You'll only really see the benefit here with threaded-gal or parallel shader cache compile.
Fix shaderc multithreaded changes
Thread safety for shaderc Options constructor
Dunno how they managed to make a constructor not thread safe, but you do you. May avoid some freezes.
* Changes 1
* Changes 2
* Better ModifiedSequence handling
This should handle PreciseEvents properly, and simplifies a few things.
* Minor changes, remove debug log
* Handle stage.Info being null
Hopefully fixes Catherine crash
* Fix shader specialization fast texture lookup
* Fix some things.
* Address Feedback Part 1
* Make method static.
* Use copy dependency for textures that differs in multisample but are otherwise compatible
* Remove allowMs flag as it's no longer required for correctness, it's just an optimization now
* Dispose intermmediate pool
The syncpoint maximum value represents the maximum possible syncpt value at a given time, however due to PBs being submitted before max was incremented, for a brief moment of time this is not the case which could lead to invalid behaviour if a game waits on the fence at that specific time.
* Implement syscall handlers using a source generator
* Copy FlushProcessDataCache implementation to Syscall since it was only implemented on Syscall32
* Fix wrong argument order in some syscalls
* Delete old Reflection.Emit based syscall handling code
* Improvements to the code generation
* ControlCodeMemory address and size is always 64-bit
* Refactor CPU interface
* Use IExecutionContext interface on SVC handler, change how CPU interrupts invokes the handlers
* Make CpuEngine take a ITickSource rather than returning one
The previous implementation had the scenario where the CPU engine had to implement the tick source in mind, like for example, when we have a hypervisor and the game can read CNTPCT on the host directly. However given that we need to do conversion due to different frequencies anyway, it's not worth it. It's better to just let the user pass the tick source and redirect any reads to CNTPCT to the user tick source
* XML docs for the public interfaces
* PPTC invalidation due to NativeInterface function name changes
* Fix build of the CPU tests
* PR feedback
As GitHub sort our builds in an alphanumeric way, we abuse that to fix
both new and old updater behaviour.
This should fix all our issues.
Avalonia updater will be broken between version 1.1.122 to 1.1.126, and
will need manual intervention.
* Prefetch capabilities before spawning translation threads.
The Backend Multithreading only expects one thread to submit commands at a time. When compiling shaders, the translator may request the host GPU capabilities from the backend. It's possible for a bunch of translators to do this at the same time.
There's a caching mechanism in place so that the capabilities are only fetched once. By triggering this before spawning the thread, the async translation threads no longer try to queue onto the backend queue all at the same time.
The Capabilities do need to be checked from the GPU thread, due to OpenGL needing a context to check them, so it's not possible to call the underlying backend directly.
* Initialize the capabilities when setting the GPU thread + missing call in headless
* Remove private variables
This PR adds the alternative enum values for StencilOp. Similar to the other enums, I added these with the same names but with Gl added to the end. These are used by homebrew using Nouveau, though they might be used by games with the official Vulkan driver.
39d90be897/rnndb/graph/nv_3ddefs.xml (L77)
Fixes some broken graphics in Citra, such as missing shadows in Mario Kart 7. Likely fixes other homebrew.
* Enable JIT service LLE
* Force disable PPTC when using the JIT service
PPTC does not support multiple guest processes
* Fix build
* Make SM service registration per emulation context rather than global
* Address PR feedback
* Fix shared memory leak on Windows
* Fix memory leak caused by RO session disposal not decrementing the memory manager ref count
* Fix UnmapViewInternal deadlock
* Was not supposed to add those back