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00:27
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I've got two performant hybrid radix sorts in there
what if I make self pilot drone to fight bush/forest fire?
fire extinction drone
nwp
nwp
You would destroy fire fighter jobs. You monster.
fire fighter usually gets to extinct city fire and rescue neighbourhood cat/kid
we are talking about wild fire here
00:39
From what I've read, they mostly burn books
FYI, that's why the eReader is called an Amazon Kindle
00:54
are you accusing amazon for starting all the forest fires in california last year?
I mean, they did sell me the matches
What would happen if we would let big block of ice (100m³) fall from space into our athmosphere
would it create rain?
Not directly the water vapor would dissolve into the atmosphere
@Brogrammer +1
thank you sehe
00:59
But amazon is based in Seattle, they probably think kindle is great for their weather ... if amazon is based in, say San Diego, they probably call it the likes of 'sea breeze'
I was thinking making the drone to scope and dump dry ice into bush/forest fire
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix too small ... probably all vaporize when enter atmosphere
let it be 1000m³ then
01:28
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix time emerge gcc
real    27m48.436s
user    163m47.488s
sys     22m59.834s
model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2683 v4 @ 2.10GHz
also gcc 7.2.0 building gcc 7.2.0
model name : Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3210M CPU @ 2.50GHz
I don't understand, how much ram do you have?
intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/processors/xeon/… it says the max memory size is 1.5 GB but I guess it's the max memory the cpu can directly handle
Hard to compare but I'd say your CPU is likely to win because not only because it has more cores but because you're also likely to have much faster memory than I have
oh wait it's 1536GB
              total        used        free      shared  buff/cache   available
Mem:           188G         36G         35G         26M        117G        151G
Swap:            0B          0B          0B
Lost 30 GB to ZFS
01:46
Using 30 GB for ZFS*
don't trigger me to go on a rant about how ZFS sucks compared to hardware raid
You're the one doing it
@Mikhail Stop making silly comparisons then.
Have you noticed how much oxygen sucks compared to carbon monoxide?
I heard ReiserFS is a killer file system!
It is. In many senses of the word (I bet Reiser4 became much more reliable, but it would be too late for many to notice. JFS and XFS have taken the cake)
Anyways, all these are shit tier solutions, Lustre, GPFS (Spectrum) or bust :-)
01:52
Are any of these valid options for a NAS / backups of Windows machines? (Or should I use RAID)
@Borgleader You should use shred
Also, WTF? RAID is not backup
@Borgleader Only valid option for Windows is hardware RAID. There is a good article by Toshiba (?) showing how storage spaces quickly serializing any array that isn't pure SSD.
@sehe Isnt there a RAID config that mirrors files on drives so if one dies you can still keep your data?
@Mikhail I think something went wrong with that sentence.
@Borgleader Still not backup
why?
01:55
> showing how storage spaces quickly serializing any array that isn't pure SSD
what?
Storage Space (TM): you got 24 drives, but when you add them with RAID6 equivalent parity they end up going as fast a single drive... Which really sucks.
Serializing?
I'm looking to have a NAS for storing files that I can share between computers (mostly videos and music) but I also want to store backups of my machines on them. I need a solution for surviving a drive dying.
There seemed to be a discussion of various filesystems vs RAID going on
@Borgleader it's called redundancy but not necessary backup
so I asked if any of them was a valid solution for that the above.
01:56
@Borgleader That's reliability. Backup would e.g. have old copies to recover from corruption
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I want redundancy for the backups ill be storing
if that wasnt clear
@Borgleader Ah. That wasn't clear.
Oh, well, my bad.
Anyhoops I use ZFS for that. And yes that means I backup of samba.
So yeah, I want a machine to be a media file server + backups storage.
01:57
For the rare things I store on a windows thing
Samba is also terrible, its only single threaded because it was written in the 90s. The same guy wrote rsync, which also sucks for the same reason.
My colleague told me about a setup where, he has like N drives + a parity drive or something like that.
0
Q: Using Linux virtual ethernet interfaces (veth) to test a custom TCP stack

StackedCrookedIf have set up a pair of virtual ethernet devices veth0 and veth1: ip link add veth0 type veth peer name veth1 # Bring the interfaces up sudo ifconfig veth0 up sudo ifconfig veth1 up sudo ifconfig veth0 1.1.1.1 sudo ifconfig veth1 1.1.1.2 Inside my application I connect to veth0 using a raw ...

