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00:41
Hello I am trying to build some cpp programs under linux.
1 message moved from Lounge<C++>
I have this in my current makefile:

%.o: %.c
	$(TOOLCHAIN)gcc -O2 $(CFLAGS) test.c  $< -o $@
But the issue is, I have no clue how to build my code from my terminal now that I have %.o
usually I used make all
now make %.o obviously didn't work.
What should I add in my makefile to make it work?
@sehe
How can we tell.
Have you ... looked at sample makefiles?
Does anyone her not suck at regex?
@sehe yes ofcourse. But I have many files containing source code. So I am trying to build everything automatically. Most of the online makefiles used are pretty complex. As I am not so experienced with makefiles I hoped someone could give me some trick(s).
I expect you tell me something like

all: <something>
or whatsoever
00:47
We have zero context. The fact that you "have many sourcefiles" doesn't magically make a makefile pop up
@trilolil Indeed. You need to tell which targets all depends on. But, who knows what targets you have.
my current makefile:
@trilolil Please consider pastebin paste.ubuntu.com/23503370
ok.
(yes I know what you are probably going to say next...)
1 message moved to bin
Yo @Puppy, Doggy is here
You're not very fast :)
My wife is lucky to have me.
at specific moments.
TMI
@trilolil paste.ubuntu.com/23503383 should be a nice start
2 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
Hey, I'm working on a group project using socket programming. I've been mostly using python and am having extraordinary difficulties reading my partner's code. We've confirmed with 100% certainty that the error is in his code, and that it's because his check on line 229 never passes. I don't understand the c++ side of things so if anyone could offer assistance I'd be eternally greatful.
@DemCodeLines Nobody sucks at regex. Regex sucks at people
@ZachThompson That's not C++
00:54
it is, the client.c comment is a relic from months past that they never changed.
@sehe thank you.
it will only compile with g++, gcc throws a ton of errors.
and it's in a .cpp file. so yeah, it's c++
@trilolil patsubst is the stuff I look up here gnu.org/software/make/manual/html_node/Text-Functions.html
@ZachThompson bwaha. It's unfortunate that people think that's C++
I don't understand your statement.
I'd just like to throw in I haven't coded in C++ in over a year and a half, and never have I ever done C++ socket programming so I'm just giving the information that I have been given.
@sehe Bro, what does that mean?
@DemCodeLines Whatever you want, m8. I know you can troll, so don't play the fool. Rather ask a question.
@ZachThompson It means the code is very very poor. It's not C++ in any way shape or form (note the title of the room). Anyhoops. Try compiling with warnings enabled.
@sehe I can troll? Makes me wonder if I did something earlier that made you think I was trolling...?
@ZachThompson -Wall -Wextra -pedantic is a nice start
@DemCodeLines Lots of times. Anyhoops, did you have a question?
2 days ago, by ratchet freak
@sehe Care to elaborate on that? There is something I must be doing which comes off as trolling then.
Not really. I'm here for the questions. Well. For the helping
01:04
@sehe well, I didn't write it so there's that
I posted my question here:
0
Q: Parsing a MySQL log file in Java

DemCodeLinesI have a MySQL log file that has all sorts of information on each file (When a connection was made, when a query was made, when the connection was ended etc.) I have to parse the log file so I can take the data on each line, put it in an array, then do some calculation based on it. Here is a sam...

