should make JIT translation a bit faster - especially for non-fastmem
test if thumb still werks
previously:
we read 32-bits one by one, and do translation **for each u32 we read**
now:
one big read of 4096 bytes (aligned of course), only 1 VAddr translation
Signed-off-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/3459
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>
Raises the size of each page entry to 32 bytes, however, it merges them into a single structure
THEORETICALLY this is better since the access pattern observed corresponds to the program wanting backing_addr/pointers/blocks immediately after one another.
This may improve performance at the cost of some extra memory.
Another implementation would be to structure only backing_addr/blocks within the same virtual buffer.
Alas spamming virtual buffers is evil since each of them is a cache trasher (imagine jumping from wildly different block to wildly different block immediately).
Signed-off-by: lizzie lizzie@eden-emu.dev
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/3215
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>
Hand rolling memcpy like this is always frowned upon because the compiler has more insight on whats going on (plus the code resolves to a worse version of itself on assembly). This removes some branches that are just straight up redundant. May save stuff especially for systems without fastmem enabled.
Signed-off-by: lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/2639
Reviewed-by: Caio Oliveira <caiooliveirafarias0@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 reverts commit c9a3baab5d.
this commit caused issues in ender magnolia or something, need to make
sure I didn't mess up the revert
Reviewed-on: https://git.eden-emu.dev/eden-emu/eden/pulls/382
Reviewed-by: Shinmegumi <shinmegumi@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-by: Lizzie <lizzie@eden-emu.dev>
Reviewed-by: MaranBr <maranbr@outlook.com>
There are still some other issues not addressed here, but it's a start.
Workarounds for false-positive reports:
- `RasterizerAccelerated`: Put a gigantic array behind a `unique_ptr`,
because UBSan has a [hardcoded limit](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/64531383/c-runtime-error-using-fsanitize-undefined-object-has-a-possibly-invalid-vp)
of how big it thinks objects can be, specifically when dealing with
offset-to-top values used with multiple inheritance. Hopefully this
doesn't have a performance impact.
- `QueryCacheBase::QueryCacheBase`: Avoid an operation that UBSan thinks
is UB even though it at least arguably isn't. See the link in the
comment for more information.
Fixes for correct reports:
- `PageTable`, `Memory`: Use `uintptr_t` values instead of pointers to
avoid UB from pointer overflow (when pointer arithmetic wraps around
the address space).
- `KScheduler::Reload`: `thread->GetOwnerProcess()` can be `nullptr`;
avoid calling methods on it in this case. (The existing code returns
a garbage reference to a field, which is then passed into
`LoadWatchpointArray`, and apparently it's never used, so it's
harmless in practice but still triggers UBSan.)
- `KAutoObject::Close`: This function calls `this->Destroy()`, which
overwrites the beginning of the object with junk (specifically a free
list pointer). Then it calls `this->UnregisterWithKernel()`. UBSan
complains about a type mismatch because the vtable has been
overwritten, and I believe this is indeed UB. `UnregisterWithKernel`
also loads `m_kernel` from the 'freed' object, which seems to be
technically safe (the overwriting doesn't extend as far as that
field), but seems dubious. Switch to a `static` method and load
`m_kernel` in advance.