This makes WiimoteScanner support several scanner backends.
This adds a WiimoteScannerBackend base class, which scanner backends
derive from, and which allows backend-specific things to be moved out
of the common code.
Also removes IODummy which is not needed anymore.
UPNP_AddPortMapping needs our IP address, however enet_address_get_host
will return 0.0.0.0 or a host name in most cases.
This gets our IP address from the socket to the IGD.
5.0-56 broke reconnecting a Wiimote on button press; this is because
data reporting was now always stopped for real Wii remotes on
disconnect, making it impossible to know a button was pressed in the
first place (to reconnect the Wiimote).
This semi-reverts to the previous behaviour, where data reporting is
never stopped.
(Also, control channels now go through WiimoteEmu, just like before,
to make sure some things are reset on disconnection.)
Hopefully fixes issue 9711.
This is something that was quite confusing for me while trying to get
netplay to work for me; once the Connect/Host buttons were pressed,
the UI would hang, only to work again a few seconds later, but with
no error message or explanation *at all*.
Turns out this is because panic alerts are shown in the netplay window
instead during netplay, even before it is even shown.
This fixes it by "piping" the alerts to the netplay chat only if the
netplay window is visible.
(regression introduced in #3823)
This fixes warnings in:
- Source/Core/InputCommon/ControllerEmu.h: avoid shadowing other
variables (my fault)
- Source/Core/Core/IPC_HLE/WII_IPC_HLE.h: made
SDIO_EventNotify_CPUThread static as it's not used anywhere else
This makes the links explicitly vertically centered in the DolphinWX
About dialog. It is not needed on Windows, because the links have the
same height as text (and look just like text links). However, this is
required on other platforms or the links would look misaligned.
POSIX specifies that inet_ntoa() is declared in arpa/inet.h, and that
POLLRDNORM, etc. are defined in poll.h.
gethostbyname() is not specified by POSIX, but the manpages in OpenBSD,
FreeBSD, OS X, and glibc all state that it is declared in netdb.h.
Without these headers, the build fails on OpenBSD and possibly other
systems.
Most modern Unix environments use 64-bit off_t by default: OpenBSD,
FreeBSD, OS X, and Linux libc implementations such as Musl.
glibc is the lone exception; it can default to 32 bits but this is
configurable by setting _FILE_OFFSET_BITS.
Avoiding the stat64()/fstat64() interfaces is desirable because they
are nonstandard and not implemented on many systems (including
OpenBSD and FreeBSD), and using 64 bits for stat()/fstat() is either
the default or trivial to set up.