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From: | Linda Walsh |
Subject: | Re: When a hashed pathname is deleted, search PATH |
Date: | Fri, 21 Mar 2014 18:48:21 -0700 |
User-agent: | Thunderbird |
Chris Down wrote:
You don't use heuristics when you have access to the underlying mechanisms, that's an extremely poor way to program, and an extremely good way to accrue technical debt.
-- Mike Frysinger wrote:
as soon as you talk about trying to time something, you're obviously looking at it wrong. having a system that only works when the cpu/disk is fast and idle is a waste of time and bad for everyone.
--- BTW -- as far as using heuristics and timing and whether or not that is "bad", you might check to see how the the linux kernel is written.As an example, I saw this today: http://oss.sgi.com/pipermail/xfs/2014-March/034977.html
It talks about using a speculative heuristic with a timing window to trim speculation. I've seen other similar algorithms in the kernel as well. Using heuristics and timing to adapt to external behaviors is an advanced programming method -- the key is knowing when to use it. It really is entering into the realm of AI programming.
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