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00:04
@Qix A moderator at #git freenode says that it should be very reliable, but he's not aware of such guarantee
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Not looking for a guarantee; it's an isolated git filesystem :)
If it's isolated, then why not break it apart?
Qix
Qix
You're missing the point ;)
The point is to be able to pull in any file from any commit on a whim.
Without having to check it out.
I'm not sure what do you mean by "on a whim"?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. instantly, when needed.
00:13
I guess I still don't see the big picture
Qix
Qix
Because checking out a file involves
- Finding the file
- Reading the object
- Writing it to the disk
- Then have the application use it
Whereas my intermediate system would
- Find the file
- Read the file
But didn't you mention lock-by-replication?
Wouldn't that imply either in-memory full replication of the datastore, before doing anything?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. I did, but now that I'm thinking about it, a real file exists for every file version in a git repository.
Just use the system's locking mechanism.
So during an access- the git won't be 'used'?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. What do you mean "won't be used"?
00:19
If the system is going to lock the datastore, I suppose a concurrent writer is restricted out?
(I'm not sure how Git reacts when its objects are not accessible)
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Git will never be accessing the files.
I'm reading the objects directly.
I'm definitely missing something :)
Qix
Qix
I think you are lol
So this is a static repo? Won't have new commits?
Qix
Qix
- My sandbox process starts
- On the command line, a git folder, and a git commit are specified, along with a -- and a new command line to run
- The sandbox reads the tree using Git's internal objects given the commit hash
- The sandbox then initializes a FUSE VFS
- The sandbox starts the previously specified program, using FUSE as a middle-man to intercept syscalls to open files.
- When a file is requested by the child process, the sandbox will be notified by FUSE and will translate the path to a Git object, returning a file handle to that object (which solves the locking problem)
Therefore, a command can be run in order to use files from a specific commit in a git repository's history
00:33
This is the approach other Git-web modules take?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Well yeah; when github reads a file from the history, it finds the exact object in the history and reads its contents.
user2985029
hellow
Qix
Qix
helloc @xxx;
user2985029
hi
@Qix So when a file is 'written', a new hash is being computed/associated?
Qix
Qix
00:40
@DrorK. Yes.
@DrorK. Oh darn :| this has already been done.
It seems pretty much unmaintained?
Takeover!
Qix
Qix
Haha
00:56
helloc
Just a quick question: I'm trying to analyze some C code, and there's this line of asm.
char *buf = alloca(0x2000);
asm volatile("" :: "m" (buf));
What does that mean?
01:15
helloc
@NoobSaibot My best guess is that it tries to manipulate the optimizer. Better yet focus on documented code, otherwise it's not going to be very productive
The question of 'why' somebody is doing something, under what implementation, for what purpose, and whether it's actually does what expected... there are way too many variables
@Owatch Hello and Good night!
@DrorK. Goodnight?
@Owatch Yes, 4 AM, I'm exhausted
@DrorK. real men never sleep
:<
@Owatch I'm read man, >30 hours on my feet :\
01:19
Alright, goodnight then
The fact that I can't spell "a real man", demonstrates it :)
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Woo, got it to work under Ubuntu. Going to fork and make some modifications to it.
@Qix Remember, it was my idea... so I expect recognition :)
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. LAWL ok
(the original idea was to hijack your idea, but then the following idea was to takeover)
01:22
someone there already used alloy language?
@DrorK.: [As you fall asleep] I'm trying to figure out how to implement coroutines. If i'm going to use setjmp.h, then some assembly should be required to temporarily "push and pop" the stack pointer & frame pointer, so to speak. I just say this example of another way and wanted to know what was going on in the asm.
Qix
Qix
01:49
Aren't coroutines just multi-threading in a single user-space thread?
Qix
Qix
Oh
lol
It was just a guess
When you're right, you're right.
Qix
Qix
:P
I'm also sweaty
playing ping pong with myself late at night
at my office
Though i should say that coroutines, as opposed to fibers, are strictly implemented in user space rather than by the kernal.
Qix
Qix
01:51
@NoobSaibot Yep
Say, by Javascript engines or Lua :)
/offtopic
Had an interviewee in, applying for an Interactive Developer position
Saying he knew programming and stuff
couldn't do a fizzbuzz.
