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00:07
One day we'll have all the PCIe lanes
00:25
Does GPU have any use other than gaming or machine learning?
Graphics? ... like watching video streams online.
Well, I was thinking more in terms of writing code
For machine learning there is something called TPU.
Also I have compulsive disorder, instead of getting paper work done (some of them are a couple of months overdue). I keep on insisting finishing this A.I. book first. My buddy told me it's a reference book. My compulsion made me reading the whole thing :'(
Me: This book is not well written, some sections I need to read twice to get what it means.
One Buddy: Only twice?
Another Buddy: It's a reference book, nobody reads it from start to the end.
@DemCodeLines Yes. CAD, Finite element analysis, computational fluid dynamics and computational geometry do as well.
00:45
@JerryCoffin Basically math operations only then? I have a program that does a lot of code scanning, parsing, serializing/deserializing etc. operations and I'm wondering if I can use attached GPU for help
@DemCodeLines Math (especially things dealing with, dense matrices) is certainly one of the most obvious applications, anyway.
As far as things like parsing, serializing and deserializing go, I suppose it could work out, but it's not immediately obvious (at least to me) that it's at all likely to. Those mostly tend to be fairly linear, and for a GPU to help, you need something you can do in parallel.
@JerryCoffin Does this paragraph/sentence make any legal sense?
> ENTITY may use this software commercially for technology reviews provided that ENTITY does not produce, manufacture, or otherwise holds economic interest in the product(s) and/or service(s) that are being reviewed.
I should probably get a fucking lawyer.
01:00
Sounds like open source software or shareware. All it says, albeit ambiguous, is that you can not make money from someone else code.
Does anyone knows how FPGA is used or how I could use for machine learning?
01:41
@Mysticial Sounds like it's trying to say somebody can't publish a review of the software if they have a conflict of interest because they have a vested interest in what they're reviewing.
Calling it badly written is a pretty serious understatement though.
@TelKitty An FPGA is a basically a big collection of re-programmable logic gates, so you can program up digital circuitry of your choice (up to some limit on the total number of gates). Programmable logic generally only allows fairly slow clock speeds, so it's only good for cases where you can do massive amounts in parallel.
02:02
@JerryCoffin IOW, I got the message across, but in a hideous way. hahaha, yeah I think I'm gonna need to reword it.
02:13
@Mikhail So I have some Cascade Lake benchmarks. But they're not that useful since it's all behind a VM and I can't see the hardware configuration.
02:53
@ABuckau 8-9 years, given 5% interest rate if the operation runs smoothly. Land is not used in the calculation, only the panels, labour and various fees. But land is usually appreciating asset and generally going up in value given long enough time.
In 9 year, all the capital used in purchasing the equipment and labour for construction, plus various fees and permits, including interest accrued should be paid off. Although the calculation has a lot of variables, including electricity prices, company tax rates, insurance costs etc.
Solar farm is still on the schedule, but it will be smaller in scales - the land we are interested in is small (3-4 hectare), power line does not support very large current. But it's closer to Sydney and easy for management. I am not comfortable taking too much risks for the first solar farm project. There is always room for expansion if this one is successful.
03:09
What was the effect you were looking for?
03:34
@TelKitty and profit per month after that time?
03:52
Why does it sound like you are trying to suss out some commercial secrets from me? >_<
@ABuckau I have just given you all the figures from which you can work the numbers out if you really want to.
Why are you so interested in this anyways?
04:49
2
Q: Interfacing a FPGA to an Intel processor

Maxthon ChanSo I gave my laptop a long overdue processor upgrade and it left me with a spare Intel Core Duo T2300E processor in perfectly working condition. So I am thinking maybe I can forgo the standard Intel (or nVidia) chipset and slap an FPGA to it and begin using this assembly like something on the lin...

Why is this closed as too broad??
I still have no idea of how to use FPGA to speed up an neural network ... wait, I do, it's in the answer.
05:15
I finally did it. I've been coding for years, and I used mutable in actual code. I had a setting that involved a lot of computation, and I realized I could "cache" the computation. But for aesthetic reasons I wanted void getSetting() const
fuck, I can just calculate the parameter in the constructor
sooo close
 
6 hours later…
11:07
I would love to see how this planet warming thing turns out in 20 years. Deep inside, we all know more people = more total fuel used.
