@MarkR Yes, I'm the one that presented the question. It was approved by my seniors.
And the person that solved did not spent a single second arguing with me about how they found it confusing. They managed to understand it and solve it rather quickly.
@Sherif My first thought was a table of hashes. It would have false positives, but if a hash wasn't on the list, then it must not be in the original list.
B-trees are only good at fast search. What we care about here is efficient use of memory.
So I'd urge you to focus on the hashing-bit and ignore the b-tree bit.
Take your interviewers advice wisely. They are there to help you focus on what's important and they want you to succeed.
Think of it like this: while you are being interviewed, this is your chance to interview them. You want to know "can I work with this person" just as much as they do.
If they're kind, courteous, helpful, and knowledgeable ... A+!
And here I thought you wanted to just throw out something extremely complicated because DaveRandom said he wasn't interested in a non-real-world problem :D
If they're mean, dismissive, and arrogant well... I'll keep looking thank you very much
@MarkR That's not the kind of person I am :)
I rather enjoy being helpful. Nobody pays me to be online and help people. The only incentive I get for it is the joy knowing I helped someone else excel.
You being smarter, actually makes my job easier believe it or not. Because there is only so much of my time I can devote to any given problem.
Note: I'm not saying you aren't already smart.
If I thought you weren't I wouldn't have bothered to have this conversation with you.
I think people are appreciative of the help, and I'd imagine most people on here are up for debate on complex matters, being told they're wrong because of a disparity between the Q and the expectation, that could certainly put people off.
I agree. Telling people they are wrong is mean spirited.
That's why I don't bother to argue about wrong and right. I only aspire to constructive conversation.
If I'm wrong, please by all means help me do better.
People that have err'ed, in my experience, eventually realize their errors and correct them if given the chance. So what's the point in focusing on who's right? Instead, focus on the right solution to the problem. One you can agree makes sense.
There's nothing that builds rapport better between team members than working together to solve a hard problem :)
If you were managing a team and you laid out a set of requirements, and your team immediately began making comments that were accurate based on their understanding, but that understanding didn't correlate to your expectations, you would presumably withdraw the original Q (as it stood to confusion) and re-issue it anew in a different manner
@MarkR Well, there's a huge difference between that and a technical interview.
In a technical interview you aim to asses 3 basic things: 1) Can this person write good code, 2) How does this person deconstruct complex problems, and 3) Are they effective communicators (i.e. do they ask good follow up questions or do they just assume they know everything?)
This question hits all 3 quite nicely at a high level.
I think we've determined you can do your filters < 32GB using the... let's say expanded version of your Q. Just talking about generic storage and searching of hashes now.
There's a reason why requirements are not always up for debate. Someone smarter than you has already covered the really hard stuff. Stand on the shoulders of geniuses and call yourself tall my friend. That's a good thing!
@MarkR And you're suggesting that I don't?
There's a reason why Google invented their own database.
There's also a reason why the crawler does not use one.
None of those reasons are due to a lack of understanding existing DBMS solutions.
You can't run a business by arguing about stuff all day and never actually solving anything. That's why we have specializations.
4 tiers of B tree at 256 slots, 8 byte pointer each consumes your 32gb. With a trillion results equally spaced that brings it down to... about 230 slots in each end bucket... I think?
@Sherif Well, I was thinking a tree, but giving that some thought it would still be too big for memory. Beyond that, I don't have anything off the top of my head, I'd have to give it a lot of thought as to how you could build some structure that you could compare to.
@Sherif Reading up I saw you mentioned a bloom filter. That would make a lot of sense. If you got a positive, you could then go to disk to confirm (if it was important to confirm).
Fair point but it's only another 16MB, didn't consider the OS either but can always do modulus <lower number> on the b yte value to reduce the number of branches
@Trowski That sounds reasonable. But we don't actually care to confirm here. We can safely assume a false positive is equal to a positive in this case.
