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00:11
@sehe Naaacht.
00:44
I just ordered an OnePlus X
let's see how that goes
@KhaledAKhunaifer the reason it's so slow is because it does a lot of computation to make minimal comparisons
that's the only thing it optimizes for
however, the computation it does is not free, and comparisons are generally fairly cheap
if you are comparing gigabyte long strings that differ by 1 byte in a random spot, then sure, go and use merge-insertion sort
No beer left :(
@Morwenn do you have water?
@orlp Why wouldn't I have water?
@Morwenn all right, do you have hops?
Of course not. And even less the time or skill to brew anything.
00:52
@Morwenn I'm afraid it's off to the store then
@Morwenn don't let the alcohol levels drop too low, it's dangerous
user406009
@AngryShoe Nice to know. Let me know if you want anything.
user406009
Other than removing the dead actual star gazing functionality.
user406009
I guess I haven't removed it yet due to the unjustified hope that SO might enable it again.
Does someone around here lives in Canada?
It has been pretty rough to find nice C++ jobs in Rio
user406009
@VillasV I think EtiennedeMartel does.
00:54
I was thinking of moving out
user406009
Maybe Luc Danton as well if I am matching the time zones correctly.
user406009
For interest's sake, why Canada?
@orlp it's dangerous to go alone! take this! hands bottle of tequila
I've seen some talks recently about Canada being very friendly towards immigrants looking for jobs, particularly from Brazil idk why
@Lalaland Then you could go back to your commit history and bring it back again
No need to have dead code :D
user406009
01:04
@ThePhD Weren't you originally planning on doing the premed thing IIRC?
@Lalaland Yes
The scarf is free of its weird bulge and is still raveled!
Ell
Ell
Wow
This colour thing made it so obviously click how this works
Khan academy is nice
Ell
Ell
01:20
That video is just perfect
So easy to understand
@Lalaland bunch of cyber stalkers the lot of you
1 message moved to bin
oooooooh
what?
10 messages moved to bin
01:24
in bin, 1 min ago, by Johan Larsson
Why are you not owner anymore Luc?
thank you, @Mysticial
@Ell I remembered how NSA cracked diffie-hellman's protocol. It was very clever idea, btw.
@JohanLarsson it was different back then, ownership was about not letting the room fall into vacancy
admittedly with a cleanup or two from time to time, but that was towards the end
Ell
Ell
@SashaMN how was that?
01:26
With a #pragma pack(2), in a structure, it's impossible to have a field with an odd offset, right?
@AngryLettuce I have no idea but you can always offsetof to check
I think it's not possible but double checking
Cause if so then this spec is ~~wrong~~
33
Q: Explaining weakness of Dual EC DRBG to wider audience?

DeepSpace101I have an audience of senior (non-technical) executives and senior technical people who are taking the backdoor in Dual_EC_DRBG and considering it as a weakness of Elliptic curves in general. I can take a max of about 10 mins in my presentation to address this issue - no more. How can I explain...

in bin, 7 mins ago, by Angry Shoe
@Ell Nice
01:36
@AngryLettuce No, it's not impossible at all. Basically, the actual packing is (or at least can be) set to min(packing_value, field_size), so a char can still be at an odd offset with #pragma pack(2).
TIL Italy has +300% senators, +50% deputies, +33% ministries, +700% free politics cars than the whole USA.
is that so? kinda weird calling it 'packing', no?
@LucDanton Kinda, but not entirely. Something like #pragma max_pad would probably be more accurate, but such is life. Anyway, assume sizeof(int) == 4, then struct A{ char a; int b;}; means that with #pragma pack(4), b can only be at addresses ==0 mod 4, #pragma pack(2), b can be at any even address, and with #pragma pack(1), it can be at any address, etc.
@AngryLettuce hey do you mind if I let gw2 things slip again
01:43
@JerryCoffin its like data alignment, right?
Ell
Ell
It would be nice if MPs were paid average wage
Or a modest wage at least
Time to sleep. Have fun while awake!
Under optimal conditions you can probably get about 1 TB/s on a 4 core Haswell.
