Explicitly specifying an install destination is not needed anymore since
CMake 3.14.
By removing the hardcoded ${CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX}/bin it is also now
possible to override the install destination via the command line. For
example, you can now install yuzu to /usr/games with
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_BINDIR=games
If we don't set an explicit source and target language for the base
english translation, then we'll generate an incorrect number of
<numerusform> tags (which Transifex doesn't like).
This commit renames the "Services" tab to "Network" and adds a combobox that allows the user to select the network interface that yuzu should use. This new setting is now used to get the local IP address in Network::GetHostIPv4Address. This prevents yuzu from selecting the wrong network interface and thus using the wrong IP address. The return type of Network::GetHostIPv4Adress has also been changed.
Decouples the CPU debugging mode from the enumeration to its own
boolean. After this, it moves the CPU Debugging tab over to a sub tab
underneath the Debug tab in the configuration UI.
If the local version of Qt is older than the minimum version required by
yuzu, download a pre-built binary package from yuzu-emu/ext-linux-bin
and build yuzu with it, instead.
This also requires linking yuzu to the correct libraries after building
it, and copying over the required binaries when building yuzu.
This sets the Qt requirement to 5.12, which is intentionally behind the
versions used by our toolchains since they are not all updated yet to
5.15.
The Qt Software Keyboard frontend attempts to mimic the software keyboard rendered by the Nintendo Switch.
This frontend implements multiple keyboard types, such as the normal software keyboard, the numeric pad software keyboard and the inline software keyboard.
Keyboard and controller input is also supported in this frontend.
Keyboard input is handled as native keyboard input, and so the on-screen keyboard cannot be navigated with the keyboard arrow keys as the arrow keys are used to move the text cursor.
Controller input is translated into mouse hover movements on the onscreen keyboard or their respective button actions (B for backspace, A for entering the selected button, L/R for moving the text cursor, etc).
The text check dialogs can also be confirmed with controller input through the use of the OverlayDialog
Massive thanks to Rei for creating all the UI for the various keyboards and OverlayDialog. This would not have been possible without his excellent work.
Co-authored-by: Its-Rei <kupfel@gmail.com>
An OverlayDialog is an interactive dialog that accepts controller input (while a game is running)
This dialog attempts to replicate the look and feel of the Nintendo Switch's overlay dialogs and
provide some extra features such as embedding HTML/Rich Text content in a QTextBrowser.
The OverlayDialog provides 2 modes: one to embed regular text into a QLabel and another to embed
HTML/Rich Text content into a QTextBrowser.
Co-authored-by: Its-Rei <kupfel@gmail.com>
Allows for enabling and modifying vibration and vibration strength per player.
Also adds a toggle for enabling/disabling accurate vibrations.
Co-authored-by: Its-Rei <kupfel@gmail.com>
Unicorn long-since lost most of its use, due to dynarmic gaining support
for handling most instructions. At this point any further issues
encountered should be used to make dynarmic better.
This also allows us to remove our dependency on Python.
This commit aims to implement the NVDEC (Nvidia Decoder) functionality, with video frame decoding being handled by the FFmpeg library.
The process begins with Ioctl commands being sent to the NVDEC and VIC (Video Image Composer) emulated devices. These allocate the necessary GPU buffers for the frame data, along with providing information on the incoming video data. A Submit command then signals the GPU to process and decode the frame data.
To decode the frame, the respective codec's header must be manually composed from the information provided by NVDEC, then sent with the raw frame data to the ffmpeg library.
Currently, H264 and VP9 are supported, with VP9 having some minor artifacting issues related mainly to the reference frame composition in its uncompressed header.
Async GPU is not properly implemented at the moment.
Co-Authored-By: David <25727384+ogniK5377@users.noreply.github.com>
* Switch game settings to use a pointer
In order to add full per-game settings, we need to be able to tell yuzu to switch
to using either the global or game configuration. Using a pointer makes it easier
to switch.
* configuration: add new UI without changing existing funcitonality
The new UI also adds General, System, Graphics, Advanced Graphics,
and Audio tabs, but as yet they do nothing. This commit keeps yuzu
to the same functionality as originally branched.
* configuration: Rename files
These weren't included in the last commit. Now they are.
* configuration: setup global configuration checkbox
Global config checkbox now enables/disables the appropriate tabs in the game
properties dialog. The use global configuration setting is now saved to the
config, defaulting to true. This also addresses some changes requested in the PR.
* configuration: swap to per-game config memory for properties dialog
Does not set memory going in-game. Swaps to game values when opening the
properties dialog, then swaps back when closing it. Uses a `memcpy` to swap.
Also implements saving config files, limited to certain groups of configurations
so as to not risk setting unsafe configurations.
