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08:00
@thecoshman Well I've a matrix. that stores relations <L, R> where both L and R is pointers. If I go by map<L, map<R, value_type>> it will store poiters of L, R in pair so for each pointer there will be 4*2 bytes allocated unnecessarily for each cell. and there are > 256^2 cells
@thecoshman :(
So I am wrote another container associative_matrix that stores values as vector<vector<value_type>> and stores L and R (e.g.) matrix headers in another linear container and then use their positional index to access from vector
It all okay I just want to see in bare eye. how much memory its actually saving.
oh, well all this is redundant. you have no control over how much memory is actually used by certain data types. You are only guaranteed how little memory each type will be using. You really should just consider it based on theory, because as soon as you throw a real computer at this, alignment and all sorts will screw you over.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked: Uhm, I think Coliru output is swallowing all angle brackets. :(
@Xeo (chevrons)
08:04
@thecoshman Yes in theory I can calculate exactly Ho much memory its occupying. BUt I want to see it in real.
@NeelBasu no, you can not calculate exactly how much it is using, only the minimum it has to use.
You also need to consider, are you actually having a problem with the memory usage? if not, why are you wasting your time trying to use less memory? Work on something more productive.
:9291089 thanks :P
@thecoshman Yes I am trying to lower my memory usage only. thats the only requirement. rest is okay
> The distinctive quality of sarcasm is present in the spoken word and manifested chiefly by vocal intonation ...
see, vocal intonation on a chat doesn't occur
makes it hard to detect sarcasm at times
@TonyTheLion no it doesn't :P
that's more like irony
08:08
@NeelBasu then why not cache all data to disk?
@TonyTheLion sarcasm is a form of irony
> irony: The expression of one's meaning by using language that normally signifies the opposite, typically for humorous or emphatic effect.
@Rakkun o_0 how do you work that our?
@thecoshman That will be slow. I need to do mathematics on that big matrix
@thecoshman I have a major in irony with a minor in sarcasm
08:09
@NeelBasu then memory is not your only concern :P
@Rakkun it's not always, it may take that form, but it doesn't have to
@Rakkun ¬_¬ and extra credits for bullshit
@TonyTheLion Sarcasm is by definition an "ironic mockery"
@thecoshman whatever, pleb
@Rakkun inbred
@thecoshman LOL man. whywould one create a matrix ? would I create a matrix and store it in reserve bank ?
08:11
@thecoshman bumpkin
@NeelBasu I was being deliberately obtuse, whilst you wish to reduce memory usage, it is not your only concern.
> A cutting, often ironic remark intended to wound.
it says often
@Rakkun contortionist
what are you fuckwits doing?
@TonyTheLion keep out of this, it has nothing to do with you... well, I'll blame you for it, but keep out of it :P
08:12
@thecoshman . See the process is running well. and version 1 is out. However it takes some huge memory at times. that I want to lower in version2.0 without caching in disk. and thats my primary concern in V2
Morning @Cat!
user142019
boo
@NeelBasu Still, trying to examine every last byte used by your program is not a simple task. The best way to do this is simply designing well.
@rightfold bs
user142019
08:15
bullpiss
@thecoshman shouldn't there be some dedicated pplications that can do this ?
like debuggers ?
@NeelBasu but then you are not getting true memory usage, as amount of extra memory used for debug info may not be proportional
Stack memory is something you can't trace too well (and shouldn't need to)
If you need to track overall memory, just hook into your allocators / new.
Increment some counters and shit.
@NeelBasu there are
Which OS are you running on?
@jalf Linux This box is ubuntu
08:19
@ThePhD shitting is not a useful debugging technique
But I get some of my best ideas on the shitter, while shitting.
@NeelBasu Isn't one of the Valgrind tools pretty much what you're looking for then? Massif, probably
user142019
You need to debug the AbstractShitFactory.
@jalf can valgrind trace stack memory ?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit huh?