11:46
Well we might have some more natural catasrophes helping out with that whole people problem
and if droughts lead to significant water/food shortages we'll also see some "conflicts" help out with that
12:21
@Mikhail How expensive are those Rome chips going to be anyway? The intel ones were marked as $many :P
12:46
@Mikhail lol
You don't need mutable very often.
I sometimes use it for mutex members.
But not very often.
13:41
@Puppy do you think that that solution is better than avoiding -iquote and just doing #include ".../include/header.h"
13:57
yes, far superior
part of the problem is that when you include something, you have to expend mental effort to figure out what the relative path is, which is a waste of time and drops mental context
another part of the problem is that it makes it hard to copy/paste includes
and another part of the problem is that if you move a file, you have to change all the includes as well as all the includes referencing it
and the includes referencing the file don't take a fixed format either so you cannot simply grep for them
thank you very much for the explanation
very helpful
broadly, changing the include path based on the path of the current file is just pointless, unnecessary, and makes everything more complicated for no benefit
14:29
What’s the difference between RTX and GTX in NVIDIA cards?
14:46
@DemCodeLines Ray Tracing hardware and Tensor cores?
why?
and a few hundred dollars
15:13
@Puppy Another advantage of your suggested solution instead of my earlier one could be that if you do #include "header.h" instead of having a path based on the root of your project like you said, you don't know where is that file, if you want to open it
@Aurelius If your environment doesn't support something like right-click open file for #includes, get a new environment.
15:54
@StackedCrooked I use it for mutexes quite a lot.
16:36
@Mgetz for GPGPU programming, I’m not sure which one to get.
16:46
@DemCodeLines OpenCL? CUDA? Vulkan? DX12?
16:59
@Mgetz I have a built in Intel so I can already do OpenCL/DX, but I’m looking at CUDA just because of better support and more content available online
@DemCodeLines with Those two I would say it doesn't matter? But honestly with intel you're almost better off on the actual CPU
should a build system take into account that people might include .c files into other .c files?
or .cpp is the same
#include "file.cpp"
17:19
omg why @Aurelius
and wouldn't the compiler just pretend like it was all one file? or do you like want the build system to output 2 object files?
17:44
@Aurelius If people want to do that weird shit, let them use their own make rules
@A.H. That's the whole point of a "unity build"- they usually run a lot faster but are a bit of a headache
@Puppy not familiar with that build system
it's more of a technique than a system
just took a quick glance
does it really cut down on time?
they're headaches to maintain but yes
as you avoid repeated header inclusions in seperate TUs
18:02
So there's this guy who for the past month has been running probably half a dozen VM instances on MS Azure in an attempt to sweep the records table (including Pi). But he doesn't know what he's doing. He keeps saying his computations are "stuck", and "not moving", or some unrelated errors. And then complains that it's costing him $7000/month.
@Mysticial does he expect techsupport?
or you to pay for this?
@Mgetz So I finally told him that he doesn't know what he's doing and that all the records in the past 50 years have been done by people with either programming or IT experience.
He tells me he has 20 years of IT experience.
@Mysticial I've found server admins that know things like memory profiles and how application shapes work better than the devs that wrote it
That's probably true given that he can spin up an Azure instance. But the fact that he can't file a useful bug report other than, "it doesn't work", "it's stuck" is really telling.
well a good server admin would have checked their IO by now to see if it was swapping
18:11
@Mgetz He managed to finish one computation. It was quite inefficient through.
The fact that he jumped into multiple large+expensive computations without asking me any questions is also telling.
Most people who are attempting a very large computation will at least run their settings by me first to sanity check it.
That's where I usually point out inefficiencies that are obvious to me, but not them.
@A.H. @Puppy For example if you were to define a template in file.hpp and then implement it in file.cpp one could do in the main file: #include "file.hpp" and #include "file.cpp"
that could be another technique
you could do that, but it would be pointless since you're effectively defining it in the header but in a way that makes it harder for other people to figure things out
instead of including the implementation directly in the header
ultimately it makes absolutely no difference as you must include the template implementation when you wish to use it
you're just making it harder for other people to find the implementation
so to go back to the opinionated discussion, isn't opinionated to not take into account of this usage pattern as well?
