« first day (2960 days earlier)      last day (2217 days later) » 

02:43
This thanksgiving, no news about turkey being pardoned. Turkey gives no thanks.
When Coliru is unresponsive and I check the rackspace "emergency console" I often see this. Any idea what could cause this? (@sehe perhaps?)
03:05
18
Q: How to check which process is using most memory

sandeepWhen I check free in one of Prod server it showing 70% of memory is being used: total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 164923172 141171860 23751312 0 4555616 20648048 -/+ buffers/cache: 115968196 48954976 Swap: 8388600 ...

Probably some process is hogging memory.
@StackedCrooked Don't recognize that, actually. I'd go with UB/corruption but that's me being C++ contaminated.
Other than that, infinite loop due an error condition>
20 GOTO 10
Or something.
That idea
03:19
'kill -9' is unix/linux server admin's best friend
04:07
3D chocolate printers are so awesome, imagine you scan yourself, then 3D print a chocolate version.
04:44
Wow, this South Park episode is really good. (I should probably watch more South Park.)
 
2 hours later…
06:59
Help! I have been swept away into a dark subspace of the internet. The sweet kitty is helpless and psychologically harmed beyond repair and awaits to be rescued from the depth of this abyss!
This internet celebrity has 112k subscribers ...
 
3 hours later…
09:59
I should be able to switch from Python 3.6 to 3.7 /o/
More optimizations, better start-up times, pkg_resources equivalent in the stdlib, and it's already pretty good that way ^.^
 
3 hours later…
sbi
sbi
13:26
"...and all members and bases are moveable". Shouldn't that be "...and all members and bases are moveable or copyable"? — T. Bergemann Nov 15 at 11:05
Can someone please confirm this?
I dunno. :-(
FWIW, I made the answer CW. By now, so little of it was done by me anyway.
IIRC if a type is copyable it is also considered moveable because copy is a valid move
sbi
sbi
14:25
@Morwenn Mhmm. cppreference.com says: If a class has non-static data members that cannot be moved, the implicitly-declared or defaulted move constructor for the class is defined as deleted. Maybe I am being dense here, but that seems to contradict that statement.
14:40
@Morwenn 'should'
@StackedCrooked I'd be interested in reading how you have Coliru setup
15:06
@sbi yeah but if they can be copied they can be moved (most of the time)
unless you created a class with a copy constructor and a deleted move constructor, but as far as I know the standard makes no effort to properly support such classes
@Feeds let's not mention the end of The Mist then :p
sbi
sbi
@Morwenn Maybe. But according to the wording on that site, if a member cannot be moved then a move operations will not be defined by the compiler. (Note: I am fully open to the possibility that you might be right. I just feel the need to be really sure before I go and change that answer.)
I don't know whether I'm right v0v
 
