Displaying 20 results from an estimated 23282 matches for "situates".
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2013 Dec 12
7
[LLVMdev] Making LLVM safer in out-of-memory situations
Hello,
Philipp Becker and me, Vaidas Gasiunas, are developers at SAP and part of a team developing a C-like domain-specific language for the SAP HANA in-memory database. We use LLVM as a backend to translate our language to native code, primarily on x86-64 platforms. Our programs are created dynamically, compiled and optimized in a running database. As a result of that we have special
2013 Dec 13
0
[LLVMdev] Making LLVM safer in out-of-memory situations
----- Original Message -----
> From: "Philipp Becker" <philipp.becker at sap.com>
> To: "Philip Reames" <listmail at philipreames.com>, "LLVM Dev" <llvmdev at cs.uiuc.edu>
> Sent: Friday, December 13, 2013 6:55:59 AM
> Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Making LLVM safer in out-of-memory situations
>
> Hi Philip,
>
> Thanks for the
2013 Dec 13
4
[LLVMdev] Making LLVM safer in out-of-memory situations
Hi Philip,
Thanks for the positive response from all of you!
> One question: How are you handling EOM? Error return? Custom region allocator?
When running into an Out-of-memory situation we're currently only doing an error return, i.e. the compilation fails, but does so without crashing the process in which the compilation/jitting occurs. It is ok for us if llvm returns with a
2013 Dec 13
0
[LLVMdev] Making LLVM safer in out-of-memory situations
On 12/12/13 4:25 AM, Gasiunas, Vaidas wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Philipp Becker and me, Vaidas Gasiunas, are developers at SAP and part of a team developing a C-like domain-specific language for the SAP HANA in-memory database. We use LLVM as a backend to translate our language to native code, primarily on x86-64 platforms. Our programs are created dynamically, compiled and optimized in a
2016 Jul 05
2
multiple connection (be careful with carrier-grade NAT)
Hi,
Yes I aware to the NAT possibility,
But let's assume that this is the issue, there is no reason that 30 listeners
>From the same country will connect and disconnect at the same time range...
I'm pretty sure that its individual listener/IP.
I deleted the Access log files, but in the next time that I will catch similar situation again,
I will complete the investigation.
Nobody from
2008 May 18
2
*apply function for arrays?
Hi all,
I've recently been writing functions which may deal with very large
arrays. And I hope to use *apply functions in the program so that the
code may look nicer and the performance may be better in the following
two situations.
The first situation is:
I'm having an array A with dim(A)==c(m,n,p). And I want to apply a
function F to a group of elements in A like:
1) F is applied to
2013 Dec 20
2
[LLVMdev] Making LLVM safer in out-of-memory situations
Hi Philip,
> If I'm reading you correctly, you are relying on exception propagation
> and handler (destructors for local objects) execution. You have chosen
> not to add extra exception logic to LLVM itself, but are relying on the
> correctness of exception propagation within the code. (The last two
> sentances are intended to be a restatement of what your message said.
2013 Dec 13
2
[LLVMdev] Making LLVM safer in out-of-memory situations
Hi Hal,
> Does this mean that you're using C++ exception handling to manage the cleanup?
No, not really. From the place where we're calling into llvm we are catching all exceptions that may occur during compilation, but normally we do not add any additional catch clauses into the llvm source itself. We mainly rely on correct stack unwinding by destructors in llvm when an exception is
2013 Dec 12
0
[LLVMdev] Making LLVM safer in out-of-memory situations
On Dec 12, 2013, at 04:25 , Gasiunas, Vaidas <vaidas.gasiunas at sap.com> wrote:
> To address these requirements we have developed a set of patches improving performance and malfunction safety of certain compiler passes and would be interested in contributing them at some point. Before proposing concrete changes, we would like to know what the general interest is with respect to making
2004 Sep 15
0
testing goodness of fit of linear model
Dear R-users,
I've been reading a bunch of things on linear models but cannot quite find a
clear answer. How can one determine whether a linear model is significant or
not?
