So I have the following sequence of scripts in Game Maker meant to provide an analogue of C's malloc and free interfaces. They intend to have the same interface except since Game Maker has no direct access to virtual memory, they use an array as the heap space. The dynamic memory allocator itself...
@TheGreatDuck: That question there should probably clearly state the actual issue at the start, rather than mention "last few bugs... somewhere in the several pages that follow".
@TheGreatDuck It was long and unclear. You said there were bugs, then you said there weren't. It uses a program that has only a marginal relation to C++, and you're reinventing the wheel.
And the messages were moved to a place where people go to answer deeper questions like that. You'll get better help from that room.
You're remaking malloc and free. Do you want to write your own game engine? Game engines provide scripting languages so that you don't need to deal with low level stuff like that.
"Note that the assignment of the instances to the instance id's changes every step so you cannot use values from previous steps. Also please note that instances that are deleted will remain in the list until the end of the step. So if you are also deleting instances you need to check whether the instance still exists. Let me give an example. Assume each unit in your game has a particular power and you want to locate the strongest one, you could use the following code: "
@TheGreatDuck Generate a unique name for each instance. Then use a traversal to find the instance by name, not id. Easier solution, especially if you have <1000 instances per level/scene.
@Aaron3468 that's idiotic and why are you trying to tell me to do something else when I already have a working solution. This is just a question about why a particular phenomenon (that is not giving me any noticeable bugs) occurs. It's literally just a question of curiosity. That's it. Why should it matter that it's supposedly reinventing the wheel and whatnot. I've improved the formatting. Since when did Stack Exchance censor based purely on content?
@Aaron3468 objects have names as in the actual resource name. Dynamically creating resources like that on the fly is just going to use up way too much memory and be incredibly slow, especially when I'm just trying to create small things like lists and tress which probably shouldn't use an object with physical properties as their components anyways.
Never said I was censoring you. You asked for feedback. I gave it. The question that's not a question has validity, though I feel a different approach would expose you to less bugs.
I didn't realize you were just giving feedback. I thought you meant the question was going to be closed as off topic. Hard to tell what people mean in these chats sometimes.
@Aaron3468 hello
in case it wasn't quite clear, I'm not actually getting any bugs when the code is in the order I have it right now. It's like there's a defect in the interface of my subfunctions that doesn't actually hurt anything so long as I play by different rules regarding it.
Hey, so yeah, that's part of why it's best not to react much to chatrooms. It's easy to fill in the blanks with "They're attacking me", even when it's not the case
Anyway, for what I have in mind in particular, the low level structs shouldn't be much of an issue. I'm fairly proficient in C, so that sort of code is very familiar to me. The alternative difficulty and increase in man-hours of redoing everything else is far more costly than having to indulge in the (fun) exercise of writing some low level C code for a few data structures.
@Aaron3468 well bear in mind though that there is no "null" here. These are all array indices. But I see your point. :/
insert is what I have my eyes on though. The only time it gets called is at the end of that particular test when a node tries to get inserted between the head and the second block.
And a very probable cause is that you're modifying an array as you iterate through it. Double check that you decrement the read pointer only when an object before it is removed, and increment it only when an object before it is added. It may help to draw a block diagram and step through your code
I can actually view the array's contents in the debugger I linked at the bottom
it prints a list of all the numeric values
and has two buttons that each call malloc and free with whatever i type in a popup box
@Aaron3468 to be a bit more specific, no, it doesn't appear to alter anything as it iterates normally other than the alteration of the links when new things are allocated. Strangely, enough, the version with set free after insert works perfectly. It's like insert is somehow falsely assuming that the free value is 0 without actually checking first.
What does getLength(freeP) mean when freeP = HEAD_NODE = 0? How does getLength convert a value into an object with length? Just by counting from that index until an empty value is found?
So when you get the length, it always says that there is more room for allocating if freeP has been set to false. When you call setFree(freeP, true), you set the available space to getLength(freeP) + true << 31. This sets it to the heap's max size + the address size.
Basically toggling the state of getFree. So if you set it free before you malloc, you change the result of the check && !getFree(freeP) and cause your program to allocate improperly
Calling the function: tcs(..., &LFP,&LFM...) I cant seem to be changing the pointer to LFP and LFM because when I print them they appear as (0) (0) but if I print LV it prints the List ok
I think The problem Is when I try to change the pointer inside TCs
@TheGreatDuck Yeah, I understand that. This level of prolonged detail-oriented thinking is burning me out though, especially when it's code I haven't written before. Building mental models, especially with the detail required for debugging, is pretty draining.