3 hours later…
18:10
A defaulted copy/move constructor for a class X is defined as deleted (11.4.3) if X has:
(10.1) — a variant member with a non-trivial corresponding constructor and X is a union-like class,
(10.2) — a potentially constructed subobject type M (or array thereof) that cannot be copied/moved because
overload resolution (16.3), as applied to find M’s corresponding constructor, results in an ambiguity or a
function that is deleted or inaccessible from the defaulted constructor,
(10.3) — any potentially constructed subobject of a type with a destructor that is deleted or inaccessible from
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin "...that cannot be copied/moved..." being what's in question here, right?
@sbi Yes, I believe so.
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin And that's a quote from the Holy Text?
However, it's the rest that gets tricky to sort out.
@sbi From N4659, to be precise.
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin Which presumably has become part of the Holy Text?
18:15
I believe it's what was voted in as C++17, yes (but I'd have to check to be completely certain).
Yeah, it was the final working draft before C++17 was approved.
sbi
sbi
Ah, so there's differences to what's available today? Note that the answer says "C++11". Uh oh, this is a can of worms. :-/
@sbi I could probably still dig up a draft from the C++11 time frame. Let me look.
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin No!
No need for that. If the rules changed for C++14 and/or 17, we need to add a new section.
Sigh. I teach C++. When you do this, you need a rule of thumb with no more than half a dozen clauses for any complex thing that programmers need to make decisions on. Really, people do not remember anything more complex. (Actually, they do not even remember half a dozen rules for the 247 things they constantly need to make decisions about while writing C++ code.) The old rules had four clauses, the C++11 rules add 2 times 6 to that, and now it gets even more complex.
18:30
@sbi Yeah--and the worse part is there are really two entirely separate things to keep track of: one set of conditions for when the compiler will declare the ctor, and a whole separate set (those above) to figure out whether it'll define it as deleted.
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin Damn. I should probably just switch to D. :-/
@sbi Fortunately, the rules for whether the compiler will declare a copy/move ctor are pretty much what we've always known: any user-defined copy/move assignment operator, copy ctor, or dtor will prevent it.
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin Yeah, but that by itself is the old rule, and then you get more rules atop of that, and those aren't just a few, but way more than the old ones were...
@sbi Yeah, and I agree--that's a real problem.
@thecoshman What do you want to know?
18:48
@StackedCrooked what sort hosting you use, things you've had to do to scale etc.
@sbi I think this was part of why Dave Abrahams (among others) was so convinced that having implicitly defined move ctors was a mistake. It makes the rules complicated (and if memory serves, there are still a few rather strange corner cases where it can still generate a move that ends up trashing data you still needed).
@thecoshman My VPS in on Rackspace (after they acquired SliceHost). I don't scale. Coliru handles all requests sequentially. One thing that improved responsiveness is that I reduce the job timeout when the request rate increases. (It ranges between 5 and 60 seconds.)
@StackedCrooked I guess that destroys my idea of using it for bitcoin mining...
Also, compile jobs don't block page request to the webserver.
@JerryCoffin It has been tried though.
@StackedCrooked I suppose that was nearly inevitable...
18:59
One guy even made some kind of mining plugin using the coliru api. (I can't find it online anymore though.)
My VPS was once hacked and was used for mining. The reason why they could hack it was probably a weak password. (It was a 8 character dictionary word, but not a common password.) What I wonder is, how were they able to brute-force it? SSH server introduces a delay between login attempts.
I also changed my SSH port number after that. That stopped the annoying login attempts.
@sbi I suspect one of the reasons Scott Meyers quit C++ is because he couldn't confidently teach it to others.
C++98's rule-of-three could be taught using a list of dos and donts.
Now we have all these different approaches to things.
@StackedCrooked Do yo not see a high enough load to justify parallel processing?
@thecoshman Sometimes. But I don't have the stamina to do it.
Coliru development equals editing the code that is live. So I can only do minor enhancements.
And I don't have the patience to setup a proper deployment pipeline with a staging server etc.
@thecoshman But there's separate server processes for HTTP and HTTPS. So now it's possible to run 2 jobs at the same time. Does that count? :)
I have considered splitting of compilation and storing shares to a "micro service" tough. If I go that way then I might be able to do it. (Since I can develop and test the service independently of the webserver without needing all this staging stuff.)
19:27
Core i9-9900K発売記念イベントに大物ゲスト降臨 http://ascii.jp/elem/000/001/775/1775774/
Two questions:
1. What the fuck is that big Core i9?
2. What's the poster behind him?
19:57
@StackedCrooked offline crack. So they nicked the file with password hashes and crack it. Prolly a matter minutes or less for a dictionary word of 8 chars)
user7659542
20:12
Why the heck is Boost making stuff so "complicated" with: acceptors, endpoints and sockets?
user7659542
Couldn't they just keep it as easy as it already is in Linux, ie sockets and that s it?
user7659542
Why did they feel the need to introduce new terminology/concepts
Ironically, that's the part that's really really straightforward. Linux also has the distinction but makes it realy hard to use correctly because everything looks the same (an fd)
ASIO taught me to use BSD sockets correctly, and avoiding the many pitfalls, even if I'm not using ASIO
user7659542
@sehe Why do you need to introduce the term "acceptor"? Even when people study networking at uni or smth like that such a term is never used. Someone just connects to the socket and the connection is accepted.
(Also, that's ASIO, not Boost (it literally exists separately and is slated for standardization)
@traducerad I have no such need. But it is a separate type of socket.
@traducerad Yup. It "connects to" one type of socket, and the resulting connection is an inherently other type of socket.
Before ASIO, everybody and his dog would call that "acceptor" a listener, so if you want, you can pick that random "wrong" or "overcomplicating" name.
user7659542
20:19
So you are saying that if I create a streaming socket in Linux, under the hood it will create a second type of socket ie an acceptor type?

