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01:00
Cincheption
@VermillionAzure Let the compiler deal with that.
If you store a vector of strings that already have a static size you can eliminate much of memory access overhead
Congratulations, it's a cinch!
Suppose we need to replace the first character of 4 strings
if it's a std::string we need to look up the pointer addresses for each 4 in each object
good evening, friends
01:01
the point of SSO is that you don't need dynamic allocation in case of short strings, and in case of longer strings, the dynamic allocation is there, as before, and the user doesn't care
or morning, for some of you. Or afternoon.
@milleniumbug But you waste the SSO space.
Morevenoon.
@melak47 :)
@ThePhD <3
01:02
And because there aren't two separate types differentiating the two, we have possible room for waste
@VermillionAzure It's time.
@VermillionAzure No, I don't. The SSO space is used for size and capacity
@VermillionAzure so...don't waste the SSO space?
the mystery is what are these 8 bytes remaining used for
and the answer is, I don't know
@milleniumbug But you still need to check the size first
01:02
maybe check the source code
So access is already 2 steps
No, you don't check the size...
First you need to check the size and then based on that you... branch
@VermillionAzure I need to check the size when I need to check the size - IOW when I'm checking the size
You check if ptr points to &buffer[0]
Then you know it's an SSO.
Otherwise you don't care.
01:03
@ThePhD But the point is that you need to perform some sort of comparison
Aren't most string implementations COW, anyhow?
@milleniumbug or when accessing the data
std::string only needs to check on reallocations, I think.
@LucDanton depends how I will implement the SSO
If you put ptr on the outside, then you just need to read from ptr and it legitimately doesn't matter because ptr is either dynamic memory or pointing to the SSO, and in either case you'll never be able to tell the difference (unless you want to).
01:04
@milleniumbug well, I’m referring to the example impl you gave
@ThePhD So let's see
@jaggedSpire Not any more. COW is prohibited (for std::string) as of C++11.
@jaggedSpire it’s safe to say that’s not the case
@ThePhD but then you waste SSO space! ~~oh no~~
@JerryCoffin shiny!
01:05
We can assume std::string has its memory taken from some sort of dynamic allocator
@LucDanton thanks.
When it resizes, or when a new one is created, we need to allocate new memory
@jaggedSpire and with GCC 5.X it's even implemented without COW, I believe :)
So your solution is to check whether ptr == &buffer[0]
@LucDanton hmmm, that was melak's one. The other one which I posted was asking Cinch if this is the one he has in mind
01:06
But what I'm trying to get at is that SSO is going to waste either space or computation time
@milleniumbug oh dear, my bad—I must confess the AGDQ stream steals a lot of my attention
Space if it's not used, computation time because of the branch
If we can statically infer one or the other, wouldn't that be more helpful?
@VermillionAzure Yes, that's such a big concern.
heeey steam gave me a refund
@AlexM. What, Underrail? :P
01:07
@VermillionAzure That's why we waste computation time on operations that are irrelevant or aren't called often
nah neo scavenger
for example size() or capacity()
I thought the game had more randomness in it but nah you're hit with fixed point story stuff in the first 20 mins
@milleniumbug But why waste it if we don't have to? Do we really need to?
01:08
Yes
this time tho I had < 2 hrs in it so they had no excuse
to not refund it
@AlexM. pretty shit?
@VermillionAzure saving a little stack space vs saving dynamic allocation?
unlike the case with TESO where I played 3 hours and they used that as an excuse to not refund
@ElimGarak I'm sure it's great for some people since it's very appreciated
@melak47 The problem is the branch
01:09
@AlexM. if it can fool you for more than 1h, shame on you! :p
but it's essentially a survival roguelike
Can you predict whether it's using SSO or not?
The most often operations like operator[] and iterator dereferencing are as fast as before SSO
so it will probably get meh to go through the same fixed story points every time
the map doesn't change either
@VermillionAzure what? if you have ptr outside, then what branch is there?
only on reallocations, and then you're doing an an allocation and copying, so what's a little branch
01:10
@melak47 Are we still talking about SSO?
Compiler can't travel in time
idgi. say you do string.push_back('a'). You will always have if (size+1 >= capacity) grow(), won't you?