18:19
to a certain extent, yes
but there's a difference
not taking it into account even tho I don't like it either, would be having an opinion
firstly, unity builds are very rare, so not including that case is having an opinion but a very, very small one
secondly, unity builds are usually done by advanced users, so they're more than capable of taking care of themselves, further decreasing the size of your opinion
it's not so much having an opinion as just supporting it not really being worth the time
if you wanted to support unity builds you could do
@Mysticial even if I wasn't going to consult you I'd do a much smaller test run to see how it scales
then probably confirm with a few trials
@Mgetz Exactly.
Though I can't tell if this guy did any small-scale tests at all.
not everything scales linearly, I'd want to see as the digit count goes up how does the memory scale etc
and depending on the application dynamically scale things efficiently
18:30
@Mgetz I can't disclose the details of this, but there is another (big) party involved that interested in pulling off a Google-like stunt to advertise their product. And the proposal that's going around (which I've seen) basically has resource requirement calculations for various potential targets.
The other thing is that because there are now multiple parties interested in using my program to generate publicity, I'm thinking it's probably time for me to drop the hammer and start charging them.
@Mysticial I would try to have an excel sheet where I can plug in the digits and get values
@Mgetz The program comes close to that. You enter the settings, it spits out the space requirements.
@Mysticial that would help, I'm assuming it doesn't always say things like Hard IO requirements
"hard I/O requirements"?
@Mysticial IO to disk, etc
18:32
All it says is that it needs X bytes of data on storage. And Y amount of RAM.
It doesn't try to estimate speed or the amount of disk I/O.
yeah I'm talking about bandwidth to disk etc
Yeah, there's no minimum bandwidth requirement. The program doesn't care what your bandwidth is. But it will obviously affect the speed of the computation.
exactly, if you're going for a record the faster you go the better
It's actually kinda ironic to say it, but the program doesn't care about "performance". Regardless of how slow the hardware is, it'll still run. So it's not like a real-time network application that'll drop packets if the connection is too poor.
@Mysticial oh I know
19:06
@Puppy thank you very much, have you seen this? onqtam.com/programming/2018-07-07-unity-builds
Seems like they also have big drawbacks
certainly do, that's why they're rare and if you're looking to make build support code I wouldn't be too interested in supporting them
19:31
@Mysticial did you explain to the guy that would be subantially cheaper to build a single white box? You can set the record in three weeks with a 15k jbod style storage node.
@Mikhail The guy can't be helped. I also don't generally recommend custom building a machine to people who are using the cloud unless they show competence in actually building computers.
Because if you don't know what the hell you're doing in terms of building hardware, don't count on being able to build something to set a record that way.
You should reconsider. The guy could own a system for 2 months of compute time. Building a server isn't too hard, and knowing what your doing doesn't help when you have a problems. People that are pros rely on proven configurations and cargo cults to get their job done. It's pretty easy to build a jbod array.
The guy is basically a help vampire on SO.
1. Doesn't know what he's doing.
2. Doesn't know how to debug.
3. Can't explain things clearly.
4. Ignores advice.
5. Gets triggered when told what he doesn't want to hear.
I feel like running some dudes code isn't a technically challenging task :-)
I've basically told him to stop wasting his money until he gets his shit together. And I'll leave it at that.
@Mikhail That's because you're actually competent.
19:44
@Mysticial Some people still haven't figured out the difference between 20 years of experience, and one year of experience repeated 20 times.
9
At work j recent had the cloud vs no cloud discussion. Anyways the cloud is a rip off. Amazon gpu instances are $3 an hour. The break even point is about 400 hours. But after you break even you actually get to keep the hardware.
@JerryCoffin haha. I'm probably one of those.
@Mikhail Break-even depends on a lot on whether you're thinking in terms of the cost of just the hardware, or a team of IT people to maintain it. Also depends (heavily) on opportunity cost (how much profit you could get from investing that money some other way).
@Mysticial I doubt it. Compare what you know of templates to what you did five years ago (just for one obvious example).
Yes. What Ive been noticing is that most people's break even points somehow don't inckude that you actually keep the hardware. So really the break even point comes much earlier.
@JerryCoffin I meant that I didn't figure out that the guy had 1 year of experience x 20 as opposed to 20 years of experience.
@Mikhail I wouldn't underestimate the maintenance part of it. For example, my hard drive towers - which I thought I've built pretty well get a lot of random dismounts. It's not often enough to disrupt my workflow, but it's enough to jeopardize something like a world-record Pi attempt if I were to run one on it.
