@Tunaki I think someone flagged the comments asking for explanation for the [java] and [perl], as they're gone now. I still don't know why it still says Java in the title
There are 3 "places" you can run an application. First is right on the host system. This gives the app the most amount of resources to play with, but it can pollute your system quickly when you install a lot of program that conflict with each other.
the second is in a VM. that give you total isolation from the host system, but at the drawback of system resources.
the third is Docker, a hybrid VM. It's not totally isolated, but good enough.
in docker, you build an "image". You run a script to build this image which contains your app, all ready to run.
Containers are supposed to be ethereal: you should be able to stop, remove it, and recreate it, and your application should work again where it left off.
in order to do that, you need some way of having persistent data, files that survive a container removal. This is what a "volume" is. Think of a volume a folder that is really mounted elsewhere that your container knows about and write to instead of it's own folder.
right now, there are 3 methods to set up volumes. First is the easy way: host mounted volumes. You specify a folder on your host system and say "this is where the container will store it's files"
second is what were were doing: data-only containers. Essentially you set up a copy of the container where it's only job is a) not to run the program (run /bin/true), and b) hold your volumes.
that works fine, assuming you don't delete the container
and that's what happened
the program we use to manage all of those services and copies decided to recreate the service containers and data-only containers
yes, but it's the problem of finding it. with the other services, it was easier because we knew what was inside those volumes, so finding it was easier. However, there are 2 problems with finding the data for closey's db
a) I'm not sure what is actually in the volume (what files to search for)
b) I think I set up the volume path incorrectly to start with, so it might be that the data wasn't persistent to begin with
worst case scenario, we have to start over with closey's db. But it's not terribly important that we have historical information. it was amusing at best. I made the permission system in 2.0 to help ease the process of adding users into the system
@NathanOliver contains is linear time. substring is on a fixed length here so constant-time (?), and then making the sets is linear. So the whole thing is linear, right?
@Tunaki Yes this is linear. all of the other O(n) operations become constants. So the algo is O(n) + C where C is some constant amount of time of the sub string and hash operation.
@Tunaki No problem. Sometimes people(i am included in that) forget the other operation get moved to being constants since it is the same thing every operation of the main loop.
@Tunaki Cool. What is really fun is when you have one algo that is O(n) but it relies an hashing and pointers to main memory and another that is O(n^2) but you have a contiguous array and you find the O(n^2) is actually faster at run time because of cache optimizations.
stackoverflow.com/questions/17364127/… Now I don't know if I should post a separate answer, because my edit pretty much contains the same information as the answer already posted.
@Tunaki Regarding that question (stackoverflow.com/questions/37616228/…): Is it still appropriate to flag for duplicate even though the code does not compile, or should I leave it to people with V4C-permission, so that it's removed quickly?
@David'mArm'Ansermot I'm not so sure about this. The dupe target is asking for the entire collection view frame, while the original question is asking about the frame of a particular section in the collection view