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00:39
helloc
01:04
So i've been reading up on coroutines and how they're implemented in C (cuz i'm weird like that).
It basically comes down to four ideas:
1. Using assembly to create a separate stack for coroutine data, and switching with `setjmp.h`.
2. [Taking advantage of the Duffs Device and `static` variables](http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/coroutines.html) --no assembly or `setjmp.h` required.
3. Using system fibers from the `POSIX` library instead, if applicable.
4. Implementing #1 in pure `C` by guestimating memory needed for coroutine data (assuming variable length arrays are created on a contiguous stack).
I'm since come across a fifth idea for creating coroutines that seems interesting, and simple enough to fit in 150 lines, including comments...but i don't really understand the game plan the author is going for, if that makes any sense.
The article that linked it says that "The trick is to allocate space for coroutine stacks on your own stack". I do see the use of a stack data structure, but i don't see how they get around the whole "overwriting the program stack" problem.
I know code review isn't the funnest thing in the world, but if someone is kind enough to take a look and explain a high-level breakdown of what's going on here and how coroutine data isn't getting overwritten, i'd really appreciate it.
 
2 hours later…
03:04
helloc all;
anyone up this time of night?
 
4 hours later…
user3079266
06:40
helloc all;
06:52
Morning
user3079266
'sup?
Nothing much, even quite boring
What are you up to?
@PeterVaro why do you feel that i3 is better than awesome and xmonad? Is it because you know C best?
user3079266
@DrorK. homework... next week's the exam week...
user3079266
this is an exam week too, actually, but we got the majority next week
06:56
I see
user3079266
BTW, I chose quite a fun piece of coursework =) I'll be making software to create a visual petri-net like models of C source code. It's something like @PeterVaro's visual programming for python, but in reverse =)
08:07
@PeterVaro Ubuntu. That's what we have at work, and it's working fine. I guess I will want to test something else when I learn more about what's under the hood. Even our embedded systems have Ubuntu (so far, we might want something smaller when we go to production)
I have peppermint on my little notebook at home, it's slow enough as it is.
user924016
08:56
Helloc all;
user3079266
helloc @RonniSkansing;
user924016
Damn I am tired..
user3079266
@RonniSkansing lots of work?
user924016
Nope, just late yesterday and early morning... need to make some coffee =]
10:36
helloc @all;
10:53
@Mints97 what are you going to implement that in?
 
