Provides extra information that makes it easier to tell if an executable
being run is using a 36-bit address space or a 39-bit address space.
While we don't support AArch32 executables yet, this also puts in
distinguishing information for the 32-bit address space types as well.
This stores a file in the save directory called '.yuzu_save_size' which stores the two save sizes (normal area and journaled area) sequentially as u64s.
fmt::format() returns a std::string instance by value, so calling
.c_str() on it here is equivalent to doing:
auto* ptr = std::string{}.c_str();
The data being pointed to isn't guaranteed to actually be valid anymore
after that expression ends. Instead, we can just take the string as is,
and provide the necessary formatting parameters.
Amends it with missing values deduced from RE (ProperSystem being from
SwitchBrew for naming)
(SdCardUser wasn't that difficult to discern given it's used alongside
SdCardSystem when creating the save data indexer, based off the usage of
the string "saveDataIxrDbSd" nearby).
This allows the array to be constexpr. std::function is also allowed to
allocate memory, which makes its constructor non-trivial, we definitely
don't want to have all of these execute at runtime, taking up time
before the application can actually load.
We can just return a new instance of this when it's requested. This only
ever holds pointers to the existing registed caches, so it's not a large
object. Plus, this also gets rid of the need to keep around a separate
member function just to properly clear out the union.
Gets rid of one of five globals in the filesystem code.
This is the same behavior-wise as DeleteDirectoryRecursively, with the
only difference being that it doesn't delete the top level directory in
the hierarchy, so given:
root_dir/
- some_dir/
- File.txt
- OtherFile.txt
The end result is just:
root_dir/
These parameters don't need to utilize a shared lifecycle directly in
the interface. Instead, the caller should provide a regular reference
for the function to use. This also allows the type system to flag
attempts to pass nullptr and makes it more generic, since it can now be
used in contexts where a shared_ptr isn't being used (in other words, we
don't constrain the usage of the interface to a particular mode of
memory management).
While we're at it, organize the array linearly, since clang formats the
array elements quite wide length-wise with the addition of the missing
'u'.
Technically also fixes patch lookup and icon lookup with Portuguese,
though I doubt anyone has actually run into this issue.
The decision was made to name them LayeredExeFS instead of just LayeredFS to differentiate from normal RomFS-based mods. The name may be long/unweildy, but conveys the meaning well.
This will scan the <mod>/exefs dir for all files and then layer those on top of the game's exefs and use this as the new exefs. This allows for overriding of the compressed NSOs or adding new files. This does use the same dir as IPS/IPSwitch patch, but since the loader will not look for those they are ignored.
There's no real point to keeping the separate enum around, especially
given the name of the error code itself is supposed to document what the
value actually represents.