Commit Graph

24 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
The Gears of Progress
1055094ab9 Modifying text_helper to not have static text sections 2026-01-11 15:02:16 -05:00
The Gears of Progress
ba1a075701 Adding PCCS 2025-10-12 15:08:33 -04:00
Philippe Symons
eef173b0d2 Fix crash + unrelated buffer overflow + some optimizations
There was a crash happening with ptgb::vector when you'd press A on the CONFIRM button of the box screen. It only occurred on actual gba hardware and
was a real heisenbug: as soon as you'd add code to display logs on screen, the problem would disappear. So it was very difficult to figure this one
out. We're not even entirely sure why, but it looks like the malloc/realloc/free use in ptgb::vector would cause issues.

Maybe it was alignment, but after messing with the code we also saw a warning appear in the terminal telling us that realloc wouldn't properly
deal with non-POD types. It complained about this very thing while referring to the add_track() function, which stores ptgb::vectors inside another
ptgb::vector. We also didn't have a custom copy constructor yet to actually copy the buffer instead of its pointer.
All of these could potentially have led to the crash. But debugging during the link cable flow was difficult, so we were never able to confirm it in
a debugger, log or dump.

Because I suspected the high IWRAM consumption (especially now with ZX0 decompression) for a while, I also did an optimization in mystery_gift_builder
to pass global_memory_buffer as its section_30_data buffer instead. This reduces IWRAM consumption by 4 KB.

There was another problem I discovered during my crash hunt: the out_array (now payload_buffer) was allocated as a 672 byte array, but the payloads
were actually 707 bytes. Therefore writing this to the buffer caused a buffer overflow, thereby corrupting the global variables appearing after it in
IWRAM. It turned out eventually that none of these variables were really critical, but it could explain some minor bugs GearsProgress has seen.

I also did a few performance optimizations:

- At various stages in the code, for loops were used to copy data from one buffer into another byte-by-byte. This was far from optimal because the gba
cpu can load/copy 4 bytes at a time if you ask it to. So I replaced those with memcpy(), which is a hand-optimized assembly function to copy data
using this principle.

- generate_payload was being called twice: once at start_link and once at continue_link, giving the exact same result, even though it was already
being stored in a global buffer allocated in IWRAM. This was also a fairly heavy function. So I optimized the code to only initialize it once in
the script chain and then just retrieve the buffer.

- generate_payload was constructing the eventual payload twice even within the same call. That's because it first merged z80_rng_seed, z80_payload
and z80_patchlist into a full_data ptgb::vector, after which it then copied the data again to out_array (now called payload_buffer). I eliminated the
full_data vector now.
2025-06-18 10:23:03 +02:00
Philippe Symons
26fd1e2dd3 Add compression for the text data, output stack usage .su files and rework script_array
Add a binary table format and convert the text entries into this format in text_helper/main.py. It then gets compressed with zx0.

The new text_data_table and streamed_data_table classes exist to read the various entries from this binary table. streamed_data_table specifically
exists to use a decompression buffer that is smaller than the actual binary table. But it requires a decompression buffer that is
still larger than ZX0_DEFAULT_WINDOW_SIZE (default: 2048 bytes) and will only be able to decompress in
chunks of (<decompression_buffer_size> - <ZX0_DEFAULT_WINDOW_SIZE>) bytes

Try to keep the binary text tables sufficiently small though, because since zx0 doesn't actually support random access,
getting to the last entry is significantly more expensive than reading the first one. And unless you use streamed_data_table,
it also requires <uncompressed_size> bytes of stack space, therefore IWRAM to decompress them.

I also had to rework script_array because it can no longer reference the strings directly. Instead we now reference the DIA_* "enum" values.
We also no longer store an array of script_obj instances, because these were getting stored in IWRAM since they're non-const global variables
originally. Instead we now have const arrays of script_obj_params structs, which should end up in .rodata -> therefore EWRAM.

Right now, script_obj only supports the PTGB text table (originally the dialogue array). But if the need arises to support other tables as well,
I'd consider adding a separate enum to script_obj_params to indicate the specific table.