2 hours later…
12:40
guys, is there any function inC to determine variable type? I mea, for example, in Python there is`type`:
`>>> a = 'o'
>>> type(a)
<type 'str'>`
user3079266
@BartekBanachewicz C#. I've got no other option: first-years aren't allowed to do coursework projects in anything else.
helloc, @Mints97
user3079266
@setevoy nope, there's no such function
user3079266
@setevoy I guess it's not very polite to chat in russian here... =)
it's pitty...
@Mints97 yep :-)
12:42
@Mints97 hm, are you going to parse C?
@setevoy You know that variables have fixed types?
@BartekBanachewicz yep
In C++ there is such a function (decltype), but why would you need it?
C isn't generic at all.
@BartekBanachewicz just inetersting :-)
user3079266
@BartekBanachewicz yes. I think C is a good option here, since it's greatly simple
@Mints97 Well, as long as you stick to declarative parsers :P
don't parse it manually for your mental health :)
@setevoy no, I mean, what purpose should it serve? you said it's "a pity" it's not there
12:44
this is why I more like C then Python - because everything are under control... if you use variable - you always know it's type... but Python will deside itself, instead of you
oops
hi guys
how do you deal with very long printf statements?
user3079266
helloc @Igor;
helloc
@setevoy eh, except it's not really true. What's under void*? C is generally using unsafe type casts and type erasure a lot.
do you chop them or define them or put them into a separate function?
12:46
@Igor the last one sounds ok.
#define is not a replacement for a function.
@ Bartek is that a common best practice? to put it into a function. Because I have to print a menu on each iteration?
@Igor yes, in general putting commonly used code in functions is considered a good practice
:P
that's the most basic principle of structuring procedural code.
@Mints97 do you know/use any Rus IRC channels about C?
user3079266
@setevoy C is generally a bit not typesafe. But that's mostly true for pointers
@Mints97 it's generally not typesafe at all.
12:48
@Mints97 I don't studied pointers yet :-(
user3079266
@setevoy sorry, I'm not on IRC... I only ever chat with people here or in VK =3
bool a = 1; // works fine.
@setevoy I wish I hadn't studied them. :P
@Mints97 some people in UA goverment encourages people to live VK, because it's FSB network :-D
user3079266
@setevoy you know, I have conflicting feelings about your new government... for now, let's just hope they won't steal as much as Yanukovich =P
user3079266
and let's hope they'll be able to handle the crap in Donbass
12:51
you know... I have on;y one feeling about our new goverment... at the 'revolution' time, some people says "You'll miss Yanukovich soon". And - they was right :-|
user3079266
@setevoy if that guy hadn't gotten out when he did, Putin would've had a good excuse to invade Ukraine openly, IMHO
user3079266
anyway, it must seem uninteresting for everyone here to read about Ukraine instead of C, so let's move to the room you made earlier =)
good point :-) but I''m now trying uderstood 'lvalue' and 'rvalue' - so, let's speak about politic little bit later :-)
user3079266
of course =)
@Mints97 btw - maybe let's contact in VK?
or FB
user3079266
12:57
@setevoy my ID is /mints97
done;
13:50
@setevoy haven't it been blocked in Russia yet? :}
@Kamiccolo you mean VK?
@setevoy nah, I mean facebook :}
@Kamiccolo oh, no... yet :-)
user3079266
@Kamiccolo facebook is still up and running... for now... ><
for good or for worse...
 
1 hour later…
15:00
*.c - C-file; *.h - header file; but what is *.o?

CC fs/ext4/balloc.o
CC fs/ext4/bitmap.o

// while compiling Linux kernel
user3079266
18
Q: What's an object file in C?

PithikosI am reading about libraries in C but I have not found yet an explanation on what an object file is. What's the real difference between any other compiled file and an object file? Would be glad if someone could explain in human language. :)

> .o UNIX object file. // thanks :-)
user3079266
whenever in doubt, google! =)
 
1 hour later…
16:05
Either my gcc is simply broken, or I've stumbled the 4th case of it being unable to produce obvious warnings
clang to the rescue
I don't get this "warnings" obsession
they are inherently optional
they're just tips :F
Arguably the most valuable tips you can get :)
still tips
Proper static analysis with dependent types is where it's getting really interesting
in Lounge<C++>, 13 secs ago, by gnzlbg
its like, i dont even know how to wrap this shit
lol
Basically C from C++ perspective in a nutshell
I wonder if I should send bug reports to the GCC people
meh warnings
16:16
It would be interesting to hear what could possibly cause the misbehavior
Although I'm not sure if they have better things to do
What's even more surprising
@DrorK. I don't think C standard specifies warnings
That all of said issues are reproducible with -O0 too
@BartekBanachewicz The C standard doesn't specify a lot of things that GCC happen to endorse
@DrorK. I guess they are of lower priority
anyway, I find it funny that gcc is compiled as C++ code now
maybe you should do that, too?
g++ should give you more warnings than gcc
Well technically g++ is not C, so it either won't compile or generate warnings related to C++
No much use
clang seems to shine with this regard, though
16:34
@DrorK. not really
@DrorK. have you tried?
because gcc team disagrees with you
What the 'gcc team' disagrees with?
14 mins ago, by Dror K.
No much use
Are you suggesting that gcc is a C compiler, and g++ is a secondary C compiler?
@DrorK. I'm suggesting that g++ is a better C compiler :P
I mean, unless you want to use C11 features
most notably, designated initializers
if you don't use them and generic macros, you might as well use g++
Explicitly states that g++ is a C++ compiler, not a C compiler
Maybe the gcc team should fix their documentation? ;)
gcc could've been written in JavaScript, it doesn't change the fact that g++ is not a C compiler
@DrorK. What I meant was that g++ is a compiler that ultimately allows you to write better C code, can produce better warnings and errors, and as an added benefit, allows you to actually use C++
@DrorK. yes, keep nitpicking, that's very useful for the discussion
g++ allows you to write better C++ code...
and better C code, because it's stricter.
If you don't understand the differences between C and C++, you came to the right channel.
16:42
Do you know C++?
The difference between a C compiler, and a C++ compiler, is not nitpicking
I'm perfectly aware of differences between C and C++
I know that my code is written in C, therefore it requires a C compiler.
@DrorK. code written in clean C subset can be compiled by both compilers
this subset covers a bit of C++ and vast majority of C
No, it can not. The standards have more than enough differences to produce a significantly different behavior
16:44
@DrorK. no, if you write your code accordingly
have you never heard the phrase "clean C"?
I have no idea what "clean C" is. I know what a strictly conforming C code is... and a strictly conforming one, has no bearing on anything C++ related
@DrorK. well then, maybe you should educate yourself first.
10
A: What is "Clean C" and how does it differ from standard C?

