* If the UI was launched with a filename as a parameter to open the capture, it
will be added to the recent capture file list. Only later (relatively
speaking) if we make a capture connection will we realise that it is temporary
and potentially delete the file. If we do so, remove the capture from the
recent file list.
* In particular make it clear that crashes caught in the injected program may or
may not be a RenderDoc bug. Even if we could point the finger to a particular
DLL we can't necessarily tie that DLL to the responsibility of either us or
the application.
* The defaults can be configured from the settings menu, and there's a new "Open
Capture with Options" menu option to open a capture with different options
temporarily.
* This allows RemoteHost handles to still be valid and usable (if returning
empty data) when they are deleted/removed if the device is disconnected, as
well as providing better multi-thread access (they lock internally)
* We also add a new message specifically for when the install succeeds but we
can't verify it, to indicate the problem better than suggesting that
permission errors are at fault.
* We also only use GIT_COMMIT_HASH where necessary to avoid rebuilding many
files for no reason, including splitting version.cpp out into a separate
project as we do with VS since otherwise changing its preprocessor defines
rebuilds the whole renderdoc project.
* At the same time, move the git hash to be internal only so we don't have to
try to link version.cpp into other projects like renderdoccmd or qrenderdoc.
* The apk targets api level 21 which is 5.0, so it still won't install on
anything older.
* We pop up a big warning to the user the first time they try and select such a
remote host.
* This means it outputs natively/properly to stdout/stderr and its output can be
redirected with pipes.
* It does mean we need to be very careful whenever it's run internally to not
pop up a command window, which happens by default.
If "adb install" command is used with "-g" flag, we may get java.lang.SecurityException on some devices because granting runtime permissions at installation time is only allowed for system apps (however we can enable it in the device's Developer options menu).
Also, pulling APK from /data/app/ may be restricted. We can workaround by copying the APK to a directory which we can access then try to pull the APK from there.