- create by forwarding allocator arguments to policy
- builder-Op to append from iterator
- decide to collapse the ArrayBucket class, since
access is going through unsafe pointer arithmetic anyway
- favour dynamic polymorphism
- use additional memory for management data alongside the element allocation
- encode a flag and a deleter pointer to enable ownership of the allocation
- inherit base container privately into builder, so the build ends with a slice
Some decisions
- use a single template with policy base
- population via separate builder class
- implemented similar to vector (start/end)
- but able to hold larger (subclass) objects
- basically works out-of-the-box now
- the hard wired fixed Extent size is a serious limitation
- however, this is not the intended primary use, rather complementary
...this is an important detail: quite commonly, a custom allocator
is actually implemented as monostate, to avoid bloating every client container
with a backlink pointer; by inheriting the `StdFactory` adapter from the
allocator, the empty-base optimisation can be exploited.
In the standard case thus LinkedElements is the same size as a single
pointer, which is already exploited at several places in the code base.
Notably `AllocationCluster` uses a »virtual overlay« to dress-up the
position pointer as `LinkedElements`, allowing to delegate most of the
administration and memory management to existing and verified code.
With this adjustments, `LinkedElements` pass the tests again
and the rework of `AllocationCluster` is considered complete.
This is the first validation of the new design:
the policy to take ownership can be reimplemented simply
by delegating to the adaptor for a C++ standard allocator
The following structure can be expected, after __switching to C++20__
* Concept **Allocator** deals with the bare memory allocation
* Concept **Factory** handles object creation and disposal by delegation
* Concept **Handle** is a ready-made functor for dependency-injection
Right now, an implementation of the ''prospective Factory Concept''
can be provided, by delegating through `std::allocator_traits` to a given
`std::allocator` or compatible object
By default, LinkedElements uses a policy OwningHeapAllocated;
while retaining this interface, this policy should be recast
to rely on a standard compliant allocator, with a default
fallback to `std::allocator<T>`
This way, a single policy would serve all the cases where
objects are actually owned and managed by `LinkedElements`,
and most special policies would be redundant.
This turns out to be quite tedious and technical however,
since the newer standard mandates to use std::allocator_traits
as front-end, and moreover the standard allocators are always
tied to one specific target type, while `LinkedElements` is
deliberately used to maintain a polymorphic sequence.
since the calculation to find the current block start
has been recast as a private method, it is now possible to
calculate the allocation statistics without mutating the pos pointer.
To enable such usages, add a wrapper for `LinkedElements` to expose
an element-pointer temporarily as a immutable `LinkedElements` list,
allowing to iterate or use subscript and size information functions
...what I've implemented yesterday is effectively the same functionality
as provided automatically by the C++ object system when using a virtual destructor.
Thus a much cleaner solution is to turn `Destructor` into a interface
and let C++ do all the hard work.
Verified in test: works as intended
This is the first draft, implementing the invocation explicitly
through a trampoline function. While it seems to work,
the formulation can probably be simplified....
These diagnostics helpers must rely on low-level trickery,
since the implementation strives at avoiding unnecessary storage overhead.
Since `AllocationCluster` is move-only (for good reasons) and `StorageManager`
can not be constructed independently, a »backdoor« is created by
forced cast, relying on the known memory layout
- rather accept hard-wired limits than making the implementation excessively generic
- by exploiting the layout, the administrative overhead can be reduced significantly
- the trick with the "virtual managment overlay" allows to hand-off most of the
clean-up work to C++ destructor invocation
- it is important to verify these low-level arrangements explicitly by unit-test
* this is pure old-style low-level trickery
* using a layout trick, the `AllocationCluster`
can be operated with the bare minimum of overhead
* this trick relies on the memory layout of `lib::LinkedElements`
...due to the decision to use a much simpler allocation scheme
to increase probability for actual savings, after switching the API
and removing all trading related aspects, a lot of further code is obsoleted
Notably this raises the difficult question,
whether to ensure **invocation of destructors**.
Not invoking dtors ''breaks one of the most fundamental contracts''
of the C++ language — yet the infrastructure to invoke dtors in such
a heterogeneous cluster of allocations creates a hugely significant
overhead and is bound to poison the caches (objects to be deallocated
typically sit in cold memory pages).
What makes this decision especially daunting is the fact that the
low-level-Model can be expected to be one of the largest systemic
data structures (letting aside the media buffers).
I am leaning towards a compromise: turn down this decision
towards the user of the `AllocationCluster`
After some analysis, it became clear that the existing code for
`AllocationCluster` (while in itself valid) will likely miss the point
for the expected usage in the low-level Model: most segments of the
model will be rather small, and thus there is not enough potential for
amortisation when using such a per-type and per-segment scheme;
a rather simplistic linear allocator will be sufficient.
