be92533eb4
This does a number of things: - Introduces new shortcodes for figures and tables, allowing them to be embedded natively. - Fixes padding on Youtube videos - Adjusts old blog posts, fixing dead links, and updating/unifying syntax.
71 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
71 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
+++
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date = "2016-05-20T18:04:00-05:00"
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title = "HLE Audio Comes to Citra"
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tags = [ "feature-update" ]
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author = "merrymage"
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forum = 38
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+++
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*Special thanks must be given to fincs and the rest of the 3DS community for their work reverse-engineering the DSP
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firmware. Without that work, Citra would not be this far with audio emulation.*
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As of [May 19th, 2016](https://github.com/citra-emu/citra/commit/af258584d978f02d462743012491a273c61b067e), Citra now
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has preliminary High Level Emulation (HLE) audio support! This means that users playing on Citra no longer have to
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listen to the deafening sound of silence in many titles. To get to this point was a huge reverse-engineering effort
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done by multiple people, with much of the reverse-engineering and the final implementation for Citra coming from
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MerryMage. This undertaking has required many months of development but the end result brings sound to the masses.
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{{< youtube 8LCUlyjvTJU >}}
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## Technical Details on how Audio Works for the 3DS
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Audio processing and output is done by a specialised coprocessor. These kinds of coprocessors are called Digital Signal
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Processors (DSPs).
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Games that run on the 3DS need to communicate with the DSP in order to play audio. They do this by two ways: via the
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the `dsp::DSP` service and via a shared memory region. The `dsp::DSP` service provides service calls for initialization
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of the DSP hardware including firmware upload. The shared memory region is used for communication between the game on
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the CPU and the firmware on the DSP.
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In order to emulate audio, Citra must emulate the `dsp::DSP` service and also understand the layout of the DSP shared
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memory region. One must understand what writing to various addresses in the shared memory region does. One must also
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understand what happens between data being fed to the DSP firmware and audio coming out of the speakers.
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## Early Reverse Engineering
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With this known MerryMage set out to trace reads and writes to shared memory that games did. She eventually ended up
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playing these back on hardware and figured out what the appropriate firmware responses were. This eventually lead to
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the early implementations of audio output that originally were shown in January by various users. Many other aspects,
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including ADPCM decoding, took a while to figure out.
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{{< youtube 1c_A7gpAZ8A >}}
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MerryMage had raw audio output working but she still didn’t understand how various parameters were applied to the audio
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by the firmware. It was at this point where she discovered that the firmware writes back what is output to the speakers
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into the shared memory region. This discovery made future work with audio effects much easier as bit perfect audio
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could be dumped as the 3DS produced it without any extra hardware. Having real hardware audio output on hand meant
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MerryMage could also apply signal processing techniques like system identification to figure out what internal
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processing the firmware does.
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With this newfound knowledge and this new set of tools MerryMage rapidly conquered what the firmware was doing.
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## Time Stretching
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Emulation speed can vary a lot between games or even parts of games. To accomodate this, time streching was added as an
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audio enhancement. This post-processing effect adjusts audio speed to match emulation speed and helps prevent audio
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stutter. This is an effect completely separate from emulation and is only to alter and improve audio played back when
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the emulator is not going full speed.
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## Future Plans for Audio
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Audio is still not complete! There are still a number of unimplemented features and accuracy improvements to have. Many
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of these features have been reverse engineered already but simply aren't implemented. This includes reverb, delay, and
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other minor audio effects. Some features require more reverse engineering work, such as looped buffers and surround
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sound.
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While the black-box reverse engineering approach has served well so far, further improvements in accuracy can more
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easily be made by decompiling the firmware and perhaps implementing Low Level Emulation (LLE) audio. This comes with
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its own set of challenges especially as the DSP architecture is not well known and there is little documentation on it.
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Until then, we at Citra hope that everyone enjoys this initial HLE audio implementation!
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