aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/beam_asm.beambin11604 -> 11368 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/beam_utils.beambin15860 -> 16328 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/compile.beambin40088 -> 40312 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/core_pp.beambin11752 -> 11756 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/core_scan.beambin6664 -> 6684 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_codegen.beambin53452 -> 53452 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_kernel.beambin54708 -> 54708 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_kernel_pp.beambin12532 -> 12540 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/disk_log.beambin32464 -> 32472 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/disk_log_1.beambin24068 -> 24068 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erl_boot_server.beambin5760 -> 5760 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erl_reply.beambin900 -> 900 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/error_logger.beambin6152 -> 6280 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erts_debug.beambin5768 -> 5752 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/group.beambin13804 -> 13832 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_config.beambin7528 -> 7536 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_dns.beambin19168 -> 19172 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_parse.beambin13812 -> 13812 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_res.beambin14176 -> 14268 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/kernel.app2
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/os.beambin4252 -> 4256 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/beam_lib.beambin19488 -> 19488 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/dets_utils.beambin27780 -> 27784 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/edlin.beambin11064 -> 11036 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/epp.beambin27704 -> 27776 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_lint.beambin91624 -> 91616 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_pp.beambin26744 -> 26648 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_scan.beambin27884 -> 27884 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/escript.beambin16820 -> 16840 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/ets.beambin22344 -> 22344 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/file_sorter.beambin29276 -> 29276 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/filename.beambin13932 -> 13932 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/io_lib_format.beambin13320 -> 13332 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/lib.beambin15004 -> 15000 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/otp_internal.beambin10240 -> 10792 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/qlc.beambin68960 -> 68960 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/qlc_pt.beambin75144 -> 75144 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/shell.beambin29888 -> 29888 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/slave.beambin4744 -> 4744 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/sofs.beambin37592 -> 37592 bytes
-rw-r--r--bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/string.beambin24444 -> 24752 bytes
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/notes.xml178
-rw-r--r--erts/emulator/beam/beam_bif_load.c18
-rw-r--r--erts/emulator/beam/erl_io_queue.c7
-rw-r--r--erts/emulator/beam/erl_process.c18
-rw-r--r--erts/emulator/drivers/common/efile_drv.c61
-rw-r--r--erts/emulator/pcre/README.pcre_update.md2
-rw-r--r--erts/emulator/test/efile_SUITE.erl49
-rw-r--r--erts/emulator/test/emulator_smoke.spec1
-rw-r--r--erts/emulator/test/iovec_SUITE.erl43
-rw-r--r--erts/test/erlexec_SUITE.erl8
-rw-r--r--erts/test/install_SUITE.erl4
-rw-r--r--erts/test/nt_SUITE.erl4
-rw-r--r--erts/test/otp_SUITE.erl4
-rw-r--r--erts/test/run_erl_SUITE.erl2
-rw-r--r--erts/test/upgrade_SUITE.erl2
-rw-r--r--erts/test/z_SUITE.erl24
-rw-r--r--erts/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/asn1/doc/src/notes.xml18
-rw-r--r--lib/asn1/src/asn1ct_check.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/asn1/src/asn1ct_gen.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/asn1/src/asn1rtt_real_common.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/asn1/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/doc/src/notes.xml15
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/common_test.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_config.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_config_plain.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_conn_log_h.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_framework.erl7
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_ftp.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_logs.erl83
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_master.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_master_logs.erl18
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_netconfc.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_release_test.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_run.erl8
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_ssh.erl3
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/ct_util.erl18
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/cth_surefire.erl11
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/test_server.erl23
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/test_server_ctrl.erl29
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/test_server_node.erl10
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/src/unix_telnet.erl3
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/ct_config_SUITE.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/ct_hooks_SUITE.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/ct_log_SUITE.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/ct_pre_post_test_io_SUITE.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/ct_priv_dir_SUITE_data/priv_dir_SUITE.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/ct_test_support.erl12
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/ct_unicode_SUITE.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/ct_userconfig_callback.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/erl2html2_SUITE.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/telnet_server.erl20
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/test_server_SUITE.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test/test_server_test_lib.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test_server/ts.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test_server/ts_autoconf_win32.erl12
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test_server/ts_erl_config.erl12
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test_server/ts_install.erl16
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test_server/ts_lib.erl8
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/test_server/ts_run.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/common_test/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/compiler/doc/src/notes.xml55
-rw-r--r--lib/compiler/src/core_pp.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/compiler/src/core_scan.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/compiler/src/v3_kernel_pp.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/compiler/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/crypto/doc/src/notes.xml46
-rw-r--r--lib/crypto/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/debugger/doc/src/notes.xml15
-rw-r--r--lib/debugger/src/debugger.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/debugger/src/i.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/debugger/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/doc/src/notes.xml34
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer.app.src4
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_cl.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_gui_wx.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_races.erl66
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/test/dialyzer_common.erl10
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/loop4
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/map_galore12
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/opaque_key1
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/src/loop.erl92
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/src/opaque_key/opaque_key_adt.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/dialyzer/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_sctp.xml60
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_soc.xml1327
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_soc_rfc6733.xml8693
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_tcp.xml45
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/doc/src/files.mk5
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/doc/src/notes.xml202
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/src/base/diameter_traffic.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/src/diameter.appup.src6
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/src/transport/diameter_sctp.erl47
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/test/diameter_traffic_SUITE.erl19
-rw-r--r--lib/diameter/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/edoc/doc/src/notes.xml15
-rw-r--r--lib/edoc/src/edoc_layout.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/edoc/src/edoc_specs.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/edoc/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/eldap/src/eldap.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/erl_docgen/doc/src/notes.xml17
-rw-r--r--lib/erl_docgen/priv/dtd/chapter.dtd2
-rw-r--r--lib/erl_docgen/src/docgen_edoc_xml_cb.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/erl_docgen/src/docgen_otp_specs.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/erl_docgen/src/erl_docgen.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/erl_docgen/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/et/doc/src/notes.xml15
-rw-r--r--lib/et/src/et.app.src4
-rw-r--r--lib/et/src/et_collector.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/et/test/et_test_lib.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/et/test/ett.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/et/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/eunit/doc/src/notes.xml15
-rw-r--r--lib/eunit/src/eunit.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/eunit/src/eunit_lib.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/eunit/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/cerl/erl_types.erl86
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/doc/src/notes.xml29
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_llvm.erl11
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_llvm_main.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_rtl_to_llvm.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/main/hipe.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/main/hipe.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/test/hipe_testsuite_driver.erl10
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/test/opt_verify_SUITE.erl8
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/test/opt_verify_SUITE_data/call_elim_test_branches_opt_poss.erl10
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/inets/doc/src/notes.xml24
-rw-r--r--lib/inets/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/doc/src/notes.xml44
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/erl_boot_server.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/erl_reply.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/error_logger.erl33
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/erts_debug.erl19
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/group.erl12
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/inet_config.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/inet_dns.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/inet_parse.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/inet_res.erl12
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/kernel.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/src/os.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/test/code_SUITE.erl50
-rw-r--r--lib/kernel/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/doc/src/company.erl7
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/doc/src/company_o.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/doc/src/notes.xml17
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/src/mnesia.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_SUITE.erl15
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_atomicity_test.erl30
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_bench_SUITE.erl8
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_consistency_test.erl73
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_cost.erl63
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_dirty_access_test.erl30
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_durability_test.erl28
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_evil_backup.erl17
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_evil_coverage_test.erl27
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_examples_test.erl9
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_frag_test.erl21
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_install_test.erl7
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_isolation_test.erl41
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_majority_test.erl8
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_measure_test.erl45
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_nice_coverage_test.erl8
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_qlc_test.erl13
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_recovery_test.erl75
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_registry_test.erl7
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_schema_recovery_test.erl74
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_test_lib.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_trans_access_test.erl23
-rw-r--r--lib/mnesia/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/doc/src/notes.xml51
-rwxr-xr-xlib/observer/priv/bin/cdv2
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/priv/bin/cdv.bat2
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/cdv_detail_wx.erl28
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/cdv_dist_cb.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/cdv_html_wx.erl9
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/cdv_mem_cb.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/cdv_term_cb.erl8
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/cdv_virtual_list_wx.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/cdv_wx.erl44
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/crashdump_viewer.erl289
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/observer.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/observer_html_lib.erl39
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/observer_lib.erl85
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/observer_procinfo.erl5
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/observer_wx.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/src/ttb.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/test/Makefile2
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/test/crashdump_viewer_SUITE.erl133
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/test/observer_SUITE.erl9
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/test/ttb_SUITE.erl32
-rw-r--r--lib/observer/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/os_mon/doc/src/notes.xml17
-rw-r--r--lib/os_mon/src/cpu_sup.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/os_mon/src/memsup.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/os_mon/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/parsetools/src/leex.erl34
-rw-r--r--lib/parsetools/src/yecc.erl12
-rw-r--r--lib/public_key/doc/src/notes.xml70
-rw-r--r--lib/public_key/doc/src/public_key.xml86
-rw-r--r--lib/public_key/doc/src/public_key_records.xml6
-rw-r--r--lib/public_key/src/pubkey_cert.erl253
-rw-r--r--lib/public_key/src/public_key.erl51
-rw-r--r--lib/public_key/test/public_key_SUITE.erl144
-rw-r--r--lib/public_key/test/public_key_SUITE_data/ec_key2.pem29
-rw-r--r--lib/public_key/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/doc/src/notes.xml21
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/src/reltool.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/src/reltool_mod_win.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/src/reltool_target.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/src/reltool_utils.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/test/reltool_app_SUITE.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/test/reltool_manual_gui_SUITE.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/test/reltool_server_SUITE.erl25
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/test/reltool_test_lib.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/test/reltool_wx_SUITE.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/test/rtt.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/reltool/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/runtime_tools/doc/src/notes.xml15
-rw-r--r--lib/runtime_tools/src/erts_alloc_config.erl28
-rw-r--r--lib/runtime_tools/src/system_information.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/runtime_tools/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/sasl/doc/src/notes.xml35
-rw-r--r--lib/sasl/src/erlsrv.erl25
-rw-r--r--lib/sasl/src/format_lib_supp.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/sasl/src/rb.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/sasl/src/rb_format_supp.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/sasl/src/release_handler.erl18
-rw-r--r--lib/sasl/src/sasl.app.src4
-rw-r--r--lib/sasl/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/snmp/doc/src/notes.xml19
-rw-r--r--lib/snmp/src/app/snmp.appup.src22
-rw-r--r--lib/snmp/src/compile/snmpc.erl39
-rw-r--r--lib/snmp/src/compile/snmpc_lib.erl39
-rw-r--r--lib/snmp/test/snmp_compiler_test.erl43
-rw-r--r--lib/snmp/test/snmp_test_data/Test-LLDP-MIB.mib251
-rw-r--r--lib/snmp/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/doc/src/notes.xml42
-rw-r--r--lib/ssh/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/ssl/doc/src/notes.xml34
-rw-r--r--lib/ssl/src/ssl.app.src4
-rw-r--r--lib/ssl/test/ssl_ECC_SUITE.erl180
-rw-r--r--lib/ssl/test/ssl_certificate_verify_SUITE.erl90
-rw-r--r--lib/ssl/test/ssl_test_lib.erl341
-rw-r--r--lib/ssl/test/x509_test.erl301
-rw-r--r--lib/ssl/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/doc/src/ets.xml4
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/doc/src/notes.xml50
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/doc/src/rand.xml77
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/doc/src/string.xml396
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/epp.erl5
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/erl_lint.erl7
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/erl_pp.erl38
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/erl_scan.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/escript.erl12
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/ets.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/filename.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/io_lib_format.erl10
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/lib.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/otp_internal.erl48
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/pool.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/slave.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/src/string.erl10
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/test/Makefile3
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/test/stdlib.spec1
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/test/stdlib_bench.spec7
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/test/stdlib_bench_SUITE.erl107
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/test/string_SUITE.erl14
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/test/unicode_util_SUITE.erl16
-rwxr-xr-xlib/stdlib/uc_spec/gen_unicode_mod.escript24
-rw-r--r--lib/stdlib/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/syntax_tools/doc/src/notes.xml21
-rw-r--r--lib/syntax_tools/src/erl_comment_scan.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/syntax_tools/src/merl_transform.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/syntax_tools/src/syntax_tools.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/syntax_tools/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/tools/doc/src/notes.xml69
-rw-r--r--lib/tools/src/cover.erl14
-rw-r--r--lib/tools/src/fprof.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/tools/src/tools.app.src2
-rw-r--r--lib/tools/src/xref_utils.erl9
-rw-r--r--lib/tools/test/fprof_SUITE.erl17
-rw-r--r--lib/tools/test/fprof_SUITE_data/fprof_unicode.erl36
-rw-r--r--lib/tools/vsn.mk2
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/api_gen/gl_gen_erl.erl32
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/api_gen/gl_scan_doc.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/doc/src/notes.xml30
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/examples/simple/hello.erl1
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/examples/simple/hello2.erl5
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/examples/simple/menu.erl31
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/examples/simple/minimal.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku.erl3
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku_game.erl23
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku_gui.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/examples/xrc/xrc.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/src/gen/gl.erl9455
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/src/gen/glu.erl405
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/test/wx_app_SUITE.erl7
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/test/wx_basic_SUITE.erl6
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/test/wx_class_SUITE.erl8
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/test/wx_event_SUITE.erl9
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/test/wx_oc_object.erl4
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/test/wx_opengl_SUITE.erl2
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/test/wx_test_lib.erl13
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/test/wx_xtra_SUITE.erl3
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/test/wxt.erl32
-rw-r--r--lib/wx/vsn.mk2
-rwxr-xr-xmake/fakefop18
-rw-r--r--make/otp.mk.in7
-rw-r--r--otp_versions.table1
-rwxr-xr-xscripts/pre-push202
-rw-r--r--system/doc/design_principles/des_princ.xml2
-rw-r--r--system/doc/oam/oam_intro.xml2
-rw-r--r--system/doc/reference_manual/typespec.xml35
356 files changed, 6922 insertions, 20327 deletions
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/beam_asm.beam b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/beam_asm.beam
index 936e6886a6..9f25d31bb2 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/beam_asm.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/beam_asm.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/beam_utils.beam b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/beam_utils.beam
index 0f44d8e4d7..4d475cd899 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/beam_utils.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/beam_utils.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/compile.beam b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/compile.beam
index a92341690d..d2f4ed83bb 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/compile.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/compile.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/core_pp.beam b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/core_pp.beam
index 8f4137db70..f0573bd200 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/core_pp.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/core_pp.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/core_scan.beam b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/core_scan.beam
index e9f74a1d1c..398c538178 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/core_scan.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/core_scan.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_codegen.beam b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_codegen.beam
index c6c1593790..a1047fb87f 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_codegen.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_codegen.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_kernel.beam b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_kernel.beam
index 6143af9050..189a8c07b2 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_kernel.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_kernel.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_kernel_pp.beam b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_kernel_pp.beam
index 6b127e86d0..e1b8c58c8f 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_kernel_pp.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_kernel_pp.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/disk_log.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/disk_log.beam
index 4dc0ef29f2..e8a6acd235 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/disk_log.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/disk_log.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/disk_log_1.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/disk_log_1.beam
index 420a4e818b..bcd3c548a5 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/disk_log_1.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/disk_log_1.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erl_boot_server.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erl_boot_server.beam
index ef3fe6fdea..d9de814e60 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erl_boot_server.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erl_boot_server.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erl_reply.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erl_reply.beam
index 6266aaa37c..d9dee00b6a 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erl_reply.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erl_reply.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/error_logger.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/error_logger.beam
index 4129e6af6e..2415215395 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/error_logger.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/error_logger.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erts_debug.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erts_debug.beam
index a47aec4a2e..75064d3452 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erts_debug.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/erts_debug.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/group.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/group.beam
index 57851fcb6e..5c5f3bfa73 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/group.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/group.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_config.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_config.beam
index ab06763c7d..6e02c48609 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_config.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_config.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_dns.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_dns.beam
index cebe72a7f0..8935d52e52 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_dns.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_dns.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_parse.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_parse.beam
index a5b4d7611f..cd27ee7265 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_parse.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_parse.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_res.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_res.beam
index 74b3a11f59..f203f7c08a 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_res.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/inet_res.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/kernel.app b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/kernel.app
index b888d914e8..244fad678f 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/kernel.app
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/kernel.app
@@ -120,6 +120,6 @@
{applications, []},
{env, [{error_logger, tty}]},
{mod, {kernel, []}},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["erts-9.1", "stdlib-3.0", "sasl-3.0"]}
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["erts-9.1", "stdlib-3.4", "sasl-3.0"]}
]
}.
