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Ell
Ell
21:00
I'll delay strings too :P
Also @Mysticial is people pressuring entry-level developers with high salaries a thing that happens?
Like, in universally EVERY job I've been in, people don't mention the salary until the last goddamn minute.
With this job, they rub that compensation in your face FIRST thing. Is that typical in FinTech or is it just the entry-level code-monkey bait?
@ThePhD Depends on how much, if its less than 130k its bait
@Mikhail Maximum is 130K base, yes.
HAHAHAHA if you use IPv6 it's even worse than messing with iptables directly.
Every container gets a globally routable IPv6 address.
3
WTF
kek
21:09
@Mikhail You work in Fintech...?
@ThePhD No I'm a graduate student, image processing
And it's a random one, guaranteeing it's not usable for you (you can't point a DNS record at it) while still exposing the whole thing to the outside world, even the unpublished ports.
@Ell This? "\"\\(\\[\\\\\"%abfnrtv0]\\|[^\\\\]\\)*\""
@ThePhD When I came out of undergrad I got 2 offers that were about 130k, from Amazon and NVIDIA.
Ell
Ell
@Mikhail wow
21:11
well i'm making 21k now
@Mikhail I'm trying to get into A9 (Amazon's subsidiary responsible for search) and Microsoft. Not skilled enough for NVidia right now.
Ell
Ell
@wilx doesn't appear to be correct
maybe re-builder is giving me false negatives, I'm very confused now.
@ThePhD Well, NVIDIA wanted me to contribute to their internal C++ emulator. It wasn't a skill requiring job. Actually, none of the places I talked to would give me a "skills" required programing position - thats why I went to grad school.
It's basically impossible to run, say, a backend database server in a container that is only exposed to other containers if you enable IPv6 in docker. It just becomes exposed to the world unless you manually mess with firewall rules every time you start a container, or get a whole IPv6 subrange just for this.
@Mikhail I heard that from both grads and undergrads here: "none of the jobs required skills, just programming, so I went back to school".
@R.MartinhoFernandes You seem to run into these issues a lot. Are you using docker?
21:14
Isn't 99 % of programming just coding? I mean, at some point your skill is so high it requires almost no effort...
Damn, 130k USD sounds very nice.
user1804599
99% of programming is writing down type signatures. The other 1% is writing down typed holes.
That is like 6 times what I make.
@wilx Right, but there's a difference between actually contributing something of worth or working on something that makes me feel challenged instead of just being the machine-cog is what I want to feel.
@ThePhD technical debt is challenging
@ThePhD I have a news for you. You are just a machine cog.
21:17
@Mikhail Yes, but if your only job is to make more technical debt it's not a challenge, it's just a burden.
@wilx But... but my Mom said I was special. ;~;
@R.MartinhoFernandes Better still, after (literally) about a year's worth of discussion, they still haven't even begun to formulate a solution--just gotten as far as "please write up another ticket for the problem."
@ThePhD To your mom. To everybody else you are just another dude.
@JerryCoffin Man, I don't know, it's almost like these people are all 14yos doing summer projects or something.
@ThePhD Trying it out.
Not very convinced.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sure seems like it. And "projects" seems to be right--it's not a team (even an immature one) working on a single project; it's a bunch of people, each going their own direction, working on a bunch of basically separate projects that happen to have vaguely similar aims--like the old line about: "A C5 is a large collection of overpriced replacement parts flying in close formation."
Let me rephrase that: docker is an overrated piece of hipster crap.
Ell
Ell
21:21
nice, that leaves a gap in the market :D
@R.MartinhoFernandes Time to take another look at StackedCrooked's chroot setup, perhaps...
user1804599
Docker is shit
@JerryCoffin lol
the inner Coliru effect
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is that so bad? I thought it was common in IPV6 to make new unique addresses basically all the time since the address space was so big.
21:28
@Puppy The problem is when you combine this with docker's insistence in overriding your firewall to route to those IPs (established in a previous episode).