The compilation process will also output .su files in the build folder from now on. These files indicate the stack frame size for every function in
every compilation unit, so be sure to check them from time to time. Note that they will only show the stack consumption for that specific function.
So to get the worst case stack consumption, you need to manually add all the functions in a certain stack flow.
2025-05-21 12:21:06 +02:00
Philippe Symons
4c93ff869c Optimize the MOVESETS table for compression + eliminate 4 KB "handles" buffer from
libsysbase_libsysbase_a-handle_manager.o

So, I optimized the MOVESETS table to only store the "overriding" bits in the movesets of the evolutions
in relation to their base forms. That only improved compression slightly (about 300 bytes)

I also eliminated 4 KB of IWRAM usage by libsysbase_libsysbase_a-handle_manager.o because of the "handles"
buffer. We're not using it and we REALLY need our IWRAM. (and it also reduces the rom size with 4KB too!)
2025-04-29 22:22:38 +02:00
Philippe Symons
9268cbd42e Reduce binary size by eliminating libstdc++
This commit removes all references to things in the libstdc++ library to remove a decent chunk of bloat.

This means every std::to_string() call, std::string and std::vector. (as well as iostream related stuff).

I replaced those with my own versions ptgb::to_string() and ptgb::vector. Especially the latter is not exactly the same,
but close enough.

I also replaced operator new and delete with my own implementation to avoid pulling in everything related to exceptions
from libstdc++

Another problem was the fact that libtonc uses siscanf, which pulls in everything related to the scanf family of functions
and locale support. The worst part of that was that it included a 13KB "categories" symbol from libc_a-categories.o,
which was pulled in because of the locale support integrated into newlibc's siscanf() function. To fix that, I created a
custom, extremely restricted implementation of siscanf. libtonc only used this function to parse at most 2 integers from a
string anyway.
2025-04-09 20:04:08 +02:00
The Gears of Progress
a278bfb355 Updating Dream Dex 2025-04-06 11:57:37 -04:00
The Gears of Progress
b267912687 Continuing box updating 2025-03-27 14:37:47 -04:00
The Gears of Progress
8160bcd276 updating box menu, pre sprite grabbing 2025-03-22 15:57:22 -04:00
The Gears of Progress
91b2534b70 Updating text rendering 2025-03-19 20:55:09 -04:00
The Gears of Progress
a805bbad0a Releasing wood gecko 2025-01-11 17:23:09 -05:00
The Gears of Progress
1662ed37e3 Fixing weird split changes 2024-12-19 18:39:37 -05:00
The Gears of Progress
41f7fcb1aa *Finally* fixing the EXP bug 2024-12-19 18:15:04 -05:00
The Gears of Progress
3b945ecf3e v1.1.0 2024-11-01 22:54:05 -04:00
The Gears of Progress
3728db9f72 Final push!! 2024-08-23 17:50:17 -04:00
The Gears of Progress
1ec09842ad Updating tons of graphics 2024-08-19 14:47:29 -04:00
The Gears of Progress
22f7aaac26 Pre-saving space 2024-08-13 15:49:04 -04:00
The Gears of Progress
add977cf02 Prep for bug testing 2024-07-03 17:44:33 -04:00
The Gears of Progress
290fdf22a4 Updating DreamDex 2024-06-28 16:24:01 -04:00
The Gears of Progress
2cfec76b3c Adding support for Yellow and fixing other bugs 2024-06-07 13:55:01 -04:00
Remnants of Forgotten Disney
a4bda4c673 Adding in event stabilization 2024-04-17 09:17:15 -05:00
Remnants of Forgotten Disney
a27f1c2c37 Continuing transfer menu implementation 2024-04-02 12:19:06 -05:00
Remnants of Forgotten Disney
de40daa51e Updating buttons and dialogue 2024-03-29 11:55:54 -05:00
Remnants of Forgotten Disney
6bef2b58f2 Reworking global frames 2024-03-27 12:04:18 -05:00