« first day (2158 days earlier)      last day (3017 days later) » 

21:00
@ThePhD Sounds neato, now listen! :)
@ThePhD guess i missed a lot in life then by choosing the wrong uni at first for bachelor's.. though i'm not sure if they do languages like these in this one where i am right now either
(PS: <3)
@Mysticial that's devotion
@Borgleader It's just a History-of-Languages kind of rundown right now.
That and I'm really tired and I've been half-falling asleep, so I popped into here to not pass out as much.
@iksemyonov The 9 years part is deceptive. Since the "touches" aren't necessarily major improvements. Most of it is refactorings and updates for new processors.
The 80k LOC one went a lot faster. 9 months from algorithm conception to working prototype. But that was 2012 and I was a lot better at programming in 2012 than in 2007.
21:04
@Mysticial sorry if it sounds.. well, cynic, but how much does the algorithm improve the end-users' life?
@Mysticial ...and sometimes those changes have been fairly far apart, if I'm not mistaken.
i fully understand that just like an artist, it is an enjoyment and a life of its own to write those things
FWIW, while I was unemployed earlier this year, I put together a 50k LOC algorithm. Algorithm conception to production ready: 2 months. But that's because I really knew what I was doing at that point.
/cc @ThePhD I thought of you <3
the former fps gamer in me screams "now that's score per minute" @Mysticial :)
21:05
That new (50k LOC) algorithm isn't expected to be efficient until late 2017. The whole thing was designed under the assumption that my model of the Cannonlake processor is reasonably accurate.
@Mysticial 50 klock in 60 days? thats... almost 1klock per day djeeeebus
anything for Zen?
@Borgleader I was unemployed.
@Mysticial Its still impressive
@iksemyonov Computation of Pi (or other constants) surpassed practical need long ago--probably before any of us was born. On the other hand, there are apparently a fair number of users who enjoy using it to test their overclocked equipment.
21:07
oh, so it's the cruncher!!
well, that thing has to live for the overclocker crowd, that's for sure
@iksemyonov Oh--you didn't know what program we were discussing?
@Borgleader I was my 8th or 9th major multiplication algorithm implementation. By then I knew exactly what I was doing. I knew exactly what had to be done and what the hiccups are. And I had plenty of older algorithms/implementations to refer to. There was also a fair amount of copy-paste. And I was only targeting 2 processors (Haswell and Cannonlake) whereas the older algorithms targeted everything.
@JerryCoffin it's my stigma to be out of context
tfw
21:09
There's LITERALLY a language made out of WHITESPACE
@Mysticial So this is AVX512 code?
@ThePhD Haskell?
No, it's literally "The Whitespace Language"
@Borgleader It's named "whitespace", if memory serves.
Whitespace is an esoteric programming language developed by Edwin Brady and Chris Morris at the University of Durham (also developers of the Kaya and Idris programming languages). It was released on 1 April 2003 (April Fool's Day). Its name is a reference to whitespace characters. Unlike most programming languages, which ignore or assign little meaning to most whitespace characters, the Whitespace interpreter ignores any non-whitespace characters. Only spaces, tabs and linefeeds have meaning. An interesting consequence of this property is that a Whitespace program can easily be contained within...
21:10
@JerryCoffin Yeah. Optimized AVX512 code for Cannonlake. And with hacked-together AVX2 path for testing on Haswell.
@JerryCoffin o.O lolwtf
@Borgleader /cc @jaggedSpire
isn't there avx512 for server skylake?
@iksemyonov Yes, but this algorithm requires a flavor of AVX512 that only Cannonlake has.
ok, clear
It's called the C17 algorithm. On my website C17 means, "Code 17 experiment". What it really means is "Cannonlake 2017".
21:11
anyway i feel sad for avx since it's so scarcely used in the desktop software
maybe somewhere in science, it is, if you know, i'd be glad to know too :)
Bypassing ASLR via a side-channel attack against the branch target prediction: http://www.cs.binghamton.edu/~dima/micro16.pdf
/cc @sehe
@iksemyonov Next up, a version of Microsoft Word using primarily AVX1024 instructions... :-)
could stay here all day long to listen to those gems
@JerryCoffin I cant wait for it to screw up my formatting even faster
It's still an "experiment" because the whole algorithm and the 2 months/50k LOC that I spent on it is technically one massive premature optimization. So it's not guaranteed to be any better than the existing algorithms. But I felt confident enough in my processor models to go ahead with it.
21:13
but, does Word really have a vectorizable workload?
@iksemyonov By modern standards, does Word qualify as a workload at all?
hm, no idea, it lags heavily on large documents at times
is it even properly mutithreaded?
@JerryCoffin Yes
"Properly"
"Multithreaded"
Pick one
21:19
@Borgleader Also, it was winter in Chicago. You really think I had anything better to do?
I had to stay in my apartment much of the time anyway for all the phone interviews.
Aside from meeting Harry Dresden, probably not.
@iksemyonov you make me drowsy?
my day
feel i need to get back on SO but have really limited c++ knowledge in the sense of the libraries or the new standard features, and answering those 1st 2nd year college questions is sort of .. despised of?
still i enjoy answering and helping where possible
last time i managed to get about 1.5k in a month with hard work, which was a sort of a challenge
@iksemyonov Sorry I missed this question. The answer is no. Since Zen is a complete redesign of everything, I had no architectural model to go by. It also doesn't have any interesting new instruction sets. Whereas Cannonlake is expected to be very similar to Skylake which I already had at the time.
nice of you mate to go back to the lost Q ^^
yeah, i'm keeping the x5650 for now and will be selling the 3930k in wait of zen
now i see
21:29
Zen's architecture is interesting in that it blew out my expectations for FPU architecture.
