@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn it depends on how MUCH of C++ you want in KM, things like constexpr basic RAII etc are all easy. Things like std::vector become a major issue
basically, dynamic allocation is difficult (is heap manager initialized? you want paged or non-paged memory? and so on), static constructors are difficult (when are they supposed to be called?), throwing exceptions is difficult (need to allocate memory, and also all the implicit environment required)
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn because most OS's want you to allocate in pools and keep track of what type of memory it is so the OS can page things out. Exceptions cause issues for the same reasons, as do vtables
because if the memory is paged out it causes major issues if you try to jump to it
instead what you'd probably do is kernel::vector<T, POOL_TYPE>
for what it's worth MS uses C++ in the NT kernel, just a limited subset
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn virtual memory is a thing in user space, KS has to live inside of the VMspace of the process that's currently active on that CPU
@Mgetz So far as I understood the issue is that cpp uses a lot of dynamic memory allocation. For a reason I can't totally understand, dynamic memory allocation is not OK in KS.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn not really surprised, entire books have been written about how kernels work. it's not like everything can be explained in a single chat conversation
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn tl;dr; in kernel mode you're building the house from scratch, in the middle of outer space... a lot of things need to be done very precisely, you can do them in any language you want. But you have to spend the time to build the basic environment first, and that's annoying.
OK so the issue is that the kernel contains entire libraries for C, which take care of all the stuff like interrupts, which avoid memory being paged out etc. While for C++ I don't have all those nice libraries, I can start by writing them myself (hence: "building the house from scratch")
@Mysticial @StackedCrooked A bit delayed thanks to just being back from vacation, but still: Weekly reminder to continue watching Made in Abyss. The newest episode was so good. Ozen is a great character. I love her design.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn it doesn't contain the cstdlib because the cstdlib assumes it needs to make system calls, in kernel mode there is nothing to call IN TO
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn you have to build the house either way, there are actually posts on the internet from people that have done it, even so far as running C++ in kernel mode
Specifically, it's a condescending expression of the male empowerment and extremely strong belief that women could never raise to actually harm them physically or require force to be stopped.
@Mgetz I ll try to summarize it again... : "the issue is that the kernel doesn t contain cstdlib, which is a fancy library for cpp code. This library allows me to do all the dynamic memory allocations etc I want without worrying to much"
It suggests that a woman will always be the lesser one in a fight despite numerous women possesing skills and strength surpassing a lot of males. It denigrates them and downplays their abilities.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn no, it's a lot more complicated than that. I would suggest you look into how NT and Linux allocate memory. While that's only part of the issues
@Mgetz so part of the issue lays in the fact that I will have in my C++ code to do all the memory allocation manually because there is no inter alia cstdlib in KS?
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn not necessarily, it's just a lot more complicated, you need to be able to understand how the memory is going to be used in a far more granular way than a user space developer would care
@BartekBanachewicz It depends what is implied by the person telling "I wouldn't punch a woman", but most of the time it's indeed employed in a denigrating and generally sexist way.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn not necessarily, it's just a lot more complicated, you need to be able to understand how the memory is going to be used in a far more granular way than a user space developer would care
when writing eg kernel space drivers in C for hardware I don't need to car that much about how the memory is being used. imo it is relatively straightforward once you have done it a few times.
It suggests that a woman will always be the lesser one in a fight despite numerous women possesing skills and strength surpassing a lot of males. It denigrates them and downplays their abilities.
@EnnMichael I don't know where you got that number from? I remember reading a report form 2014 which said men were victims more often (in countries that don't consider women to be a lower form of life ofc)
@fredoverflow It wasn't as dark as I thought it would be. But this eclipse wasn't a particularly large one. The path was only 70 mi. wide. So there's plenty of back scattering from the surrounding area.
@EnnMichael the point I made was that it was exactly like the other generalizations of women made by men, and I think it should be considered just as such
So while I had the greatest eclipse (0.5mi north of center line, 2 miles from point of greatest duration), it was too high in the sky for any good selfies.
@milleniumbug to which my response would be, if you say you've been there, cool, if you feel you need to prove it, then I must question everything else about you that you don't offer photos of, you dirty cheating bastard
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn You have to realise there's kernelspace, and there's kernelspace. There are things like interrupt handlers where you are limited in what you can do and how long can you do it, there is a high level where it's almost like userspace, and there's low-level.
If you can't throw exceptions, but you must handle memory failures, you can't use v.push_back(33); because it has no way to report a memory allocation failure (it returns void)
@Ven I remember a few times where I wondered whether I could make it to the next rest area. It's a bit terrifying yet you still feel like you're going to fall asleep.
@fredoverflow No, but there is no official treatment, and doctors aren't trained nor used to deal with the issue. It's not difficult from a technical point of view, but new doctors are a bit afraid to do the wrong thing.
So specialists became ultra-specialists even though they don't even handle trans people the same way. It's a bit dumb :/
@milleniumbug Thanks for your answer! I didn't know you couldn t throw exceptions in kernel space
user784668
10:01 PM
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn There's no real reason for the inability to throw exceptions, you can certainly make that work if you're writing your own kernel.
user784668
Mostly just a matter of porting libgcc and libstdc++ because they do most of the heavy lifting.
user784668
In most existing kernels you can't because the machinery just isn't there.
@Fanael theoretically speaking if one could successfully port them, it would totally be possible to write c++ in kernel space without worrying about anything?
Those variants are not recursive. You define a recursive_variant that looks like it should be named recursive_wrapper. But it isn't used. If you had used it, it would have the exact same problem because it requires the template argument T defined to be a complete type as well, AFAICT. — sehe15 secs ago
@fredoverflow Nah. To kill a mockingbird
user784668
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Without worrying about anything? No. It's still kernel space.