THe newly created variable does indeed get smaller address. Interesting. found how to view stack variables address in that answer : stackoverflow.com/questions/18856487/…
@Borgleader ^ I did it. No UB, just hard compile time shenanigans. We have implemented 100% of all features, with all tests passing, and we are now literally one of the fastest lua <-> C++ frameworks in existence.
@Borgleader what does a skilled programmer in particular bring to the table that someone would want to fall in love with one in particular? I -sort of- understand being interested in someone, noting they're a skilled programmer, and wondering if they have time in their life for love, but not deciding you want a skilled programmer as a prerequisite.
so now i have my linux instance launched but i'm getting operation timeout on ssh, and i don't even know why their vpn looks so complicated but i used to have a nice Plesque panel with windows xp and it worked fine with just an ip address and the login credentials
So rather than wasting anymore time on that, I'm just gonna reduce the scope of the locks to cover only the condition variables instead of the entire subroutines which may acquire other locks.
@Borgleader I changed it so that no thread acquires more than one lock at a time. And I'm rerunning the the tests overnight with that - leaving everything else the same.
There are two suspect lines in the code I posted yesterday: https://gist.github.com/Mysticial/a2a2e66363398f680a01#file-threadworker-cpp-L27 https://gist.github.com/Mysticial/a2a2e66363398f680a01#file-threadworker-cpp-L94
Those are large subroutines being called while holding a lock that isn't necessary.
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In any case, the thread loop holds the wake-lock while it is running the task. And the task holds its wait-lock while it is running the work. So every work that is running is holding both locks.
That's the two-lock scenario. But I was unable to find a sequence that would loop back and try to acquire the original wake-lock.
@Borgleader Both. I made it so the wake-lock doesn't cover the task that's being run. And the wait-lock for the task doesn't cover the actual work that's being run.
The work can be anything. I imagine the bad case is when the work tries to interact with the thread pool.
Oh, btw. I found a work-around to the problem where using a fixed number of threads will deadlock. And it doesn't involve swapping out execution stacks.
The problem is that it doesn't lead to very good CPU utilization.
I'll update my gist later this week if the deadlocks don't repro. It actually kicks one mutex off the critical path so it might actually be more efficient than before.
My friend in Japan reports that the original pool (the one that deadlocked last night) isn't quite as efficient as the Windows Thread Pool on his 56-vcore box. It results in about 1% slower throughput. Whereas for me it's 1% faster on both my 8 and 16-vcore boxes. Go figure... lol
@Mysticial I forgot exactly how it works, but there are tools where you write your lock/unlock order and such, and they can automatically prove whether it will deadlock or not
There's a (tiny) gap between when the thread loop checks the exit flag and then acquires the wait lock. If the destructor manages to acquire the lock, set the flag, notify, and release the lock in that tiny gap, it will deadlock.
Confirmed by adding a 100 ms sleep into that gap to make it larger. And it deadlocks 100% of the time.
> The function is bijective (one-to-one and onto or one-to-one correspondence) if every element of the codomain is mapped to by exactly one element of the domain.
@HubertApplebaum I would say no. But that depends on your method of encapsulation and how you control access to the object
I mean, if there's no control over writing to the object, I can do whatever I want to it if you pass it
If you manage to limit things you don't want to be changed in the object and only submit access to certain relevant parts that you actually need for the callback, then yes
But that's functionally equivalent to passing the parameters that matter. So pass only the information that matters.
Considering C#'s type system and need to change declarations of privacy/publicity for a function, I'd say no. Unless you can cast to an interface that disallows the things you don't want to happen
> This wasn’t an option back when you wrote your original article, but have you taken a look at Rust?
> C++ is very, very hurt by not having a base Object type from which all other types derive. Because of this, we get templates, and templates suck a lot.
> In USA it is cool to have sex with girls to use them as sex objects, then throw them away and replace them with some other girl who is younger and prettier. People call them studs, players, heartbreakers, etc.
> I looked up the word "forever" on urbandictionary.com It means " i will love youvtill someone better comes along." The one who wrote that definition, was he sinful? Is it haram to write those definition on that website?
In USA it is cool to have sex with girls to use them as sex objects, then throw them away and replace them with some other girl who is younger and prettier. People call them studs, players, heartbreakers, etc.
Does Allah punish heartbreakers?
Because it is cool for men to cheat on your wife. It...
Even not considering that, every time someone joins a chatroom is good etiquette to greet with "good morning" even if it's night where you are. Because pointing out that there are different timezones gets boring very quickly.
If I moved a file from one folder to another in a branch. An someone else made changes to the file in the master branch (where the file was in the previous location), and then I merge the other branch into the master branch, does it recognize that they are the same file and therefore the changes should be moved into the newest folder too?