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Ell
Ell
00:00
this place is absolutely amazing
you're gagging on my white membrane
Ell
Ell
;)
did i post this already?
actually i dont care, its worth watching again :P
@TonyTheLion <3
@WGhost I've never been able to find any study that confirmed it--but your taste buds get replaced every ~2 weeks, and after ~40, there's a slow loss of regeneration (and although less seems to be known about it, you seem to slowly lose your sense of small too). At the same time, at least some studies seem to indicate that your brain continues to develop, so even though the sensing part isn't as sensitive, the processing afterward probably becomes more developed.
continue to shove hot peppers down my throat, got it
00:13
Neurons in the cerebral cortex are never replaced. There are no neurons added to your cerebral cortex after birth. Any cerebral cortex neurons that die are not replaced
this is terrible
but on the bright side:
@Telkitty Didn't the amazon bloatware phone cost $1?
`In a notice to customers, the company said it was receiving 600,000 hits a second on its website, although it did not say how many of those hits converted to real orders. By comparison, Google processes about 40,000 search requests a second.`
WAT.
@thecoshman just for you
00:31
@Borgleader kek
read as "why do squeaky rogues prefer leather armor" first
ah shit, failed at pinging @ThePhD just for you!!! (sorry pirate)
Wut
@JerryCoffin Damn, I'm sorry. :(
@ThePhD Oh man, are you alright? Wheres the usual insults and borgplz? :(
@Ell I've got a pretty amaze Indian place a three minutes' drive away. :)
00:36
okay looks like creduce has managed to throw GCC into a loop
screaminternally.a
@jaggedSpire Such is life sometimes--fortunately, I don't usually have any kids along when I eat lunch.
so you can eat wherever you please* then
also htop won’t allow me to change by which column to sort what is going on
something to do with setting a custom delay apparently
how do I import stuff from a python package that installs itself in a weird nested folder? e.g. SCons sits in Python27/Lib/site-packages/scons-2.4.1/SCons/__init__.py :/
@melak47 from a shell, I set PYTHONPATH
00:41
but then I have to explicitly put the name with version number there...that seems crappy
um is site-packages a pip thing
@melak47 import SCons
Well, that has one too many stars.
Also SCons sucks
what do you recommend, CMake? :v
or just to kill myself
00:43
It's better than SCons at least
@melak47 naw looks like you point to site-packages and then it does its thing
Well it's called SCons for a reason, not SPros
ayyyyyyyyyy
You don't have to modify PYTHONPATH for site-packages
This is all managed
@LucDanton site-packages is not the problem, I can import other packages from there just fine - just not SCons because there is no SCons (only scons-2.4.1) ._.
00:45
@CatPlusPlus it could be living in a custom location (prefix at configure time and all that)
I bet a symlink will fix things right up :v
sounds like a terrible idea
@orlp lol
If it install into subfolder of site-packages and doesn't install a proper .pth file then it's a bug
Also don't use SCons
Why are you importing SCons anyway, you call it via scons tool
00:48
@CatPlusPlus to make intellisense work :v
So it probably does install proper .pth file but your IDE is too shitty to use them
That's a bug, but in the IDE
>>> import SCons
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: No module named SCons
>>>
read the READMEs
and the manual
and the wiki
00:52
And don't use SCons
and the issue tracker
and the bible
and asimov
Yeah it's SCons that's buggy piece of shit
I know some of these words!
Not that your IDE is any better likely
00:54
I don't have any .pth files in my python install anywhere, apparently.
Most things don't need them
my IDE seems to have no problem with them though, which is kinda surprising :p
(hint: it's VS :v)
> fatal error: incremental linking is not compatible with --plugin
confused, I’m not using lto
incremental == lto?
00:56
@melak47 no, but they kinda don’t work together (most of the time)
I’m not even using -Og
oh hey looks like creduce has made progress, it wasn’t stuck
15min per iteration, this will be reduced in no time!
oh boy
@CatPlusPlus what's so bad about scons? :/
Speed, not idiomatic, terrible documentation
01:01
looks like the way GCC is configured it is passing -plugin to the linker—but according to the manual it’s supposed to be --plugin so???