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/os.beam b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/os.beam
index 0bc6403871..cedf7bf49e 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/os.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/kernel/ebin/os.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/beam_lib.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/beam_lib.beam
index 8255fc6f82..39d80d9e36 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/beam_lib.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/beam_lib.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/dets_utils.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/dets_utils.beam
index 6840be1e57..d858a59f8b 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/dets_utils.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/dets_utils.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/edlin.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/edlin.beam
index b6f5e62671..1cabe095b3 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/edlin.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/edlin.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/epp.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/epp.beam
index 36c2b2219e..22c0978854 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/epp.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/epp.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_lint.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_lint.beam
index dc4c689263..d018b33132 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_lint.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_lint.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_pp.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_pp.beam
index e77e0f9136..5c5a46d8bb 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_pp.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_pp.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_scan.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_scan.beam
index 86307bc790..d36202515a 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_scan.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_scan.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/escript.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/escript.beam
index 30dea42a21..10982c84ce 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/escript.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/escript.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/ets.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/ets.beam
index 40be147afa..c2b113b79e 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/ets.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/ets.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/file_sorter.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/file_sorter.beam
index f2a1fd74d0..74c7c5ce01 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/file_sorter.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/file_sorter.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/filename.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/filename.beam
index a94acbb852..13f1c8029e 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/filename.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/filename.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/io_lib_format.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/io_lib_format.beam
index e85995c1de..c02da85965 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/io_lib_format.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/io_lib_format.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/lib.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/lib.beam
index 6ad7dff7da..98a7f91ab8 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/lib.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/lib.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/otp_internal.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/otp_internal.beam
index 912dfba644..166574e0f6 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/otp_internal.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/otp_internal.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/qlc.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/qlc.beam
index 4a315e8d42..592f7b4740 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/qlc.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/qlc.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/qlc_pt.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/qlc_pt.beam
index ac343d8abd..1a7d678227 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/qlc_pt.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/qlc_pt.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/shell.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/shell.beam
index a0e2b73018..fab94d5509 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/shell.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/shell.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/slave.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/slave.beam
index 299c24448d..abab0acf33 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/slave.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/slave.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/sofs.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/sofs.beam
index a2cc62d4af..aa8ed3d99c 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/sofs.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/sofs.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/string.beam b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/string.beam
index a281027902..8bb21b24f2 100644
--- a/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/string.beam
+++ b/bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/string.beam
Binary files differ
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/notes.xml b/erts/doc/src/notes.xml
index 10b963a4e8..e89f2680ea 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -31,6 +31,184 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to the ERTS application.</p>
+<section><title>Erts 9.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Changed <c>erlang:apply/2</c> to raise a <c>badarg</c>
+ exception if the second argument is not a proper list.
+ Previous behavior was a misleading <c>undef</c>
+ exception.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14490 Aux Id: ERL-432 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>On macOS, <c>crypto</c> would crash if <c>observer</c>
+ had been started before <c>crypto</c>. On the beta for
+ macOS 10.13 (High Sierra), <c>crypto</c> would crash.
+ Both of those bugs have been fixed.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14499 Aux Id: ERL-251 ERL-439 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fixed bug in enif_whereis_pid/port that could cause heap
+ corruption in rare cases.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14523</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix so that trace messages generated when in a dirty nif
+ are flushed correctly when the dirty nif is done
+ executing.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14538</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix escape code handling when using ANSI color codes in
+ the shell.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14549 Aux Id: PR1536 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Upgraded the ERTS internal PCRE library from version 8.40
+ to version 8.41. See <url
+ href="http://pcre.org/original/changelog.txt">http://pcre.org/original/changelog.txt</url>
+ for information about changes made to PCRE. This library
+ implements major parts of the <seealso
+ marker="stdlib:re"><c>re</c></seealso> regular
+ expressions module.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14574</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fixed a bug causing <c>statistics(runtime)</c> to produce
+ negative values and a bug in
+ <c>statistics(wall_clock)</c> causing it to produce
+ values one second too long.</p>
+ <p>
+ <c>statistics(runtime)</c> now also use
+ <c>getrusage()</c> as source when available preventing
+ the returned value from wrapping as frequent as before.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14597 Aux Id: ERL-465 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fixed small memory leak that could occur when sending to
+ a terminating port.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14609</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix bug causing VM crash when a module with
+ <c>-on_load</c> directive is loaded while
+ <c>erlang:trace(on_load, ...)</c> is enabled.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14612</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>A warning that the compiler may optimize away atoms
+ have been added to the documentation of
+ <c>list_to_existing_atom/1</c> and
+ <c>binary_to_existing_atom/2</c>.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14614 Aux Id: ERL-453 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>Lock counting can now be fully toggled at runtime in
+ the lock counting emulator (<c>-emu_type lcnt</c>).
+ Everything is enabled by default to match the old
+ behavior, but specific categories can be toggled at will
+ with minimal runtime overhead when disabled. Refer to the
+ documentation on <c>lcnt:rt_mask/1</c> for details.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-13170</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>The <c>zlib</c> module has been refactored and all its
+ operations will now yield appropriately, allowing them to
+ be used freely in concurrent applications.</p> <p>The
+ following functions have been deprecated, but will not
+ produce compiler warnings until OTP 21:
+ <c>zlib:adler32</c>, <c>zlib:crc32</c>,
+ <c>zlib:inflateChunk</c>, <c>zlib:getBufSize</c>,
+ <c>zlib:setBufSize</c>.</p> <p>The behavior of throwing
+ an error when a dictionary is required for decompression
+ has also been deprecated. Refer to the documentation on
+ <c>inflateSetDictionary/2</c> for details.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14185</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p><c>lcnt:collect</c> and <c>lcnt:clear</c> will no
+ longer block all other threads in the runtime system.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14412</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>Add <c>erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1</c>, which converts an
+ iolist() to an erlang:iovec(), which suitable for use
+ with <c>enif_inspect_iovec</c>.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14520</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>When provided with bad arguments, the <c>zlib</c>
+ module will now raise named exceptions instead of just
+ <c>badarg</c>. For example, <c>not_initialized</c> when
+ using <c>zlib:inflate/2</c> with an uninitialized
+ stream.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14527</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ <c>erlang:halt/2</c> allows any Unicode string as slogan
+ for the crash dump.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14553</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>Add new nif API functions for managing an I/O Queue.
+ The added functions are:</p> <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><seealso marker="erl_nif#enif_ioq_create">
+ <c>enif_ioq_create()</c></seealso></item> <item><seealso
+ marker="erl_nif#enif_ioq_destroy">
+ <c>enif_ioq_destroy()</c></seealso></item> <item><seealso
+ marker="erl_nif#enif_ioq_enq_binary">
+ <c>enif_ioq_enq_binary()</c></seealso></item>
+ <item><seealso marker="erl_nif#enif_ioq_enqv">
+ <c>enif_ioq_enqv()</c></seealso></item> <item><seealso
+ marker="erl_nif#enif_ioq_deq">
+ <c>enif_ioq_deq()</c></seealso></item> <item><seealso
+ marker="erl_nif#enif_ioq_peek">
+ <c>enif_ioq_peek()</c></seealso></item> <item><seealso
+ marker="erl_nif#enif_inspect_iovec">
+ <c>enif_inspect_iovec()</c></seealso></item>
+ <item><seealso marker="erl_nif#enif_free_iovec">
+ <c>enif_free_iovec()</c></seealso></item> </list>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14598</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Erts 9.0.5</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/erts/emulator/beam/beam_bif_load.c b/erts/emulator/beam/beam_bif_load.c
index 7f8dc42aca..e48415ecc4 100644
--- a/erts/emulator/beam/beam_bif_load.c
+++ b/erts/emulator/beam/beam_bif_load.c
@@ -259,7 +259,7 @@ struct m {
Binary* code;
Eterm module;
Module* modp;
- Uint exception;
+ Eterm exception;
};
static Eterm staging_epilogue(Process* c_p, int, Eterm res, int, struct m*, int, int);
@@ -278,7 +278,7 @@ exception_list(Process* p, Eterm tag, struct m* mp, Sint exceptions)
Eterm res = NIL;
while (exceptions > 0) {
- if (mp->exception) {
+ if (is_value(mp->exception)) {
res = CONS(hp, mp->module, res);
hp += 2;
exceptions--;
@@ -379,9 +379,9 @@ finish_loading_1(BIF_ALIST_1)
