Yes, I do very much mean gaslight me, in the actual definition of the word.
It lead me to alter my perception of reality.
I recently posted on here with a plethora of bugs, and nothing I tried could fix it.
I was lost for a whole two days.
I was starting to go insane, I had tried the same things over and over...
Was it the compiler optimizations???
Is my math right???
Am I calling this function???
Where are my breakpoints???????????
It was then that I realized, hey, my build system wasn't putting the newly-built kernel into the bin/ directory.
Alas, I try the new kernel, and all my issues are resolved.
story time: when my build system tried to gaslight me
story time: when my build system tried to gaslight me
Skylight: https://github.com/austanss/skylight
I make stupid mistakes and my vision is terrible. Not a good combination.
NOTE: Never respond to my posts with "it's too hard".
I make stupid mistakes and my vision is terrible. Not a good combination.
NOTE: Never respond to my posts with "it's too hard".
Re: story time: when my build system tried to gaslight me
With time I have grown suspicious of this and similar problems. If it looks like my changes are not being picked up, I just delete my whole build directory just in case.
That said, you should still fix your build problems when you find them... It's been a while since I had one.
That said, you should still fix your build problems when you find them... It's been a while since I had one.
Re: story time: when my build system tried to gaslight me
I had this on 9front once, with the added embarassment that it wasn't me who was writing the fixes. I was saying what was wrong, the kernel dev would write fixes, I'd pull compile reboot and nothing would be fixed! I wrote a little build script after that. 9ront kernel `mk install` doesn't install the new kernel to the actual boot partition on PCs. Neither does Bell Labs Plan 9, but I think it might work out better there: it loads a boot kernel which can hypothetically read Plan 9's native filesystems and kexec the real kernel. Emphasis on "might" and "hypothetically"; I don't recall if it's set up to do that by default.
Kaph — a modular OS intended to be easy and fun to administer and code for.
"May wisdom, fun, and the greater good shine forth in all your work." — Leo Brodie
"May wisdom, fun, and the greater good shine forth in all your work." — Leo Brodie