And TBH, I don't know what the cause is. And therefore I don't know how to fix it.
IOW, I'm not sure I'd consider myself capable of building a custom machine to set a Pi record.
Throwing it on the cloud is an expensive solution to more-or-less not have to worry about hardware reliability. Though even that doesn't escape it because we had one in this 31.4t run.
Now if I had a lot more money, I could get multiple drive controllers, different types of HDs, different mobos, different SAS cables, etc... and then track down the problem from there. But these are additional costs not counted in the raw hardware cost of what you'd normally spec out for a computation.
Cloud services already do this. And once they find the right combination of shit that's reliable, they can then scale it up. And that's a big part of what you pay for on the cloud - the research aspect of getting a reliable combination of shit to work together.
20:13
So, I've been running a system for 3 years that has had "1 random" dismount, and I think that was become somebody accidental pulled the power plug. The alarm goes off when it "dismounts".
But really the argument to not use the cloud is about specifics. Its about calculating that at a 10x premium you're better off doing it yourself. Perhaps at a 2x premium we'd reconsider.
The real issue I've had is that sometimes builds completely fail. For example, I have 4 Norco JBOD builds (24 bays) and one of them keeps eating data, and I have no clue why. The rest have almost perfect uptime. If the cloud was a 2x premium I'd have little problem moving to the cloud, but at a 10x premium it makes sense to count one system as a total loss and move on.
Fuck, $7k a month is a lot of fucking money
I'm actually going to upgrade my "case" game by getting one these at work: amazon.com/Supermicro-CSE-846E16-R1200B-Chassis-Black-Redundant/…
The price tag is really only $300 more than Norco because SuperMirco includes PSUs
@Mysticial Ah, fair enough.
@Mikhail But does it include the hearing protection necessary to approach within 50 yards when it's running? :-)
20:37
@Mikhail That's more than most people make. But it's still cheap compared to the GCP computation.
The guy said he was computing a bunch of things to the 50 trillion digit range and it was "only" costing $7k/month on Azure.
That's bullshit.
Because a single instance that's capable of doing just one of these computations is already over 7k/month.
Yeah, the cost effectiveness of the "GCP" computation was pretty messed up
I've been pretty impressed with this companies offerings of JBOD arrays: 45drives.com/products/storage
According to my "math" you pay around a $2k premium for them to assemble it. The only thing I don't like is that they use software RAID so the performance isn't great.
Most of the people who don't know what the fuck they're doing just do some system or hardware RAID of JBOD, don't adjust any of the settings in the program to compensate, and run it.
IOW, they just leave the program's swap settings at default. (1 path with default buffer and default bytes/seek tuning)
But anybody who actually reads the documentation will either know to test the program's own RAID-layer or to at least ask about it.
Basically, the Storinator build is $24k for 30 drives @ 14 TB. If you pass the drives through (no-RAID) you should get about the speced performance.
@Mikhail how do they connect to the mobo?
Can they simultaneously sustain the full bandwidth of all the hard drives? Or will the controller bottleneck it to something stupid?
2 RAID controllers, but you can turn off the "RAID" functionality and they will appear as separate drives.
Controller is 12 GB/s from a good company (also you have 2 controllers)
20:45
24 GB/s is enough to destroy the GCP record in a fraction of the time.
Wait, they're entire systems?
Yes, thats why all the stories you've been telling me are pretty funny
They don't plug into the PCIe slots of some bigger machine?
Yes, the entire system is $24k
Then that's useless.
20:47
You need to get the bandwidth into large multi-socket machine with 1+ TB of ram.
for the computation.
Oh, they can put more RAM sticks in and dual socket. Obviously, that costs more.
Unless that all-in-one system has a 24 GB/s of network bandwidth.
@Mikhail They won't go more than 256 GB.
Anyway, at least they list the model # of the controller.
@Mysticial So, you need to do what I did, where you contact them for a quote. In my case I offered to move my RAM so it didn't effect price. They also have a 10% education discount.
Wait, that's 24 Gbit/s not 24 GBytes/sec.
That's not enough.
24 GBit/s is about the same as the GCP shit.
Yes, but its much cheaper
Fuck, if you really wanted to, you could probably bump the node up by adding two more LSI controllers.