exceptions = 0;
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
- p[i].exception = 0;
+ p[i].exception = THE_NON_VALUE;
if (p[i].modp->seen) {
- p[i].exception = 1;
+ p[i].exception = am_duplicated;
exceptions++;
}
p[i].modp->seen = 1;
@@ -415,9 +415,9 @@ finish_loading_1(BIF_ALIST_1)
exceptions = 0;
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
- p[i].exception = 0;
+ p[i].exception = THE_NON_VALUE;
if (p[i].modp->curr.code_hdr && p[i].modp->old.code_hdr) {
- p[i].exception = 1;
+ p[i].exception = am_not_purged;
exceptions++;
}
}
@@ -438,7 +438,7 @@ finish_loading_1(BIF_ALIST_1)
retval = erts_finish_loading(p[i].code, BIF_P, 0, &mod);
ASSERT(retval == NIL || retval == am_on_load);
if (retval == am_on_load) {
- p[i].exception = 1;
+ p[i].exception = am_on_load;
exceptions++;
}
}
@@ -469,7 +469,8 @@ staging_epilogue(Process* c_p, int commit, Eterm res, int is_blocking,
erts_commit_staging_code_ix();
for (i=0; i < nmods; i++) {
- if (mods[i].modp->curr.code_hdr) {
+ if (mods[i].modp->curr.code_hdr
+ && mods[i].exception != am_on_load) {
set_default_trace_pattern(mods[i].module);
}
#ifdef HIPE
@@ -686,6 +687,7 @@ BIF_RETTYPE delete_module_1(BIF_ALIST_1)
Eterm retval;
mod.module = BIF_ARG_1;
mod.modp = modp;
+ mod.exception = THE_NON_VALUE;
retval = staging_epilogue(BIF_P, success, res, is_blocking, &mod, 1, 0);
return retval;
}
diff --git a/erts/emulator/beam/erl_io_queue.c b/erts/emulator/beam/erl_io_queue.c
index a01b676d39..190ba6bbb9 100644
--- a/erts/emulator/beam/erl_io_queue.c
+++ b/erts/emulator/beam/erl_io_queue.c
@@ -973,9 +973,10 @@ static int iol2v_append_binary(iol2v_state_t *state, Eterm bin_term) {
UWord binary_size;
Uint byte_offset, bit_offset, bit_size;
+ byte *binary_data;
+
Eterm *parent_header;
Eterm parent_binary;
- byte *binary_data;
ASSERT(state->bytereds_available > state->bytereds_spent);
@@ -1001,14 +1002,14 @@ static int iol2v_append_binary(iol2v_state_t *state, Eterm bin_term) {
erts_emasculate_writable_binary(pb);
}
- binary_data = pb->bytes;
+ binary_data = &((byte*)pb->bytes)[byte_offset];
} else {
ErlHeapBin *hb = (ErlHeapBin*)parent_header;
ASSERT(thing_subtag(*parent_header) == HEAP_BINARY_SUBTAG);
ASSERT(is_bin_small);
- binary_data = &((unsigned char*)&hb->data)[byte_offset];
+ binary_data = &((byte*)&hb->data)[byte_offset];
}
if (!is_bin_small && (state->acc_size == 0 || !is_acc_small)) {
diff --git a/erts/emulator/beam/erl_process.c b/erts/emulator/beam/erl_process.c
index 1f696f7ba4..f3f99f1835 100644
--- a/erts/emulator/beam/erl_process.c
+++ b/erts/emulator/beam/erl_process.c
@@ -8600,11 +8600,13 @@ erts_start_schedulers(void)
erts_atomic_init_nob(&runq_supervisor_sleeping, 0);
if (0 != ethr_event_init(&runq_supervision_event))
erts_exit(ERTS_ERROR_EXIT, "Failed to create run-queue supervision event\n");
- if (0 != ethr_thr_create(&runq_supervisor_tid,
- runq_supervisor,
- NULL,
- &opts))
- erts_exit(ERTS_ERROR_EXIT, "Failed to create run-queue supervision thread\n");
+ res = ethr_thr_create(&runq_supervisor_tid,
+ runq_supervisor,
+ NULL,
+ &opts);
+ if (0 != res)
+ erts_exit(ERTS_ERROR_EXIT, "Failed to create run-queue supervision thread, "
+ "error = %d\n", res);
}
@@ -8640,7 +8642,7 @@ erts_start_schedulers(void)
opts.suggested_stack_size = erts_dcpu_sched_thread_suggested_stack_size;
res = ethr_thr_create(&esdp->tid,sched_dirty_cpu_thread_func,(void*)esdp,&opts);
if (res != 0)
- erts_exit(ERTS_ERROR_EXIT, "Failed to create dirty cpu scheduler thread %d\n", ix);
+ erts_exit(ERTS_ERROR_EXIT, "Failed to create dirty cpu scheduler thread %d, error = %d\n", ix, res);
}
for (ix = 0; ix < erts_no_dirty_io_schedulers; ix++) {
ErtsSchedulerData *esdp = ERTS_DIRTY_IO_SCHEDULER_IX(ix);
@@ -8648,7 +8650,7 @@ erts_start_schedulers(void)
opts.suggested_stack_size = erts_dio_sched_thread_suggested_stack_size;
res = ethr_thr_create(&esdp->tid,sched_dirty_io_thread_func,(void*)esdp,&opts);
if (res != 0)
- erts_exit(ERTS_ERROR_EXIT, "Failed to create dirty io scheduler thread %d\n", ix);
+ erts_exit(ERTS_ERROR_EXIT, "Failed to create dirty io scheduler thread %d, error = %d\n", ix, res);
}
}
@@ -8658,7 +8660,7 @@ erts_start_schedulers(void)
res = ethr_thr_create(&aux_tid, aux_thread, NULL, &opts);
if (res != 0)
- erts_exit(ERTS_ERROR_EXIT, "Failed to create aux thread\n");
+ erts_exit(ERTS_ERROR_EXIT, "Failed to create aux thread, error = %d\n", res);
if (actual < 1)
erts_exit(ERTS_ERROR_EXIT,
diff --git a/erts/emulator/drivers/common/efile_drv.c b/erts/emulator/drivers/common/efile_drv.c
index a1b15a2199..4e1d2f0d7f 100644
--- a/erts/emulator/drivers/common/efile_drv.c
+++ b/erts/emulator/drivers/common/efile_drv.c
@@ -1261,6 +1261,50 @@ static void free_read_line(void *data)
EF_FREE(d);
}
+void read_file_zero_size(struct t_data* d);
+#define ZERO_FILE_CHUNK (64 * 1024)
+
+/* [ERL-327] Some special files like /proc/... have reported size 0 */
+void read_file_zero_size(struct t_data* d) {
+ size_t total_read_size = 0;
+ size_t allocated_size = ZERO_FILE_CHUNK; /* allocd in invoke_read_file */
+ for (;;) {
+ size_t read_result;
+
+ /* Read until we hit EOF (read less than FILE_SEGMENT_READ) */
+ d->result_ok = efile_read(&d->errInfo,
+ EFILE_MODE_READ,
+ (int) d->fd,
+ (d->c.read_file.binp->orig_bytes +
+ total_read_size),
+ ZERO_FILE_CHUNK,
+ &read_result);
+ if (!d->result_ok) {
+ break;
+ }
+
+ total_read_size += read_result;
+ d->c.read_file.offset += read_result;
+ if (read_result < ZERO_FILE_CHUNK) {
+ break;
+ }
+
+ /* Grow before the next read call */
+ allocated_size = total_read_size + ZERO_FILE_CHUNK;
+ d->c.read_file.binp = driver_realloc_binary(d->c.read_file.binp,
+ allocated_size);
+ }
+
+ /* Finalize the memory usage. Hopefully it was read fully on the first
+ * go, so the binary allocation overhead becomes:
+ * alloc ZERO_FILE_CHUNK (64kb) -> realloc real_size */
+ if (allocated_size != total_read_size) {
+ d->c.read_file.binp = driver_realloc_binary(d->c.read_file.binp,
+ total_read_size);
+ }
+ d->again = 0;
+}
+
static void invoke_read_file(void *data)
{
struct t_data *d = (struct t_data *) data;
@@ -1279,9 +1323,15 @@ static void invoke_read_file(void *data)
}
d->fd = fd;
d->c.read_file.size = (int) size;
- if (size < 0 || size != d->c.read_file.size ||
- ! (d->c.read_file.binp =
- driver_alloc_binary(d->c.read_file.size))) {
+
+ /* For zero sized files allocate a reasonable chunk to attempt reading
+ * anyway. Note: This will eat ZERO_FILE_CHUNK bytes for any 0 file
+ * and free them immediately after (if the file was empty). */
+ ERTS_ASSERT(size >= 0);
+ d->c.read_file.binp = driver_alloc_binary(size != 0 ? (size_t)size
+ : ZERO_FILE_CHUNK);
+
+ if (size < 0 || size != d->c.read_file.size || !d->c.read_file.binp) {
d->result_ok = 0;
d->errInfo.posix_errno = ENOMEM;
goto close;
@@ -1290,6 +1340,11 @@ static void invoke_read_file(void *data)
}
/* Invariant: d->c.read_file.size >= d->c.read_file.offset */
+ if (d->c.read_file.size == 0) {
+ read_file_zero_size(d);
+ goto close;
+ }
+
read_size = (size_t) (d->c.read_file.size - d->c.read_file.offset);
if (! read_size) goto close;
chop = d->again && read_size >= FILE_SEGMENT_READ*2;
diff --git a/erts/emulator/pcre/README.pcre_update.md b/erts/emulator/pcre/README.pcre_update.md
index 8caf575d31..599e3d0d12 100644
--- a/erts/emulator/pcre/README.pcre_update.md
+++ b/erts/emulator/pcre/README.pcre_update.md
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
## The basic changes to the PCRE library
-To work with the Erlang VM, PCRE has been changed in two important ways:
+To work with the Erlang VM, PCRE has been changed in three important ways:
1. The main execution machine in pcre\_exec has been modified so that
matching can be interrupted and restarted. This functionality utilizes
diff --git a/erts/emulator/test/efile_SUITE.erl b/erts/emulator/test/efile_SUITE.erl
index f0e1bcf04b..08d5597d78 100644
--- a/erts/emulator/test/efile_SUITE.erl
+++ b/erts/emulator/test/efile_SUITE.erl
@@ -19,16 +19,20 @@
-module(efile_SUITE).
-export([all/0, suite/0]).
--export([iter_max_files/1, async_dist/1]).
+-export([async_dist/1,
+ iter_max_files/1,
+ proc_zero_sized_files/1
+ ]).
-export([do_iter_max_files/2, do_async_dist/1]).
-include_lib("common_test/include/ct.hrl").
+-include_lib("stdlib/include/assert.hrl").
suite() -> [{ct_hooks,[ts_install_cth]}].
all() ->
- [iter_max_files, async_dist].
+ [iter_max_files, async_dist, proc_zero_sized_files].
do_async_dist(Dir) ->
X = 100,
@@ -162,3 +166,44 @@ open_files(Name) ->
% io:format("Error reason: ~p", [_Reason]),
[]
end.
+
+%% @doc If /proc filesystem exists (no way to know if it is real proc or just
+%% a /proc directory), let's read some zero sized files 500 times each, while
+%% ensuring that response isn't empty << >>
+proc_zero_sized_files(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
+ {Type, Flavor} = os:type(),
+ %% Some files which exist on Linux but might be missing on other systems
+ Inputs = ["/proc/cpuinfo",
+ "/proc/meminfo",
+ "/proc/partitions",
+ "/proc/swaps",
+ "/proc/version",
+ "/proc/uptime",
+ %% curproc is present on freebsd
+ "/proc/curproc/cmdline"],
+ case filelib:is_dir("/proc") of
+ false -> {skip, "/proc not found"}; % skip the test if no /proc
+ _ when Type =:= unix andalso Flavor =:= sunos ->
+ %% SunOS has a /proc, but no zero sized special files
+ {skip, "sunos does not have any zero sized special files"};
+ true ->
+ %% Take away files which do not exist in proc
+ Inputs1 = lists:filter(fun filelib:is_file/1, Inputs),
+
+ %% Fail if none of mentioned files exist in /proc, did we just get
+ %% a normal /proc directory without any special files?
+ ?assertNotEqual([], Inputs1),
+
+ %% For 6 inputs and 500 attempts each this do run anywhere
+ %% between 500 and 3000 function calls.
+ lists:foreach(
+ fun(Filename) -> do_proc_zero_sized(Filename, 500) end,
+ Inputs1)
+ end.
+
+%% @doc Test one file N times to also trigger possible leaking fds and memory
+do_proc_zero_sized(_Filename, 0) -> ok;
+do_proc_zero_sized(Filename, N) ->
+ Data = file:read_file(Filename),
+ ?assertNotEqual(<<>>, Data),
+ do_proc_zero_sized(Filename, N-1).
diff --git a/erts/emulator/test/emulator_smoke.spec b/erts/emulator/test/emulator_smoke.spec
index b2d0de8835..fc98ba6823 100644
--- a/erts/emulator/test/emulator_smoke.spec
+++ b/erts/emulator/test/emulator_smoke.spec
@@ -7,3 +7,4 @@
[consistency],"Not reliable in October and March"}.
{cases,'Dir',crypto_SUITE,[t_md5]}.
{cases,'Dir',float_SUITE,[fpe,cmp_integer]}.
+{cases,'Dir',erts_debug_SUITE,[df]}.
diff --git a/erts/emulator/test/iovec_SUITE.erl b/erts/emulator/test/iovec_SUITE.erl
index 28df36d293..49dc64b0d2 100644
--- a/erts/emulator/test/iovec_SUITE.erl
+++ b/erts/emulator/test/iovec_SUITE.erl
@@ -24,7 +24,8 @@
-export([integer_lists/1, binary_lists/1, empty_lists/1, empty_binary_lists/1,
mixed_lists/1, improper_lists/1, illegal_lists/1, cons_bomb/1,
- iolist_to_iovec_idempotence/1, iolist_to_iovec_correctness/1]).
+ sub_binary_lists/1, iolist_to_iovec_idempotence/1,
+ iolist_to_iovec_correctness/1]).
-include_lib("common_test/include/ct.hrl").
@@ -34,8 +35,8 @@ suite() ->
all() ->
[integer_lists, binary_lists, empty_lists, empty_binary_lists, mixed_lists,
- illegal_lists, improper_lists, cons_bomb, iolist_to_iovec_idempotence,
- iolist_to_iovec_correctness].
+ sub_binary_lists, illegal_lists, improper_lists, cons_bomb,
+ iolist_to_iovec_idempotence, iolist_to_iovec_correctness].
init_per_suite(Config) ->
Config.
@@ -46,15 +47,16 @@ end_per_suite(Config) ->
integer_lists(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
Variations = gen_variations([I || I <- lists:seq(1, 255)]),
+ equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations).
- equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations),
-
- ok.
+sub_binary_lists(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
+ Parent = <<0:256/unit:8, "gazurka">>,
+ <<0:196/unit:8, Child/binary>> = Parent,
+ equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, gen_variations(Child)).
binary_lists(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
Variations = gen_variations([<<I:8>> || I <- lists:seq(1, 255)]),
- equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations),
- ok.
+ equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations).
empty_lists(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
Variations = gen_variations([[] || _ <- lists:seq(1, 256)]),
@@ -70,8 +72,7 @@ empty_binary_lists(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
mixed_lists(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
Variations = gen_variations([<<>>, lists:seq(1, 40), <<12, 45, 78>>]),
- equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations),
- ok.
+ equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations).
illegal_lists(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
BitStrs = gen_variations(["gurka", <<1:1>>, "gaffel"]),
@@ -82,18 +83,15 @@ illegal_lists(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
Variations =
BitStrs ++ BadInts ++ Atoms ++ BadTails,
- illegality_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations),
-
- ok.
