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@pizlonator
pizlonator / pizlossafull.md
Last active January 2, 2026 07:40
How I implement SSA form

This document explains how I would implement an SSA-based compiler if I was writing one today.

This document is intentionally opinionated. It just tells you how I would do it. This document is intended for anyone who has read about SSA and understands the concept, but is confused about how exactly to put it into practice. If you're that person, then I'm here to show you a way to do it that works well for me. If you're looking for a review of other ways to do it, I recommend this post.

My approach works well when implementing the compiler in any language that easily permits cyclic mutable data structures. I know from experience that it'll work great in C++, C#, or Java. The memory management of this approach is simple (and I'll explain it), so you won't have to stress about use after frees.

I like my approach because it leads to an ergonomic API by minimizing the amount of special cases you have to worry about. Most of the compiler is analyses and transformations ov

@thesamesam
thesamesam / xz-backdoor.md
Last active January 9, 2026 08:45
xz-utils backdoor situation (CVE-2024-3094)

FAQ on the xz-utils backdoor (CVE-2024-3094)

This is a living document. Everything in this document is made in good faith of being accurate, but like I just said; we don't yet know everything about what's going on.

Update: I've disabled comments as of 2025-01-26 to avoid everyone having notifications for something a year on if someone wants to suggest a correction. Folks are free to email to suggest corrections still, of course.

Background

@nicolas17
nicolas17 / yellow.asm
Last active January 22, 2026 14:40
hello-world iOS app
.global _main
.extern _putchar
.align 4
_main:
; prolog; save fp,lr,x19
stp x29, x30, [sp, #-0x20]!
str x19, [sp, #0x10]
@pesterhazy
pesterhazy / building-sync-systems.md
Last active January 15, 2026 08:28
Building an offline realtime sync engine

So you want to write a sync system for a web app with offline and realtime support? Good luck. You might find the following resources useful.

Overview articles

@eatonphil
eatonphil / psql-srv.py
Last active November 22, 2025 15:02 — forked from matteobertozzi/psql-srv.py
postgres "server" wire protocol example (ported python3)
# th30z@u1310:[Desktop]$ psql -h localhost -p 55432
# Password:
# psql (9.1.10, server 0.0.0)
# WARNING: psql version 9.1, server version 0.0.
# Some psql features might not work.
# Type "help" for help.
#
# th30z=> select foo;
# a | b
# ---+---
@shawwn
shawwn / since2010.md
Created May 11, 2021 09:46
"What happened after 2010?"

This was a response to a Hacker News comment asking me what I've been up to since 2010. I'm posting it here since HN rejects it with "that comment is too long." I suppose that's fair, since this ended up being something of an autobiography.

--

What happened after 2010?

@x0nu11byt3
x0nu11byt3 / elf_format_cheatsheet.md
Created February 27, 2021 05:26
ELF Format Cheatsheet

ELF Format Cheatsheet

Introduction

Executable and Linkable Format (ELF), is the default binary format on Linux-based systems.

ELF

Compilation

@ctsrc
ctsrc / README.md
Last active December 27, 2025 06:03 — forked from niw/README.en.md
Guide: Run FreeBSD 13.1-RELEASE for ARM64 in QEMU on Apple Silicon Mac (MacBook Pro M1, etc) with HVF acceleration (Hypervisor.framework)
@vindarel
vindarel / Common Lisp VS Racket - testimonies.md
Last active December 29, 2025 18:31
Common Lisp VS Racket. Feedback from (common) lispers.

Developer experience, libraries, performance… (2021/11)

I'll preface this with three things. 1. I prefer schemes over Common Lisps, and I prefer Racket of the Schemes. 2. There is more to it than the points I raise here. 3. I assume you have no previous experience with Lisp, and don't have a preference for Schemes over Common Lisp. With all that out of the way... I would say Common Lisp/SBCL. Let me explain

  1. SBCL Is by far the most common of the CL implementations in 2021. It will be the easiest to find help for, easiest to find videos about, and many major open source CL projects are written using SBCL
  2. Download a binary directly from the website http://www.sbcl.org/platform-table.html (even for M1 macs) to get up and running (easy to get started)
  3. Great video for setting up Emacs + Slime + Quick Lisp https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnWVu8VVDbI

Now as to why Common Lisp over Scheme