@MarkR It's fine. I'm trying to get to next steps. Even if we run into a slight problem. How do we fit the hashes into that space though?
That's a harder problem to solve.
And again, is the Trie actually helping us with any of this? Is it even necessary?
Could you remove the trie entirely and still use that space more efficiently?
I wouldn't. I'd store the entire list separately backed by some other storage and then access an offset of that based on the final tier of pointers. Realistically I'd not use 256^4 and would leave half my memory free for caching.
@Trowski We've already determined that pretty much everyone in the room who chimed in on the original question at the time interpreted it differently to how Sherif intended. But after 36 years of non-stop arguing we changed the problem we were trying to solve.
There's an episode of Star Trek, the Sheliak are going to obliterate a planet and the Enterprise is there to evacuate the humans living there but they can't beam people through the atmosphere. LaForge works night and day to try and find a way to beam them off. He says he can do it... It'll take 20 years and a research team of 11, meanwhile Picard has found a way to eliminate the problem entirely using another method.
You're talking to a guy who failed his A level ICT exams because I spent 10 minutes on the exam, and then the remaining 50 scribbling over why there were factual errors on the said exam :P
@MarkR I'm not going to read through the last 7 hours of chat, but the question is clear. Maybe missing information on what accuracy is acceptable, but given the constraints it's obvious that sacrifices will need to be made.
Nah, but after 15 years of working in software development, after another 5 or so I suspect I'll be done and want to move out the field into something else.
So, question. You were RAM limited, were you CPU limited? For a trillion rows, it seems like you'd need a fairly substantial number of discrete hashes. GPU accelerated?
I'm not sure I understand where the spam list came from in that case. I mean I could understand if upon scanning a page and determining it to be spam, it added it to its own spam records for future, but how do multiple serves achieve a quorum if they don't have the same data?
I think Google's search precision has gotten worse. When I search for similar but not the same things, I get the same result. To some degree this unification can be good, but for tech stuff it is worse than before, imo.
Search appliance with some public documents on, who gives a shit.... the server next to it containing the gdocs of a major company, and bye-bye cloud hosting business.
They started with a security chip for their own servers and then made many different variations of it for their consumer products like the Pixel and the Chromebook
I mean, when $50,000 cars can have their doors opened by replay attacks because no-one thought to add a f**king nonce and timestamp to it, what hope does the $50 iot lightbulb have
one of the reasons why I do my absolute best to avoid smart devices... sure they're convenient, but I'm not trading someone hacking into my stuff and keeping me from it
e.g. turning my lights on sporadically, locking me out of my home... I'll take physical means
Once the cookie is out the cookie jar and every cybercriminal on earth gets its hands on nation-state level cyberweapons because some dipshit uploaded the wrong thing on his home laptop.
Certainly doesn't when they're running Kali loaded up with the latest leaks from the TAO
It genuinely terrifies me. You can't defend against that.
Well, I've spent 3 nights trying to get through Leonard Susskins lecture on penrose diagrams and I keep falling asleep, going to try it a bit earlier tonight. Goodnight all o/
@Sherif The latter half of the conversation was very enjoyable.
@salathe sorry to be such a drag, a couple days ago I've submitted more information on my account request (sorin). Please let me know if there's any more info needed from me, I'm also available here :). Again, sorry for being a pain.
@NikiC why, could you please describe? It is reasonable why it should be restricted. And I'm agree that the best option is to terminate execution of code immediately.
There is no defined operation such like str_replace in zend operators right? Can I change php_str_to_str_ex() to a PHP_API and use it in file.c? (for the multi-byte enclosure/delimiter in fputscsv() )
@NikiC I agree with this, because it's the only solution here. Only small chance to implement something like a coroutine/exception with return value to catch this exception ourselves and return a valid value to C code (or try to clean result)
@JoeWatkins just imagine that C code waits for specific structure to be returned on the stack and we have a PHP exception instead, then FFI won't be able to return required C structure back on top of the stack or returned value will be a garbage.