+ illegality_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations).
improper_lists(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
Variations = [
[[[[1 | <<2>>] | <<3>>] | <<4>>] | <<5>>],
- [[<<"test">>, 3] | <<"improper tail">>],
- [1, 2, 3 | <<"improper tail">>]
+ [[<<1>>, 2] | <<3, 4, 5>>],
+ [1, 2, 3 | <<4, 5>>]
],
- equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations),
- ok.
+ equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations).
cons_bomb(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
IntBase = gen_variations([I || I <- lists:seq(1, 255)]),
@@ -108,8 +106,7 @@ cons_bomb(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
end,
Variations = gen_variations([IntBase, BinBase, MixBase], Rounds),
- equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations),
- ok.
+ equivalence_test(fun erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1, Variations).
iolist_to_iovec_idempotence(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
IntVariations = gen_variations([I || I <- lists:seq(1, 255)]),
@@ -134,11 +131,15 @@ iolist_to_iovec_correctness(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
ok.
illegality_test(Fun, Variations) ->
- [{'EXIT',{badarg, _}} = (catch Fun(Variation)) || Variation <- Variations].
+ [{'EXIT',{badarg, _}} = (catch Fun(Variation)) || Variation <- Variations],
+ ok.
equivalence_test(Fun, [Head | _] = Variations) ->
+ %% Check that each variation is equal to the others, and that the sum of
+ %% them is equal to the input.
Comparand = Fun(Head),
- [is_iolist_equal(Comparand, Fun(Variation)) || Variation <- Variations],
+ [true = is_iolist_equal(Comparand, Fun(V)) || V <- Variations],
+ true = is_iolist_equal(Variations, Fun(Variations)),
ok.
is_iolist_equal(A, B) ->
diff --git a/erts/test/erlexec_SUITE.erl b/erts/test/erlexec_SUITE.erl
index 44d7f63387..db993abe52 100644
--- a/erts/test/erlexec_SUITE.erl
+++ b/erts/test/erlexec_SUITE.erl
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ otp_8209(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
{ok,[[PName]]} = init:get_argument(progname),
SNameS = "erlexec_test_01",
SName = list_to_atom(SNameS++"@"++
- hd(tl(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@")))),
+ hd(tl(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@")))),
Cmd = PName ++ " dummy_param -sname "++SNameS++" -setcookie "++
atom_to_list(erlang:get_cookie()),
open_port({spawn,Cmd},[]),
@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ cleanup_node(SNameS,0) ->
{error, {would_not_die,list_to_atom(SNameS)}};
cleanup_node(SNameS,N) ->
SName = list_to_atom(SNameS++"@"++
- hd(tl(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@")))),
+ hd(tl(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@")))),
case rpc:call(SName,init,stop,[]) of
{badrpc,_} ->
ok;
@@ -322,7 +322,7 @@ zdbbl_dist_buf_busy_limit(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
{ok,[[PName]]} = init:get_argument(progname),
SNameS = "erlexec_test_02",
SName = list_to_atom(SNameS++"@"++
- hd(tl(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@")))),
+ hd(tl(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@")))),
Cmd = PName ++ " -sname "++SNameS++" -setcookie "++
atom_to_list(erlang:get_cookie()) ++
" +zdbbl " ++ integer_to_list(LimKB),
@@ -400,7 +400,7 @@ emu_args(CmdLineArgs) ->
{ok,[[Erl]]} = init:get_argument(progname),
EmuCL = os:cmd(Erl ++ " -emu_args_exit " ++ CmdLineArgs),
io:format("EmuCL = ~ts", [EmuCL]),
- split_emu_clt(string:tokens(EmuCL, [$ ,$\t,$\n,$\r])).
+ split_emu_clt(string:lexemes(EmuCL, [$ ,$\t,$\n,$\r])).
split_emu_clt(EmuCLT) ->
split_emu_clt(EmuCLT, [], [], [], emu).
diff --git a/erts/test/install_SUITE.erl b/erts/test/install_SUITE.erl
index d6c6d6f30e..324b398caa 100644
--- a/erts/test/install_SUITE.erl
+++ b/erts/test/install_SUITE.erl
@@ -580,7 +580,7 @@ end_per_testcase(_Case, _Config) ->
ok.
make_dirs(Root, Suffix) ->
- do_make_dirs(Root, string:tokens(Suffix, [$/])).
+ do_make_dirs(Root, string:lexemes(Suffix, [$/])).
do_make_dirs(_Root, []) ->
"";
@@ -709,4 +709,4 @@ join("") ->
join([""|Ds]) ->
join(Ds);
join([D|Ds]) ->
- "/" ++ string:strip(D, both, $/) ++ join(Ds).
+ "/" ++ string:trim(D, both, [$/]) ++ join(Ds).
diff --git a/erts/test/nt_SUITE.erl b/erts/test/nt_SUITE.erl
index 624e5484ba..3081b58835 100644
--- a/erts/test/nt_SUITE.erl
+++ b/erts/test/nt_SUITE.erl
@@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ wait_for_node(Name) ->
do_wait_for_it(FullName,30).
make_full_name(Name) ->
- [_,Suffix] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@"),
+ [_,Suffix] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@"),
list_to_atom(Name ++ "@" ++ Suffix).
@@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ service_env(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
["ERLSRV_SERVICE_NAME"]),
"erlsrv.exe" = filename:basename(
hd(
- string:tokens(
+ string:lexemes(
rpc:call(make_full_name(Name),
os,
getenv,
diff --git a/erts/test/otp_SUITE.erl b/erts/test/otp_SUITE.erl
index 54fcfd935f..3abe45c141 100644
--- a/erts/test/otp_SUITE.erl
+++ b/erts/test/otp_SUITE.erl
@@ -336,7 +336,7 @@ not_recommended_calls(Config, Apps0, MFA) ->
_ ->
AppStrings = [atom_to_list(A) || A <- SkippedApps],
Mess = io_lib:format("Application(s) not present: ~s\n",
- [string:join(AppStrings, ", ")]),
+ [lists:join(", ", AppStrings)]),
{comment, Mess}
end;
_ ->
@@ -463,7 +463,7 @@ runtime_dependencies(Config) ->
have_rdep(_App, [], _Dep) ->
false;
have_rdep(App, [RDep | RDeps], Dep) ->
- [AppStr, _VsnStr] = string:tokens(RDep, "-"),
+ [AppStr, _VsnStr] = string:lexemes(RDep, "-"),
case Dep == list_to_atom(AppStr) of
true ->
io:format("~p -> ~s~n", [App, RDep]),
diff --git a/erts/test/run_erl_SUITE.erl b/erts/test/run_erl_SUITE.erl
index fe1ccba1e2..08edd930b4 100644
--- a/erts/test/run_erl_SUITE.erl
+++ b/erts/test/run_erl_SUITE.erl
@@ -255,7 +255,7 @@ do_run_erl(Config, Case, Opt) ->
net_kernel:monitor_nodes(true),
open_port({spawn,Cmd}, []),
- [_,Host] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()), "@"),
+ [_,Host] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()), "@"),
Node = list_to_atom(NodeName++"@"++Host),
receive
diff --git a/erts/test/upgrade_SUITE.erl b/erts/test/upgrade_SUITE.erl
index a5639d927d..31ceb06314 100644
--- a/erts/test/upgrade_SUITE.erl
+++ b/erts/test/upgrade_SUITE.erl
@@ -287,7 +287,7 @@ create_relfile(Node,CreateDir,RelName0,RelVsn) ->
true ->
case filename:split(Path) -- SplitLibDir of
[AppVsn,"ebin"] ->
- case string:tokens(AppVsn,"-") of
+ case string:lexemes(AppVsn,"-") of
[AppStr,Vsn] ->
App = list_to_atom(AppStr),
case lists:member(App,Exclude) of
diff --git a/erts/test/z_SUITE.erl b/erts/test/z_SUITE.erl
index d474c71c4f..cd7a894eb5 100644
--- a/erts/test/z_SUITE.erl
+++ b/erts/test/z_SUITE.erl
@@ -132,22 +132,9 @@ core_search_conf(RunByTS, DBTop, XDir) ->
file_inspect(#core_search_conf{file = File}, Core) ->
FRes0 = os:cmd(File ++ " " ++ Core),
- FRes = case string:str(FRes0, Core) of
- 0 ->
- FRes0;
- S ->
- L = length(FRes0),
- E = length(Core),
- case S of
- 1 ->
- lists:sublist(FRes0, E+1, L+1);
- _ ->
- lists:sublist(FRes0, 1, S-1)
- ++
- " "
- ++
- lists:sublist(FRes0, E+1, L+1)
- end
+ FRes = case string:split(FRes0, Core) of
+ [S1] -> S1;
+ [S1,S2] -> lists:flatten(S1 ++ " " ++ S2)
end,
case re:run(FRes, "text|ascii", [caseless,{capture,none}]) of
match ->
@@ -194,9 +181,6 @@ mod_time_list(F) ->
[0,0,0,0,0,0]
end.
-str_strip(S) ->
- string:strip(string:strip(string:strip(S), both, $\n), both, $\r).
-
dump_core(#core_search_conf{ cerl = false }, _) ->
ok;
dump_core(_, {ignore, _Core}) ->
@@ -232,7 +216,7 @@ format_core(#core_search_conf{file = false}, Core, Ignore) ->
io:format(" ~s~s " ++ time_fstr() ++ "~s~n",
[Ignore, Core] ++ mod_time_list(Core));
format_core(#core_search_conf{file = File}, Core, Ignore) ->
- FRes = str_strip(os:cmd(File ++ " " ++ Core)),
+ FRes = string:trim(os:cmd(File ++ " " ++ Core)),
case catch re:run(FRes, Core, [caseless,{capture,none}]) of
match ->
io:format(" ~s~s " ++ time_fstr() ++ "~n",
diff --git a/erts/vsn.mk b/erts/vsn.mk
index c231c9c27d..380be1b534 100644
--- a/erts/vsn.mk
+++ b/erts/vsn.mk
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
# %CopyrightEnd%
#
-VSN = 9.0.5
+VSN = 9.1
# Port number 4365 in 4.2
# Port number 4366 in 4.3
diff --git a/lib/asn1/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/asn1/doc/src/notes.xml
index 5399528271..ae6660c143 100644
--- a/lib/asn1/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/asn1/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -32,6 +32,24 @@
<p>This document describes the changes made to the asn1 application.</p>
+<section><title>Asn1 5.0.3</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Compiling an ASN.1 module using the option {n2n,
+ EnumTypeName} when EnumTypeName contains a hypen like for
+ example Cause-Misc caused syntax errors when compiling
+ the generated Erlang code. This is now corrected.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14495 Aux Id: ERL-437 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Asn1 5.0.2</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/asn1/src/asn1ct_check.erl b/lib/asn1/src/asn1ct_check.erl
index 83d12600b7..321980e5e4 100644
--- a/lib/asn1/src/asn1ct_check.erl
+++ b/lib/asn1/src/asn1ct_check.erl
@@ -1576,13 +1576,15 @@ printable_string_1(#'Externalvaluereference'{value=Type}) ->
printable_string_1({Atom,Line}) when is_atom(Atom), is_integer(Line) ->
q(Atom);
printable_string_1({object,definedsyntax,L}) ->
- q(string:join([printable_string_1(Item) || Item <- L], " "));
+ Str = lists:join($\s, [printable_string_1(Item) || Item <- L]),
+ q(lists:flatten(Str));
printable_string_1([_|_]=Def) ->
case lists:all(fun is_integer/1, Def) of
true ->
lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~p", [Def]));
false ->
- q(string:join([printable_string_1(Item) || Item <- Def], " "))
+ Str = lists:join($\s, [printable_string_1(Item) || Item <- Def]),
+ q(lists:flatten(Str))
end;
printable_string_1(Def) ->
lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~p", [Def])).
diff --git a/lib/asn1/src/asn1ct_gen.erl b/lib/asn1/src/asn1ct_gen.erl
index 806f8420ec..84c7f39d55 100644
--- a/lib/asn1/src/asn1ct_gen.erl
+++ b/lib/asn1/src/asn1ct_gen.erl
@@ -796,7 +796,7 @@ result_line(NoOkWrapper, Items) ->
result_line_1([SingleItem]) ->
SingleItem;
result_line_1(Items) ->
- ["{",string:join(Items, ","),"}"].
+ ["{",lists:join(",",Items),"}"].
try_catch() ->
[" catch",nl,
@@ -943,7 +943,7 @@ open_hrl(OutFile,Module) ->
hrl_protector(OutFile) ->
BaseName = filename:basename(OutFile),
- P = "_" ++ string:to_upper(BaseName) ++ "_HRL_",
+ P = "_" ++ string:uppercase(BaseName) ++ "_HRL_",
[if
$A =< C, C =< $Z -> C;
$a =< C, C =< $a -> C;
diff --git a/lib/asn1/src/asn1rtt_real_common.erl b/lib/asn1/src/asn1rtt_real_common.erl
index 3a79209015..81c1f54d74 100644
--- a/lib/asn1/src/asn1rtt_real_common.erl
+++ b/lib/asn1/src/asn1rtt_real_common.erl
@@ -125,7 +125,7 @@ encode_real(_C, {_,Base,_}) ->
encode_real(C, Real) when is_list(Real) ->
%% The Real string may come in as a NR1, NR2 or NR3 string.
