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  3. i feel that the grammar of a programming language is among the least appropriate of all possible facets of its behavior to start off with.

i feel that the grammar of a programming language is among the least appropriate of all possible facets of its behavior to start off with.

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  • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

    fidonet did a ton of load sharing on a per-file basis, including some really interesting locality-based queueing

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    wrote last edited by
    #90

    Program Sharing: Data is sent to a program located at a remote computer and the answer is returned. Software of particular efficiency or capability exists on certain machines.

    literally this is all google tech lmao it's like he's salivating over this

    The use of specialized programs at remote facilities makes possible large gains in performance.
    Perhaps even more important is the potential saving in reprogramming effort.

    ridiculous shit

    hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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    • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

      This style of definition was used in the definition of Standard ML by Milner, Tofte and Harper [MTH90]. This example, one of the most famous formal language definitions, is a clear demonstration that a large language can be formalised in this manner.

      i'm getting the impression that the seL4 HOL C semantics may not be as useful as it's being let on lmao

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      wrote last edited by
      #91

      @hipsterelectron oh wait that's what you're looking at rn??

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

        Program Sharing: Data is sent to a program located at a remote computer and the answer is returned. Software of particular efficiency or capability exists on certain machines.

        literally this is all google tech lmao it's like he's salivating over this

        The use of specialized programs at remote facilities makes possible large gains in performance.
        Perhaps even more important is the potential saving in reprogramming effort.

        ridiculous shit

        hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH This user is from outside of this forum
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        hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
        wrote last edited by
        #92

        yeah and then he mentions three separate times how scientists can use it to do new science together. it seems important that scientists are on it at all

        hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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        • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

          yeah and then he mentions three separate times how scientists can use it to do new science together. it seems important that scientists are on it at all

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          hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
          wrote last edited by
          #93

          and i found all that about DARPA salivating over people never writing their own programs again because of:

          • the seL4 paper which got best paper https://web.archive.org/web/20110219113850/http://www.ok-labs.com/releases/release/open-kernel-labs-paper-on-formal-verification-wins-top-prize-at-prestigious

          still think this paper is terrible. it keeps saying it made compromises for verifiability and wildly overstates the guarantees

          • turns out that conference SOSP is literally the (ACM) conference whose first year was when a big ARPANET thing was unveiled https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symposium_on_Operating_Systems_Principles

          • there's these unstructured notes from the fucking pentagon lmao https://web.archive.org/web/20150405055923/https://web.stanford.edu/dept/SUL/library/extra4/sloan/mousesite/EngelbartPapers/B1_F20_CompuMtg.html

          • and finally this is IETF at its best https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shared_resource choose the most generic possible term that sounds like page cache, but it specifically means network share

          hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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          • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

            and i found all that about DARPA salivating over people never writing their own programs again because of:

            • the seL4 paper which got best paper https://web.archive.org/web/20110219113850/http://www.ok-labs.com/releases/release/open-kernel-labs-paper-on-formal-verification-wins-top-prize-at-prestigious

            still think this paper is terrible. it keeps saying it made compromises for verifiability and wildly overstates the guarantees

            • turns out that conference SOSP is literally the (ACM) conference whose first year was when a big ARPANET thing was unveiled https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symposium_on_Operating_Systems_Principles

            • there's these unstructured notes from the fucking pentagon lmao https://web.archive.org/web/20150405055923/https://web.stanford.edu/dept/SUL/library/extra4/sloan/mousesite/EngelbartPapers/B1_F20_CompuMtg.html

            • and finally this is IETF at its best https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shared_resource choose the most generic possible term that sounds like page cache, but it specifically means network share

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            hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
            wrote last edited by
            #94

            oh this is a great tidbit

            Before 2023, SOSP was held every other year, alternating with the conference on Operating Systems Design and Implementation (OSDI);

            • starting 2024, SOSP began to be held every year.

            lots of weird things like this

            hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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            • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

              oh this is a great tidbit

              Before 2023, SOSP was held every other year, alternating with the conference on Operating Systems Design and Implementation (OSDI);

              • starting 2024, SOSP began to be held every year.

              lots of weird things like this

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              hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
              wrote last edited by
              #95

              oh then i found this guy who was at the arpanet conference http://royalsocietypublishing.org/rsbm/article-pdf/doi/10.1098/rsbm.2002.0006/911101/rsbm.2002.0006.pdf

              so like this guy is easily off the charts evil imho. this is him saying he was smarter and braver than alan turing:

