This provides the equivalent behavior, but without as much boilerplate.
While we're at it, explicitly default the move constructor, since we
have a move-assignment operator defined.
* More improvements to GDBStub
- Debugging of threads should work correctly with source and assembly level stepping and modifying registers and memory, meaning threads and callstacks are fully clickable in VS.
- List of modules is available to the client, with assumption that .nro and .nso are backed up by an .elf with symbols, while deconstructed ROMs keep N names.
- Initial support for floating point registers.
* Tidy up as requested in PR feedback
* Tidy up as requested in PR feedback
* Add VfsFile and VfsDirectory classes
* Finish abstract Vfs classes
* Implement RealVfsFile (computer fs backend)
* Finish RealVfsFile and RealVfsDirectory
* Finished OffsetVfsFile
* More changes
* Fix import paths
* Major refactor
* Remove double const
* Use experimental/filesystem or filesystem depending on compiler
* Port partition_filesystem
* More changes
* More Overhaul
* FSP_SRV fixes
* Fixes and testing
* Try to get filesystem to compile
* Filesystem on linux
* Remove std::filesystem and document/test
* Compile fixes
* Missing include
* Bug fixes
* Fixes
* Rename v_file and v_dir
* clang-format fix
* Rename NGLOG_* to LOG_*
* Most review changes
* Fix TODO
* Guess 'main' to be Directory by filename
Without this, it's possible to get compilation failures in the (rare) scenario where
a container is used to store a bunch of live IOFile instances, as they may be using
std::move_if_noexcept under the hood. Given these definitely don't throw exceptions
this is also not incorrect to add either.
Ensure that the actual types being passed in are trivially copyable. The internal
call to ReadArray() and WriteArray() will always succeed, since they're passed a pointer to char*
which is always trivially copyable.
The minimum clang/GCC versions we support already support this. We can also
remove is_standard_layout(), as fread and fwrite only require the type to be
trivially copyable.
These are all unused and the Write() ones should arguably not even be in the interface. There are better ways to provide this if we ever need it (like iterators).