@Mysticial ...or not: "A large enough mix of Intel AVX-512 light instructions and Intel AVX2 heavy instructions drives the core to request License 2, despite the fact that they usually map to License 1."
Looks like we all have 280 now. Sweet!
-Paul
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@Mysticial Yeah--I s'pose it could arise if you had a big chunk of AVX2 code and cherry picked a few AVX 512 instructions that happened to be particularly useful, but it sure doesn't seem like something you'd see very often.
@Mysticial Yeah, the most obvious would almost certainly be to interleave a couple of (mostly) unrelated instruction streams in the hope of maximizing IPC (but I'd have to re-check port usage to be at all sure this would stand any chance of doing much/any good).
The mechanism I suspect that's in play here is that there are multiple (conflicting) SIMD modes that the core can be in. 1. In 256-bit mode: It can run FP instructions on two ports. No 512-bit instructions. 2. In 512-bit mode (license 1): It can 512-bit AVX. But only only FP instructions on 1 port. 3. In 512-bit mode (license 2): It can run any sized FP or integer on two ports.
Code that consists only of 256-bit FP instructions will run in mode 1. Code that consists only of 512-bit integer will run in mode 2.
Neither of those modes are optimal for both workloads. So the processor drops down to mode 3.
More like you can't you sizeof on it, you can't use decltype on it IIRC, it's mandated to work with range-based for but you can't call begin and end on it, etc...
Ouch. I just figured out why I couldn't build lld. I'm using cygwin on windows. By default, cygwin uses case insensitive filenames. Some files lld uses have #include <cstring>, which has #include <string.h>, which has a #include <strings.h>. In building these cpp files for lld, there's also some -I options passed to llvm dirs. One of these directories has a Strings.h. Instead of including that cygwin implementation file strings.h, it includes this Strings.h.
Which is basically a duplicate of the __int128 check. Maybe they should make the existence of tokens sfinae detectable or invent a compiler magic std::token_exists<foobar>::value.
I guess I can use #if __linux constexpr bool linux = true;, but that doesn't seem worth it.
For the specific example of the constexpr bool linux it makes it so much easier to just put the whole expression there twice than to split it over 7 lines.
Maybe it's that general code naturally has to cover more cases than code for a specific case and therefore is more complicated.
The multiple specific cases are longer in total, but you can see them one by one which makes the cognitive load lighter, especially when you are only interested in a specific case anyways.
throw new AbstractSingletonTransactionAwareStatelessPersistenceManagerServiceProviderResourceDependencyInstanceInterceptorAspectFactoryFactoryProxyBeanStrategyBuilderLocator.PersistenceAnnotationManagerFactoryInvocationDispatcherHandlerProcessorDefinitionInstantiationException();
@Ell In the general case it would happen because code is broken down to smaller particles than humans can keep mentally organized/still understand in context
It solves no problem, @gnat. The site is for helping. If I discover a question in my particular niche after a day, and it was accidentally ban-hammered to something else, why would the OP have to wait extra? If 100k rep users cannot be trusted to do this responsibly, that means the banhammer feature should be axed instead. — sehe17 secs ago
I'm tired of straw men. "Not seeing the use and seeing downsides" (both articulated and supported with arguments) is "unwillingness to wait"? Ok, I guess. @gnat. And being given "a way to post things" is hardly a special privilege (anyone and their dog can post answers). Again, if it's about "excess privilege" then the logical thing to do is to drop the dupe-hammer feature. That makes a lot of sense (I don't really know why I need the hammer. Voting works fine, on average) — sehe29 secs ago
> Attributes are only appropriate if they satisfy the guideline: "Compiling a valid program with all instances of a particular attribute ignored must result in a correct implementation of the original program?" 5 | 14 | 5 | 1 | 0
Fuck yeah, at least they're starting to get this right :o
I still have yet to properly test the case where code that is mostly "light" 512-bit code with a sparse amount of "heavy" instructions stays in license level 1 (AVX) instead of dropping down to level 2 (AVX512).
