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00:01
@sehe either enthusiast or who is desperate as in the medical/pharmaceutical industry
00:18
@Mysticial $2k is more than server RAM, I
I'm still confused why enthusiast don't buy old Xeons. When I did HPC and scientific computing, like many of my collegues had a pet MPI cluster that they built out of old xeons.
but bitches be like, lets buy RGB lights instead of SGEMM performance
probably also doing DGEMM with their rainbow lights, what a bunch of cucks
@Mikhail They don't overclock. And they don't have good single-threaded performance.
I understand that overclock is fun, but single thread performance is good enough, and many applications are mulithreaded and even GPU threaded. Not to mention IO bounds
I'd rather get a 4 chip server than high end i7 any day
@Mikhail No it isn't. FF isn't threaded. Linking isn't threaded. Most of Window's services aren't threaded. Games usually have a critical event loop that needs to be fast, etc...
SMB is threaded, and I think individual services run on separate threads
games are on the GPU
Oh and of course, HFT needs fast single-threaded performance.
@Mikhail Only the graphics are. Not the main threads.
00:30
@Mysticial also physics
the CPU part isn't a limiting factor, and after the they fixed binding and unbinding textures even more so
fucking used to cost 0.5 ms for each bound texture or some other bullshit I once wrote a email to nvidia about
@Mikhail It is if you go far back enough. You can blame it on bad programmers, but it doesn't matter what the reason is. It is fact that a sufficiently slow processor will bottleneck the GPU.
@Mysticial sure but that processor is worse than a xeon
And by "sufficiently slow" I mean even something as recent as Nehalem or Sandy Bridge will bottleneck a 1080TI.
depends what its doing
in the ancient times, HFT used to be heavily multi-threaded ...
00:32
I happen to have 1080TI on one of my work desktop and it runs most games on max graphics without issue...
@Mikhail Not if the task is single-threaded - like the event loop for many games.
I mean, many game loops were bottlenecked by OGL API/driver calls, but this gotten better
idk, my 2.2 GHz machines runs all the games
but also has like 72 cores
like Tux Racer :-)
lol
@Mikhail Looks are pretty important too. Especially if it's gonna be sitting next to you for an extended period of time.
At least we can agree that DGEMM is for cucks
@Mikhail Um, I think I'm gonna have to disagree with you there too. :)
00:37
You use double precision?
almost exclusively actually
does anybody use a headless browser as a proxy?
i want a browser to access a page , and then remotely be access the contents as the browser
this is jupyter, and long running tasks
I'll help you but only if its circumvent the laws of the Chinese government
00:39
@harvey_slash You're in the wrong room. This is the C++ room. We talk about RGB ram and Anime here.
ah , anime , i have something for you guys , pls give me a moment
what's a headless browser?
obligatory joke about double penetration precision
using deep learning to make mona lisa into an anime :D
00:41
is to proxy for hentai?
@Telkitty i don't know the exact definition of that, but what I want to do is have a browser constantly connect to some server. Then use my machine to access the webpage that the proxy has been connected to
asking the real questions here
its not for proxy as bypass
like tor?
so Jupyter uses a constant connection between local computer and remote computer
00:42
the correct answer was "yes"
when you type something , the request is sent via network to server, the typed thing is run , the output is sent back to local machine , and you can see it
sometimes , the output takes 10 hours, or even more to execute
so if you disconnect before thats complete, you will never be able to see the output
what I want to do is keep a constantly on connection between a server and the actual jupyter server, so that jupyter thinks that my server is the browser , then I want to ping that fake server from my actual local machine
can't you write a program to send the request and constantly pinging the server on the other side to keep the connection alive?
usually my projects take a week to run , and id like to shut down my laptop
just make the server to store the result somewhere for later retriever ...
what youre saying (they use web socket instead of ping) is already implemented, but that requires me to keep my laptop on, and also connected to the internet
the thing is im using project Jupyter (its not a simple web server). And that uses a lot of realtime stuff. I wont be able to simple cache , as its a long running thing
00:53
DON'T USE JUPYTER
what I was thinking of was to use a headless browser like selenium (headless=doesnt require UI ) , and access the contents using a proxy. But i cant seem to find any way
you're trying too hard to run a python script
run with nohup
@Mikhail unfortunately thats not an option :/ lots of images and stuff
@harvey_slash I'm an expert on image processing, image formation. My experiments routinely consume 100 TB. You're doing something wrong if you can't launch a python script.
