5 comments

  • zahlman 12 hours ago ago

    > I remember this leading to a fun, rambling, back-and-forth discussion of the ways computers can fail. There are so many! Every level of the stack can fail in interesting ways: storage, RAM, memory management, networking. How would a bit flip in a TLB manifest? How does TCP/IP detect and handle ordering? collisions?

    Sure, but the simplest ways (at least with CPython) are to invoke C code that crashes via the FFI, or to manually explicitly create a code object from invalid bytecode data (or hex-edit a .pyc file so that the usual machinery does it for you).

    Also, as usual I'm tired of the implication that networking is a necessary component of "the stack".

  • tkluck 12 hours ago ago

    I clicked the link expecting a discussion of what would cause a Python interpreter to crash, but found only a generic list of low level problems for any piece of software, and the statement that the headline was an interview question at YouTube ten years ago.

  • sefk 16 hours ago ago

    I liked the interview question that I got when interviewing at YouTube in 2015.

    Discuss what would cause a Python interpreter to crash. Not a program written in Python, but the interpreter itself.

    • skylurk 12 hours ago ago

      Would this count?

        import ctypes
        ctypes.string_at(0)
  • samdoesnothing 16 hours ago ago

    This seems like an orthogonal question to architecture doesn't it?