I suggest you move forward with the fintech recruiter. If you make it all the way to an onsite interview, ask the interviewers the following questions:
1. What's the turnover rate? Voluntary and involuntary.
2. Is the code littered with technical debt?
These aren't questions they would expect from someone from tech. If the firm is as I had described, you probably won't get a truthful answer from them and it may exclude you from an offer. But pay attention to how they respond to such questions. Remember that interviews go both ways. And it's also your chance to judge them as much as they jud
@Mysticial That was my plan. Well, sort of: I was going to ask to speak to a current "Core Developer" as part of my interview, and basically ask them that question.
At this point I think systemd is probably a better option.
@R.MartinhoFernandes How else would they be useful for public-facing servers?
Can't believe I said that.
21:30
I mean, I know that I don't know shit about this stuff so maybe I'm asking dumb questions
But surprise, surprise! All the interesting docker functionality is provided by systemd too!
Ell
Ell
isn't it mostly cgroups doing the heavy lifting?
@ThePhD My experience is similar. As a fresh grad, you won't hear salary until the last minute. But once you're already employed, you'll hear salary early because that's the only way they can get anyone to listen.
cgroups and namespaces.
systemd has nspawn and machinectl as kind of interfaces to such things.
systemd-cgroup too.
@Puppy You don't always want everything exposed. E.g. you have a non-public-facing database server that a public-facing web server has access to.
doesn't this situation involve the database server having a separate firewall, and that one being the one routed through instead of the front firewall?
21:36
But this is all in one box, and docker just fucks with your firewall to make the containers reachable.
or maybe most guys don't bother with the double-firewall thing
how does Docker punch a giant hole in an arbitrary firewall anyway?
It invokes iptables as root.
huh
I.e. like you would do by hand.
when I want to make a hole in my firewall I go to my router and change the configuration there
but that's probably the weak consumer-grade router firewall and not a real firewall
21:38
@Puppy If the router is running anything Linuxy that's probably just a web interface to iptables.
fair enough
@ThePhD During my job hunt following my termination by my previous employer, I made no attempt to hide the fact that I was fired. So when I asked question #1, nobody was surprised and they didn't hold any suspicion against me.
Even when I asked the CEO's that question.
And actually, they were trying hard to differentiate themselves from my previous employer.
ok yeah that's dumb
@Ell "\"\\(\\(?:\\\\\\(?:[\"%abfnrtv0\\\\]\\|u[0-9]{4}\\|x[0-9a-fA-F]{2}\\)\\|[^\"]\\)*\\)\""
frankly I would expect that the container's firewall would be worried about by something other than the containre
21:40
The container doesn't have a separate network stack (I'm guessing that's a limitation of the cgroups/namespace mechanism; it's not a full VM).
user1804599
steps\s*({([^{}]|(?R))*}) matches matching braces :3
Docker just creates a shitton of bridges on the host and then fucks with the firewall to route shit.
hm
so what exactly is different between Docker and, say, Vagrant?
Forgot some: "\"\\(\\(?:\\\\\\(?:[\"%abfnrtv0\\\\]\\|u[0-9a-fA-F]{4}\\|U[0-9a-fA-F]{8}\\|x[0-9a-fA-F]{2}\\‌​)\\|[^\"]\\)*\\)\""
user1804599
@Puppy Vagrant spawns virtual machines, Docker spawns environments within the host kernel.
Ell
Ell
21:42
@wilx this one appears to work
I'll try the second one also
user1804599
So with Vagrant, you're running a kernel for each box. With Docker, you run only the host kernel.
Ell
Ell
second one appears not to work
@Puppy Vagrant runs full VMs. Like, they have their own kernel and hardware and shit. Containers are more or less just namespaced process spaces and filesystems; there's only one kernel running, the host's.
hmm
21:43
"namespaced process spaces" sounds wrong.
what's the intended benefit? I thought that VMs had very low overhead with hardware virtualization now
user1804599
It's cheaper.
I thought Vagrant was free
Resource cheaper.
Ell
Ell
@wilx this is a truly terrible piece of source code :V
21:45
oh
so hardware virtualization isn't quite free then
Ell
Ell
you can dedup containers more easily than VMs I guess
and maybe it's more efficient by CPU and RAM also
@Puppy I think there's virtually no overhead with a container, since it's just normal processes managed by the kernel directly.
The only thing that changes is which external system state a process can view (as opposed to having the external system state emulated as in a VM)
Docker is trying to be like FreeBSD jails IMHO.