64 bytes/cycle * 4 GHz * 4 cores.
@JerryCoffin But then there's still a padding byte right
@LucDanton Please do
01:57
@AngryLettuce permanent bank contract doubled in price from 2k to 4k
cus anet has introduced account-wide inventory slots
so you could access your bank from anywhere on any character
@LucDanton amaze
700 gems apiece
5 slots max
it’s barely been a couple months since HoT release but I guess you can’t have too much money
user406009
@ThePhD If you don't mind me asking, why did you decide to stop that plan? The main reason I am asking you is because I am strongly considering ditching that plan as well and it seems like both of us have somewhat similar motivations/goals.
Have you WINADVAPI BOOL WINAPI PrivilegeCheck() today?
@LucDanton "The ship is sinking!!!!!!!!!"
user406009
@AngryShoe One benefit of high MP salaries is that it makes them a little more immune to bribery.
02:07
since you can have too much money
user406009
So "the lowest possible politician salary" is not always a good thing.
Ell
Ell
I have PrivilegeCheckEx()'d
user406009
@LucDanton But that is sorta true.
user406009
Once you have a certain amount, extra money isn't as of much use.
@Lalaland I’m just having fun meshing the two discussions
user406009
02:08
Well, actually more accurately, there is no discrete limit.
ffs fell through the map anet pls
user406009
Money simply has less value the more you have of it.
Ell
Ell
@Lalaland I don't understand this. Extra money is always good to invest and give to your children
I suppose if you don't have children
Also I take it back already
user406009
Even if you have children, every additional dollar provides less and less.
user406009
If you are a bumb on the street, 100K dollars is a godsend.
Ell
Ell
02:09
I think paying less would encourage people to go into politics in order to effect change as opposed to"just" earning a living
@Mysticial cool
user406009
@Ell Yeah, but people want to live a comfortable life.
user406009
And politicians live in very expensive areas.
user406009
(Well, at least usually in the USA)
user406009
(Our capital DC, has really high prices for lots of things.)
Ell
Ell
02:10
I know. But if someone is willing to make that sacrifice it shows that they are passionate
I never understood the need for politics to be expensive
user406009
@Ell Or they are heartless about the wellbeing of their kids.
Ell
Ell
They wouldn't take it if their kids were starving of course
Or maybe they would
user406009
Yeah, I admit that's a bit overrdramatic.
Ell
Ell
I guess it depends on what value their change is bringing
user406009
Still, I think the core of my point applies: Additional salary provides some defense against bribery.
Ell
Ell
02:12
But the greater sacrifice an individual will take the more I will respect them
@Lalaland Computer Science / Programming 2 fun.
Also, I wanted to go into surgery and genetic stuff.
Ell
Ell
Yeah I've never thought about bribery really
Turns out I'm MEGA squeeamish.
I have managed to get a resistance to seeing blood, but
Guts and stuff? I gotta take a seat and shit.
Ell
Ell
Ideally there would be "enough democracy" such that bribing a politician doesn't achieve anything
Can't be a combat medic and stuff if you get squeamish at gross things. :B
user406009
02:13
Programming is lots of fun, but when it comes down to, I would rather have a boring job than be unemployed when the CS bubble burts.
> // TODO FIXME HACK horrible
not a day passes by
user406009
@AngryLettuce The thing is, those fixmes like never go away.
user406009
Cause they are usually so poorly written and documented that they are actually more difficult to remove/change than good code.
You know what I hate most
having to default on an enum
it feels dirty evertim
user406009
The last time I tried fixing one of those, I accidentally fixed a "bug/feature".
user406009
02:15
(Well, it was a bug, but people relied on the bug as a feature, whatever)
ITT dirty (feeling) lettuce ... 🍅
Can only find a tomato ..
user406009
It's cool that Shoe created that gist.
user406009
Now I can find out something I have always wanted to know.
user406009
"How many Loungers are nocturnal?"
@TonyTheLion Every weekday morning.
