Now, since we have a const qualified variant of GetPointer(), we can put
it to use in ReadBlock() to retrieve the source pointer that is passed
into memcpy.
Now block reading may be done from a const context.
- Use QStringLiteral where applicable.
- Use const where applicable
- Remove unnecessary precondition check (we already assert the pixbuf
being non null)
Fills in the missing surface types that were marked as unknown. The
order corresponds with the TextureFormat enum within
video_core/texture.h.
We also don't need to all of these strings as translatable (only the
first string, as it's an English word).
Since c5d41fd812 callback parameters were
changed to use an s64 to represent late cycles instead of an int, so
this was causing a truncation warning to occur here. Changing it to s64
is sufficient to silence the warning.
Replaces header inclusions with forward declarations where applicable
and also removes unused headers within the cpp file. This reduces a few
more dependencies on core/memory.h
BitField has been trivially copyable since
e99a148628, so we can eliminate these
TODO comments and use ReadObject() directly instead of memcpying the
data.
Makes the return type consistently uniform (like the intrinsics we're
wrapping). This also conveniently silences a truncation warning within
the kernel multi_level_queue.
Rather than make a full copy of the path, we can just use a string view
and truncate the viewed portion of the string instead of creating a totally
new truncated string.
Temporal generally indicates a relation to time, but this is just
creating a temporary, so this isn't really an accurate name for what the
function is actually doing.
TXQ returns integer types. Shaders usually do:
R0 = TXQ(); // => int
R0 = static_cast<float>(R0);
If we don't treat it as an integer, it will cast a binary float value as
float - resulting in a corrupted number.
In several places, we have request parsers where there's nothing to
really parse, simply because the HLE function in question operates on
buffers. In these cases we can just remove these instances altogether.
In the other cases, we can retrieve the relevant members from the parser
and at least log them out, giving them some use.
Applies the override specifier where applicable. In the case of
destructors that are defaulted in their definition, they can
simply be removed.
This also removes the unnecessary inclusions being done in audin_u and
audrec_u, given their close proximity.
Quite a few unused includes have built up over time, particularly on
core/memory.h. Removing these includes means the source files including
those files will no longer need to be rebuilt if they're changed, making
compilation slightly faster in this scenario.
Rather than scream that the file doesn't exist, we can clearly state
what specifically doesn't exist, to avoid ambiguity, and make it easier
to understand for non-primary English speakers/readers.
Quite a bit of these were out of sync with Switchbrew (and in some cases
entirely wrong). While we're at it, also expand the section of named
members. A segment within the control metadata is used to specify
maximum values for the user, device, and cache storage max sizes and
journal sizes.
These appear to be generally used by the am service (e.g. in
CreateCacheStorage, etc).
We need to be checking whether or not the given address is within the
kernel address space or if the given address isn't word-aligned and bail
in these scenarios instead of trashing any kernel state.