This will work for all of our platforms, x86, ARMv7, and AArch64.
Main issue with this is that LLVM's cmake files aren't correctly finding the LLVM install.
Not sure if this is Ubuntu's issue or not, it may just work on other operating systems.
We could potentially improve this, you can pass in a specific CPU in to the LLVM disassembler. This would probably affect latency times that are
reported by LLVM's disassembly? This needs to be further investigated later.
GCC has optimized this using the exact same code since 4.7 or 4.8.
Android building falls back to the __linux__ route.
No need to keep these around anymore since we aren't building on an old GCC version.
Before this commit, the two were reversed ("cpu_string" had the brand, e.g. "AuthenticAMD"; and "brand_string" had the CPU type, e.g. "AMD Phenom II X4 925").
The timing information is set on s_scaled_frame->pts, giving precise
timing information to the encoder. Frames arriving too early (less than
one tick after the previous frame) are droped. The setting of packet's
timestamps and flags is done after the call to avcodec_encode_video2()
as this function resets these fields according to its documentation.
This extends the register cache's BindToRegister function with a doLoad argument just like x86's.
The speedup is minor for these implemented integer instructions.
We weren't setting the backbuffer dimensions on this platform when the window is created.
This required a resize event to first be fired in order to see anything.
So instead do like GLX + X11 platforms do and query the dimensions and set the backbuffer to them.
Should fix issue 7666.
This is good hygiene, and also happens to be required to build Dolphin
using Clang modules.
(Under this setup, each header file becomes a module, and each #include
is automatically translated to a module import. Recursive includes
still leak through (by default), but modules are compiled independently,
and can't depend on defines or types having previously been set up. The
main reason to retrofit it onto Dolphin is compilation performance - no
more textual includes whatsoever, rather than putting a few blessed
common headers into a PCH. Unfortunately, I found multiple Clang bugs
while trying to build Dolphin this way, so it's not ready yet, but I can
start with this prerequisite.)
I found it via clang complaining about a useless null check on an array,
but I decided to get rid of the array in favor of dynamic allocation, as
there was no reason to assume a maximum length of 0x32 bytes. Plus, add
a CFString type check just in case, and switch to UTF-8 in the
off-chance it matters.
The result has not actually been tested, as I have no CD drive.