08:19
2 mins ago, by ThePhD
Increment some counters and shit.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit oh right right
He's nitpicking my words. :c
@NeelBasu No idea. You could give it a try and find out. But why do you need to? Is stack memory really your problem?
user142019
@NeelBasu Isn't the stack always of the same size?
user142019
Unless you use segmented stack, but that's unlikely with C++.
08:21
@rightfold wtf? oh, you mean to the total stack, not just the used stack?
user142019
Oh right.
silly you
My container is on stack. and I know theoritically how much memory it should occupy. But I want to check that Its same or at least similar to theory
user142019
Silly me.
... Wait
08:22
before I plug that container to actual application
If your container is on the stack,
sizeof(mycontainertype)
then it boils down to a fixed-sized array
Or something that can be sizeof()'d
That will tell you how much space it takes up on the stack
@jalf It uses vector's inside it.
08:23
@NeelBasu And?
@NeelBasu you realise that whilst the container is on the stack, the memory it allocate, and no doubt how it keeps track of that, will be on the heap
... Theeen it's not on the stack.
@ThePhD Hmm right
So you need to look at heap memory.
Which I'm almost 100% positive Valgrind can do.
The size of the container is the size that will be stored wherever the container is allocated. If you put the container on the stack, then the container will be on the stack, and the size of the container object is the size of the container object on the stack
because the container object is the container object regardless of where you put it
08:24
Hmm right. I missed the point
Stack is not magical and not any different from heap why would Valgrind not be able to see it
user142019
All I can find in Valgrind's man page is how to set the max stack size and flags to set things about stack traces.
@CatPlusPlus because magic ofc
Anyway, if you want a very very simple way to approximate how much stack you're using, then, at the start of main, create a local object on the stack, take the address of it, and print it out. Then, somewhere deep down in your code where you want to know how much stack you're using, create another object on the stack, and take its address. Subtract the two, and you know how much stack you've used
So can I trace memory in two points with valgrind ? like

//memory_usage_here()
some code
//memory_usage_here()
08:25
@thecoshman cotter
user142019
Isn't Valgrind a machine code interpreter?
what no
@rightfold Valgrind is a lot of things. It's a suite of quite different tools
user142019
Ah.
@Rakkun Gypo
08:28
@thecoshman farmer
@Rakkun ¬_¬ you just used that one, round head
@thecoshman churl
@Rakkun gong-fayer
@thecoshman yokel
@Rakkun redneck
08:33
@thecoshman hayseed
@Rakkun hick
@thecoshman rube
Is while(1); UB in C?
@Rakkun half-wit
@thecoshman slob
08:35
@TonyTheLion why would it be?
@TonyTheLion why ?
@jalf I swear I've seen someone say that it is in UB in C++, so I thought it may be in C too
@Rakkun amoeba
@thecoshman prokaryote
@TonyTheLion Afaik, in C++11 there's some funny wording that the compiler may assume that all loops eventually terminate, so it could basically optimize out the loop
but it's never been UB, afaik
08:37
ah
@jalf What!?! I mean, yes, all loops eventually terminate, but how do you optimize them out?
@jalf where!?!
user142019
@TonyTheLion in C++ it is.
user142019
No idea about C.
@Rakkun If the loop has no side effects, then why bother doing it?
user142019
08:38
@jalf threads either terminate or exhibit observable side-effects.
@jalf I'd argue that stalled execution is a side effect
@Rakkun but yeah, I grow tired of what ever that was...
Poor imperative programmers got their pointless infinite loops taken away from them
@Rakkun You'd be wrong. The C++ standard does not list that as an observable side effect
Heh, looking for the relevant SO question turns up some funny ones. I love this Q's title: "Please help stop an infinite loop"
I can just imagine it, HELP HELP, HOW DO I MAKE IT STOP BEFORE IT DEVOURS US ALL!!
user142019
> Which is faster, for (;;) or while (true)?