So building with --enable-lto means no -Wl,--incremental ever? sadface
Incremental linking never worked for me anywhere
it's --plugin yes
It's probably just a bug
@HubertApplebaum I’m just gonna assume the gcc driver -v dump is being quirky
Maybe nobody uses that
01:06
ah, -fno-use-linker-plugin so that GCC doesn’t feed the plugin stuff to the linker
it must have been a while since I’ve done incremental links seeing as reportedly feeding those options is a new behaviour since 4.8
welp looks like gold is very efficient at pegging those cores
yay testcases are aborting hurra
> A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
why are you even using excremental linking
@HubertApplebaum to see if it’s worthwhile
@HubertApplebaum Because it's full of shit?
01:26
@Mysticial Why is it bad?
> /usr/bin/ld.gold: internal error in set_needs_dynsym_index, at ../../gold/output.cc:959
welp
@Borgleader Either I suck at jokes, or you suck at getting them. :)
@Mysticial neither, IRTA as incremental
my brain has autocorrect turned on =/
Ugh.
Time to run my crappy benchmarks...
01:37
"wow it processes over 3000 characters per minute!"
Ell
Ell
I don't like this ZFS dealie
@Ell everyones making a big deal about it. whats so great about ZFS anyway? (explain like im 5)
it's the best filesystem
@Borgleader Part of the basic idea is that the file system can expand onto more disks whenever needed, so when you start to run out of space, you don't (for example) have to explicitly copy data to a new disk--instead, you plug in the new disk, run a utility to tell the file system about its existence, and the file system starts to use the extra space.
Cmon, you stupid tests... pass already..
01:49
@JerryCoffin Oh, so essentially having 1x2TB drive vs having 2x1TB drives is the same thing from the point of view of the user?
@ThePhD A truly stupid test passes easily: bool is_code_good() { return true; }
I mean, I assume you can still view each drive separately, but files can span drives if needed (as if it was just one)?
@Borgleader Pretty much, yeah. You can do that with RAID (for example) without ZFS though. What ZFS allows is doing it semi-dynamically, so you can add new disks to a file system without tearing it down and building a new one.
Oh thats cool. And I'm assuming its "competitive" performance wise?
@Mysticial how did that custom thread pool turn out
:allears:
Ell
Ell
01:56
@Borgleader ZFS also has neat snapshotting features
I don't use ZFS but I use btrfs which is basically the GPL competitor
A few weeks ago I switched RAID modes of my file system while it was running
Which was pretty cool
I also use COW snapshots and restore from them when I break my system badly :P
@Borgleader On reasonably current hardware, yeah, mostly. It is a bit more dependent on caching than (most) older file systems, but it includes a couple levels of caching.
@Ell COW? as in its a diff of the previous one or something? like you have a base backups and the following ones are only changes compared to the base?
Ell
Ell
I'm not sure how it works internally but yeah you make a snapshot and it shares the storage of unchanged parts of the filesystem
And I thin ZFS has that feature
@HubertApplebaum I haven't worked on it in a while. But it's basically "in production" as far as internal builds go.
Ell
Ell
@Borgleader they are not "backups" though, backups need to be off site and all I'd say
02:03
@Borgleader COW does't imply base+diffs, but does make the latter fairly easy to implement. ZFS also includes de-duplication, so (for example) if you're storing a bunch of VM images, most of the base parts of the image (the kernel, drivers, etc.) will end up a little like a shared_ptr to a single block of data.
It's great on Windows. But disappointing on Linux. It still beats everything else on Linux, but it seems that Linux condition variables aren't as efficient as the Windows ones. Though I'm 70% sure it's something more fundamental such as how the Linux scheduler works.
@Xeo apparently this may or may not be hijack-resistant, although as you can tell it’s fairly annoying to write. it gets better for operations that aren’t const-overloaded though (then you just have the as_const(arg) attempt).
