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10:35
@Rasovica basically, You have FILE * and You'd like to know how was it opened?
 
5 hours later…
15:54
Hmmm
Vague question... when you have a data structure within an allocated and dynamic object, which means it may be realloc'd... how do you deal with pointers into said structure?
I mean, it's either you use an actual pointer, and then before resizing: you store the ptrdiff as an offset, and then afterwards: re-assign the pointer, using the new base pointer, and add the stored offset.
OR... you simply avoid using actual 'absolute' pointers altogether, and use 'relative' indices from the base pointer, and hope for the best?
Anybody can think of a better alternative?
@Kamiccolo You're pretty much the only survivor around, I might as well privmsg you my questions :)
@DrorK. I saw Your question. Was typing the answer but... changed my mind :}
Oh, so change it back!
@DrorK. it's not crafted and thought about well enough :P
Personally, I tend to avoid reallocation.
Well, avoiding reallocation is easy, until you wish your datastructure to support the concept of 'resize'
By using trees, linked lists, etc. Or just... by having some hard limits. Which is bad by design. Most of the times.
Well, on data structures like tree, growing and cutting it down goes... quite naturally :}
16:04
I don't follow- how any of these structures are going to allow 'resize'?
Would You have some specific use-case which requires reallocation and can't be solved by redesigning Your data structures?
I think you're missing a key element, even if you pre-allocate, and you don't actually require a realloc for a bigger allocation... your structure might as well re-structure itself within the same given space for the purpose of growing or shrinking
So 'realloc' is not even required for introducing the impact of making pointers into the structure obsolete
@DrorK. Yup. I am. That's why I'm asking for an example :P
Think of a parser that reads input, such as: "Hello world: $world!"
Once you would like to expand/evaluate $world, after it has been read, without recreating a new object- but manipulating the existing one... it might require growing- for the case where $world is lengthier than strlen("${world}");
@DrorK. so, basically You want to realloc $world part or whole string... depending on some input...
16:10
Even without reallocating, even if you have pre-allocated, or even just want to make it smaller
Your data structure might have features that require restructuring, such as arbitrary length chunk'ed elements
So any pointers 'into' the object, are now obsolete
I'd prefer reassigning. I mean... Your first option. Because it's goes quite naturally for me. And that's the question for architecture of the piece of software You're writing. Basically, higher level buffersand decides about reallocation of lower level. I guess... the problem is, that maximum memory consumption like... doubles.
I have gone the reassigning route, and it became ugly pretty quickly
@DrorK. Yup, I see. In that case Your objects might have some fancy reference counting with an extra bit.
I guess I'll have to try out the alternative with relative offsets
@DrorK. Yup, I believe so. Had some... code to dig through where the fastest production solution was... allocating as much as possible and if more needed... just bluntly saying --- "screw you, insert more RAM or die!".
@DrorK. so far it sounds like... even bigger can of worms. Can't say for sure though.
16:15
I mean, for anything that is 'static', or for anything within a scope/block that won't require restructuring... having regular pointers is straight forward... but when this concern comes.... before the concern takes place: 1. store the ptrdiff of each and every pointer, 2. do_concern, 3. re-assign each and every pointer with the new base-pointer + stored offset
Now I'll add another tricky thing
If the evaluation of ${world} is actually part of the very same data-structure
So it means that you first:
1. parse ${world}
2. lookup 'world' value, for its length
3. if the length is bigger, expand. If it's smaller, shrink.
4. Now lookup 'world' AGAIN, because if it sits within the same datastructure, its pointer is now obsolete too
And for that case, there is no base+offset to store, only the entity's logical position
So once again, an actual pointer doesn't really work :\
@DrorK. and again... 3rd point is for architecture. Shrinking might be ineffective. In case of the size changing quite rapidly.
But Your point is... consuming only as much memory as needed. No more, no less. Right?
@Kamiccolo Nope, shrinking doesn't actually imply realloc, just as growing doesn't necessarily require realloc
Shrinking implies restructure within the same allocated object
Growing mostly implies restructuring within the same preallocated objects, but rare cases would call realloc()
Now when I think of it...
I think I can make the data-structure more friendly towards manipulations, at the expense of storage
So far I've been using the offsets of the arbitrary-length chunks, as the indicator for their length
So the length for element #1... is the offset of #1 - #0
So it means that shrinking makes restructuring mandatory, for keeping this rule
But keeping record for both offset+len, for each arbitrary-length chunk... would allow shrinking without restructuring, and would allow pre-allocation overhead for a specific chunk
 
3 hours later…
19:39
Hi, anyone here have experience writing USB kernel drivers?
19:50
@QuaxtonHale got some specific problem?
@Kamiccolo Yes, I posted a question on on SO, would you mind taking a look at it?
0
Q: Not receiving data from USB interrupt

Quaxton HaleI am sending an interrupt URB to the device's IN endpoint (0x82) in my read() function and looking at usbmon's output, the device seems to be receiving it and acknowledging. However, it is not filling the int_in_buffer with the data. ffff8801e0ab9240 897415524 S Ii:1:050:2 -115:8 8 < ffff8801...

Oh, wow. Sorry I just realized how dumb my question is.
I am getting the data, I was just casting it wrong.
Lack of sleep >.>
 
2 hours later…
21:58
I have another problem, edited the question.

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