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08:42
Morning
 
1 hour later…
09:50
@ABuckau Ah, Reminds Me Of “Ah Shit There We Go Again!!”
 
2 hours later…
11:56
I am forced to stay on the farm 1 more night because I have lost a chicken. Hopefully she will come out of her hideout tomorrow morning. It happened to me once with another chicken.
12:36
and then a few months later a horrible rotten egg smell will come from that hidey hole
13:09
Anyone ever used a Windows build server? How does it typically work? Do you ssh to the Windows machine and start the build using the command line? Or is it like a server application running on the Windows machine that listens to build commands?
@StackedCrooked I always used it with build agents, so automatically starting it
don't they often monitor a repo and on each commit they start a build?
I've used teamcity and Jenkins, teamcity is more integrated with visual studio
Yeah, I've had just simple build testing on every commit and a nightly integration tests suite
It would spam failed builds into a slack channel
Interesting. Thanks.
We currently build our Windows binaries on a Linux machine using mingw32. Now we're considering switching to VS compiler.
yeah, the company I'm working for is also doing windows builds with mingw at the moment
13:17
It's easy to automate things using Linux. We don't want to sacrifice that when switching to VS.
depending on what you want to do it can be really hard or sort of easy
I mean nowadays you can just install WSL and run an ssh server just like under linux
lol, I get that
Right, I forgot about WSL
Switching the build system to CMake will probably be the first step we need to take.
Currently it's autotools, lol.
it was challenging to keep the unit complemetely headless when we did a bunch of the integration testing because it involved some opengl and CUDA and that sometimes refuses to work without a display attached under linux
@PeterT I see.
also, the drivers for those things can sometimes not be shy about just stopping and showing a windows dialog error box instead of spilling the error into the shell
13:24
Well, I hope we won't run into that.
But then again, even a missing dll file is reported using a message dialog on Windows.
oh yeah, that was a pain too, the amount of times we had to pull out depends.exe was way too high
 
2 hours later…
15:01
@PeterT in combination with CMake ?
15:22
yes, currently the dreaded conan/cmake/mingw stack, ran inside a docker container to add another layer of fun :P don't know if I'd recommend
but I haven't found anything better. I might be looking into spack one of these days to see what it offers
 
2 hours later…
17:18
you don't even need WSL
it's built in now and maintained by MS
I meant WSL for the bash part
I assume most people don't expect to SSH into powershell
eh... if you're doing stuff remotely on windows... it's usually powershell
you'd be surprised
particularly now that powershell has a linux build
for sysadmin stuff, I've rarely seen it for dev stuff beyond .net or msbuild only shops
if you're doing a mixed env it's useful
I know a few admins that use it for that
they still use bash locally, but pwsh and bash can talk pretty easily
Personally I'd never use bash to sysadmin a windows box
 
4 hours later…
21:27
Folks, there was a world-famous bug caused by an if-statement with a newline but without a curly brace.
if (condition)
    do_something();
I vaguely recall that it was done at Apple. But I don't remember the name of that incident.
I'm trying to track that incident down for illustration purposes. I've got a few people on my team who write if statements like that.
Does anyone have an idea how can I track it down?
in short you can demand people adhear to any standard you can enforce with clang-tidy
I'd educate them first, then enable the tidyfier in a little while.
Good luck educating them, anybody that writes code like that is broken
21:35
... or really-really green.
idk, I saw that a lot more in old code from the 90s
My guys were in kindergarten at that time. Convergent evolution of bugs, I suppose.
In some universe they thought they were being "real" coders by writing C-style code like its 1994 :-)
And they still haven't learnt about C99
"some compilers don't support it they said"
maybe, but said compilers didn't support the POSIX APIs we were required to use anyway
22:26
Anybody know of a Linux command utility that will calculate available day-light/night hours to determine timeouts for my nightly CI pipeline?

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