This is a list of individuals and organizations noteworthy for engaging in bulk electronic spamming, either on their own behalf or on behalf of others. It is not a list of all spammers, only those whose actions have attracted substantial independent attention. Shane Atkinson, who was named in an interview by The New Zealand Herald as the man behind an operation sending out 100 million emails per day in 2003, who claimed (and appeared) to honor unsubscribe requests, and who claimed to be giving up spamming shortly after the interview. His brother Lance was ordered to pay $2 million to U.S. ...
Richard Colbert, a retired spammer (as of 2003) who scoured AOL for business contacts, offering spam as his service, claims to have honored "unsubscribe" requests, and gave an interview to The New York Times.[5]
retired spammer ... apparently spamming is a career that you can retire from ...
@melak47 This is a branch as well.
I really need to buy a less shitty router
01:13
So, why do we need to perform a string.push_back('a')
because if we're not changing the string, then we don't need a branch, and you were complaining about the branches?
@melak47 But I'm complaining about the dynamic behavior of the string
The reason we branch is because we need the pushback and the size changes
But the question is why does the size even need to change?
...because you are changing the size?
Because... you're pushing something and changing the siz- holy crap. @_@
But I'm trying to ask why
Why do you push in the first place?
If we can prevent pushing, we can prevent dynamic behavior
And we may be able to limit that
01:16
@VermillionAzure because the user can do this
That requires advance knowledge.
> because the user can do this
std::array<char, 32> there
01:16
@melak47 Not fucking even necessary.
The problem in most cases is the user
When we think about dynamic behavior, we need to accommodate the user, so to speak
mystring.resize( 7 )
mystring[4] = a;
Problem solved.
But a lot of cases for input is error checking
No dynamic whatever required, uses SSO to its fullest.
@ThePhD But you have to invoke the resize or size already
And the code that the compiler generates should already perform the check
01:17
What check, where?
In reality, the best case is to just have the data already. No checks needed.
@VermillionAzure The user is always a problem
.... But that's not what a std::string is.
@ThePhD It's supposed to be the catch all, yes...
But C++ could provide different implementations if we gave it hints
Could we somehow get an SSO only implementation should we desire?
static_string?
01:18
Then write your own static string and stop this stupid discusion.
plenty of those around
@melak47 Right. But can we make the compiler do it for us?
No
The class could select on some compile-time value
Hm
@milleniumbug Exactly.
Again, you're making a really stupid point by moving the goalposts. SSO is fast because it loads the pointer, size, and the contents of the string into a local space in memory (the cache) which provides for by-the-cycle memory fetches when getting characters, while still keeping the array / size / capacity in memory for checking. That's the point of SSO. If you want something that's faster, then write something that's "faster" by making ` static_string` or a static_vector.
01:20
If we can assume that our strings will be small, then just do that and have the compiler optimize for that
but then the types are incompatible (it's a template), and you could simply have different types, vOv
curious floof /cc @Borgleader @ElimGarak @ThePhD @TonyTheLion @набиячлэвэлиь
@ThePhD But we're not always going to get just SSO because SSO is dependent on the size or the type of the class. Since std::string doesn't have a separate type just for SSO only, it'll need the check
Criminy.
@milleniumbug Or... we could make an interface or concept.
and then inline.
01:21
@VermillionAzure And it's still breakneck fast. What's your point?
@ThePhD The point is that all programs are some form of a large graph
9
I'm out.
@jaggedSpire awwww <3
The more branches, the less we can run in parallel
Pipeline all the cinches and flush them to oblivion
01:22
Maybe I should just write something for this
@VermillionAzure Have a star
what a flexible tongue /cc @Borgleader @ElimGarak @ThePhD @TonyTheLion @Xeo @набиячлэвэлиь
@VermillionAzure A tutorial
A language
Might be possible
it'll be a cinch
user406009
01:23
I'm just imagining the Cinch religion here.
user406009
"All life is one graph. An endless graph."
Yeah, maybe I'll do that
@VermillionAzure well, you lost me there
@milleniumbug Look
congratulations
01:23
Cinch reminds me of folks who come into graphics, can't get a perspective transform right for years, but are intent on writing CryEngine 6.