On the other hand, with the current C++ standard it is easy to provide
a complient allocator implementation for STL containers, and thus the
interface should be retro-fitted accordingly.
At the time of the initial design attempts, I naively created a
classic interface to describe an fixed container allocated ''elsewhere.''
Meanwhile the C++ language has evolved and this whole idea looks
much more as if it could be a ''Concept'' (C++20). Moreover, having
several implementations of such a container interface is deemed inadequate,
since it would necessitate ''at least two indirections'' — while
going the Concept + Template route would allow to work without any
indirection, given our current understanding that the `ProcNode` itself
is ''not an interface'' — rather a building block.
- the starting point is the idea to build a dedicated ''turnout system''
- `StateAdapter`, `BuffTable` ⟶ `FeedManifold` and _Invocation_ will be fused
- actually, the `TurnoutSystem` will be ''pulled'' and orchestrate the invocation
- the structure is assumed to be recursive
The essence of the Node-Invocation, as developed 2009 / 2011 remains intact,
yet it will be organised along a clearer structure
Use the statistic functions imported recently from Yoshimi-test
to compute a linear regression model as immediate test result.
Combining several measurement series, this allows to draw conclusions
about some generic traits and limitations of the scheduler.
Visual tweaks specific to this measurement setup
* include a numeric representation of the regression line
* include descriptive axis labels
* improve the key names to clarify their meaning
* heuristic code for the x-ticks
Package these customisations as a helper function into the measurement tool
After a lot of further tinkering, seemingly arriving at a
somewhat satisfactory solution for the layout and arrangement of
test definitions and especially the table for measurement series.
While the complete setup remains fragile indeed, and complexity is more
hidden than reduced — the pragmatic compromise established yesterday
at least allows to reduce the amount of boilerplate in the test or
measurement setup to make the actual specifics stand out clearly.
----
As an aside, the usage of the `DataFile` type imported from Yoshimi-test
recently was re-shaped more towards a generic handling of tabular data with
CSV storage option; thus renaming the type now into `DataTable`.
Persistent storage is now just one option, while another usage pattern
compounds observation data into table rows, which are then directly
rendered into a CSV string, e.g. for visualisation as Gnuplot graph.
Rework the existing tool to capture the measurement series
into the newly integrated CSV-based data storage, allowing
to turn the results into a Gnuplot-visualisation.
...which is added automatically whenever additional data columns are present
Result can only be verified visually
* the upper diagram should show the first fibonacci points
* a (correct) linear regression line should be overlayed in red
* below, a secondary diagram should appear, with aligned axis
* the row "one" in this diagram should be shown as impulses
* the further rows "two" and "three" should be drawn as
green points, using the secondary Y-axis (values 100-250)
* Gnuplot can handle missing data points
The idea is to build the Layout-branching into the generated Gnuplot script,
based on the number of data columns detected. If there is at least one further
data column, then the "mulitplot" layout will be used to feature this
additional data in a secondary diagram below with aligned axis;
if more than one additional data column is present, all further
visualisation will draw points, using the secondary Y-axis
Moreover, Gnuplot can calculate the linear regresssion line itself,
and the drawing will then be done using an `arrow` command,
defining a function regLine(x) based on the linear model.
- `forElse` belongs to the metaprogramming utils
- have a CSVLine, which is a string with custom appending mechanism
- this in turn allows CSVData to accept arbitrary sized tuples,
by rendering them into CSVLine
the metafunction `is_basically<X>` performed only an equality match,
while, given it's current usage, it should also include a subtype-interface-match.
This changes especially the `is_StringLike<S>` metafunction,
both on const references and on classes built on top of string
or string_view.
Whenever a class defines a single-arg templated constructor,
there is danger to shadow the auto-generated copy operations,
leading to insidious failures.
Some months ago, I did the ''obvious'' and added a tiny helper,
allowing to mask out the dangerous case when the ''single argument''
is actually the class itself (meaning, it is a copy invocation and
not meant to go through this templated ctor...
As this already turned out as tremendously helpful, I now extended
this helper to also cover cases where the problematic constructor
accepts variadic arguments, which is quite common with builder-helpers
The intention is to create a library of convenient building blocks;
providing a visualisation should be as simple as invoking a free function
with CSV data, yet with the ability to tweak some lables or display
variations if desired.
This can be achieved by..
* having a series of ready-made standard visualisations
* expose a function call for each, accepting a data-context builder
* provide secondary convenience shortcuts, which add some of the expected bindings
* notably a shortcut is provided to take the data as CSV-string
* augmented by a wrapper/builder to allow defining data points inline
Basically GenNode and the enclosed record were designed to be
immutable — yet some valid usage patterns emerged where gradually
building structure seems adequate — which can be accomodated by
entering a ''mutation mode'' explicitly through the Rec::Mutator.
