For similar reasons to the previous change, we move this to a single
function, so we don't need to duplicate the conversion logic in several
places within main.cpp.
Specifies the conversions explicitly to avoid implicit conversions from
const char* to QString. This makes it easier to disable implicit QString
conversions in the future.
In this case, the implicit conversion was technically wrong as well. The
implicit conversion treats the input strings as ASCII characters. This
would result in an incorrect conversion being performed in the rare case
a branch name was created with a non-ASCII Unicode character, likely
resulting in junk being displayed.
The C++ standard allows constexpr variables declared with the extern
keyword to have external linkage. Previously MSVC wasn't abiding by
this. This just makes the compiler more standards compliant during
builds.
Given we currently don't make use of anything that would break by this,
this is safe to enable.
The backend is not used until we decide to submit the testcase/telemetry, and creating it early prevents users from updating the credentials properly while the games are running.
Also introduced in REV5 was a variable-size audio command buffer. This
also affects how the size of the work buffer should be determined, so we
can add handling for this as well.
Thankfully, no other alterations were made to how the work buffer size
is calculated in 7.0.0-8.0.0. There were indeed changes made to to how
some of the actual audio commands are generated though (particularly in
REV7), however they don't apply here.
Introduced in REV5. This is trivial to add support for, now that
everything isn't a mess of random magic constant values.
All this is, is a change in data type sizes as far as this function
cares.
"Unmagics" quite a few magic constants within this code, making it much
easier to understand. Particularly given this factors out specific
sections into their own self-contained lambda functions.
Instead of asserting on already stored shader variants, silently skip them.
This shouldn't be happening but when a shader is invalidated and it is
not stored in the shader cache, this assert would hit and save that
shader anyways when the asserts are disabled.
These are actually quite important indicators of thread lifetimes, so
they should be going into the debug log, rather than being treated as
misc info and delegated to the trace log.