For background info, I am modelling the response of topographic slope to the
distance of a catchment's outlet. Some guys have shown that if there is a
significant fit to a linear model, one can deduce the dynamic
2016 Jul 01
4
multiple connection
I didn't pick up the data from the access file, just from the error file...
About players, I can't control what the "radio index" sites are doing with
my icecast streaming address,
But as far as I know from my experience, the players when they getting
"crazy" causing between 3-5 multiple connections for less than a 2 minutes.
Not a big issue.
The situation that
2011 Mar 19
1
Getting No Antenna bar when behind a NAT
My Asterisk server is behind a NAT and I have set:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
externhost="my.server.address"
externrefresh=180
localnet=192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0
localnet=10.0.0.0/255.0.0.0
localnet=172.16.0.0/12
nat=yes
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
in [general] section of sip.conf.
I can
2015 Jan 08
4
[LLVMdev] Machine LICM and cheap instructions?
Hi everyone,
The MachineLICM pass has a heuristic such that, even in low-register-pressure situations, it will refuse to hoist "cheap" instructions out of loops. By default, when an itinerary is available, this means that all of the defined operands are available in at most 1 cycle. ARM overrides this, and provides this more-customized definition:
bool ARMBaseInstrInfo::
2007 Jul 19
4
Why using usecallerid=no?
Hi everybody.
I'm in a discussion and someone ask me in which situation we should use the
zapata.conf usecallerid set to no. I didn't have the answer.
I understand what the usecallerid keyword does but I'm talking about a
actual situation that is interesting to to avoid receiving the caller id.
Thanks in advance!
--
--------------------------------------------
Paulo Garcia
Pika
2007 Sep 21
3
Standardize environment between specs containing class defs
I have some specs that involve the use of eval and class definitions to
test code generation. I want to always start with a clean slate so none
of my tests fail or succeed incorrectly due to artifacts left over from
previous specs.
Example of my situation
Spec 1 defines
class Fish
class Cod < Fish
Spec 2 defines
class Animal
class Cod < Animal
In this situation the
2010 Oct 24
1
SAMBA weird situation
Samba: Version 2.2.10
Kernel: 2.4.31
There is share on the server (for DBASE app) with following config:
comment = zwierzaki 2.5.04N
path = /pub/zwierz/
force user = smbguest
read only = No
guest only = Yes
guest ok = Yes
dos filetime resolution = Yes
I have found weird situation:
- not every file in shared dir is visible under windows but
2016 Sep 08
4
typedef or using in C++ code
> On Sep 7, 2016, at 4:50 PM, Joerg Sonnenberger via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:
>
> On Wed, Sep 07, 2016 at 04:30:01PM -0700, Eugene Zelenko via llvm-dev wrote:
>> What should be used for type declarations: typedef or using? typedef
>> is there because of historical reasons, but LLVM code based is C++11
>> now.
>>
>> LLVM Coding
2014 Feb 15
2
Formalizing the end of the relationship with Eaton
Dear NUT users,
The relationship with Eaton was in need of clarification for a long time,
which happened over the past weeks.This is now officially noted on the NUT
side, through moving Eaton from the "Main supporter" to "Supporting UPS
manufacturer", rewording the content and putting a big warning [1].
Quoting these main changes:
"Eaton, has been the main NUT supporter
2007 Oct 12
5
ZFS on EMC Symmetrix
If anyone is running this configuration, I have some questions for you about Page83 data errors.
This message posted from opensolaris.org
2013 Dec 19
0
[LLVMdev] Making LLVM safer in out-of-memory situations
On 12/13/13 6:47 AM, Becker, Philipp wrote:
> Hi Hal,
>
>> Does this mean that you're using C++ exception handling to manage the cleanup?
> No, not really. From the place where we're calling into llvm we are catching all exceptions that may occur during compilation, but normally we do not add any additional catch clauses into the llvm source itself. We mainly rely on correct