This slider affects the number of cycles that the guest cpu emulation
reports that have passed since the last time slice. This option scales
the result returned by a percentage that the user selects. In some games
underclocking the CPU can give a major speedup. Exposing this as an
option will give users something to toy with for performance, while also
potentially enhancing games that experience lag on the real console
* Core::Timing: Add multiple timer, one for each core
* revert clang-format; work on tests for CoreTiming
* Kernel:: Add support for multiple cores, asserts in HandleSyncRequest because Thread->status == WaitIPC
* Add some TRACE_LOGs
* fix tests
* make some adjustments to qt-debugger, cheats and gdbstub(probably still broken)
* Make ARM_Interface::id private, rework ARM_Interface ctor
* ReRename TimingManager to Timing for smaler diff
* addressed review comments
* HTTP_C::Implement Context::MakeRequest
* httplib: Add add_client_cert_ASN1 and set_verify
* HTTP_C: Fix request methode strings case in MakeRequest
* HTTP_C: clang-format and cleanups
* HTTP_C: Add comment about async in BeginRequest and BeginRequestAsync
* Update httplib to contain all the changes we need; adapt http_c and web_services to the changes in httplib; addressed minor review comments
* Add android-ifaddrs
10 slots are offered along with 'Save to Oldest Slot' and 'Load from Newest Slot'.
The savestate format is similar to the movie file format. It is called CST (Citra SavesTate), and is basically a 0x100 byte header (consisting of magic, revision, creation time and title ID) followed by Zstd compressed raw savestate data.
The savestate files are saved to the `states` folder in Citra's user folder. The files are named like `<Title ID>.<Slot ID>.cst`.
This holds the archives which include the SelfNCCH archive which holds the RomFS files. If we don't reset it the LayeredFS class can't get destructed and mods files won't be released.
The original path (file_name.exefsdir) is still supported, but alternatively users can choose to put exefs patches in the same place as LayeredFS files (`load/mods/<Title ID>/exefs`).
Only enabled for NCCHs that do not have an override romfs.
LayeredFS files should be put in the `load` directory in User Directory. The directory structure is similar to yuzu's but currently does not allow named mods yet. Replacement files should be put in `load/mods/<Title ID>/romfs` while patches/stubs should be put in `load/mods/<Title ID>/romfs_ext`.
This implementation is different from Luma3DS's which directly hooks the SDK functions. Instead, we read the RomFS's metadata and figure out the directory and file structure. Then, relocations (i.e. replacements/deletions/patches) are applied. Afterwards, we rebuild the metadata, and assign 'fake' data offsets to the files. When we want to read file data from this rebuilt RomFS, we use binary search to find the last data offset smaller or equal to the given offset and read from that file (either from the original RomFS, or from replacement files, or from buffered data with patches applied) and any later files when length is not enough.
The code that rebuilds the metadata is pretty complex and uses quite a few variables to keep track of necessary information like metadata offsets. According to my tests, it is able to build RomFS-es identical to the original (but without trailing garbage data) when no relocations are applied.
The DIGIT filter was incorrectly implemented as preventing all digits. It actually limits the maximum digit count to max_digits, according to ctrulib and hardware testing.