Thsi is partialy wrong. We need to save the state into the submission context itself, not the rasterizer since we can yield and process another sumission (if im not understanding wrong).
* Proper handling of whence 3 & 4
* Accurate directory handling in open
Directories can be opened, and can be created in open, these changes should handle that more accurately.
* Mount /app0 as read only
On real hardware, it's read only.
* Proper directory flag handling.
Even when directory is specified, it will still succeed to open non-directories.
* Check for read only directories
* Earlier ro check in posix_rmdir
Hardware tests suggest these checks are in a different order
* Clear temp folder on boot
My tests rely on this, and some games do too.
Two birds with one stone
* Clang
* Add missing DeleteHandle calls
Whoops
* Final flags adjustment in sceKernelOpen
All my current tests are now hardware accurate.
* Fix truncates
Host ftruncate consistently fails on EINVAL, I'll need to test if this issue affected Windows too.
* Windows hacks
Windows is more limiting about how folders are opened and things like that. For now, pretend these calls didn't error.
Also fixes compilation for Windows
* Final touch-ups
After expanding my test suite further, I found a couple more edge cases that needed addressing.
Bloodborne audio is still broken, I'll look into that soon.
* Remove hacky read-only behavior in posix_stat
Bloodborne apparently uses the mode parameter here when querying it's audio files, and the mode we returned led to it disabling audio entirely.
* Clang
* Cleaner code
* Combine fsync and sync flags
According to FreeBSD docs, the "sync" flag is synonymous with the fsync flag, and is only included to meet the POSIX spec.
* Log if any currently unhandled flags are encountered.
These are rare and probably not too important, but log a warning when they're seen.
* Update file_system.cpp
* Update file_system.cpp
* Clang
* Revert truncate fix
Using ftruncate works fine after moving the call to before the proper file opening code.
* Truncate before open
Open the file as read-write, then try truncating.
This fixes read | truncate flag behavior on Windows.
* Slightly adjust check for invalid flags
Any open call with invalid flags should return EINVAL, regardless of other errors parameters might cause.