@Aaron3468 I already had the C version from 2 years ago for a class project I did so (since we're allowed to use our own code for future stuff) it was somewhat trivial to convery
ironically, this bug exists in the C version
in fact, there is no setfree in the iterative loop
I would look closely at how insert and setFree modify the global state they share. Clearly setFree voids the expectations that insert has in such a way that insert tries to allocate to space outside of the array
@Aaron3468 shared state? I'm confused what you mean by shared state. Are you referring to the free value and the length of the allocated block being stored in the same index?
@Aaron3468 the functions are all meant to be similar to operations upon a linked list, so perhaps there's something I'm missing in terms of what you mean by shared state? The whole heap is a data structure, so it is natural that operations upon it cause side effects.
I'm referring to variables that exist outside of the scope. For example, all the functions modify HEAD_NODE, hence it is 'shared state information'. When one function changes it, the function must be very careful to be hygienic and set the state in a way that won't cause bugs in the other functions.
The hardest bugs to discover in any program or system are those which involve shared state. This is because shared state bugs tend to 'bubble' outside of the culprit's scope
if something is changing the head node let me know. That's not supposed to happen.
@Aaron3468 hence, I have a bug that doesn't actually exist when i reorder things. It's like the windows OS interface for pipes. Have to do a little dance to get everything to work right.
(If you've ever used the C windows pipeline interface, you'll know what I mean)
If not for the absurdity of such a claim, I'd swear each pipe or handle goes on a stack and the whole blows up if the function calls aren't modifying the guy on the top of this invisible stack. Good for enforcing good code organization, but frankly... it's kinda stupid.
:p
not exactly shared state but it is a landmine of sorts
on an unrelated note though I did just find a legit bug
in the insert function I claim nodes are aligned to 2 index sizes
The best solution to shared state is to pass state as an argument. It makes it easier to reason about the execution flow and who modified the state last.
@TheGreatDuck Yeah, I admit it's a bit harder when you program at such a low level. Really important to have very explicit and well-tested validation code.
@TheGreatDuck No no, your code validates and functions with no bugs. But when your flow matches the textbook version, the bug appears. Hence one of the two functions is doing something the other is supposed to do.
Okay. But you say you should free before you insert. And when you make the change to do this, it causes a bug. The idea of should is your attempt to follow some textbook or article somewhere
actually, I put free there cause it made sense to me
the should isn't so much a fact that it needs to so much as it the order shouldn't matter based on my design. In other words, the fact that order matters contradicts my own interface.
facepalm so you build a working program, and expect it to work the same if you pull one of the pieces out and put it in another place? In some situations, especially those with shared state, it's impossible to hold that contract.
To overcome these situations, you create a 'conventional order' and stick to it.
if I have a list, and set one of the elements to a particular value, should it ever matter whether I do that before or after I add a new element after that?
I mean, I don't think anything cares about that afaik. I'd hope not. That's a weird condition to impose. :p
and to be fair, I wrote that there the first time thinking it would be right and then it failed. That was just a band-aid I slapped on it to try and fix it. For all I know, there are still other things not quite right with it.
Well like I could expect code to function properly if I switch foo(34, True) with foo(True, 34), but that won't mean it does. The problem is an implied relationship to the argument order. Same thing with your code. Something you do in setFree depends on something insert does first, and if it doesn't happen, your list gives values outside of its size.
The issue lies within the subfunction getFree:
getFree()
{
return (HEAP_SPACE[argument[0]] & (1 << 31));
}
Unlike c which would ordinarily cast this to either 0 or 1 as being a boolean function, game maker is inherently typeless to an extent and so if the block is allocated (yes, the funct...
thanks
that was definitely hard to find
glad i found it though. It might've cropped up again later on if intuition serves right
plus, now my code is in a logical order. XD
(like it even mattered, but still... bugs are bugs)
I'll probably end up cutting away the 2 increment locking of blocks, but that can be done another day and i already know what to do for that
(the original project demanded 8 byte allignment and I just hadn't yet removed the code for the equivalent 2 index allignment)
@Aaron3468 another great advantage to this is that game maker objects come with a lot of built in junk. By using my own allocator for simple data structures, I'll save a shit ton of memory. Pardon my french.
Well done. Yeah, rubber ducking is a good way to catch that stuff. It also helps if you have a type system checking if you're returning size, index/offset, or boolean.
vectors of vectors approach is more annoying in general because you need to enforce that all inner vectors have the same size and it's waaay slower because of N+1 dynamic allocations instead of 1
double s2 = sqrt(2); // call sqrt() with the argument double{2}
double s3 = sqrt("three"); // error: sqrt() requires an argument of type double *The value of such compile-time checking and type conversion should not be underestimated.*
Is that point referring to derived class type class to base class type conversion, amidst polymorphism?
5 hours later…
user1593881
10:12 PM
What's the rationale behind the basic_string wording on cppreference?