I need to display the jupyter notebook , for some tutorials that im writing up
its not about being able to launch a python script. I can ofc do that (i use tmux instead of nohup). Jupyter helps because the whole thing is reproducible and I can share the notebooks along with my outputs with people
jupyter also allows multiple people to run/modify the same code that has run halfway, which is also something I need
00:57
use both tmux & no hup
this is silly, you invented yourself a problem
well, Its kind of hard to explain my use cases. But there are a lot of people who will benefit if this issue can be handled.
trust me, im not trying to gold plate my workflow
you can always output intermediate results upon request, so you can check the result at anytime
@Telkitty, thats a design flaw of the Jupyter project (which is why im trying to find a setup like this). To persist the output on the server, the output needs to be sent to a browser, rendered as HTML, then sent back to the server , where it is saved
sounds like the project you chose to work with doesn't handle basic things
:( thats the only thing that makes it not perfect. Its extremely popular, especially for scientific computing.
https://github.com/jupyter/notebook
01:42
Hello, Cruel World!
@harvey_slash what flaw?
01:53
To persist the output on the server, the output needs to be sent to a browser, rendered as HTML, then sent back to the server , where it is saved
@harvey_slash whats the university?
university meaning ?
02:26
@Mysticial Testing performance of memory copy using x86/SSE/AVX. Does the copy routine look optimal to you?
For some reason the AVX is not faster than SSE (even on a machine that supports AVX)
Not that I worry about it. Just curious :)
It's properly using AVX in the first loop.
What's the hardware?
Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2690 v3 @ 2.60GHz
That's weird. Then the AVX version shouldn't be slower than SSE.
Oh. Apparently it gets better if I reduce the buffer size. Reducing to 8K (from 32K) improves it. Perhaps L1 cache misses were dominating.
Data fits in L1?
02:31
I'm copying a 32K buffer into another 32K buffer. I repeat this a couple of times using the same buffers.
However, I'd expect AVX to still be faster..
Since hardware prefetching should do its job.
# Using 8192-byte buffers:
result_x86=2218528
result_sse=144004
result_avx=73462
If it doesn't fit in L2, I'd expect then to be the same speed.
fyi, you can probably steal somebody's code: patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/566568
But I'm not sure if L2 itself has enough bandwidth to feed AVX memcpy.
# Using 32768-byte buffers
result_x86=145682089
result_sse=16954768
result_avx=16789820
Andrew Senkevich says he got a 30% improvement on KNL, so just steal his code...
02:34
@StackedCrooked To answer your question, it "should" be optimal if the data fits into the lower level caches.
Once you spill into memory, then the best memcpy() will need to use NT-stores.
Hm. SSE is 8x faster than x86.
@Mysticial I see.
The example that Mikhail linked does use it. Search for vmovntdq in that link.
I see.
I was just wondering if type of unrolling in the copy routine is optimal. Not sure if the compiler is with *dst++= *src++;
@StackedCrooked The compiler is already collapsing those increments to once per loop iteration.
@Mikhail That's asm code?
02:39
So what the compiler has is pretty good. Though I would still do it differently.
Instead of reading each word and then immediately storing it. I'd read several of them at once, then store them.
The compiler can't do that for you unless you mark them both as restrict.
Ah.
// You mean like this?
while (len >= 4)
{
    auto a = dst[0]; auto b = dst[1]; auto c = dst[2]; auto d = dst[3];
    src[0] = a; src[1] = b; src[2] = c; src[3] = d;
    src += 4; dst += 4; len -= 4;
}
Though for code that simple, it probably won't matter. The hardware will be able to speculate around the memory accesses and run them in parallel anyway.
Erm. With src and dst reversed.
@Mysticial Ah, I forgot to use restrict.
02:43
@StackedCrooked write loops much?
Not that it makes a difference.
Nice. Perfect halving:
restrict is hit and miss.
And it only works on function parameters.
result_u64=4251604
result_sse=2144300
result_avx=1097385
Unrolling doubled up the speed?
Nope it's still the same code. Only changed the uint8_t copy with uint64_t.
02:48
ah
I don't notice any "warm-up" effects on the AVX code.
How long does the benchmark last?
If it's anything longer than like a few microseconds, it's too long to notice the warm up.
The results are in nanoseconds. The avx one ran for 1.097385ms.
But the shortest test finished in 10us:
max=1
result_x86=40976
result_sse=21438
result_avx=10805
===
max=10
result_x86=450455
result_sse=227865
result_avx=116427
===
max=100
result_x86=4560647
result_sse=2256868
result_avx=1172398
===
max=1000
result_x86=45569396
result_sse=22516163
result_avx=11769409
Still fast.
Try throwing in some floating-point instructions in there.
It's possible that the warm-up only applies to the execution units and not the LSU.