^ Any Linux freaks here that can answer my question?
@Mikhail Why don't you go and improve things if it's so important (my hunch: it's not important enough, obviously)
@sehe Don't got the time to improve it. But you're not wrong, serious users use other software/networking solutions. I've been using this crap because my lab is financially destitute, but also because I messed up and thought it would work...
02:08
@Mikhail I use rsync all the time and now I feel offended!
@CaptainGiraffe Its single threaded!
@StackedCrooked Does it work on a non-custom implementation?
@Mikhail I'm single threaded, you clod!
3
A: Parallelise rsync using GNU Parallel

MikhailI would strongly discourage anybody from using the accepted answer, a better solution is to crawl the top level directory and launch a proportional number of rync operations. I have a large zfs volume and my source was was a cifs mount. Both are linked with 10G, and in some benchmarks can satur...

people might be at least 2 threaded - conscious thread and subconscious thread
02:10
@milleniumbug Hm. I should check that. (Now, is there a quick way to setup a HTTP server (on veth1)?)
With Python 3.5 that's gist.github.com/TheCatPlusPlus/70f0384a2e314d4e85ec (courtesy of Cat)
hmm, that doesn't bind to the interface, but to an address, so dunno if that'll work for you
Hello all. This is my first Stack Overflow chat message ever. :D
Hello. If you have a C++ question, see that room chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/116940/c-questions-and-answers
if you want to lounge around and/or complain about C++, you want this room
Heheh, okay thanks.
Has anyone here tried Bazel? (I've been going through the tutorial and started my way through the documentation)
It seems fairly well thought out
But then how do 14 emerge in the first place?
Poor @Borgleader, drowned out by Captain...
C++ is gr8 m8
I've already solved this, so this is just a complaint, not a help request.
This code
creates this output
When I changed the loop to
for(auto i = 0; i < points.size(); i++)
it worked perfectly.
I still don't know why, I'm just going to blame C++ in general lol
Youre aware that for(Point point : ....) creates copies right?
also more auto&
02:33
It does? Wow, I'm really stupid
@DefecateRainbows You were very successful gathering code help from here.
3
@BorgleaderSee the top of my wall of images, I rationalized posting it here because I'd already solved the problem and wanted to complain about C++, although I failed at doing that because of my own lack of knowledge.
Alright, thanks.
Sure you fixed it, but your complaint was essentially "ugh, the first one didnt work and I dont understand why so I'm gonna blame C++ for it" and that is pretty much asking for help understanding why it didnt work
Fair enough.
@Mikhail good old UNIX spirit
02:38
I've scooted over to Questions, sorry for being stupid ;o;
02:54
ahh... & * have so many different meanings
I feel like a dozen or so different keywords, so that there's one for each usage, would be so much better
<- is this something that should go in this chat or the Questions chat? 0.o
03:27
I am so pedantic ... even care about colours of the wires on the board, they must correspond to the correct meaning of things ...
04:00
well fuck the police, I'm out for a few hours
04:35
0
Q: Dereferencing causes crash, even not NULL pointer, so why?

Jude GaoI tried to scan the whole process for some reason, but it cauesed crash. I do not understand why that happened. What's another equivalent but safe way to do so? void searchAddrByValue(const int value) { int *p = (int *)0x00FFFFFF; while ((int *)0x0FFFFFFF >= p) { if(value == *p) ...

/CC @Mysticial :|
 
1 hour later…
05:51
wrong window :P
yeah
wrong window focus
 
1 hour later…
07:14
The program's behavior is very different than what I expected.
Ah well.
partially ruined my drone already
07:35
but just the propeller and the shell
electronic parts are intact ... I think ...
 
4 hours later…
11:33
@JerryCoffin Where did you the detailed language and compiler knowledge???
you certiainly dont get it from learning the languages from the core texts like me
what books would you recommend?
nwp
nwp
@TelautonomousKitty You might be able to order those separately. They should not be overly expensive. Though I would wait until they are unusable and not just a bit scratched.
libcaca has been a standard for years :p
nwp
nwp
That's just the VM name, right?
12:32
@nwp they are still usable but a bit crooked ...
price is not too steep, but installation is a bit tricky
mainly because I lack experience
I should be able to order body and 4 x propeller for $30 - $50
@nwp Weird stuff.
@nwp Seems like he's checking out some malware and he wanted to sandbox it in a VM.
@Permian not sure about him but I got most of my compiler knowledge by watching presentations by compiler writers and my language knowledge by reading authoritative sources on the language
I don't get it. (Super interesting talk though.)
nwp
nwp
12:48
The canaries?
Ah.
I guess I learned a new term then :P
> Random canaries are randomly generated, usually from an entropy-gathering daemon.
^ Sounds like some dark horror fantasy genre.
said canaries are the incarnation of chaos (entropy gathering)
@thecoshman According to Google walking from Ghent to Lyon would take 135 hours. That's 11 days if I walk 12 hours per day, or up to 22 days if I only walk 6 hours a day. How many hours would be reasonable?
I suppose it depends on whether there's anything interesting to do besides walking.
Oh. And I'd need to find a place to sleep every night. Hm.. that sucks.
nwp
nwp
13:05
I would recommend you stick to civilized areas in the beginning so you can call a taxi or pizza when needed. Also getting a travel buddy who did that before would help.
@StackedCrooked you could try with a tent so you can camp out in a deserted park or under a bridge or something, lolol
Not gonna do it. I was just wondering :)
You could ask Andrea! They're probably right next to you in class and know all about using it in a Ubuntu VM and not using Boost at all: stackoverflow.com/questions/48591592/how-do-i-use-boost-rand‌​om/…sehe 15 secs ago
@StackedCrooked There's no art in that
14:58
I linked to the resources you need to understand that. Just don't expect to understand the C++ compilation model fully in minutes. Take your time learning this new language. (Note: if you're in fact in the same course as Andrea, remind them to accept the answer if it helped :)) — sehe 32 mins ago
lol seems I guessed correctly, since Andrea just responded.
With a vampiring follow-up, but still.
 
