Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
May 30, 2014 21:49
+1
May 30, 2014 21:49
So I guess it's my civic duty to stick around till I answer as many questions as I asked, huh?
May 30, 2014 21:45
Doesn't work well for polymorphism. If a class has REF_TYPEDEF and inherits another class that has REF_TYPDEF, which one is it supposed to use?
May 30, 2014 21:42
Well, admittedly REF_TYPEDEF is more than that. It declares Ref, ConstRef, WeakRef, and ConstWeakRef, but they're all just typedefs
May 30, 2014 21:41
Alright... I'll see what I can do.
May 30, 2014 21:41
REF_TYPEDEF is just a declaration for typedef std::shared_ptr<TextureView>
May 30, 2014 21:40
Yet more, Root::Root pastebin.com/66bbyDSJ
May 30, 2014 21:39
Those are defines, but they aren't macro magic. They just convert to stuff like Animation::Animatable<Color>
May 30, 2014 21:39
It's in TextureView.cpp pastebin.com/qps0b5Bw
May 30, 2014 21:38
The definition for Animation::Animatable: pastebin.com/QyT75kbW
May 30, 2014 21:37
Well, here's the TextureView class: pastebin.com/QqQmwMex
May 30, 2014 21:35
I guess I could put the whole project on github... hundreds of files... but I think my employer would have an issue with that. shrugs
May 30, 2014 21:34
Yeah it is.
May 30, 2014 21:34
But I guess I'm on my own.
May 30, 2014 21:34
Hmm... Well, here's the code. pastebin.com/usywjA4w
May 30, 2014 21:32
I can remove the offsetof usage (its only for debugging). The problem remains.
May 30, 2014 21:29
so data members are indirectly accessed through the vtable too?
May 30, 2014 21:29
Considering that &myTextureView is consistent, and its data member is not.
May 30, 2014 21:28
OK... but I also took the plain address-of operator and did some arithmetic. This TextureView instance is in one location in memory, and when I &myTextureView.color in Root::Root() it's 0x113d7be4, and in TextureView::Render() &myTextureView.color is 0x113f7be0. How can that possibly be right?
May 30, 2014 21:26
Since the address of this data member is inconsistent, I'm assuming that whatever is happening is fubaring the vtable address too, which is why I can't call a method through the vtable of "color"
May 30, 2014 21:24
May 30, 2014 21:23
/Users/brent/Documents/git/brainlib/RenderNodeViews/TextureView.cpp (16): The address of the TextureView instance while in Root::Root(): 0x113f67f0
/Users/brent/Documents/git/brainlib/RenderNodeViews/TextureView.cpp (17): The address of the TextureView instance while in TextureView::Render(): 0x113f67f0
/Users/brent/Documents/git/brainlib/RenderNodeViews/TextureView.cpp (18): The address of the Animation::Animatable<Color> TextureView::color instance while in Root::Root(): 0x113f7be4
/Users/brent/Documents/git/brainlib/RenderNodeViews/TextureView.cpp (19): The address of the Animation::Anim
May 30, 2014 21:23
I'm using offsetof to print messages to the console regarding the positions of data members, so I can see that it is infact in different offsets (and different addresses).
May 30, 2014 21:21
Not really. "color.getterFunc();" just a plain jane function call.
May 30, 2014 21:20
I'm just calling a method. I'd hardly say I'm doing anything where I should be worried about implementation details.
May 30, 2014 21:18
I unfortunately have a talent for finding compiler bugs. :(
May 30, 2014 21:17
Yeah... Not sure how else to approach it though. In one module, I can correctly interact with this object instance, and in another I can't, because it's reading/writing to the wrong addresses. Kinda stuck, TBH.
May 30, 2014 21:15
I'm not actually using offsetof for anything other than picking apart this weird behavior I'm observing.
May 30, 2014 21:08
Also, some of the data members of MyClass, including their vtables work fine as if they are unaffected by whatever is causing the others not to work.
May 30, 2014 21:07
Offsetof can be kinda finicky (undefined) with polymorphism, but MyClass is not inherited by any other classes, so I'm at a loss for what could be causing the apparent layout to change, causing the data members and vtable to be addressed incorrectly. Notably, I can manually compensate for this error by fixing the 4-byte offset error that's introduced through simple pointer arithmetic.
May 30, 2014 21:07
Well, I guess I can give it a shot then. I have a C++ class that I'm using across multiple static libraries. I've discovered that offsetof(MyClass, myDataMember) is varying from library to library, and causing EXC_BAD_ACCESS when I try to call virtual methods on myDataMember. As far as I can tell, there are no #pragma alignment things going on, so I'm wondering what else could be causing this.
May 30, 2014 20:57
Is this a good place to ask questions?
 
Aug 24, 2013 22:37
Anyway, thanks for your efforts. I'm going to get back to work.
Aug 24, 2013 22:34
The queue does not lock. It is lockless.
Aug 24, 2013 22:33
As I mentioned, this implementation is lockless, so there's no contention
Aug 24, 2013 22:32
Making a copy using ToArray is certainly slower
Aug 24, 2013 22:31
It has to Dequeue it, not just peek it
Aug 24, 2013 22:30
Because iterating doesn't remove the item.
Aug 24, 2013 22:29
I'm afraid you don't quite understand what this code does.
Aug 24, 2013 22:29
The dontcare parameter is only an integer
Aug 24, 2013 22:29
I'm using Parallel.ForEach so that multiple items can be processed in parallel.
Aug 24, 2013 22:28
There is no other thread.
Aug 24, 2013 22:27
Not so. The call to TryDequeue cannot occur more times than the queue has items.
Aug 24, 2013 22:26
Anyway, I appreciate your effort. I don't think your suggestion is on the right track though.
Aug 24, 2013 22:26
Just afternoon here.
Aug 24, 2013 22:25
Hi
Aug 24, 2013 22:25
There is no "other thread." There's only the ones used by Parallel.ForEach, which as I've stated, is limited by _items.Count. When I say "will work" I mean that it is correct - it will not cause an error.
Aug 24, 2013 22:25
So that items can be processed in parallel.
Aug 24, 2013 22:25
The code above actually works (if you make the methods public, which I forgot). THere's no ApplicationException because there aren't more jobs than items (I use _items.count). I would like to use something that doesn't force me to manually choose how many threads should run. Also, HashSet doesn't work because it is not thread safe. ConcurrentSet is thread safe, and relies on ConcurrentDictionary to do this (which is also lockless IIRC). The byte is just a dummy value since you can't have a ConcurrentDictionary<T, void>.