@ZachThompson It's not an attack :) It's an observation about the code
It's in Java, but I don't think that matters as regex is probably in question.
g++ -pedantic -Wall -Wextra -Wcast-align -Wcast-qual -Wctor-dtor-privacy -Wdisabled-optimization -Wformat=2 -Winit-self -Wlogical-op -Wmissing-declarations -Wmissing-include-dirs -Wnoexcept -Wold-style-cast -Woverloaded-virtual -Wredundant-decls -Wshadow -Wsign-conversion -Wsign-promo -Wstrict-null-sentinel -Wstrict-overflow=5 -Wswitch-default -Wundef -Werror -Wno-unused Slave.cpp
is that good?
I'd keep it at -Wall -Wextra -pedantic. The rest is most likely completely redundant noise
01:06
@sehe Actually your code doesn't do what I want. So far I only want my makefile to output .o files no executables or so.
@ZachThompson I like some of those though. Gonna check whether they are redundant :) So I can add them to my prjs
@trilolil So, do that.
I've shown you 2 tricks that you didn't know how to. Use the tricks to do what you want, instead.
Let me know what you have if you're stuck
@ZachThompson So. Did you get the warnings I wanted you to see?
test.cpp|263 col 58| warning: format ‘%s’ expects argument of type ‘char*’, but argument 2 has type ‘int’ [-Wformat=]
||                                  printf("%s", msgM->msg[j]);
||                                                           ^
test.cpp|286 col 45| warning: format ‘%s’ expects argument of type ‘char*’, but argument 2 has type ‘char (*)[64]’ [-Wformat=]
||                      scanf("%63s", &msgS->msg);
||                                              ^
test.cpp|284 col 36| warning: ignoring return value of ‘int scanf(const char*, ...)’, declared with attribute warn_unused_re
(see full text)
Yeah, I told my partner to cast arg 2 on lines 263 and 286 to char *
Slave.cpp: In function ‘void* get_in_addr(sockaddr*)’:
Slave.cpp:59: error: no previous declaration for ‘void* get_in_addr(sockaddr*)’
Slave.cpp:62: error: use of old-style cast
Slave.cpp:65: error: use of old-style cast
Slave.cpp: In function ‘int main(int, char**)’:
Slave.cpp:124: error: use of old-style cast
Slave.cpp:134: error: conversion to ‘int16_t’ from ‘uint16_t’ may change the sign of the result
Slave.cpp:153: error: use of old-style cast
Slave.cpp:153: error: use of old-style cast
Slave.cpp:153: error: use of old-style cast
(see full text)
@ZachThompson Casts are rarely the answer. What do you think casts do? In particular "old-style casts" which your compiler - rightly - warns about?
well, a (char *)something would convert the something into a string
01:13
or not so much convert it, but tell it to "treat it as a char * even though it's not really"
So. Does that sound like a safe idea? 99% of the time, it's not what you want to do
Depends on what it is.
Not really. Certainly not here.
I know in my python code, casts were extremely useful for this line in particular

checksum = int('0b' + str(bin(checksum))[3:], 2)
That's a conversion, not a cast.
Anyhoops. Are we talking about C or python.
01:16
@sehe well I do understand your code. I understand what it does. but I am stuck here: paste.ubuntu.com/23503437
I am trying to make "make all" work and get .o files as output.
We're talking about C(++?) but we somehow got on the topic of type casting and me not understanding what that means.
@trilolil So close. You deleted (commented) the rule that would have done the work. And all only needs to list dependencies
@ZachThompson Yeah. Guess why.
but the rule doing the work is already there i.e.: $(TOOLCHAIN)gcc -O2 $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@.o