ouahClean C is a term coined in Harbison & Steele book (C: A Reference Manual, Prentice Hall). A program is said to be written in Clean C if it can be compiled by a Standard C compiler and a Standard C++ compiler; and its execution would not produce different observable behavior from the two compiler...

The C and C++ programming languages are closely related. C++ grew out of C, as it was designed to be source-and-link compatible with C. Due to this, development tools for the two languages (such as IDEs and compilers) are often integrated into a single product, with the programmer able to specify C or C++ as their source language. However, due to minor semantic differences, most non-trivial C programs will not compile as C++ code without modification — C++ is not a superset of C. Likewise, C++ introduces many features that are not available in C and in practice almost all code written in C++ is...
@BartekBanachewicz I suggest you take your own suggestion. Go to open-std.org and start reading defect reports of all the explicit, and implicit differences C and C++ implementations have
Then, try to suggest to somebody who writes strictly conforming C code, to use a C++ compiler, for writing "better code"...
@DrorK. I know all about them.
You know all of them?
16:47
@DrorK. that's precisely what GCC team did.
why don't you go up to them and tell them that?
@DrorK. I couldn't probably dictate them all from memory, but I'm aware of them, yes.
Tell the GCC team what? ... that a strictly conforming C code might not produce the same behavior under a C++ compiler?
@DrorK. no, that the idea of compiling C code with a C++ compiler is bad
If your intention is to write C++ compiler specific code, go ahead
I presume you're smarter than people making decisions there.
@DrorK. no, their intention was to ultimately write safer and better code.
It's not a question of being smart, it's a question of choice
16:50
have you read the link I've posted
have you read the answer I've posted
They're fully entitled to use a more suitable language for their needs
do you even read anything I post here
@DrorK. they're still writing standard C
just sticking to behaviour that's well defined to work the same both in C and C++
which is ultimately a very reasonable decision
because things that don't work the same are mostly unsafe obscure hacks.
Again, they're allowed to do so
I just said that's a good idea.
It doesn't mean that I have to do what they've decided to do. I don't care for C++
16:52
you've never answered me
9 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
Do you know C++?
I'm writing C code, you proposed that I'll use a C++ compiler. That's not a legitimate suggestion.
A C++ compiler would require me to write code that with consideration to C++ standards, which obviously my code has no such consideration
that doesn't make the suggestion not legitimate
it just means you have to do something differently, but apparently that's too much to accept
helloc
user3079266
@DrorK. it's not that hard, really. I do that all the time because of VS's compiler's limits. It's basically C89 + warnings when you don't cast pointers.
user3079266
helloc @NoobSaibot;
16:54
and, again, that's a suggestion based on a decision made by the C compiler developers
In my book, that's quite more than doing something 'differently'
then your book sucks hth
in the time we spent discussing you could've ran g++ over your codebase
@BartekBanachewicz Okay, thanks for the suggestion- not interested.
I'm not surprised, C people are typically very reluctant to do things in a different way.
C code written today looks pretty much like code written 20 years ago.
little to no progress at all
I actually think that most C people actually like C++
16:56
I am pretty sure that most C++ people actually dislike C, though.
Could someone please explain what's going on here?
Who knows, one day I might have the time to learn it too, but obviously I have no intention to touch it before I feel comfortable with C
You know, knowing C doesn't help you in writing idiomatic C++
I mean I understand you don't want to learn two things at once
just don't get into thinking that knowing C will help you
I'm sure that most probably it even hurts :)
heh, it can :)
people tend to fall back to available C primitives instead of choosing higher-level concepts
16:59
The reason why I'd chosen to start with C, and not C++, is because I've looked around at libs that I was curious about. and it seemed that the vast majority of those were written in C
So I thought it would only make sense to focus on C if I want any chance on trying reading what's going on
if you want to read their code, yeah. But if you just want to use them, C++ is typically fine
except stuff like GLFW API that doesn't give you userdata on callbacks :/
Oh, sure. If anything, the APIs are one-way street. No?
user3079266
