On Monday, 24. January 2011 21:57:59 Lasse Kliemann wrote:
* Message by -Cedric Laczny- from Mon 2011-01-24:
I use this approach:
#include <ctime> #include
#include struct timeval tv; gettimeofday(&tv, 0); long int seed; seed = (tv.tv_sec * 1000000) + tv.tv_usec;
// Set the seed
gen.seed( seed );
I am however not sure how exact it is (high precision timer?!) and if there isn't probably a better way to get a fresh seed at every execution. It might be that rapid subsequent executions will get the same seed and thus will produce the same results.
I use /dev/urandom for this, like so (code fragments):
FILE *dev_urandom; uint32_t seed; if((dev_urandom = fopen("/dev/urandom", "r")) == NULL) throw /* error */ if(fread(&seed, sizeof(seed), 1, dev_urandom) == 0) throw /* error */ if(fclose(dev_urandom) != 0) throw /* error */ boost::mt19937 gen(seed);
But maybe there are even better ways.
Interesting suggestion. Thank you. Best, Cedric