The current texture cache has several points that hurt maintainability
and performance. It's easy to break unrelated parts of the cache
when doing minor changes. The cache can easily forget valuable
information about the cached textures by CPU writes or simply by its
normal usage.The current texture cache has several points that hurt
maintainability and performance. It's easy to break unrelated parts
of the cache when doing minor changes. The cache can easily forget
valuable information about the cached textures by CPU writes or simply
by its normal usage.
This commit aims to address those issues.
fmt now automatically prints the numeric value of an enum class member
by default, so we don't need to use casts any more.
Reduces the line noise a bit.
On Apple platforms, FALSE and TRUE are defined as macros by
<mach/boolean.h>, which is included by various system headers.
Note that there appear to be no actual users of the names to fix up.
Force early fragment tests when the 3D method is enabled.
The established pipeline cache takes care of recompiling if needed.
This is implemented only on Vulkan to avoid invalidating the shader
cache on OpenGL.
This reduces the overhead of bounds checking on each element.
It won't reduce the cost of allocation because usually this vector's
capacity is usually large enough to hold whatever we push to it.
Allows some implementations to avoid completely zeroing out the internal
buffer of the optional, and instead only set the validity byte within
the structure.
This also makes it consistent how we return empty optionals.
There were two issues with block linear copies. First the swizzling was
wrong and this commit reimplements them.
The other issue was that these copies are generally used to download
render targets from the GPU and yuzu was not downloading them from
host GPU memory unless the extreme GPU accuracy setting was selected.
This commit enables cached memory reads for all accuracy levels.
- Fixes level thumbnails in Super Mario Maker 2.
Change GOB sizes from free-functions to constexpr constants.
Add SwizzleSliceToVoxel, a function that swizzles a 2D array of pixels
into a 3D texture and use it for 3D copies.
Add HSET2_IMM. Due to the complexity of the encoding avoid using
BitField unions and read the relevant bits from the code itself.
This is less error prone.
This allows rendering to 3D textures with more than one slice.
Applications are allowed to render to more than one slice of a texture
using gl_Layer from a VTG shader.
This also requires reworking how 3D texture collisions are handled, for
now, this commit allows rendering to slices but not to miplevels. When a
render target attempts to write to a mipmap, we fallback to the previous
implementation (copying or flushing as needed).
- Fixes color correction 3D textures on UE4 games (rainbow effects).
- Allows Xenoblade games to render to 3D textures directly.
Games using D3D idioms can join images and samplers when a shader
executes, instead of baking them into a combined sampler image. This is
also possible on Vulkan.
One approach to this solution would be to use separate samplers on
Vulkan and leave this unimplemented on OpenGL, but we can't do this
because there's no consistent way of determining which constant buffer
holds a sampler and which one an image. We could in theory find the
first bit and if it's in the TIC area, it's an image; but this falls
apart when an image or sampler handle use an index of zero.
The used approach is to track for a LOP.OR operation (this is done at an
IR level, not at an ISA level), track again the constant buffers used as
source and store this pair. Then, outside of shader execution, join
the sample and image pair with a bitwise or operation.
This approach won't work on games that truly use separate samplers in a
meaningful way. For example, pooling textures in a 2D array and
determining at runtime what sampler to use.
This invalidates OpenGL's disk shader cache :)
- Used mostly by D3D ports to Switch
Drop MemoryBarrier from the buffer cache and use Maxwell3D's register
WaitForIdle.
To implement this on OpenGL we just call glMemoryBarrier with the
necessary bits.
Vulkan lacks this synchronization primitive, so we set an event and
immediately wait for it. This is not a pretty solution, but it's what
Vulkan can do without submitting the current command buffer to the queue
(which ends up being more expensive on the CPU).
Using deko3d as reference:
4e47ba0013/source/maxwell/gpu_3d_state.cpp (L42)
We were using bits 3 and 4 to determine depth clamping, but these are
the same both enabled and disabled:
state->depthClampEnable ? 0x101A : 0x181D
The same happens on Nvidia's OpenGL driver, where they do something like
this (default capabilities, GL 4.5 compatibility):
(state & DEPTH_CLAMP) != 0 ? 0x201a : 0x281c
There's always a difference between the first bits in this register, but
bit 11 is consistently disabled on both deko3d/NVN and OpenGL. This
commit changes yuzu's behaviour to use bit 11 to determine depth
clamping.
- Fixes depth issues on Super Mario Odyssey's intro.
The encoding for negation and absolute value was wrong.
Extracting is now done manually. Similar instructions having different
encodings is the rule, not the exception. To keep sanity and readability
I preferred to extract the desired bit manually.
This is implemented against nxas:
8dbc389957/table.h (L68)
That is itself tested against nvdisasm (Nvidia's official disassembler).
On NVN buffers can be enabled but have no size. According to deko3d and
the behavior we see in Animal Crossing: New Horizons these buffers get
the special address of 0x1000 and limit themselves to 0xfff.
Implement buffers without a size by binding a null buffer to OpenGL
without a side.
1d1930beea/source/maxwell/gpu_3d_vbo.cpp (L62-L63)
Allows reporting more cases where logic errors may exist, such as
implicit fallthrough cases, etc.
We currently ignore unused parameters, since we currently have many
cases where this is intentional (virtual interfaces).
While we're at it, we can also tidy up any existing code that causes
warnings. This also uncovered a few bugs as well.
Implements the common usages for VMNMX. Inputs with a different size
than 32 bits are not supported and sign mismatches aren't supported
either.
VMNMX works as follows:
It grabs Ra and Rb and applies a maximum/minimum on them (this is
defined by .MX), having in mind the input sign. This result can then be
saturated. After the intermediate result is calculated, it applies
another operation on it using Rc. These operations are merges,
accumulations or another min/max pass.
This instruction allows to implement with a more flexible approach GCN's
min3 and max3 instructions (for instance).
Implements a reduction operation. It's an atomic operation that doesn't
return a value.
This commit introduces another primitive because some shading languages
might have a primitive for reduction operations.
Credits go to gdkchan and Ryujinx. The pull request used for this can
be found here: https://github.com/Ryujinx/Ryujinx/pull/1082
yuzu was already using the header for interpolation, but it was missing
the FragCoord.w multiplication described in the linked pull request.
This commit finally removes the FragCoord.w == 1.0f hack from the shader
decompiler.
While we are at it, this commit renames some enumerations to match
Nvidia's documentation (linked below) and fixes component declaration
order in the shader program header (z and w were swapped).
https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-doc/blob/master/Shader-Program-Header/Shader-Program-Header.html
This information is required to properly implement SULD.B. It might also
be handy for all image operations, since it would allow us to implement
them on devices that require the image format to be specified (on
desktop, this would be AMD on OpenGL and Intel on OpenGL and Vulkan).
Layered framebuffer attachments is a feature that allows applications to
write attach layered textures to a single attachment. What layer the
fragments are written to is decided from the shader using gl_Layer.
Instead of waiting immediately for executed commands, defer the query
until the guest CPU reads it. This way we get closer to what the guest
program is doing.
To archive this we have to build a dependency queue, because host APIs
(like OpenGL and Vulkan) use ranged queries instead of counters like
NVN.
Waiting for queries implicitly uses fences and this requires a command
being queued, otherwise the driver will lock waiting until a timeout. To
fix this when there are no commands queued, we explicitly call glFlush.
Some instances were using cbuf34.offset instead of cbuf34.GetOffset().
This returned the an invalid offset. Address those instances and rename
offset to "shifted_offset" to avoid future bugs.