Converted the hack into another... hopefully better hack.
Check for IW/EWRAM addr bit and handle accesses to EWRAM by correcting
the base addr and the mirroring range.
Assumes that iwram and ewram buffers are at a distance multiple of 64KB
for speed (so that lw/sw offsets can be shared).
This fixes a variety of games that should have been present in
game_config.txt such as Ninja Cop, Star Wars JPB, Medal of Honor,
Spongebob, etc. Some of them were just missing regional versions of the
cart. It also fixes newer games and homebrew such as GoodBoy Galaxy.
This gets rid of the bloated memmap_win32.c in favour of a much simpler
wrapper. This will be needed in the future since the wrapper does not
support MAP_FIXED maps (necessary for some platforms)
This fixes a race condition that happens whenever the ROM cache is flushed but
the RAM one is not, causing any SWI calls (implemented as direct branches) to
jump to random instructions.
The fix could be to flush both caches at the same time (~expensive on
low mem platforms), use indirect jumps (a bit expensive) or emit the SWI
handler below the watermark to ensure it is never flushed. This is cheap
and effective, requires minimal changes.
This uses BSON as savestate format, to allow external tools to parse it
(so that we can add proper test of the states). The BSON is not 100%
correct according to spec (no ordered keys) but can be parsed by most
libraries.
This fixes also a bug in the savestate palette color recalculation that
was wrongly overwritting the original palette (which could cause some
problems on some games).
Also fixes some potential issues by serializing some more stuff and
cleans up unused stuff.
Testing shows that states look good and there's only minor differences
in audio ticks, related to buffer sizes (since buffer flushes are
de-synced from video frames due to different frequency).
Seems that using the __atribute__ magic for sections is not the best way
of doing this, since it injects some default atributtes that collide
with the user defined ones. Using assembly is far easier in this case.
Reworked definitions a bit to make it easier to import from assembly.
Also wrapped stuff around macros for easy and less verbose
implementation of the symbol prefix issue.
This saves a few cycles in MIPS and simplifies a bit the core.
Removed the write map, only affects interpreter performance very
minimally. Rewired ARM and x86 handlers to support direct access to
I/EWRAM (and VRAM on ARM) to compensate. Overall performance is slightly
better but code is cleaner and allows for further improvements in the
dynarecs.
Added a more thorough cache cleanup for reset/mode-change too.
Fixed the mmap initialization that ends up leaking memory.
Minor x86 asm fixes for Android.
This is not really necessary since it can share area with ROM.
Performance impact should be very minimal (haven't noticed it myself)
and could be compensated (even by a positive offset) if we bump the ROM
cache area size.
Tested with several dynarecs.
This allows us to emit the handlers directly in a more efficient manner.
At the same time it allows for an easy fix to emit PIC code, which is
necessary for libretro. This also enables more platform specific
optimizations and variations, perhaps even run-time multiplatform
support.
This removes libco and all the usages of it (+pthreads).
Rewired all dynarecs and interpreter to return after every frame so that
libretro can process events. This required to make dynarec re-entrant.
Dynarecs were updated to check for new frame on every update (IRQ, cycle
exhaustion, I/O write, etc). The performance impact of doing so should
be minimal (and definitely outweight the libco gains). While at it,
fixed small issues to get a bit more perf: arm dynarec was not idling
correctly, mips was using stack when not needed, etc.
Tested on PSP (mips), OGA (armv7), Linux (x86 and interpreter). Not
tested on Android though.