Saturday, August 9, 2008

Blogging from Manhattan through a MacBook !

Its been almost five months since I posted anything on my blog. I have been through a wide range of experiences in this period, from extremely bitter to really wonderful and pleasant. I hope to be able to put in articles more consistently now, as things seem to be settling down now.

Its been 23 days since I set my foot on the American soil. I am writing this post currently from my apartment in Manhattan, New York and my happiness is doubled by the fact that I am using a MacBook ! ... I have long awaited to understand the loyalty of Mac fans and though I am very new to the fraternity (just a week), I am beginning to see why is it so. I have been to quite a few places in New York now and I have walked a lot here, which is a big change from Bangalore. This place is a sort of jungle of skyscrapers :) ... with so many people moving both above and below the roads. New York certainly deserves to be called one of the greatest cities of the world if not the greatest, which it perhaps is at present. There is so much energy moving around in this city, a place where people are living to get something done. Manhattan is a very safe place too, you can see girls walking around in streets at midnight. There are "thelaas" like we have in Indian cities, just more sophisticated. And you can see a lot of rickshaws at Times Square and in Central Park, just more sophisticated :) designer rickshaws infact ! ... a bicycle here is something which sets you apart from the crowd, just the reverse of what we have in India.

There are so many observations which I want to put down, but it will take many posts so I will keep them for later posts.

I intend to put some interesting stuff regarding Linux memory management, compilers and some ideas I have. The thing is that I want to put stuff that's my own hack (as I would like to call it) rather than something which you can find on technology sites or Wikipedia. I can't do it today but I hope I can start with something soon.

Its been a very happy feeling to return back to my blog and I hope to do better this time :)

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Driver, where you taking us ?

Its a special day for me, my birthday :) ... nothing much happened today except I was able to pray in the famous Dakshineshwar temple here in Kolkata, after a long, slow walk from outside the temple premises to inside. It was a surprise for me as I had expected it to be an easy-going affair, I would be done in about half an hour, I had thought ... it took more than 2 hours, which I am thankful for, as it could have been more.

So, here I am, 26 years of my life complete today and I am in a strange state. I feel happy, I feel sad, I feel confused, hopeful and sometimes I feel blank. It seems that this has been triggered because of my thoughtful, introspective mood that I entered yesterday night. There are so many things I have thought about since. Family, friends, studies, career ... And each of these topics makes me feel a lot of things as I have said earlier ... happy, sad, confused, hopeful, blank.

I am not however, going to discuss (most of) my thoughts here. I rather thought of writing out some of the thoughts that I have for my blog though :)

Well, this is a summary of what I think I would do with my blog this year :
1) I feel like I need to write more articles that are geek-ish ;) ... what I mean to say is that, I want to write more articles that are not of a philosophical/intellectual mode ... I would like to put more concrete articles this year.
2) I would like to put a lot of small math posts that would be relatively easier for people to grasp and fun too.
3) As for programming, I would like to pick specific language features from those I know and discuss what I know and maybe that could help some new people ... maybe also invite the wrath of experts :D ... but I am ready for that, that's the way to grow !
4) Put more material on data structures as used in Linux, material on Linux scheduler and Linux memory management.
5) Some algorithms that are beautiful and less-known.
6) Cryptography - Posts introducing readers to basics of cryptography, encryption schemes, some practical and wonderful aspects of cryptography.

Hope, I can do justice to this list this year. Happy blogging to all of you and happy birthday to me ;-)

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

A whining post

Missed February 2008 in my blogging career, busy with exams and other stuff. I have three to four topics on which I would love to write something as soon as possible. However, it looks like even March is going to be unsparing. So, with not much time at hand, I thought of writing a post where I would list many of my recent dislikes (it feels so good to criticize ;) ... and hence I call this a whining post :)

Well, here they are in no particular order or importance :

