OSD messages can be disabled, while still leaving them in the status bar. This is incredibly useful for certain users, who may wish to see the messages, but do not wish to have them cover up half of the screen. In particular TASers will generally have OSD messages on the screen 100% of the time, and they cover up useful information, making it critical to turn them off. However the messages are still very useful to them, so it's important to have them somewhere.
This reverts 4a16211bae.
The concept of a "title bar" / "status bar" shouldn't be a core concept,
so remove the Host_UpdateStatusBar function, and move the code handles
whether to update the status bar or titlebar into DolphinWX.
This is effectively unused, as the window handles that we pass to the
GLInterface are window handles for the frame which isn't ever a real
toplevel window. Host_UpdateTitle is what actually sets the proper title
on the render window.
Now that MainNoGUI is properly architected and GLX doesn't need to
sometimes craft its own windows sometimes which we have to thread back
into MainNoGUI, we don't need to thread the window handle that GLX
creates at all.
This removes the reference to pass back here, and the g_pWindowHandle
always be the same as the window returned by Host_GetRenderHandle().
A future cleanup could remove g_pWindowHandle entirely.
This is good for a couple of reasons: one, it gets rid of duplicated code,
and two, DSP emulation shouldn't need to interact with audio in the first
place.
Our defines were never clear between what meant 64bit or x86_64
This makes a clear cut between bitness and architecture.
This commit also has the side effect of bringing up aarch64 compiling support.
VI isn't called as regular as we want to, so we have to create a new throttling event called regularly by coretiming.
Atm we throttle every 1 ms when we are too fast and skip throttling when we lack 40ms (to avoid fast boosts after slowdowns)
This branch is the final step of fully supporting both OpenGL and OpenGL ES in the same binary.
This of course only applies to EGL and won't work for GLX/AGL/WGL since they don't really support GL ES.
The changes here actually aren't too terrible, basically change every #ifdef USE_GLES to a runtime check.
This adds a DetectMode() function to the EGL context backend.
EGL will iterate through each of the configs and check for GL, GLES3_KHR, and GLES2 bits
After that it'll change the mode from _DETECT to whichever one is the best supported.
After that point we'll just create a context with the mode that was detected