Major change to how `deftype` shows up in our code:
- the decompiler will no longer emit the `offset-assert`,
`method-count-assert`, `size-assert` and `flag-assert` parameters. There
are extremely few cases where having this in the decompiled code is
helpful, as the types there come from `all-types` which already has
those parameters. This also doesn't break type consistency because:
- the asserts aren't compared.
- the first step of the test uses `all-types`, which has the asserts,
which will throw an error if they're bad.
- the decompiler won't emit the `heap-base` parameter unless necessary
now.
- the decompiler will try its hardest to turn a fixed-offset field into
an `overlay-at` field. It falls back to the old offset if all else
fails.
- `overlay-at` now supports field "dereferencing" to specify the offset
that's within a field that's a structure, e.g.:
```lisp
(deftype foobar (structure)
((vec vector :inline)
(flags int32 :overlay-at (-> vec w))
)
)
```
in this structure, the offset of `flags` will be 12 because that is the
final offset of `vec`'s `w` field within this structure.
- **removed ID from all method declarations.** IDs are only ever
automatically assigned now. Fixes#3068.
- added an `:overlay` parameter to method declarations, in order to
declare a new method that goes on top of a previously-defined method.
Syntax is `:overlay <method-name>`. Please do not ever use this.
- added `state-methods` list parameter. This lets you quickly specify a
list of states to be put in the method table. Same syntax as the
`states` list parameter. The decompiler will try to put as many states
in this as it can without messing with the method ID order.
Also changes `defmethod` to make the first type definition (before the
arguments) optional. The type can now be inferred from the first
argument. Fixes#3093.
---------
Co-authored-by: Hat Kid <6624576+Hat-Kid@users.noreply.github.com>
Started at 349,880,038 allocations and 42s
- Switched to making `Symbol` in GOOS be a "fixed type", just a wrapper
around a `const char*` pointing to the string in the symbol table. This
is a step toward making a lot of things better, but by itself not a huge
improvement. Some things may be worse due to more temp `std::string`
allocations, but one day all these can be removed. On linux it saved
allocations (347,685,429), and saved a second or two (41 s).
- cache `#t` and `#f` in interpreter, better lookup for special
forms/builtins (hashtable of pointers instead of strings, vector for the
small special form list). Dropped time to 38s.
- special-case in quasiquote when splicing is the last thing in a list.
Allocation dropped to 340,603,082
- custom hash table for environment lookups (lexical vars). Dropped to
36s and 314,637,194
- less allocation in `read_list` 311,613,616. Time about the same.
- `let` and `let*` in Interpreter.cpp 191,988,083, time down to 28s.
This change adds a few new features:
- Decompiler automatically knows the type of `find-parent-method` use in
jak 1 and jak2 when used in a method or virtual state handler.
- Decompiler inserts a call to `call-parent-method` or
`find-parent-state`
- Removed most casts related to these functions
There are still a few minor issues around this:
- There are still some casts needed when using `post` methods, as `post`
is just a `function`, and needs a cast to `(function none)` or similar.
It didn't seem easy to change the type of `post`, so I'm not going to
worry about it for this PR. It only shows up in like 3 places in jak 2.
(and 0 in jak 1)
- If "call the handler if it's not #f" logic should probably be another
macro.
Fixes#805
Adds controller LED features to Jak 2:
- progressive flickering denoting health
- copies tomb simon says puzzle colors
- unique colors for each gun
- orange color for being indax
- yellow color for being in mech
- purple color for being darkjak
- blue color for being in board
- red flash when wanted.
May add more features later?
Also did some minor clean-up on some types.
This renames the method object in `defmethod`s to `this` and adds
detection for the `set-time!` and `time-elapsed?` macros.
Definitely my biggest PR yet...
- state handlers that are not inlined lambdas have smarter type
checking, getting rid of 99.9% of the casts emitted (they were not
useful)
- art groups were not being properly linked to their "master" groups.
