ergh... it get's on my tits when the media present Moore's Law like it causes the increase in performance power, rather than it simply being an observation of how the technology increases.
Early morning rant - why do common OS filesystems not support queue files, ie. where you can add records at the start and remove them at the end? Why is this useful data structure not available - I cannot think of any basic reason why it should not be possible to add a cluster at the start of a file? Maybe I should ask on SO.
@jalf Well, sure, you would need to write the whole block, but is that not what happens anyway in normal sequential files when writing at end and another block is needed?
@MartinJames the file has a length (with byte granularity), so it can handle that the last block is not fully used. But it assumes each file to start on a block boundary
because otherwise, specifying the address of a file would take, oh, say, a dozen more bits. For every time the file system needs to store a reference to a file. Which it does a lot because you have a lot of files ;)
@jalf No, the location of the file on disk is stored in one place, in any FS format. If it were in multiple places, then reallocating the file would be expensive.
I think a better question would be "why doesn't the OS provide a queue abstraction on top of the filesystem. It could have a special "magic" file format which tracks this additional metadata, on top of a normal block-aligned file (which can then just have some unused bytes at the beginning of it)
The reason the mentioned feature isn't commonplace is that it's not in POSIX. I'm pretty sure if you dig deep enough you can find a few filesystems that do support it, including most "advanced" ones.
A better question would be to ask which popular filesystems already support this feature. I'd be surprised if there weren't a few. And ask how to access it… there might be a widely-supported Linux fcntl.
Anyway, you'd be breaking a fairly fundamental assumption that all major filesystems rely on. That's not to say it couldn't be done, or even that it would necessarily be costly, just that it would affect a lot of different aspects of the filesystem, so "why isn't it done" is unlikely to have a simple answer. For example, performance could be affected by files suddenly having to be addressed with byte granularity instead of block granularity.
or at least "are there technical reasons why it isn't done"
@jalf I want it! That, and presumably all those devs. who insist on communicating between processes by writing lots of little files in one and using some FileSystemWatcher in another, (there are plenty of those:).
@MartinJames but how many have asked FS devs for it?
There's a big difference between the set of people to whom it would be convenient, and the set of people who also explicitly identify it as a feature that would be nice to have and contact FS devs to suggest it
Typical filesystems, and the POSIX interface, only allow a file to be resized at the end. Typically the size of a file "on disk" after it has been closed is equal to the offset of the read/write position when it was closed. Seeking before closing is also known as "repositioning the end-of-file."
...
@jalf Yeah - usually XY problems: 'I need to do this, so I'll ask how to implement the most awkward, inefficient and dangerous design choice ever'.
It just feels so awkward to reply 'It's unfortunate that you have all this serialization and lock contention, but you have to realize that your overall design, on which you have probably spent months of effort, is inherently brain-dead and cannot be resuscitated'.
(well, disclaimer: it seems to work now in my standalone prototype app I built to test this. No clue if everything will blow up when I try putting it into the actual application)
Code
I reduced the problem to this example (pasted as a single block for ease of compilation)
/// \brief The free-function template,
/// which is overloading a method with the same name in AbstractA below.
template <class T>
inline const T overloadedMethod(const T& lhs, const T& rhs)
{
retu...
@TonyTheLion IANALL but I think what the OP is trying is not possible because the A type used in the friend declaration is not complete, yet, and it should be complete at the point of the function template instantiation which is IMHO the friend declaration?
Looks like Kim Jong wants the cash for Assassin's Creed III and to restock on cuban cigars: http://www.voanews.com/content/nkorea-offers-fresh-talks-with-south-on-kaesong-factory/1724958.html
@BartekBanachewicz one might consider a VPS to just a VM running in a local dedicated server, usually a few VMs on one dedicated server. but a VM clearly runs on one physical server. A cloud server tends to be distributed over many physical servers, there is no direct mapping to a physical machine.
@BartekBanachewicz o_0 what's to configure? install some software, pull the repo and then run one command. You would have to configure every machine for ssh anyway.
First of all, the basic premise of your friend declaration is sound:
[C++11: 14.5.4/1]: A friend of a class or class template can be a function template or class template, a specialization of a function template or class template, or an ordinary (non-template) function or class. For a friend ...
Think I got it, with 3.4.1/10.
though arguably this doesn't "name a member function" outright
@thecoshman This is exactly my problem. I tried to learn Haskell and Ada, each at different times. But since I have nearly nothing to do in them, it seems impossible.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: I have learned Perl because I wanted to do an IRC bot. I have learned C++ because it was either that or Pascal on university. I have learned Python because I got a job doing it.