- https://dancres.github.io/Pages/
- https://ferd.ca/a-distributed-systems-reading-list.html
- http://the-paper-trail.org/blog/distributed-systems-theory-for-the-distributed-systems-engineer/
- https://github.com/palvaro/CMPS290S-Winter16/blob/master/readings.md
- http://muratbuffalo.blogspot.com/2015/12/my-distributed-systems-seminars-reading.html
- http://christophermeiklejohn.com/distributed/systems/2013/07/12/readings-in-distributed-systems.html
- http://michaelrbernste.in/2013/11/06/distributed-systems-archaeology-works-cited.html
- http://rxin.github.io/db-readings/
- http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/people/lamport/pubs/pubs.html
- http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/dsrg/papers/
github.com/twotwotwo/sorts is a Go package with parallel radix- and quicksorts. It can run up to 5x faster than stdlib sort on the right kind of large sort task, so it could be useful for analysis and indexing/database-y work in which you have to sort millions of items. (To be clear, I don't recommend most folks drop stdlib sort, which is great, and which sorts depends on.)
While the process of writing it's fresh on my mind, here are some technical details, some things that didn't make the cut, and some thoughts about the process:
Concretely, what this looks like inside:
-
Both number and string versions are in-place MSD radix sorts that look at a byte at a time and, once the range being sorted gets down to 128 items, call (essentially) the stdlib's quicksort.
-
The [parallelization code
- Install XQuartz: https://www.xquartz.org/
- Launch XQuartz. Under the XQuartz menu, select Preferences
- Go to the security tab and ensure "Allow connections from network clients" is checked.
- Run
xhost + ${hostname}to allow connections to the macOS host * - Setup a HOSTNAME env var
export HOSTNAME=`hostname`* - Add the following to your docker-compose:
environment:
| -- vim: tabstop=2 shiftwidth=2 expandtab | |
| -- We almost always start by importing the wezterm module | |
| local wezterm = require 'wezterm' | |
| -- Define a lua table to hold _our_ module's functions | |
| local module = {} | |
| -- Returns a bool based on whether the host operating system's | |
| -- appearance is light or dark. | |
| function module.is_dark() |