I wasn't exactly optimizing for size, but rather "flatness". The struct is a "stub" for a much larger (virtual) data-structure that that has power-of-two sizes. 64 is the limit of 64-bit.
It's complicated.
So I decided to inline all those arrays rather than have std::vectors with aligned allocators everywhere.
The other reason is that the struct needed to be trivially destructible. So it couldn't have any RAII.
Okay, I'm getting a better understanding now. The larger data structure would (broadly) be allocated space and you needed a very efficient way to manage, navigate, and sort data into position before actually committing it to the HDD/device/pipeline.
Ah, okay. Now that I've looked up what an SIMD vector is, I can see what you were doing. Very impressive!
Kinda yeah. If it makes it any easier to visualize, the struct represents a set of arithmetic-like sequences. These sequences are always lengths of power-of-two or small multiples of powers-of-two. The first element of the sequence is the "generator" that is stored in the struct itself.
When the sequence has been computed and cached, you get the value you want directly from the table. Otherwise you go to the struct and multiply together the appropriate combination of generators to get the element you want.
> Thanks to the shrewd detective work of /u/sariel007 it seems this story is completely fabricated and the Boston Leader is a fake website created last week.
Okay, so then you've got one of these composers for each instruction set (or extension) available, and then a wrapper that chooses the right one and passes it to the pi algorithm
The complexity for that is probably very close and probably a bit beyond making a C++ compiler. D: I feel really sad that you need to find errors in it now. It's almost easier to be debugging the platform before you even start looking inside of that
So for each processor, I provide the typedefs and the primitive functions. The high-level code is all written generically to handle any SIMD width.
Some amount of specialization is needed for cross-lane operations within the SIMD vector. But those are intentionally designed to be few and far between.
I see. I can definitely see how you can use that for a stability test of OCs. It practically squeezes out every optimization possible between the hardware and the algorithm level. With the failures you're getting, it's extraordinarily likely that you've pushed the hardware to limits that cause it to fail proper operation xD
Going up 5 levels of abstraction, you see only BigInt, BigFloatand similar objects. There is no concept of SIMD anymore. But there are other things like parallelization and memory management which don't exist at the lowest levels.
So uh, I think the next thing you'll need to add is some sort of temperature and/or speed regulator for systems that are too fragile to operate at their stated limits
@Mysticial Yep. Keep it up and you'll need a full-blown OS to run your program without hardware failures under load. Unless you can get failures consistently on the same test, that's the problem; you reached the absolute limits of the hardware. I think congratulations are in order!
Now you can start a new career as Intel or AMDs QC specialist :D
TBH, my SIMD-agnostic approach isn't optimal. As you have no control over the register allocation or the scheduling. You need to drop down to assembly to do that.
That can squeeze out another 20% if you game the execution pipeline well enough. But I've decided long ago not to pursue that.
That's where I draw the line. And that's why Prime95 runs hotter when it fits in cache.
@Mysticial At which point it's an OS xD As I say, you've achieved something I highly doubt anybody else has even come close to. You've found hardware and OS failure modes in modern architectures
@Mysticial Pretty much the only remaining way to disprove that hypothesis is if you can, without modification, get your code to fail in exactly the same tests >90% of the time
@Aaron3468 As far as code-generating codes, I won't be surprised if what I have is probably one of the best in the world. But it's not gonna beat out hand-optimized assembly. But I'm not actually the kind of person who will write 100k LOC of assembly for every processor.
@user2296177 I've actually grown more and more neutral since I moved to Germany because so many of the people I interact with have a bias to discuss language (because they're learning German or English) and they're universally terrible at it.
@Aaron3468 My suspicion right now is some sort of memory-related UB that only manifests with a non-deterministic memory allocator that only my laptop's installation hits. But even that is very unlikely.
The unit tests constantly allocate and free memory. The main computations don't. They allocate once and hold onto it until everything is done.
@Mysticial Yep. If you can make or use a good linter to hunt known C/C++ memory UB in your unit tests and rule out that possibility, then the only possibility remaining is that you've found new UB in the OS or the hardware's memory
@Aaron3468 I've done that. My allocator has over/under-run checking. And they don't report any of the boundary cookies being overwritten. Which is what I'm puzzled.
@R.MartinhoFernandes my attitude towards bias in general (i.e. even outside of the context) is that there’s probably no way to know for sure either way
Either way, I am relieved that the May release didn't fail. Because 1) that's the one that's in production. 2) It means something recent in the program directly or indirectly is causing the failures.
@Mysticial So now there are two hypothesis left to test; yours of uninitialized data, and mine that you've found a way to overload the underlying platform (probably during unit tests) to the point that it fails read/write properly.