02:24
More GW2 facts pls
entertain me
@AngryLettuce the December WvW overhaul is coming on the 26
we’ve finally claimed a guild hall and it’s… super neat
Ell
Ell
02:40
Well how the hell did they pull this off :V phoronix.com/…
02:52
@Lalaland Put up something similar, but ask what times (UTC) they tend to be online (or trawl through the transcript and figure out times for each--might produce something interesting).
@StackedCrooked If he ran those benchmarks fully threaded, anything that doesn't fit in the L3 is probably gonna crash and burn.
@Mysticial Since when did people interested in benchmarking care about meaningful results? :-)
@JerryCoffin lol
In my experience, almost everything that's vectorized and parallelized is gonna be severely memory-bound unless it's specially designed or doesn't use memory at all.
@Lalaland I am 70% nocturnal
Calculating fibonacci numbers :)
@Mysticial If I allow my audio compression program to process multiple files in parallel. Will that cause this problem too?
03:02
I don't know if audio compression is CPU-bound or memory-bound.
Or even disk bound, if you're running off disk.
But the answer is potentially yes.
I think loading the file into memory as a pre-step could be done quickly.
If one instance hogs all your memory bandwidth, running two of them in parallel will not double the throughput.
I suppose hyper-threading in these cases.
A little bit.
Hyperthreading helps with memory latency, not bandwidth.
Aren't both cases where the CPU is waiting for memory? AFAIK hyperthreading causes the CPU to switch to the sibling core if current core is waiting for memory.
03:06
The memory bound thing is a pretty big problem in my YMP library. Since the test app doesn't try take over memory the way my Pi program does, I have trouble getting more then 5x scaling on my 8-core box.
All the time is spent in the kernel push-locks and memory zeroing.
Memory zeroing? Oh, the kernel does it.?
@Mysticial Your experience is moot
throws rock
@StackedCrooked If you're bound by memory bandwidth, it simply means the memory can't deliver more than X bytes per second. It doesn't matter how many threads are trying.
@AngryLettuce GPUs don't count. :)
Makes sense.
@Mysticial Just kidding, GPUs are memory bound too in the immense majority of cases
03:12
@AngryLettuce Even if you stay on the GPU?
Yeah
I don't think I've ever seen a kernel being limited by the pipeline being busy
It's always memory requests, synchronization, and/or atomics
@StackedCrooked It's this stupid thing:
58
Q: Why does malloc initialize the values to 0 in gcc?

SHHMaybe it is different from platform to platform, but when I compile using gcc and run the code below, I get 0 every time in my ubuntu 11.10. #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> int main() { double *a = (double*) malloc(sizeof(double)*100) printf("%f", *a); } Why do malloc behave l...

If I pull up the "basic" profile in VTune, I can see that 30+% of the time is being spent in a handful of stores. But when I turn on the "advanced" profile, those stores disappear from the profile and get replace with kernel calls.
So what's happening is that it's page-faulting on those stores since they touch memory that hasn't been commited yet.
The OS comes in and zeros it.
Now you've got 16 threads doing this constantly, so there's also lock contention.
The memory is zeroed every time..
That's a bad test case.
You need larger blocks.
But malloc keeps returning the same pointer. And it's zero each time.
03:20
Small allocations get cached by the malloc library that the compiler links to.
Only the big ones go all the way to the kernel to issue new pages.
Does VTune advanced mode also report Apple stores
Apple stores?
oh... For a sec, I was suspecting a really lame Apple joke. But I mistakenly thought better of it.
what a mistake
03:22
@Mysticial I suppose you could manage your own memory pools. I'm actually surprised that you're not doing that.
@StackedCrooked My Pi program goes that. (not with a pool though)
So it doesn't have this problem. It's only the library that does.
It's this particular malloc that's causing all the issues: github.com/Mysticial/NumberFactory/blob/master/Source/…
It's not inside the DLL though.
I've intentionally kept all the memory allocation out of the DLL.
first of all it's std::malloc
Ah. That explains.
Technically, I could write my own pool allocator. But we're talking allocations that are on the order of gigabytes. Writing one that's efficient both in performance (minimizing kernel allocations) and in minimizing wasted memory is not exactly up my alley.