If we make some sort of diagram describing the flow of the access of a std::string, it goes like this:
start at the root, and walk down from there
You know what I should just show rather than tell
I actually admire Cinch's enthusiasm though, it gives me hope
I should come back when I'm done so I look like a better idiot
01:24
hope to get ass cancer and not have to listen to it anymore?
@ElimGarak how do you manage to listen through your donkey?
No, I'm actually serious this time
@LucDanton It is similar to the technique Cinch uses to talk :/
@ElimGarak hee-yonk
user406009
01:26
@milleniumbug Sorta like how when Nooble stays up till 1 AM to do homework. It's sorta foolish, but inspiring.
@Lalaland It's inspiring indeed
Nooble stays up until 01:00 because he was playing GTA Online till 00:30
@Lalaland Is stargazer still a thing?
user406009
@milleniumbug No.
@milleniumbug Snackchat devs crushed it
user406009
01:27
Well, the undelete feature still works.
user406009
But the star thing got nuked hard by the devs.
@Lalaland Fine, that's what I need
Stars were better during the stargazer tenure
user406009
@ElimGarak Says the person who used stargazer to taunt Telkitty to the point where she got the mods to shut it down :P
01:30
what's stargazer
browser extension to view deleted messages
And see who starred shit.
sounds fun :D
it also could preview who starred which message, but it worked for 2 weeks and SO fixed the bug
SO not realizing that bugs can be features...
user406009
And there was a chrome version as well.
@Lalaland hey look it's mark
and park my youg bae
paid shills to endorse the product, no doubt
> 9 users
:D
01:34
@AlexM. WTF! Where's my royalties?!!
time for some suing
did it work?
user406009
hmmm, can't see it
works for me.
user406009
01:37
@milleniumbug Did you refresh the page?
ok, I just needed to whitelist the server in NoScript
@milleniumbug Why? All you have to do is click on the left of the deleted message, and select "history". :-)
@JerryCoffin yes, but your italic nick gives you magic powers
@milleniumbug I have powers, regardless of nick...
@nick hear that m8?
01:42
Unfortunately, most of my powers aren't exactly magical...
0.1hp when standing, 0.05hp when sitting?
@AlexM. ~~it's the sound of butthurt~~?
(it's a Cicada reference)
yesterday, by sehe
thank god for subtitling
:P
You should feel ashamed for not instantly recognizing one of the room's most celebrated memes
@AlexM. well played btw
Ugh, its time to refactor C++ code
user406009
01:55
@Mikhail Well, do you have tests?
@Lalaland No, thank god
user406009
So, by refactor, you really mean "subtly introduce bugs"
user406009
At least that's an easy task in C++ :P
"features"
Wouldn't tests make it easier to refactor without fucking something up? Or is the point of the refactoring to fuck something up?
01:56
and by "features" I mean change my internal structures
@Mysticial Whose going to refactor the tests, smart guy?
@Mysticial refucktor
3
FUCK IF I KNEW HOW TO WRITE THE CODE I WOULD HAVE WRITTEN IT THE FIRST TIME
@Mikhail I love refactoring, gimme something!
I'm quite serious btw, sick and tired of working on what I should be working on
need a break
give him that part of the codebase written in borland c 20 years ago
I would give it to him but the research is unpublished/unpublishable...
01:58
@Mikhail you could give me a tiny fraction of it
or a modified version; we'll probably be fine!
user406009
@Mikhail Clearly you need to convert the code into a large graph ala Cinch.
user406009
And then have Filip refactor the graph.
user406009
And then you can turn it back into code.
or I just write a code representation (including refactoring) of the graph, give Mikhail permission to use it, and we'd be done for the day
@Mikhail I guess that depends on how the tests interact with the code. If it interacts directly with the implementation, then you're fucked. But if it interacts only with the top level through some static API, then you're less fucked.
02:00
doesn't anyhow have something that I could refactor? it'd be fun
@Lalaland The code's already a graph. Maybe not nearly as large a one as you expect, either. As Sean Parent pointed out years ago, most design patterns basically work out to small graphs (e.g., Model/View/Controller is a 3-node graph).
haven't done c++ refactoring for ages (since I currently don't use it at work)
@FilipRoséen-refp Tomorrow after I add some features...