My girl's texting me. Gotta go!!!
lolololll
Qix
Qix
@NoobSaibot Girls? What are these creatures you speak of?
I thought they were a myth too, until i caught one. I'm gonna study it, and share my findings with the world. So far, its behavior is a bit illogical, but so pretty!
Qix
Qix
@NoobSaibot Seems like they require lots of time and energy
and money
@Qix Indeed. I fear my funding may run out sooner than i thought.
 
2 hours later…
03:52
Hey, I wanted to ask why one might want to mask an instance variable with a property?
My book has a property that is declared as an NSArray, but in reality, it's method returns an NSMutableArray which is in fact an instance variable hidden in a class extension. If anything I would think this to be deceptive to people trying to use the code (Of course nobody will use these examples, but you get the idea) and would be ultimately counterproductive.
 
7 hours later…
10:42
g'Morning world
World morning
heya @DrorK. how's everything going ?
Nothing much, how about you?
just enjoying the weekend :)
am I only one staying in bed today? :}
10:46
Apparently!
most probably, yes
..and no at the same time
this just might help you get out of bed:
11:10
@Apoorv ha ha, funny ^_^
not sure if it's going to work... at least for next couple of hours.. xP than going to a store... no food left.
 
3 hours later…
user924016
14:05
helloc all;
user924016
Hope you are enjoying the weekend
user3079266
helloc all;
user3079266
@RonniSkansing yeah, of course, with univ on the weekend, yeah, it's SO easy to enjoy! :D
user924016
=D
user924016
Pointer decay really got to me yesterday..
user3079266
14:14
@RonniSkansing pointer decay? how does that work? I though only arrays could decay...
user924016
(wanting to pass array of structs.. should have passed array of pointers to structs)
user3079266
@RonniSkansing why? wouldn't an array of structs work out?
user924016
I do not have the code with the bugs anymore. But I could try and reproduce it if you want. Anyways, going to paste this from the book I am reading atm pastebin.com/w6gqqmTS
user3079266
@RonniSkansing oh, that's array decaying, I know about that. It's basically the compiler changing the code void *pointer = array; to void *pointer = &array; automatically, IIRC
More accurately, array would be treated as array[0]
user3079266
14:25
@DrorK. yep, you could also say that.
&array and &array[0] are actually of two different types
user3079266
BTW, I wonder, would that mean that array[0] would return the same thing as (array[0])[0]? =)
Technically, any object is being treated as an array of 1 element
(if it's not an array, of course)
user924016
Anyways, I think soon it is time to read up on gdb, was printing %p all of the place..
"a pointer to an object that is not an element of an array behaves the same as a pointer to the first element of an array of length one with the type of the object as its element type."
user3079266
14:28
whoopsie, I've been wrong, it should have been (&(array[0]))[0]
That's actually the rule that makes: int i; int *p = &i; .. p++; well-defined
@RonniSkansing Your book didn't specify that the pointer would point to the first element of the array?
user924016
Yes, it does, alot of time =]
@RonniSkansing The quote you pasted is inaccurate
user924016
the last of the quote is
"Every time you pass an array to a
function, you’ll decay to a pointer, so
it’s unavoidable. But you need to keep
track of where arrays decay in your code
because it can cause very subtle bugs."
"If you assign an array to a pointer variable, then the pointer variable will only contain the address of the array."
This is inaccurate, there is a difference of type between the address of the array, and the address of its first member/element
user3079266
14:34
@RonniSkansing that's why you should implicitly do &array every time when you pass it to a function taking a pointer, IMHO. It'll have the same result as decaying, but you'll be doing it, not the compiler.
Again, you mean &array[0] , not &array :)
user3079266
@DrorK. at this time, Bartek should pop out of nowhere and start ranting about how C is fundamentally type-unsafe :D
And actually you meant 'explicitly' not, implicitly
user3079266
@DrorK. ain't it the same?