{Mantissa, Exponent} =
- case string:tokens(Real,"Ee") of
+ case string:lexemes(Real,"Ee") of
[NR2] ->
{NR2,0};
[NR3MB,NR3E] ->
@@ -144,7 +144,7 @@ encode_real(C, Real) when is_list(Real) ->
NewMan = remove_trailing_zeros(Dec),
{NewMan,length(ZeroDecimal(NewMan))};
_ ->
- case string:tokens(Mantissa,",.") of
+ case string:lexemes(Mantissa,",.") of
[Num] -> %% No decimal-mark
{integer_to_list(list_to_integer(Num)),0};
[Num,Dec] ->
diff --git a/lib/asn1/vsn.mk b/lib/asn1/vsn.mk
index 5900f3037e..ef83b9e3dc 100644
--- a/lib/asn1/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/asn1/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-ASN1_VSN = 5.0.2
+ASN1_VSN = 5.0.3
diff --git a/lib/common_test/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/common_test/doc/src/notes.xml
index 37a1846160..b039023e0f 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/common_test/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -33,6 +33,21 @@
<file>notes.xml</file>
</header>
+<section><title>Common_Test 1.15.2</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Common_Test 1.15.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/common_test.app.src b/lib/common_test/src/common_test.app.src
index 430a4fa2fb..0aa4aacf16 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/common_test.app.src
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/common_test.app.src
@@ -92,7 +92,7 @@
"sasl-2.4.2",
"snmp-5.1.2",
"ssh-4.0",
- "stdlib-2.5",
+ "stdlib-3.4",
"syntax_tools-1.7",
"tools-2.8",
"xmerl-1.3.8"
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct.erl
index a12c0c9101..875301a8b2 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct.erl
@@ -1030,7 +1030,7 @@ make_and_load(Dir, Suite) ->
EnvInclude =
case os:getenv("CT_INCLUDE_PATH") of
false -> [];
- CtInclPath -> string:tokens(CtInclPath, [$:,$ ,$,])
+ CtInclPath -> string:lexemes(CtInclPath, [$:,$ ,$,])
end,
StartInclude =
case init:get_argument(include) of
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_config.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_config.erl
index d48ae830bb..b3f983dd46 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_config.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_config.erl
@@ -659,7 +659,7 @@ decrypt_config_file(EncryptFileName, TargetFileName, {key,Key}) ->
get_crypt_key_from_file(File) ->
case file:read_file(File) of
{ok,Bin} ->
- case catch string:tokens(binary_to_list(Bin), [$\n,$\r]) of
+ case catch string:lexemes(binary_to_list(Bin), [$\n,$\r]) of
[Key] ->
Key;
_ ->
@@ -693,7 +693,7 @@ get_crypt_key_from_file() ->
noent ->
Result;
_ ->
- case catch string:tokens(binary_to_list(Result), [$\n,$\r]) of
+ case catch string:lexemes(binary_to_list(Result), [$\n,$\r]) of
[Key] ->
io:format("~nCrypt key file: ~ts~n", [FullName]),
Key;
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_config_plain.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_config_plain.erl
index e72b55971b..e77381d7cf 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_config_plain.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_config_plain.erl
@@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ read_config_terms1({done,{eof,EL},_}, L, _, _) ->
read_config_terms1({done,{error,Info,EL},_}, L, _, _) ->
{error,{Info,{L,EL}}};
read_config_terms1({more,_}, L, Terms, Rest) ->
- case string:tokens(Rest, [$\n,$\r,$\t]) of
+ case string:lexemes(Rest, [$\n,$\r,$\t]) of
[] ->
lists:reverse(Terms);
_ ->
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_conn_log_h.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_conn_log_h.erl
index cf0a228e1b..3e83020f45 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_conn_log_h.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_conn_log_h.erl
@@ -224,7 +224,7 @@ now_to_time({_,_,MicroS}=Now) ->
{calendar:now_to_local_time(Now),MicroS}.
pretty_head({{{Y,Mo,D},{H,Mi,S}},MicroS},ConnMod,Text0) ->
- Text = string:to_upper(atom_to_list(ConnMod) ++ Text0),
+ Text = string:uppercase(atom_to_list(ConnMod) ++ Text0),
io_lib:format("= ~s ==== ~s-~s-~w::~s:~s:~s,~s ",
[Text,t(D),month(Mo),Y,t(H),t(Mi),t(S),
micro2milli(MicroS)]).
@@ -275,7 +275,7 @@ pad0(N,Str) ->
lists:duplicate(N-M,$0) ++ Str.
pad_char_end(N,Str,Char) ->
- case length(lists:flatten(Str)) of
+ case string:length(Str) of
M when M<N -> Str ++ lists:duplicate(N-M,Char);
_ -> Str
end.
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_framework.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_framework.erl
index 6066470233..7f7e9ae6f9 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_framework.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_framework.erl
@@ -921,9 +921,10 @@ error_notification(Mod,Func,_Args,{Error,Loc}) ->
end,
ErrorStr = case ErrorSpec of
{badmatch,Descr} ->
- Descr1 = lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~tP",[Descr,10])),
- if length(Descr1) > 50 ->
- Descr2 = string:substr(Descr1,1,50),
+ Descr1 = io_lib:format("~tP",[Descr,10]),
+ DescrLength = string:length(Descr1),
+ if DescrLength > 50 ->
+ Descr2 = string:slice(Descr1,0,50),
io_lib:format("{badmatch,~ts...}",[Descr2]);
true ->
io_lib:format("{badmatch,~ts}",[Descr1])
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_ftp.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_ftp.erl
index 8effb06e7e..ee4a6a6c45 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_ftp.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_ftp.erl
@@ -285,7 +285,7 @@ init(KeyOrName,{IP,Port},{Username,Password}) ->
{ok,FtpPid} ->
log(heading(init,KeyOrName),
"Opened ftp connection:\nIP: ~tp\nUsername: ~tp\nPassword: ~p\n",
- [IP,Username,lists:duplicate(length(Password),$*)]),
+ [IP,Username,lists:duplicate(string:length(Password),$*)]),
{ok,FtpPid,#state{ftp_pid=FtpPid,target_name=KeyOrName}};
Error ->
Error
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_logs.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_logs.erl
index ba7660fe6a..028c265420 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_logs.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_logs.erl
@@ -1188,26 +1188,23 @@ print_style(Fd, IoFormat, StyleSheet) ->
case file:read_file(StyleSheet) of
{ok,Bin} ->
Str = b2s(Bin,encoding(StyleSheet)),
- Pos0 = case string:str(Str,"<style>") of
- 0 -> string:str(Str,"<STYLE>");
- N0 -> N0
- end,
- Pos1 = case string:str(Str,"</style>") of
- 0 -> string:str(Str,"</STYLE>");
- N1 -> N1
- end,
- if (Pos0 == 0) and (Pos1 /= 0) ->
- print_style_error(Fd, IoFormat,
- StyleSheet, missing_style_start_tag);
- (Pos0 /= 0) and (Pos1 == 0) ->
- print_style_error(Fd, IoFormat,
- StyleSheet,missing_style_end_tag);
- Pos0 /= 0 ->
- Style = string:sub_string(Str,Pos0,Pos1+7),
- IoFormat(Fd,"~ts\n",[Style]);
- Pos0 == 0 ->
- IoFormat(Fd,"<style>\n~ts</style>\n",[Str])
- end;
+ case re:run(Str,"<style>.*</style>",
+ [dotall,caseless,{capture,all,list}]) of
+ nomatch ->
+ case re:run(Str,"</?style>",[caseless,{capture,all,list}]) of
+ nomatch ->
+ IoFormat(Fd,"<style>\n~ts</style>\n",[Str]);
+ {match,["</"++_]} ->
+ print_style_error(Fd, IoFormat,
+ StyleSheet,
+ missing_style_start_tag);
+ {match,[_]} ->
+ print_style_error(Fd, IoFormat,
+ StyleSheet,missing_style_end_tag)
+ end;
+ {match,[Style]} ->
+ IoFormat(Fd,"~ts\n",[Style])
+ end;
{error,Reason} ->
print_style_error(Fd,IoFormat,StyleSheet,Reason)
end.
@@ -1414,9 +1411,9 @@ make_one_index_entry1(SuiteName, Link, Label, Success, Fail, UserSkip, AutoSkip,
{Lbl,Timestamp,Node,AllInfo} =
case All of
{true,OldRuns} ->
- [_Prefix,NodeOrDate|_] = string:tokens(Link,"."),
- Node1 = case string:chr(NodeOrDate,$@) of
- 0 -> "-";
+ [_Prefix,NodeOrDate|_] = string:lexemes(Link,"."),
+ Node1 = case string:find(NodeOrDate,[$@]) of
+ nomatch -> "-";
_ -> NodeOrDate
end,
@@ -1523,7 +1520,7 @@ not_built(BaseName,_LogDir,_All,Missing) ->
%% Top.ObjDir | Top.ObjDir.suites | Top.ObjDir.Suite |
%% Top.ObjDir.Suite.cases | Top.ObjDir.Suite.Case
Failed =
- case string:tokens(BaseName,".") of
+ case string:lexemes(BaseName,".") of
[T,O] when is_list(T) -> % all under Top.ObjDir
locate_info({T,O},all,Missing);
[T,O,"suites"] ->
@@ -2051,9 +2048,9 @@ sort_all_runs(Dirs) ->
%% "YYYY-MM-DD_HH.MM.SS"
lists:sort(fun(Dir1,Dir2) ->
[SS1,MM1,HH1,Date1|_] =
- lists:reverse(string:tokens(Dir1,[$.,$_])),
+ lists:reverse(string:lexemes(Dir1,[$.,$_])),
[SS2,MM2,HH2,Date2|_] =
- lists:reverse(string:tokens(Dir2,[$.,$_])),
+ lists:reverse(string:lexemes(Dir2,[$.,$_])),
{Date1,HH1,MM1,SS1} > {Date2,HH2,MM2,SS2}
end, Dirs).
@@ -2063,9 +2060,9 @@ sort_ct_runs(Dirs) ->
lists:sort(
fun(Dir1,Dir2) ->
[SS1,MM1,DateHH1 | _] =
- lists:reverse(string:tokens(filename:dirname(Dir1),[$.])),
+ lists:reverse(string:lexemes(filename:dirname(Dir1),[$.])),
[SS2,MM2,DateHH2 | _] =
- lists:reverse(string:tokens(filename:dirname(Dir2),[$.])),
+ lists:reverse(string:lexemes(filename:dirname(Dir2),[$.])),
{DateHH1,MM1,SS1} =< {DateHH2,MM2,SS2}
end, Dirs).
@@ -2211,27 +2208,15 @@ runentry(Dir, Totals={Node,Label,Logs,
0 -> "-";
N -> integer_to_list(N)
end,
- StripExt =
- fun(File) ->
- string:sub_string(File,1,
- length(File)-
- length(?logdir_ext)) ++ ", "
- end,
- Polish = fun(S) -> case lists:reverse(S) of
- [32,$,|Rev] -> lists:reverse(Rev);
- [$,|Rev] -> lists:reverse(Rev);
- _ -> S
- end
- end,
- TestNames = Polish(lists:flatten(lists:map(StripExt,Logs))),
+
+ RootNames = lists:map(fun(F) -> filename:rootname(F,?logdir_ext) end, Logs),
+ TestNames = lists:flatten(lists:join(", ", RootNames)),
TestNamesTrunc =
- if TestNames=="" ->
- "";
- length(TestNames) < ?testname_width ->
+ if length(TestNames) < ?testname_width ->
TestNames;
true ->
- Trunc = Polish(string:substr(TestNames,1,
- ?testname_width-3)),
+ Trunc = string:trim(string:slice(TestNames,0,?testname_width-3),
+ trailing,",\s"),
lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~ts...",[Trunc]))
end,
TotMissingStr =
@@ -2374,7 +2359,7 @@ force_rename(From,To,Number) ->
timestamp(Dir) ->
- TsR = lists:reverse(string:tokens(Dir,".-_")),
+ TsR = lists:reverse(string:lexemes(Dir,".-_")),
[S,Min,H,D,M,Y] = [list_to_integer(N) || N <- lists:sublist(TsR,6)],
format_time({{Y,M,D},{H,Min,S}}).
