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A: Why is C++ template use not recommended in space/radiated environment?

Basile Starynkevitch Why C++ template use is not recommended in space/radiated environment? That recommendation is a generalization, to C++, of MISRA C coding rules and of Embedded C++ rules, and of DO178C recommendations, and it is not related to radiation, but to embedded systems. Because of radiation and vibr...

true for standard library templates and complex features (I once used lambdas in a project that doubled my code size) but I was thinking more of custom made ones. If you make your own templates, you should know what you are doing, right? I mean if you don't know what you are coding, that is a pretty big problem.
But how do you prove, to the people paying 100M€ a space mission, that your software is "bug-free"?
templates are just a way of writing. For instance If i make a template function that can be used with 2 classes, I unit test the 2 uses, and a third use with another class to be sure everything is correct.
this is still a bit tangentially related to templates. Could you elaborate more on the questions specific problem: templates.
@BasileStarynkevitch Embedded C++ has died cause it was to restrictive and even removde useful features like namespaces and templates. But you are right to mention that many parts of the C++ Standard Library are not usable on safety systems.
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@user6556709 It rather died because PC programmers with zero domain knowledge moaned and bitched about it. EC++ was pretty sound. Since it failed, C++ failed, and is losing market in embedded systems to C.
jww
jww
"consider coding your space embedded software in Rust" - Lol... Good god... Rust. About the only thing it works on is x86. They are broken on ARM and Aarch64. I don't expect it to do any better on rad-hardened PowerPC. And I'd rotflmao when cargo has to update with a bunch of broken packages.
With 5M€ I could be capable of adapting Rust to GCC. Just send me an email at work, with a serious enough offer.
@Lundin Really the job market tells something different and I don't know anyone who liked EC++ cause you had no benefit over using C.
@user6556709 Look at this: embeddedgurus.com/barr-code/2018/02/…. EC++ was used until around 2005-ish. I would guess that the strong dip in C++ use after 2006, is EC++ failing. It had clear language support for private encapsulation and RAII, which is about the only C++ features that are desirable in safety-related system. Much as I dislike C++, it is undeniably far easier to write your OO design in C++ than in C, and you can do it without being a language expert.
@Lundin You are right, RAII is the C++ feature which gives you a real benefit in safety systems. But RAII without having it in form of template containers is not really funny. IMHO the rising market share of C++ was from the echo of the OOP dream of the 90s. (Btw. C has lost market share in the last two years.)
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"since any run-time bug in embedded C++ space software can crash the mission (read again about Ariane 5 first flight failure," that ain't a argument in favour of C in the embedded space though. C++ has stronger type checking which would have helpen in this instance.
AFAIK, that is not true. Because Ariane 5 was coded in some dialect of Ada, which, at the time, had a better type system than C++17 today
opa
opa
@jww How long ago did you try it out? I haven't seen problems with ARM recently. Rust has had a lot of changes, and comparing what Rust a year a go to today is often unfair. Rust team is legitimately working hard on fixing embedded issues in particular, as in updates come out almost every week about progress and LLVM itself is often a blocker for less popular systems. Also complaining here won't get your issues fixed much less heard. Report issues to the embedded working group, then you can complain.
jww
jww
@opa - The issues I encountered were about two months ago attempting to compile Mozilla's Geckodriver. I was testing on a Trituim H3 with 32-bit Cortex A-7 and Lepotato with 64-bit Cortex A-53. Both used Armbian, which is based on Ubuntu Bionic. I was not able to compile the missing Geckodriver. Then, when that failed, I was told to update with cargo and then try again. Rust could not compile its cargo packages either. I moved onto a different approach that avoided Geckodriver and Rust.
@opa - I was not complaining here. I found Basile's the statements quite humorous, and I was literally laughing. I envisioned the Mars Rover downloading a Rust update through Cargo and then rolling over on its side when it tries to compile the package and it fails. Anyway, I did file the bug reports and got the standard "won't fix" response. See, for example, Debian Issue 926748.
The Arianne thing has been much discussed. They used fairly bog-standard Ada, but turned off some unnecessary bounds checks to save CPU cycles. That worked great. Then they ported the same code to the later Arianne 5, which had different specs, and never readdressed if those checks should be turned back on or the bounds readdressed. It was a human error, and likely would have happened in C++ as well (since by default it has no bounds checks to start with), but has nothing to do with templates or language complexity.
Ariane was a management error. I gave a few references regarding management
opa
opa
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@jww so in other words, it was due to debian using an old version of cargo, not rust being unable to support arm. And I'm guessing this is you? That's not how you report a bug, you don't go off the cuff and start insulting people.
jww
jww
@opa - As far as I know, Debian packaged Rust and Cargo from the same release. They are a matched set and from the Rust folks. The matching Geckodriver for the release was v0.24.0. I tried to building all versions of Geckodriver from about v0.10.0 through v0.24.0. None of them would build under Rust. Rust packages could not be updated through Cargo because the packages failed to build. I'm guessing the compiler was broke, but it is just a guess on my part. Something should have succeeded (Geckodriver or Cargo packages).
@opa - Sorry to disappoint you, but I don't put up with that crap. I think the bug report was fine. They did not know they had a broken compiler and a broken update mechanism in the field, so it was reported. The half ass response from the maintainers got criticized. There's no way I would consider using Rust again. I only see incompetence when I look at the project. Hence the reason I envisoned the Mars Rover keeling over on its side when trying to update through rust and cargo.
"[...] so please skip pages for European bureaucrats" ::chuckles:: I guarantee it.
For certain reasonable values of "error-free", it is not very difficult to make an error-free C++ compiler, it's provably impossible to make an error-free C++ compiler. Turing-completeness of the template metaprogramming system means that in order to accept all well-formed C++ programs while rejecting all ill-formed ones, you need to solve the Halting Problem.
It is still very difficult to make an efficient, optimizing C++ compiler
Unfortunately your answer really answers why not use the STL not why not use developer-provided templates.

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