Ell
Ell
I get "Unmatched ( or \\("
21:49
Note that docker is just some fancy interface to a couple of Linux kernel features that enable this isolation between processes.
Ell
Ell
I tried to create my own container at my uni
Hence why it fucks with the network.
As I mentioned above, you can achieve the same basic functionality by creating a tar archive with a filesystem snapshot in it, and invoking systemd-nspawn.
Ell
Ell
@wilx maybe markdown is messing this up
@GundolfGundelfinger LW3 episode next week, the trailer (still spoilerish, so no link) used very nice music which I just discovered since I didn't play most of LW1. and what do you know, composed by Lena
I'm using LXC directly
Ell
Ell
21:52
could you dpaste.com it?
Hello, Cruel World!
Ell
Ell
ah it works
thank you very much @wilx, you will be credited :3
@Ell lol
Ell
Ell
if it ever goes public :P
(which I doubt it will)
21:55
Editing REs in languages without RE literals or at least raw literals is evil.
user1804599
@wilx Load them from a file.
This is why I also love Perl: built-in RE syntax. :)
user1804599
Perl 6 has even builtinner RE syntax.
user1804599
Minecraft is to money what Haskell is to time learning: best ever spent.
@rightfold :) I never seem to be enough motivated to do anything in Perl6.
user1804599
21:57
Probably because Perl 6 is horrendous.
amazing
I had a code that worked
5
made some changes, stopped working
went back to prev version, stopped working as well
Heisenbug.
more like Hardwarebug
user1804599
Reboot.
Perhaps always set the device to a known state when you turn on?
Or at least, when the software starts running.
22:00
well I'm doing that
@R.MartinhoFernandes It would be interesting to know how many of the people working on Docker have read through the history of (for example) IBM's VM for System 360/370/308x/309x/zSystem and realized that most of these problems have been encountered and solved before--and there are ways to solve them that don't involve tearing down your entire world, then building a new (incompatible) one from scratch every 3 to 6 months.
2
user1804599
Current development speed is a function of past development quality.
7
user1804599
Perl of wisdom.
@JerryCoffin Oh gee, don't get me started on this recent fad of "move fast and BREAK EVERYTHING YOU COULD POSSIBLY THINK OF AND EVEN MORE"
Fuck Facebook.
22:04
Was it Meijer who coined move fast and break things?
It was Facebook's motto.
user1804599
Meijer recommends running untested programs in production.
user1804599
Therefore Meijer has lost every bit of credibility when it comes to deployment methodology.
I don't think whoever said it first matters; Facebook legitimised it.
@JerryCoffin Mainframes are evil.
22:05
guess m$ is the opposite then
never fix anything no matter how broken it is
user1804599
Fix things that are broken.
wonder what the massage looked like
user1804599
Overly vigorous happy ending.
22:07
okay I've loaded my old program into arduino ide
all works
so it's not a hardware issue
user1804599
Disintegrated Development Environment.
now I need to find out what I broke
user1804599
user1804599
Just found that by clicking "random". :P
@rightfold Haha.
22:10
oh hm
I think the Latcher is broken
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, I don't know about that. If Facebook and Twitter broke everything to the point that they just disappeared permanently, I don't think that would be a major loss to the world at all.
user1804599
Lol these two scenes: youtu.be/1C4d_SclbKs?t=8m22s
@JerryCoffin The problem is that they already made hipsters all around follow this BREAK EVERYTHING idea.
also platformIO can build my projects
so the compiler works
and the setup works
so what doesn't
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, I realize what you're saying, and I agree. I just try to see the silver lining in the cloud, no matter how dark it may be... :-)
(see what I did there: "the cloud"?)
22:18
I could really use a logic probe
I've no idea what is this thing doing
@JerryCoffin due to network connectivity issues that led to race conditions, I didn’t
		auto s = make_sender(comm::HardwareSpi(), comm::MultiplexLatcher<4, Pins::pins>());
		s.send(0x0c, 0x01);
		s.send(0x09, 0xff);
		s.send(0xff, 0x00);
		s.send(0x0b, 0x07);
this works
which is weird because it would seem that the components are ok
@LucDanton Conditions racing is even more dangerous than street racing. Arrest condition racers on sight!
