Adds new functions to read and write settings while keeping the global state in
focus. Files now generated per-game are much smaller since often they only need
address the global state.
Replaces the type of each variable in the Settings::Values struct with a new
class that allows basic data reading and writing. The new struct
Settings::Setting duplicates the data in memory and can manage global overrides
per each setting.
In main.cpp, we have to get the title ID before the ROM is loaded, else the
renderer will reflect only the global settings and now the user's game specific
settings.
By splitting the settings into two mutually exclusive structs, it becomes easier,
as a developer, to determine how to use the Settings structs after per-game
configurations is merged. Other benefits include only duplicating the required
settings in memory.
Any add-ons interaction happens directly through the global values struct.
Swapping bewteen structs now also includes copying the necessary global configs
that cannot be changed nor saved in per-game settings. General and System config
menus now update based on whether it is viewing the global or per-game settings.
In order to add full per-game settings, we need to be able to tell yuzu to switch
to using either the global or game configuration. Using a pointer makes it easier
to switch.
This commit: Implements CPU Interrupts, Replaces Cycle Timing for Host
Timing, Reworks the Kernel's Scheduler, Introduce Idle State and
Suspended State, Recreates the bootmanager, Initializes Multicore
system.
Occurs when doing a local compile in MSVC build. The compiler I'm using is as below:
Microsoft Visual Studio Community 2019 Preview
Version 16.6.0 Preview 5.0
Fixes this error:
CVTRES : fatal error CVT1100: duplicate resource. type:MANIFEST, name:1, language:0x0409
LINK : fatal error LNK1123: failure during conversion to COFF: file invalid or corrupt
I have put 0 since previous name was 1. If have other names in mind, please let me know.
Co-Authored-By: dragios <dragios@users.noreply.github.com>
The JIT is mature enough that this setting can be removed, falling back
to Unicorn only on unsupported architectures. Any missing features from
Unicorn (of which there are extremely few), are mostly
developer-oriented, which most users don't care about.
Features should be coordinated with the JIT, not the interpreter,
anyhow.
A normal user shouldn't change this, as it will slow down the emulation and can lead to bugs or crashes. The renaming is done in order to prevent users from leaving this on without a way to turn it off from the UI.