*full-width floating-point instructions. Like _mm256_add_pd().
03:30
Ok. AVX is slower in the shortest test:
Number of iterations: 1
  result_sse=9260
  result_avx=15668
===
Number of iterations: 2
  result_sse=20581
  result_avx=11677
===
Number of iterations: 4
  result_sse=37937
  result_avx=22697
What are the units?
Nanoseconds.
Sounds about right.
Ended up using vmulpd and vdivpd.
Uh... divpd is probably gonna do a lot more than you'd expect.
@StackedCrooked It's slow and there isn't full-width hardware for it.
So I'm surprised that the AVX gets much faster at all.
It also uses the AVX instructions on the xmm input.
Perhaps I should build the sse benchmark with avx disabled.
That part won't matter.
It's only the ymm stuff that will hit the warmup.
Since it's the upper-half of the execution units that's power-gated.
The bottom half is always on. And both SSE and 128-bit AVX use it.
And the upper 3/4's power gated on the AVX512 cores.
03:49
I wonder if the Coliru VM supports real AVX.
Or if it does some emulation thing.
Wait, why would a VM emulate it if the hardware supports it?
Oh, it simply doesnt have AVX.
Bonus points if you can reproduce an AVX bug on EC2 or other cloud hardware
If it doesn't have AVX, it would be a couple orders of magnitude slower.
04:02
Bulldozer family.
 
2 hours later…
06:13
why does it look as wobbly as those self driving cars?
06:24
seriously, ultralight helicopters are semi mature technology
not very expensive either ...
 
3 hours later…
nwp
nwp
No amount of rep lets you see deleted comments right?
09:56
@nwp right
nwp
nwp
Someone wrote a comment about how you can move the semantics in C++11 but deleted the comment immediately.
Is it only me that just found out about Herb Sutter's metaclasses?
Mind still blown
nwp
nwp
The proposal article is a few months old now and the video a few weeks.
To be honest I only understood it after the video which probably makes me a bad person somehow.
I'm reading the proposal now, and realized if it went through, it might well be the last time C++ needs some kind of new core language feature
New features can be just libraries
@nwp well I've learned about it from the video so
@PasserBy that's what they said the last time :P
10:08
@BartekBanachewicz Lols
in other news I kinda want to buy the Line6 Helix
nwp
nwp
Let's hope the fragmenting doesn't get as bad as with strings.
@PasserBy I like the "out-of-the-box" approach to "compile-time reflection" (instead it is "let's interact with the compiler". But I think it's kinda sad how it's so much more complicated than "just" syntactic macros or meta-programming Boo/Nemerle style
I agree its ridiculously complicated.
But the complexity might just be justified by how it attempts to let you essentially hack the compiler
Both of which predate this by at least 10 years. And of course there's everything Lisp-heritage or even dynamic (Ruby e.g.) that has had AST-manipulation/AST-generation in the language since... forever.
@PasserBy I think that's the fallacious part. I can write AST-generation without any compiler support (hell, that has been prototyped a zillion times using libclang alone).
The "plus" this achieves is that everything occurs in a single existing compiler pass, mainly.
10:14
I suppose
@BartekBanachewicz #metoo
To be completely blunt, I think the first step ought to be like Cfront, which can be formalized and standardized just fine (like preprocessing is standardized). Then when things are crystalized, we can look at optimizing (that's what it is, mostly) into the compiler for obvious benefits in implementing constraint checking etc.
This works on i686:
`asm!("push %eax" : : "eax"(eflags_mod as u32) : : );`
but fails on i586, any ideas about why?
I am trying to push a 32bit value into the stack :/
@sehe That kind of makes sense. Even though exciting, it does feel like hazards lurking everywhere
In fact, I was just thinking about something along the lines of making it a different language or something like that
10:22
I was missing {} -.-
@PasserBy Evolving the standard has the immediate benefit of keeping adoption. The other route has led to D, Rust, Go, etc. It's only in recent years that some of these have seen any amount of adoption
My concern is with metaclasses, C++ programs, and idioms, can look so radically different, that people can only read a subset of them. But then that might be just my imagination going wild.
If its a different language that is simply a superset of C++, it could do to C++ what C++ did to C if its successful enough.
nwp
nwp
The "simply a superset of C" didn't work out too well for C++. Arguably one of its greatest weaknesses.
I think some of the weakness came into existence as C++ ages, not necessarily because it was based on C
Anyhow, I'm just speculating, while mind being blown
nwp
nwp
I do hope they go easy on the "Interface must be all public virtual no data members" part.
10:36
How so?
