I've defined a message type for my networked program. I wanted it to be a fixed size, and all machines would receive N bytes when calling recv and send N bytes with send.
To do this, I made it a union of a set of different message format I want to support.
So far, everything works fine. A union is supposed to be just as large as its biggest member.
The problem is that I know I cannot assume the size of these structures, because there may be padding bytes in some places.
So I use sizeof(). That is not a problem on the same architecture and compiler. But what if I send a message to another computer with a different architecture or compiler and the compiled program there doesn't yeild the same size message.
Is it plausible I can have this happen, and so accidentally block across platforms when one expects more bytes than another?
I normally wouldn't be here. I'd use one of my university labs where it's a lot cooler and I can use some software I need for an unrelated project. However, I have to be here today for a supposed visit from the energy company.
They told me Monday they'd be here anytime between 8 and 5.
So I've been sitting here, all day, in 30 degree heat, trying to do something productive while waiting. And I have a feeling they won't show up until 5. Or even at all.
Kind of expected him to say he's running a custom manufactured board/CPU that uses no more than 10 joules per hour and that's all anyone should ever need.
In other news, I've almost finished the networking code for this sychronization scheme.
Only tested it by manually poking messages around though.
Think tonight I can write the final part and try running it for real.
The message passing is horrifically non-portable though. It doesn't account for Endianess yet, I don't pack my structs. I don't safely encode any floating points (don't have any though).
However, I do have a bit of a problem with that. The network is supposed to sychronize memory between systems at times.
It's well ... memory. I have no idea what they're storing there. So I can't convert or touch it.
This means that the hardware setup needs to be identical.