This patch reduces the burden of adding services significantly, rather
than having to create an enum entry and add strings in the constructor
it will all be determined at runtime through RTTI. A macro is also used
in the service creation case to reduce clutter.
* Fix NvHostCtrl:EventSignal event ID parsing
* Divide the audout buffer length by the sample size
* Correct audout channel quantity handling
* A few bugfixes for audio tracks
* * Correctly lock in CheckReleasedBuffers and only call the callback once
* * Check if the identifier queue is empty before accessing it's iterator
* Refactor audio to better fit the codestyle
* Explictly specify reference when using GetReference
* Fix CheckReleasedBuffers
This commit significantly increases the accuracy of the prior HID code due to testing on the Switch. It is now fully accurate in all supported scenarios, them being assignment mode, orientation, color writes and system properties. In addition, review comments were addressed and fixed in the PR.
This fixes a Joy-Con Pair bug which caused a crash when a partner device was set to none while being set as a partner. In addition, the following HID service functions were implemented:
* GetSupportedNpadStyleSet
* ActivateNpadWithRevision
* GetNpadJoyHoldType
* AcquireNpadStyleSetUpdateEventHandle
This commit adds support to the C++ end of things for controller configuration. It isn't targeting being 1:1 to HOS for controller assignment but is rather based on intuition of how things should be.
This commit adds in the UI for Controller Configuration to Settings, in addition to introducing the storage and loading of aforementioned configurations to a file that can be saved/loaded at runtime. This commit also fixes updating of individual fields in Settings when changed from an external activity.
This commit focuses on making the UI completely usable using a controller so that a user won't have to switch between their device's touch screen and a controller constantly.
This commit refactors the C++ end of Input so it'll be in line with the rest of the codebase and be ready for the extension with multiple players and controller configuration.
This commit contains the Kotlin side of the initial Input implementation, this is based on the work done in the `hid` branch in `bylaws/skyline`.
Co-authored-by: ◱ PixelyIon <pixelyion@protonmail.com>
This commit contains the C++ side of the initial Input implementation, this is based on the work done in the `hid` branch in `bylaws/skyline`.
Co-authored-by: ◱ PixelyIon <pixelyion@protonmail.com>
interpreter.
The Maxwell 3D engine handles all 3D rendering, currently only non
rendering related methods are implemented. Macros are small pieces of
code that run on the GPU and allow methods to be quickly called for
things like instanced drawing.
These are used to allow the CPU to synchronise with the GPU as it
reaches specific points in its command stream.
Also fixes an nvmap bug where a struct was incorrect.
bugs
An engine is effectively a HW block in the GPU, the main one is the
Maxwell 3D which is used for 3D graphics. Engines can be bound to
individual subchannels and then methods within them can be called
through pushbuffers.
The engine side of the GPFIO is also included, it currently does nothing
but will need to be extended in the future with semaphores.
* Rework VFS to support creating and writing files and introduce OsFileSystem
OsFileSystem abstracts a directory on the device using the filesystem API.
This also introduces GetEntryType and changes FileExists to use it.
* Implement the Horizon FileSystem APIs using our VFS framework
Horizon provides access to files through its IFileSystem class, we can
closely map this to our vfs::FileSystem class.
* Add support for creating application savedata
This implements basic savedata creation using the OsFileSystem API. The
data is stored in Skyline's private directory is stored in the same
format as yuzu.
* Make sure icons have a 1:1 ratio
* Use recyclerview padding to increase grid edge margins
* Fix race condition in searching roms
* Use notify insert for adapter
The GPU has it's own seperate address space to the CPU. It is able to
address 40 bit addresses and accesses the system memory. A sorted vector
has been used to store blocks as insertions are not very frequent.