No, &array and &array[0] having two different types
user3079266
14:36
whoopsie, right you are
int array[10]; int *p = array; ... is equal to: int *p = &array[0];
user924016
I consider it genuine fun
(hence why specifying the pointer to the first element of the array is significant)
K&R took extreme measures to make the syntax of arrays and pointers, within the context of function-arguments, to be interchangeable
Same goes to the types of arguments with: func(int *i) ... func(int i[])
helloc, @all
Morning @setevoy
user3079266
14:41
helloc @setevoy;
@DrorK. evening, @DrorK. :-)
Morning vs Evening.. a timeless battle :)
@Mints97 hi... snowing in Msk?
user3079266
@setevoy no, actually, it hasn't snowed for days, but it's cold as heck
What's the temperature?
14:43
@Mints97 in Kiev todat's night will be -7 :-( Winter is coming!
I love it how there's different kind of 'cold' weather
and battery barely warm
@DrorK. we waiting to -30 at Dec :-)
I remember having Russian associates to Israel, and it seemed that a +10 C with a little bit of wind, made them uncomfortable
user3079266
@setevoy lol, it's called 'central heating' in English XD
and +40 in summer...
@Mints97 :-)
user3079266
14:45
-7 here too, lol
user924016
14:55
thanks for the pointer decay feedback btw
user924016
16:21
(this is how I was enjoying weekend yesterday) ^_^
user3079266
@Kamiccolo lol, an impressive journey =)
@Mints97 and it was freaking brought down in like... 1 hour or something :( poor blue whale...
todays unfinished result --- not that nice, but still...
user3079266
@Kamiccolo a map-art is something new to me :D
@Mints97 it's not actually a map art... :} it's Ingress -field-art ^_^
You need the portal to be owned by Your faction and have a key to it, to be able to make a link to it... that complicates things a little bit...
sigh need to fix my bike...
user3079266
@Kamiccolo what's this? an augumented reality-based real-life game?
16:34
@Mints97 exactly :} With some sci-fi plot which is partly influenced by players. Interesting fact, google is behind this game.
user3079266
@Kamiccolo wow, that's interesting! Good AR should look cool with a real-life game =) I wonder if it's available for Google's glasses.
user3079266
BTW, what is the gameplay like? smt like, dunno, DOTA?
@Mints97 I guess... not yet. But the gameplay and concept of the game and Google glasses itself pretty much fits the bill. So, I guess, it's safe to say that it's an upcoming feature :}
@Mints97 the gameplay is pretty basic: using Android phone (or iPhone) and proper application with GPS and internet enabled You can see virtual objects located in the surrounding area and/or map instead of some real objects there (like statues, churches, libraries, etc.) To interact with those virtual objects --- portals You must physically come closer (<=40 meters) to those real objects and do some stuff like building, upgrading, hacking, linking or attacking if it's owned by enemies.
More like some kind of RTS + Tower Defencer + RPG
user3079266
@Kamiccolo geez, that game should get famous! XD
user3079266
(should, I'm not sure about will)
16:49
@Mints97 for example in US --- localized events brings thousands of people into one city... :} Sometimes even around ~10ĸ
and the game isn't that old... it's became not beta just like an year ago... or something around. It's been public for 2 years now.
user3079266
@Kamiccolo wow! Then it already is popular! XD geez, the guys who made it are geniuses! I mean, advanced AR has been around for a while, but implementing a real-world game with it...
aye, there is already non-official and experimental AR Ingress viewer application... :}
apparently , same Google team is working on another virtual reality game, which would involve into the plot even more: Endgame
I've played ingress for a while
it was rather dull
user3079266
@Kamiccolo don't mix VR and AR... =)
I really prefer a proper RPG session over running around with a smartphone
or dunno, geocaching if you want to go outside
16:59
@BartekBanachewicz running around with a smartphone includes more real social interaction. And by real I mean face to face :}
@Mints97 agh... xD
@Kamiccolo not really
hint: proper rpg sessions also have face-to-face social interaction
@BartekBanachewicz in this case --- it definitely does. Unless... You mean something like DnD xP
What's a proper RPG session?
@Kamiccolo nah, DnD would be more die-rolling
I meant WoD. Or Monastyr.