08:39
@jalf Oh? But an infinite loop is observable "indirectly" from another thread!
user142019
> My infinite loop is so fast, it runs in under an hour!
oooh, here we are
74
Q: Optimizing away a "while(1);" in C++0x

Johannes Schaub - litbUpdated, see below! I have heard and read that C++0x allows an compiler to print "Hello" for the following snippet #include <iostream> int main() { while(1) ; std::cout << "Hello" << std::endl; } It apparently has something to do with threads and optimization capabilities. It looks ...

@CatPlusPlus does recursion not count as a loop, thus if you give it no end condition, you can get a functional infinite loop? hint: I have a very crude understanding of that shit
@rightfold Your computer is a beast
oh wait
user142019
08:40
A compiler should optimize out while (true); to save CPUs and fans.
Can an infinite number of cores finish an infinite loop?
according to my answer on that Q, I agree with @TonyTheLion. Awkward, arguing against yourself
2
user142019
@thecoshman Why would they?
user142019
(Hint: no.)
You don't need infinite number of cores, but infinite time
user142019
08:42
Even then it wouldn't terminate.
¬_¬ I really should use more
@jalf Yea I was going to say.
@rightfold Fastest computer I've ever seen
user142019
@Neil Designed at Infinite Loop. :P
08:44
@rightfold I'll bet Chuck Norris has a computer that will finish an infinite loop in under 20 minutes though.
Reading up on the Q and A's, I see where I'm coming from though. :D
@Neil twice
@bamboon Twice, all the while playing call of duty
@TonyTheLion thats my issue really, is that no matter what 16bit counter I try to use for a counter, its 32bit counterpart is already in use somewhere else and cannot be changed — user2357446 3 mins ago
heh what a problem to have, not enough registers
lol
logs as far as the eye can see, yet not a pip of information.
08:57
I know that feeling
"But we haz teh logz"
@thecoshman Yeah... It's kind of impressive how hard good logging actually is
boost::thread is quite different from std::thread. They are not interchangeable. boost::thread was designed several years ago, and it shows its age. — Pete Becker Sep 11 '12 at 9:41
^that's incorrect, right? Wasn't boost::thread updated to match std::thread?
@Pubby yep, it was. It even wasn't that much different before.
74
A: Is it smart to replace boost::thread and boost::mutex with c++11 equivalents?

Anthony WilliamsThere are several differences between Boost.Thread and the C++11 standard thread library: Boost supports thread cancellation, C++11 threads do not C++11 supports std::async, but Boost does not Boost has a boost::shared_mutex for multiple-reader/single-writer locking, which is not present in C++...

I mean, of course std::thread still lacks the interruption machinery for example, but I wouldn't call them quite different because of that.
@bamboon Thanks for the link. Do you personally use std or boost?
09:08
@Pubby well, I would use async anyway.
Now, that boost also offers that with more advancements, that might be an alternative.
I think it's always a question of whether you want to introduce dependencies or not.
Okay
> Why is that even necessary for a derived class to hold n-1 virtual tables ? source
afaik, a class only has 1 virtual table
and OP is just misunderstanding it
right?
Nope.]
Or, well. Hm. Maybe.
I think I'm mixing up V-table implementation with the vtable itself.
Thinking on it, there is one and only one vtable.
I think.
I hope.
I dunno. :c
Yet you keep rambling. nods head in shame
Per wikipedia, when you have multiply bases, you'll have pointers to the vtable of each base in the derived class
09:23
@Rapptz Hey, it's how I reason things out. D:
DON'T DISCRIMINATE, YO.
Ah, your source is wikipedia, I get it now. :)
lol
A virtual method table, virtual function table, virtual call table, dispatch table, or vtable, is a mechanism used in a programming language to support dynamic dispatch (or run-time method binding ). Suppose a program contains several classes in an inheritance hierarchy: a superclass, Cat, and two subclasses, HouseCat and Lion. Class Cat defines a virtual function named speak, so its subclasses may provide an appropriate implementation (e.g. either meow or roar). When the program calls the speak method on a Cat pointer (which can point to a Cat class, or any subclass of Cat), the calling ...
for the lazy
I just knew that there would be cats involved.