@@ -2923,7 +2908,7 @@ cache_vsn() ->
VSNfile = filename:join([EbinDir,"..","vsn.mk"]),
case file:read_file(VSNfile) of
{ok,Bin} ->
- [_,VSN] = string:tokens(binary_to_list(Bin),[$=,$\n,$ ]),
+ [_,VSN] = string:lexemes(binary_to_list(Bin),[$=,$\n,$ ]),
VSN;
_ ->
undefined
@@ -3320,7 +3305,7 @@ insert_javascript({tablesorter,TableName,
end, [{"CTDateSorter",DateCols},
{"CTTextSorter",TextCols},
{"CTValSorter",ValCols}]))),
- Headers1 = string:substr(Headers, 1, length(Headers)-2),
+ Headers1 = string:trim(Headers, trailing, ",\n"),
["<script type=\"text/javascript\">\n",
"// Parser for date format, e.g: Wed Jul 4 2012 11:24:15\n",
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_master.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_master.erl
index 6e6d1879c2..44d3fb8f64 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_master.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_master.erl
@@ -807,7 +807,7 @@ filter_accessible(InitOptions, Inaccessible)->
start_nodes(InitOptions)->
lists:foreach(fun({NodeName, Options})->
- [NodeS,HostS]=string:tokens(atom_to_list(NodeName), "@"),
+ [NodeS,HostS]=string:lexemes(atom_to_list(NodeName), "@"),
Node=list_to_atom(NodeS),
Host=list_to_atom(HostS),
HasNodeStart = lists:keymember(node_start, 1, Options),
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_master_logs.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_master_logs.erl
index d8ecd641ed..fd92f73f63 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_master_logs.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_master_logs.erl
@@ -297,7 +297,7 @@ sort_all_runs(Dirs) ->
%% "YYYY-MM-DD_HH.MM.SS"
KeyList =
lists:map(fun(Dir) ->
- case lists:reverse(string:tokens(Dir,[$.,$_])) of
+ case lists:reverse(string:lexemes(Dir,[$.,$_])) of
[SS,MM,HH,Date|_] ->
{{Date,HH,MM,SS},Dir};
_Other ->
@@ -312,18 +312,8 @@ runentry(Dir) ->
{MasterStr,NodesStr} =
case read_details_file(Dir) of
{Master,Nodes} when is_list(Nodes) ->
- [_,Host] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(Master),"@"),
- NodesList =
- lists:reverse(lists:map(fun(N) ->
- atom_to_list(N) ++ ", "
- end,Nodes)),
- case NodesList of
- [N|NListR] ->
- N1 = string:sub_string(N,1,length(N)-2),
- {Host,lists:flatten(lists:reverse([N1|NListR]))};
- [] ->
- {Host,""}
- end;
+ [_,Host] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(Master),"@"),
+ {Host,lists:concat(lists:join(", ",Nodes))};
_Error ->
{"unknown",""}
end,
@@ -348,7 +338,7 @@ all_runs_header() ->
xhtml("", "</tr></thead>\n<tbody>\n")]].
timestamp(Dir) ->
- [S,Min,H,D,M,Y|_] = lists:reverse(string:tokens(Dir,".-_")),
+ [S,Min,H,D,M,Y|_] = lists:reverse(string:lexemes(Dir,".-_")),
[S1,Min1,H1,D1,M1,Y1] = [list_to_integer(N) || N <- [S,Min,H,D,M,Y]],
format_time({{Y1,M1,D1},{H1,Min1,S1}}).
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_netconfc.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_netconfc.erl
index 2c4b97df20..29188a648e 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_netconfc.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_netconfc.erl
@@ -1467,7 +1467,7 @@ decode_data(Other) ->
{error,{unexpected_rpc_reply,Other}}.
get_qualified_name(Tag) ->
- case string:tokens(atom_to_list(Tag),":") of
+ case string:lexemes(atom_to_list(Tag),":") of
[TagStr] -> {[],TagStr};
[PrefixStr,TagStr] -> {PrefixStr,TagStr}
end.
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_release_test.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_release_test.erl
index 551a7e06d7..4af9afb45b 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_release_test.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_release_test.erl
@@ -817,7 +817,7 @@ get_runtime_deps([App|Apps],StartApps,Acc,Visited) ->
RuntimeDeps =
lists:flatmap(
fun(Str) ->
- [RuntimeAppStr,_] = string:tokens(Str,"-"),
+ [RuntimeAppStr,_] = string:lexemes(Str,"-"),
RuntimeApp = list_to_atom(RuntimeAppStr),
case {lists:keymember(RuntimeApp,1,Acc),
lists:member(RuntimeApp,StartApps)} of
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_run.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_run.erl
index 14f28f9ca3..9436236719 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_run.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_run.erl
@@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ script_start(Args) ->
CTVsn =
case filename:basename(code:lib_dir(common_test)) of
CTBase when is_list(CTBase) ->
- case string:tokens(CTBase, "-") of
+ case string:lexemes(CTBase, "-") of
["common_test",Vsn] -> " v"++Vsn;
_ -> ""
end
@@ -315,7 +315,7 @@ script_start1(Parent, Args) ->
{undefined,InclDirs};
CtInclPath ->
AllInclDirs =
- string:tokens(CtInclPath,[$:,$ ,$,]) ++ InclDirs,
+ string:lexemes(CtInclPath,[$:,$ ,$,]) ++ InclDirs,
application:set_env(common_test, include, AllInclDirs),
{undefined,AllInclDirs}
end;
@@ -1096,7 +1096,7 @@ run_test2(StartOpts) ->
application:set_env(common_test, include, InclDirs),
{undefined,InclDirs};
CtInclPath ->
- InclDirs1 = string:tokens(CtInclPath, [$:,$ ,$,]),
+ InclDirs1 = string:lexemes(CtInclPath, [$:,$ ,$,]),
AllInclDirs = InclDirs1++InclDirs,
application:set_env(common_test, include, AllInclDirs),
{undefined,AllInclDirs}
@@ -1482,7 +1482,7 @@ run_testspec2(TestSpec) ->
false ->
Opts#opts.include;
CtInclPath ->
- EnvInclude = string:tokens(CtInclPath, [$:,$ ,$,]),
+ EnvInclude = string:lexemes(CtInclPath, [$:,$ ,$,]),
EnvInclude++Opts#opts.include
end,
application:set_env(common_test, include, AllInclude),
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_ssh.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_ssh.erl
index ca62357e1c..491d56dfc1 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_ssh.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_ssh.erl
@@ -996,7 +996,8 @@ init(KeyOrName, {ConnType,Addr,Port}, AllOpts) ->
try_log(heading(init,KeyOrName),
"Opened ~w connection:\n"
"Host: ~tp (~p)\nUser: ~tp\nPassword: ~p\n",
- [ConnType,Addr,Port,User,lists:duplicate(length(Password),$*)]),
+ [ConnType,Addr,Port,User,
+ lists:duplicate(string:length(Password),$*)]),
{ok,SSHRef,#state{ssh_ref=SSHRef, conn_type=ConnType,
target=KeyOrName}}
end.
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/ct_util.erl b/lib/common_test/src/ct_util.erl
index abf131f4df..3c0fead5b2 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/ct_util.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/ct_util.erl
@@ -795,25 +795,25 @@ parse_table(Data) ->
{Heading,Lines}.
get_headings(["|" ++ Headings | Rest]) ->
- {remove_space(string:tokens(Headings, "|"),[]), Rest};
+ {remove_space(string:lexemes(Headings, "|"),[]), Rest};
get_headings([_ | Rest]) ->
get_headings(Rest);
get_headings([]) ->
{{},[]}.
parse_row(["|" ++ _ = Row | T], Rows, NumCols) when NumCols > 1 ->
- case string:tokens(Row, "|") of
+ case string:lexemes(Row, "|") of
Values when length(Values) =:= NumCols ->
parse_row(T,[remove_space(Values,[])|Rows], NumCols);
Values when length(Values) < NumCols ->
parse_row([Row ++"\n"++ hd(T) | tl(T)], Rows, NumCols)
end;
-parse_row(["|" ++ _ = Row | T], Rows, 1 = NumCols) ->
- case string:rchr(Row, $|) of
- 1 ->
+parse_row(["|" ++ X = Row | T], Rows, 1 = NumCols) ->
+ case string:find(X, [$|]) of
+ nomatch ->
parse_row([Row ++"\n"++hd(T) | tl(T)], Rows, NumCols);
_Else ->
- parse_row(T, [remove_space(string:tokens(Row,"|"),[])|Rows],
+ parse_row(T, [remove_space(string:lexemes(Row,"|"),[])|Rows],
NumCols)
end;
parse_row([_Skip | T], Rows, NumCols) ->
@@ -822,7 +822,7 @@ parse_row([], Rows, _NumCols) ->
lists:reverse(Rows).
remove_space([Str|Rest],Acc) ->
- remove_space(Rest,[string:strip(string:strip(Str),both,$')|Acc]);
+ remove_space(Rest,[string:trim(string:trim(Str,both,[$\s]),both,[$'])|Acc]);
remove_space([],Acc) ->
list_to_tuple(lists:reverse(Acc)).
@@ -832,7 +832,7 @@ remove_space([],Acc) ->
%%%
%%% @doc
is_test_dir(Dir) ->
- lists:last(string:tokens(filename:basename(Dir), "_")) == "test".
+ lists:last(string:lexemes(filename:basename(Dir), "_")) == "test".
%%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
%%% @spec
@@ -1077,7 +1077,7 @@ open_url(iexplore, Args, URL) ->
_ = case win32reg:values(R) of
{ok, Paths} ->
Path = proplists:get_value(default, Paths),
- [Cmd | _] = string:tokens(Path, "%"),
+ [Cmd | _] = string:lexemes(Path, "%"),
Cmd1 = Cmd ++ " " ++ Args ++ " " ++ URL,
io:format(?def_gl, "~nOpening ~ts with command:~n ~ts~n", [URL,Cmd1]),
open_port({spawn,Cmd1}, []);
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/cth_surefire.erl b/lib/common_test/src/cth_surefire.erl
index da68bd105e..4407ff56c1 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/cth_surefire.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/cth_surefire.erl
@@ -184,15 +184,14 @@ end_tc(Name, _Config, _Res, State = #state{ curr_suite = Suite,
Log =
case Log0 of
"" ->
- LowerSuiteName = string:to_lower(atom_to_list(Suite)),
+ LowerSuiteName = string:lowercase(atom_to_list(Suite)),
filename:join(CurrLogDir,LowerSuiteName++"."++Name++".html");
_ ->
Log0
end,
Url = make_url(UrlBase,Log),
ClassName = atom_to_list(Suite),
- PGroup = string:join([ atom_to_list(Group)||
- Group <- lists:reverse(Groups)],"."),
+ PGroup = lists:concat(lists:join(".",lists:reverse(Groups))),
TimeTakes = io_lib:format("~f",[timer:now_diff(?now,TS) / 1000000]),
State#state{ test_cases = [#testcase{ log = Log,
url = Url,
@@ -317,9 +316,9 @@ make_url(undefined,_) ->
make_url(_,[]) ->
undefined;
make_url(UrlBase0,Log) ->
- UrlBase = string:strip(UrlBase0,right,$/),
+ UrlBase = string:trim(UrlBase0,trailing,[$/]),
RelativeLog = get_relative_log_url(Log),
- string:join([UrlBase,RelativeLog],"/").
+ lists:flatten(lists:join($/,[UrlBase,RelativeLog])).
get_test_root(Log) ->
LogParts = filename:split(Log),
@@ -329,7 +328,7 @@ get_relative_log_url(Log) ->
LogParts = filename:split(Log),
Start = length(LogParts)-?log_depth,
Length = ?log_depth+1,
- string:join(lists:sublist(LogParts,Start,Length),"/").
+ lists:flatten(lists:join($/,lists:sublist(LogParts,Start,Length))).
count_tcs([#testcase{name=ConfCase}|TCs],Ok,F,S)
when ConfCase=="init_per_suite";
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/test_server.erl b/lib/common_test/src/test_server.erl
index dc6b7a536c..35a73e6d2e 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/test_server.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/test_server.erl
@@ -462,11 +462,12 @@ run_test_case_msgloop(#st{ref=Ref,pid=Pid,end_conf_pid=EndConfPid0}=St0) ->
%% it as a comment, potentially replacing user data
Error = lists:flatten(io_lib:format("Aborted: ~tp",
[Reason])),
- Error1 = lists:flatten([string:strip(S,left) ||
- S <- string:tokens(Error,
- [$\n])]),
- Comment = if length(Error1) > 63 ->
- string:substr(Error1,1,60) ++ "...";
+ Error1 = lists:flatten([string:trim(S,leading,"\s") ||
+ S <- string:lexemes(Error,
+ [$\n])]),
+ ErrorLength = string:length(Error1),
+ Comment = if ErrorLength > 63 ->
+ string:slice(Error1,0,60) ++ "...";
true ->
Error1
end,
@@ -2697,9 +2698,9 @@ is_cover() ->
is_debug() ->
case catch erlang:system_info(debug_compiled) of
{'EXIT', _} ->
- case string:str(erlang:system_info(system_version), "debug") of
- Int when is_integer(Int), Int > 0 -> true;
- _ -> false
+ case string:find(erlang:system_info(system_version), "debug") of
+ nomatch -> false;
+ _ -> true
end;
Res ->
Res
@@ -2735,9 +2736,9 @@ has_superfluous_schedulers() ->
%% We might want to do more tests on a commercial platform, for instance
%% ensuring that all applications have documentation).
is_commercial() ->
- case string:str(erlang:system_info(system_version), "source") of
- Int when is_integer(Int), Int > 0 -> false;
- _ -> true
+ case string:find(erlang:system_info(system_version), "source") of
+ nomatch -> true;
+ _ -> false
end.
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/test_server_ctrl.erl b/lib/common_test/src/test_server_ctrl.erl
index 71978c7267..c70ea4ef9d 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/test_server_ctrl.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/test_server_ctrl.erl
@@ -1464,13 +1464,14 @@ get_suites([], Mods) ->
lists:reverse(Mods).
add_mod(Mod, Mods) ->
- case string:rstr(atom_to_list(Mod), "_SUITE") of
- 0 -> false;
- _ -> % test suite
+ case lists:reverse(atom_to_list(Mod)) of
+ "ETIUS_" ++ _ -> % test suite
case lists:member(Mod, Mods) of
true -> false;
false -> true
- end
+ end;
+ _ ->
+ false
end.