1) Indian cricket team has created history in Australia with their sensational 2-0 thrashing of Australia in the triangular series finals. Moreover, they won the historic test in Perth which had become a holy grail of sorts for the Australians. And, the fact that India did this was even more breathtaking. The sad part is India could have won the test series also, had it not been some 'obnoxious umpiring' in the Sydney test. What irritates me now is the attitude of Indian media and some Indian fans. There are still a lot of people who dismiss Indian victory as fluke ... c'mon now, what do you want ? Indian team came back after a major mental setback in the Sydney test to beat Australia, in nowhere else but Perth ! isn't that awesome ? Beating world champs in ODI versions 2-0 in triangular series finals emphasized the domination of Australia by India. The drama by Indian media is sickening, ridiculous, irritating, over-hyped, emotionally exploiting and what not ... the post-victory shows on leading news channels like Aaj Tak and Star News was senseless. They were blowing things out of proportion, I mean let the team relax, don't play with the sentiments of people for your ratings ... these same channels will not leave a stone unturned the next time Dhoni and gang fail ... the way they projected the clash between Harbhajan and Symonds, Hayden was shameful ... yes, Australians are bad losers but you got to be sensible with national broadcasts. The Indian media looks to me like a bunch of a**holes who flush the ethics with their shit.

2) I love Ubuntu, this is the most satisfying Linux distro I've laid my hands upon (well, definitely some people won't agree but that's ok with me, you got your reasons to stick with your distro, have fun). However, there are somethings I would like to be improved. Firstly, and I am talking about Ubuntu 7.04, why is the shutdown so ugly ? On Windows XP, the application windows get closed one by one in a clean manner, the shutdown on Ubuntu is like a mad rush to wipe out the window graphics from the screen (you get white rectangles all overlapping, some colours too and then suddenly to the black screen, the sound is broken and sometimes there is no sound !). I have done a bit of searching and come across some links that I am not sure are talking about the same problem ... I would post about this if I can get it fixed. Secondly, why isn't there a group by name or group by type option in the Nautilus window manager in GNOME (even KDE doesn't have it) ... this is a comparison to Windows XP but that feature helps to make the folder view look more organized.

3) There's this hand gesture that I see all the time when I am at some rock band show (be it in Bangalore or Kolkata) that really irritates me. A lot of young people do it, this is done basically by closing your two fingers just before the little finger along with the thumb, so that the index and little finger are pointing forward ... it's meant to show your appreciation to the band, but I intuitively feel that most of these people are bullshitting, they don't even understand the music. I am not a big guru of music but I would rather stay calm and clap when I have enjoyed some good music from the band ... it makes more sense because you are more likely to be awed and happy by a good/excellent performance rather than 'yo man'ing the performance ;) ... and I find more support for my theory because you can find these people behaving in the same fashion over a crap performance.

4) The obsession of newspapers and media with politics and celebrities is disgusting ... what do millions of people who are working hard for their meals every day care about Britney Spears' baldness, Paris Hilton's exploits or Kareena-Saif romance ? Go to hell ... I wish there would be a lightning some day that would crack on each of these media people and these narcissistic celebrities who occupy unnecessary attention.

I feel like I would spit out a lot more whining if I continue ... so I am cutting it short now and switching to work.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Where are your tools ?

A new year brings with itself a new hope, a revived enthusiasm to set up things in your life in order. That's exactly the purpose of this post. I intend to help some students who are willing to strengthen their programming skills this year.

I have observed that a number of students in colleges who like to program in C, C++ are a bit short on the knowledge or are in complete ignorance, of how to use tools that are used by professional programmers daily. These tools like make, gdb, prof/gprof, valgrind/Electric Fence, CVS/Subversion really help you a lot with programming projects and in fact programmers can't imagine doing their work without these tools. You seriously need them for large-scale projects, and even with smaller projects you will notice how helpful they are.

My plan in this post is to give such students a short intro to these tools and places where they can start learning these tools. And as you may have noticed, there is bias towards the Linux/UNIX environment here. That's because it's really a much more powerful environment for programming than Windows. You need tos get good in Linux/UNIX environment if you really want to learn more and better about C, C++ programming.