09:26
cats are involved in a lot of things on the Internet
..and now, vtables are added to the list, (or maybe a pointer to a superclass list).
Oh - one of those days in the Lounge. vtable implementation and optimizing away infinite empty loops. I think I'll do some work.
which reminds me... when it comes to build system scripts and controlling there output. Would a simple enable/disable printing to console suffice (leaving it to the user to pipe into file if they wish to save a copy) or would it be preferable if the build script itself was able to log to file. Would you want all or nothing logging, or the ability to have it output to both console and file?
this is a most usual Lounge day.
Hm.
09:32
@TonyTheLion oh, I missed the drama did I?
I want to steal the memory from a std::vector
but it's not letting me. D:
Xeo
Xeo
What do you mean, "steal"?
@ThePhD o_0 what you mean?
Xeo
Xeo
You can't take ownership away from std::vector
@Xeo But I want to. D:
Xeo
Xeo
09:33
Why?
@ThePhD yeah, I want a few bars of solid gold, but it ain't gonna happen
@thecoshman no, there wasn't drama, just tech discussion
or was that irony?
I am operating on a std::vector<byte> for some image data. When it's over, I want to stuff it in an Image2D class, which has a std::vector<Color> inside of it.
@ThePhD stealing is a crime.
you wouldn't steal a car...
09:35
you wouldn't download a car...
I can't get the vector to give me its data without deleting it, so it seems like I'll be forever stuck with making a copy of all the data. D:
well, if I could, I would
@TonyTheLion Stealing is fun sometimes, though!
Like right now, stealing would be really fun.
09:36
stealz all the memoriez
well, you could pass ownership of a vector into the class...is it possible to work on Color from the start?
else, if you have to convert each element from byte to color, I don't see what good just taking the memory would serve
Not really. PNGs specifically specifies all its operations in terms of bytes, not Color or RGBA or anything like that. TGA, DDS, etc. all have their own rules... which is why I have std::vector<byte> or std::vector<unsigned int> and other stuff to work with.
Xeo
Xeo
Then, how do you think stealing the memory would even work when you need to go from byte to Color?
@Xeo Well, in the end, all the data - despite being worked on in bytes - I expand out into RGBA. So I thought I'd just nab me some data and shift it into the Color vector all quiet and secret like.
Nobody would know, yo.
user142019
@TonyTheLion Fuck you! I would if I could!
09:39
@ThePhD why don't you just read the data from the png file directly into your internal native format
Xeo
Xeo
Then make a std::vector<Color> to start with oO
... Hm.
....
Xeo
Xeo
But I have to ask
I see no reason to make an in memory copy of the file, then convert it.
Xeo
Xeo
do you expect to grow that vector?
user142019
09:40
Use mmap and BMP.
std::vector<Color> colors;

union {
     byte* bytes;
     Color* colors;
} data ( colors.data () );
<3333
@ThePhD vomit
user142019
You idiot.
user142019
Don't do that.
It's so pretty, though! :D
user142019
09:41
It's absolutely terrible.
@ThePhD no, it's not.
it makes next to no sense.
I can access the pointer as bytes or as colors. :D
Xeo
Xeo
no you can't
UB
user142019
You are accessing them as UB.
As long as I re-initialize the pointers after a pushback or a resize, I'll be fine. <3
09:42
@ThePhD no
Xeo
Xeo
The same kind of UB your stupid cowboy cast is.
please stop
user142019
I want to see how any of your code works when optimizations are enabled.
user142019
I will laugh my ass off.
Alright, fiine. byte* bytes = reinterpret_cast<byte*>( colors.data() ); =[
Look how boring that looks. D:
user142019
09:43
Just as terrible.
@ThePhD stop it!!!
Xeo
Xeo
Are bytes and Color layout-compatible?
They're both PoD
Xeo
Xeo
That doesn't mean shit
There's no special allocations or other fancy shit
They do have constructors though
Color is basically 4 bytes.