              My few contacts with Turing were not encouraging. I wanted to talk to him about the remarkable results of his paper ‘On computable numbers’. Reading this paper I had found numerous errors in the formal specification of the universal computer. Some were trivial but others were quite subtle and I was not sure that my solutions were correct. When I came to this point, Turing became more and more agitated, until I could see that no sensible discussion was possible. Clearly he felt the errors to be irrelevant and my drawing attention to them rather foolish.

              then he mysteriously advises on "cryptography" from the late 80s until he finally fucked off this planet

              Retirement did not by any means imply inactivity. For the next 15 years Davies practised
              as a consultant in security engineering for the financial and media industries. This was at a
              time when systems based on cryptographic and similar techniques were coming into wide use
              both for cash cards and pay television.

              hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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              • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                oh then i found this guy who was at the arpanet conference http://royalsocietypublishing.org/rsbm/article-pdf/doi/10.1098/rsbm.2002.0006/911101/rsbm.2002.0006.pdf

                so like this guy is easily off the charts evil imho. this is him saying he was smarter and braver than alan turing:

                My few contacts with Turing were not encouraging. I wanted to talk to him about the remarkable results of his paper ‘On computable numbers’. Reading this paper I had found numerous errors in the formal specification of the universal computer. Some were trivial but others were quite subtle and I was not sure that my solutions were correct. When I came to this point, Turing became more and more agitated, until I could see that no sensible discussion was possible. Clearly he felt the errors to be irrelevant and my drawing attention to them rather foolish.

                then he mysteriously advises on "cryptography" from the late 80s until he finally fucked off this planet

                Retirement did not by any means imply inactivity. For the next 15 years Davies practised
                as a consultant in security engineering for the financial and media industries. This was at a
                time when systems based on cryptographic and similar techniques were coming into wide use
                both for cash cards and pay television.

                hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH This user is from outside of this forum
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                hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
                wrote last edited by
                #96

                omg

                Davies was very much an engineer rather than a scientist, and he was always on the lookout
                for topics in which his ingenuity and insight could be deployed.

                guy who steals people's ideas

                hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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                • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                  omg

                  Davies was very much an engineer rather than a scientist, and he was always on the lookout
                  for topics in which his ingenuity and insight could be deployed.

                  guy who steals people's ideas

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                  hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
                  wrote last edited by
                  #97

                  He was early in the field of civil uses of cryptography and always had a healthy scepticism of claims to perfection.

                  terrifying

                  Mathematical proof of the security of a system struck him as dubious, because it is much easier to prove resistance to attacks one has thought about than it is to prove resistance to attacks one has not thought about.

                  guy who knows how cryptography works

                  hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                    He was early in the field of civil uses of cryptography and always had a healthy scepticism of claims to perfection.

                    terrifying

                    Mathematical proof of the security of a system struck him as dubious, because it is much easier to prove resistance to attacks one has thought about than it is to prove resistance to attacks one has not thought about.

                    guy who knows how cryptography works

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                    hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
                    wrote last edited by
                    #98

                    omg the EROS author is literally validating all my ideas about the macrokernel love that for me

                    hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                      omg the EROS author is literally validating all my ideas about the macrokernel love that for me

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                      wrote last edited by
                      #99

                      Systems programs are strongly driven by bulk I/O
                      performance.

                      he keeps talking about multiple aliasing being problematic and of course this is why i decided to never share anything and instead have layered i/o queues

                      In systems code, the effect of representation and data placement can be extreme. Bonwick et al. discuss some of these effects [5], noting that the performance of system-level benchmarks can change by 50% through careful management of cache residency and collisions.

                      but how do you manage something "carefully" if all the interfaces allow for is urgency???

                      This tends to penalize the performance of automatic storage reclamation strategies. To make matters more interesting, there are caches.

                      yeah it rly annoys me how the filesystem has its own caches and the kernel has its own caches but there's this assumption that persistence is always the final destiny of all writes

                      It follows that user-managed storage is a requirement, but perhaps not in fully general form.

                      that's exactly it!

                      hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                        Systems programs are strongly driven by bulk I/O
                        performance.

                        he keeps talking about multiple aliasing being problematic and of course this is why i decided to never share anything and instead have layered i/o queues

                        In systems code, the effect of representation and data placement can be extreme. Bonwick et al. discuss some of these effects [5], noting that the performance of system-level benchmarks can change by 50% through careful management of cache residency and collisions.