So the pool, while originally done to narrow the performance gap between Windows and Linux has actually made it wider - while speeding things up on both platforms.
Ell
Ell
@Telkitty is feeding chickens prawns a good idea? :o
@Mysticial it's a success then I suppose? :P
@Mysticial As long as it's faster on both, I'd find it hard to complain a lot about a larger gap...
02:06
@JerryCoffin Oh thats pretty cool.
Ell
Ell
@Borgleader IIRC in band dedup is the reason ZFS requires a lot of RAM
btrfs supports out of band but in band is being worked on
@JerryCoffin oh neat
Ell
Ell
Of course all in all, ZFS is faster and more stable & mature than btrfs
Actually it appears performance of ZFS and btrfs appears to be a very mixed bag
Huh, I just discovered I can use all 3 of my monitors in VirtualBox
(I never thought of trying before)
mmmh it’s boilertastic but write-once and seems to work
kinda invites copy-pasta and hence c&p errors though :/
02:15
@Mysticial Interesting, are you allowed to go a little further into detail?
As in what's the pool size, average task duration and these things
@JerryCoffin @Mysticial likes to tie gap that was forced, im tired T_T
Pool size is unlimited. The # of threads it will spawn is equal to the largest # of overlapping tasks. Task duration can range anywhere from microseconds to minutes.
Do you reuse threads on a round-robin fashion or latest-used-first or depending on cpu affinity or something else
So if you throw a parallel for-loop at it with a million iterations, bad things will happen.
@HubertApplebaum Randomized.
Anything that tracks such data is a point of contention.
Alright
Thanks :)
02:21
It uses rdtsc to generate a "random" number to select a thread number.
Then it probes the threads in order from that one until it finds one that's idle.
Or if there's none that's idle, it acquires the spawn lock and spawns a new thread.
Oh so there's no... queue?
Just random indexing into an array?
no queue at all
@HubertApplebaum correct
Are you saying by that that the enqueue/dequeue operations were a contention point too?
Hey, I got ~15k to build a computer. Would 16 sticks at 256 GB perform faster than 8 sticks at 256 GB?
I'd use 256 sticks of 1 GB
02:24
USB?
And spend the rest on booze & hookers
Sorry, I just got back from SF
Urbana-Champaign is a hooker free zone
@HubertApplebaum I can't say whether a queue would've been a point of contention since I designed it without a queue in the first place in the expectation that it would be a point of contention.
Boobana Champagne
@Mysticial Oh I see
"Banana-Champaign"
02:26
Bartek-Banachewicz
hyphen
@Mikhail Back in the Nehalem days, memory speed was partially limited by the number of DIMMS per channel. More sticks, lower speed. I'm unsure of the situation now with the LRDIMMs and stuff.
@HubertApplebaum Basically, the process of finding an idle thread (when one exists) is completely lockless. It doesn't even use any expensive instructions like atomic increment.
Once it finds (what it thinks is) an idle thread, it does compare-swap on the "busy" flag. That will officially "capture" the thread. At that point, there's a condition variable/lock/signal to wake up the thread. But we're now isolated on a single thread. So it won't clash with the gazillion other threads trying to put stuff in the pool.
Okay here is the parts list:
Look on my partslist, ye Mighty, and despair!
@Mikhail They support multi-socket now? That's cool.
I'm wondering if it's worth it to wait a bit longer for the Broadwell-EP.
Its probably gonna cost more money
02:34
@Mysticial I was guessing so :)
> 24 6TB dri​ves $7200.00
Yes
Thats the most important item
So one cv per thread
@HubertApplebaum yep
whats a "cv"?
02:34
Condition variable.
@Mikhail résumé
That seems like a pretty neat implementation, I kinda wanna copy try it
can't resume if I haven't started
@HubertApplebaum The other tricky part that I haven't mentioned is how to add new threads in a manner that's thread-safe with the existing ones.
Am trying to think of the complexity of a queue_task operation
Seems O(N) at worst, but on average?
