* Add timestamp to 16-byte semaphore releases.
BOTW was reading a ulong 8 bytes after a semaphore return. Turns out this is the timestamp it was trying to do performance calculation with, so I've made it write when necessary.
This mode was also added to the DMA semaphore I added recently, as it is required by a few games. (i think quake?)
The timestamp code has been moved to GPU context. Check other games with an unusually low framerate cap or dynamic resolution to see if they have improved.
* Cast dma semaphore payload to ulong to fill the space
* Write timestamp first
Might be just worrying too much, but we don't want the applcation reading timestamp if it sees the payload before timestamp is written.
This fixes an issue where the render scale array would not be updated when technically the scales on the flat array were the same, but the start index for the vertex scales was different.
* Add support for BC1/2/3 decompression (for 3D textures)
* Optimize and clean up
* Unsafe not needed here
* Fix alpha value interpolation when a0 <= a1
* Stop using glTransformFeedbackVarying and use explicit layout on the shader
* This is no longer needed
* Shader cache version bump
* Fix gl_PerVertex output for tessellation control shaders
This fixes some regressions caused by #2971 which caused rendered 3D texture data to be lost for most slices. Fixes issues with Xenoblade 2's colour grading, probably a ton of other games.
This also removes the check from TextureCache, making it the tiniest bit smaller (any win is a win here).
* Implement IMUL shader instruction
* Implement PCNT/CONT instruction and fix FFMA32I
* Add HFMA232I to the table
* Shader cache version bump
* No Rc on Ffma32i
* Initial test for texture sync
* WIP new texture flushing setup
* Improve rules for incompatible overlaps
Fixes a lot of issues with Unreal Engine games. Still a few minor issues (some caused by dma fast path?) Needs docs and cleanup.
* Cleanup, improvements
Improve rules for fast DMA
* Small tweak to group together flushes of overlapping handles.
* Fixes, flush overlapping texture data for ASTC and BC4/5 compressed textures.
Fixes the new Life is Strange game.
* Flush overlaps before init data, fix 3d texture size/overlap stuff
* Fix 3D Textures, faster single layer flush
Note: nosy people can no longer merge this with Vulkan. (unless they are nosy enough to implement the new backend methods)
* Remove unused method
* Minor cleanup
* More cleanup
* Use the More Fun and Hopefully No Driver Bugs method for getting compressed tex too
This one's for metro
* Address feedback, ASTC+ETC to FormatClass
* Change offset to use Span slice rather than IntPtr Add
* Fix this too
* Add support for render scale to vertex stage.
Occasionally games read off textureSize on the vertex stage to inform the fragment shader what size a texture is without querying in there. Scales were not present in the vertex shader to correct the sizes, so games were providing the raw upscaled texture size to the fragment shader, which was incorrect.
One downside is that the fragment and vertex support buffer description must be identical, so the full size scales array must be defined when used. I don't think this will have an impact though. Another is that the fragment texture count must be updated when vertex shader textures are used. I'd like to correct this so that the update is folded into the update for the scales.
Also cleans up a bunch of things, like it making no sense to call CommitRenderScale for each stage.
Fixes render scale causing a weird offset bloom in Super Mario Party and Clubhouse Games. Clubhouse Games still has a pixelated look in a number of its games due to something else it does in the shader.
* Split out support buffer update, lazy updates.
* Commit support buffer before compute dispatch
* Remove unnecessary qualifier.
* Address Feedback
* Flip scissor box when the YNegate bit is set
* Flip scissor based on screen scissor state, account for negative scissor Y
* No need for abs when we already know the value is negative
Rather than calculating this for every sampler, this PR calculates if a texture can force anisotropy when its info is set, and exposes the value via a public boolean.
This should help texture/sampler heavy games when anisotropic filtering is not Auto, like UE4 ones (or so i hear?). There is another cost where samplers are created twice when anisotropic filtering is enabled, but I'm not sure how relevant this one is.
* 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>
* Limit Custom Anisotropic Filtering to only fully mipmapped textures
There's a major flaw with the anisotropic filtering setting that causes @GamerzHell9137 to report graphical bugs that otherwise wouldn't be there, because he just won't set it to Auto. This should fix those issues, hopefully.
These bugs are generally because anisotropic filtering is enabled on something that it shouldn't be, such as a post process filter or some data texture. This PR maintains two host samplers when custom AF is enabled, and only uses the forced AF one when the texture is 2d and fully mipmapped (goes down to 1x1). This is because game textures are the ideal target for this filtering, and they are typically fully mipmapped, unlike things like screen render targets which usually have 1 or just a few levels.
This also only enables AF on mipmapped samplers where the filtering is bilinear or trilinear. This should be self explanatory.
