GoogleTest internally set
CMake compiler flags
are too aggressive for end users, and can cause build errors.
We experienced this with Intel oneAPI, and created a workaround for the GoogleTest-consuming CMake project to override the offending flags.
This technique is useful in general with third-party CMake projects, including those obtained by FetchContent.
For GoogleTest, we determined that Intel oneAPI was experiencing nuisance internal errors:
Windows “-WX” flag
Linux “-Werror” flag
We overrode those flags with this CMake script:
FetchContent_MakeAvailable(googletest)if(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_IDSTREQUAL"IntelLLVM")foreach(tINITEMSgtestgtest_maingmockgmock_main)if(WIN32)# necessary since GoogleTest injects /WX blindly and that fails builds with modern IntelLLVM.
# https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/compiler-option-warning-level
target_compile_options(${t} PRIVATE $<$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:CXX>:/WX->)else()# necessary to avoid
# error: unknown warning option '-Wno-implicit-float-size-conversion' [-Werror,-Wunknown-warning-option]
target_compile_options(${t} PRIVATE $<$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:CXX>:-Wno-error=unknown-warning-option>)endif()endforeach()endif()
The override “/WX-” nullifies the
/WX flag
that errors for nuisance warnings internal to GoogleTest.
The “-Wno-” flag is the same as the underlying GCC compiler on Linux.
The 6 GHz Wi-Fi band is widely available in new hardware (routers and clients).
However, for economic reasons, many devices still omit the 6 GHz Wi-Fi band.
6 GHz Wi-Fi helps provide more data bandwidth on less congested RF spectrum, which is important for latency-sensitive applications like gaming and video conferencing.
While the ultimate connection quality can be achieved by wired Ethernet, practical considerations often lead to Wi-Fi being used even within the same room as the network router.
At least Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) hardware (router and laptops, etc.) should be considered as Wi-Fi 7
MLO (Multi-Link Operation)
avoids connection hiccups when switching between Wi-Fi bands because all the available bands are used simultaneously.
Typical contemporary mobile phones already have Wi-Fi 7 support.
Laptop support can be checked from the manufacturer.
Laptops with the Snapdragon X Elite CPU widely emerged in 2024.
Certain benchmarks show performance comparable with the Apple M3 CPU.
The Snapdragon X2 Elite CPU is available in laptops emerging in 2026, and surpasses the Apple M5 in some benchmarks.
Windows 11
24H2 added Prism
x86-64 emulation like
Rosetta on macOS
but tuned for Snapdragon X CPUs, offering significant performance improvements for x86-64 applications on ARM-based laptops.
CMake
--graphviz
can generate GraphViz target dependency graphsfor CMake-supported project code languages including C, C++, and Fortran.
Fortran executables and modules are shown in the directed dependency graph.
Generating the dependency graph requires CMake configure and generate.
Thus, the compiler and generator needed by the CMake project must be working.
The project does not need to be compiled before generating the dependency graph.
However, the user should select the same CMake configure options as they would for compiling the project.
Example:
MUMPS
dependency graph is below.
SVG vector graphics can be zoomed arbitrarily large in a web browser.
The “graphviz/” directory is to avoid making files in the source directory.
CMake build targets are declared by “add_[executable,library,custom_target]” commands.
Targets can be dynamically set by arbitrarily complex foreach(), if(), etc. logic.
A list of CMake targets in the directory scope is retrieved by the
BUILDSYSTEM_TARGETS
directory
property.
The variable “target_names” contains all the target names previously added in the CMakeLists.txt in the DIRECTORY scope.
Retrieving the list of targets in a whole project, or in a FetchContent dependency is possible with this CMake function:
function(print_targetsdir)get_property(subdirsDIRECTORY"${dir}"PROPERTYSUBDIRECTORIES)foreach(subINLISTSsubdirs)print_targets("${sub}")endforeach()get_directory_property(targetsDIRECTORY"${dir}"BUILDSYSTEM_TARGETS)if(targets)message("Targets in ${dir}:")foreach(tINLISTStargets)message(" • ${t}")endforeach()endif()endfunction()
Use this function like:
print_targets("${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}")
Or supposing FetchContent, here using “googletest”:
Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) uses
VHDX
files to store each distribution’s filesystem.
Over time these disk images grow in size as files are added and deleted.
However, the space used by deleted files is not automatically reclaimed, leading to larger disk images than necessary.
There is a
PowerShell script
to automatically compact WSL VHDX files that works with any of the Windows release levels (including Home).
The
jpegtran
command line tool allows lossless transformations on JPEG images, including rotation, cropping, and flipping.
This is particularly useful when you want to modify JPEG images without re-encoding them, which can lead to quality loss.
Example: lossless clockwise 90 degree rotation of a JPEG image “input.jpg” and save the result to file “output.jpg”:
WiFi
captive portals
and public networks often block outbound network port traffic.
Sometimes even VPNs are blocked.
Often only ports 80 (HTTP) and 443 (HTTPS) are allowed.
For Git, one can use
Git with HTTPS and Oauth tokens
instead of Git over SSH.
However, note that Git over SSH has certain
benefits
for ease of use and security.
To quickly determine if outbound network ports are blocked, portquiz.net is a useful free service.
Using Python automates this process for multiple ports concurrently using concurrent.futures.ThreadPoolExecutor threads or asyncio.
We provide an
example
of each method in short scripts.
The examples shows that Asyncio using Semaphore with AIOHTTP can be faster than ThreadPoolExecutor with urllib.request.
Solutions to blocked ports for SSH include using
SSH ProxyJump
with an intermediate TRUSTED server on an allowed port.
Some remote SSH systems actually require this, where they the desired server has only LAN access, and a gateway SSH server with no privileges is used as the SSH ProxyJump by network design.
The ultimate workaround would be a mobile hotspot (different network).
If using a GUI, the --shell-escape option may need to be added.
In TeXmaker / TeXstudio, under “Options → Configure → Commands” add --shell-escape right after the compiler executable like xelatex --shell-escape or pdflatex --shell-escape or latexmk --shell-escape.
If “pygmentize” isn’t found, under TeXstudio Preferences → Build, check Show Advanced Options in the lower left checkbox and set Additional Search Paths → Commmands ($PATH) to the directory containing “pygmentize”, e.g. /opt/homebrew/bin on macOS with Homebrew or whatever directory comes up for which pygmentize in a Terminal.
In general operation systems set a limit to the number of open files per process.
A “file” might be a regular file, a socket, a pipe, etc.
When a Python program exceeds this limit, it raises exception:
OSError: [Errno 24] Too many open files
Such issues might tend to arise with highly concurrent applications as enabled by asyncio or higher-level libraries.
Resolving such asyncio concurrency issues generally involves asyncio
primitives
like
asyncio.Semaphore.
Implementing asyncio libraries correctly is so
non-trivial
that using higher-level libraries that implement such concurrency control
correctly
can be a better idea.
It’s important to go beyond toy examples and consider
real-world
concurrent Python usage patterns.