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14:53
@JerryCoffin Do you have any suggestions for a broadcast message command that pushes a message to all connected clients? I can broadcast 80-100kb of data to 200 clients every second but there's anywhere between 20 and 300ms of delay between the time the message is sent and the time the client receives the message.
Ideally I'd be able to send 80-100kb of data once every 50ms to 1k clients with minimal delays
but idk if that's reasonable or not - because I'd really like to know how the game servers handle stuff like that
and this is on localhost only too
is this like TCP stuff? I assume you already set NODELAY if it is
this is boost asio tcp async multi-threaded server
and I have no clue what that flag is
7 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
no I haven't set that
what does it do?
15:00
it stops the delay of the last packet only being send after getting ACKs for all previous packets.
it helped some
is this local systems? if so 300ms delay seems extreme
yeah it's localhost
This is a release build with 200 connected clients on localhost
the interval is 1000ms
the payload is 80-100kb
anything over 1010ms is logged to the console
so the server sends at 1000ms, that transaction alone takes 20-30ms to do
then the clients receive the broadcast
the broadcast locks a mutex then iterates the connections and calls send on each one
in total the bandwidth is 20,000kb max
 
3 hours later…
18:18
Hi, I need some help understanding this code which finds the largest element of a vector manually i.e without using the #include<algorithm>
code snippet:
template <typename T>
const T* larger(const std::vector<T>& data)
{
const T* result {}; // The largest of an empty vector is nullptr
for (auto& value : data)
if (!result || value > *result) result = &value;
return result;
}
please could anyone help with regards to !result||value>*result line ?
@Electrical_engineer_student if result is nullptr assign a value to it so it's not undefined behavior to read it
and then assuming it's not... and value is greater than the value pointed to by result... point to `value instead
so you can think of that as (A || (B >C))
so I had it right the first time... operator || has a lower precedence than operator >
thanks man I think I get it now
18:47
How can i pass c++ stl functions as pointer inside my function
Here I define some dummy max and min functions just to get around not having to pass STL max and min functions
why are you doing this?
like &std::max<int> ?
This smells like something better solved other ways
int getf (int l, int r, const vector<int> &a, int (*f)(int a, int b)) {
    if (l == r) {
        return (*f)((int)a[l], (int)a[r]);
    }
    int m = (l+r)/2;
    return (*f)(getf(l, m, a, f), getf(m+1, r, a, f));
}

int mx (int a, int b) {
    if (a > b) {
        return a;
    }
    return b;
}
int mn (int a, int b) {
    if (a > b) {
        return b;
    }
    return a;
}

