@JoshMenzel One big one has already been pointed out: use UDP. Order really isn't a problem on localhost, but if you're really concerned about that use a library that supported ordering over UDP (but will still support broadcast). For one example, I've used enet with good results. I'm not sure it supports broadcast though--I've used it for mostly TCP-like connections.
@JoshMenzel Given that you want to broadcast to hundreds of clients, there's quite a fair argument that one of the things you're doing wrong is using TCP.
First off, without measurements you're nowhere. Can you prove that it is unnecessarily slow?
Second, be sure to use scatter-gather and the composed write-operations supplied by ASIO. That eliminates your code as a source of inefficiency, and also generally removes room for error.
In that case
...
You can disregard the CMakeLists.txt - it's literally a copy of a file that I've carried for years answering SO stuff. It's a mess of irrelevant things
I'm a bit confused about the enable_shared_from_this. Best I know it only works with make_shared`. And it cannot be used because the constructor is private. How does that work on your end?
Nope. It's never needed/useful on temporaries. The return value of shared_from_this() is one (what's known as rvalue in the inscrutable standards jargon)
Looks like I'm going to be proven right about that:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/52371051/visual-studio-callback-function-problem-cdecl @sehe I have this exact issue with the connection create method
@JerryCoffin yeah, I get that and I was looking for the mechanism/timeout by which it would still send smaller packets and the wiki page said it was when it received the ACKs for all previous packets
Has anybody ever used asio( not Boost::asio, which is not depend on Boost)?
The compiler complains that "error: ‘deadline_timer’ in namespace ‘asio’ does not name a type" when encounters using deadline_timer = asio::deadline_timer;.
Hello! I ran cppcheck on our code and it hinted that 'EmbeddedResourceAccessor' forward declaration not expected in source file; here is the code (I'm not the one who wrote it). This line does not seem to be needed as commenting it out gets me the same behaviour. Is there a point in instancing the class like that, or is it really only a forward declaration and not an actual instantiation?
// Convenience typedef to reduce typing.
typedef EmbeddedResourceAccessor<SilverLiningResources> SimSilverDataAccessor;
// !!! IMPORTANT !!! Create the accessor methods by explicitly instantiating the template class.
template class EmbeddedResourceAccessor<SilverLiningResources>;
Thanks; I read on that page that the functions that are never used are never instantiated, so is the comment "right" when it says "Create the accessor methods"?
There's a difference between latency (think lag) and bandwidth (think streaming velocity)
You are right to also wish to minimize the latency, but there's only a problem when the latency is more than you can buffer for, (or your results become useless for external reasons)
Still, the steps are: identify bottlenecks, identify fixes, select high impact low effort wins, impolement top-N
There's always latency. The point is whether you care/can deal. Latency is not an issue, unless there is a throughput mismatch. That is unlikely to happen in this case
I don't mind, but I won't look at it much (if at all), because that's not the point of my review/refactors. The point is to reduce clutter so you can be enlightened just reading it :)
Shared pointers are usually quite dubious, in fact. However, here it is the clearest way to extend the lifetime of the message(s) for as long as some remote is still having it queued (or actually resends it!)
@JoshMenzel Yup. And it's usually superior. What shared_ptr solves is NOT the passing style, but the lifetime semantics.
I think that C# eventually catches cycles, but you can easily leak if some collection still contains a root for such a cyclic graph
Regardless, yes, this is another possible improvement: e.g. making the connection map contain weak pointers and getting rid of all explicit locking. Though you would get more strand executions as a trade off. I'm not sure it's a big win, but I might try it
Do you know how to clone a gist locally? Then you can just use regular Git tooling
It's well hidden. I installed gh command line tool yesterday just so I don't have to keep looking it up (then it's something like` gh gist clone a2c54169d35915f2a102533850123920`)
@JoshMenzel so C++ is what I'd call a resource oriented language where scope matters. When something leaves scope the destructor is run. So insofar as you're using shared_ptr correctly... yes it will auto cleanup
basically the idea is that a weak pointer will say "HEY I need to use this for a sec" grab a strong reference so it can't be deleted on it. Then release that as soon as it's done
you're testing my pedantry...
there is a difference between the thing the weak/strong ptr points to and the ptr itself