@@ -2611,7 +2612,7 @@ run_test_cases_loop([{conf,Ref,Props,{Mod,Func}}|_Cases]=Cs0,
NumStr ->
%% Ex: "123 456 789" or "123,456,789" -> {123,456,789}
list_to_tuple([list_to_integer(NS) ||
- NS <- string:tokens(NumStr, [$ ,$:,$,])])
+ NS <- string:lexemes(NumStr, [$ ,$:,$,])])
end,
{shuffle_cases(Ref, Cs0, UseSeed),{shuffle,UseSeed}}
end;
@@ -3979,11 +3980,12 @@ progress(skip, CaseNum, Mod, Func, GrName, Loc, Reason, Time,
true -> "~w"
end, [Time]),
ReasonStr = escape_chars(reason_to_string(Reason1)),
- ReasonStr1 = lists:flatten([string:strip(S,left) ||
- S <- string:tokens(ReasonStr,[$\n])]),
+ ReasonStr1 = lists:flatten([string:trim(S,leading,"\s") ||
+ S <- string:lexemes(ReasonStr,[$\n])]),
+ ReasonLength = string:length(ReasonStr1),
ReasonStr2 =
- if length(ReasonStr1) > 80 ->
- string:substr(ReasonStr1, 1, 77) ++ "...";
+ if ReasonLength > 80 ->
+ string:slice(ReasonStr1, 0, 77) ++ "...";
true ->
ReasonStr1
end,
@@ -4067,11 +4069,12 @@ progress(failed, CaseNum, Mod, Func, GrName, unknown, Reason, Time,
true -> "~w"
end, [Time]),
ErrorReason = escape_chars(lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~tp", [Reason]))),
- ErrorReason1 = lists:flatten([string:strip(S,left) ||
- S <- string:tokens(ErrorReason,[$\n])]),
+ ErrorReason1 = lists:flatten([string:trim(S,leading,"\s") ||
+ S <- string:lexemes(ErrorReason,[$\n])]),
+ ErrorReasonLength = string:length(ErrorReason1),
ErrorReason2 =
- if length(ErrorReason1) > 63 ->
- string:substr(ErrorReason1, 1, 60) ++ "...";
+ if ErrorReasonLength > 63 ->
+ string:slice(ErrorReason1, 0, 60) ++ "...";
true ->
ErrorReason1
end,
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/test_server_node.erl b/lib/common_test/src/test_server_node.erl
index c0d7e12721..f0f9cea6e0 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/test_server_node.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/test_server_node.erl
@@ -315,9 +315,11 @@ start_node_peer(SlaveName, OptList, From, TI) ->
Prog0 = start_node_get_option_value(erl, OptList, default),
Prog = quote_progname(pick_erl_program(Prog0)),
Args =
- case string:str(SuppliedArgs,"-setcookie") of
- 0 -> "-setcookie " ++ TI#target_info.cookie ++ " " ++ SuppliedArgs;
- _ -> SuppliedArgs
+ case string:find(SuppliedArgs,"-setcookie") of
+ nomatch ->
+ "-setcookie " ++ TI#target_info.cookie ++ " " ++ SuppliedArgs;
+ _ ->
+ SuppliedArgs
end,
Cmd = lists:concat([Prog,
" -detached ",
@@ -612,7 +614,7 @@ pick_erl_program(L) ->
%% emulator and flags as the test node. The return from lib:progname()
%% could then typically be '/<full_path_to>/cerl -gcov').
quote_progname(Progname) ->
- do_quote_progname(string:tokens(Progname," ")).
+ do_quote_progname(string:lexemes(Progname," ")).
do_quote_progname([Prog]) ->
"\""++Prog++"\"";
diff --git a/lib/common_test/src/unix_telnet.erl b/lib/common_test/src/unix_telnet.erl
index 8ac467014c..5992f26e6d 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/src/unix_telnet.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/src/unix_telnet.erl
@@ -121,7 +121,8 @@ connect1(Name,Ip,Port,Timeout,KeepAlive,TCPNoDelay,Username,Password) ->
prompt,?prx,[]) of
{ok,{prompt,?password},_} ->
ok = ct_telnet_client:send_data(Pid,Password),
- Stars = lists:duplicate(length(Password),$*),
+ Stars =
+ lists:duplicate(string:length(Password),$*),
log(Name,send,"Password: ~s",[Stars]),
% ok = ct_telnet_client:send_data(Pid,""),
case ct_telnet:silent_teln_expect(Name,Pid,[],
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/ct_config_SUITE.erl b/lib/common_test/test/ct_config_SUITE.erl
index 250700741c..5ffc735d6a 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/ct_config_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/ct_config_SUITE.erl
@@ -213,8 +213,8 @@ reformat_events(Events, EH) ->
skip_dynamic() ->
case os:getenv("TS_EXTRA_PLATFORM_LABEL") of
TSExtraPlatformLabel when is_list(TSExtraPlatformLabel) ->
- case string:str(TSExtraPlatformLabel,"TimeWarpingOS") of
- 0 -> false;
+ case string:find(TSExtraPlatformLabel,"TimeWarpingOS") of
+ nomatch -> false;
_ -> true
end;
_ ->
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/ct_hooks_SUITE.erl b/lib/common_test/test/ct_hooks_SUITE.erl
index 8ba14e63bc..3c1e887f65 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/ct_hooks_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/ct_hooks_SUITE.erl
@@ -257,7 +257,7 @@ cth_log(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
lists:foreach(
fun(UnexpIoLog) ->
{ok,Bin} = file:read_file(UnexpIoLog),
- Ts = string:tokens(binary_to_list(Bin),[$\n]),
+ Ts = string:lexemes(binary_to_list(Bin),[$\n]),
Matches = lists:foldl(fun([$=,$E,$R,$R,$O,$R|_], N) ->
N+1;
([$L,$o,$g,$g,$e,$r|_], N) ->
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/ct_log_SUITE.erl b/lib/common_test/test/ct_log_SUITE.erl
index 93affda398..9655b6f09a 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/ct_log_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/ct_log_SUITE.erl
@@ -174,7 +174,7 @@ verify(Config) ->
TcLogFile = proplists:get_value(the_logfile, SavedCfg),
Pid = proplists:get_value(the_pid, SavedCfg),
StrPid = lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~p",[Pid])),
- EscPid = "&lt;" ++ string:substr(StrPid, 2, length(StrPid)-2) ++ "&gt;",
+ EscPid = "&lt;" ++ string:slice(StrPid, 1, length(StrPid)-2) ++ "&gt;",
String = proplists:get_value(the_string, SavedCfg),
ct:log("Read from prev testcase: ~p & ~p", [TcLogFile,Pid]),
{ok,Dev} = file:open(TcLogFile, [read]),
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/ct_pre_post_test_io_SUITE.erl b/lib/common_test/test/ct_pre_post_test_io_SUITE.erl
index 7ffe6f045b..0b85392009 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/ct_pre_post_test_io_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/ct_pre_post_test_io_SUITE.erl
@@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ pre_post_io(Config) ->
fun(PrePostIoFile) ->
ct:log("Reading Pre/Post Test IO Log file: ~ts", [PrePostIoFile]),
{ok,Bin} = file:read_file(PrePostIoFile),
- Ts = string:tokens(binary_to_list(Bin),[$\n]),
+ Ts = string:lexemes(binary_to_list(Bin),[$\n]),
PrePostIOEntries =
lists:foldl(fun([$L,$o,$g,$g,$e,$r|_],
{pre,PreLogN,PreErrN,0,0}) ->
@@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ pre_post_io(Config) ->
fun(UnexpIoFile) ->
ct:log("Reading Unexpected IO Log file: ~ts", [UnexpIoFile]),
{ok,Bin} = file:read_file(UnexpIoFile),
- Ts = string:tokens(binary_to_list(Bin),[$\n]),
+ Ts = string:lexemes(binary_to_list(Bin),[$\n]),
UnexpIOEntries =
lists:foldl(fun([$L,$o,$g,$g,$e,$r|_], [LogN,ErrN]) ->
[LogN+1,ErrN];
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/ct_priv_dir_SUITE_data/priv_dir_SUITE.erl b/lib/common_test/test/ct_priv_dir_SUITE_data/priv_dir_SUITE.erl
index 1b171801a3..b1d191873d 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/ct_priv_dir_SUITE_data/priv_dir_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/ct_priv_dir_SUITE_data/priv_dir_SUITE.erl
@@ -126,12 +126,12 @@ default(Config) ->
auto_per_tc(Config) ->
PrivDir = proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config),
- ["log_private",_] = string:tokens(filename:basename(PrivDir), "."),
+ ["log_private",_] = string:lexemes(filename:basename(PrivDir), "."),
{ok,_} = file:list_dir(PrivDir).
manual_per_tc(Config) ->
PrivDir = proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config),
- ["log_private",_] = string:tokens(filename:basename(PrivDir), "."),
+ ["log_private",_] = string:lexemes(filename:basename(PrivDir), "."),
{error,_} = file:list_dir(PrivDir),
ok = ct:make_priv_dir(),
{ok,_} = file:list_dir(PrivDir).
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/ct_test_support.erl b/lib/common_test/test/ct_test_support.erl
index 44c27e54c2..2ba7c7c13f 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/ct_test_support.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/ct_test_support.erl
@@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ start_slave(Config, Level) ->
start_slave(ct, Config, Level).
start_slave(NodeName, Config, Level) ->
- [_,Host] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()), "@"),
+ [_,Host] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()), "@"),
test_server:format(0, "Trying to start ~s~n",
[atom_to_list(NodeName)++"@"++Host]),
PR = proplists:get_value(printable_range,Config,io:printable_range()),
@@ -1088,8 +1088,8 @@ locate({TEH,Name,{'DEF','RUNDIR'}}, Node, [Ev|Evs], Config) ->
{TEH,#event{name=Name, node=Node, data=EvData}} ->
{_,{_,LogDir}} = lists:keysearch(logdir, 1, get_opts(Config)),
D = filename:join(LogDir, "ct_run." ++ atom_to_list(Node)),
- case string:str(EvData, D) of
- 0 -> exit({badmatch,EvData});
+ case string:find(EvData, D) of
+ nomatch -> exit({badmatch,EvData});
_ -> ok
end,
{Config,Evs};
@@ -1104,8 +1104,8 @@ locate({TEH,Name,{'DEF',{'START_TIME','LOGDIR'}}}, Node, [Ev|Evs], Config) ->
{DT={{_,_,_},{_,_,_}},Dir} when is_list(Dir) ->
{_,{_,LogDir}} = lists:keysearch(logdir, 1, get_opts(Config)),
D = filename:join(LogDir, "ct_run." ++ atom_to_list(Node)),
- case string:str(Dir, D) of
- 0 -> exit({badmatch,Dir});
+ case string:find(Dir, D) of
+ nomatch -> exit({badmatch,Dir});
_ -> ok
end,
{[{start_time,DT}|Config],Evs};
@@ -1373,7 +1373,7 @@ delete_dirs(LogDir) ->
Dirs2Del =
lists:foldl(fun(Dir, Del) ->
[S,Mi,H,D,Mo,Y|_] =
- lists:reverse(string:tokens(Dir, [$.,$-,$_])),
+ lists:reverse(string:lexemes(Dir, [$.,$-,$_])),
S2I = fun(Str) -> list_to_integer(Str) end,
DT = {{S2I(Y),S2I(Mo),S2I(D)}, {S2I(H),S2I(Mi),S2I(S)}},
Then = calendar:datetime_to_gregorian_seconds(DT),
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/ct_unicode_SUITE.erl b/lib/common_test/test/ct_unicode_SUITE.erl
index 355503a5dc..6f6ec97ceb 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/ct_unicode_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/ct_unicode_SUITE.erl
@@ -191,7 +191,7 @@ check_logs(Dirs) ->
[] ->
ok;
Match ->
- MatchStr = string:join(Match,"\n"),
+ MatchStr = lists:join("\n",Match),
ct:log("ERROR: Escaped unicode characters found in:~n~ts",[MatchStr]),
ct:fail(escaped_unicode_characters_found)
end.
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/ct_userconfig_callback.erl b/lib/common_test/test/ct_userconfig_callback.erl
index c723f4ca1c..14e3d9a688 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/ct_userconfig_callback.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/ct_userconfig_callback.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@
-export([check_parameter/1, read_config/1]).
read_config(Str) ->
- KeyVals = string:tokens(Str, " "),
+ KeyVals = string:lexemes(Str, " "),
{ok,read_config1(KeyVals)}.