I'm actually more interested in a thread pool that's as efficient as the Windows one.
I really don't understand how that Windows thread pool is so goddamn efficient.
what does that even mean
03:36
It beats the shit out of Intel's Cilk Plus.
The thread pool is something you can post tasks on and it will then divide them among the threads?
The purpose of the thread pool is to run tasks thrown at it asynchronously. (in my particular case, it's recursive task splitting) The performance metrics that I care about is minimizing the amount of time needed for the tasks to complete.
Hm, that seems like Cilk's forte.
They are all about fork/join stuff.
Which basically means, the pool needs to be able to keep all the cores busy. Minimize overhead for switching between tasks.
03:39
> Cisco Must Be Held Accountable for Aiding China’s Human Rights Abuses (eff.org)
laffo
@StackedCrooked Which is why I'm surprised that the Windows thread pool does it better - at something that's supposed to be what Cilk is specifically designed for.
Cilk Plus does work stealing no?
Better than Intel on their on processors.
Work stealing is hard
@AngryLettuce Yes it does. But the Windows thread pool is just as capable in selecting an idle thread to run when not all the cores are running.
03:40
my bad I’ve just been told those were thread spools
I strongly suspect there's some domain-specific nuance going on.
If you throw a million tasks into the Windows thread pool, I'm gonna guess that it isn't going to be as efficient as Cilk Plus.
But that's not my use case.
You should ask Pablo Halpern. He probably knows what's up.
Cilk Plus keeps one thread per logical core. And runs a work-stealing algorithm.
Maybe Cilk is dividing the work in too small pieces.
I think you can configure those things.
The Windows thread pool seems to keep a thread per task and context switches between them. But it reuses threads when tasks come and go.
03:43
@Mysticial The Windows Thread Pool is p good at maintaining caches hot and things
@StackedCrooked I do the subdivisions manually.
@Mysticial general perpose to reuse thread as I know to minimize time for thread starting...
This Windows thread pool thingy is the primary reason why Windows beats the shit out of Linux for my Pi program.
You launching a new thread per task?
Here's my understanding of the Windows thread pool:
03:51
- nothing
When you give it a task, it assigns it to an idle thread if available. If not, it creates a new thread.
The number of threads never seems to go down.
If you throw 100 tasks at the pool, you will get 100 threads if they are overlapping.
When a task finishes, it vacates that thread and the kernel will switch to another thread that's ready to run.
IOW, it doesn't try to do anything smart with work-stealing.
But it's probably working at a very low level with the kernel.
It seems that they implemented threads as lightweight objects (Kinda like handles to a "real" underlying thread.). As opposed to linux.
When there are more ready threads than cores, it might be doing some time-sliced round-robin thing.
its strange that the number of threads never go down
Oh, and the thread pool seems to have gotten significantly better between Win7 and Win8.
03:57
Could also be a fairness/unfairness scheduling thing.
Once thing that I've noticed is that Cilk Plus spins a lot.
It shows up pretty high in the profiler.
As a result, it also gets stupidly high CPU utilization of like 97%+.
user406009
@Mysticial Have you experimented at all with pinning threads to certain cores?
user406009
I have heard rumors that it supposedly helps with utilization, but never actually tried it.
@Lalaland I believe Cilk Plus does that automatically. But I haven't verified it.
For the Windows thread pool, there are many more threads than logical cores, so that might be counterproductive if the OS wants to bounce them around to an idle core.
When I need a thread pool I usually resort to a asio's io_service. But it's not really great at scheduling. Best is to go for one thread per io_service. (If that fits your problem.)
04:02
@Lalaland If you want stability in the CS jobs search for a job that is catered towards server development and maintenance, especially in the financial sector.
user406009
@ThePhD The difference in money is also extremely significant.
user406009
You are talking about 2-3x difference in salary.
> The trade improvements will never be in the form of an auction house that has automated buyouts. There are many reasons for this, but the short answer is that trivial trading has a very negative impact on games. There are other trading improvements coming. Just no automatic buyouts.
