Slight improvements to readability.
Dropped suggestions for string_view (settings.h:101), pass by value
(settings.h:82), reverting double to a float (config.cpp:316), and other
smaller ones, some out of scope.
Addresses review feedback.
Co-authored-by: Ameer J <52414509+ameerj@users.noreply.github.com>
There's no point in keeping the file open after the write limit is exceeded. This allows the file to be committed to the disk shortly after it is closed and avoids redundantly checking whether or not the write limit is exceeded.
It became apparent that logging can continuously spam errors that trigger file flushing.
Since committing the files to disk is an expensive operation, this causes unnecessarily high disk usage.
As such, we will revert Flush() to the previous behavior and add a Commit() member function in the event that this behavior is needed.
Creates a new BasicSettings class in common/settings, and forces setting
a default and label for each setting that uses it in common/settings.
Moves defaults and labels from both frontends into common settings.
Creates a helper function in each frontend to facillitate reading the
settings now with the new default and label properties.
Settings::Setting is also now a subclass of Settings::BasicSetting. Also
adds documentation for both Setting and BasicSetting.
Removes common_sizes.h in favor of having `_KiB`, `_MiB`, `_GiB`, etc
user-literals within literals.h.
To keep the global namespace clean, users will have to use:
```
using namespace Common::Literals;
```
to access these literals.
This check was preventing files with the Write or Append file access modes from being created, as per the documented behavior in FileAccessMode.
This amends the check to test for the existence of a filesystem object prior to checking whether it is a regular file.
Thanks to liushuyu for pointing out that removing the check altogether would not guard against attempting to open non-regular files such as directories, symlinks, FIFO (pipes), sockets, block devices, or character devices.
The documentation has also been updated for these functions to clarify that a file refers to a regular file.
Similarly, Flush() is typically called to attempt to flush a file into the disk. In the one case where this is used, we do not care whether the flush has succeeded or not, making [[nodiscard]] unnecessary.
There are a lot of scenarios where we don't particularly care whether or not the removal operation and just simply attempt a removal.
As such, removing the [[nodiscard]] attribute is best for these functions.
If this is not waited on, the synchronization primitives are destroyed
whe main exits and the detached task ends up signalling garbage and not
properly finishing.
This introduces a new setting Enable FS Access Log which saves the filesystem access log to sdmc:/FsAccessLog.txt
If this setting is not enabled, this will indicate to FS to not call OutputAccessLogToSdCard.
Fixes softlocks during loading in Xenoblade Chronicles 2 when certain DLC is enabled.
std::fflush does not guarantee that file buffers are flushed to the disk.
Use _commit on Windows and fsync on all other OSes to ensure that the file is flushed to the disk.
MSVC's implementation of recursive_directory_iterator throws an exception on an error despite a std::error_code being passed into its constructor. This is most likely a bug in MSVC's implementation since directory_iterator does not throw an exception on an error.
We can replace the usage of recursive_directory_iterator for now until MSVC fixes their implementation of it.
This falls back to the old approach of using a virtual buffer.
Windows is untested, but this build should fix support for Windows < 10 v1803. However without fastmem support at all.