Fixes a critical regression where 95945a0 made us unable to
start emulation on Android 10 and newer. Android is restricting
direct access to /dev/ashmem starting with the new SDK version,
but we can use the new (and simpler) ASharedMemory API instead.
We have to keep using the /dev/ashmem approach on old versions
of Android, though.
On Linux, if shared zlib is present, zlib.h is always available and -lz
links to zlib, even if you don't run find_package(ZLIB).
For some reason I have zlib installed on Windows (possibly from vcpkg),
so find_package(ZLIB) succeeds and ZLIB_FOUND is true.
When Dolphin uses shared zlib on Windows, the problem is that zlib.h
is not in the default include path, and the CMake target is called
ZLIB::ZLIB and there's neither a target nor a library called z.
However, both find_package(ZLIB) and add_subdirectory(Externals/zlib)
create a target called ZLIB::ZLIB, so I'll switch to that instead.
Hopefully this change doesn't break anyone's build.
This modifies GCMemcard::TitlePresent() to match my findings of how the GC BIOS and various games behave when you alter the fields in the directory entry.
It looks like for a save to be recognized by a game, the following have to be true:
- Game code and maker code must exactly match what the game expects.
- Filename is only checked up to the first null byte. All bytes afterwards can be whatever.
The BIOS itself does a full compare of the filename when checking for whether it should allow copying a file from one card to another, but behaves oddly in some cases when there's non-null bytes after the first null. See the big comment in `HasSameIdentity()` for details.
This could cause read errors if chunks were laid out a certain
way in the file and the whole chunk wasn't being read at once.
Should fix https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/12184.
I believe the value returned by value() resets when we call
setValue() with the maximum (due to auto-reset). I have been
unable to test this because I can't reproduce the issue, which is
described at https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/12158#note-9.
The functions with "UTF" in the name use "modified UTF-8" rather
than the standard UTF-8 which Dolphin uses, at least according
to Oracle's documentation, so it is incorrect for us to use them.
This change fixes the problem by converting between UTF-8 and
UTF-16 manually instead of letting JNI do it for us.