int solve(vector<int> &a) {
    int n = a.size();
    int sum = getf(0, n-1, a, &mx) + getf(0, n-1, a, &mn);
    return sum;
actually getf function is just has to apply F function
Yes... you're doing too much
18:54
how about
auto m = std::minmax(a.begin(), a.end());
return m.first+m.second;
oh, nvm I confused minmax with minmax_element
so more like
auto m = std::minmax_element(a.begin(), a.end());
return *m.first+*m.second;
actually I am solving an interview question where it is said to use less number of comparison, there as a hint they say to use less than O(n) comparison and use divide the array by 2 method
divide in 2 parts method
is it a sorted vector?
no
actually the question is just find maximum and minimum element sum using less comparsins
I hate those questions
I'd just blow them off
@PeterT why this is also not working
should there be change in function parameters:
int getf (int l, int r, const vector<int> &a, int (*f)(int a, int b)) {
19:09
is there is any way to transfer data into someone's brain by using USB cable like in Elysium movie?
19:25
As far as I know when a user runs a program, the program gets from the OS some reserved space to allow stack and heap to expand. But how does the os know how much space the program needs? What if it allocates or pushes too much memory? I guess, the amount to reserse can be predicted be a compiler in some way, but what if the allocated space cannnot be predicted, e.g. if it depends from a user input? I ask especially about C++, but it would be great to understand how it works in general.
@SKIP it's often fixed at compile time, has some default like 1MB
but there's implementations with guard pages, where they only allocate the space if the program accesses the memory page
@SKIP it's in the executable
In computing, the Executable and Linkable Format (ELF, formerly named Extensible Linking Format), is a common standard file format for executable files, object code, shared libraries, and core dumps. First published in the specification for the application binary interface (ABI) of the Unix operating system version named System V Release 4 (SVR4), and later in the Tool Interface Standard, it was quickly accepted among different vendors of Unix systems. In 1999, it was chosen as the standard binary file format for Unix and Unix-like systems on x86 processors by the 86open project. By design, the...
you can read the source code for linux and reactOS if you want to see how it's done in practise
I remember stumbling across that part of reactOS like a year ago
It's actually kinda cool
When an executable starts the only thing the OS has given it is the initial code segment and the stack it asked for
it then has to ask the OS to load everything else usually
and set up it's own heap
If I try to allocate some data and there's no space "under" stack the os will give some space "below" stack?
19:35
by default? no
it will give you a segfault/access violation and crash
TFW you ponder if you should give color to that or not....
eh whatever never stopped me before
@SKIP for simple purposes assume the stack is allocated all at once based on what the executable asks for. The reality is different (for security reasons) but it's easier to think about it that way.
is there a way to get more space for heap?
get more ram/increase swap memory
Heap is different, heap is requested and managed by the libc
theoretically the OS can allocate as much heap as you have address space allowed. But realistically your local memory is where you'll start to run into issues.
@PeterT I mean, when there is physically space to allocate more memory, but there is no space between the stack and heap(like in the photo)
19:44
that's like virtual memory on a modern OS, not physical addresses
@PeterT So each segment is like virtual memory?
so the virtual heap and stack addresses are most of the time "further apart" than you have RAM
@SKIP it's all virtual...
but realistically stack and heap will be in separate pages
and they will definitely have guard pages and unallocated areas around them
if you touch those... you'll segfault/Access violation
20:01
I started a random 64-bit process and looked with vmmap, some thread stacks and the heap were like 1555 GB apart in virtual memory space.
and they would probably be further apart if I had like Windows Server running
why would it be different for Windows Server?
windows server supports more memory
because it support more than 2TB of RAM
microsoft is weird that way for no reason
Thank you both @PeterT @Mgetz . It was really interesting to have a discussion with you.
@SKIP FWIW the big thing you should realize is that with virtual memory and modern OSes most of the textbook stuff is kinda "eh" anymore. Because realistically they haven't been truly accurate for a long time. Not really since the pentium at least. But when you're on a modern OS, everything is virtual memory, even kernel mode.
20:09
@Mgetz Somethimes I even think I am virtual too...
21:03
Can someone point me to a question that tells me why this is bad? I'm doing a code review and I cannot pin point the thread that I swear I saw this in and said to never do the following:

`FuncCall(myPointer = new SomePointer(arg1,arg2,arg3));`
@Sailanarmo it hides a secondary side effect
@sehe yeah I know it hides a side effect. But I cannot remember what it is called. I've been looking for a SO post that explains this. But I honestly cannot remember it.
21:16
3 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
@Sailanarmo aside from the raw new which can fail and isn't exception safe?
yeah I was simply trying to remember why it was bad and what it was called. Which seems to be this post: stackoverflow.com/questions/49336335/…
so I got the delays figured out and snuffed out for the most part
now it's just down to the iteration over the client list
even if I use std::for_each and par_unseq execution, it still takes 10-50ms for the Send method to be called on each client
21:39
@JoshMenzel sockets?
if so make sure you're disabling Nagel
I did
Nagel is disabled
or do you mean on the client as well
Yes
Nagel just sucks
is there anything that can be done beyond that?
yeah turning it off on the client didn't really help
@Mgetz
didn't make it worse either
21:46
Profile?
see if you're waiting on something
So on the dev machine
(even in release build)
it made no difference
but on my game pc
it went from 30ms to do the parallel broadcast
to 10ms
and the average timing latency went from 100ms on the dev machine to 10ms on the game pc
haven't seen the code can't say
buuut spawning threads is expensive
can I share the code on github?
gist.github.com is a good place
there's multiple files - should I do each one
or put them all in one gist?
21:52
1
honestly only show the relevant stuff
okay give me a few minutes
hopefully it's not too much but just enough
What are you polling your io_service at?
it's an io_context
and it's ran in a thread group
you're polling somewhere?
tbf this is more of a @sehe thing
22:06
no - it doesn't need to be polled
the run doesn't return until I call stop on the context
and again
it's not the actual sending that's slow
it's the iteration through the connections list in broadcast message
22:31
@sehe do you have any input?
@JoshMenzel yeah. Why are you bothering pushing async operations ... from multiple threads?
That's just what the examples had
Dubious examples I think. What examples?
(that I worked off of)
the samples on boost.org and other various tutorials I looked at
there doesn't seem to be a set standard
Anyhoops, I don't know the type of the queue, I don't see what strands you use (and why). I don't see what IO objects you use (and whether you specialized the executor types or are using any_io_executor etc).
22:39
it's all default
I also don't know why you have a context and an io_service object.
there's 1 strand per client
there's only 1 context
Seems odd, since qMessagesOut is what needs protection, is that also per client?
> if (!context.stopped() && !io_service.stopped() && !e && !stop) {
the io_service is for the deadline timer
So, there's two contexts (exec ution contexts)
22:40
io_service only runs the deadline timer
context runs the server
Also, learn how to use chrono :)
                long time  = (Clock::now() - t1) / 1ms;
                long time2 = (Clock::now() - t2) / 1ms;
qMessagesOut is per client yes
it's a type of ThreadSafeQueue
@JoshMenzel Is it asio::thread_pool? Or asio::io_context? Why is the timer not on that?
which uses a deque
@JoshMenzel Cool. Thanks
That seems a bit contentious. Why is it thread safe if you have a strand
Can you not have implicit strand? Stdands are quite expensive.
22:42
I'm not sure what you mean by the asio::thread_pool or io_context?
I have a boost::thread_group that calls io_context.run() in however many threads
Just which of the two types is it? You mentioned that "it runs on a thread_group" before, but that doesn't actually clarify because Asio uses a boost::thread_group inside thread_pool
So, io_context. Thanks
yeah
the strand is there since I read that if you're making multiple calls to async_write the callbacks can get passed to different threads
I think I'd like to see all of the code. It seems a bit of this is undercomplicated and a lot is overcomplicated.
how should I send it?
@JoshMenzel Sure. That's irrelevant as long as the sequence relation is forced.
@JoshMenzel A gist can be multi-file
22:45
should I just attach all the files and make that the gist?
But maybe send in whatever way you find convenient, because it'll be easier to reconstruct
(like this time around the file ended up with "gistfile1.txt" as the name. )
ah yeah I'll attach the source files directly
it's all headers and one cpp
I had already mocked up a ton pastebin.ubuntu.com/p/VyvJkn4jgz
@JoshMenzel To broadcast, you need to use UDP instead of TCP. Since it's local, there shouldn't be a big problem with packets getting dropped or reordered though. So I'd at least make an attempt at sending UDP to 127.255.255.255, on a port agreed to by your server and clients.
@JoshMenzel Oh aha. In that context I agree that UDP seems in order
22:50
There's the full thing
I'd like to use TCP
since it guarantees order
and I cannot have this get out of sync
@PeterT Just for what it's worth: no, that's not what it does. Nagle's algorithm is a way to reduce overhead by avoiding sending lots of tiny network packets. So (with TCP) when tell the network stack to send some data, it can let the data sit in a buffer for a while, waiting to fill the buffer so it can send one big packet instead of a bunch of little ones. Setting TCP_NODELAY tells it to send each packet as soon as possible instead, even if that might increase network overhead.
The objective is to build it and send 80-100kb of data every 50ms to all clients
All on loopback?
yes
and have it be able to handle up to 200 clients
@JoshMenzel That becomes an issue over a real network. I've never heard of a network stack that would reorder packets locally.
22:54
yeah it's not going to be for a real network
it's literally just for loopback only
I wouldn't expect to be able to do this over anything other than loopback
there's just no consistent guides on how developing this sort of thing is done
and I'm mainly a c#/.net dev
Personally, I'd probably use shared memory, with (for example) a condition variable to tell clients when a buffer is ready, and a counted semaphore to release the buffer. For the moment, I'm assuming clients only read data, not modify it.
yeah they don't need write access
just read
That's also good thinking
I thought of that too
but do all the common languages support memory mapped files?
Python, node.js, c#/.NET are the common ones
the objective I'm accomplishing is exposing data, events, and other things from a game
the game sdk is not thread safe and is written in c
@JoshMenzel Is this for Windows, Linux, or does it need to be portable?
22:58
needs to be cross-platform
hence why I'm using boost asio
Windows, Linux and Mac OS X
I'm starting with Windows for now
since that's what I know
so how would I use a condition variable to release a buffer into a memory mapped file?
because wouldn't the other processes not have any knowledge of the condition variable?
if I were to say write a Python module to interface with this
Have a look at this:
2
A: How to put file in boost::interprocess::managed_shared_memory?

sehe UPDATE Added bonus versions at the end. Now this answer presents three complete versions of the code: Using managed_shared_memory as requested Using message_queue as a more natural appraoch for upload/transfter Using TCP sockets (Asio) as to demonstrate the flexibilities of that All of these a...