@Mikhail tomorrow is not today, and more importantly; it's not now.
in either case, I must reload my kernel in order to get my vpn up, which.. I don't feel like doing
@Mysticial I could never figure it out. For example, I wrote a hardware SDK but during development the API changed significantly making the 40 units tests I wrote go bad. I have never done unit tests since then. The word of "real" software development with "teams" and "unit tests" is foreign to me.
02:03
maybe I should become active at codereview.SE
A large part of unit tests is making sure someone else doesn't fuck up your own code.
It's much easier to get away without tests if it's all your own code.
let's reboot and have a smoke, and talk to the security guard that is lurking around probably trying to find me
*ploff*
But even then, there are parts of my own code which are complicated and sensitive enough that I need unit tests to prevent myself from fucking it up.
Another thing that pissed me off was that MSVC 2013 unit test framework kept fucking crashing
I just realized that 4 of my last 5 messages have the word "fuck' in it.
02:06
Mysticial doesn't fuck around
#disgusted
very professional, as expected form a Lounger
3
@Mysticial Even when it's simple a straightforward, I write unit tests for my own code. To paraphrase Dave Berry, we're all idiots most of the time.
@VillasV s/form/from/ ?
sorry I don't vim. I was fixing on VS but it crashed
user406009
@JerryCoffin Worrying about spelling? Who do you think we are? Professionals?
02:10
@Lalaland Purrrformance Purrrfessionals!
oooooh
<3 SMBC
@jaggedSpire sounds familiar
hahaha SMBC is awesome
@jaggedSpire Scope Maintained Bacon Crust
02:12
@user3886129 SMBC
Resource Acquisition is Intercourse
Super Metrosexual Buddy Center
pick up a metrosexual buddy today
@jaggedSpire Oh I was thinking of SDHC.
@AlexM. I'm reading SMBC more than XKCD nowadays.
@Mikhail I've been banned for 30 min for using the "I" word in this chat!!! now you got me #triggered
02:15
Yes, but mine is C++ related
Hey, you want to Instantiate?
user406009
@MarkGarcia Only if it gets cleaned up when we leave the room.
you'll all be banned for using sex& in this chat
@JerryCoffin I'm actually too lazy to do even that unless it's something that would break in a sufficiently bad way.
02:20
@Mysticial Well, in some cases the unit tests are...minimal, to put it nicely. Honestly, in a lot of cases I find that the biggest long-term use is having some simple demo-code nearby so I can figure out how to use the code again.
@JerryCoffin Ah. For me, I don't normally write something unless I need it. So it gets used immediately after I write it.
That said, that applies more for top-down programming.
The bottom up stuff will have a lot more unused functions. And for those, I typically leave very crummy manual test code around until it gets used.
@Mysticial Oh, I usually have some use for it right away--but the calling code may be more complex, so reverse engineering it to figure out how to re-use some piece may be more work than it saves.
Hey, I have a C++ question. I think crashing on std::bad_alloc is bad, but CppCoreGuidelines now says it's a good thing: github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/pull/465 .. what does the lounge think?
@bitcode Intercoursing fragments of fecal matter.
02:27
@Cubbi You fail to allocate: that usually means you're out of memory or something. At what point do you think recovering is useful?
@user3886129 I predict a ban of 3 days
@ThePhD The last of my comments shows LibreOffice and ScyllaDB as examples.
Failure to allocate does not mean out of memory.
@Cubbi Then you just use try {} catch( const std::bad_alloc& ) { /* whatever you want */ }
@bitcode that would be pretty...
shitty
BOWCHICKAWOW
What, you passed the negative values to the std::vector constructor? Your problem
02:29
@Cubbi Crashing is fine, but do your users understand that they need to buy more ram or defragment the ram? For example, weaker graphics cards will fail cudamalloc due to not having enough RAM, we need our users to know they need to buy a better card.
nite guys
Good night.