I like the market (not an auction house) of gw2 so much because of how streamlined it is :|
user406009
@LucDanton Which game is that previous statement for?
user406009
Different games have very different game economies.
04:07
I’m guessing it’s not so much that 'very negative impact' is meant but 'very inappropriate for the sort of game we strive for our game to provide' instead, i.e. they’d be afraid of losing their flavour/identity/what have you
@Lalaland from Path of Exile’s Chris Wilson
user406009
Haven't really played too much of Path of Exile, so I can't really comment too much on it.
it’s very much a diablo-like, it draws comparisons to Diablo II the most
also to Diablo 3 of course, but usually to the tune of 'the successor to Diablo II that Diablo 3 didn’t turn out to be'
user406009
Banning an automated market allows more player interaction in some cases.
the 'hello I would like to buy your thingy for such and such' 'okay yes there you go' 'thanks goodbye' kind? what’s the appeal?
this is a 3rd-party site that scrapes the official trading forums, parses the listings and allows custom searches
user406009
Yeah, it's a really weak argument.
04:13
in turn the tentative sellers use third-party programs to read player inventories (there is an official API for this and apps and what have you) and post/update those forum listings automatically
inside the game you can label a part of your stash as e.g. '2 chaos' (that’s an amount of currency) and whatever thing you chuck into it will be detected, listed for that price, and put up for sale
and the thing that kills me
if it weren’t so streamlined/automated (no APIs etc.), I’d hate it
user406009
The best example of a game with "trivial trading" I can remember was Runescape around 2009. The main effect of the "trivial trading" is that you were able to use the market to quickly level of certain skills by buying raw resources.
yeah that doesn’t take place in that game
you kill stuff, get their loot and use that loot to kill more stuff
user406009
I guess in some sense it sorta cheapened "leveling up" as it was more a question of buying all the resources you needed than anything else.
trading means that player A who found the super bow of +1 death can trade it for the mega ultra sword of tickling that player B found, because A uses swords and B is a coward
that’s really it
at this point the devs have really been pressured into addressing the current situation because reportedly the bandwidth that’s wasted by 3rd-party sites/apps on 'hey tell me about that forum post I asked you 15 minutes ago again in case something changed' is growing
user406009
Yeah, you probably wouldn't see that "negative" dynamic in Path of Exile as it doesn't have Runescape's skill/xp system.
user406009
04:20
Scraping (done correctly), shouldn't use up that much bandwith.
yeah it’s weird but so they’ve told us
not just the forums but also the APIs, maybe it’s that part they intercoursed up
user406009
Maybe the developers just need to change the API so you get the latest updates on a set of characters without too much polling?
user406009
Something simple like that.
user406009
I highly doubt Path of Exile has that many users.
to be fair the programs that update forum threads should only be run while the game is played
user406009
04:24
@LucDanton Maybe the devs can just decrease the polling time or something?
user406009
Once every 10 minutes or something.
I’m fairly sure at least one handles that because it marks you online (another community-handled matter) only when the game runs
user406009
Still seems like a very simple problem with straightforward solutions.
user406009
Makes you sort of think the "real" reason why "trivial trading" is a problem is because it would require development time.
@Lalaland 29k shop threads for this league (started in December)
my shop takes ~45KB
user406009
04:31
That's nothing.
every 30 minutes or so?
obviously poe.trade does not poll for every thread, after a while it drops them (which is when you bump your own thread if you’re still trading)
sadly I can’t find stats for how many threads it watches
which is why I only pulled up the temporary league numbers
just hangin' around /cc @Borgleader @ElimGarak @ThePhD @TonyTheLion @Xeo @набиячлэвэлиь
user406009
Actually I guess that's around 1.5 GB (conservatively).
there’s also hardcore this league, another 13k
that smile /cc @Borgleader @ElimGarak @TonyTheLion
user406009
04:33
So I can see that being sorta an issue if it's a ton of requests.
user406009
(Assuming nothing is cached or shared)
and then there’s permanent standard and also hardcore, and I have 0 idea how many 'active' threads that is
user406009
@LucDanton Is that 45 KB for just the HTML?
buddies /cc @Borgleader @ElimGarak @TonyTheLion @набиячлэвэлиь
@Lalaland yeah, although it has JS in it
I also have no idea how many items the typical shop has, that affects the byte count
user406009
04:36
45 KB before or after compression?
without
user406009
HTML should compress very well.
