what does a good C++ build system need, anyway? Obviously a way to specify different compiler options in a compiler-invariant way--link and include directories, optimization and warning levels
probably also preprocessor directives for compatibility with cmake
A way to track changes to not only source but also header files, and dependencies between files
Something where you can inject things directly to the compiler
In the case of {special snowflake build system}.
But all the things you just mentioned are for building a single thing.
The next level -- and most important level, IMO -- is the concept of outputs.
Libraries (Static and Dynamic) that can be put in a common directory for proper linking to other build projects, build ordering based on that, ability to specify inputs and outputs and then have a custom command run for those, capturing the specified output and feeding it into other parts of the system (a la C-compatible-string-source generators and other things more interesting than that).
@Mysticial So, elevating the PIC/HPET from the NT API got better precision responses on my condition variables, internal timeouts. Mystery latency went down from ~800us to ~500us. I'm using _sleep(x) to measure, where "mystery latency" is the difference from the number I enter. How do I explain differences between different systems, hardware configurations?
@Mysticial No, I just placed that NT API call in addition to the normal stuff to elevate thread priority. It lets you request an order of magnitude more precision compared to the multimedia API.
I have no clue what I'm doing but I gotta learn or else my embryos die/don't cure cancer
I find it interesting how the internet is overflowing with C++ knowledge, but its hard to find a guide on tuning your BIOS
So, disabling C-state tuning helped, but that one was obvious...
@Mysticial Another weird thing, I have a hardware device, camera, that seems to have very precise synchronization, and timing. I'm thinking of maybe writing a hardware driver that services a callback. Know anybody doing stuff like that?
@Mikhail Not surprising--it's heavily about memorization because practically every mobo has at least a few unique settings, and when you get down to it, almost none of them make much difference in typical use anyway.
Recently on /r/cpp there was some dude talking about high frequency trading and the testing they do to keep the trading system response times down to nanoseconds. A lot of comments were disappointed he skipped the subject of mobo tuning.
> The Hewland AE75 is a lightweight aircraft engine that was manufactured in the mid-1980s by Hewland in Maidenhead, United Kingdom. The engine, a two-stroke inverted inline triple of 750 cc (46 cu in) displacement, is liquid-cooled and yields 75 hp (56 kW)[1]
Where it's basically "here's the bug I'm getting in my instance of code, with no reductions or debug poking done on my end except commenting out what doesn't work. Help me."
This Augmentum bug I have to literally build all of Augmentum to figure out what's wrong.
...so not only MinGW has non-random std::random_device, others have to suffer because of humonguous sizeof(std::random_device) even when there's a working /dev/urandom
And unless the commits being squashed consist mostly of undoing each other, squashing and pruning by, say, cloning a fresh repo, won't save a lot of space because the diff is still large regardless of how you break it down.
so the downside is that I now have to figure out how to break down my massive commit of death
which I'm struggling to do even after agreeing with my team that I did not have to follow our usual rule of each commit building and passing tests individually
When I review code, I usually go through commit by commit. So if changes are fragmented across different commits, sometimes I'd think you missed something because I haven't looked at the next commit.
Andrei Alexandrescu gave a talk at our company some months ago. And he said something that sounded like some sort of iterative templates. He didn't go into detail though. And I might've misremembered.
@ThePhD From my experience, compilers often don't even do that. The thing that does work is to stick with the template recursion with force-inline semantics. But that's brutal.
So I usually end up doing my unrolling manually.
Which also gives me the flexibility of manually reordering things. (such as interleaving different iterations of a loop)
^^ That is readable enough. No need to overkill things with TMP.
I usually stay away from macros. But they do have one advantage: They don't break the compiler's aliasing analysis. Functions (even when inlined) have a tendency to break aliasing analysis depending on whether it does the analysis before or after the inlining. This gave me some headaches with ICC when I did a set of "harmless" conversions of macros to functions which led to a noticeable slowdown caused the ICC generating a shit-ton of unnecessary load/stores.
@JohannesSchaub-litb Well, a "burg" is a place that people live, so "Johannesburg" is a city. "Johannes" (without the "burg" part) is a place that nobody lives. Since nobody lives there, it's free for everybody (so it belongs to (is "of") all the people.
@Mysticial See, I never got that bullshit. If you put 9000$ on an actual PC instead of a laptop you'll get something way more powerful and just as portable as this fucking brick.
Apparently my current "gaming" laptop can't always use the in-flight chargers. In-flight chargers will automatically turn off when the current is too high. And my laptop's power brick has enough capacitance to draw enough current to trip it.
@JohannesSchaub-litb I explained that. A "burg" is a place that people live, and Johannesburg is a city, so "Johannes" without the "burg" part is a place that nobody lives. (No, this doesn't really make sense, so Googling won't help).
In the US, they didn't seem to care when I lugged 100 lbs of textbooks home at the end of a school year because the check-in baggage had a 50 lbs limit.
@JerryCoffin Interesting. United doesn't have a weight limit. And if they do, they never enforce it.
But the 7kg limit outside the US is so stupid. It's burned my parents many times. Where they go over 7.1 or 7.2 and then have to either check it in, or take things out and wear it.
If you're gonna weigh check-in baggage, you might as well weight the person as well.
@Mysticial I suspect it's an "annoyance" kind of thing, kind of like jay-walking. 99% of the time, they ignore it--but if you show up smelling nasty or something like that, they suddenly find lots of regulations that you're either breaking, or at least they need to spend enough time checking on them that you may easily miss your flight...
I can understand a higher (like 50 pound) limit for carry on bags so you don't break the overhead bin, or hurt someone it the process. But really 7kg?
There's been a few times where me (and my parents) have gotten so pissed at the international 7kg limit where we literally wear everything (laptop chargers are scarfs). Let them weight the empty suitcase. Then put everything back in in front of them.
@Mysticial Does seem pretty silly, but a lot of this stuff does to me. I think a lot of it is really just an attempt at generating extra money by requiring you to pay extra for everything short of breathing.
Laptops are harder to wear. (not sure how they do it Akiba's Trip /cc @milleniumbug) But usually an empty suitcase + laptop alone will stay just under 7kg.