* configuration: change config interfaces to use config-specific pointers
When a game is booted, we need to be able to open the configuration dialogs
without changing the settings pointer in the game's emualtion. A new pointer
specific to just the configuration dialogs can be used to separate changes
to just those config dialogs without affecting the emulation.
* configuration: boot a game using per-game settings
Swaps values where needed to boot a game.
* configuration: user correct config during emulation
Creates a new pointer specifically for modifying the configuration while
emulation is in progress. Both the regular configuration dialog and the game
properties dialog now use the pointer Settings::config_values to focus edits to
the correct struct.
* settings: split Settings::values into two different structs
By splitting the settings into two mutually exclusive structs, it becomes easier,
as a developer, to determine how to use the Settings structs after per-game
configurations is merged. Other benefits include only duplicating the required
settings in memory.
* settings: move use_docked_mode to Controls group
`use_docked_mode` is set in the input settings and cannot be accessed from the
system settings. Grouping it with system settings causes it to be saved with
per-game settings, which may make transferring configs more difficult later on,
especially since docked mode cannot be set from within the game properties
dialog.
* configuration: Fix the other yuzu executables and a regression
In main.cpp, we have to get the title ID before the ROM is loaded, else the
renderer will reflect only the global settings and now the user's game specific
settings.
* settings: use a template to duplicate memory for each setting
Replaces the type of each variable in the Settings::Values struct with a new
class that allows basic data reading and writing. The new struct
Settings::Setting duplicates the data in memory and can manage global overrides
per each setting.
* configuration: correct add-ons config and swap settings when apropriate
Any add-ons interaction happens directly through the global values struct.
Swapping bewteen structs now also includes copying the necessary global configs
that cannot be changed nor saved in per-game settings. General and System config
menus now update based on whether it is viewing the global or per-game settings.
* settings: restore old values struct
No longer needed with the Settings::Setting class template.
* configuration: implement hierarchical game properties dialog
This sets the apropriate global or local data in each setting.
* clang format
* clang format take 2
can the docker container save this?
* address comments and style issues
* config: read and write settings with global awareness
Adds new functions to read and write settings while keeping the global state in
focus. Files now generated per-game are much smaller since often they only need
address the global state.
* settings: restore global state when necessary
Upon closing a game or the game properties dialog, we need to restore all global
settings to the original global state so that we can properly open the
configuration dialog or boot a different game.
* configuration: guard setting values incorrectly
This disables setting values while a game is running if the setting is
overwritten by a per game setting.
* config: don't write local settings in the global config
Simple guards to prevent writing the wrong settings in the wrong files.
* configuration: add comments, assume less, and clang format
No longer assumes that a disabled UI element means the global state is turned
off, instead opting to directly answer that question. Still however assumes a
game is running if it is in that state.
* configuration: fix a logic error
Should not be negated
* restore settings' global state regardless of accept/cancel
Fixes loading a properties dialog and causing the global config dialog to show
local settings.
* fix more logic errors
Fixed the frame limit would set the global setting from the game properties
dialog. Also strengthened the Settings::Setting member variables and simplified
the logic in config reading (ReadSettingGlobal).
* fix another logic error
In my efforts to guard RestoreGlobalState, I accidentally negated the IsPowered
condition.
* configure_audio: set toggle_stretched_audio to tristate
* fixed custom rtc and rng seed overwriting the global value
* clang format
* rebased
* clang format take 4
* address my own review
Basically revert unintended changes
* settings: literal instead of casting
"No need to cast, use 1U instead"
Thanks, Morph!
Co-authored-by: Morph <39850852+Morph1984@users.noreply.github.com>
* Revert "settings: literal instead of casting
"
This reverts commit 95e992a87c898f3e882ffdb415bb0ef9f80f613f.
* main: fix status buttons reporting wrong settings after stop emulation
* settings: Log UseDockedMode in the Controls group
This should have happened when use_docked_mode was moved over to the controls group
internally. This just reflects this in the log.
* main: load settings if the file has a title id
In other words, don't exit if the loader has trouble getting a title id.
* use a zero
* settings: initalize resolution factor with constructor instead of casting
* Revert "settings: initalize resolution factor with constructor instead of casting"
This reverts commit 54c35ecb46a29953842614620f9b7de1aa9d5dc8.
* configure_graphics: guard device selector when Vulkan is global
Prevents the user from editing the device selector if Vulkan is the global
renderer backend. Also resets the vulkan_device variable when the users
switches back-and-forth between global and Vulkan.
* address reviewer concerns
Changes function variables to const wherever they don't need to be changed. Sets Settings::Setting to final as it should not be inherited from. Sets ConfigurationShared::use_global_text to static.
