* IncomingDisplayTransfer: Triggered just before a display transfer is performed.
* GSPCommandProcessed: Triggered right after a GSP command is processed.
* BufferSwapped: Triggered when the frames flip
This commit fixes several kernel object leaks. The most severe of them
was threads not being removed from the private handle table used for
CoreTiming events. This resulted in Threads never being released, which
in turn held references to Process, causing CodeSets to never be freed
when loading other applications.
This is exposed in the GUI as a new "CiTrace Recording" widget.
Playback is implemented by a standalone 3DS homebrew application (which only runs reliably within Citra currently; on an actual 3DS it will often crash still).
memory.cpp/h contains definitions related to acessing memory and
configuring the address space
mem_map.cpp/h contains higher-level definitions related to configuring
the address space accoording to the kernel and allocating memory.
Involves making asserts use printf instead of the log functions (log functions are asynchronous and, as such, the log won't be printed in time)
As such, the log type argument was removed (printf obviously can't use it, and it's made obsolete by the file and line printing)
Also removed some GEKKO cruft.
Hardware testing determined that the GSP processes shared memory
framebuffer update info even when no memory transfer or filling GX
commands are used. They are now updated on every interrupt, which isn't
confirmed correct but matches hardware behaviour more closely.
This also reverts the hack introduced in #404. It made a few games
behave better, but I believe it's incorrect and also breaks other games.
PDC0 and PDC1 are both VBlank interrupts. PDC0 was being treated as a
HBlank interrupt and fired many more times than it should. They now both
fire together at 60 Hz. This puzzlingly *improves* apparent framerate on
many applications.
A few other interrupts were being fired inside the GSP command
processing instead of on the actual GPU register writes, so they were
moved there, which should cover direct writes tho those registers not
going through the GX command queue.
This is a first step at fixing the conceptual insanity that is our
handling of service and IPC calls. For now, interfaces still directly
derived from Session because we don't have the infrastructure to do it
properly. (That is, Processes and scheduling them.)
All service calls in the CTR OS return result codes indicating the
success or failure of the call. Previous to this commit, Citra's HLE
emulation of services and the kernel universally either ignored errors
or returned dummy -1 error codes.
This commit makes an initial effort to provide an infrastructure for
error reporting and propagation which can be use going forward to make
HLE calls accurately return errors as the original system. A few parts
of the code have been updated to use the new system where applicable.
One part of this effort is the definition of the `ResultCode` type,
which provides facilities for constructing and parsing error codes in
the structured format used by the CTR.
The `ResultVal` type builds on `ResultCode` by providing a container for
values returned by function that can report errors. It enforces that
correct error checking will be done on function returns by preventing
the use of the return value if the function returned an error code.
Currently this change is mostly internal since errors are still
suppressed on the ARM<->HLE border, as a temporary compatibility hack.
As functionality is implemented and tested this hack can be eventually
removed.