- `max` in `ja` in Jak 2 was not being detected.
Another huge PR...
Previously, `object` and `none` were both top-level types. This made
decompilation rather messy as they have no LCA and resulted in a lot of
variables coming out as type `none` which is very very wrong and
additionally there were plenty of casts to `object`. This changes it so
`none` becomes a child of `object` (it is still represented by
`NullType` which remains unusable in compilation).
This change makes `object` the sole top-level type, and the type that
can represent *any* GOAL object. I believe this matches the original
GOAL built-in type structure. A function that has a return type of
`object` can now return an integer or a `none` at the same time.
However, keep in mind that the return value of `(none)` is still
undefined, just as before. This also makes a cast to `object`
meaningless in 90% of the situations it showed up in (as every single
thing is already an `object`) and the decompiler will no longer emit
them. Casts to `none` are also reduced. Yay!
Additionally, state handlers also don't get the final `(none)` printed
out anymore. The return type of a state handler is completely
meaningless outside the event handler (which is return type `object`
anyway) so there are no limitations on what the last form needs to be. I
did this instead of making them return `object` to trick the decompiler
into not trying to output a variable to be used as a return value
(internally, in the decompiler they still have return type `none`, but
they have `object` elsewhere).
Fixes#1703Fixes#830Fixes#928
This PR adds detection of the `launch-particles` and `seconds-per-frame`
macros to the decompiler, removing a lot of bloat and hiding many
process register uses.
I also added `og:preserve-this` comments to as many manual patches and
comments as I could, which will soon be used in conjunction with CI to
hopefully catch any regressions in future big decomp update PRs.
I have some concerns about the `launch-particles` macro (more details in
`sparticle-launcher.gc`) , but thus far, I have not seen anything break
yet.
---------
Co-authored-by: water <awaterford111445@gmail.com>
I think this is very likely to fix
https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/issues/2970
We had somebody report a stacktrace from the debugger, and it was
immediately after calling `gen-perms`.
I found that `gen-perms` writes past the end of a stack array during
this mission, and at the same time as the reported freezes.
I was unable to recreate the original freeze after making this change.
Fixes#2167
Reduces test flakiness if ran on multiple threads and gets rid of a few
hundred files from the source tree
I believe this also makes #1434 irrelevant and it can be closed.
---------
Co-authored-by: ManDude <7569514+ManDude@users.noreply.github.com>
The progress menu loads its icon textures from a .STR file that we were
previously ignoring.
This change:
- updates the decompiler so it can process a .STR file containing a
texture
- adds a feature to force an entire page to always be loaded in the PC
renderer by putting all textures in the GAME.FR3 file.
- regenerates the texture offset map file for jak 2 with these new
textures
For now, I've just put the icon textures in GAME.FR3. The downside is
that these will always stay on the GPU, using up VRAM even when they
aren't needed. But the entire GAME.FR3 file is under 3 MB so I think
it's ok.
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/48171810/39f075b5-7cc5-4168-872a-33026342afab)
Changes the DGO build order so that the city gets compiled first, and a
random guess at an "order" of which levels people might edit more often.
Most of the data-only borrow files are moved to the end as well.
Also moves around files in the `goal_src` tree to a structure that makes
a bit more sense, some files were either in the completely wrong place,
their folders had strange names, were too deep for no reason or were
just too far away from other relevant files. This structure should make
it easier to guess a file's location.
Fixes empty boxed arrays of strings breaking some decomp
(`ctywide-speech` and `race-info`).
Adds `decomp-as` tag to decompiler types so that the static data
decompiler can use macros like `meters` and `seconds` on fields that
aren't of type `meters` or `time-frame`.
Adds `override` tag to decompiler types which overrides the type of
field with that name. The type must be a child type of the original
field's type (or the same type, but why would you do this?).
Fixes the camera being offset for `drillmtn` after loading `palout`
once.