It's trivially checkable beforehand
good night sweet prince
Otherwise you can catch it
still better than malloc's NULL return
02:31
@Mikhail cud a malloc
@Cubbi I think it rarely matters what you do, at least on a typical OS. Something with virtual memory will normally do just about anything necessary to free up enough memory to satisfy your request. When/if that fails, chances are its going to do something like invoke the OOMkiller, and your code will never get a chance to react at all. There are exceptions, but I think most are unusual enough you just about have to deal with them individually.
@JerryCoffin Would somebody please think of the large pages :-)
I think I remember Adobe products being more graceful on out-of-memory circumstances. Graceful as in, gives an error message for an action rather than crashing.
@MarkGarcia Yeah--there are also cases where you can do things like free up cached data and recover--but in all honesty, it's pretty unusual. Given the amount of RAM you can now get, I sort of wonder if virtual memory (as in, ability to swap to disk, not just virtualizing addresses) shouldn't usually be eliminated or at least drastically reduced by default.
@JerryCoffin IMO, the OOM killer is a ridiculous way to free up memory.
Randomly killing applications is probably about as good as just hitting the power button.
02:35
It's a way though, should be the very last effort
@JerryCoffin Doesn't OOM killer mean actual heap pressure rather than an a surprisingly large allocation (from an unreasonably large file, web page, runaway embedded script etc)
My parents Dell tablet has 1GB of RAM and runs Windows 10. It idles at ~700MB, so swapping happens when we it opens FireFox.
@JerryCoffin One of the things that I've noticed on recent Linux kernels is that it will start paging stuff out even before you run out of memory.
Not even Windows does something like that. And that's saying a lot.
@Cubbi TL;DR: (a) have you checked those handlers actually work (b) in the isolated instances where handling the bad_alloc would be known to probably succeed, you can do it specifically
@Mysticial IME Windows does that a lot. For years. They might have stopped in W10?
02:37
@Cubbi Yeah, sort of, I guess (but I've never spent much time studying details). You also get the ugliness that Linux will over-commit, so it gives you a valid pointer, but trying to dereferences it produces an fault.
@Mysticial Linux doesn't page out for me (because there's no swap on my systems)
@sehe not actually checked, I am trying to decide whether it's worth the effort to go about surveying opensource servers.
@sehe I've never noticed it. Only when I push the memory usage until it reaches like 98%.
Could paging to disk save power?
@JerryCoffin well, it is true that my formative experience comes from LynxOS which doesn't overcommit..
02:38
@Cubbi My point is, it would be too tricky to do an outside assessment in a hurry to reach confirmation. You should ask the devs/designers for their thoughts. And whether they tested their intentions
@sehe On Ubuntu 15.10, it started paging stuff out at about 50% utilization. It was bad enough that I had to make an announcement on my Pi page warning Linux users of this and that they need to disable their pagefile or set the swappiness to zero.
@Mysticial At least in theory, it's not really random. It does attempt to do some computation to figure out which processes "should" be killed. Unfortunately, it's wrong often enough that it's often little better than random anyway.
I'm countering that in the next version by locking pages into memory if possible.
@Mysticial Windows tended to always be sluggish after prolonged idle or just when switching apps. And yes, that would also be the case on my high mem boxes
The problem with locking pages into memory is that it requires elevation in both Windows and Linux.
02:40
@Mysticial That's weird. Have you checked which processes were being "victimized"? And whether there were suitable swap tunables (I think I've seen some sysctl type parameters related to virtual memory "load". In general, I believe in no-swap, so I didn't use them)
Apparently it's a tool for DOSing.
@Mysticial Ah. Swappiness is the thing I suppose
@Mysticial Isn't that obvious?
@sehe My pi program allocates 20GB of memory. And it starts getting paged out which absolutely kills the I/O performance.
That's silly. Just don't let it. Why do you have swap? Do you need it?
Indeed, zeroing the swappiness should do, right?
@Mysticial Windows has a working set trimmer that can do that fairly actively. In the early days of NT it happened a lot more; I'm pretty sure more recent versions they've modified it to do it less (or maybe changed memory categories--it's always had separate settings for "small" and "large" memory, but the threshold I last remember seeing for "large" would now be laughably tiny.