Isn't that what people generally mean by interfaces?
nwp
nwp
Yes they do. And I fear they will litter actual interfaces with those "interfaces" infecting my code with pointer semantics and virtual function overheads for no gain.
> Is there any thing to avoid crashes access violation memory , i am using boost version 1.64
 
3 hours later…
13:26
Looks like the committee is pretty keen to push operator<=> so that it makes it in C++20 for sure
meh
I think it's a terrible idea
I like it very much
"Hey guys, we'd like to extend this interface, so instead of like, just defining a fiunction or someshit, let's introduce super-special syntax and core language support for what is ultimately a trivial function"
2 mins ago, by Morwenn
I like it very much
13:45
@Morwenn What makes you like it
14:01
I suppose it removes the need to implement <, >, ==, !=, ...
At least I hope that's what it does.
That was already there, nor does it need a spaceship operator.
One operator to rule them all.
Yeah, that
But there's also the part where it guarantees an ordering in the return type
Au make the automagic deduction of the ordering based on the underlying types when you use = default
And the one-pass guarantee for the tuple-like types
14:35
@Morwenn What does that mean?
@StackedCrooked When <= is applied on an std::tuple, it might first make an < pass on every element then make an == pass on every element again (I'm not sure whether it was exactly that)
While if you have an <=> operators, you can be sure that the < and == will be performed element by element
that
is unbelievably meh
the <=> operator still needs to perform exactly the same underlying operations
and probably in the same order
unless they cache the result of course, but tuple could just do that and do things in one pass without it
the proposal mentions built-in three-way comparison instructions x)
14:41
oh yeah, I'm sure that x64 has one of those for std::string
the implementation can do that with the existing operators anyway if they want to
nwp
nwp
@Puppy I believe it doesn't. There are situations when you need to know if an element is greater, less or equal to some other element. Basically every language including C's memcmp can do that, only C++'s operators cannot and require 2 passes where 1 would be enough.
@nwp If only we had some kind of compiler optimizer that could replace double comparisons with a single three-way if a suitable instruction for that actually exists...
15:10
-(a < b) | (b > a)
which is probably like 3-4 instructions
Trying to watch Lakos video on "Levelization Techniques", and failing again. He goes on and on introducing new terminology to further dissect the nature of the dependencies.
Perhaps I should stick to it and watch all 3 parts.
15:33
FML. My misadventures with too short crypto keys continues.
I have my PGP key since 2003 and I have only been adding sub keys each year.
But it is DSA 1024 bit and I think gpg-agent or its underlying library does not like it and won't open it/use it.
And you cannot just update/upgrade the primary key.
as if it was ever that useful
@Puppy I think the D compiler uses the Visitor Pattern.
a sound point against the visitor pattern
You don't like the D?
15:47
no
Then you won't like Java either, pretty sure they throw around visitors like there's no tomorrow as well.
of course, because design patterns
16:03
@fredoverflow I think that was determined like, a decade ago
@fredoverflow wow such dedication
16:41
I recall that named parameters was mentioned as a proposal or something here. Should this be a feature of IDE instead of feature of language?
@Xeo @Mysticial @ScarletAmaranth Net-juu no Susume took me by surprise. It's soo freaking engaging. Can't wait for the next ep.
the description seems... meh to say the least :D
Well then. Go ahead and miss out :P
I need to resume watching New Game
I like New Game. Esp the second season.
16:52
How reliable are the scores or animelist?
I find that you need to look at both the score and the scores in the written reviews when you scroll down. The scores from the written reviews are usually a better indicator.
and the overall score is not the average of the review scores?
overall is average of everyone's ratings
On the page they only show the top 3-5 reviews. So that's only a small sample. But those scores are usually reliable.
not only of those who have bothered to write a detailed review
16:55
^ Net-juu no Susume reviewer scores (while the average score is 7.57)
scores on MAL follow the usual caveats: sequels are better ranked than the originals (because only the fans of the original watch and rate it), and the scale is 7-9 (because most people don't use all the 10 points on the scale)
Yeah. An average score of 7.4+ is usually watchable. But also check the scores of the written reviews on the same page.
What I find strange is how shows like Haikyuu!! get such high ratings.
I watched 20 eps or so. I liked it but then I forgot to continue watching. (Which says something...)
I stopped rating anything because the shows I watched and rated 10 years ago are on the same page as the ones I would rate today, so these can't compare
Which ones? If I may ask :)
@StackedCrooked school rumble, angelic layer, moyashimon, and all the harem/ecchi stuff
17:06
I occasionally rewatch a few School Rumble episodes. It's always fun.
Funny how this seemingly silly show managed be so memorable.
