It looks like at some point Dolphin device IDs coincided with IOS file
descriptors, but this is not the case anymore, so keeping those
WriteReturnCode(GetDeviceID()) in every single IOS HLE device,
as if the device ID was used as IOS fd, is both unnecessary
and confusing.
Other settings options are nouns rather than verbs so this change makes the configuration option consistent with others. Also makes the menu option label the same as the windows title.
We don't really have to keep track of device opens/closes manually,
since we can already check that by calling IsOpened() on the device.
This also replaces some loops with for range loops.
Certain parts of the standard library try to determine whether or not a
transfer operation should either be a copy or a move. The prevalent notion
of move constructors/assignment operators is that they should not throw,
they simply move an already existing resource somewhere else.
This is typically done with 'std::move_if_noexcept'. Like the name says,
if a type's move constructor is noexcept, then the functions retrieves an
r-value reference (for move semantics), or an l-value (for copy semantics)
if it is not noexcept.
As IOFile deletes the copy constructor and copy assignment operators,
using IOFile with certain parts of the standard library can fail in
unexcepted ways (especially when used with various container
implementations). This prevents that.
'operator void*' is basically a pre-C++11-ism that was used, as C++03
only had the notion of implicit type-conversion operators, but not explicit type
conversion operators (allowing implicit conversion of a file handle to
bool can go downhill pretty quickly).
ExecuteCommand was becoming pretty confusing with unused variables
for some commands, confusing names (device ID != IOS file descriptor),
duplicated checks, not keeping the indentation level low, and having
tons of things into a single function.
This commit gives more correct names to variables, deduplicates the
device checking code, and splits ExecuteCommand so that it's
easier to read.
It's worth noting that some device checks have been forgotten in the
past, which has caused a bug (which was recently fixed in 288e75f6).