@Mysticial Well with a deque it should be OK-ish
that or you have a double buffer that you swap on realloc
@HubertApplebaum I had a discussion with Luc about that a while back. He said the standard doesn't guarantee thread safety on push/emplace-back for even a deque. Even if it is in all implementations.
So I had to do something customized.
It's an array of arrays. The first two arrays have size 1. The next has 2, then 4, then 8. All the way up to 2^64. (which is overkill btw)
02:39
BUT WHAT IF
Why bother starting at 1 though
Dereferencing an index on the vector involves doing an lzcnt/bsr on the index to determine which sub-array it belongs in. Then some bit twiddling to get the index within the sub-array.
@HubertApplebaum It made the index conversion easier.
Quite cool
@Mysticial what were you trying to do?
(sorry was a bit late to the conversation)
@orlp This thread pool that I built back in January.
and the queue was for tasks?
02:45
yeah
what's wrong with locking the queue?
are the tasks so shortlived that the overhead of the task handler shows up?
@Mysticial neat
22 mins ago, by Mysticial
@HubertApplebaum I can't say whether a queue would've been a point of contention since I designed it without a queue in the first place in the expectation that it would be a point of contention.
I also don't immediately see why your data structure does not require locking
@orlp It does, but not in a way that would cause contention.
02:49
@Mysticial Something something premature optimization :P
@Mysticial FIFO or LIFO or something else?
@orlp Neither. Completely async.
@orlp Read up
@HubertApplebaum I don't know where
up
this way ^
02:50
you do realize that literally every message ever said in this chat room, barring future ones, are that way?
so why aren't you reading them
kek
@Mysticial why not a simple lock free linked list of idle threads?
28 mins ago, by Mysticial
@HubertApplebaum I can't say whether a queue would've been a point of contention since I designed it without a queue in the first place in the expectation that it would be a point of contention.
I guess
02:54
@HubertApplebaum instructions unclear apparently :P
ok time for bed, friday tomorrow, cant be too zombie
In the asymptotic sense, anything that has a single-access point will never scale beyond a fixed number of tasks/sec O(1). Regardless of whether there are locks, the cacheline that holds the head of the queue will be bounced around all the cores. In a fully decentralized system, there is no single point of contention. So there is no limit to the number of tasks/sec except those imposed by the cache coherency protocol of the hardware.
@Borgleader zombecca will be there for you
@Mysticial Amdahls law or wtv?
If I may interject your heated debate with a dumb question, why not simply use operations that are guaranteed to be atomic?
@HubertApplebaum oh god no
02:56
@Mikhail because those operations do not exist under the hood, and if they do, they're slow
@Mikhail isnt that what lockfree is?
@Borgleader Amdahls law is different thing.
@Mikhail atomic here isn't used in the meaning "uninterruptible" but also "visible to other threads"
@Mysticial Is it though? You may not have lock but you have something that acts like one or rather has the same side effect.
@Mysticial is there any point beyond 1 thread per (hyper)core?
if not doing I/O
02:58
Actually I/O can improve with mutliple threads simply because the OS doesn't like to saturate itself (although not much past 2 threads)...
> if not doing I/O
the OS could learn a lot from your mother then
@orlp This is for all threads in the system. Not just one core. So we're talking potentially hundreds of threads simultaneously trying to put work into the thread pool.
WE PASSED LADIES \o/
@Mysticial my intutition says that you can avoid contention using some kind of data structure similar to a skip-list
03:00
@ThePhD I'm proud of you :)
why am i not sleeping yet T_T
@Borgleader Not really. A lock gives a thread exclusive access to a region. But that's overkill. In reality all you need is to broadcast the fact that you're busy. And there's no limit to how many threads can read a memory location provided that nobody changes it.
But, eventually, the receiver of the broadcast needs a lock?
@Mikhail Nope. x86 guarantees write ordering.