22:40
FUCK'S SAKE
so i copied that class
of course with a pointer
and I left a dtor in
so bad
Ell
Ell
> symbols value as variable is void: quote
what does this even mean >.< how can quote be void C:^(
@Ell Isn't quote already a function? Are you trying to define override it with your own meaning?
Ell
Ell
I'm doing this:
(defconst wren-font-lock
  (list
   (wren-keyword-regex . 'font-lock-builtin-face)
   (wren-type-regex    . 'font-lock-variable-face)))
where
(defconst wren-keyword-regex
  (regexp-opt '("break" "class" "construct" "else" "for" "foreign" "if" "import"
                "in" "is" "null" "return" "static" "super" "this" "var" "while")
              'words)
  "Regex matching all wren keywords")
user1804599
quote isn't a function.
user1804599
It's a special form.
Ell
Ell
22:45
and wren-type-regex is defined similarly
@Ell No actual idea, maybe '(list...)? Really no idea.
Ell
Ell
@wilx wouldn't quoting the outside mean that wren-keyword-regex doesn't get expanded?
err no wait I'm confused
user1804599
'(list ...) evaluates to a list whose first element is the symbol list.
@rightfold Ah. OK. I suck at this.
user1804599
'<term> is short for (quote <term>), and it evaluates to <term>.
user1804599
22:47
It does not evaluate to what <term> evaluates to.
user1804599
It evaluates to <term> itself.
Ell
Ell
yeah
Ven
Ven
(Except for a few weird things in a few lisps)
@Ven that’s the footnote to life
Ven
Ven
@Ell that's elisp right?
@LucDanton no it's PERL PARSE ERROR
Ell
Ell
22:49
yeah elisp
I want wren-keyword-regexp to evaluate and font-lock-builtin-face not to.
So I quoted font-lock-builtin-face
In the docs (emacswiki.org/emacs/ModeTutorial) they quote each super-list item
user1804599
elisp is horrible
Ell
Ell
ie: (list '(...) '(...))
user1804599
it's like tcl with lists
Ven
Ven
@Ell do note that elisp is a lisp-2. So "list" can have a value as a function and one as a variable.
Ell
Ell
but quoting those will leave wren-keyword-regexp unevaluated
Ven
Ven
22:51
@Ell give the code in a pastie or smth
Ell
Ell
kk
now this doesn't complain
but doesn't do what is expected, aka, highlight for
or anything else for that matter
Ven
Ven
Unquote that call in the 2nd-to-last line.
You want to set the value of calling that function, I believe
and if you want to store a function use 'fn not '(fn)
user1804599
render state
    | Set.member vertexID parentIDs = renderCycleIndicator
    | otherwise = renderVertex state
user1804599
Ell
Ell
> Symbol's function definition is void: wren-font-lock
Ven
Ven
22:58
(keywords [keywords-only [case-fold
[syntax-alist other-vars…]]])
Ell
Ell
well, I don't know if I want to store functions or not anymore
Ven
Ven
From the docs
Well, if you don't want to store functions... Don't. (list wren-font-lock) as a 2nd arg to that set-variable should work
(Still from what I read in the docs)
Ell
Ell
and now it sets it to nil
There is not enough static typing in the world :V
Ven
Ven
You're just bad
Ell
Ell
elisp is hard
the docs aren't explicit enough
Ven
Ven
23:03
Poor excuse for not looking in the manual. It took me 2mins to find the structure you were looking for...
Ell
Ell
@Ven It was written the way the docs say it should be written
but thank you for the help regardless :P
oh man I just realised I had an extraneous s :'(
exactly like the docs said
Ell
Ell
well, it still doesn't work
Here's the complete interactive charts for 900 vertices + 1200 edges. Filter out the naive matrix implementation (click on legend). You'll see that the flat_edge_list is roughly 3x faster than your original adjacency_list based algorithm — sehe 13 secs ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes working nicely ^
Ell
Ell
I think I'm using list incorrectly though now
@sehe access denied :/
<Error>
<Code>AccessDenied</Code>
<Message>Access Denied</Message>
<RequestId>375DC39E47DD9A51</RequestId>
<HostId>
n3smthqX6dwa0EaAMQJSpuZNp5k4HEzetKHjxNoAnxrIERjin3RVRLHHMNxlpZIUqMPbx5WPh2E=
</HostId>
</Error>
23:15
@Ell Thanks. Fixed the link (also in the answer, which is a different report). I suppose + in a file name is not supported on S3. Perhaps I should have url-escaped it
(Why doesn't s3cmd do that)
Ell
Ell
No problem :)
fixed on my end too
Of course :)
@rightfold Shocker is dit¹
(¹ when did you change your mind?)