The other reason I did want the TCP sockets was for the events
so I can signal that an event occurred in the game
That answer contrasts shared memory, IPC message_queue and TCP socket approaches
23:03
right but this isn't a client connects asks for something then disconnects
this is a client connects to receive a stream of data
until the game closes, the client disconnects, or a network error occurrs
now the other thing I can do
is to make it so that it only sends it once every second
it's not absolutely necessary to go down to 50ms
but if I want to build this as a generic server I can use in other projects as well
I'd like it to kind of be all purpose
@JoshMenzel I don't see the "but". That example was about mass throughput on several concurrent connections.
in Discussion between sehe and Prohor, Mar 15 at 17:00, by sehe
Because I had time to spare - here's a socket version that receives in a multi-threaded async streaming server. The server writes out all the files received as relative paths under an output location (e.g. safe_out_dir).
I think the answer is instructive for e.g. reasons like this (which I already briefly mentioned before)
in Discussion between sehe and Prohor, Mar 15 at 22:03, by sehe
Oh cool. The strands were unnecessary. I add them for safety until I know it's safe to go without. In this case the async call chains form logical strands (there are no timers or full duplex sockets going on, so it's all linear). That... improves the situation :)
Ah okay
And here's an example of where I optimized by avoiding default executors:
in Discussion between sehe and rahul, Mar 28 at 2:46, by sehe
Shaved .5s off the execution by avoiding the type-erased any_io_executor:
This is a lot to read so I'll take a look at it
I guess my biggest question
Is
Is it unreasonable to want to have 200 clients with 80-100kb sent to each one every 50ms
Over TCP
On loopback
Not really. That's a meager ~500 mebibytes per second
In that answer linked I got:
in Discussion between sehe and Prohor, Mar 15 at 22:03, by sehe
Now it's 3.5gbps even with the 1024 byte server buffer
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
23:19
So for my purpose of building a message and broadcasting it to all clients
Is that still reasonable
I guess I don't understand enough about the changes I need to make to make that happen
It's possible. Whether it is reasonable depends on a lot of stuff I don't know.
Do I need to just start over then?
Or can what I have be salvaged
I wouldn't say so, directly. But I've only skimmed the surface
So I guess what pattern should I try and follow for this?
Io_context? Io_service? Async or sync? Single or multi-thread?
There is no real difference between io_service/io_context (the latter is the newer interface). I'd say you need only 1. But prefer thread_pool so you don't have manually deal with threads and correct running of the io_context.
Async, for sure. Multi-thread depends on how any state is shared. I can't tell r.n.
23:29
The state is a shared_ptr of connection
And is stored in a map
On server.h
I meant the state that informs what message payload is sent
So, how "hard" it is to concurrently generate the traffic
I mean right now it just uses the MessageTypes and sends a SendText of a random size
The point is, that's not what it's going to do in the future, right? Random is easy.
well in the future it'll be fixed size
Question: it looks like header and body are "ready" at the same time. Is there any reason not to send them in one go?
23:34
yes - then the client cannot receive the header only
@JoshMenzel (I was more referring to the content. Random is better generated by the receiver :))
@JoshMenzel That's not how TCP works. But, the point is, you give the kernel (IP stack) more leverage to optimize the work
I tried sending the full message in one shot
but then the client couldn't receive it
(at least not the c++)
Huh. That's... odd. As in that doesn't make a lot of sense.
c++ client uses a copy of Connection.h
and it got stuck in ReadBody
Let me zip the client and server up and upload them to drive
That has both the client and the server code on it
I guess I'm at a loss as to how to build this thing
I guess the other keyword is concurrent connections
23:49
I thought that was 1k
the objective is to just make it more robust so it doesn't crap itself when there's more than 3 dozen clients connected
but if I want it to be all purpose
then it really needs to be able to handle the 1k concurrent
I see loads of code like this:
boost::signals2::connection c = this->bcast.connect([new_connection] { new_connection->Send(boost::placeholders::_1); });
What (the hell) is that supposed to mean.
that's when I tried using boost signals
for the broadcast
It mixes lambdas with bind-expression artefacts in ways that can't possibly work.
to avoid iterating over the list of clients
23:53
You know that signals still iterate over the slots, right
Yeah it's just something I saw suggested in another answer when I was looking for how to do this
and it does work
just not to the degree I want
How? It's not valid code.
2 mins ago, by sehe
It mixes lambdas with bind-expression artefacts in ways that can't possibly work.
it compiles
and it runs
23:56
I'm sitting here with my quiet face. I cxan repeat what I saw :)
Is there a guide or tutorial or something that explains how to do what I'm trying to do?
that's really what I need
this is how boost::asio works
"this"?
this is how you do high concurrency large size data transfer
to high numbers of concurrent connections
I've looked on youtube, read various other blogs

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