Why duplicate it in the rule I commented?
@ZachThompson If msg is null-terminated, you can simply do printf("%s", msgM->msg);
there was a mistake in the file I posted. this is the correct one: paste.ubuntu.com/23503451
@sehe
01:19
@trilolil No no no. Not duplicate. See: paste.ubuntu.com/23503453
Yes, it's null-terminated. I've relayed your message to my group member.
That's a bit premature IYAM. It's only one thing
Also, on the "Guess why." It's because we shouldn't be using type-casting where I suggested we use them.
Oh ok I see. But when is
%.o: %.c executed? Under which circumstances?
@trilolil When the pattern matches
@ZachThompson Indeed.
01:20
@sehe what do you mean?
I input .c files only.
So it will never see .o files
I want my makefile to output objectfiles no executables or so.
@trilolil That's time to hit the docs. It can match the intermediate targets. That's why makefiles exist: they do things "magically" for you
@trilolil Oh damn. You may have a point. I'm not sure it'll keep the .o. files. In that case, add either .PHONY: all or .PRECIOUS: $(OBJFILES). Just a second, juggling convos here
@sehe Ok I ll wait a second.
@ZachThompson Indeed. Your code has problems, and the casts happen to be the first the compiler shouts about. Now, let's look at the rest will we.
Sure
I appreciate your help by the way
@trilolil paste.ubuntu.com/23503470 I'd try without first though. I'm not sure that the direct dependencies of an explicit target would be deemed 'intermediate files'.
@ZachThompson The scanf just needs to be scanf("%63s", msgS->msg); leveraging array decay (The docs know stackoverflow.com/questions/4810664/how-do-i-use-arrays-in-c)
Too many tabs.
@ZachThompson Is the python side large? Can we see it?
01:28
@sehe Doesn't work.
Well you know. Give me something a little less blasé than that :(
1sec lemme find the pastebin
if it's still up
Expired
I need to rehost it 1sec
The killswitch is a relic of something that I optionally wanted to put in, it's never actually utilized.
@ZachThompson lol. It looks simple, yet somehow it's not immediately clear what it does. Can you summarize in 2 sentences?
@ZachThompson Ok
I think it has to do with cutesy naming "lordoftheRings" doesn't tell me anything like 'processSingleRequest' would e.g.
01:35
Not in two sentences, but I can.
Thread 1 sets up a ring of "slaves," Each machine only knows about the machine next in the ring, and is given that information by the master so it can store it.
^TCP
Thread 2 prompts the user for input and then sends it to the next machine in the ring.
Which user, where.
Just console?
keyboard input yeah
So what is the goal?
message = raw_input("Please enter a message to send -> ")
It's just message relay through a number of machiens?
@ZachThompson I could spot that. I was asking for highlevel functionality
01:38
Thread 3 receives messages from the previous slave, checks to see if the destination ring ID is it's, if it is it displays it, if not it sends it to the next slave.
The goal is to send messages through the ring and have the machine to which the message is destined display it, otherwise it forwards it to the next machine in the ring.
If it can't find the machine to which it is destined by the time TTL reaches 0, it says fuck it
Ok. Sounds pretty simple. Thanks. Looking now
@ZachThompson Among other expletives, I saw
python master.py 10020
that's how it's supposed to run
Just figured it out. It counts master.py
for the "c++", it's ./Slave $HOSTNAME 10020
What is a ring ID?
01:42
if you're running it on the same machine, otherwise replace $HOSTNAME with the machine that is running Master
I got that.
the Ring ID is what tells the machine whether or not the message belongs to it, it is assigned to each machine when they make the connection request with the master.
What is it, though.
it's just a 1 byte integer
technically it should be unsigned but we're never going to have 128 machines running this code at once so it's okay being signed.
Thing is, I'm having very unsatisfying conversations with your program: paste.ubuntu.com/23503573
01:46
I'm unsure what you're trying to do there.
Is this an issue with me being quirky or the fact that it's not able to send something to a slave that doesn't exist?
I'm just running that thing. And entering "just a 1 byte integer" because it asks for it.
because the python code does what's needed for this project. I've tested it on another groups slave code already and it worked flawlessly.
I have a habit of wanting to know what the purpose of the code is, so I can validate the code in my head. If you think that's bothersome I'll do something else
Naw that's fine
@ZachThompson So... I should just have entered 0 for the ring ID. So much trouble for nothing.
01:53
I just wanted to let you know.
Yeah if you want to send a message to yourself
Am I right in thinking that the python and c++ should be equivalent?
@ZachThompson How will the master know what port another ID lives on?
The slave requests a connection with the master, the master gives it information needed to set itself up in the ring, the slave then goes into doing essentially what threads 2 and 3 do in the python code so those should be equivalent yes.
It's based on the ring ID
Ah. Without slaves, there is only an empty ring. (Outside the master). Got it
01:54
The slave binds to the port "10010 + (5 * GID) + RID"
where GID is 2, and RID depends on where it is in the ring
Because the master knows which RID it's going to assign next, it knows that the next slave in the ring will have and RID equal to nextRID - 1 so how it determines which port to use. It keeps the nextSlaveIP stored so that it can A.) Send it to the right place and B.) Give it to the next slave to request entrance into the ring.
So starting with the master, the ring would look something like 0->5->4->3->2->1->0 (repeat)
You still talk like I already know the purpose of a master and a slave.
But I'll look on
Sorry, they're just sending messages along. The only difference is the slave requests connections to the master and the master accepts them.
Like I said earlier, what's happening in the python threads 2 and 3 should be equivalent to what's happening after the fork in the c++ code.
brb I need a cigarette
Yeah. The question is "who" and "how" - I'll be back
Kk, in case I didn't say this early, the python code is the master the "c++" is the slave
You said that. I gather that python contains the slave as well
But the C++ doesn't master
There's a lot of weirdness. And then there is the fatal C quality. For one thing, this makes me appreciate our work code base a lot more
02:14
We're about to have to submit it so if you're close to a breakthrough I'd appreciate any insight.
Yeah. The baseline is: don't do C.
Next up is it seems that you forget to break out of the bind loop if bind doesn't fail, so p2==NULL is always true
            if (childPID == 0) {
                if (bind(sockfd2, p2->ai_addr, p2->ai_addrlen) == -1) {
                    close(sockfd2);
                    perror("listener: bind");
                    continue;
                }
                break;
            }
Gets past that hurdle
Doesn't make the code any more cromulent of course
Thing is steeped in memory leaks. Why are you guys using fork()?
not sure
I think he was trying to avoid using pthreads
#facepalm :)
Anyhoops, I think recvfrom should be in a loop until the entire message is read.
it should be
It's read mo but the message was more good news: i.imgur.com/5HyYG6S.png
02:28
what am i looking at
My screen
so, it's getting part of it
Yup
It's not looping the recvfrom
It's assuming when it returns, that's the whole message
is this okay
Better check the docs :)
user406009
02:32
IIRC, recfrom will give you the whole message for UDP.
user406009
But definitely not for TCP.
Yup. SOCK_STREAM, not datagram
wait is he using SOCK_STREAM in his forked processes?
No he isn't in fact. In that case, it's weird that only part of the message arrived
It makes sense because indeed recvfrom is for UDP
user406009
Well, for UDP, recvfrom should get everything as a whole then.
04:39
@ZachThompson This is C++ coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/94acc0be06bb8aeb /cc @milleniumbug
It's a translation of the C code, so it's probably not correct (see the FIXMEs) but it should do "the same"
 