This is a huge refactor sadly.
This is a major deviation from the original game, which did not have any
way to access the nest after beating Metal Kor as the air train gets
hidden when he is beaten. This was mostly annoying because there are
precursor orbs in that level that you might miss.
This makes it so the air train can once again be used to enter the nest
even after beating Metal Kor. The rest of the level remains mostly the
same, except the Rift Ring does not spawn and an invisible wall is added
to the Metal Kor arena to prevent you from entering it as you are
normally unable to leave it anyway.
```lisp
(defenum collide-action
:type uint32
:bitfield #t
(solid 0) ;; used for solid things
(rider-plat-sticky 1) ;; used for platforms in rider/platform interactions
(rider-target 2) ;; used for target in rider/platform interactions
(edgegrab-active 3) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting edgegrab states
(rider-plat 4) ;; used for platforms in rider/platform interactions
(unused 5) ;; totally unused?
(edgegrab-possible 6) ;; used when edge grab checks should be done
(edgegrab-cam 7) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting edgegrab states
(swingpole-active 8) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting swingpole states
(racer 9) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting racer states
(attackable 10) ;; used for something to do with attacking/damaging
(attackable-unused 11) ;; seems to relate to attacking - set in several places but never tested for?
(snowball 12) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting snowball states
(tube 13) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting tube states
(flut 14) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting flutflut states
(racer-grounded 15) ;; set/cleared when entering/exiting certain racer states w/ extra conditions
(racer-unused 16) ;; seems to relate to racer - never set, only cleared in one place?
)
```
Adds support for adding custom subtitles to Jak 2 audio. Comes with a
new editor for the new system and format. Compared to the Jak 1 system,
this is much simpler to make an editor for.
Comes with a few subtitles already made as an example.
Cutscenes are not officially supported but you can technically subtitle
those with editor, so please don't right now.
This new system supports multiple subtitles playing at once (even from a
single source!) and will smartly push the subtitles up if there's a
message already playing:
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/7569514/033e6374-a05a-4c31-b029-51868153a932)
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/7569514/5298aa6d-a183-446e-bdb6-61c4682df917)
Unlike in Jak 1, it will not hide the bottom HUD when subtitles are
active:
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/7569514/d466bfc0-55d0-4689-a6e1-b7784b9fff59)
Sadly this leaves us with not much space for the subtitle region (and
the subtitles are shrunk when the minimap is enabled) but when you have
guards and citizens talking all the time, hiding the HUD every time
anyone spoke would get really frustrating.
The subtitle speaker is also color-coded now, because I thought that
would be fun to do.
TODO:
- [x] proper cutscene support.
- [x] merge mode for cutscenes so we don't have to rewrite the script?
---------
Co-authored-by: Hat Kid <6624576+Hat-Kid@users.noreply.github.com>
Gives proper names to almost every color. It is very apparent that some
colors are context-sensitive/made for a specific purpose, so those
colors were named after that purpose instead of a generic color name.
Also fixed an original game bug in `loader.gc` on a method that's called
quite often, though I have no clue what erroneous behavior it could have
even caused.
- elec gates now always render at max quality if you have PS2 lods
disabled. the original render distances are so low that the one in
caspad is impossible to see in normal gameplay.
- `fort-entry-gate-11` and `com-airlock-outer-13` are specifically
banned from the all actors hack because they are placed in a bad spot
and Naughty Dog did not program the airlocks very well.
- fixed NPC talk distance being bad for 1 frame.
- fix `sew-scare-grunt` erroneously keeping its spool anim active if you
killed the enemy.
This PR is a combination of
https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/pull/2507 and some additional
changes to port Shadow VU1 to OpenGL. As far as I can tell, it's
working.
