@SantiagoPacheco allocators were added to support different memory strategies. For some of those strategies, you need nonstandard pointers and references, so allocators contain pointer and reference typedefs.
I'm soo lazy, i do something like that. Super safe gc: http://pastebin.com/m3mBUMMW and to use it: GarbageCollector::RegisterObject([=](){ delete[] soundFalloffPt; });
@SantiagoPacheco but outside of containers and algorithms, most code doesn't use them ever, which means that "custom memory strategies" must interop with the default T* and T&.
@SantiagoPacheco that's.... that's not GC, that's just reinventing std::unique_ptr
anyway, point is, it's impossible to tell if there is T* or T& referring to an object, so it's impossible (for user code) to know if an object can be referenced, and therefore is impossible to know if it's safe to collect.
yhea, with one small diference. I have controll of when the objects are deleted. The "GC" owns the pointers, so I know they are valid until i release the "GC"
I know, I know,i'm a c++ asshole two, but like i said, too lazy some times. that way i'm sure my pointers are deleted sometime, but they are valid in the program (btw, my "program" is a game engine=
@SantiagoPacheco if the program ends, they're cleaned up by the OS. If your thing happens before the program ends, you have to manually make sure none of the things allocated are still in use.
In computer science, the Boehm-Demers-Weiser garbage collector, often simply known as Boehm GC, is a conservative garbage collector for C and C++.
Boehm GC is free software distributed under a permissive free software licence similar to the X11 license.
Design
The developer describes the operation of the collector as follows:
Boehm GC can also run in leak detection mode in which memory management is still done manually, but the Boehm GC can check if it is done properly. In this way a programmer can find memory leaks and double deallocations.
Boehm GC is also distributed with a C ...
@SantiagoPacheco because there's no point? It happens for free automatically when the program ends? That slows down your code for no benefit whatsoever
@SantiagoPacheco I find it interesting that GCs often have no way of doing an explicit release. I mean, even if it does nothing in most implementations, it opens a door for small optimizations or hybrids
how does that affects re-usability. And yes, now that you said it, I could let the os clean up everything. But my allocations only happend at startup( as allocating in the heap 60 times per second is stupid ) so there's not a big slowdown, and i guess it was just that i didn't wanted to leave pointers arround.
@SantiagoPacheco Probably because virtually every use case requires that you dispose of your resources before the program ends. So as soon as anything at all changes, your code will have to be completely re-written.
for a game, what do you suggest? You load your data, run the game, and destroy everything at exit. If you are doing allocations in the frame loop you'll: A) fragment the heap B) slow down everything
Never noticed A, noticed a bit of B, but still, I don't belive is a good design to create a lot of objects just for a really small time. Or I have yet to fund a use for that, I mean, I have never needed to allocate a memory in the frame loop.
fragmentation is more of an issue when your address space isn't 2GB or bigger, and the new allocators are very low fragmentation, not to mention all of the zero-fragmentation allocators like regions/pools.
and memory allocation is slow but holy shit, it's really not THAT slow at all.
@Xeo when I have a lot of small objects on the heap that I don't want to delete and new a lot, I use operator= (typo my bad XD) to alter their state instead, rather than deallocate and make a new one, just change them into what the new one would be
@SantiagoPacheco Er, cause no game ever had to create objects to represent, I dunno, bullets the player chose to fire? Enemies the player has to face? User-loaded maps? Units the player constructed? Images from files the user may have changed?
@DeadMG allocate a new bullet in the fly is not the way to go. that requires to create a GPU buffer, with will stale everything. You just create a bunch and then reuse them. And all the other things aren't loaded in the render loop, they are loaded when the game starts. Loading a level in the render loop( unless you're using some kind of streaming) is insane.
@DeadMG Each object normally uses a diferent vertex and index buffer. Unless you're doing something like instancing, you are truly creating a GPU buffer for each object. So yhea, store a bunch of bullets, or better, using instancing, is the way to go, but that doesn't require any allocations in the render loop
@CaptainGiraffe Math is about discovery, not memorizing formulas. Of course you have to know certain principles, but it's much more focused on arriving at the right answer than on being able to figure out how to arrive there.
the simple fact is, you should only optimize when you have proven that you A) are running too slowly and B) you have profile data to prove that you know which bit of code is causing the problem.
running around obfuscating your code because "ER MAH GERD THE ALLOCATIONS" is certainly not better.
@SantiagoPacheco You designed it that way to avoid allocations because they are slow (when infact they are totally not slow at all). That is a crappy optimization.
@chris We all get criticism. My fav feedback was: "I no longer select courses based on the topics I like. I select the topics where this teacher is teaching."
@CaptainGiraffe Interesting, everything in Canada before university is "free", but it's really not about the money, I want to learn things that I see as useful or very interesting.
Anyway it's not ready for use yet, but it's coming together, I actually have friends (I can now call colleges) in the comp sci building that like/use the language :) I get to write a paper about the parsing method I "invented" (if one invents with code) ^.^
Riding high atm :) Loving Uni <---first year math student
I didn't do comp sci because 4 years of Java is like.... a punishment.