But it's a relief that this problem only occurs at the absolute utilization limits for the cpu and memory, and is non-deterministic; even on the affected branches, you can alleviate the problem by reducing utilization.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's true, but I do think they've failed to prove there are not cases where the bias is only about the language; that is the direct contradiction to their axiom and does seem to occur among academics (though the axiom may hold true for the general population)
For example, I'm not a huge fan of how English does not capitalize Specialized Terminology in order to clarify that it is not being used in a general sense of the words. That hardly means I'm biased to people, especially since I am an English speaker
But the repro time goes gradually goes up as I narrow in on the revision that did it (if a sequence of optimizations steadily increases stress and decreases stability), then it might be impossible to pinpoint it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes for all the evils of French education I actually think that’s not one of them, at least as limited to my experience (to explain why that seems somewhat far-fetched to me)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Fair point. I think it's important to understand the content of what they say (due to the fact that there is relatively easy contradiction if the words are taken for face value).
@EtiennedeMartel I would be surprised. In Veneto (northern region of Italy), according to the ministry of health or whatever there are way too many alcoholized people and younger generations drink way too much
@Aaron3468 I'm hoping it won't be as bad as the stackoverflow bug back in 2010. That one took a month to fix and took out a few sticks of ram on the Japanese guy's server. It was a deterministic bug that had a 4 day repro time on his machine, and 8 days on mine. And required 3 TB of disk.
Nordicity is the degree of northernness. The concept was developed by Canadian geographer Louis-Edmond Hamelin in the 1960s based on previous work done in the Soviet Union. Hamelin's point was that northern territories – like northern Canada – cannot be identified based on a single criterion, but that there was a continuum based on a number of natural and human factors.
Hamelin developed an index he called Valeurs polaires (Polar values) or VAPO, where the North Pole had a VAPO of 1000. The nordicity index had 10 natural and human components:
latitude
summer heat
annual cold
types of ice
total...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not in mine either to be fair. I pronounce 'your' as 'yore', and 'you're' as 'yew-er'. But when I speak in the accent of this region, both 'you're' and 'your' become 'yer'
@Mysticial :) If it's a bug in your code, the problem is many times more complex than that. Occam's Razor strongly suggests you've finally reached a point where the hardware cannot physically keep up
@Aaron3468 There were two bugs. One of which was my fault, the other is up for discussion. The one that was my fault was an oversight when porting the program to 64-bit. The struct array of 64 elements thing that I mentioned earlier was 32 on 32-bit. But I forgot to extend the size to 64 during the port.
So at 200 billion digits or higher, the size was large enough where the stub ran pass the 32 elements and corrupted the stack. But it didn't crash until 500 billion digits+. That one was obviously my fault.
The other bug was that there was a function that needed 2k of stack. I call it 10 times in a recursion of logarithmic depth. The Intel Compiler inlined all 10 calls so the caller needed 20k of stack. At 500 billion digits, the recursion went in 34 levels which was finally enough to blow out the stack.
@Borgleader This question makes be cringe in two ways. 1) If a "t-bit" is thing, then I cringe at not having ever heard about it. 2) If it isn't a thing, then I cringe at what the OP is on:
It basically guarantees the result value for positive Distance is larger than the result value for negative Distance (and also flips all bits for negative Distance)
here's the FUNction in its entirety:
(>> 17 for the first occurence because that one is only 15 bits in the packed struct, dropping some more precision to make place for the bBackground bit)
@wilx I thought feminism was about doing what you wanted regardless of gender roles? If she stays in a shitty relationship with a lazy asshole, it's her choice. Feminism changes nothing there.
@EtiennedeMartel Feminism enabled the role reversal that is apparent in her and her spouse relationship. IMHO. She is the husband and he is the wife, figuratively. And she does not like it.
@wilx But it's not feminism. It's the same shitty gender roles, only reversed. Same shit, different smell.
Reminds me of these women who said they didn't want feminism because they wanted to stay at home and raise kids. But feminism allows that. Feminism just doesn't want that to be the only possible option for a woman.
She's saying she doesn't like her current situation, but she's blaming external causes.
Hell, if she wants to stay at home and do laundry and raise kids while her husband works, that's not "anti-feminist". As long as she's doing it because she wants to and not because society tells her to, it's exactly within what feminism is about.
@Xeo That's not for us to decide. Ultimately, like any humanism, feminism starts from the idea that you assume everyone is capable of free thought. That's why SWERFs (and radfems in general) are feminists in name only: the basis of their ideology is that some people are not acting in their own best self-interest, and therefore should be told what to do.
I've come to a point with C++ standardisation where I'm not hoping for some fancy new language feature anymore, I just hope for basic usability enhancements...
But even that seems to be in vain, as default operators seem to be quite controversial to add! (Evidenced by the fact that they're still not in with the obvious syntax and semantics...)
@EtiennedeMartel I think that feminism (not as an ideology, but as an actual lived practice) has had some negative effects on men-women relationships. It could be argued the gains have outweighed them (a net win).
Perhaps it's not fair to say it is feminism
I'm thinking of this piece, and some others by Douthat.
A good number of months ago he made the effective timeout dependent on system load or something. So you can "ask" to increase, but it will modulate it down according to load