---------
Co-authored-by: Hat Kid <6624576+Hat-Kid@users.noreply.github.com>
Adds sprite distort, fixes buggy sprite rendering in progress, adds
scissoring support (used in various scrolling menus) and a very basic
implementation of `blit-displays`. This is enough to make the fade
effect in the progress menu work, along with all the menus working
properly without needing to use the REPL. This does not make screen
flipping and the filter when failing a mission work.
Added support in the decompiler for detecting `dma-buffer-add-gs-set`
and `dma-buffer-add-gs-set-flusha` and updated all of the Jak 2 code to
use it. Readability improved!
Fixes decompiler issue with `with-dma-buffer-add-bucket` not inlining
forms which broke syntax. Fixes store error warnings showing up for
non-existent stores, there is now a dedicated pass for this at the end.
I started work on making `BITBLTBUF` stuff work in the DirectRenderer,
but stopped for now because it wasn't strictly necessary. It will still
assert like before.
This fixes a long time issue with `lambda`. The `lambda` is a bit
overloaded in OpenGOAL: it's used in the implementation of `let`, and
also to define local anonymous functions.
```
(defmacro let (bindings &rest body)
`((lambda :inline #t ,(apply first bindings) ,@body)
,@(apply second bindings)))
```
```
(defmacro defun (name bindings &rest body)
(let ((docstring ""))
(when (and (> (length body) 1) (string? (first body)))
(set! docstring (first body))
(set! body (cdr body)))
`(define ,name ,docstring (lambda :name ,name ,bindings ,@body))))
```
In the first case of a `let`, a `return` from inside the `let` should
return from the functioning containing the `let`, not the scope of the
`lambda`. In the second case, we should return from the lambda. The way
we told the different between these cases was if the `lambda` was used
"immeidately", in the head of an expression (like it would be for the
`let` macro). But, this falsely triggers when an anonymous function is
used immediately: eg
```
((lambda () (return #f)))
```
should generate and call a real x86 function that returns immediately.
This should fix some death/mission failed stuff in jak 2.
Updates the decompiler for the new format and there's new macros. This
new format should be easier to read/parse.
Also rewrote `sp-init-fields!` (both jak 1 and 2) from assembly to GOAL.
Hopefully I did not miss any regressions in Jak 1/2 while updating the
files, it's a lot.
- [x] compare NTSC-K
- [x] compare NTSC-J
- [x] compare PAL
- [x] figure out version order
- [x] ~~write delta patch for spanish text~~ no need for now
Fixes#2530
Cleans up every `dummy-*` and `TODO-RENAME-*` method up with either
proper names or by renaming them to `[type-name]-method-[method-id]`
similar to Jak 2's `all-types`.
Also fixes the bad format string in `collide-cache` and adds the event
handler hack to Jak 1.
The game boots and runs fine, but I might have missed a PAL patch or
other manual patches here and there, please double-check if possible.
The last of the missions that had a missing file.
I manually fixed some casting related to a `handle->process`, since this
is the last file...whatever not worth stressing about. But probably an
issue that will crop up in the future.
Co-authored-by: water <awaterford111445@gmail.com>
- decompile `neon-baron-part`, which also has the hideout door for some
reason
- improve a few error messages in static data decompilation
- fix bug with disabling fog in merc
Add the vortex renderer. The vortex texture isn't there yet (it uses the
same texture as clouds), so it uses a checkerboard. But the
colors/vertices seem right.
Definitely needs a clean up pass, but I think the functionality is very
close.
There's a few "hacks" still:
- I am using the emerc logic for environment mapping, which doesn't care
about the length of the normals. I can't figure out how the normal
scaling worked in etie. I want to do a little bit more experimentation
with this before merging.
- There is some part about adgifs for TIE and ETIE that I don't
understand. The clearly correct behavior of TIE/ETIE is that the alpha
settings from the adgif shader are overwritten by the settings from the
renderer. But I can't figure out how this happens in all cases.
- Fade out is completely disabled. I think this is fine because the
performance difference isn't bad. But if you are comparing screenshots
with PCSX2, it will make things look a tiny bit different.