@DrorK. non-joking one, with everyone acting. We usually try to play like that (acting every talk and staying in our characters)
@BartekBanachewicz so, something like Yup, in this case You're right :} At least partly. Running around the city with smartphone You're never sure what and where will You meet. For example a couple bringing You tee in the middle of the freaking forest at 3:00 AM xD (happened to me couple of times)
user3079266
17:04
@Kamiccolo if I were in the middle of a forest at 3 AM, I wouldn't be surprised about anything happening XD
user3079266
mostly because I'd probably be very drunk...
user3079266
BTW, I guess you could call vodka the local version of Ingress =3
@Mints97 there are couple of times I've almost ended up arrested...xD wasn't looking at the signs saying something about private teritory of analogue of Department of Defence... xDDD
@Mints97 how deep in the forest? xD waking up only with knife in Your right arm and seeing a hungry and angry female polar bear running at You... xD
user3079266
@Kamiccolo OMG XD well, Ingress sounds more and more like vodka! XD
@Mints97 loool both --- Connecting People since... xD
Connecting People, Disconnecting Conscious to be exact xD
user3079266
17:14
geez, studying for the programming test brings up some interesting stuff about C# to light =) Can you guys tell what will this output?
class Program {
static int p = f;
const int f = 10;

static void Main(string[] args){
System.Console.WriteLine("{0}", p);
System.Console.ReadLine();
}
}
17:48
hmm... just found halloween freebies: http://www.rpgnow.com/featured.php?promotion_id=Halloween2014_RPG
(2 RPG books for free)
@Mints97 hmmm... what does "{0}" supposed to be doing?
user3079266
@Kamiccolo it's like "%d" in C's printf
18:16
@Mints97 aaah. Okey. I'd expect compilation error saying something about f being undefined xP (or UB)
I suppose it depends on when 'p' is being assigned 'f', and whether 'f' is being assigned '10' then
user3079266
you're both wrong. It outputs 10.
user3079266
in all cases.
user3079266
and if I declare f as static int, it outputs 0
That's because there are rules of when 'static' is being initialized
(a quick google shows the cases)
user3079266
18:18
it seems that, in C#, constant fields are for some reason initialized before static ones. But I cannot find any documentation related to this...
@Mints97 quite expected :} I have zero knowledge how C# const/static/etc works xD
Btw, some short and yet, unrelated read: https://medium.com/i-m-h-o/programmers-dilemma-231d7499a75?_e_pi_=7%2CPAGE_ID10%2C3900351734

(Programmers Dilemma --- programming for years with the same old proprietary stable stack)
user3079266
@Kamiccolo the problem is that I have zero knowledge too, and I have to write a very nasty test on it on thursday ><
@Mints97 oooh... poor :/
@Kamiccolo I'm sorry but the 'conclusions' of said article seem bogus to me.
An expert is an expert is an expert.
If somebody is an expert, he is an expert.
If he is not an expert, he is- believe or not, not an expert.
Trying to make up 'reasons' why one might be an expert, and why he might not, is silly
@DrorK. expert in distant abstraction vs an expert :}
Personally, I do have such an example or couple at work...
18:24
I used to know a relatively 'known' video codec programmer
He has done great things in his field. But believe it or not, he can't cope with a simple bash script
The only reason for that, is that he simply doesn't care for it.
It makes him 'less' of an expert?
Look at Bartek for example
@DrorK. You're comparing totally different things --- bash script and codec programmer. The idea is... what kind of expert are You if You don't know basics of the technology You're calling Yourself an expert.
He shared a couple of C samples here in the past, which even beginners wouldn't. Does it make him less of knowledge in his field?
That's the problem... who is to say which 'basics' are right?
You'd choose specific 'basics', and the expert will look like a fool
And you'd choose different 'basics', and the expert will look like a genius
@DrorK. probably god :} or an employer (in the specific case mentioned in the article). Basics depends on the context. And again, as it was mentioned in the article --- if that so called expert doesn't know how his former abstraction works beneath, he might not be able to work with another abstraction. Or even without it.
If You add an ability to adapt and learn to a definition of so called expert I would shut my traps xP
user3079266
nowadays, programming experts are often determined by the speed of coding. I might never ever be thought of as a programming expert... XD
I actually believe the reverse is the correct analogy: if this expert doesn't know how something works, maybe this something isn't related to his expertise.
