Avoids unnecessary reference count increments where applicable and also
avoids reallocating a vector.
Unlikely to make a huge difference, but given how trivial of an
amendment it is, why not?
Nvidia recently introduced a new memory type for data streaming
(awesome!), but yuzu was assuming that all heaps had enough memory
for the assumed stream buffer size (256 MiB).
This worked fine on AMD but Nvidia's new memory heap was smaller than
256 MiB. This commit changes this assumption and allocates a bit less
than the size of the preferred heap, with a maximum of 256 MiB (to avoid
allocating all system memory on integrated devices).
- Fixes a crash on NVIDIA 450.82.0.0
Some variables aren't used, so we can remove these.
Unfortunately, diagnostics are still reported on structured bindings
even when annotated with [[maybe_unused]], so we need to unpack the
elements that we want to use manually.
Implement indexed quads (GL_QUADS used with glDrawElements*) with a
compute pass conversion.
The compute shader converts from uint8/uint16/uint32 indices to uint32.
The format is passed through push constants to avoid having different
variants of the same shader.
- Used by Fast RMX
- Used by Xenoblade Chronicles 2 (it still has graphical due to
synchronization issues on Vulkan)
The original idea of returning pointers is that handles can be moved.
The problem is that the implementation didn't take that in mind and made
everything harder to work with. This commit drops pointer to handles and
returns the handles themselves. While it is still true that handles can
be invalidated, this way we get an old handle instead of a dangling
pointer.
This problem can be solved in the future with sparse buffers.
Allows reporting more cases where logic errors may exist, such as
implicit fallthrough cases, etc.
We currently ignore unused parameters, since we currently have many
cases where this is intentional (virtual interfaces).
While we're at it, we can also tidy up any existing code that causes
warnings. This also uncovered a few bugs as well.
This can result in silent logic bugs within code, and given the amount
of times these kind of warnings are caused, they should be flagged at
compile-time so no new code is submitted with them.
When the dynamic state is specified, pViewports and pScissors are
ignored, quoting the specification:
pViewports is a pointer to an array of VkViewport structures, defining
the viewport transforms. If the viewport state is dynamic, this member
is ignored.
That said, AMD's proprietary driver itself seem to read it regardless of
what the specification says.
This is a simple optimization as Buffer Copies are mostly used for texture recycling. They are, however, useful when games abuse undefined behavior but most 3D APIs forbid it.