Drop the std::list hack to allocate memory indefinitely.
Instead use a custom allocator that keeps references valid until
destruction. This allocates fixed chunks of memory and puts pointers in
a free list. When an allocation is no longer used put it back to the
free list, this doesn't heap allocate because std::vector doesn't change
the capacity. If the free list is empty, allocate a new chunk.
Most overlaps in the buffer cache only contain one mapped address.
We can avoid close to all heap allocations once the buffer cache is
warmed up by using a small_vector with a stack size of one.
Instead of using boost::icl::interval_map for caching, use
boost::intrusive::set. interval_map is intended as a container where the
keys can overlap with one another; we don't need this for caching
buffers and a std::set-like data structure that allows us to search with
lower_bound is enough.
"Not equal" operators on GLSL seem to behave as unordered when we expect
an ordered comparison.
Manually emulate this checking for LGE values (numbers, not-NaNs).
This should fix grass interactions on Breath of the Wild on Vulkan.
It is currently untested against validation layers.
Nvidia's Windows 443.09 beta driver or Linux 440.66.12 is required for
now.
In file included from src/video_core/renderer_opengl/renderer_opengl.cpp:25:
In file included from src/./video_core/renderer_opengl/gl_rasterizer.h:26:
In file included from src/./video_core/renderer_opengl/gl_fence_manager.h:11:
src/./video_core/fence_manager.h:91:32: error: use 'template' keyword
to treat 'Write' as a dependent template name
memory_manager.Write<u32>(current_fence->GetAddress(), current_fence->GetPayload());
^
template
src/./video_core/fence_manager.h:137:32: error: use 'template'
keyword to treat 'Write' as a dependent template name
memory_manager.Write<u32>(current_fence->GetAddress(), current_fence->GetPayload());
^
template
Reduces some header churn and reduces rebuilds when some header
internals change.
While we're at it we can also resolve a missing include in buffer_cache.
Xenoblade 2 invokes a draw call with zero vertices.
This is likely due to indirect drawing (glDrawArraysIndirect).
This causes a crash in the staging buffer pool when trying to create a
buffer with a size of zero. To workaround this, skip index buffer setup
entirely when the number of indices is zero.
Drop MemoryBarrier from the buffer cache and use Maxwell3D's register
WaitForIdle.
To implement this on OpenGL we just call glMemoryBarrier with the
necessary bits.
Vulkan lacks this synchronization primitive, so we set an event and
immediately wait for it. This is not a pretty solution, but it's what
Vulkan can do without submitting the current command buffer to the queue
(which ends up being more expensive on the CPU).
Using deko3d as reference:
4e47ba0013/source/maxwell/gpu_3d_state.cpp (L42)
We were using bits 3 and 4 to determine depth clamping, but these are
the same both enabled and disabled:
state->depthClampEnable ? 0x101A : 0x181D
The same happens on Nvidia's OpenGL driver, where they do something like
this (default capabilities, GL 4.5 compatibility):
(state & DEPTH_CLAMP) != 0 ? 0x201a : 0x281c
There's always a difference between the first bits in this register, but
bit 11 is consistently disabled on both deko3d/NVN and OpenGL. This
commit changes yuzu's behaviour to use bit 11 to determine depth
clamping.
- Fixes depth issues on Super Mario Odyssey's intro.
This reverts commit 94b0e2e5da.
preserve_contents proved to be a meaningful optimization. This commit
reintroduces it but properly implemented on OpenGL.
We have to make sure the clear removes all the previous contents of the
image.
It's not currently implemented on Vulkan because we can do smart things
there that's preferred to be introduced in a separate commit.
Deduplicate code shared between vk_pipeline_cache and gl_shader_cache as
well as shader decoder code.
While we are at it, fix a bug in gl_shader_cache where compute shaders
had an start offset of a stage shader.