20:52
To get 20 GB/s, you'll need 7 of them.
That's minimum 56 PCIe lanes. That's doable on a dual-socket I think.
No I did the math wrong.
You need 14 of them.
That's stretching it.
21:19
Yeah, so its pretty easy from a technical perspective to get massive performance. You do what we did for high-speed ballistics like cameras where you're connected to a SSD storage node. The real problem is $. I'd be somewhat interested in the cost effectiveness of the computation, although obviously Google doesn't want to talk about that.
@Mikhail This actual GCP computation was obviously not efficient. But it can be optimized down to under 100k without any changes to y-cruncher itself.
100k is still absurdly expensive though.
There's also going to be a price/time curve.
Since you're limited by the network anyway, you can go with a smaller compute node which will be cheaper. But the smaller node has less memory, so it requires more disk/network access - thus increasing the run-time.
1) its also not obvious how you'd optimize it to cost less. It would probably go slower.
2) So, that money is lost, but if you build a computer, you could ostensibly use the comptuer.
21:32
You should use this GPU system to set the PI record. For the LOLs.
BTW the one we got at Beckman has more SSD backed storage.
references and const make my head hurt
why?
shouldn't it be the same as const pointer
and then some dude says it compiles and links because his int is not const
but then should it not compile because compiler saw no prototype for is_even(int&)
or is MSVC just silly
I'm not going to read the question, but basically there is a case where you typdef a reference and when you use it as a argument (aka void my_func(const my_typdef& item) the const does nothing. The compiler or static analysis tool will warning you the const does nothing useful. Personally, I've been coding for years and still can't produce a cogent statement as the origin of the problem. Because if you do my_func(const std::vector<int>& something), the static analysis tool doesn't warn you.
Underlying issue is that we want the actual data held by the vector<> to be const, rather than the internal structure of the container.
wait
are you saying in that case you can use non static data members of something in my_func?
non const member functions * (my brain did a oopsy_
I think I misunderstood you
22:27
@Borgleader Head scratcher?
-2
Q: in Java how can i convert byte[] or inputstream object to tapestry5 upload file

Serhat OzI have a byte array. How can i convert it to tapestry upload file. @Property private UploadedFile file; void setupRender() { String str = "PANKAJ"; byte[] byteArr = str.getBytes(); file = byteArr; ??? }

Not sure if Turkey is one of the shit hole countries I'd push to "rate" limit
They came close to being a real country
23:16
Life is sometimes fantastic. During the public/oral evaluation of the course most of it was 5* . During the confidential part I have 3 people accusing me of discriminating against them, reasons ranging from religion, sexual orientation to ethnicity.
First time I've had that complaint in 21 years.
@CaptainGiraffe I believe you're discriminating against me for being a deity, by not sending me virgins as I've repeatedly pointed out is the duty of any moral person!
@JerryCoffin Dude, remember the redhead in 2014? She was sweeter than a honeybee. You should have said Hi at least. (Not a virgin though)
@CaptainGiraffe My friend Ricardo (whose ego is at least equal to mine) is the one who wants redheads.
@JerryCoffin Ah still going with the wife spiel I see.
@JerryCoffin Seriously this is fucking me up. Sure I'm a big white guy. This makes me uneasy about that.
@CaptainGiraffe Being serious, I can't blame you at all. People have lost tenured positions based on nothing but completely unsupported accusations.
23:32
@JerryCoffin The people deciding on these matters are not my reasonable boss. But rather legal people not concerned with my well being.
I know my pointing that out probably doesn't make you feel any more comfortable--I apologize. Unfortunately, my pointing it out or not won't change facts.
@CaptainGiraffe Yeah--and their purpose is most likely to protect your employer, not you.
Well, if push comes to shove, I have about 1000 previous students of mine downtown, 50 of who are in a managerial position that would happily pay me twice my current salary.
Always nice to have a fallback, of course--but obviously preferable that you never have to use it. OTOH, as I recall, you've been teaching a long time. Maybe a change of pace would provide new challenges and some fun.
@JerryCoffin Indeed, I've been in a few research groups at the university. That has always seemed like the natural progression.
Doctorates are horrible coders.
Prof -> assignment > PhD student > Giraffe saving 400 hours > really fun output.
I know one or two who do all right, but yeah.

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