April 1997
- From out of the shadows... Dan Mazeau
- Introduction Shawn Halpenny
- Introduction Nathan Yospe
- Introduction Chris Gray
- Introduction coder@ibm.net
- Introduction S001GMU@nova.wright.edu
- Introduction Jeff Kesselman
- Introduction Chris Gray
- Introduction Mik Clarke
- Introduction Caliban Tiresias Darklock
- Introduction Mik Clarke
- Introduction Caliban Tiresias Darklock
- Introduction J C Lawrence
- Introduction Elia Morling
- Event-driven? Michael Hohensee
- Event-driven? Nathan Yospe
- Event-driven? coder@ibm.net
- Event-driven? Jon A. Lambert
- Event-driven? Adam Wiggins
- Event-driven? Shawn Halpenny
- Event-driven? Chris Gray
- Event-driven? coder@ibm.net
- (subject missing) Dan Mazeau
- A late introduction Jon A. Lambert
- Re-Introduction S001GMU@nova.wright.edu
- New guy Walter Goodwin
- New guy coder@ibm.net
- Socket Stuff Shawn Halpenny
- database stuff Chris Gray
- So in an event-driven server, how do you ... Michael Hohensee
- So in an event-driven server, how do you ... Nathan Yospe
- So in an event-driven server, how do you ... S001GMU@nova.wright.edu
- So in an event-driven server, how do you ... Chris Gray
- So in an event-driven server, how do you ... clawrenc@xsvr1.cup.hp.com
- So in an event-driven server, how do you ... clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Off on the languages tangent! Chris Gray
- Yet Another Introduction Reed D. Copsey, Jr.
- Yet Another Introduction Nathan Yospe
- Yet Another Introduction clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Yet Another Introduction clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Yet Another Introduction Adam Wiggins
- Yet Another Introduction Dmitri Kondratiev
- self-intro: Cynbe Cynbe ru Taren
- Unique id's Chris Gray
- Unique id's clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Unique id's Jon A. Lambert
- Unique id's coder@ibm.net
- Unique id's Jon A. Lambert
- Unique id's coder@ibm.net
- Unique id's Jeff Kesselman
- Unique id's clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Unique id's Jon A. Lambert
- Dupes are my fault (again) coder@ibm.net
- six degrees of submission ... er, compilation. Cynbe ru Taren
- six degrees of submission ... er, compilation. Jeff Kesselman
- Java as a mudserver language Cynbe ru Taren
- Java as a mudserver language Jeff Kesselman
- Execution Chris Gray
- Using system time for ObjectIDs clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- short absence Chris Gray
- short absence coder@ibm.net
- Hello! Ross Nicoll
- Ho hum (clarifiyign AI terms) Jeff Kesselman
- Ho hum Ling
- Fw: Just a bit of musing Travis Casey
- Risk Assessment -- was (Ho hum) Jon A. Lambert
- Who is Steward and what can he do for me? Jon A. Lambert
- Who is Steward and what can he do for me? clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Who is Steward and what can he do for me? Chris Gray
- project management (or coding, kings, and other things) Jon A. Lambert
- Threads and Sockets (Was Ho hum) S001GMU@nova.wright.edu
- Threads and Sockets (Was Ho hum) Jeff Kesselman
- Threads and Sockets (Was Ho hum) S001GMU@nova.wright.edu
- Threads and Sockets (Was Ho hum) clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Threads and Sockets (Was Ho hum) Chris Gray
- Strings & Memory Usage Greg Munt
- Strings & Memory Usage clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Strings & Memory Usage Jeff Kesselman
- Strings & Memory Usage Shawn Halpenny
On Apr 14, 8:07pm, Greg Munt wrote:
> Subject: Strings & Memory Usage
> Is there a common way to save the memory used up by storing strings? I'm
> sure something was said on this subject in the RGMA 'MUD Memory' thread
> (by George Reese, IIRC)
I'm curious about this too. I haven't thought all that much about it and,
given that, could certainly benefit from others' trials and tribulations to
point me in a sensible direction. Right now I'm thinking hashing, but
nothing more detailed than that.
>
> I will probably be using some sort of bytecode compilation on my mud now.
> Would this method of memory saving simply involve checking a list of
> those strings currently in memory, and either adding a new string, or
> adding a pointer to an old string? (that would probably slow down the
> process unless the storage structure was right, tho)
>
> Thanks,
> Greg.
