* kernel: Properly clean up process threads on exit.
* kernel: Track process-owned memory and free on destruction.
* apt: Implement DoApplicationJump via home menu when available.
* kernel: Move TLS allocation management to owning process.
When we targeted API <32, the notification permission would automatically be requested on startup. This restores that behavior temporarily while we work on new UX.
* shader_jit/tests: Add support for multiple inputs
Allows for multiple `Vec4f` inputs for each run
* shader_jit/tests: Add additional shader-jit tests
Add some more expansive tests for each of the shader-instructions for
regression-testing. `MAD`/`MADI` is not added due to an upstream bug in
nihstro:
https://github.com/neobrain/nihstro/issues/68
* android: Migrate to Kotlin DSL
Includes updates to all android dependencies/ndk (minus billing) and adds support for Kotlin, Android 13, and view binding.
* android: Remove unused tests
* android: Remove unused dependencies
Xbyak has a complete utility-class for determining the host-processor's
ISA-features such as SSE4.1, AVX, AVX2, AVX512{F,VL,DQ,VBMI,etc}, and so
on for further potential optimizations.
Was getting an unhandled `invalid_argument` [exception](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/thread/join) during
shutdown on my linux machine. This removes the need for a `StopBackendThread` function entirely since `jthread`
[automatically handles both checking if the thread is joinable and stopping the token before attempting to join](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/jthread/~jthread) in the case that `StartBackendThread` was never called.
Loop on stop_token and remove final_entry in Entry.
Move Backend thread out of Impl Constructor to its own function.
Add Start function for backend thread.
Use stop token in PopWait and check if entry filename is nullptr before logging.
This fixes a lost wakeup in SPSCQueue. If the reader is in just the right position, the writer's notification will be lost and this will be a problem if the writer then does something to wait on the reader.
This was discovered to affect my upcoming stacktrace PR. I don't think any performance decrease will be noticeable because an uncontended mutex is smart enough to skip the syscall. This PR might also resolve some rare deadlocks but I don't know of any examples.
The log filter was being ignored on initialization due to the logging instance being initialized before the config instance, so the log filter was set to its default value.
This fixes that oversight, along with using descriptive exceptions instead of abort() calls.
This implements backtraces so we don't have to tell users how to use gdb anymore.
This prints a backtrace after abort or segfault is detected. It also fixes the log getting cut off with the last line containing only a bracket. This change lets us know what caused a crash not just what happened the few seconds before it.
I only know how to add support for Linux with GCC. Also this doesn't work outside of C/C++ such as in dynarmic or certain parts of graphics drivers. The good thing is that it'll try and just crash again but the stack frames are still there so the core dump will work just like before.
This simplifies the logging system.
This also fixes some lost messages on startup.
The simplification is simple. I removed unused functions and moved most things in the .h to the .cpp. I replaced the unnecessary linked list with its contents laid out as three member variables. Anything that went through the linked list now directly accesses the backends. Generic functions are replaced with those for each specific use case and there aren't many. This change increases coupling but we gain back more KISS and encapsulation.
With those changes it was easy to make it thread-safe. I just removed the mutex and turned a boolean atomic. I was planning to use this thread-safety in my next PR about stacktraces. It was actually async-signal-safety at first but I ended up using a different approach. Anyway getting rid of the linked list is important for that because have the list of backends constantly changing complicates things.