Making the stream buffer resident increases GPU usage significantly on
some games. This seems to be addressed invalidating the stream buffer
with InvalidateBufferData instead of using a Unmap + Map (with
invalidation flags).
Switch games are allowed to bind less data than what they use in a
vertex buffer, the expected behavior here is that these values are read
as zero. At the moment of writing this only D3D12, OpenGL and NVN through
NV_vertex_buffer_unified_memory support vertex buffer with a size limit.
In theory this could be emulated on Vulkan creating a new VkBuffer for
each (handle, offset, length) tuple and binding the expected data to it.
This is likely going to be slow and memory expensive when used on the
vertex buffer and we have to do it on all draws because we can't know
without analyzing indices when a game is going to read vertex data out
of bounds.
This is not a problem on OpenGL's BufferAddressRangeNV because it takes
a length parameter, unlike Vulkan's CmdBindVertexBuffers that only takes
buffers and offsets (the length is implicit in VkBuffer). It isn't a
problem on D3D12 either, because D3D12_VERTEX_BUFFER_VIEW on
IASetVertexBuffers takes SizeInBytes as a parameter (although I am not
familiar with robustness on D3D12).
Currently this only implements buffer ranges for vertex buffers,
although indices can also be affected. A KHR_robustness profile is not
created, but Nvidia's driver reads out of bound vertex data as zero
anyway, this might have to be changed in the future.
- Fixes SMO random triangles when capturing an enemy, getting hit, or
looking at the environment on certain maps.
Make stream buffer and cached buffers as resident and query their
address. This allows us to use GPU addresses for several proprietary
Nvidia extensions.
Expose NV_vertex_buffer_unified_memory when the driver supports it.
This commit adds a function the determine if a GL_RENDERER is a Turing
GPU. This is required because on Turing GPUs Nvidia's driver crashes
when the buffer is marked as resident or on DeleteBuffers. Without a
synchronous debug output (single threaded driver), it's likely that
the driver will crash in the first blocking call.
Enable GL_EXT_texture_shadow_lod if available. If this extension is not available, such as on Intel/AMD proprietary drivers, use textureGrad as a workaround.
Variables that are marked as const cannot have the move constructor
invoked when returning from a function (the move constructor requires a
non-const variable so it can "steal" the resources from it.
Check() can throw an exception if the Vulkan result isn't successful.
We remove the check so that std::terminate isn't outright called and
allows for better debugging (should it ever actually fail).
Renames some variables to prevent ones in inner scopes from shadowing
outer-scoped variables.
The Copy* functions have no shadowing, but we rename them anyways to
remain consistent with the other functions.
We can reduce the capture scope so that it's not possible for both "reg"
variables to clash with one another.
While we're at it, we can prevent unnecessary copies while we're at it.
maxwell_to_vk: Reorder filtering modes to start with None, then Nearest, then Linear.
maxwell_to_vk: Logs filter modes under UNREACHABLE_MSG instead of UNIMPLEMENTED_MSG, since any unknown filter modes are invalid and not unimplemented.
maxwell_to_vk: Return VK_SAMPLER_MIPMAP_MODE_NEAREST instead of VK_SAMPLER_MIPMAP_MODE_LINEAR when mipmap_filter is None with the description from the VkSamplerCreateInfo(3) man page.
maxwell_to_gl: Log unimplemented features under UNIMPLEMENTED_MSG instead of LOG_ERROR to bring into parity with maxwell_to_vk
maxwell_to_gl: Deduplicate logging in VertexType(), merging them into one.
maxwell_to_gl: Return GL_NEAREST instead of GL_LINEAR if an unknown texture filter mode is encountered.
maxwell_to_gl: Log the mipmap filter mode if an unknown value is passed in.
maxwell_to_gl: Reorder filtering modes to start with None, then Nearest, then Linear.
Due to the limitation of GL_MAX_IMAGE_UNITS being low (8) on Intel's and Nvidia's proprietary drivers, we have to reserve an appropriate amount of image bindings for each of the stages. So far games have been observed to use 4 image bindings on the fragment stage (Kirby Star Allies) and 1 on the vertex stage (TWD series).
No games thus far in my limited testing used more than 4 images concurrently and across all currently active programs.
This fixes shader compilation errors on Kirby Star Allies on OpenGL (GLSL/GLASM)