@Mysticial In that case, yeah, removing it would probably be better. For a test like this, it's probably best to have the machine stripped to the minimum necessary to show the symptoms (the hardware equivalent of an MCVE).
@Mysticial Many years ago, I was having trouble with a machine, so I'd pulled everything to pieces, including yanking the motherboard out of the case. I kind of lost track of time, so I'm not sure who was more surprised when my girlfriend of the time showed up and found me sitting on the floor, nearly surrounded by computer parts. From what she said, I looked more than a little like the classic mad scientist...
@Cubbi Sometimes I think people forget just how much of C++ is part of the compiler and not part of the runtime. To be fair, they often look the same syntactically, even though they don't do the same things behind the scenes
@orlp If I can confirm that my laptop is vulnerable to row hammer, that would (almost) finally put an end to my unit test instability saga. The final test is for me to manually increase the row refresh rate and see if the errors go away.
@Mysticial Yes, we've narrowed it down at least to something in that line of code which causes the hardware to misbehave. Thankfully it isn't actually your code. Unfortunately it isn't actually your code.
Honestly, I empathize with how functional advocates want to eradicate side-effects because debugging is much easier, but I don't think we'll ever entirely succeed. Even flawless code is prone to bugs... like not being connected to void mains
And as far as I can tell, you've been debugging an unforeseen side-effect that may not be documented very well
@Aaron3468 Based on what (seems to have) caused the failure, yes, clearly--including or excluding the value initialization shouldn't have made any difference at all.
@Mysticial Do you have multiple dlls? I found an SO question where someone had corruption of member variables because two projects were receiving different alignment/padding from instances declared by the same header file.
@Ramy It's not a matter of worth. Mess around with the language a bit and learn about it if you're interested, and ignore it if not. The only time coding skills are really worth it is when they are required by your job. They're certainly helpful to acquire, and won't hurt you :)
@Aaron3468 I've been a intentionally avoiding 3rd party libraries as much as possible. Though that isn't really possible anymore. Especially with Cilk and some of the NUMA stuff that I'm experimenting with.
Ah, I'm used to the convenience of having the language built on top of the architecture, rather than requiring a library and scheduling by hand. Why does NUMA require the special treatment?
NUMA is basically a shared memory version of distributed computing.
If you aren't careful with where you place your data or threads, performance will go down the drain. The OS can't predict where it should put things. And if you have data that needs to be shared by everyone, there may not be a good place to put it.
Ah, so then latency is so high that you must dispatch it with the end result in mind; something even an OS would be unable to do. Then there's no reason you couldn't whip together an OS made for NUMA, but it's optimal decisions at each iteration would sacrifice the optimal performance of the calculation.
Or you design your supercomputing application to properly utilize NUMA locality.
My Pi program already does this for swap-mode computations that use disk.
All data is on the disk, and memory is used as a cache.
All transfers between memory and disk are done manually and kept to a minimum because it's slow.
The thing that I'm experimenting with is to keep the same concept. But instead of disk, I replace it with memory that's interleaved across all the NUMA nodes.
The same algorithms that "understand" that disk is slow and therefore minimize access to it should (theoretically) work just as well if the disk is actually remote NUMA memory.
There's still a scalability problem though. The "final" solution is something hierarchical rather than 2 levels.
But that's MUCH more difficult to implement.
I run a two-layer thing between L3 cache and memory. And I have another 2-level thing between memory and disk. So essentially 3 layers of memory awareness. But they're implemented at different levels of abstraction. So the complexity of each one doesn't actually touch 3 levels.
Once the "replace disk with NUMA" thing works, the next step is gonna be harder.
Since I've booted out the disk, I've lost the ability to use disk.
The idea that I'm (planning) to toy with is to then turn the NUMA portion into an associative cache for the disk.
IOW, hide the disk access from the program itself. This can go wrong in so many different ways. But since it's still far off, I haven't started looking deep into this.
I'm at 3 right now. L3 -> memory -> NUMA -> disk is 4. And I'm not looking forward to it.
If you want to include all the "fit in register" optimizations, then add an additional level. lol
The lower levels are easier to reason with. You don't have to worry about multi-threading and allocation. And when all else fails or gets too ugly, you can drop the awareness and it will still work. (just less efficiently)
The higher levels with disk access are much harder.
@Mysticial Reminds me of a tagline one of the guys on comp.lang.asm.x86 used to use. Something to the effect that "from the right perspective, all of computing can be viewed as an exercise in caching."
@Griwes I missed your talk for the spectacle of cross-platform mobile development with visual studio (it barely works with help of random things downloaded from MS blogs)
@ThePhD Also note that you don't have to actually stay in SF. A hotel in Oakland (for example) that's close to a BART terminal could save a fair amount of money (and be nearly as convenient).
@jaggedSpire It's not like SF ever gets terribly cold (or extremely hot, for that matter). Really need a mattress pad to go under the sleeping bag though.
@jaggedSpire Not about stiffness. Sleeping bag directly on ground means you'll freeze, even in a bag rated for much colder than you're in. Always need a pad unless you're using the bag indoors.
@ThePhD Don't remember why it just occurred to me, but I'm suddenly reminded of a martini bar I used to go to. Had a sign on the wall saying something like: "In this bar, sexual harassment is graded on a scale of 1 to 10, and reported to the police if it falls below a 4."
@Mike -1 for spamming your question tagged c++ in the room where people are routinely browsing the c++ tag. You might as well have sent us Jehova witnesses to our doors, and make them ask us "would you like to talk about mongo-cxx".
My desktop background is that (Cartoon of a) dog who's sat in a burning room saying "this is fine", it makes me happy to see it when I lock my computer. I'm so sad :'(
[context: Fermi Paradox] What if everyone out there is a paperclipper and radio silence is an evolutionary feature of paperclippers? Reasoning being that noisy paperclippers are more likely to be targeted by predatory paperclippers.
> Earl Serrano speculates that all life between the origin of the Moons and humanity's home system may have been extinguished because of the Moons, which would have mixed up countless species in their uniform biomass. The game proposes here an uncommon answer to the Fermi paradox: Humanity never had the opportunity to contact any aliens because a giant species of apex predators absorb all organic tissue within the universe, leaving much of our galaxy in a state of "dead space".
I think it's a pretty common one, right after the self-annihilation one.
It's the most natural consequence in a universe where paperclippers are possible.
@wilx Yeah, that reads just like a biomass-centered version of a paperclipper apocalypse. The only unusual thing about it is that it is focused only on biomass instead of any and all matter.
"Markers" are von Neumann probes (they're even self-replicating given the right conditions, i.e., curious and ambitious advanced civilizations copy them).
I remember the CEO of a company I did a "stage" in saying that actually 2-factor auth weakens authentication and then went on babbling about things I didn't know
Can we restrict variadic template arguments to a certain type? I.e., achieve something like this (not real C++ of course):
struct X {};
auto foo(X... args)
Here my intention is to have a function which accepts a variable number of X parameters.
The closest we have is this:
template <class.....
I'm looking for an S/F story I can't remember the title of
I remember the plot roughly
the clue of it was a dystopian society where all things had timed life placed on them with a special substance that made them fall apart after said time.
it really sounds like something Dick could write, but I'm not sure
I recently reminded myself about a book (a story, not sure) I've read way back about hypothetical future of Earth.
I don't remember a lot from it, but the general idea was that the civilization has reached such levels of abundancy that they could produce things at arbitrary rate without human wo...