@DrorK. yeah, as for libs, you can easily use C source code within C++ (even if it's not "clean C", extern "C" helps), but not vice versa
@DrorK. you can wrap C++ code in a C API
but otherwise, yeah, it could be hard, C can't really parse headers of C++
When it comes to resources such as books, it seems that C is lacking
Especially with anything 'modern'
Qix
Qix
17:14
helloc all;
But when it comes to paper/publications of algorithms/data structures, it seems that C is very much liked
user3079266
helloc @Qix;
Qix
Qix
@BartekBanachewicz I've run into this issue tonnnssss of times. How hard is it to pass some sort of identifier back to a callback?
A few SDKS I depend on do this.
18:13
It's shitty if you don't have userdata
18:27
helloc all;
@Gauthier because of the plain-text based, simple configuration, 100% configurable and the nice and clean status bar -- and it is written in C ;)
@RonniSkansing I'm glad -- use it well ;)
@Mints97 tell me more about it -- sounds exciting ;)
@Gauthier Ubuntu by itself is not a bad distro -- it just feels far more limited than Arch. If you really want to learn what's under the hood, how GNU/Linux is working => Arch is one of the best distro to start with, also it will as small as you wish, since you are the one, who is building the whole system <= Arch is sometimes called a "meta-distro"
@setevoy you don't use types in idiomatic Python as you would use in C
if you try to do so, you are on the wrong track -- you are duck-typing there => you don't care about the type itself, as long as it has the properties you are looking for
the two concept cannot be far from each other
what you can't control in Python is the life-time of a variable because of the GC
although if you want to, you can => you can use weak-references for example -- but the main idea is: Python won't mess with you with the object creation -- in return, you don't want to mess python with the object deletion
helloc @NoobSaibot;
helloc @PeterVaro.
@PeterVaro: Could you explain something for me please?
How is the author allowed to get away with line 17 & 20?
@DrorK. C++ compilers can't eat "real" C code especially since C99, as you mentioned -- no matter how hard ones state they know it can. You can restrict yourself to use a smaller subset, but what will you gain?
probably nothing. IMHO you should contact the GCC devs
I think they will explain 1) why it is missing and 2) what they are going to do about it
@NoobSaibot I have no idea
18:44
hmm...
I mean I have no idea how the author allowed to get away
You can have function pointers point tovoid* variables?
(lol)
look, function pointer is just like any pointers, except since it is a complex data type, you declare them differently. so, as other pointers, they cannot hold other typed pointers than they are, and only a pointer to void can hold any kind of pointer, which can be a function pointer as well
Qix
Qix
Isn't in the spec that void* is a special type that can be cast to any other type?
SO should have a pay-as-you-go service...
Qix
Qix
18:48
I believe @DrorK. pointed that out.
@NoobSaibot Not at all.
@Qix it is -- so?
@Qix Por qué?
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro So the function in that snippet returns a void*; it can assign it to whatever it wants.
@NoobSaibot Because StackOverflow is CC-by-SA
I believe it is the other way around
you can assign a function pointer to void*
but you cannot assign a void* to a function pointer
unless you explicitly cast it
Qix
Qix
You're not passing a function pointer to a void*; you're assigning it
s/You're/they're/g
18:50
@PeterVaro So that code is fraudulent?
Qix
Qix
fun = pass(...);
@Qix What does "CC-by-SA" mean?
Qix
Qix
Is valid because you're going from a void* -> a function pointer
sorry I've been teaching 6 hours today
I'm super tired
and I don't really think right now -- just typing in words ;)
18:51
@Qix But pass doesn't return a function pointer.
@PeterVaro sleep(@PeterVaro)
will go ;)
Qix
Qix
@NoobSaibot Right; it returns a void*. In C, you can assign a void* to any type without explicit casts.
@Qix false
you can assign anything to a void*
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro I believe it's in the spec.
but you cannot assign a void* to anything
Qix
Qix
18:53
hmmm
@Qix But it's assigning the void* returned by pass to a function pointer.
Qix
Qix
Idk if that's correct.
@Qix I almost 100% sure it is the other way around
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro Why don't you have to explicitly cast the return of malloc, then?
Foo* foo = malloc(sizeof(Foo));
Perfectly valid. In fact it's one of the first things @DrorK. tested me on when I first started coming in here ;)
Maybe there's a way to get in touch with Tony Finch...
18:54
wait a minute, I will open a terminal then ;)
Qix
Qix
I get one warning with GCC
void* foo() {
return 123456;
}