Over time, a builder usage style came in widespread usage, especially
when building test data structures. There seems to be no deeper reason
preventing the Mutator from being ''moved'' — notwithstanding the fact
that using such a ''movable builder'' can be dangerous, especially
when digressing from the strict »fluent inline builder« usage style
and storing the mutator into a variable.
For populating the data context for a text template instantiation,
we have now a valid case where it seems helpful to partially populate
the context and then move it further down into an implementation
function, which does the bulk of the work.
Deliberately keep it unstructured and add dedicated functions
for each new emerging use case; hopefully some commen usage scheme
will emerge over time.
* Data is to be handed in as an iterator over CSV-strings.
* will have to find out about additional parametrisation on a case-by-case base
The default visuals of gnuplot are simple,
yet tend to look cluttered and are not well suited for our purpose
We need the following presentation
* a scatter diagram with a regression line
* additionally a secondary diagram stacked below, with aligned axis
Thus 🠲 R-T-F-M
* The [http://gnuplot.info/ Gnuplot docu] is exhaustive, yet hard to get into
* Helpful was this collection of [http://gnuplotting.org/ example solutions for scientific plots]
* and — Stackoverflow...
A minimalist `TextTemplate` engine is available for in-project use.
* supports only the bare minimum of features (no programming language)
* substitution of `${placeholder}` by key-name data access
* conditional section `${if key}...${end if}`
* iteration over a data sequence
* other then most solutions available as library,
this implementation does **not require** a specific data type,
nor does it invent a dynamic object system or JSON backend;
rather, a generic ''Data Source Adapter'' is used, which can
be specialised to access any kind of ''structured data''
* the following `DataSource` specialisations are provided
* `std::map<string,string>`
* Lumiera »External Tree Description« (based on `GenNode`)
* a string-based spec for testing
This extension is required to use GenNode as data source for text-template instantiation.
I am aware that such a function could counter the design intent for GenNode,
because it could be (ab)used to "just get the damn value" and then
parse back the results...
...turns out challenging, since our intention here
is borderline to the intended design of the Lumiera ETD.
It ''should work'' though, when combined with a Variant-visitor...
Document existing data binding logic and investigate in detail
what must be done to enable a similar binding backed by Lumiera's ETD structures.
This analysis highlights some tricky aspects, which can be accommodated by
slight adjustments and generalisations in the `TextTemplate` implementation
* `GenNode` is not structured string data, rather binary data
* thus exposing a std::string_view is not adequate, requiring to
pick up the result type from the actual data binding
* moreover, to allow for arbitrary nested scopes, a back-pointer
to the parent scope must be maintained, which requires stable memory locations.
This can best be solved within the InstanceCore itself, which manages
the actual hierarchy of data source references.
* the existing code happens already to fulfil this requirement, but
for sake of clarity, handling of such a nested scope is now extracted
into a dedicated operation, to highlight the guaranteed memory layout.
...hoped to keep it simple, but this is inevitable, since we
want to provide a CSV list as value within a list of key=value
bindings, and all packaged into a simple string for easy testing.
Thus the parsing RegExp just needs two branches for simple and quoted vals
We use a DataSrc<DAT> template to access the actual data to be substituted.
However, when applying the Text-Template, we need to pick the right
specialisation, based on the type of the actual data provided.
Here we face several challenges:
* Class-Template-Argument-Deduction starts from the *primary* template's constructors.
Without that, the compiler will only try the copy constructor and will
never see the constructors of partial specialisations.
This can be fixed by providing a ''dummy constructor''.
* The specifics of how to provide a custom CTAD deduction guide
for a **nested template** are not well documented. I have found
several bug reports, and seemingly one of these bugs failed my
my various attempts. Moreover it is ''not clear if such a deduction
guide can even be given outside of the class definition scope.''
For the intended usage pattern this would be crucial, since users
are expected to provide further specialisations of the DataSrc-template
* Thus I resorted to the ''old school solution,'' which is to use
a ''free builder function'' as an extension point. Thus users could
provide further overloads for the `buildDataSrc()` function.
* Unfortunately, SFINAE-Tricks are way more limited for function overload.
Thus it seems impossible to have a generic and more specialised cases,
unless all special cases are disjoint.
Thus the solution is far from perfect, ''yet for the current situation it seems
sufficient'' (and C++20 Concepts will greatly help to resolve this kind of problems)
...implemented by simply parsing the string into key=value pairs,
which are then stored into a shared map. The actual data binding
implementation can thus be inherited from the existing Map-binding
While they were detected just fine, thy were passed-through
unaltered, which subverts the purpose of such an escape,
which is to allow for the tag syntax to be present in the
processed, substituted document (e.g. when generating a
shell script)
thus `\${escaped}` becomes `${escaped}`