(² when didn't you change your mind)
(³ SCNR)
@LucDanton lol
@Puppy well, you need only observe. Is your program faster launched from a vagrant box, or form a chroot/docker/linux container?
(Hint: It's very much slower. At least to start. And the overhead is very much larger)
I don't trust observations
too many people declaring what the result of i = i++ + ++i is
Ell
Ell
well, performance is a descriptive measure right
23:24
1 hour ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
I had a code that worked
Starred for bloody shame.
Bartek reaching Indian levels on all fronts
Ell
Ell
though I suppose the source of the lack of performance is where the observation becomes problematic
@Ell Only if performed rigorously.
I mean, effectively, it's a statistical study, except in this case I'd be declaring that my one result on my one system supports conclusions for all results on all systems.
@Mysticial neat
@Puppy Ha Ha Ha
@Puppy too many? are you sure? how did you reach that conclusion?
23:28
rigorous statistical analysis of course
you can see the paper published in Nature next issue
@Puppy Typically you say that your experiment validates your model, what you bring up is, why a performance measurement without explanation is not useful.
Ell
Ell
> Wrong type argument: listp, wren-font-lock
the documentation says it needs to be a list, and (listp wren-font-lock) is t
I give up :(
@Ell Ask on some Emacs mailing list.
Ell
Ell
I will return to it at a later point :)
Why can't Member Variable pointers point to bitfields? =/
23:42
@ThePhD Because bitfields are not lvalues?
I suppose that makes sense. I don't know why it wouldn't generate an automatic proxy, though.
Well, the pointer looses the information as to what it is point at. It only has the type and the offset, AFAIK. To handle bitfields it would have to store more information than that at run time.
But member object pointers and member function pointers are specifically defiend as impl-defined thunks, right?
@wilx But at compile time the type information can provide this.
Those thunks should contain things like bitfield implementation, IMHO...
23:48
@Mikhail Have you seen the new AVX512 instructions? The 4FMAPS and 4VNNIW?
Intel "announced" it like a month ago, but didn't actually say anything about the instructions themselves. Now they finally updated their instruction set pdf with them.
The machine learning instructions?
yeah
My first thought after seeing them is that they're taking this application-specific shit a little too far.
@Mysticial Maybe its the dark silicon :-)
Those new instructions are probably gonna be the first microcoded AVX512 instructions.
@Mikhail That's what I'm thinking too...
idk, my thought is that Intel is getting its ass handed to it in the machine learning space because they can't get their shit straight and just fucking port CUDA to their platform
23:50
Or just another way to screw over AMD by making their shit so complicated that AMD will go broke just trying to copy it.
AMD recently gave up, says its won't compete with nvidia, instead going to focus on VR
Yeah. AMD has made no mention (not even a leak) of native 256-bit wide execution units. Let alone 512.
maybe they wasted a ton of money making an arm core
Whats interesting is that the image processing space is moving towards OpenCL, especially with the new unified GPU architecture that Intel helped to get into OpenCV. I still can't for the life of me understand why we can't just port CUDA to KNL
@Mikhail That's just a software thing right?
My guess is that Intel hasn't done that because they know KNL won't be competitive with NVidia for CUDA applications.
Kinda, is like a JVM on your GPU. Except normal people can only use the JVM.
@Mysticial Well they ported OpenCL
23:56
IOW, anything that can be implemented efficiently in CUDA is already a lost cause for KNL. They need to target the stuff that are less parallelizable.
But it doesn't have to be this way!
Also, its not clear wtf intel is doing because as mentioned they added those machine learning instructions
@Mikhail There's an article that speculates on that.
The 4FMAPS instruction speed up dense matrix for single-precision.
>>The art and science of microprocessor architecture is a never-ending struggle
The struggle is real
It combines 4 FMAs with memory operands into one instruction.
So it frees up issue slots on Xeon Phi which can only dual-issue.

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