Now that we have most of core free of shadowing, we can enable the
warning as an error to catch anything that may be remaining and also
eliminate this class of logic bug entirely.
The FPS counter was based on metrics in the nvdisp swapbuffers call. This metric would be accurate if the gpu thread/renderer were synchronous with the nvdisp service, but that's no longer the case.
This commit moves the frame counting responsibility onto the concrete renderers after their frame draw calls. Resulting in more meaningful metrics.
The displayed FPS is now made up of the average framerate between the previous and most recent update, in order to avoid distracting FPS counter updates when framerate is oscillating between close values.
The status bar update frequency was also changed from 2 seconds to 500ms.
Implements the OnClose method of the nvhost_vic device, and removes the remnants of an older implementation.
Also cleans up some of the surrounding code.
Undefined Behaviour Sanitizer reports a null pointer is being sent to
memcpy, thought it's "guaranteed to never be null". Guard it with an if
statement, and log when the action has been averted.
- Use .at() instead of raw indexing when dealing with untrusted indices.
- For the special case of WaitFence with syncpoint id UINT32_MAX,
instead of crashing, log an error and ignore. This is what I get when
running Super Mario Maker 2.
Resolves numerous deprecation warnings throughout the codebase due to
inclusion of this header. Now building core should be significantly less
noisy (and also relying on less global state).
This also uncovered quite a few modules that were relying on indirect
includes, which have also been fixed.
This commit aims to implement the NVDEC (Nvidia Decoder) functionality, with video frame decoding being handled by the FFmpeg library.
The process begins with Ioctl commands being sent to the NVDEC and VIC (Video Image Composer) emulated devices. These allocate the necessary GPU buffers for the frame data, along with providing information on the incoming video data. A Submit command then signals the GPU to process and decode the frame data.
To decode the frame, the respective codec's header must be manually composed from the information provided by NVDEC, then sent with the raw frame data to the ffmpeg library.
Currently, H264 and VP9 are supported, with VP9 having some minor artifacting issues related mainly to the reference frame composition in its uncompressed header.
Async GPU is not properly implemented at the moment.
Co-Authored-By: David <25727384+ogniK5377@users.noreply.github.com>