I started Angelic Layer when I also started watching One Piece. I kind of alternated watching episodes. So my memories of it are kind of intertwined with the early episodes of One Piece :D
I liked Angelic Layer though.
Never heard of Moyashimon...
@StackedCrooked It is pretty awesome. :)
I should get and re-watch Fruits Basket again.
Harem/ecchi stuff I like if well done. I really enjoyed shows like Love Hina, To Love-Ru, ..
@wilx That's also one of my favorites. I have most of the manga as well.
This morning when walking to work I reminded the scene where the two brothers came to get here after she had moved in with her step-family.
The way Kyo pulled her in by her head :P
17:22
Fruits Basket seems like a fun show
@StackedCrooked I found the first fe manags super fun but then stopped reading
@milleniumbug Basically animated GIF anitmation quality for the first episodes
@StackedCrooked I remember Love Hina too. I liked it.
oh look Morwenn as a new pic
17:28
@wilx That was nice too :D
@BartekBanachewicz Picking a non-lewd one was hard
change your profile link to point to the gallery instead
eh I have to get dressed and go out and be social but that's so much effort
damn
why am I here instead
@Morwenn Why not making it easy and picking a lewd one then!
@BartekBanachewicz Then don't. Be like the rest of us. :D
@wilx Lewd is only borderline professional
@BartekBanachewicz wow there is a shitload of namecalling in comments tho.
@Morwenn Like anyone cares about your SO profile pic. :)
Also, borderline is still professional. :D
17:32
@wilx Eh, people do notice it changes :p
@wilx nah already made arrangements
@BartekBanachewicz Rearrange!
@wilx LRiO has proven definitely that people DO care about that
@BartekBanachewicz True.
Proof by LRiO, almost an oxymoron.
Damn, I am so bad, speaking behind his back like this.
17:52
@milleniumbug Now I remember me seeing MAL page several years ago for this, and me seeing "Shojo" in the list of tags
I don't really care for this nowadays
18:05
It's a good show.
Really love the OP song.
can anyone tell me what a jiffy is ?
I mean in the context of the linux kernel
nevermind
Watching Star Trek Discovery, why are so many actors midgets?
19:25
Star Trek Discovery, episode 7 season 1: Being married to a woman you ran from is apparently a good enough punishment for trying to steal and sell Star Fleet ship over 50 times (in a time loop).
This is getting ridiculous.
This is not the Star Trek of my generation. :(
nwp
nwp
I had a thought today. I had some contact with library science people who had to learn some computer science and had trouble with it. One thing they struggled with in particular was converting between number systems and doing calculations in not-base-10. They talked to some CS people and they told them that number systems are irrelevant in practice which really didn't help motivation.
The thought is that the reason it is taught anyways is to get the idea of context-dependent truth/correctness across. Before the number systems they have thought patterns that say there is some truth to learn, like 1+1=2. But then they learn that for binary it's 1+1=10.
It may make it easier to teach them various domain-specific concepts that only apply in that domain, such as programming language syntax. So maybe it's not completely useless after all.
I think the critical part in people "getting" different number bases is getting people to understand the difference between a number and its representation
19:51
Never had trouble with that.
Don't ask me to multiply binary numbers by hand though.
You're weak :D
20:10
Hey all
@StackedCrooked there's a new mahoustkai btw
nwp
nwp
20:42
This took way too long to get to work.
 
2 hours later…
22:23
Whats everybody working on?
I'm just back from sleep
Hoping Catch2 will add Catch::rngSeed back the the public interface ç_ç
Somebody needs to write Catch22
I had to Google to get the joke :/
22:56
Somebody should make an VS add in similar to StarCraft's actions per minute (APM) calculation for C++ developers.
would be cool to track productivity, so that it lights up red when I'm not productive
More depressing ideas? x)
nwp
nwp
So people will start spam-typing before starting to work to get their APM up when it matters?
not all actions count, as real actions
nwp
nwp
Let's also fight about if holding CTRL+Z is considered one action or one action per undo.
23:12
Frankly, a measure of activity, no matter how screwed might be useful
We might find that coding after 2:00am is harder because you're not issuing enough action
@StackedCrooked it's not responding
Hm, curl works, but the browser shows a blank page.
@nwp APM is partially why I can't play RTS games. I'm a lot better at FPS - although I still suck and I work better in a team setting.
There needs to be a "programming-assisted" type of RTS. Where you can use per-prepared scripts to do commands.
@StackedCrooked it does
@sehe Ok. Fixed it
I forgot to escape " inside "".
Strange that this didn't seem to fail when I tested it yesterday...
I must truly suck :P
23:22
:)
You suck at testing I suppose

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