Note: This book, The Linux Programmers Toolbox , by John Fusco, is a must-have for all those who are looking to do some serious programming in the Linux environment, and covers all the tools I mentioned. It's very well written also.

So let's start with 'make'. When you are writing an application, you will have many source files, that roughly depict how you have broken your app into modules. Now, as will happen almost always, you will need to make changes to some module of your app to get things working, or maybe adding a new feature. Once you have made the changes you will need to recompile. This means you will recompile all your source files (in case you don't know make already) which is a waste of time and CPU resource because you changes only one or a small number of modules in your app. And, so ideally you don't need to recompile the ones you haven't changed. This is where make is so helpful and the importance increases when the size of your application's code increases. The book, C in a Nutshell, by Prinz and Crawford, is also a good resource for learning about gcc, make and gdb. You should try to use GNU make as it is the one used almost in all open-source projects. The page is, GNU make, and has documentation and other relevant information on it. Even if the documentation looks a bit heavy, make sure you do read it every once in a while to know more about the capabilities and intricacies of make, it will help you in the long run.

Now, another very essential tool, 'gdb'. gdb is the GNU debugger. For those of you who still do the debugging by using print statements, it's important you know how to use a debugger because a debugger can save you a lot of time and labour. That's because debuggers will display the values variables are having at any point in the code and so you don't have to guess which variable values to check through print statements, removing and re-writing print statements in your code again and again. Also, you can put breakpoints anywhere and let a particular section of the program run to get an idea of what's going on. Once again, the book C in a Nutshell, is a good place to learn gdb and once again the GNU page manual, gdb, is the authoritative source.

Profilers become important when you want to improve the efficiency of your code. You need to identify the hotspots in your code, that is, the portions of your code which take up most of the execution time. Then you can think about why it's taking that much time, and try to substitute better algorithms. prof, gprof are some common profilers available on the Linux/UNIX systems. You can learn about gprof from this great doc, GNU gprof, by Jay Fenlason and Richard Stallman. This SUN doc, is also a very good one.
Let's move on to memory debuggers. Electric Fence is a memory debugger that triggers a program crash when the memory error occurs, so a debugger like gdb can be used to inspect the code that caused the error. You can learn about eFence (as it is called) on this page by the author of the software, Bruce Perens. He also points to some tools that are better than eFence, however eFence is simpler and a good starting point. 'valgrind' is actually a suite of tools that can automatically detect many memory management and threading bugs, and profile your code in detail. valgrind emulates a CPU and so really slows down your program. You can do some tuning to get a bit improved runtime with valgrind. It's heavy-weight compared to less memory-demanding tools like Purify. valgrind consists of five tools, memcheck (a memory debugging tool), cachegrind (a profiling tool which provides information on cache hit-miss and branch prediction events), callgrind (a tool that shows the call relationships and costs), massif (a space profiling tool which provides information on parts of your code that allocate memory) and helgrind (a debugging tool for threaded programs). You can download valgrind from the official site, and also find the very detailed and good manual there. Again, the manual may look heavy but you should read it.

Well, all the above tools help you with the programming logic and builds. You also need a good tool to manage your code when you are working on a considerable sized project, since you will be revising your code and you need versions of the code so that you can fall back to a code that worked. Also, in the case where you are working in a team a tool is needed that can provide safe access to code to the programmers in team, that is, one person's edits are not interrupted by other and everyone gets latest version of code. In a nutshell, you need a verison control system, like RCS, CVS, Subversion etc. RCS is probably the oldest, CVS is the most tried and tested and Subversion is the newer one with a set of exciting new functionality not in CVS. In the beginning, stages it really won't make a difference which one you pick but eventually you should use CVS or newer alternatives like Subversion. The official Subversion book is a good place for learning Subversion. Some good places to learn CVS are the cvshome.org archive, the Utah University page.

Ok, so with that I end my intro to these tools. I hope I have sparked some interest in some of you and you will go and try using these tools. And believe me, you should learn and use them because they are really necessary when you work on bigger projects. You will save a lot of time and improve your skills. Plus you will feel more like a professional programmer and that's cool, aint it ? ;-)