* Change the logging backend to support multiple sinks through the
Backend Interface
* Add a new set of logging macros to use fmtlib instead.
* Qt: Compile as GUI application on windows to make the console hidden by
default. Add filter configuration and a button to open log location.
* SDL: Migrate to the new logging macros
On SDL2 this allows it to use SDL_GL_GetProcAddress() instead of the
default function loader, and fixes a crash when using apitrace with an
EGL context.
On Qt we will need to migrate from QGLWidget to QOpenGLWidget and
QOpenGLContext before we can use gladLoadGLLoader() instead of
gladLoadGL(), since the former doesn’t expose a function loader.
citra: Remove GLFW, Add SDL2
FindSDL2: Do not CACHE SDL2_* variables if library is not found
EmuWindow_SDL2: Set minimal client area at initialisation time
EmuWindow_SDL2: Corrections
EmuWindow_SDL2: Fix no decorations on startup on OS X
cmake: windows_copy_files
The main advantage of switching to glad from glLoadGen is that, apart
from being actively maintained, it supports a customizable entrypoint
loader function, which makes it possible to also support OpenGL ES.
If the mouse position for a mouse move/drag would take it outside the emulated screen dimensions, clip the coordinates to
the emulated screen dimensions.
Qt and GLFW will report negative coordinates for mouse positions to the left, or above citra window. Added restriction
to mouse coordinates passed to touchmoved by Qt/GLFW to be greater or equal to zero.
Involves making asserts use printf instead of the log functions (log functions are asynchronous and, as such, the log won't be printed in time)
As such, the log type argument was removed (printf obviously can't use it, and it's made obsolete by the file and line printing)
Also removed some GEKKO cruft.
It will print a message to know what happened in case something went wrong in a GLFW call.
Also replace every printf() in the glfw emu-window by ERROR_LOG().
The window title is none of the emulation core's business. The GUI code is free to put whatever it wants there.
Providing properly thread-safe window title getters and setters is a mess anyway.
The view is scaled to be as large as possible, without changing the aspect, within the bounds of the window.
On "retina" displays, or other displays where window units != pixels, the view should no longer draw incorrectly.
In PR #143, the name of the function IsOpen was originally ShouldClose, but was changed. The function's caller was changed to reflect this, but the return value wasn't.