                        but how do you manage something "carefully" if all the interfaces allow for is urgency???

                        This tends to penalize the performance of automatic storage reclamation strategies. To make matters more interesting, there are caches.

                        yeah it rly annoys me how the filesystem has its own caches and the kernel has its own caches but there's this assumption that persistence is always the final destiny of all writes

                        It follows that user-managed storage is a requirement, but perhaps not in fully general form.

                        that's exactly it!

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                        hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
                        wrote last edited by
                        #100

                        The facts say otherwise. The annual cost to operate a large banking data center today is $150,000 per square foot. It is by far the most expensive real estate in the world, and more than one third of that cost is the cost of cooling the data center.

                        2006!!!!

                        hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                          The facts say otherwise. The annual cost to operate a large banking data center today is $150,000 per square foot. It is by far the most expensive real estate in the world, and more than one third of that cost is the cost of cooling the data center.

                          2006!!!!

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                          hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
                          wrote last edited by
                          #101

                          wait shit he had a point:

                          The general rule of thumb is that power
                          is proportional to V2F: the square of the voltage times the frequency. Most of this power is wasted as heat. To a system’s programmer, the cost of doubling the clock rate is $50,000 per square foot per machine room.

                          do i detect an IETF hater???

                          Raising the clock rate decidedly isn’t free, and walking into the network distribution closet at your business or school will quickly convince you that current power usage is excessive.

                          hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                            wait shit he had a point:

                            The general rule of thumb is that power
                            is proportional to V2F: the square of the voltage times the frequency. Most of this power is wasted as heat. To a system’s programmer, the cost of doubling the clock rate is $50,000 per square foot per machine room.

                            do i detect an IETF hater???

                            Raising the clock rate decidedly isn’t free, and walking into the network distribution closet at your business or school will quickly convince you that current power usage is excessive.

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                            hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
                            wrote last edited by
                            #102

                            oh oops he glazes up tcp/ip immediately after. this is "Programming Language Challenges in Systems Codes" by jonathan shapiro

                            hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                              oh oops he glazes up tcp/ip immediately after. this is "Programming Language Challenges in Systems Codes" by jonathan shapiro

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                              wrote last edited by
                              #103

                              on the internet:

                              Large block processing costs are dominated by memory bandwidth, not software overheads.

                              that makes sense. the difficulty with fitting network i/o into my beautiful symphony of data locality is that the network is "necessary global" in some sense, and can't do multi-level queueing or w/e because you can't dictate to network resources how fast or slow to send data to you!

                              As Blackwell discusses [4], processing overhead on smaller packets is necessarily much higher.

                              hmmmm

                              hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH meph@social.treehouse.systemsM 2 Replies Last reply
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                              • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                                on the internet:

                                Large block processing costs are dominated by memory bandwidth, not software overheads.

                                that makes sense. the difficulty with fitting network i/o into my beautiful symphony of data locality is that the network is "necessary global" in some sense, and can't do multi-level queueing or w/e because you can't dictate to network resources how fast or slow to send data to you!

                                As Blackwell discusses [4], processing overhead on smaller packets is necessarily much higher.

                                hmmmm

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                                hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
                                wrote last edited by
                                #104

                                vaguely interesting microsoft research paper https://research.cs.wisc.edu/areas/os/Seminar/schedules/papers/Deconstructing_Process_Isolation_final.pdf

                                A software isolated process is a collection of memory pages and a language safety mechanism that ensures that code in a process cannot access another process’s pages. A SIP replaces hardware memory protection with static verification of program safety.

                                DEEPLY suspicious to hear "replaces hardware memory protection" coming from microsoft lmao

                                They rely on verifying code’s safe behavior to prevent it from accessing another process’s (or the kernel’s) instructions or data.

                                LMAO

                                hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                                  vaguely interesting microsoft research paper https://research.cs.wisc.edu/areas/os/Seminar/schedules/papers/Deconstructing_Process_Isolation_final.pdf

                                  A software isolated process is a collection of memory pages and a language safety mechanism that ensures that code in a process cannot access another process’s pages. A SIP replaces hardware memory protection with static verification of program safety.

                                  DEEPLY suspicious to hear "replaces hardware memory protection" coming from microsoft lmao

                                  They rely on verifying code’s safe behavior to prevent it from accessing another process’s (or the kernel’s) instructions or data.

