The old calculation was stride * (max_index + 1), which fails if stride is less than the size of a component (for instance, if float XYZ positions are used, and the stride was set to 4 (i.e. sizeof(float)) instead of 12 (i.e. 3 * sizeof(float)), it would be missing the last 8 bytes of the final element in the array. Or, if stride was set to 0, then no bytes would be recorded at all (though that's not a useful configuration so it's unlikely to actually exist).
I'm not aware of any games affected by this issue.
This should fix recording the wall in the staircase leading to the basement in Luigi's Mansion (though I haven't tested it, as I don't own a copy of Luigi's Mansion). This uses NormalIndex3, and the index for the normal vector (generally 0x02XX or 0x01XX) there is always lower than the tangent or binormal (generally 0x07XX). Other games seem to usually have a similar range of indices for the normal, tangent, and binormal, so this issue wouldn't affect them.
In most cases, games will use the same type for all vertex components (either Index8 or Index16 or Direct). However, RS2's deflection towers use Index16 for the texture coordinate and Index8 for everything else, meaning the texture coordinates were recorded incorrectly (the first byte was used, so only indices 0 and 1 were recorded instead of 0 through 0x0192). Worse still, some background elements in RS2 use direct positions but indexed normals or texture coordinates, and those would not be recorded at all.
This is a regression from b5fd35f951.
The previous implementation of Force25BitPrecision was essentially a
translation of the x86-64 implementation. It worked, but we can make a
more efficient implementation by using an AArch64 instruction I don't
believe x86-64 has an equivalent of: URSHR. The latency is the same as
before, but the instruction count and register count are both reduced.
The new `dispatcher_no_timing_check` is the same as `dispatcher_no_check`
except it includes the "stepping check" in debug mode. This lets us avoid
the `m_enable_debugging ? dispatcher : dispatcher_no_check` dance.
Maybe "tail call" isn't quite the right term for what this code
is doing, since it's jumping to the dispatcher rather than
returning, but it's the same optimization as for a tail call.
fregsIn will include FD for double-precision instructions, since for
dependency tracking purposes the instruction does read the upper
half of FD. This is not what we want in HandleNaNs.
The consequence of this bug is that if an instruction was supposed to
output a NaN and FD happens to contain a NaN and FD happens to be the
same register as an unused register in the instruction encoding, the
NaN in FD could get used as the output instead of the correct NaN.
This isn't known to affect any games, which isn't especially surprising
considering that there's only one game that needs AccurateNaNs anyway.
Jumping to `dispatcher` requires first subtracting the downcount,
otherwise `dispatcher` may unpredictably jump to CoreTiming::Advance,
which could break determinism compatibility with JitArm64. We should
jump to `dispatcher_no_check` instead.
The breakpoint check in Jit.cpp makes it redundant.
Normally this redundant check doesn't cause any issues, but if you
create a breakpoint and enable logging without breaking, you get two
log messages if the breakpoint is at the beginning of a block. See
https://bugs.dolphin-emu.org/issues/13044.
This is also a tiny performance improvement for when debugging is
active, since we no longer check for breakpoints for blocks that never
had any breakpoints to begin with.
base is an unsigned variable, so we can make things little more
consistent by making the loop index unsigned so we aren't doing bit
arithmetic with signed types.
MemoryInterface already does this, so we can leave it alone.
No behavioral changes, just a consistency thing.
Micro-optimization. Some CPUs can fuse CMP+B, TST+B, arith+CBZ, etc.
I also moved things around for CMP+CSET and TST+CSET - which I'm not sure
if any CPUs support - but it doesn't hurt anything, so I might as well.
Improves accuracy but isn't known to affect any games.
This turned out to be fairly convenient to implement; ORing with the
PPC default NaN will quieten SNaNs and do nothing to QNaNs.
This existed in the initial megacommit (though I don't know why) as IO_SIZE. It was used in Memmap's Init() to compute totalMemSize, but I don't know if it actually did anything then. That use was removed in 2d0f714546, but the constant persisted until cc858c63b8, when it became a static variable.
This was added in 385d8e2b15, but became somewhat redundant with Do in 4c7bbd96e4, and completely redundant now that std::is_trivially_copyable_v is well-supported.
This lets the TAS input code use a higher-level interface for
overriding inputs instead of having to fiddle with raw bits.
WiiTASInputWindow in particular was messy with how much
controller code it had to re-implement.