Xeo
Xeo
09:44
yeah... UB
byte stuff[4];
@ThePhD Your "basically" is very reassuring.
user142019
std::vector<byte> bytes;
bytes.reserve(colors.size() * 4);
for (auto c : colors) {
    bytes.push_back(c.red);
    bytes.push_back(c.green);
    bytes.push_back(c.blue);
    bytes.push_back(c.alpha);
}
@ThePhD Oh. Been busy, eh?
@rightfold Nonononono NO COPIES. D:
Xeo
Xeo
09:45
Then read the data in Color in the first place, FFS
user142019
@ThePhD OH NO WE ARE DOING A COPY OH NO WE'RE SO GOING TO FUCKING DIE.
user142019
inb4 compiler will optimize it like hell and you won't notice a thing.
just read your image files directly into a native in memory format, something that provides no abstractions on the data. Your 'read png file' function should return an instance of that image class directly
@MarkGarcia tl;dr
Well, right now I'm inside the Read PNG File function.
That's why I'm asking. :c
09:46
@MarkGarcia I read an older version of it, yeah. He taught my compiler course at uni, so guess which book we used :)
@thecoshman Oh. Anyway, have you known of comments on the book?
yeah... so as you read the data, push that directly into the vector. creating a new 'colour' class each time, presumably after reading four bytes.
@MarkGarcia nope
@jalf Any comments on quality?
So there's no way to manipulate a Color array as bytes, or vice-versa?
user142019
You don't have to.
09:47
@thecoshman OK. I'm planning on reading it. Really am interested.
@ThePhD you realise copying data is not a bad thing, it's copying LARGE data objects that is a POTENTIAL problem
I think it's pretty good. It sometimes leans a bit too heavily on the contents of his actual lectures (as in, if you're not attending the lecture, it might be a bit tricky to grasp what the book is talking about), but overall, I think it's quite good
Well these textures aren't small. D:
@jalf Hm. Then I think it's a go then. Thanks.
=[
I am sad.
09:49
@ThePhD yes, but you are not reading the entire file, then copying the entire file to a new format. You will still only have one copy of the complete image data, and a small bit of overhead for the partial color object.
@ThePhD You're making your own image loader?
user142019
std::vector<color> bytes_to_colors(std::vector<unsigned char> const& bytes) {
    std::vector<color> colors;
    colors.reserve(bytes.size() / 4);
    for (auto it = bytes.begin(); it != bytes.end(); ++it) {
        auto r = *it;
        auto g = *++it;
        auto b = *++it;
        auto a = *++it;
        colors.emplace_back(r, g, b, a);
    }
    return colors;
}
and to be fair, reading the file will be slower then copying the data of that file.
user142019
Have you profiled? inb4 no.
user142019
09:51
Did you find a bottleneck? inb4 no.
I'm gonna find out what layout-compatible means.
@rightfold Yes, image loading is the slowest part of my application right now.
user142019
It means that the layouts are compatible.
user142019
@ThePhD Because of I/O or because of parsing the data?
user142019
inb4 I/O
@ThePhD Two things to check then: disk read and decompression.
09:52
@ThePhD almost certainly just because you are sat waiting on disk IO
if you want to make it faster, probably the best thing to do is to slurp the file into memory, this will hopefully ensure you get given constant reading, thus fastest reading. Once in memory, you can work on the file a lot faster then if you keep having to wait for your file to be seeked again as you only read a few bytes at a time.
the trick with IO is aim to have as much queued up as possible to make the most of when you finally get to do any of it.
You should probably just memory map the file
of course, if your image files are too big, you will have to start to look at doing this in chunks
q_q
All this stuff to think about just because I want to do some pointer sluttery
@ThePhD no, you are (seemingly yet again) suffering very badly from XY
I have to know, though.
09:57
@ThePhD know what?
I think I'm going to ask an SO question.
You mean, a bad question :)?
@ThePhD Copy/noCopy war about to break out..

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