITS JUST LOGGING
Signed-off-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/3688
Reviewed-by: crueter <crueter@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-by: DraVee <chimera@dravee.dev>
Reviewed-by: CamilleLaVey <camillelavey99@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Co-committed-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
also changes some methods to std::span<> as well, but mainly std::vector<> in the NSO/KIP loading stuff is not needed to be memcpy'ed and memmove'd around
this should save a marginal amount of loading time (RDR1)
Signed-off-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/3639
Reviewed-by: DraVee <dravee@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-by: Maufeat <sahyno1996@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Co-committed-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
mainly doing this to reduce memory footprint; we all know how nice ankerl::unordered_dense is
in theory 4x faster - in practice these maps arent that "hot" anyways so not likely to have much perf gained
i just want to reduce mem fragmentation to ease my porting process, plus it helps other platforms as well (ahem weak Mediatek devices) :)
Signed-off-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Co-authored-by: Caio Oliveira <caiooliveirafarias0@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/3442
Reviewed-by: DraVee <dravee@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-by: CamilleLaVey <camillelavey99@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Co-committed-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Compilation and CMake fixes for both Windows on ARM and clang-cl, meaning Windows can now be built on both MSVC and clang on both amd64 and aarch64.
Compiling on clang is *dramatically* faster so this should be useful for CI.
Co-authored-by: crueter <crueter@eden-emu.dev>
Co-authored-by: crueter <crueter@crueter.xyz>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/348
Reviewed-by: CamilleLaVey <camillelavey99@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: crueter <crueter@eden-emu.dev>
Co-authored-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Co-committed-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
This formats all copyright comments according to SPDX formatting guidelines.
Additionally, this resolves the remaining GPLv2 only licensed files by relicensing them to GPLv2.0-or-later.
Guest logs are not very useful, as they are intended for use by the game developers during development. As such, they provide little meaning to be logged by yuzu and tend to overwhelm the log output at times.
We can perform the lookup and then do the contains check by checking the
end iterator. The benefit of this is that if we *do* find an entry, then
we aren't hashing into the map again to find it.
We can also get rid of an unused std::vector temporary while we're at
it.
Fixes assertion on Bloodstained Ritual of the Night.
We would over read sometimes, this is fixed by checking if the top bit is set in the first iteration. We also lock the loop off to be only the max size of the type we can fit. Finally we changed an incorrect print of "DEBUG" to "TRACE" to reflect the proper log severity
Resolves numerous deprecation warnings throughout the codebase due to
inclusion of this header. Now building core should be significantly less
noisy (and also relying on less global state).
This also uncovered quite a few modules that were relying on indirect
includes, which have also been fixed.
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.
Amends a few interfaces to be able to handle the migration over to the
new Memory class by passing the class by reference as a function
parameter where necessary.
Notably, within the filesystem services, this eliminates two ReadBlock()
calls by using the helper functions of HLERequestContext to do that for
us.
This commit it automatically generated by command in zsh:
sed -i -- 's/BitField<\(.*\)_le>/BitField<\1>/g' **/*(D.)
BitField is now aware to endianness and default to little endian. It expects a value representation type without storage specification for its template parameter.
This service function was likely intended to be a way to redirect where
the output of a log went. e.g. Firing a log over a network, dumping over
a tunneling session, etc.
Given we always want to see the log and not change its output. It's one
of the lucky service functions where the easiest implementation is to
just do nothing at all and return success.
Using LOG_TRACE here isn't a good idea because LOG_TRACE is only enabled
when yuzu is compiled in debug mode. Debug mode is also quite slow, and
so we're potentially throwing away logging messages that can provide
value when trying to boot games.
The thread field serves to indicate which thread a log is related to and
provides the length of the thread's name, so we can print that out,
ditto for modules.
Now we can know what threads are potentially spawning off logging
messages (for example Lydie & Suelle bounces between MainThread and
LoadingThread when initializing the game).