@Mysticial I should probably stop asking questions, I'm bothering you and I don't want to give the impression I'm interested in acquiring your secret stuff.
@orlp Yep I know. I can't go into the details, but it's an extra layer on top of currently unbroken algorithms. So it's at least as strong as what's out there right now.
They would first have to reverse engineer the binary. Break a currently unbroken algorithm. Then break the internal algorithm. They might as well just use a keylogger.
lol, Alexander Graham Bell & Charles Darwin in Assassin's Creed Syndicate. Also, Charles Dickens. He's been talking to me about his phonetic telegraph, my character suggested calling it a telephone, which he wrote off without a second thought. :D During the mission where we were fixing his comm lines.
@Mysticial either way, last part of unsolicited advice, I have to say that rolling your own encryption is rather odd when the vast, vast (I believe all - for unbroken primitives) majority of code is cracked through side-channel attacks, bad implementations, key escrow (intel microcode, AES-NI? get fukt), keyloggers, hardware attacks, etc
in particular AES-NI
I don't know why you'd ever want to trust that
when microcode updates will pwn you in the blink of an eye
@orlp Oh I know. I didn't write the thing for this purpose. It wrote it out of curiosity. And after a while both of us started using it carry files overseas.
It's more complicated than that. But there's an asympotote where the run-time and memory consumption shoots to infinity once the precision drops low enough.
There is one trick that my professor in grad-school taught me which is to use a multi-dimentional radix table.
It's not an algorithm for computing sin/cos, but it is an algorithm for generating the twiddle factors that are needed.
For the simple and efficient implementation of fast math functions with reasonable accuracy, polynomial minimax approximations are often the method of choice. Minimax approximations are typically generated with a variant of the Remez algorithm. Various widely available tools such as Maple and Mat...
@StackedCrooked The area of Berlin (Prenzlauer Berg) where I lived with my girlfriend in the 90s was back then still full of small shops, bakeries, etc. We usually went shopping together on Saturdays, walking from baker to butchery to some small food shop, buying our groceries. If on some Saturday, for whatever reason, I went alone, some of these shop owners would ask me "is she sick?"
My girlfriend reported the same when she went alone.
The (semi-)embedded hardware we're using has non-volatile RAM (NVRAM). We have employed that before, as a byte buffer: Of a 500k buffer, the upper bytes were reserved for the current number of occupied bytes, the rest was either data or unoccupied memory. When the system dies, after restart it's easy to read back those bytes in order to know how big the occupied memory is where the data resides.
@Mikhail "It outperforms SATA SSDs by over 4.5 times in sequential read and by over 2.5 times in sequential write, delivering the speeds of 2,500 MB/s and 1,500 MB/s respectively."
However, for this, the NVRAM buffer was just one big blob of bytes. When read, all that needed to be done to that blob was to flush it to a file on the flash memory. Now I need to employ the NVRAM for buffering individual objects of arbitrary size, and I need to find those objects and read them back in. So I need a kind of a directory.
Does anyone of you have an idea what would be a good data structure for this?
Well, a list of indices is kinda obvious, I think. However, how much room do you pre-allocate for the list? Or do I grow it from the upper end of the memory, like a stack?
@milleniumbug Yes, but if the list is at the lower end of the memory, I will have to pre-allocate a piece of memory that's not to be used for storing objects, but to be reserved for the list. But the objects differ in size, so the length of the list can vary wildly.
@wilx Up to every few msecs. It should be fast. Ideally, I would just dump an object at the current end of the list, jot in the address/index behind it, and be done.
Well, speaking of ideally: It's supposed to be FIFO queue. Maybe a ringbuffer would be great.