If you ask me, the only conclusion here, is that the person who interviewed the candidates is inadequate. If he failed to target the candidates with the appropriate background- that's not the candidates' fault, that's the interviewer's fault
user3079266
18:35
goto away; //cya!
Bon appetit @Mints97
@DrorK. or just trying to find an adequate guy for the job :} (some specific kind of an expert) Again, if You're not mentioning an ability to learn or learn fast.
Well I'm getting hungry!
ugh... me too... :/
what about ordering some pizza? xP btw, colleagues of mine coming to cook some and open couple of wiskey bottles.... xD
I'm afraid I don't eat just 'any' pizza... I eat from specific places
And currently it's out-of-region
In Israel we have too many places for food, so unfortunately it automatically makes the vast majority of them bad.
Here's a nice number. The city I'm currently in- has ~80K population
It has about 15 pizza joints in it.
Here's another fun fact: within the radius of 300 meters, there are 6 pizza joints! :)
Now you tell me, with such competition, how good these places could possibility be?
18:53
@DrorK. I see. You, guys, must really like pizzas :}
@DrorK. better than others? :} Not sure, how competition works in Isreal. Especially in food distribution. Totally different cultural and historical background :}
The rule is, the more 'generic' something becomes, the overall quality drops
I see Your point :} Differences would beat such kind of a problem. Because places wouldn't have to compete for lowest price. Different flavours/different food would attract different people or make them move on it's own.
and if You have 6 joints in radius of 300 meters You can't distribute people by the distance... sigh
The funny thing is
Within the 6 pizza joints, one of them is Pizza Hut
All over Israel, Pizza Hut has fixed prices, and are generally the most costly one
But only within this specific region of 6 joints, their prices/offers are somewhat ~40% lower
And you know what? It tastes like it
@DrorK. agh xD world-wide franchise. About the price... it might be marketing. One of the possibilietes --- they've just started at that region, so just trying to attract critical mass of people. Or that regions is just poorer. Or it's too huge competition at that region...
This Pizza Hut joints- exists for several years here. So it's not 'new' to the region
Even when Pizza Hut opens new joints, they don't give different prices to that specific joint
19:06
@DrorK. I doubt if they set their prices blindly, without any of market exploration or something...
This region is maybe at the 10% percentile in Israel. So poor it's definitely not
It is very common in Israel, to have 'fixed' prices within a 'chain' of shops
Only within governmental infrastructures there are other regulator's considerations, but that's a true exception
I think that the problem with pricings... is that they have 'global' advertising campaigns... so if they mention anything about a price of something on their menu, it must be respected in all shops
You can't say that this location is 'expensive', so the price on the TV-ad doesn't apply here. (unless it's governmental, which is regulated by law)
Btw, same goes to ordering
Generally you don't call to a specific joint to order from, you have a 'global'/'central' phone number or website, so the price doesn't change between joints
ok, I see... so, it stays kind of a mystery... :}
19:28
@PeterVaro pretty nice blog I've just found, last two entries talking about Openness of SoC's, specifically RPi and everything Mali based.
20:06
Nitpicking:
When people describe the integer ranges required by the C standard
They're always very explicit about it, and they tend to give out:
-(2^31-1) to 2^31-1
Now my question, how come they're extremely 'explicit' when it comes to this, but would mention the requirement in 'bits' such as: "64 bits" ... without being explicit: 64 bits (-1) ?
20:27
helloc all;
I didn't talk in ages :(
@fahdijbeli It's like riding a bicycle... you never forget!
21:01
welcome back @fahdijbeli;
@DrorK. isn't just another layer of abstraction? :}
Looks like pretty nice bunch of talks: youtube.com/user/fosdemtalks/videos
@Kamiccolo I'm sure that if I'll suggest a correction from "64 bits" to "64 bits (- 1)" ... it will be dismissed
But if one would suggest the range of an unsigned char to be: 0 to 2^8 ... now being explicit is extremely important and it should not go unpunished
21:24
heh, senior in action:

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