1 hour later…
16:43
ahaha
"In Capitalist America, bank robs you!"
16:56
What happened
truth did
I feel I'm missing context
it's in contrast to all those Soviet Russia jokes, except this is extra funny because it's true
17:14
don't assume everyone reads the same newsfeeds as you do...
"In soviet russia $(inverted relationship)" jokes are fairly common
e.g. "In soviet russia game plays you"
17:27
sure but did a bank actually steal some money or was that just an out of the blue remark?
maybe you haven't noticed, but over here in the West, banks stole a lot of money.
that banks pull all kinds of tricks to increase margins is nothing new but outright stealing?
uh, yes.
they stole an absolute fuckload and been fined billions
not as much as they stole, I'm pretty sure, just the bit we proved they stole
got an article I can read?
here's one from about a week ago
17:43
I hope they give back what they stole to the rightful owners.
highly unlikely
 
1 hour later…
19:37
Okay can someone enlighten me here
>
register uint8_t* stackPtr asm ("sp");
std::cout << "Stack pointer: " << (void*)stackPtr << '\n';

intptr_t retAddr = *((intptr_t*)stackPtr);
The print statement shows that stackPtr is non-zeró
But when I run this, the third line segfaults, and lldb shows that stackPtr is supposedly zero
register lol
What?
actually
lldb shows that stackPtr is not zero
This is so fucking weird. Is there some optimisation involved
I mean, there isn't because I turned them off completely
why no volatile
@Morwenn Makes no difference
Okay, I'm lost. LLDB shows that RCX is filled with some pointer value, yet the instruction it segfaults on, which loads from RCX, segfaults with fault address 0x0.
*((intptr_t*)stackPtr) violates strict aliasing rule
19:49
If anything, it would violate the pointer semantics introduced by P0137, which are bollocks anyway, but the issue seems to be on machine level.
Since I cannot understand the behaviour of the disassembled frame.
20:00
I just used manual inline assembly now. At least it works...
20:24
@Columbo register is a hint only (like inline). So volatile is not strictly the same (you might know that in this case the same code is generated, but)
@sehe You realise I'm using register variables
...
Not the register keyword as in to tell the compiler to allocate this variable in a register
the register keyword is literally that. I was only referring to that
@sehe In this context, it is part of the syntax to declare a variable that will be initialised with the value of a register? I said "makes no difference" because I tested it, anyway :-)
20:26
I think only the latter is relevant
That's halfway there :-)
@sehe You said that the register keyword is only a hint. But that seems to be unrelated to our discussion above, because I never used it in that form?
Possibly. I'm not sure register uint8_t* stackPtr asm ("sp"); has some special magic meaning.
uint8* stackPtr asm ("sp"); would do the same thing anyway
Would it?
the register keyword is meaningless
20:29
That's odd. I thought it was required grammatically
that would be a compiler extension you are talking about
Wait.
> main.cpp:6:12: warning: ignored asm label 'rsp' on automatic variable
long a asm("rsp");
So register is indispensable.
compiler extension then
@sehe /cc the above.
And the GCC manual:
> The register keyword is required, and cannot be combined with static.
@ratchetfreak But asm labels are part of the language grammar? TIL (potentially)
@Columbo well :) TIL
20:33
@sehe Well you can discard all knowledge of this sorcery, because it's broken sorcery :-)
but the C standard doesn't specify that a certain architecture must be used
@Columbo their meaning isn't
@milleniumbug That wasn't my question
@sehe That doesn't cover register variable declarations as shown above, though? Where would the type and identifier go?
I didn't say that.
5 mins ago, by Columbo
@ratchetfreak But asm labels are part of the language grammar? TIL (potentially)
20:38
@sehe Right: labels, not declarations.
However, I didn't know that either, so thanks for pointing it out!
Okay, I can see why my approach wasn't working
> The only supported use for this feature is to specify registers for input and output operands when calling Extended asm (see Extended Asm).
Oh the joys of extended asm. It's esoteric, but it works well
@sehe I have a treat for you: youtube.com/watch?v=vG1nsxy46AA&t=148s
Blows all other recordings clean out, IMO. The climax has so much pathos.
@Columbo live* version
@sehe Cheers!
:)
21:06
@Columbo never heard these pieces
@sehe You never heard Medtner's Fairy Tales? You're missing out!
Never did indeed
Just for fun, added 10 different distributions with those properties: Live On Coliru. Pick the normal distribution, unless you know what you're doing : ) — sehe 7 secs ago
 
1 hour later…
22:35
@StackedCrooked or... fly vOv
@StackedCrooked wow. I love watching these old tech videos
I love the idea of TV shows being able to broadcast software for computers
meh, depends on the desired properties
22:50
@thecoshman Me too.
23:42
oh no, imagine that, sum types in 2018

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