This PR simply exposes the tapserver options in Serial Port 1 on Android. They already exist and work, but are not selectable. I've tested the tapserver options myself with Phantasy Star Online Episode I & II and they work fine.
This implements the GameCube modem adapter. This implementation is stable but not perfect; it drops frames if the receive FIFO length is exceeded. This is probably due to the unimplemented interrupt mentioned in the comments. If the tapserver end of the connection is aware of this limitation, it's easily circumvented by lowering the MTU of the link, but ideally this wouldn't be necessary.
This has been tested with a couple of different versions of Phantasy Star Online, including Episodes 1 & 2 Trial Edition. The Trial Edition is the only version of the game that supports the Modem Adapter and not the Broadband Adapter, which is what made this commit necessary in the first place.
This expands the tapserver BBA interface to be available on all platforms. tapserver itself is still macOS-only, but newserv (the PSO server) is not, and it can directly accept local and remote tapserver connections as well. This makes the tapserver interface potentially useful on all platforms.
Google Play's policies require us to tell the user the size of any large
download.
The size seems to vary by just a megabyte or two across regions in my
testing, so I'm listing a rough size for all the regions.
I'm also taking the opportunity to shorten the message to make it easier
to read.
Because the wording of the Load Wii System Menu string can change
depending on the contents of the NAND, we should update that menu item in
a method that's guaranteed to get called every time the user opens the
menu rather than one that's only guaranteed to be called once.
After reading the previous commit, you might think "hold on, what's the
difference between GetProfileName and GetProfileDirectoryName"? These
two are being used for the exact same thing - figuring out where
profiles are stored - yet they return different values for certain
controllers like GC keyboards! As far as I can tell, the existing code
has been broken for GC keyboards since they were introduced a decade
ago. The GUI (and more recently, also InputCycler) would write and read
profiles in one location, and our code for loading profiles specified in
a game INI file would read profiles in another location.
This commit gets rid of the set of values used by the game INI code in
favor of the other set. This does breaking existing setups where a
GCKey profile has been configured in a game INI, but I think the number
of working such setups is vanishingly small. The alternative would make
existing GCKey profiles go missing from the profile dropdown in the GUI,
which I think would be more disruptive. The alternative would also force
new GCKey profiles into the same directory as GCPad profiles.
This commit also fixes a regression from d6c0f8e749. The Android GUI was
using GetProfileName to figure out what key to use in the game INI,
which made it use incorrect game INI entries for GameCube controller
profiles but not Wii Remote profiles. Now the Android GUI uses
GetProfileKey for this, fixing the problem.
"When interacting with DocumentUI or the built-in Android System Internal Files Manager app and performing Create, Rename, and Delete operations, DocumentsUI will not automatically refresh the changes.
Previously, users had to manually pull down from the top to refresh the changes. This commit aims to fix this issue by automatically notifying the system that changes have occurred and triggering a requery."
The gate size is 79.37125 by default, and the step size is 0.5. Android
throws an exception if we try to show the slider with the value set to
something that isn't divisible by the step size. To avoid this problem,
round the value.
Allows the Coil memory cache to use up to 90% of the application's available memory. Previously this could cause problems with reloading images in very large libraries of games.
Combined with the previous commits, this finally fixes the bug where
Dolphin had a chance of crashing if you returned to it after Android
killed the Dolphin process.
This way, we ensure that game INI settings are properly applied. I don't
think we actually expose the affected settings on a per-game basis in
the UI, but still.
This way the Settings class doesn't contain a hardcoded reference to
a specific setting. And Settings.loadSettings no longer calls
getBoolean, which is a step towards fixing the crash when recreating
EmulationActivity after process death.
In some settings where the default value could not be evenly divided by the step size for the slider, there would be a crash. This increases the precision of all double numeric settings to 0.5 and now shows the decimal that you couldn't see before.