                                  LMAO

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                                  hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #105

                                  However, language safety offers important benefits not provided by hardware process protection, for example, detecting in-process errors such buffer overruns.

                                  literally nothing in this paper makes any sense

                                  hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                                    However, language safety offers important benefits not provided by hardware process protection, for example, detecting in-process errors such buffer overruns.

                                    literally nothing in this paper makes any sense

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                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #106

                                    just read a liedtke paper for the first time https://cgi.cse.unsw.edu.au/~cs9242/19/papers/Liedtke_93.pdf i think this guy is crazy for still trying to make ipc faster but this was actually cool to read. should have thought to learn that context first before hating on all the modern microkernel stuff =\

                                    and he completely blew my fucking mind with this lmao:

                                    5.3.5 Direct Process Switch
                                    For a remote procedure call it is natural to switch the flow of control directly to the called thread, donating the current timeslice to it (as also LRPC does).
                                    This is also the most efficient method, since it only involves changing stack pointer and address space.

                                    i don't think i would ever have thought of that myself and i can see why all-consuming focus on a hopeless task can actually get you places sometimes if you don't half-ass it

                                    guy seems cool

                                    hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                                      just read a liedtke paper for the first time https://cgi.cse.unsw.edu.au/~cs9242/19/papers/Liedtke_93.pdf i think this guy is crazy for still trying to make ipc faster but this was actually cool to read. should have thought to learn that context first before hating on all the modern microkernel stuff =\

                                      and he completely blew my fucking mind with this lmao:

                                      5.3.5 Direct Process Switch
                                      For a remote procedure call it is natural to switch the flow of control directly to the called thread, donating the current timeslice to it (as also LRPC does).
                                      This is also the most efficient method, since it only involves changing stack pointer and address space.

                                      i don't think i would ever have thought of that myself and i can see why all-consuming focus on a hopeless task can actually get you places sometimes if you don't half-ass it

                                      guy seems cool

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                                      hipsterelectron@circumstances.run
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #107

                                      ipc performance is not only determined by the kernel algorithms, but also by the user/kernel interface. It is important to support typical usage and permit compilers to optimize code.

                                      clearly we agree on the important things??? lol

                                      Since there are no compilers (as far as we
                                      know) which permit interfaces to be specified at register level and basic block sequences to be optimized by programmer supplied usage information, we had to use hand coding for the critical ipc related parts.

                                      see i love this guy lmao

                                      hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH kebokyo@plush.cityK 2 Replies Last reply
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                                      • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                                        ipc performance is not only determined by the kernel algorithms, but also by the user/kernel interface. It is important to support typical usage and permit compilers to optimize code.

                                        clearly we agree on the important things??? lol

                                        Since there are no compilers (as far as we
                                        know) which permit interfaces to be specified at register level and basic block sequences to be optimized by programmer supplied usage information, we had to use hand coding for the critical ipc related parts.

                                        see i love this guy lmao

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                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #108

                                        oh amoeba is so cool lmao https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/54289.54291

                                        6. THE FAST AMOEBA FILE SERVER
                                        Like the Amoeba communication primitives, the Amoeba file server, called the bullet server was designed for extremely high performance.

                                        you're allowed to say stuff like this if you can back it up. let's see:

                                        In particular, the decrease in the cost of disk and RAM memories over the past decade has allowed to use a radically different design than is used in UNIX and most other operating systems. In particular, we have abandoned the idea of storing files as a collection of fixed size disk blocks.

                                        HELL yes i win again

                                        All files are stored contiguously, both on the disk and in the server's (16 MB) main memory

                                        16 mb lmao

                                        hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH kebokyo@plush.cityK 2 Replies Last reply
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                                        • hipsterelectron@circumstances.runH hipsterelectron@circumstances.run

                                          ipc performance is not only determined by the kernel algorithms, but also by the user/kernel interface. It is important to support typical usage and permit compilers to optimize code.

                                          clearly we agree on the important things??? lol

                                          Since there are no compilers (as far as we
                                          know) which permit interfaces to be specified at register level and basic block sequences to be optimized by programmer supplied usage information, we had to use hand coding for the critical ipc related parts.

                                          see i love this guy lmao

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                                          kebokyo@plush.city
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #109

                                          @hipsterelectron I have no fucking clue what any of this means but this guy seems chill and I love these types of threads where you liveblog the nerd shit you're reading anyways

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