10 hours later…
14:11
@milleniumbug I asked my question at stackoverflow(as a complete question) so it's ok now.Thanks anyways.
 
2 hours later…
15:53
Hello all, I had a question. If I had a function all it does is getdata from user and stores it into a vector, would I be able to call this function to another function and do something with that data for example displaying it backwards ? If so how ? Thank you.
nwp
nwp
16:15
you return the vector from the getdata function and then use it in the calling function
How do you return it ? :(
16:45
nvm I think I know :(
 
5 hours later…
21:17
vector<std::string>& getData()
{
nwp
nwp
that & you got there is probably not what you want
21:37
would you than return vector<std::string> v ??
well, yes ??
vector<string>& v addData()
{
while(str !="quit")
{
cout << "Enter first and last name (quit to stop)" << endl;
getline(cin,str);
if(str == "quit")
break;
string word = " ";
string s3;
int pos = str.find(word);
string s1 = str.substr(pos+word.length());
string s2 = str.substr(0, pos);
s3 += s1 + ", " + s2;
v.push_back(s3);
return vector<string> v;
}
}
I get this error : [Error] expected initializer before 'addData'
Sorry :( I am begginer programmer.
sorry, but this is enough confusion I don't know where to start explaining what's wrong
ok, let's see: return vector<string> v; is not valid syntax
because return statement accepts an expression
not a declaration
21:51
ps. the vector is declared globally, str is declared globally.
don't return a reference to a thing you don't own
...the function is badly named and it does too much
I'm not even sure what it's supposed to be doing
user406009
Hmm, can anyone here help me understand how allocation/deallocation work with shared libraries opened with dlopen?
user406009
In particular, if I allocate a variable using new inside the shared library and then unload the library, what happens?
user406009
(Assuming I forget to deallocate it before unloading the library)
I'll explain. User import their first and last name with a space than I want to flip the names where The last name goes first and first name goes second for example :
Enter your first and last name:
Bob Marley
Outputs: Marley, Bob
user406009
21:55
Darn it. stackoverflow.com/questions/8866790/… indicates that it does share the same heap.
user406009
Does anyone know of any ways to force deallocation when the library is unloaded?
@Lalaland you've just found the heap is shared, but there are more issues there: what about the destructors
string s1 = str.substr(pos+word.length()); // is finding surname after the space
string s2 = str.substr(0, pos); // is finding the firstname before the space
user406009
@milleniumbug I only destruct from within the shared library. I have a deleteWhatever function that I am exporting.
user406009
The exact details of my issue is that I am trying to provide some code through FFI to Matlab.
user406009
21:57
Matlab's FFI is actually pretty decent.
user406009
But Matlab doesn't have destructors, so I am worried about users leaking everywhere.
@Lalaland GNU-specific: declare a function with __attribute__((destructor))
user406009
Actually NVM, I was able to find an alternative for Matlab: mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/oncleanup.html
user406009
@milleniumbug Perfect
@fsfh60 so what about the vector
22:02
it stores the first and last name.
what for
do you use it later
THan I have a function that displays it.
void display()
{
int length= v.size();
for(int x=0; x < length; x++)
{
cout << v[x] << endl;
}
}
Yes.
instead of using a global, you can make display() take a std::vector<std::string> argument
and addData to return the vector by value
Sorry, I dont understand.
void display(std::vector<std::string> v)
22:09
So than I would put the code in display ?
also: I'm purposefully using words you can google
especially "return by value" and "the function argument"
the point is to not use globals when you can pass values in and return them out of the functions
also
Nov 16 at 0:02, by sehe
@fsfh60 http://ideone.com/A0yDUI Please take good notes, because it's no use if you don't understand

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