I expected FPUs to migrate towards a monolithic FMA-only architecture. Bulldozer, Haswell, and Power7 already did this.
Zen seems to take a step backwards to optimize for legacy SSE work-loads.
@Borgleader Word is the ultimate slut. Where, when and how would you like to be screwed today?
with those split 128 bit units right?
(forgive my poor knowledge)
user406009
Mysticial, for interest's sake, were you able to track down that bug with the flaky tests?
That will affect high-level algorithm selection for Zen. As I'll need to move away from the algorithms that assume an FMA have unit cost.
@Lalaland Not yet. So far I have evidence that software prefetching has to do with it. As I've failed have to get the no-prefetch binary to fail after 12+ hours. The normal binaries fail within 2 hours.
recursive fail
21:35
How do you "build" without prefetch - you mean, not optimized for prefetch efficiency?
@sehe I no-op all the prefetch intrinsics.
Ah in manual assembly. Ok. Or maybe editing the compiler generated assembly.
Source. I rarely ever use raw intrinsics. Most of them are wrapped. So I just change the wrapper to do nothing.
It's not a true NOP, since it allows the compiler to remove all the address generating code that the prefetch instructions use. But it's an easy hack to test.
Why nop it out? Is it important to keep the instruction footprint?
Ah. Already answered
That's part of how I make the program target so many different instruction sets without having a million lines of code.
A lot of things can be changed/disabled with a small change to the right macro or template parameter.
21:45
@Mysticial is it open source?
But I have some (outdated) examples on my Github of how I manage the ISA explosion.
It was something I developed in grad school.
that's masters? i keep getting lost in the grad undergrad notation
@Borgleader Evil.
21:50
@iksemyonov During the day, there's morning and afternoon, but noon lasts only for a moment. Likewise, in school there's undergrad and post-grad, but 'grad' lasts only a morning (or so, depending on who speaks at your ceremony).
hmm, wonder how that maps to Russian education
unfortunately now we have the Bologne process and it's being applied incorrectly here, from my experience
but, these post and under grad terms refer to high school, don't they?
@iksemyonov Poorly, at least to Russia's "traditional" model.
asked you on the basis of your Russian experience mentioned once :)
ok, i see
// Pointer to an array containing adjacency listsList
list<int> *adj;
wtf
@iksemyonov No. University. Undergrad is the first four (or so) years, and if you graduate then you normally get a bachelor's degree. A master's degree is around two more years. A doctorate is around 4 more years. Much like with a Russian Doctorate, you're normally required to document some amount of original research before receiving a doctorate.
21:57
well, that's the new system we have here too, the Bologne process
4+2+4 though my sc. advisor said it's alright to learn the phd program in 2 years and hand in a research paper without having to wait for 4 years
@iksemyonov Should be at least roughly similar, yeah.
though, and i have to stress this, the 5 year model still exists, at least in my traditional 100 year old Uni
@iksemyonov Sorry--meant 4+2 for masters, 4+4 for doctorate.
and it hapily coexists with the 4+2, with students form both models often present in the same class
uhm, wait, now i'm not so sure, 4+2 is the same, then 4, then.. there is another degree, right, but i don't know how it is obtained
@milleniumbug that c++ code is just lol
22:12
@iksemyonov Yeah--my ex-fiance had a 5 year degree from St. Petersburg University.
@JerryCoffin What kind of job do you get with a degree in "5 years"?
@Borgleader not Jerry but pretty much the same as 6 years
5 years >>> 4+2 years, as proven by the 70+ year long history of the Soviet Science and Engineering
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's insane.
it's a lot more concentrated, in the 5 year flavor, you get down to business between years 3 and 4
Especially when you consider Fascism's roots in nationalism and progressivism means it has non-trivial ties to basically all the major ideologies in the West.
22:25
with 4+2, the first 4 are pretty much generics and only in the last 2 years is where you get down to the specifics, which is not enough time
but unfortunately, i have to admit we still have a few people in the govt who have sold their souls and bring foreign traditions into many areas, including education
@JerryCoffin St Peter's uni is a great one, a leader in many areas
(in Russia)
@nwp string_view might be one of my favorite C++17 "features". I keep emulating it in all my code since I first encountered it. Most lately, I used boost::iterator_range<CharT*>. None of the alternatives are as good as string_view since they are oblivious that they are dealing with chars, but in reality it (mostly) doesn't make a huge difference.
@LucDanton I can't remember if I already asked this, but, what's the difference between constexpr if and static_if?
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... and faith in accurate perception, faith in tool quality (could roll this in with the last one), faith in integrity of preceding scientists and their work, etc. etc.
@Telkitty No, but it does require certain premises. As does science.
Xeo
Xeo
23:09
Aaah, I should sleep
But I can't fight the urge to just keep on coding.
@nwp boost::range library has something that does exactly that
Xeo
Xeo
Also, dat feeling of coding for 6h straight and getting the logic right first try... mmh, how I missed that.
23:53
Guys, guys! I have a brilliant new idea that nobody's thought of before - cross-thread exceptions.
8
</sarcasm>
@NathanOsman My sanity is already in question already. Pls no more.
I have a whole notebook full of ideas for C++17.

« first day (2158 days earlier)      last day (3017 days later) »