AFAIK there are only 3 types of sockets: stream dgram and seqpacket
user7659542
@sehe I'd say "a process listens on a socket". There is no such thing as a listening socket
It's a bit like people who are used to assembly complaining that there is both a while (c) {} and do { } while (c); in C ("why complicate") or C programmers complaining that there is std::string and std::vector<char>` in C++. Why complicate? You can just use char* in both cases!
@traducerad Have fun sending data on the socket "that your process is using to listen on"
@traducerad And they're also represented.
@traducerad Isn't that obvious? I'll even go as far as to claim that if you open a file, the resulting file-descriptor points to something else than a socket entirely, even though superficially they're the same, and literally from the same domain.
It's called polymorphism, and yes, it exists everywhere, like, in this case, in the kernel.
user7659542
@sehe To what is the fd pointing in that case?
More to the point, why must a networking library use the same broken abstractions, if it can improve the semantics without cost?
@traducerad "pointing to" might have been a bad choice of words, but you're on the right track there.
3
A: Design rationale behind that separate acceptor class exists in ASIO

seheThey have a separate set of operations. Also, they have a separate set of socket options that apply, e.g. acceptor_.set_option(boost::asio::ip::tcp::acceptor::reuse_address(true)); This distinction raises the abstraction of the interface and makes it easier to use the API correctly. To p...

