Squash attributes into the pointer's integer, making them an uintptr_t
pair containing 2 bits at the bottom and then the pointer. These bits
are currently unused thanks to alignment requirements.
Configure Dynarmic to mask out these bits on pointer reads.
While we are at it, remove some unused attributes carried over from
Citra.
Read/Write and other hot functions use a two step unpacking process that
is less readable to stop MSVC from emitting an extra AND instruction in
the hot path:
mov rdi,rcx
shr rdx,0Ch
mov r8,qword ptr [rax+8]
mov rax,qword ptr [r8+rdx*8]
mov rdx,rax
-and al,3
and rdx,0FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFCh
je Core::Memory::Memory::Impl::Read<unsigned char>
mov rax,qword ptr [vaddr]
movzx eax,byte ptr [rdx+rax]
- For `std::same_as`, add missing include of `<concepts>`.
- For `std::convertible_to`, create a replacement in `common/concepts.h`
and use that instead.
This would also be found in `<concepts>`, but unlike `std::same_as`,
`std::convertible_to` is not yet implemented in libc++, LLVM's STL
implementation - not even in master. (In fact, `std::same_as` is the
*only* concept currently implemented. For some reason.)
Without using VK_EXT_robustness2, we can't consider the 'enabled' (not
null) vertex buffers as dynamic state, as this leads to invalid Vulkan
state. Move this to static state that is always hashed and compared in
the pipeline key.
The bits for enabled vertex buffers are moved into the attribute state
bitfield. This is not 'correct' as it's not an attribute state, but that
struct has bits to spare, and it's used in an array of 32 elements (the
exact same number of vertex buffer bindings).
The following command line arguments are supported:
yuzu.exe "path_to_game" - Launches a game at "path_to_game"
yuzu.exe -f - Launches the next game in fullscreen
yuzu.exe -g "path_to_game" - Launches a game at "path_to_game"
yuzu.exe -f -g "path_to_game" - Launches a game at "path_to_game" in fullscreen
Most of the time people write code that always returns a value,
terminates execution, throws an exception, or uses an unconventional
jump primitive.
This is not always true when we build without asserts on mainline builds.
To avoid introducing undefined behavior on our most used builds, enforce
this warning signalling an error and stopping the build from shipping.