This PR also allows the changing of Anisotropic Filtering at runtime, and you can immediately see the changes. All samplers are flushed from the cache if the setting changes, causing them to be recreated with the new custom AF value. This brings it in line with our resolution scale. 😌
* Expected minimum mip count for large textures rather than all, address feedback
* Use Target rather than Info.Target
* Retrigger build?
* Fix rebase
* Implement DrawTexture functionality
* Non-NVIDIA support
* Disable some features that should not affect draw texture (slow path)
* Remove space from shader source
* Match 2D engine names
* Fix resolution scale and add missing XML docs
* Disable transform feedback for draw texture fallback
* Support shader gl_Color, gl_SecondaryColor and gl_TexCoord built-ins
* Shader cache version bump
* Fix back color value on fragment shader
* Disable IPA multiplication for fixed function attributes and back color selection
* Support coherent images
* Add support for fragment shader interlock
* Change to tree based match approach
* Refactor + check for branch targets and external registers
* Make detection more robust
* Use Intel fragment shader ordering if interlock is not available, use nothing if both are not available
* Remove unused field
* Fix race when EventWait is called and a wait is done on the CPU
* This is useless now
* Fix EventSignal
* Ensure the signal belongs to the current fence, to avoid stale signals
* Another workaround for NVIDIA driver 496.13 shader bug
This might work better than the other one. Give this a test to see if it fixes/doesn't fix issues with the other one.
The problem seems to be when any variable assignment happens with a negation. `temp_1 = -temp_0;` seems to trigger weird behaviour, but `temp_1 = 0.0 - temp_0;` does not. This also might to extend towards integer types?
* Update cache version
* Add disclaimer comment
* Wording
Some games (GameMaker Studio) build texture atlases out of sprites during initialization, using the 2D copy method. These copies are done from textures loaded into memory, not rendered, so they are not scaled to begin with.
I had set srcTexture in these copies to force scaling, but really it only needs to scale if the texture already exists and was scaled by rendering or something else. I just set that to false, so it doesn't change if the texture is scaled or not. This will also avoid the destination being scaled if the source wasn't. The copy can handle mismatching scales just fine.
This prevents scaling artifacts in GMS games, and maybe others (not Super Mario Maker 2, that has another issue).
Fixes a regression from #2663 where buffer flush would not happen after a resize. Specifically caused the world map in Yoshi's Crafted World to flash.
I have other planned changes to this class so this might change soon, but this regression could affect a lot so it couldn't wait.
This fixes a potential regression with the new range list changes, where the cost for creating new ones would be rather large due to creating a 1024 size array. Also reduces cost for range list inheritance by using the first existing range list as a base, rather than creating a new one then adding both lists to it.
The growth size for the RangeList is now identical to its initial size. Every 32 elements was probably a little too common - now it is 1024 for most things and 8 for the buffer modified range list.
The Unmapped and SyncMethod methods have been changed to ensure that they behave properly if the range list is set null. Cleaned up a few calls to use the null-conditional operator.
* Replace CacheResourceWrite with more general "precise" write
The goal of CacheResourceWrite was to notify GPU resources when they were modified directly, by looking up the modified address/size in a structure and calling a method on each resource. The downside of this is that each resource cache has to be queried individually, they all have to implement their own way to do this, and it can only signal to resources using the same PhysicalMemory instance.
This PR adds the ability to signal a write as "precise" on the tracking, which signals a special handler (if present) which can be used to avoid unnecessary flush actions, or maybe even more. For buffers, precise writes specifically do not flush, and instead punch a hole in the modified range list to indicate that the data on GPU has been replaced.
The downside is that precise actions must ignore the page protection bits and always signal - as they need to notify the target resource to ignore the sequence number optimization.
I had to reintroduce the sequence number increment after I2M, as removing it was causing issues in rabbids kingdom battle. However - all resources modified by I2M are notified directly to lower their sequence number, so the problem is likely that another unrelated resource is not being properly updated. Thankfully, doing this does not affect performance in the games I tested.
This should fix regressions from #2624. Test any games that were broken by that. (RF4, rabbids kingdom battle)
I've also added a sequence number increment to ThreedClass.IncrementSyncpoint, as it seems to fix buffer corruption in OpenGL homebrew. (this was a regression from removing sequence number increment from constant buffer update - another unrelated resource thing)
* Add tests.
* Add XML docs for GpuRegionHandle
* Skip UpdateProtection if only precise actions were called
This allows precise actions to skip reprotection costs.
When a texture is deleted by falling to the bottom of the AutoDeleteCache, its data is flushed to preserve any GPU writes that occurred. This ensures that the data appears in any textures recreated in the future, but didn't account for a texture that already existed with a copy dependency.
This change forces copy dependencies to complete if a texture falls out from from the AutoDeleteCache. (not removed via overlap, as that would be wasted effort)
Fixes broken lighting caused by pausing in SMO's Metro Kingdom. May fix some other issues.