Renames the members to more accurately indicate what they signify.
"OneShot" and "Sticky" are kind of ambiguous identifiers for the reset
types, and can be kind of misleading. Automatic and Manual communicate
the kind of reset type in a clearer manner. Either the event is
automatically reset, or it isn't and must be manually cleared.
The "OneShot" and "Sticky" terminology is just a hold-over from Citra
where the kernel had a third type of event reset type known as "Pulse".
Given the Switch kernel only has two forms of event reset types, we
don't need to keep the old terminology around anymore.
Makes the class less surprising when it comes to forward declaring the
type, and also prevents inlining the destruction code of the class,
given it contains non-trivial types.
These are able to be omitted from the declaration of functions, since
they don't do anything at the type system level. The definitions of the
functions can retain the use of const though, since they make the
variables immutable in the implementation of the function where they're
used.
Instead of retrieving the data from the std::variant instance, we can
just check if the variant contains that type of data.
This is essentially the same behavior, only it returns a bool indicating
whether or not the type in the variant is currently active, instead of
actually retrieving the data.
By default, MSVC doesn't use standards-compliant volatile semantics.
This makes it behave in a standards-compliant manner, making
expectations more uniform across compilers.
The C++ standard allows constexpr variables declared with the extern
keyword to have external linkage. Previously MSVC wasn't abiding by
this. This just makes the compiler more standards compliant during
builds.
Given we currently don't make use of anything that would break by this,
this is safe to enable.
The backend is not used until we decide to submit the testcase/telemetry, and creating it early prevents users from updating the credentials properly while the games are running.
Instead of asserting on already stored shader variants, silently skip them.
This shouldn't be happening but when a shader is invalidated and it is
not stored in the shader cache, this assert would hit and save that
shader anyways when the asserts are disabled.
This option allows picking the compatibility profile since a lot of bugs
are fixed in it. We devs will use this option to easierly debug current
problems in our Core implementation.:wq
flushing is now responsability of children caches instead of the cache
object. This change will allow the specific cache to pass extra
parameters on flushing and will allow more flexibility.