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Merry Christmas šŸŽā›„šŸŽ„ from a new member of the family: Oakley!

He's an approximately 6 year old Cocker Spaniel from a rescue. Mysterious past as he was found as a stray, but very well behaved. Been with us for around a month now.

Loves: cuddles
Favourite activity: walking and running.
Favourite location: Chair in living room
Favourite food: game sausages

What better way to use 3 hours of #freepower from #OctopusEnergy than to do some #altzheimers research with #folding@home

Perfect timing; dropped into Robert Watson’s and Carl Shaw’s (#Codasip) talks on #CHERI at INRIA while visiting @guillaumehiet.bsky.social at CentraleSupĆ©lec in #Rennes.

https://www.creachlabs.fr/en/seminars-keeping-date-latest-research/sosysec-seminar/cheri-architectural-support-memory-protection-and-software-compartmentalization

I finally turned off GitHub Copilot yesterday. I’ve been using it for about a year on the ā€˜free for open-source maintainers’ tier. I was skeptical but didn’t want to dismiss it without a fair trial.

It has cost me more time than it has saved. It lets me type faster, which has been useful when writing tests where I’m testing a variety of permutations of an API to check error handling for all of the conditions.

I can recall three places where it has introduced bugs that took me more time to to debug than the total time saving:

The first was something that initially impressed me. I pasted the prose description of how to communicate with an Ethernet MAC into a comment and then wrote some method prototypes. It autocompleted the bodies. All very plausible looking. Only it managed to flip a bit in the MDIO read and write register commands. MDIO is basically a multiplexing system. You have two device registers exposed, one sets the command (read or write a specific internal register) and the other is the value. It got the read and write the wrong way around, so when I thought I was writing a value, I was actually reading. When I thought I was reading, I was actually seeing the value in the last register I thought I had written. It took two of us over a day to debug this. The fix was simple, but the bug was in the middle of correct-looking code. If I’d manually transcribed the command from the data sheet, I would not have got this wrong because I’d have triple checked it.

Another case it had inverted the condition in an if statement inside an error-handling path. The error handling was a rare case and was asymmetric. Hitting the if case when you wanted the else case was okay but the converse was not. Lots of debugging. I learned from this to read the generated code more carefully, but that increased cognitive load and eliminated most of the benefit. Typing code is not the bottleneck and if I have to think about what I want and then read carefully to check it really is what I want, I am slower.

Most recently, I was writing a simple binary search and insertion-deletion operations for a sorted array. I assumed that this was something that had hundreds of examples in the training data and so would be fine. It had all sorts of corner-case bugs. I eventually gave up fixing them and rewrote the code from scratch.

Last week I did some work on a remote machine where I hadn’t set up Copilot and I felt much more productive. Autocomplete was either correct or not present, so I was spending more time thinking about what to write. I don’t entirely trust this kind of subjective judgement, but it was a data point. Around the same time I wrote some code without clangd set up and that really hurt. It turns out I really rely on AST-aware completion to explore APIs. I had to look up more things in the documentation. Copilot was never good for this because it would just bullshit APIs, so something showing up in autocomplete didn’t mean it was real. This would be improved by using a feedback system to require autocomplete outputs to type check, but then they would take much longer to create (probably at least a 10x increase in LLM compute time) and wouldn’t complete fragments, so I don’t see a good path to being able to do this without tight coupling to the LSP server and possibly not even then.

Yesterday I was writing bits of the CHERIoT Programmers’ Guide and it kept autocompleting text in a different writing style, some of which was obviously plagiarised (when I’m describing precisely how to implement a specific, and not very common, lock type with a futex and the autocomplete is a paragraph of text with a lot of detail, I’m confident you don’t have more than one or two examples of that in the training set). It was distracting and annoying. I wrote much faster after turning it off.

So, after giving it a fair try, I have concluded that it is both a net decrease in productivity and probably an increase in legal liability.

Discussions I am not interested in having:

  • You are holding it wrong. Using Copilot with this magic config setting / prompt tweak makes it better. At its absolute best, it was a small productivity increase, if it needs more effort to use, that will be offset.
  • This other LLM is much better. I don’t care. The costs of the bullshitting far outweighed the benefits when it worked, to be better it would have to not bullshit, and that’s not something LLMs can do.
  • It’s great for boilerplate! No. APIs that require every user to write the same code are broken. Fix them, don’t fill the world with more code using them that will need fixing when the APIs change.
  • Don’t use LLMs for autocomplete, use them for dialogues about the code. Tried that. It’s worse than a rubber duck, which at least knows to stay silent when it doesn’t know what it’s talking about.

The one place Copilot was vaguely useful was hinting at missing abstractions (if it can autocomplete big chunks then my APIs required too much boilerplate and needed better abstractions). The place I thought it might be useful was spotting inconsistent API names and parameter orders but it was actually very bad at this (presumably because of the way it tokenises identifiers?). With a load of examples with consistent names, it would suggest things that didn't match the convention. After using three APIs that all passed the same parameters in the same order, it would suggest flipping the order for the fourth.

#GitHubCopilot #CHERIoT

Our work on a non-public 5G network trial for the Coronation won a best paper award has won a second award, this time at the NAB Show in New York!

Congratulations to our 5G team and partners - read the paper and more about the trial on our site: https://www.bbc.co.uk/rd/blog/2023-05-5g-non-public-network-coronation

#5G #broadcast #video

Using a private 5G network to support coverage of the King's Coronation

At large events mobile networks are saturated with data traffic and news coverage can be interrupted or delayed because of the congestion. So we're using the largest ever temporary private 5G network to cover the Coronation.

BBC R&D
Never roll your own date time library kids
For speakers who gave a talk, please check your mailbox (including spam folder) for a mail from our review system. If you review your own video it will get published faster on our website.
People of a certain age, have some free nostalgia:
"The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar" by Wes Anderson is excellent. An intriguing telling of a Roald Dahl tale.

On Friday, we selected 4 Codethings to become 'Codethink Fellows'. Codethink Fellows are selected from our most experienced engineeers to represent and lead Codethink's engineering values both in public and within Codethink.

We are proud to announce that Daniel Silverstone, James Thomas, Ben Dooks, and Jürg Billeter are the first Codethink Fellows! Congratulations all!

#opensource #softwareengineers #culture