* infra: Migrate to .NET 6
* Rollback version naming change
* Workaround .NET 6 ZipArchive API issues
* ci: Switch to VS 2022 for AppVeyor
CI is now ready for .NET 6
* Suppress WebClient warning in DoUpdateWithMultipleThreads
* Attempt to workaround System.Drawing.Common changes on 6.0.0
* Change keyboard rendering from System.Drawing to ImageSharp
* Make the software keyboard renderer multithreaded
* Bump ImageSharp version to 1.0.4 to fix a bug in Image.Load
* Add fallback fonts to the keyboard renderer
* Fix warnings
* Address caian's comment
* Clean up linux workaround as it's uneeded now
* Update readme
Co-authored-by: Caian Benedicto <caianbene@gmail.com>
* Avoid deleting textures when their data does not overlap.
It's possible that while two textures start and end addresses indicate an overlap, that the actual data contained within them is sparse due to a layer stride. One such possibility is array slices of a cubemap at different mip levels - they overlap on a whole, but the actual texture data fills the gaps between each other's layers rather than actually overlapping.
This fixes issues with UE4 games having incorrect lighting (solid white screen or really dark shadows). There are still remaining issues with games that use the 3D texture prebaked lighting, such as THPS1+2.
This PR also fixes a bug with TexturePool's resized texture handling where the base level in the descriptor was not considered.
* AllRegions granularity for 3d textures is now by level rather than by slice.
* Address feedback
* Return mapped buffer pointer directly for flush, WriteableRegion for textures
A few changes here to generally improve performance, even for platforms not using the persistent buffer flush.
- Texture and buffer flush now return a ReadOnlySpan<byte>. It's guaranteed that this span is pinned in memory, but it will be overwritten on the next flush from that thread, so it is expected that the data is used before calling again.
- As a result, persistent mappings no longer copy to a new array - rather the persistent map is returned directly as a Span<>. A similar host array is used for the glGet flushes instead of allocating new arrays each time.
- Texture flushes now do their layout conversion into a WriteableRegion when the texture is not MultiRange, which allows the flush to happen directly into guest memory rather than into a temporary span, then copied over. This avoids another copy when doing layout conversion.
Overall, this saves 1 data copy for buffer flush, 1 copy for linear textures with matching source/target stride, and 2 copies for block textures or linear textures with mismatching strides.
* Fix tests
* Fix array pointer for Mesa/Intel path
* Address some feedback
* Update method for getting array pointer.
* Initial implementation (3d tex mips broken)
This works rather well for most games, just need to fix 3d texture mips.
* Cleanup
* Address feedback
* Copy Dependencies and various other fixes
* Fix layer/level offset for copy from view<->view.
* Remove dirty flag from dependency
The dirty flag behaviour is not needed - DeferredCopy is all we need.
* Fix tracking mip slices.
* Propagate granularity (fix astral chain)
* Address Feedback pt 1
* Save slice sizes as part of SizeInfo
* Fix nits
* Fix disposing multiple dependencies causing a crash
This list is obviously modified when removing dependencies, so create a copy of it.
* Support for resources on non-contiguous GPU memory regions
* Implement MultiRange physical addresses, only used with a single range for now
* Actually use non-contiguous ranges
* GetPhysicalRegions fixes
* Documentation and remove Address property from TextureInfo
* Finish implementing GetWritableRegion
* Fix typo
* PBO single layer copy, part 1
Still needs ability to take and set width/height slices. (using pack paramaters)
* PBO Copies pt 2
* Some fixes and cleanup.
* Misc Cleanup
* Move handle into the TextureInfo interface.
This interface is shared between texture storages and views.
* Move unscaled copy to the TextureCopy class.
* Address feedback.
* infra: Migrate to .NET 5
This migrate projects and CI to .NET 5
* Remove language version restrictions (now on 9.0 by default)
* infra: pin .NET 5 to avoid later issues
* infra: Cleanup csproj files
* infra: update dependencies
* infra: Add temporary workaround for a bug in Vector128.Create
see https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/issues/44704 for more informations
* Initial NVDEC and VIC implementation
* Update FFmpeg.AutoGen to 4.3.0
* Add nvdec dependencies for Windows
* Unify some VP9 structures
* Rename VP9 structure fields
* Improvements to Video API
* XML docs for Common.Memory
* Remove now unused or redundant overloads from MemoryAccessor
* NVDEC UV surface read/write scalar paths
* Add FIXME comments about hacky things/stuff that will need to be fixed in the future
* Cleaned up VP9 memory allocation
* Remove some debug logs
* Rename some VP9 structs
* Remove unused struct
* No need to compile Ryujinx.Graphics.Host1x with unsafe anymore
* Name AsyncWorkQueue threads to make debugging easier
* Make Vp9PictureInfo a ref struct
* LayoutConverter no longer needs the depth argument (broken by rebase)
* Pooling of VP9 buffers, plus fix a memory leak on VP9
* Really wish VS could rename projects properly...
* Address feedback
* Remove using
* Catch OperationCanceledException
* Add licensing informations
* Add THIRDPARTY.md to release too
Co-authored-by: Thog <me@thog.eu>
* Improve performance when converting texture formats.
Still more work to do.
* Speed up buffer -> texture copies.
No longer copies byte by byte. Fast path when formats are identical.
* Fix a few things, 64 byte block fast copy.
* Spacing cleanup, unrelated change.
* Fix base offset calculation for region copies.
* Fix Linear -> BlockLinear
* Fix some nits. (part 1 of review feedback)
* Use a generic version of the Convert* functions rather than lambdas.
This is some real monkey's paw shit.
* Remove unnecessary span constructor.
* Revert "Use a generic version of the Convert* functions rather than lambdas."
This reverts commit aa43dcfbe8bba291eea4e10c68569af7a56a5851.
* Fix bug with rectangle destination writing, better rectangle calculation for linear textures.
Some parts of our code needs C# 8 who isn't set as default in Visual Studio. To fix this we have to set the C# version correctly in the csproj files and then we are be able to build the project using Visual Studio.
* Updated all NuGet packages to latest, and updated the framework from .NET Core 3.0 to 3.1.
* Updating appveyor settings for 3.1
Updating appveyor to use the netcoreapp3.1 path instead of 3.0.
* Removing unneeded NuGet package System.Runtime.CompilerServices.Unsafe.
* Removing unused NuGet package SharpFontCore.
* Removing unused NuGet package TimeZoneConverter.Posix
* Cleaning up by adding newline to a csproj.
* Simplfying a NuGet conditional include, and adding a warning disable for an annoying NuGet package.
* I'm not sure if .travis.yml is still used, but I'm updating its 'dotnet' version to the correct SDK.
* Making the runtime version into its own environment variable so it's a bit easier to change in the future.
* Removing OpenTK.NetStandard reference from Ryujinx.Common
* Fixing indentation in Common.csproj
* Updating the README to specify .NET Core 3.1.
* Reverting the update of the GTKSharp package so it doesn't block the PR.