>
> PS On the subject of project management, I was planning on some sort of
> autocratic method, quite simply because I have experienced first-hand the
> political nightmare of a democracy (see my intro). I'll probably have
> some communication medium through which people can talk about design
> ideas, then I would decide what I wanted, and share the work out to
> numerous people. One of the goals of Frontiers is to have a code base
> which *anyone* can contribute to - thats one of the reasons i'll be using
> the copyleft. Probably a core base of serious programmers, and
> 'contractors' who want to do the odd feature here and there. I do think
> it important that the programmers dont make unilateral design changes
> while coding tho - they should report design flaws, where a solution
> should either be given by me (if a simple fix), or discussed by everyone.
My approach was to break the design into two parts (a lot like an LP, I
suppose): kernel and lib. The kernel handles all the nitty-gritty, the
stuff that no one creating their own mud should need to know the
intricacies of, while they can build their own lib to suit. IMO, this
prevents the tragic proliferation of stock-muds too, once a number of
from-scratch servers are released. That is to say, just release your
kernel. Don't release a lib at all, document the hell out of your
kernel and perhaps supply a whole bunch of examples (sure, pull them from
your lib), but don't give anyone else a complete world to start with,
otherwise you'll just end up with a situation like we have now (server
quality notwithstanding).
I'm at the point where I'm considering being a rat bastard and not
releasing anything (not selling it, but making it the only one in
existance), but that could just be because I'm discouraged by all the crap
that's out there and don't want the same to happen to mine. I'll probably
smarten up and listen to what I wrote in the preceding paragraph sometime :P
Heh...somewhat rant-ish :>
> The documentation of every development stage is of paramount importance -
> it sickens me how poorly documented muds and code bases are. In fact, it
Too true. It's _way_ to easy to hack something up and then have to patch
it and hack it all over the place to make it do what you want, whereas if
you'd started with an actual design, some goals in mind when you started
(and wrote them down and thought about them and bounced them off others
yada yada yada), you end up with a much easier-to-work-with finished
product. IMO, the only way to go.
--
Shawn Halpenny - Strings & Memory Usage ashen
- Strings & Memory Usage Chris Gray
- Steward coder@ibm.net
- r.g.m.* - worthwhile thread Nathan Yospe
- r.g.m.* - worthwhile thread clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- r.g.m.* - worthwhile thread Jeff Kesselman
- r.g.m.* - worthwhile thread Chris Gray
- (fwd) A Mud Protocol (MUD Markup Language) coder@ibm.net
- Ho hum (Sockets) Ling
- Steward and other painful friends coder@ibm.net
- A Combat System (please critique!) S001GMU@nova.wright.edu
- Your Message To mud-dev Jon A. Lambert
- I'm back Chris Gray
- Changes to the list coder@ibm.net
- Oops coder@ibm.net
- Verb binding Chris Gray
- Verb binding clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Verb binding ashen
- Verb binding Chris Gray
- Verb binding Adam Wiggins
- Verb binding clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Verb binding S001GMU@nova.wright.edu
- Verb binding Shawn Halpenny
- Verb binding Chris Gray
- Verb binding clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Verb binding Chris Gray
- Why have a combat state? Jeff Kesselman
- Why have a combat state? clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Introduction Jamie Norrish
- Introduction S001GMU@nova.wright.edu
- Introduction clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Introduction Jeff Kesselman
- Introduction clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Introduction Chris Gray
- Introduction Travis Casey
- Introduction Jeff Kesselman
- Introduction scherecwich@angelfire.com
- Introduction Jon A. Lambert
- Introduction Chris Gray
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Raz
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Chris Gray
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Raz
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Chris Gray
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Chris Gray
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Oliver Jowett
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Chris Gray
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Raz
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Miroslav Silovic
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Adam Wiggins
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Miroslav Silovic
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list Raz
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- (fwd) Issues from the digests and Wout's list clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Me Raz
- Sendmail changes coder@ibm.net
- Reposts Adam Wiggins
- Semaphores, Mutices, fd_sets Greg Munt
- Semaphores, Mutices, fd_sets Jeff Kesselman
- Semaphores, Mutices, fd_sets clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- MUD Design Digest V1 #55 coder@ibm.net
- Me Raz
- Magnetic Scrolls' magical parser Greg Munt
- Magnetic Scrolls' magical parser clawrenc@cup.hp.com
- Magnetic Scrolls' magical parser Adam Wiggins
- Magnetic Scrolls' magical parser Nathan Yospe
- Magnetic Scrolls' magical parser Chris Gray
- Magnetic Scrolls' magical parser Ling
- Magnetic Scrolls' magical parser Chris Gray
- Magnetic Scrolls' magical parser Shawn Halpenny
- Reposts Jeff Kesselman
- Email change Alex Oren
- SUBSCRIBE Alex Oren
- (fwd) Death in Muds -(also Birth, Imprisonment, Aging, and skill development) coder@ibm.net
- fd_set limitations Greg Munt
- parsing Chris Gray