The comments at the main question there might help too.
So, it's ok if your preference is otherwise (just use the C API). It's shifting the burden of justification to criticize other designs for not buying into your beliefs/sunk cost fallacy/preference, though.
user7659542
20:37
Ok, now I understand better. You do indeed have 2 sockets one on which you listen and one which you open (after the three way handshake) once there is a connection. Boost does make a difference between those two sockets while BSD doesn't. In C you do however have the listen and accept functions, but they take the same fd as parameter. One may argue that this is to some extent a bit of a lie... BSD is lying
user7659542
@sehe
user7659542
On the other side BSD is hiding that complexity, because as a programmer you usually don't care whether "physically" you have two sockets AFAIK
user7659542
you only care about whether or not you are accepting a connection at that point.
In fairness, UNIX style (and specifically kernel) interfaces have often been designed in this way. It made sense at the time and in the specific domain.
I specifically like that you managed to stay away from adding the knee-jerk "_but_ boost does make a difference". I think that's the fairest basis.
@traducerad Boost just does it differently, and it may well be better (I think it is, because the distinction is always a bit fuzzy. Just look at the self-documentary value of basic_acceptor<>::set_option now)
@traducerad Yeah. To play devil's advocate here, you could argue similarly that using void* for all your variables hides complexity :)
Reminds me of Intrinsic Complexity (the complexity of your domain) vs. Accidental Complexity (see eg infiniteundo.com/post/19910636303/…).
If you try to hide intrinsic complexity you just make leaky abstractions and/or interfaces that are hard to use correctly.
user7659542
@sehe I am not sure I understand you correctly. Is the point you are trying to make, that it is good that you can now set specific options for every socket separately in a clear way?
20:45
Yeah. The interface makes it obvious that you cannot (usefully) set e.g. SO_REUSEADDR on a non-listening socket.
user7659542
@sehe debatable, but valid argument
IDEs will even make it more easy in that you can type tcp::acceptor:: and it will complete the options available (see boost.org/doc/libs/1_68_0/doc/html/boost_asio/reference/ip__tcp/…)
It's fundamentally friendlier than saying "Hey, it's an int. Good luck figuring out the supported state transitions for the invisible object that handle refers to"
@fredoverflow You wouldn't be the first one to propose oranges
user7659542
@sehe At what time do you usually do some live coding?
Not anymore. livecoding.tv went rogue
Also, I have a sufficiently demanding job now :)
user7659542
@sehe What are you doing atm?
20:57
I'm a developer at Magnet Forensics these days.
user7659542
@sehe Working as a freelancer?
Just a wage slave :) Couldn't be happier
user7659542
Where I live cpp freelancers get 500e/day, quite easily...
Oh, yeah. I'm lousy at making money. But I love my job
user7659542
@sehe you could love your job and make a proper amount of money by being a freelancer :p
21:03
Not at this company. I agree, but I'm content to trade some security for margin.
user7659542
I can't imagine how much people can get if they work in London for example
I have told myself that same thing many times. If so pushed I might dive into the deep end one day
user7659542
(I see you coming.. COL this COL that, I know)
user7659542
@sehe "one day"
user7659542
We all have that "one day" where everything will be great
user7659542
21:04
:p
Yup. I'm slowly starting to think I might not be totally inept at the business side of things.
user7659542
@sehe Business in what sense. Like selling a product?
user7659542
Or selling a service like a freelancer
@traducerad Oh, don't get me wrong. Things are pretty great already. Just, one day I might be willing to risk more. I /do/ expect that might lead to a more honest life attitude
@traducerad That
user7659542
@sehe Speaking about honest life attitude. Have you ever worked as a consultant?
21:06
15 years (on paper). I considered myself software engineer the whole time, though :)
I do tend to gravitate to the consultancy side of things, but love to actually go and deliver on it too.
user7659542
It has good and bad sides. One of the good ones is that you can leave a company quite easily. The bad side is that the consultancy firm makes a shit load of money thanks to you while they actually don't do anything
user7659542
This makes me crazy. Especially when they afterwards refuse to give you a proper wage
user7659542
although you know how much they ask other companies for your services
Yup
user7659542
BTW, do you happen to have any experience with RTOS?
21:08
I never felt too bad about it, but I also realize that I'm much happier since I started following my true interest in 2013 (I got "sniped" away by a startup)
@traducerad Not. Basically not at all. Though as a C++ adept I might be predisposed to understand the kind of platform :)
user7659542
@sehe What is your true interest?
I like non-routine areas where the quality of work matters directly and immediately (so, usually more system programming or maybe advanced business logic). In practice this is why I also like C++, because it tends to select for interesting projects.
quick question
I'm in no way a fanboy, but I'm a fan of the ecosystems that require it (hint: not the ones that use it regardless)
user7659542
@sehe Have you ever tried safety critical software?
21:12
Not professionally. Although maybe if you count software where a bug might accidentally shift a few dozen million euros.
user7659542
@sehe In that case safety critical software might be something for you :)
It does fascinate me, in that I like when s/w strives to guarantee the correctness and safe failure modes. However, I've heard enough to be criticial at intakes (particularly when companies value their certification more than actual reliability).
I've heard stories where the need for certified safety induced a strangle-hold of old tech.
user7659542
@sehe this sounds like defence and aviation industry
And automobile software companies, medical equipment too.
user7659542
On a sidenote, I am extremely far from being a cpp expert. I just started paying more attention to it a couple of days ago
21:16
I truly believe that 90% is up to the particular team at the particular company, so I'd very much get to know them
user7659542
I am trying to send some datagrams from a desktop to an embedded device
user7659542
the desktop combines Qt for the View while the Model and Controller use Boost
Datagrams are so much fun. And hard to use reliably. Though, if you don't assume anything, it's always surprisingly reliable.
