Setting __GL_SHADER_DISK_CACHE_PATH we can force the cache directory to
be in yuzu's user directory to stop commonly distributed malware from
deleting our driver shader cache. And by setting
__GL_SHADER_DISK_CACHE_SKIP_CLEANUP we can have an unbounded shader
cache size.
This has only been implemented on Windows, mostly because previous tests
didn't seem to work on Linux.
Disable the precompiled cache on Nvidia's driver. There's no need to
hide information the driver already has in its own cache.
Fixes regression by 761206cf81, causing
yuzu to not build on Linux with any version of Boost except a cached
1.73 Conan version from before about a day ago.
Moves the Boost requirement out of the `REQUIRED_LIBS` psuedo-2D-array
for Conan to instead be manually configured, using Conan as a fallback
solution if the system does not meet our requirements.
Requires any update from the linux-fresh container in order to build.
**DO NOT MERGE** until someone with the MSVC toolchain can verify this
works there, too.
Add a std::bit_cast-like function archiving the same runtime results as
the standard function, without compile time support.
This allows us to use bit_cast while we wait for compiler support, it
can be trivially replaced in the future.
This commit aims to implement the NVDEC (Nvidia Decoder) functionality, with video frame decoding being handled by the FFmpeg library.
The process begins with Ioctl commands being sent to the NVDEC and VIC (Video Image Composer) emulated devices. These allocate the necessary GPU buffers for the frame data, along with providing information on the incoming video data. A Submit command then signals the GPU to process and decode the frame data.
To decode the frame, the respective codec's header must be manually composed from the information provided by NVDEC, then sent with the raw frame data to the ffmpeg library.
Currently, H264 and VP9 are supported, with VP9 having some minor artifacting issues related mainly to the reference frame composition in its uncompressed header.
Async GPU is not properly implemented at the moment.
Co-Authored-By: David <25727384+ogniK5377@users.noreply.github.com>
This is the only place it's actively used. It's also more appropriate
for web-related structures to be within the web service target.
Especially given this one doesn't rely on anything in the common
library.
* ipc: Allow all trivially copyable objects to be passed directly into WriteBuffer
With the support of C++20, we can use concepts to deduce if a type is an STL container or not.
* More agressive concept for stl containers
* Add -fconcepts
* Move to common namespace
* Add Common::IsBaseOf
This is a new attempt at #4206 that shouldn't break windows builds.
If someone else could test on windows, it would be much appreciated.
Previously, the build bot passed but the actual builds failed.
On gcc/ld, and clang/lld, fmt::v6 symbols are excluded, so linking
fails. This fixes the issue.
Note: This was included in the FindBoost changes I shared with
BlinkHawk, however only they were merged. I'm not sure if it was missed,
or if there was an issue with this part of the change.
Emit code compatible with NV_gpu_program5.
This should emit code compatible with Fermi, but it wasn't tested on
that architecture. Pascal has some issues not present on Turing GPUs.
* Remove git submodules that will be loaded through conan
* Move custom Find modules to their own folder
* Use conan for downloading missing external dependencies
* CI: Change the yuzu source folder user to the user that the containers run on
* Attempt to remove dirty mingw build hack
* Install conan on the msvc build
* Only set release build type when using not using multi config generator
* Re-add qt bundled to workaround an issue with conan qt not downloading prebuilt binaries
* Add workaround for submodules that use legacy CMAKE variables
* Re-add USE_BUNDLED_QT on the msvc build bot
Makes the header more general for other potential algorithms in the
future. While we're at it, include a missing <functional> include to
satisfy the use of std::less.
Implement VOTE using Nvidia's intrinsics. Documentation about these can
be found here
https://developer.nvidia.com/reading-between-threads-shader-intrinsics
Instead of using portable ARB instructions I opted to use Nvidia
intrinsics because these are the closest we have to how Tegra X1
hardware renders.
To stub VOTE on non-Nvidia drivers (including nouveau) this commit
simulates a GPU with a warp size of one, returning what is meaningful
for the instruction being emulated:
* anyThreadNV(value) -> value
* allThreadsNV(value) -> value
* allThreadsEqualNV(value) -> true
ballotARB, also known as "uint64_t(activeThreadsNV())", emits
VOTE.ANY Rd, PT, PT;
on nouveau's compiler. This doesn't match exactly to Nvidia's code
VOTE.ALL Rd, PT, PT;
Which is emulated with activeThreadsNV() by this commit. In theory this
shouldn't really matter since .ANY, .ALL and .EQ affect the predicates
(set to PT on those cases) and not the registers.