@Rick Hmm...I suppose it depends on your definition of reasonable, and probably on how familiar somebody was with LLVM and writing a lowering module for it. The good point is that WASM looks like a fairly conventional instruction set. The work I was involved with was for a decidedly unconventional architecture, that imposed a lot of difficulties. A more conventional target would undoubtedly be faster and easier, but I'm not sure how much faster and easier.
On the other hand, while WASM is fairly conventional in some ways, it's decidedly averse to LLVM IR in at least one: WASM defines a stack machine instead of a register-based machine. LLVM's IR is really designed for register-based machines, and all their back-end infrastructure is oriented (heavily) toward register-based machines.
:46722059 Come on now. Lets' try to keep it civil, and avoid language that might result in flags.
@Rick C++ itself doesn't care. LLVM, however, is pretty heavily oriented toward registers. LLVM has a target-independent code generator that lets you specify characteristics of your target, and generates code based on that. But one of the most important parts of the description of the target is about its registers--how many registers it has, how large they are, what order to allocate them in, their names, and so on.
Since none of that applies, I guess you'd have to walk its DAG to generate instructions on your own (but I've never done anything similar, so I'm really quite uncertain).
To put it more simply, I can kind generically tell LLVM that it's supposed to generate code for a machine with, say, 64 registers of 64 bits apiece named (say) R0 through R63, with normal alignment requirements, and such. It also needs to know names of instructions to do things like add, subtract, and so on. that's enough for it to take something like A = B + C and generate code like load R0, B; Load R1, C; Add R0, R1, R2; Store R2, A.
If, however, I gave it register descriptions for X86-64, that might be something like: mov eax, B; mov edx, C; add edx; mov A, eax`. But, with no registers at all, you can't tell it how many registers are available, and things probably go south from there pretty quickly.
@Rick That does mean that even though it's running on an x86 (which has registers), WASM can't access/use the registers directly, and WASM code has to do stack things instead of register things, even though the underlying hardware has registers.
From my understanding of llvm, the moment you can build some valid llvm "machine code". You can then target any other platform that has a working backend.
I'd say the new JVM is more likely to be python. I've seen a lot of post in the recent year claiming that MicroPython will replace C on microcontrollers
My application is actually compute intensive, but I think there are ways to deal with this in Electron/Vue. Fundamentally, I don't know how what I'm doing is supposed to be done. The best I can tell no device manufacturer does the Qt work in house.
I mean I can already do that, I need to analyze etc. But I already made the back end, and it works. Whats killing me is the front end. There is just so much code.
Wtf are you two talking about. @the french Canadian, the difficulty is fucking writing all the fucking code, including user interaction, the buttons to do different image filters, the OGL to support zooming and interacting, volumetric rendering, etc. And yes, you need to avoid deep copies, and guess what? You also need to store more images than you have ram for.
Yeah, I'm still doing a little embryo work. I came up with a cute way to do a Live/Dead (TM) screen, its going into the paper this massive re-write is for.
@Mikhail well I'm not aware of everything you've done so far. I've been in a similar yet much simpler situation. But I once worked on a project, resizing bitmaps in JS by porting some native code in c++ to js. Memory limit sucks.
But the fucking PhD level analysis is easy, building the GUI is too time consuming. I also built the equipment, am listed as co-inventor on the patents, etc.
I'm also so fucking tired, but I need to be ready when the idiots/non-technical people that pay me come back on Monday
I've also been having trouble finding a CRO to outsource some of my wet lab work. For example, I could probably give $5k for a stable transfection of a certain plasmid, as were running out of time. But I can't really find anybody interested.
I'm kinda starting to get sloppy doing wet lab work, for example, yesterday after coding for 8 hours, I accidental got some contamination on some fixed samples. Had to refix them. It was a novice mistake, somewhat embarrassed by it.
So, the company I worked for lost our marketing guy. He left last week. Problem is that you need engineers doing sales. But I doubt there is any market, we're doing most of this stuff for amusement.
Anyways, now that I fixed the build times on my stuff by using opaque pointers for UI elements I now I have less of excuse for chatting on here.
eh, I'd be happier if I was reading my own code. Most of my days nowadays are debugging why everything breaks when nobody understand what's going on. I'm the last barrier to fix things.
I'm thinking if we code fast enough, we can outlive those who have wronged us by exploiting the well known tendency for time to slow down in the direction of motion (time dilation).
I'm amazed how things badly written can be so popular sometimes. The platform I work on is pretty much a cluster fuck most of the time but it's only viable to use it because it has a big community and is quite flexible to work on
I'm mostly amazed how the technical support of the enterprise edition of the software tell us this or that would be difficult to implement but I can fix the bug in a few hours top. I've been convinced for years that their dev are full of shit
This can be logically proved: you can have maximum two out of the three things: speed, quality and low price. So if you customer want it fast and want it cheap, then it must be of low quality.
For us is when they want it fast and people barely test that it works. Then fun time fixing a production server when someone wanted something released asap
instead of making deployment schedule and have everything under control
@Mikhail the first few version of the platform were developped by outsourced firms in India
6 or 7 version later the foundation on which it was built is slowly getting fixed but people still add bad design of their own. Imagine how bad it must be if updating a few record takes around 1s per record and that's not so bad
For example Qt is fucked because there are 3 different ways to lay out a widget, and for backwards compatibility reasons they opted to have overloaded functions. Among other things. Also none of the layout methods are functional compared to vue, and the default widgets insufficient.
@Mikhail Up until version 8 all password were saved in cleartext by default. Up until version 11, password were saved along the session object for cookies. Making it possible to retrieve all passwords regardless of them being encrypted in the db.
But performance wise, they rolled their own version of ORM which is completely inneficient. You'd see somewhere in their code
for obj in objs: lines = obj.search(lines)
But these case forces to do at least n searches behind the scene when you can make batch searches directly from objs and group the lines later for example.
There's a cool thing called a computed field, you give it some dependencies and when the dependencies are modified, the field get recomputed. But if the field is stored in database, and you have to recompute more than a few field at boot time (fresh computation) it will take forever because they don't build a dependency graph
so if you have a somewhat complex dependencies, and you're not lucky, it may recompute multiple time the same field making it run forever
In general it's a pretty cool piece of software but when you look closer, we could go on forever how bad everything got glued together. It's a wonder it works
I have this strange case where calloc zeroes out another variable’s memory. I created a hashmap data structure where I put some data. It works fine when I “get” that data immediately, but if put something in the map, make a call to calloc and then try to get the data from the map, “0x0” is returned. Commenting out the calloc makes it start working as it should. I have no clue why calloc is overwriting memory and how I can prevent it
This weird thing happened, and I managed to condense it down to just this small program:
int main()
{
int a[20];
a[21] = 5;
return 0;
}
this program results in puppies puppies puppies continuously scrolling by on the terminal until I hit control-C. What's going on?!
Edit: What is ...