02:42
I'm not 100% what triggers it. I haven't seen a problem with ram only computations. It's only in swap mode when the premature paging becomes an issue. I suspect the kernel is trying to page out the program to make room for a larger disk cache.
@Mysticial ...and the disk usage it does in swapping proves that it was justified to try to increase the disk cache size! :-)
@sehe When the program allocates memory, it expects it to be in memory and it treats it that way. (i.e. random access) So bad things happen when it gets paged out. From my experience, it hangs the OS to the point of unresponsiveness. So I need to pull the plug.
@Mysticial What is "in swap mode" and how is it opposed to "ram only computations"? It sounds like saying "it only pages when it pages" to me
@Mysticial So are you overcommitting? (I believe that, too, is a tunable)
@JerryCoffin That's what I remember then
@sehe Swap mode uses the disk for computation. I suspect that the Linux kernel tries to buffer those disk accesses and it tries everything it can to do it, even paging stuff out. It shouldn't be doing this since I'm using O_DIRECT. On Windows this isn't a problem because it respects FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING.
@sehe No. Typical is 28GB / 32GB.
@Mysticial Ah. Cool. You meant application-level swap (your own)?
02:46
@sehe Correct.
@Mysticial Then why would it page out? Your begging the question here. It's not productive to repeatedly state that paging slows down (badly) if you know how to prevent it? (I must be confused)
@Mysticial So, did you validate the design of the application level swap logic? Maybe it's not purging/freeing pages when you expect them to be. Can you use a statically allocated pool of pages and swap into them (assuring the OS doesn't remap them at different process space addresses, ruining your memory management goals?)
@sehe Well, I know how to prevent it. But the program doesn't. And other users probably won't either unless they investigate and experiment like I did.
@Mysticial Can't the program do it (btw VirtualLock has a linux pendant (mlock or something?))
@Mysticial Ah. I didn't get from your description that you were looking for the way for the program to prevent/detect thrashing autonomously.
@sehe The program allocates all its memory up front. The only exception would be small bookkeeping allocations which are insignificant.
@Mysticial Yes you will need specific privileges (there would be SELinux roles, I guess)
02:50
@sehe That's coming in the next version. But it requires elevation.
@Mysticial I don't understand the "But". It's a fact. You can always document it ("if not run with adequate permission, performance maybe suboptimal if your system is swappy")
@sehe If I can summarize here: his code do faster computation when it has random access to data. But, if it's going to access data on disk, it can switch the computation to something that's more disk-friendly. It attempts to allocate (essentially) all of physical memory to compute as fast as possible, and handle swapping itself; it can use knowledge of the computation (and modifies how it's done) to make that work a lot faster than the OS trying to swap to make it all randomly accessible.
Yeah. It finally became clear just a minute ago.
Thank you Jerry. I tend to get caught up in details. :)
You can probably detect when things are prone to get swappy. And you can probably also diagnose when sysctls/vmem parameters are not set conservatively to prevent bad paging scenarios. You could inform the user beforehand.
What you can only do with privileges is autonomously configure the vmem config for your process/kernel to be adequate.
02:53
Yeah, the next version isn't ready yet.
@Mysticial Surely. Maybe I need to take up the role of "professional explainer", since the post now seems to be vacant...
I have a working implementation of the large pages/page locking for both Windows and Linux. And I have system that will warn the user when it lacks the permissions to do something.
But I haven't yet decided how to put it all together yet.
Interlude:
@Mysticial Ah. Seems you'll be fine then. (Beware of distro specific things like AppArmor/SELinux, I guess). I'd make it "not my problem". If you fail with permission errors, let god them sort it out:)
Maybe I spoke too soon, but the large pages thing on Windows is almost useless.
Windows doesn't try to defrag physical memory. So it can't find enough large page blocks, it fails - even if there's plenty of memory left.
I haven't figured out a way to get Windows to defrag its physical memory.
That doesn't involve rebooting the computer.
Hmm, how does Boost.Pool deal?
02:59
@Mysticial sounds legit. Seems to me to be a feature specifically for e.g. a SQLServer/MSOLAP Enterprise Edition. (Allocate at startup)

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