I don’t suppose there is a rule of thumb here, since it’s content-sensitive?
what are we arguing about now
m a t c h
user406009
@LucDanton The best you could do is probably just look at similar sites: gidnetwork.com/tools/gzip-test.php
04:40
> > Jonathan told me on reddit that PoE supports UTF16 already, can you tell us why we are not allowed to use characters like Ö,Ä,Ü for our alter egos?
> Certain characters that are present in Brazilian names are now allowed but are equivalent to their English equivalents. We may expand this for the characters you listed.
???
user406009
@LucDanton They are probably trying to avoid the gimmicks where you can scam people with unicode letters that look like ascii ones.
user406009
Like "ѕ" vs "s"
>2016
>using UTF-16
what is the English equivalent of 'caçar'
user406009
04:43
@AngryLettuce Windows and Java are heavily based off UTF-16.
user406009
inb4 "they both suck"
user406009
@LucDanton "cacar"
they both suck
lol they both suck
user406009
@nick JS is also UTF-16.
user406009
04:44
Where is your savior now?
I mean if you're gonna design a system to support unicode you might as well do it right and use utf8
js sucks too
is terrible
@Lalaland lol
I wonder if caça/caca works as a minimal pair of stupidity cc @R.MartinhoFernandes our resident expert in Brazilian
@AngryLettuce romantic lunch date in 15 mins
user406009
@AngryLettuce Doesn't UCS-2 predate UTF-8?
04:47
@nick who's the lucky XX bearer
you
@Lalaland No idea
@nick I had lunch already
Also I'm going to ski in China for a couple days tonite
oh :(
well have fun man try not to break anything
user406009
@nick For interest's sake, what's the visa process for working in HK for US citizens like?
@StackedCrooked I'd guess it depends (at least somewhat) on what sort of audio compression you're talking about. Vocoders (speech compression) do a lot of processing on a very small amount of data--for example, the standard GSM vocoder took input 13 bit samples at 8 KHz, and typically produced output at 11 kilobits/second. Music encoders need more bandwidth, but still do quite a bit of processing compared to the amount of data.
04:52
@nick Don't answer he's trying to steal your job
TIL Lalaland is mexican
> We don't use an SQL database for account/character/item data.
@Lalaland it's stupid
user406009
@LucDanton Want to provide the full link?
well compared to the US it's not that bad
just go through a visa consultant
user406009
@nick Is the primary requirement to just be sponsored by a company?
04:55
@Lalaland to what?
> Well I know that with D3's auction house, it was basically dominated by bots that would instantly buy good items at low prices. While this is what any 'good' trader/player would do, the problem is these were running constantly 24/7 and real people couldn't compete with them.
@JerryCoffin I suppose you're right. Considering the time it takes to compress a file. Even if a 100 MB file is compressed in as fast as 5 seconds that still shouldn't cause much memory bandwidth problems...
user406009
@LucDanton To wherever the stupid discussion of "trivial trading" is occuring.
the system dedicated to selling items results in item sales, the horror
@Lalaland pretty sure you need an employer to sponsor you yes
> Everything is stored in a big .csv
04:57
additionally they like to see stuff like graduate degrees and reasonable salaries (by their definition, 40k usd is reasonable)
@Lalaland um there isn’t a discussion per se I’m afraid, it was one A amongst many in a general Q&A, no particular topic set
@AngryLettuce yeah that must be it
and that the worker has skills that a local couldnt fill
but anyways a consultant will manage all that for you
user406009
Hmm. Maybe I'll look into it later.
> std::runtime_error at memory location 0x0030BED0
Are you trying to tell me something, VS
lala coming to HK
who else
user406009
04:59
But what's the primary benefit for moving to HK from the US?
You get to sleep with nick
priceless
yes

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