There are *a lot* of file changes and while I have carefully gone
through every gsrc change to fix up manual patches, there might still be
spots that I missed.
My mistake -- testing focused too much on preserving the existing
behaviour I clearly forgot to make sure the new stuff worked properly.
Just had to early out and not modify the args if they were in the new
format.
This fixes the issue where elevators leave you behind (stack structure
related)
At the same time I cleaned up some things I found along the way, most
notably changing `script-context`'s `basic` field to `object` as
non-basics use this method as well.
Fixes#2305
An attempt to cleanup the last CLI interface we have left to cleanup.
- `gk` args now follow the typical convention ie. `--proj-path` instead
of `-proj-path`.
- args that are passed through to the rest of the application / the
game's runtime use the typical convention of following a `--`
- I'm thinking some args shouldn't be handled at this level ie
(`-nodisplay`, `-vm`, `-novm` or `-jak2`) These could be better
documented as legitimate flags and passed in via a nice struct. They
don't seem to be used in `InitParams` but I'll triple check.
There's a temporary shim here so there is no coupled release with the
launcher (right now it executes `gk` with a few args). So I just change
the old args into the new format. After one release cycle, I can change
it in the launcher and delete it here.
I am unsure if this will break the bash shellscript usages -- not sure
which args were usually passed into `$@`
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/13153231/222035309-b6601719-cdc9-40ee-b36e-e4b135d3f128.png)
Reasons for doing so include:
1. This should stop the confusion around editing the wrong config file's
flags -- when for example, extracting a level. Common settings can be in
one central place, with bespoke overrides being provided for each
version
2. Less verbose way of supporting multiple game versions. You don't have
to duplicate the entire `type_casts` file for example, just add or
override the json objects required.
3. Makes the folder structure consistent, Jak 1's `all-types` is now in
a `jak1` folder, etc.
Work in progress minimap. Known issues:
- "path finding" doesn't appear to work - it gets stuck forever in many
cases
- some nasty patches around timer-based code
- jak arrow blending issues
- would be nice to make it higher resolution
if the search is forced to terminate due to iteration/time limits, the
icon is not in the right place
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/48171810/221432792-678d6124-a6a6-4875-a91f-7eceedbfec98.png)
I didn't actually visually notice much of a difference with these hacks
unlike in Jak 1, but I also avoided checking the missions thoroughly
since the game crashes very often right now.
Some backtraces are quite large, an option is to increase your terminal
buffer -- but dumping to a file is also useful if you want to share the
crash.
I'm not crazy about the way I hacked this in, but it felt like the least
invasive way for now and I don't want to cause a regression with the
debugger. It's also nice that it dumps with ansi colors as then you can
view the backtrace with the original coloring:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/13153231/221460358-991916ad-90f0-445d-ba81-7bc3dbc42eb4.png)
Usage:
```clj
(:di "./stacktrace.log")
```
Where applicable, of course.
My system language is set to English so I actually can't test this. If
anyone has their Windows language (NOT LOCALE) set to Spanish, German,
French, Italian or Japanese please test this.
Fixes#1734
Also fixes the opengoal debugger on Windows and fixes the decomp for
`menu` which was causing some crashes related to input handling.
`*alert-level-settings*` was actually an inline array and we were
indexing past the end of it.
I think this will fix some of the strange on-foot guard behavior too.
Adds the `pckernel` system to Jak 2, allowing you to do the PC-specific
things that Jak 1 lets you do like change game resolution, etc.
In other to reduce the amount of code duplication for something that
we're gonna be changing a lot over time, I split it into a few more code
files. In this new system, `pckernel-h.gc`, `pckernel-common.gc`
(previously `pckernel.gc`) and `pc-debug-common.gc` are the files that
should be shared across all games (I hacked the Jak 2 project to pull
these files from the Jak 1 folder), while `pckernel-impl.gc`,
`pckernel.gc` and `pc-debug-methods.gc` are their respective
game-specific counterparts that should be loaded after. I'm not fully
happy with this, I think it's slightly messy, but it cleanly separates
code that should be game-specific and not accidentally copied around and
code that should be the same for all games anyway.