user7659542
is it normal that the only official documentation I have is this: boost.org/doc/libs/1_41_0/doc/html/boost_asio/reference/ip__udp
user7659542
?
user7659542
21:18
@sehe Indeed, it is crazy how much one person is able to change the opinion other people have from a company
Basically. I usually scour the source first (closer/easier to navigate), also boost.org/doc/libs/1_68_0/doc/html/boost_asio/reference/… is slightly better.
Lastly, the introductory chapters of the Boost docs are vastly underrated: boost.org/doc/libs/1_68_0/doc/html/boost_asio/overview.html
user7659542
@sehe ok. And from there you start looking at all the API's functions until you find what you need? I am not looking for a technical answer, but rather for an approach: I -for the moment- have no clue about how to setup a socket which can send and receive datagrams. So I am just looking at all the functions the API has to offer and will try to build an application that way. I don't want to just lookup code online from other people.
@traducerad It also informs my own actions at the places I work: If I see things that genuinely seem important or having potential, I'll personally put it on the agenda.
@traducerad Yeah. The samples are nice for obvious reasons (they tie all the dry docs together), but if there's one favour you can do yourself when learning the library, it would be to read those introductory chapters. Even if you just scan the advanced topics, that will teach you all the concepts you need to be aware of to write excellent ASIO code.
I wish I had discovered this earlier myself.
@traducerad Normal if and only if you need/want documentation that's roughly a decade old.
user7659542
@sehe How so? :)
user7659542
21:23
You used to just copy random people's code without understanding it?
I had focused on the samples and [reference]() as entry points. I encountered so many life-changing insights on Stack Overflow (David Schwarz on general networking, Vinnie falco and Tanner Sansbury come to mind), and always wondered how people could have gained such a profound understanding.
Then recently I grokked the intro chapters (mostly to get a view of the interfaces that changed in 1.66 to match the Networking TS), and, much to my surprise, found that most of these things are documented there.
user7659542
@sehe Are those people going to become the next bjarne stroustrup?
Nah. But I hold them in no lower esteem.
user7659542
Can you actually somehow work for Boost? The same way you can work fro Red Hat or Canonical?
I think there might be a handful of paid positions. But I'm basically guessing. It would all be sponsorship anyways
I think Stroustrup's main merit might have been political, and much of that has always been circumstantial (you have to be at the right place at the right time e.g.)
Bell Labs in the 70s would be such a place. Personal genius might be a bit overrated (Stepanov might count as a visionary example - although I cannot be too sure).
user7659542
21:32
@sehe They nowadays seem to still have an office in Belgium. Antwerp is not so far from Rotterdam... :p
Other people who I personally think deserve as much respect and are likely just as smart or possibly loads smarter would be Miguel de Icaza (of Mono/Xamarin fame) or e.g. Brian Behlendorf (bringing ZFS to linux kernel)
@traducerad The 70s is a long commute for me. I don't have the best timetraveling equipment here.
user7659542
@sehe I am currently looking at their open vacancies. They wrote: "When there’s an opening at Bell Labs, we aim to fill it with the best and brightest. "
user7659542
I like such statements. This on one hands means that if you are competent you can ask an above average wage
user7659542
and
user7659542
you won't be surrounded by a bunch of Ding-Dongs who can't write a minimum of proper code : p
21:42
@traducerad Nearly everybody claims that. It's open to more question whether they follow through with it.
user7659542
@JerryCoffin I have to admit that in the coutry where I live (Western Europe), I have rarely seen this. And the few times I saw this, I did apply and could see that they weren't lying
@traducerad I don't think so. I can imagine, however, the C++ Foundation hiring a few people.
@traducerad Well, I've seen a few that would have been happy to hire bright people--but the salary they were offering was around half what the best could expect to get...
@traducerad Bright people are fostered. You don't need to have all rock stars. I have equally good experience with bright juniors
But yeah, the culture defines whether they have the ambition to attract/retain bright people with experience.
user7659542
21:57
@sehe Fostered, how so? I don't quite get the point you are trying to make there.
user7659542
At the end of the day as a business owner, you ideally, want the creme de la creme
I mean, to me it's not all important that companies "hire" the top talent. It's actually a bigger tell when they are able to "grow" their own generation of them
@traducerad Depends solely on what you want to achieve (of course, can be seen as shifting the definition of "crème")
user7659542
@sehe Why do you believe it is more important to be able to grown your own generation? It can be extremely valuable to have a top engineer from another company come over to your company in order to learn from him, because he has seen other stuff and another point of view
user7659542
having home grown boys usually means he thinks in the same way as he always has done
user7659542
ie the way the company thaught him
22:01
@traducerad I don't think it's "more important". I do think it's a better indication of good company culture
@traducerad Yeah. The trick is to balance the "echo pit" against the "everybody is here for 4 years" thrill factory
user7659542
@sehe 4 years? I usually tend to go with 2
user7659542
I leave every 2 years
Well, my track record is highly skewed by spending 15 years at a general contracting firm
user7659542
@sehe but after how much time do you go to another customer? :)
Also, I intend to stay a lot longer than 2 years. Just startups are a fickle thing. Either they fail or they succeed, both mean you frequently have to look elsewhere
@traducerad I stopped doing that ~2014 remember (it used to be 2~8 months with some repeat/extension projects taking up to 2 years in total)
Gah. 2015 more like. But I didn't notice typo
22:30
@sehe With Bell Labs in the '70s as a prime example.
I like to believe so
I doubt much of anybody would argue the point.
I wasn't there. Maybe they secretly all came in as gifted aliens
@sehe I was there (though in the '90s, not the '70s). If they were aliens, their disguises were pretty good, anyway.
lol. I defer to your informed opinion then :)

« first day (2960 days earlier)      last day (2217 days later) »