int main() {
void *(*fun)(void *arg);

fun = foo();

return 0;
}
Gives me:
└┨│ gcc test.c
test.c: In function ‘foo’:
test.c:2:10: warning: return makes pointer from integer without a cast [-Wint-conversion]
return 123456;
^
@PeterVaro
@Qix you don't have to tell me to not cast malloc -- I never did that in all my life
anyway -- I think you are right about this -- at least I don't have a warning
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro I know, that's not what I was suggesting.
19:00
from either direction..
Qix
Qix
I was just pointing out the fact about void*. I think I read it in the spec somewhere.
which is surprising for me at this moment,
but you malloc example makes perfect sense
Qix
Qix
:)
okay -- I'm going to sleep now, my head started to hurt (cold front)
we will talk about these tomorrow, when I can think ;)
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro Sounds good :)
19:02
but I think you are right about this
and I was wrong.
@Qix I have a very good reason for casting them...
anyway, nighty night guys!
Night.
Qix
Qix
free @PeterVaro;
19:02
But what was @Qix right about...? lol
Qix
Qix
@NoobSaibot So a void* can be implicitly cast to any type.
At least, any pointer type (not sure about any type)
meaning you don't have to cast explicitly
but void* is the only type that has this property.
Ok...i too thought it was the other way around...
You even got a warning.
Qix
Qix
It is in both C and C++; any pointer type (at least) can be cast to a void*
in C, though, it's both ways.
So it would seem...
Qix
Qix
@NoobSaibot Yeah because I think it's an int in particular; not a pointer type.
19:05
Do you know about coroutines?
Qix
Qix
not an int*; just a scalar int.
@NoobSaibot A little.
Thank god...
I know that the trick is making sure that the application doesn't overwrite idle coroutine data on the stack.
So what most people do is use assembly to create a separate stack that holds coroutine data.
Either that, or they take advantage of the "Duff's Device".
But this is supposed to be another way.
...only i can't seem to figure out how they prevent the coroutine data from being overwritten on the stack.
I can see they make their own stack, but can't see where the dots connect.
I thought the void*-thing was a clue...
Wait...i think each coroutine struct is supposed to have its own coroutine_main...

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