I am trying to make a gameboy emulator, but it plays faster than it should.
This is the timing code I'm using in the main loop.
if (cpu.T >= CLOCKSPEED / 40) // if more than 1/40th of cycles passed
{
// Get milliseconds passed
QueryPerformanceCounter(&EndCounter);
unsigned long long counter = EndCounter.QuadPart - LastCounter.QuadPart;
MSperFrame = 1000.0f * ((double)counter / (double)PerfCountFrequency);
LastCounter = EndCounter;
// if 1/40th of a second hasn't passed, wait until it passes
if (MSperFrame < 25)
Sleep(25 - MSperFrame);
MSperFrame = 0;
cpu.T -= CLOCKSPEED / 40;
}
CLOCKSPEED
is the cycles per second of the gameboy cpu (4194304).cpu.T
is cycles passed until now.PerfCountFrequency
is the result of QueryPerformanceFrequency which I called before entering the loop.
When I compare it to another emulator (VBA) which plays at the correct speed, my emulator goes faster. What is the problem here?
QueryPerformancCounter()
. I've heard that since modern CPU's dynamically alter their speed for power savings, this isn't necessarily always accurate though I don't have a definite source for that. I generally use std::chrono::steady_clock for profiling now as long as its granularity is sufficiently smaller than the periods you are trying to time.