@Mysticial but I guess a random selection of arrays also works
The core of the algorithm is this:
bool ThreadWorker::try_dispatch(WorkerTask& task){
    WorkerTask* null = nullptr;

    //  Optimization: In most cases, the thread will be busy. So let's break
    //  out early without the compare/exchange.
    if (this->task != null){
        return false;
    }

    //  Now test it for real.
    bool success = this->task.compare_exchange_weak(null, &task);
    if (!success){
        return false;
    }

    std::lock_guard<std::mutex> lg(lock);
    cv.notify_one();
    return true;
}
03:04
@Mysticial But only on the same core? preshing.com/20120515/memory-reordering-caught-in-the-act am I even talking about the same thing?
@Mikhail On x86, for word-sized integer load/stores that are aligned, all writes in one core will be seen in the same order on all other cores.
The example you listed reorders writes with reads.
In this case, the dataflow is uni-directional.
but you need to read it at some point?
You're reading it in the other thread.
If thread A does:
store A 123;
store B 456;
And thread B does:
load reg, B
load reg, A
If load reg, B reads the 456, then the load reg, A is guaranteed to pick up the 123.
Because x86 guarantees that thread B will see the 123 before the 456.
In C++, this is implemented with std::atomic<void*> or whatever. Those will guarantee that behavior. On x86, it compiles to lockless load/stores since x86 guarantees write ordering.
Dumb question, can one thread get a register from another thread (easily)?
a register?
no
03:13
yeah
But in CUDA yes!
Clearly GPU > CPU
03:14
okay, you win
can’t c++ on a Friday so I’ll do something dumb with awk
what could go wrong
awk of it
@Mysticial What does the simplified body of the thread loop look like?
@HubertApplebaum your puns are definitively going wrong
while (!false) { cv.wait_one(); do_the_thing(); }
@HubertApplebaum Lemme just dump the entire class on gist.
03:17
coliru pls
@HubertApplebaum I saw you blaspheme
thanks (gotta check on my phone though)
and ofc GH can't unzoom on mobile
:cri:
03:23
I wouldn't bet my life that the ThreadWorker is bugfree. But it's held up very well so far through all the work-loads I've thrown at it.
` It will deadlock if it is not run.`
Okay that's simpler than I expected
how2upvote gist
Well, that's just the ThreadWorker. All that randomization stuff and the thread-safe resizing vector is in the ThreadPool object.
I didn't mean that in a derogatory way lol
03:26
I mean I was expecting something really fat
And it's refreshingly simple
Which is good!
To be fair, since this was my first ever "real" lock programming project, I wouldn't have been able to handle anything more complicated than that.
And still have any confidence it its correctness.
You mean you've never used locks before? I don't believe you
I have, but trivially throwing a lock over a critical region isn't "real" programming.
03:29
I think the more important thing here is the condition verbibols tbh
That's true. Since that tripped me up until @wilx helped me out.
Lmao
Our fucking performance
Even after removing std::string, using std::map's transparent lookup, refusing to allocating memory until the very last moment, we're still SUPER in the fucking shitter for member function calls.
250 ms slower than everyone else.
And nearly 400 ms slower than fucking Selene.
Selene, of all things, the most offensive framework when it comes to performance.
Boost.DeadPool
Good morning.
@ThePhD And what's the bottleneck
03:32
@HubertApplebaum lua's the fucking bottleneck.
Literally, lua is the fucking bottleneck here.
And when I try to explain that on the lua mailing list, I get a bunch of meandering about C code being faster than C++ code, and I'm just so fucking done.
Rewrite Lua in C++, that'll show them
@ThePhD Not your problem then
It IS my problem because other frameworks that aren't supporting member variable access (e.g., myinstance.a = 24) are getting away with it because they don't have to go through lua the same way I do.
So they get heaps of performance for fuckin' free.
And of course having lua provide me with the fucking thing that triggered metamethod lookup is just too goddamn hard.
"Hey, this is the thing that started this insane lookup cascade" nah nobody needs that fam, because why would you need performance THAT'S SILLY.
back to projection matrices with you
04:06
@Ell I think so ...
Uploaded a video of my chooks nom nom on the prawns

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