this post was submitted on 26 Feb 2024
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Programming

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As someone who spends time programming, I of course find myself in conversations with people who aren't as familiar with it. It doesn't happen all the time, but these discussions can lead to people coming up with some pretty wild misconceptions about what programming is and what programmers do.

  • I'm sure many of you have had similar experiences. So, I thought it would be interesting to ask.
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[–] Daedskin@lemm.ee 12 points 9 months ago (1 children)

I used to work on printer firmware; we were implementing a feature for a text box for if you scanned a certain number of pages on a collated, multi-page copy job. The text box told you it would print the pages it had stored to free up memory for more pages; after those pages had printed, another text box would come up asking if you wanted to keep scanning pages, or just finish the job.
The consensus was that it would be a relatively simple change; 3 months and 80 files changed — with somewhere in the ballpark of 10000-20000 lines changed, — proved that wrong.

[–] Feathercrown@lemmy.world 7 points 9 months ago (1 children)

printer firmware is tens of thousands of lines long

I'm starting to understand why printers are so horrible

[–] Daedskin@lemm.ee 8 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Just what was in the main repo (at least one other repo was used for the more secure parts of the code) was a little over 4 million lines. But yeah there's a lot of complexity behind printers that I didn't think about until I had worked on them. Of course that doesn't mean they have to be terrible, it's just easier to fall into without a good plan (spoiler alert: the specific firmware I was working in didn't have a good plan)

[–] Feathercrown@lemmy.world 5 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Out of curiosity do you have any good examples of this hidden complexity? I've always kinda wondered how printers work behind the scenes.

[–] Daedskin@lemm.ee 10 points 9 months ago (1 children)

A lot of the complexity came from around various scenarios you could be in; my goto whenever people would ask me "Why can't someone just make printer firmware simple?" is that you could, if you only wanted to copy in one size with one paper type, no margin changes, and never do anything else.

There's just so many different control paths that need to act differently; many of the bugs I worked on involved scaling and margins. Trying to make sure the image ended up in a proper form before it made it to hardware (which as more complexity, ran on a different processor and OS than the backend so that it could run realtime) when dealing with different input types (flatbed scanner vs a document feeder, which could be a everyday size, or like 3 feet long) different paper sizes, scaling, and output paper. I mainly worked on the copy pipeline, but that also was very complex, involving up to, something like, 7 different pieces in the pipe to transform the image.

Each piece in the pipeline was decently complex, with a few having their own team dedicated to them. In theory, any piece that wasn't an image provider or consumer could go in any order — although in practice that didn't happen — so it had to be designed around different types of image containers that could come in.

All of that was also working alongside the job framework, which communicated with the hardware, and made sure what state jobs were in, when different pieces of the pipeline could be available to different jobs, locking out jobs when someone is using the UI in certain states so that they don't think what's printing is their job, and handling jobs through any of other interface (like network or web.)

That's the big stuff that I touched; but there was also localization; the UI and web interfaces as a whole; the more OS side of the printer like logging in, networking, or configuration; and internal pages — any page that the printer generates itself, like a report or test page. I'm sure there's a lot more than that, and this is just what I'm aware of.

[–] Feathercrown@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago

Wow, thank you