* Add ZeroMQ external submodule
* ZeroMQ libzmq building on macOS
* Added RPC namespace, settings and logging
* Added request queue handling and new classes
* Add C++ interface to ZeroMQ
* Added start of ZeroMQ RPC Server implementation.
* Request construction and callback request handling
* Read and write memory implementation
* Add ID to request format and send reply
* Add RPC setting to macOS UI
* Fixed initialization order bug and added exception handling
* Working read-write through Python
* Update CMakeLists for libzmq to resolve target name conflict on Windows
* Platform-specific CMake definitions for Windows/non-Windows
* Add comments
* Revert "Add RPC setting to macOS UI"
* Always run RPC server instead of configurable
* Add Python scripting example. Updated .gitignore
* Rename member variables to remove trailing underscore
* Finally got libzmq external project building on macOS
* Add missing dependency during libzmq build
* Adding more missing dependencies [skip ci]
* Only build what is required from libzmq
* Extra length checks on client input
* Call InvalidateCacheRange after memory write
* Revert MinGW change. Fix clang-format. Improve error handling in request/reply. Allow any length of data read/write in Python.
* Re-organized RPC static global state into a proper class. [skip ci]
* Make sure libzmq always builds in Release mode
* Renamed Request to Packet since Request and Reply are the same thing
* Moved request fulfillment out of Packet and into RPCServer
* Change request thread from sleep to condition variable
* Remove non-blocking polling from ZMQ server code. Receive now blocks and terminates properly without sleeping. This change significantly improves script speed.
* Move scripting files to dist/ instead of src/
* C++ code review changes for jroweboy [skip ci]
* Python code review changes for jroweboy [skip ci]
* Add docstrings and tests to citra.py [skip ci]
* Add host OS check for libzmq build
* Revert "Add host OS check for libzmq build"
* Fixed a hang when emulation is stopped and restarted due to improper destruction order of ZMQ objects [skip ci]
* Add scripting directory to archive packaging [skip ci]
* Specify C/CXX compiler variables on MinGW build
* Only specify compiler on Linux mingw
* Use gcc and g++ on Windows mingw
* Specify generator for mingw
* Don't specify toolchain on windows mingw
* Changed citra.py to support Python 3 instead of Python 2
* Fix bug where RPC wouldn't restart after Stop/Start emulation
* Added copyright to headers and reorganized includes and forward declarations
Given these functions aren't intended to be used frequently, there's no
need to keep the std::string instances allocated for the whole lifetime
of the program. It's just a waste of memory.
Despite being covered by a global mutex, we should still ensure that the
class handles its reference counts properly. This avoids potential
shenanigans when it comes to data races.
Given this is the root object that drives quite a bit of the kernel
object hierarchy, ensuring we always have the correct behavior (and no
races) is a good thing.
Shared fonts is no different from any other system archives, and there is not really any point to make a separate status for it. This also fixes the incorrect error message that was introduced when I made the UI text improvements.
* Add setting to switch between a fixed start time and the system time
Add clock settings to SDL
Make clock configureable in qt
Add a SharedPage handler class
Init shared_page_handler for tests
Rather than having to type out the full std::map type signature, we can
just use a straightforward alias. While we're at it, rename
GetBreakpointList to GetBreakpointMap, which makes the name more
accurate. We can also get rid of unnecessary u64 static_casts, since
VAddr is an alias for a u64.
…class
Makes the global a member of the RendererBase class. We also change this
to be a reference. Passing any form of null pointer to these functions
is incorrect entirely, especially given the code itself assumes that the
pointer would always be in a valid state.
This also makes it easier to follow the lifecycle of instances being
used, as we explicitly interact the renderer with the rasterizer, rather
than it just operating on a global pointer.
* kernel/event: Make data members private
Instead we can simply provide accessors to the required data instead of
giving external read/write access to the variables directly.
* fix compile error
* client_port: Make all data members private
These members don't need to be entirely exposed, we can instead expose
an API to operate on them without directly needing to mutate them
We can also guard against overflow/API misuse this way as well, given
active_sessions is an unsigned value.
* make the condition an assert
Using member variables for referencing the segments array increases the
size of the class in memory for little benefit. The same behavior can be
achieved through the use of accessors that just return the relevant
segment.