So everytime someones logs in, the password is saved in cleartext in memory in a globally available object
the api technically check for private parameters and try to escape them in eval calls but the simple fact that they're using eval almost everywhere in the code base it's purely idiotic
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix first thing you don't do when you find a security issue: announce it in a public place. Instead you find a the security team/developer and message them privately
@ratchetfreak tbh most people in the US don't have access to that hardware, but there is a reason that Intel has fabs in the US and Germany for government contracts
@ratchetfreak nah, the thing is a global and possibly passwords lives accross requests as it's stored in a local thread. Passwords are also stored in a pickled session database on the hard drive... All of this in clear text of course.
@Mgetz Although this would probably be taken as "the unsollicited code review". It probably won't help a bit unless you pack a demo exploit. Devs tend to have high hubris and great incentive to maintain their superior persona inside the company/project
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Needs the sandwhich approach then InfoSec: "You need security review because of structural issues like X, Y, Z", A: "Oh we're fine, we know what we're doing", InfoSec: "No do you don't: DEMO". A: "foot-in-mouth: okay, maybe we should have a security review"
@Mgetz Very good point. One best made by a security reviewer, perhaps :)
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix depends on who gave them the quote, we are considered expensive but having seen our competitors code... we're worth it. Quite a lot of our business is people balking at our price, getting someone crappy to do it, then having us fix it for a lot more than they were quoted in the first place.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix neither strictly speaking does salesforce, the core group of execs came from Oracle... but they recognize that putting their customers at risk is the exact opposite of what brings in business
They're slowly removing modules from the community code base to the enterprise code base... And honestly the enterprise code base is also a clusterfuck of weird things
@Mysticial IIRC they have a small fab that makes processors for defense in Arizona, apple does too. The chips cost a couple thousand a piece and never get to the consumer market
@Mgetz yeah this reminds me one thing, our job is particular because if our product fail to work, this can completely prevent clients from doing business. Like invoice that don't get printed.
I'm curious as to why Stack Exchange laid off 20% of its staff, and crucially why is there a discrepancy between the PR statement "we cut sales and marketing" and the apparently reality of lots of developers announcing on Twitter they'd been laid off.
Given the amount of time people invest in cr...
The case in which a question really was closed in error as a dupe, and the reopener really can answer the question in a non-dupe way is significant enough not to overlook here. I get the intention behind this, but I feel like it's a very, very heavy-handed approach for something which really isn't that big of a deal. ("Not that big of a deal" in the sense of, "there really aren't a lot of users who have this power and are abusing it.) — Makoto24 mins ago
@sehe Oh. Come to think of it, I don't see a lot of SE on my twitter feed. It's mostly Anime and cosplay spam from Fiora and company. So I easily could've missed it.
And a lot of computer stuff.
I just scrolled through it on my phone. There's nothing in the top 100-ish that says anything about this. It's all political retweets from last night's elections.
> Four interns are brought into Fog Creek Software's Manhattan office and given 12 weeks to design, develop, debug and ship a computer program that will, among other things, help millions of frustrated users fix their relatives computers via the internet. Boondoggle Films presents a journey through the world of software development from the perspective of a unique software startup, four quirky interns, and the world of the geek.
@BartekBanachewicz (I'd never ever refer to the fifth step in a myxolidian scale as such. It be very rare for me to even bother with functional harmony if the whole starting point was modality)
Just take 1, to, max 3 flavours and jam. Once you do, for a week or maybe longer, replace 1 and continue to jam. After a while, you can recognize/hit the stuff without thinking about it. Best part: the useless cruft doesn't take your time.
@BartekBanachewicz I was surprised that the channel id wasn't AdamNeely or so too :)
@JohanLarsson In what respect? In the sense of "Embedded could be a lot worse" I think it qualifies as "Fair, to the point, ambitious". But in the sense of concrete projects, I'm not too sure I'd like it. So many hard-cast constraints.
@johnregehr @path1ckey Nothing to do with magic optimization passes: just intrinsics replacing malloc/free: https://godbolt.org/g/1YfZGT (-fno-builting-malloc)