Co-Authored-By: VolcaEM <volcaem@users.noreply.github.com>
* main: load per-game settings after LoadROM
This prevents `Restart Emulation` from restoring the global settings *after* the per-game settings were applied. Thanks to BSoDGamingYT for finding this bug.
* Revert "main: load per-game settings after LoadROM"
This reverts commit 9d0d48c52d2dcf3bfb1806cc8fa7d5a271a8a804.
* main: only restore global settings when necessary
Loading the per-game settings cannot happen after the ROM is loaded, so we have to specify when to restore the global state. Again thanks to BSoD for finding the bug.
* configuration_shared: address reviewer concerns except operator overrides
Dropping operator override usage in next commit.
Co-Authored-By: LC <lioncash@users.noreply.github.com>
* settings: Drop operator overrides from Setting template
Requires using GetValue and SetValue explicitly. Also reverts a change that broke title ID formatting in the game properties dialog.
* complete rebase
* configuration_shared: translate "Use global configuration"
Uses ConfigurePerGame to do so, since its usage, at least as of now, corresponds with ConfigurationShared.
* configure_per_game: address reviewer concern
As far as I understand, it prevents the program from unnecessarily copying strings.
Co-Authored-By: LC <lioncash@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Morph <39850852+Morph1984@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: VolcaEM <volcaem@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: LC <lioncash@users.noreply.github.com>
We can simply enable CMAKE_AUTOUIC and let CMake take care of handling
the UI code generation for targets.
As part of letting CMake automatically handle the header file parsing,
we must not name includes with "ui_*" unless they're related to the
output of the Qt UIC compiler. Because of this, we need to rename
ui_settings, given it would conflict with this restriction.
Enforces the use of the proper URL resolution functions. e.g.
url = some_local_path_string;
should actually be:
url = QUrl::fromLocalPath(some_local_path_string);
etc.
This makes it harder to cause bugs when operating with both strings and
URLs at the same time.
Other overloads of start() are considerably much safer to use if we ever
need this in the future and need to pass arguments to the program, given
it contains separate parameters for the program path and the arguments
themselves, whereas this unsafe overload contains both as a single
string.
Given the alternatives are much safer, we can disable this.
This is a compile definition introduced in Qt 4.8 for reducing the total
potential number of strings created when performing string
concatenation. This allows for less memory churn.
This can be read about here:
https://blog.qt.io/blog/2011/06/13/string-concatenation-with-qstringbuilder/
For a change that isn't source-compatible, we only had one occurrence
that actually need to have its type clarified, which is pretty good, as
far as transitioning goes.
This doesn't actually work anymore, and given how long it's been left in
that state, it's unlikely anyone actually seriously used it.
Generally it's preferable to use RenderDoc or Nsight to view surfaces.
With shader caches on the horizon, one requirement is to provide visible
feedback for the progress. The shader cache reportedly takes several
minutes to load for large caches that were invalidated, and as such we
should provide a loading screen with progress.
Adds a loading screen widget that will be shown until the first frame of
the game is swapped. This was chosen in case shader caches are not being
used, several games still take more than a few seconds to launch and
could benefit from a loading screen.
Greatly simplifies the current input UI, while still allowing power users to tweak advanced settings. Adds 'input profiles', which are easy autoconfigurations to make getting started easy and fast. Also has a custom option which brings up the current, full UI.
This allows adjusting the finger, diameter, and angle of the emulated touchscreen. It also provides a warning to the user about what changing these parameters can do.
Previously, we would let a user enter an unbounded name and then
silently truncate away characters that went over the 32-character limit.
This is kind of bad from the UX point of view, because we're essentially
not doing what the user intended in certain scenarios.
Instead, we clamp it to 32 characters and make that visually apparent in
the dialog box to provide a name for a user.
This is more localized to what we want to enforce directory-wise with
the project. CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR indicates the root of the source tree, but
this would cause the wrong behavior if someone included yuzu as part of
a larger buildsystem (for whatever reason). Instead, we want to use the
directory where the "project(yuzu)" command was declared as the root
path reference.
Keeps the definition constrained to the yuzu target and prevents
polluting anything else in the same directory (should that ever happen).
It also keeps it consistent with how the USE_DISCORD_PRESENCE definition
is introduced below it.
Lets us keep the generic portions of the compatibility list code
together, and allows us to introduce a type alias that makes it so we
don't need to type out a very long type declaration anymore, making the
immediate readability of some code better.
This has gotten sufficiently large enough to warrant moving it to its
own source files. Especially given it dumps the file_sys headers around
code that doesn't use it for the most part.
This'll also make it easier to introduce a type alias for the
compatibility list, so a large unordered_map type declaration doesn't
need to be specified all the time (we don't want to propagate the
game_list_p.h include via the main game_list.h header).