Moves PC-specific entity and debug menu things to `entity-debug.gc` and
`default-menu-pc.gc` respectively and makes `(declare-file (debug))`
work as it should (no need to wrap the entire file in `(when
*debug-segment*` now!).
Also changes the DGO descriptor format so that it's less verbose. It
might break custom levels, but the format change is very simple so it
should not be difficult for anyone to update to the new format. Sadly,
you lose the completely useless ability to use DGO object names that
don't match the source file name. The horror!
I've also gone ahead and expanded the force envmap option to also force
the ripple effect to be active. I did not notice any performance or
visual drawbacks from this. Gets rid of some distracting LOD and some
water pools appearing super flat (and pitch back for dark eco).
Fixes#1424
Manual patches:
`(trans idle krew-boss)`: `collide-shape` array created on the stack
changed to `(pointer collide-shape)`
---------
Co-authored-by: water <awaterford111445@gmail.com>
Implements the jak 2 lightning renderer as an alternate path through
Generic2. Also set up some generic stuff in the goal code.
There is a problem with the texture pool, which doesn't support the case
where two textures have the same tbp, but different cluts. So lightning
is often the wrong color (usually red).
I did a pass through all missions, fixing issues as they came up. Also
got `seal-at-waterslums` working -- the best mission in the game 🥳
Co-authored-by: water <awaterford111445@gmail.com>
Manual patches:
- `drill-turret`: The static data for `*turret-13-path*`,
`*turret-14-path*` and `*turret-15-path*` was decompiled by hand and the
integers in the `set-speed-mult` events have been replaced with boxed
integer arrays that contain only that integer in order to make the
compiler happy. To that effect, the event handler in `target-turret` was
changed to access that array instead of just accessing the int.
- `hover-nav-control`: In `hover-nav-control::10`, `arg2` is usually a
`vector`, but there are some places where it is called with `#t` as
`arg2` and, subsequently, crashes the game because it tries to access
the `quad` of `arg2` if `arg2` is truthy. To mitigate this, the
condition `arg2` has been replaced with `(and (!= arg2 #t) arg2)` (in
this case, it would jump to the `else` that just resets the `dest-vel`
and `transv` `quad`s)
- `drill-baron`: The static data for `*drill-ship-turret-speed-event*`
has been decompiled by hand.
TODOs:
- Jellyfish crash the game
- Destroying the metalhead eggs that are on the breakable wall crashes
the game (already happened with the Peacemaker before)
- Figure out why static data of type `turret-path-event` doesn't
decompile
The docs for all the hover-nav and nav-network code could use some love
in the future, I'm not smart enough to figure out what any of that code
actually means, but it seems to work...
Also threw in the fix for the ▲ that was accidentally left commented
out.
No more ghost town!
Manual patches:
- `hal3-course`: In `(anon-function 17 hal3-course)`, the decompiler is
doing something strange with `s3-0` that fails to compile, so I just
removed the `set!` and inlined the condition in the `when`.
- `guard`: Rewrote `(.mula.s)` stuff
This is a WIP while I'm learning the ins and outs of decompilation, but
putting up what I have for 2 reasons:
- Hoping someone can double check I'm on the right path (all functions
have signatures, all reasonably safe guesses for types have been put in,
using "object" for type where they're not)
- Might be blocked by not being able to run the offline-tests as a PAL
scrub
I'm going to look at what might be involved in making tests work for
PAL, but wouldn't be surprised if I have to wait to get a black label
version and come back to this after :(
---------
Co-authored-by: Tyler Wilding <xtvaser@gmail.com>