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Path: news.eternal-september.org!eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: candycanearter07 <candycanearter07@candycanearter07.nomail.afraid>
Newsgroups: comp.lang.c++
Subject: Re: Solving thundering Herd with glibc...
Date: Fri, 16 May 2025 12:30:03 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: the-candyden-of-code
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David Brown <david.brown@hesbynett.no> wrote at 06:49 this Thursday (GMT):
> On 14/05/2025 17:05, Vir Campestris wrote:
>> On 25/04/2025 09:37, Bonita Montero wrote:
>>> Am 24.04.2025 um 23:33 schrieb Chris M. Thomasson:
>>>
>>>> "there’s no thundering herd, ever!" because a controlled test didn't
>>>> "show it" is like saying race conditions do not exist because your
>>>> code "worked fine this time."? Fair enough?
>>>
>>> Yes, controlled test with 10'000 iterations.
>>> The code is correct and trivial, but too much for you.
>>>
>> Once upon a time I put a race in a bit of code.
>>
>> It took us 3 years to track down why our customers were reporting
>> occasional faults :(
>>
>> (It turned out the trick to reproduce it was a combination of lots of
>> CPU load and disk transfers not more than once every 30 seconds)
>>
>
> It's always fun dealing with a bug that only triggers in rare timing
> situations. We once had a mistake in a timing table in a program that
> could sometimes result in intermittent faults in the system if
> particular events occurred at the same time, on the 30th of September.
> Finding an issue that occurred at most once per year was a challenge!
If you knew what date the issue was happening on, could you force the
system clock to be on that day?
--
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