The PowerPC CPU has bits in MSR (DR and IR) which control whether
addresses are translated. We should respect these instead of mixing
physical addresses and translated addresses into the same address space.
This is mostly mass-renaming calls to memory accesses APIs from places
which expect address translation to use a different version from those
which do not expect address translation.
This does very little on its own, but it's the first step to a correct BAT
implementation.
Instead of swaping each word of the elf code section(s) looking
for a match to our pattern, we swap the pattern just once (at
compile time) and test against our swapped pattern.
* Don't claim to support any features we don't, like relocation
* Actually zero-out BSS sections, as memory might not be already
zeroed.
* Deleted commented out code.
* Removed GetPointer, updated to more modern interface methods.
* Updated pointer types style from "u32 *x" to "u32* x"
* The file already exsists, otherwise we wouldn't have gotten
this far in the boot.
* We have already checked if it's a Wii or GameCube elf,
besides, it's too late to change our minds now anyway.
* On Wii - Don't call EmulatedBS2, it can never succeed as
it knows nothing about booting elfs. Just call the
SetupWiiMemory directly if needed.
* On GameCube - We still call EmulatedBS2_GC, but we stop
it from running Apploader, which might boot something
unexpected from the default iso or DVD root folder.
This value was "helpful" for debugging when the stack got corrupted.
Helpful that if gpr[1](Which is the stack pointer with PPC ABI) is zero then the interpreter would spam huge amounts of annoy text saying that we
managed to get in to a "corrupted" state.
This is incremented every instruction on the interpreter, or every block run on the JIT64....Only if debugging is enabled(JIT64 it is a const
variable)
The message is only outputted when interpreter is used and debugging is enabled.
This was actually never used as far as I can tell. There was no wx event handling done whatsoever for the global ID, So this is basically a dead function.
It doesn't really matter much at the moment given our current terrible MMU
emulation, but it will start mattering once our MMU emulation gets more
accurate.
- remove unused variables
- reduce the scope where it makes sense
- correct limits (did you know that strcat()'s last parameter does not
include the \0 that is always added?)
- set some free()'d pointers to NULL