read_config1([Key,Val | KeyVals]) ->
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/erl2html2_SUITE.erl b/lib/common_test/test/erl2html2_SUITE.erl
index 53a63578b2..b2336ff0bc 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/erl2html2_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/erl2html2_SUITE.erl
@@ -214,10 +214,10 @@ check_line_number(Last,Line,OrigLine) ->
[$>|Rest] = lists:dropwhile(fun($>) -> false; (_) -> true end,Line),
check_line_number(Last,Rest,OrigLine);
_ ->
- [N |_] = string:tokens(Line,":"),
+ [N |_] = string:lexemes(Line,":"),
% erlang:display(N),
Num =
- try list_to_integer(string:strip(N))
+ try list_to_integer(string:trim(N,both,"\s"))
catch _:_ -> ct:fail({no_line_number_after,Last,OrigLine})
end,
if Num == Last+1 ->
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/telnet_server.erl b/lib/common_test/test/telnet_server.erl
index 65300b0bdf..cef7784333 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/telnet_server.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/telnet_server.erl
@@ -249,7 +249,7 @@ do_handle_data("echo " ++ Data,State) ->
send(Data++"\r\n> ",State),
{ok,State};
do_handle_data("echo_sep " ++ Data,State) ->
- Msgs = string:tokens(Data," "),
+ Msgs = string:lexemes(Data," "),
lists:foreach(fun(Msg) ->
send(Msg,State),
timer:sleep(10)
@@ -260,28 +260,28 @@ do_handle_data("echo_no_prompt " ++ Data,State) ->
send(Data,State),
{ok,State};
do_handle_data("echo_ml " ++ Data,State) ->
- Lines = string:tokens(Data," "),
- ReturnData = string:join(Lines,"\n"),
+ Lines = string:lexemes(Data," "),
+ ReturnData = lists:flatten(lists:join("\n",Lines)),
send(ReturnData++"\r\n> ",State),
{ok,State};
do_handle_data("echo_ml_no_prompt " ++ Data,State) ->
- Lines = string:tokens(Data," "),
- ReturnData = string:join(Lines,"\n"),
+ Lines = string:lexemes(Data," "),
+ ReturnData = lists:flatten(lists:join("\n",Lines)),
send(ReturnData,State),
{ok,State};
do_handle_data("echo_loop " ++ Data,State) ->
- [TStr|Lines] = string:tokens(Data," "),
- ReturnData = string:join(Lines,"\n"),
+ [TStr|Lines] = string:lexemes(Data," "),
+ ReturnData = lists:flatten(lists:join("\n",Lines)),
send_loop(list_to_integer(TStr),ReturnData,State),
{ok,State};
do_handle_data("echo_delayed_prompt "++Data,State) ->
- [MsStr|EchoData] = string:tokens(Data, " "),
- send(string:join(EchoData,"\n"),State),
+ [MsStr|EchoData] = string:lexemes(Data, " "),
+ send(lists:flatten(lists:join("\n",EchoData)),State),
timer:sleep(list_to_integer(MsStr)),
send("\r\n> ",State),
{ok,State};
do_handle_data("disconnect_after " ++WaitStr,State) ->
- Wait = list_to_integer(string:strip(WaitStr,right,$\n)),
+ Wait = list_to_integer(string:trim(WaitStr,trailing,"\n")),
dbg("Server will close connection in ~w ms...", [Wait]),
erlang:send_after(Wait,self(),disconnect),
{ok,State};
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/test_server_SUITE.erl b/lib/common_test/test/test_server_SUITE.erl
index 50d8bdd1ac..edfaea1d08 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/test_server_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/test_server_SUITE.erl
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ init_per_testcase(_TestCase, Config) ->
%% @spec end_per_testcase(TestCase, Config0) ->
%% void() | {save_config,Config1} | {fail,Reason}
end_per_testcase(test_server_unicode, _Config) ->
- [_,Host] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()), "@"),
+ [_,Host] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()), "@"),
N1 = list_to_atom("test_server_tester_latin1" ++ "@" ++ Host),
N2 = list_to_atom("test_server_tester_utf8" ++ "@" ++ Host),
test_server:stop_node(N1),
@@ -347,7 +347,7 @@ generate_and_run_unicode_test(Config0,Encoding) ->
RunDir = get_latest_run_dir(LogDir),
true = filelib:is_dir(RunDir),
- LowerModStr = string:to_lower(ModStr),
+ LowerModStr = string:lowercase(ModStr),
SuiteHtml = translate_filename(LowerModStr++".src.html",Encoding),
true = filelib:is_regular(filename:join(RunDir,SuiteHtml)),
@@ -362,7 +362,7 @@ generate_and_run_unicode_test(Config0,Encoding) ->
%% remote file system on master - i.e. they will use same file name
%% mode as the master.
start_node(Config,Name,Args) ->
- [_,Host] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()), "@"),
+ [_,Host] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()), "@"),
ct:log("Trying to start ~w@~s~n",[Name,Host]),
case test_server:start_node(Name, peer, [{args,Args}]) of
{error,Reason} ->
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test/test_server_test_lib.erl b/lib/common_test/test/test_server_test_lib.erl
index c18b89b178..e3d987a2ea 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test/test_server_test_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test/test_server_test_lib.erl
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ pre_init_per_testcase(_TC,Config,State) ->
{start_slave(Config, 50),State}.
start_slave(Config,_Level) ->
- [_,Host] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()), "@"),
+ [_,Host] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()), "@"),
ct:log("Trying to start ~s~n",
["test_server_tester@"++Host]),
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts.erl b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts.erl
index 5bfea9f4de..330652e73f 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts.erl
@@ -583,7 +583,7 @@ is_list_of_suites(List) ->
S = if is_atom(Suite) -> atom_to_list(Suite);
true -> Suite
end,
- try lists:last(string:tokens(S,"_")) of
+ try lists:last(string:lexemes(S,"_")) of
"SUITE" -> true;
"suite" -> true;
_ -> false
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_autoconf_win32.erl b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_autoconf_win32.erl
index 52e5ac8e69..6f6caaeb70 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_autoconf_win32.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_autoconf_win32.erl
@@ -228,7 +228,7 @@ make(Vars) ->
end.
find_make(MakeCmd, Vars) ->
- [Make|_] = string:tokens(MakeCmd, " \t"),
+ [Make|_] = string:lexemes(MakeCmd, " \t"),
case os:find_executable(Make) of
false ->
{no, Vars};
@@ -248,9 +248,9 @@ javac(Vars) ->
end.
is_debug_build() ->
- case catch string:str(erlang:system_info(system_version), "debug") of
- Int when is_integer(Int), Int > 0 ->
- true;
- _ ->
- false
+ case catch string:find(erlang:system_info(system_version), "debug") of
+ nomatch ->
+ false;
+ _Else ->
+ true
end.
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_erl_config.erl b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_erl_config.erl
index 032593bdda..c7fe4ccf83 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_erl_config.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_erl_config.erl
@@ -311,7 +311,7 @@ lib_dir(Vars, Lib) ->
end,
CLibDir = filename:join(CLibDirList),
Cmd = "ls -d " ++ CLibDir ++ "*",
- XLibDir = lists:last(string:tokens(os:cmd(Cmd),"\n")),
+ XLibDir = lists:last(string:lexemes(os:cmd(Cmd),"\n")),
case file:list_dir(XLibDir) of
{error, enoent} ->
[];
@@ -361,15 +361,11 @@ emu_vars(Vars) ->
{erl_name, atom_to_list(lib:progname())}|Vars].
is_source_build() ->
- string:str(erlang:system_info(system_version), "[source]") > 0.
+ string:find(erlang:system_info(system_version), "source") =/= nomatch.
is_debug_build() ->
- case catch string:str(erlang:system_info(system_version), "debug") of
- Int when is_integer(Int), Int > 0 ->
- true;
- _ ->
- false
- end.
+ string:find(erlang:system_info(system_version), "debug") =/= nomatch.
+
%%
%% ssl_libdir
%%
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_install.erl b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_install.erl
index c5631fb9c3..048e5493d2 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_install.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_install.erl
@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ get_vars(_, _, _, _) ->
config_flags() ->
case os:getenv("CONFIG_FLAGS") of
false -> [];
- CF -> string:tokens(CF, " \t\n")
+ CF -> string:lexemes(CF, " \t\n")
end.
unix_autoconf(XConf) ->
@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ unix_autoconf(XConf) ->
Threads = [" --enable-shlib-thread-safety" ||
erlang:system_info(threads) /= false],
Debug = [" --enable-debug-mode" ||
- string:str(erlang:system_info(system_version),"debug") > 0],
+ string:find(erlang:system_info(system_version),"debug") =/= nomatch],
MXX_Build = [Y || Y <- config_flags(),
Y == "--enable-m64-build"
orelse Y == "--enable-m32-build"],
@@ -159,10 +159,8 @@ assign_vars([]) ->
assign_vars([{VAR,FlagsStr} | VARs]) ->
[{VAR,assign_vars(FlagsStr)} | assign_vars(VARs)];
assign_vars(FlagsStr) ->
- Flags = [assign_all_vars(Str,[]) || Str <- string:tokens(FlagsStr, [$ ])],
- string:strip(lists:flatten(lists:map(fun(Flag) ->
- Flag ++ " "
- end, Flags)), right).
+ Flags = [assign_all_vars(Str,[]) || Str <- string:lexemes(FlagsStr, [$\s])],
+ lists:flatten(lists:join(" ", Flags)).
assign_all_vars([$$ | Rest], FlagSoFar) ->
{VarName,Rest1} = get_var_name(Rest, []),
@@ -292,7 +290,7 @@ add_vars(Vars0, Opts0) ->
get_testcase_callback() ->
case os:getenv("TS_TESTCASE_CALLBACK") of
ModFunc when is_list(ModFunc), ModFunc /= "" ->
- case string:tokens(ModFunc, " ") of
+ case string:lexemes(ModFunc, " ") of
[_Mod,_Func] -> ModFunc;
_ -> ""
end;
@@ -430,8 +428,8 @@ bind_type() ->
debug() ->
- case string:str(erlang:system_info(system_version), "debug") of
- 0 -> "";
+ case string:find(erlang:system_info(system_version), "debug") of
+ nomatch -> "";
_ -> "/Debug"
end.
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_lib.erl b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_lib.erl
index ea039a2c2b..da8d676b18 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_lib.erl
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ specialized_specs(Dir,PostFix) ->
sort_tests([begin
DirPart = filename:dirname(Name),
AppTest = hd(lists:reverse(filename:split(DirPart))),
- list_to_atom(string:substr(AppTest, 1, length(AppTest)-5))
+ list_to_atom(string:slice(AppTest, 0, string:length(AppTest)-5))
end || Name <- Specs]).
specs(Dir) ->
@@ -111,9 +111,9 @@ specs(Dir) ->
[Spec,TestDir|_] =
lists:reverse(filename:split(FullName)),
[_TestSuffix|TDParts] =
- lists:reverse(string:tokens(TestDir,[$_,$.])),
+ lists:reverse(string:lexemes(TestDir,[$_,$.])),
[_SpecSuffix|SParts] =
- lists:reverse(string:tokens(Spec,[$_,$.])),
+ lists:reverse(string:lexemes(Spec,[$_,$.])),
if TDParts == SParts ->
[filename_to_atom(FullName)];
true ->
@@ -273,7 +273,7 @@ do_test(Rest, Vars, Test) ->
get_arg([$(|Rest], Vars, Stop, _) ->
get_arg(Rest, Vars, Stop, []);
get_arg([Stop|Rest], Vars, Stop, Acc) ->
- Arg = string:strip(lists:reverse(Acc)),
+ Arg = string:trim(lists:reverse(Acc),both,[$\s]),
Subst = subst(Arg, Vars),
{Subst,Rest};
get_arg([C|Rest], Vars, Stop, Acc) ->
diff --git a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_run.erl b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_run.erl
index 2736010551..3f594236bc 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_run.erl
+++ b/lib/common_test/test_server/ts_run.erl
@@ -464,4 +464,4 @@ split_one(Path) ->
filename:split(Path).
split_path(Path) ->
- string:tokens(Path,";").
+ string:lexemes(Path,";").
diff --git a/lib/common_test/vsn.mk b/lib/common_test/vsn.mk
index 9fc3f7f797..7b959ebfe3 100644
--- a/lib/common_test/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/common_test/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-COMMON_TEST_VSN = 1.15.1
+COMMON_TEST_VSN = 1.15.2
diff --git a/lib/compiler/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/compiler/doc/src/notes.xml
index bc335a9eaa..9b32ec54c4 100644
--- a/lib/compiler/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/compiler/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -32,6 +32,61 @@
<p>This document describes the changes made to the Compiler
application.</p>
+<section><title>Compiler 7.1.2</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>Fail labels on guard BIFs weren't taken into account
+ during an optimization pass, and a bug in the validation
+ pass sometimes prevented this from being noticed when a
+ fault occurred.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14522 Aux Id: ERIERL-48 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ When compiling from Core Erlang, an 'apply' with a nested
+ apply in the function position would be treated as an
+ invalid call. Corrected. (Thanks to Mikael Pettersson for
+ reporting this bug.)</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14526</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>Fixed checking of binary matching in the
+ <c>beam_validator</c> module to ensure that potential
+ compiler bugs are found at compile-time instead as
+ emulator crash at run-time.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14591</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>There could be false warnings for
+ <c>erlang:get_stacktrace/0</c> being used outside of a
+ <c>try</c> block when using multiple <c>catch</c>
+ clauses.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14600 Aux Id: ERL-478 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p> The Erlang code linter no longer checks that the
+ functions mentioned in <c>nowarn_deprecated_function</c>
+ options are declared in the module. </p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14378</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Compiler 7.1.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/compiler/src/core_pp.erl b/lib/compiler/src/core_pp.erl
index cff6c7098b..2516a9a1e1 100644
--- a/lib/compiler/src/core_pp.erl
+++ b/lib/compiler/src/core_pp.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1999-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1999-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -464,7 +464,7 @@ indent(#ctxt{indent=N}) ->
N =< 0 ->
"";
true ->
- string:chars($\t, N div ?TAB_WIDTH, spaces(N rem ?TAB_WIDTH))
+ lists:duplicate(N div ?TAB_WIDTH, $\t) ++ spaces(N rem ?TAB_WIDTH)
end.
nl_indent(Ctxt) -> [$\n|indent(Ctxt)].
diff --git a/lib/compiler/src/core_scan.erl b/lib/compiler/src/core_scan.erl
index 9f0676538f..a50a2ffa8d 100644
--- a/lib/compiler/src/core_scan.erl
+++ b/lib/compiler/src/core_scan.erl
@@ -200,8 +200,8 @@ pre_string(eof, Q, _, Sp, SoFar, Pos) ->
pre_string_error(Q, Sp, SoFar, Pos).
pre_string_error(Q, Sp, SoFar, Pos) ->
- S = reverse(string:substr(SoFar, 1, string:chr(SoFar, Q)-1)),
- pre_error({string,Q,string:substr(S, 1, 16)}, Sp, Pos).
+ [S,_] = string:split(SoFar, [Q]),
+ pre_error({string,Q,string:slice(string:reverse(S), 0, 16)}, Sp, Pos).
pre_char([C|Cs], SoFar) -> pre_char(C, Cs, SoFar);
pre_char([], _) -> more;
diff --git a/lib/compiler/src/v3_kernel_pp.erl b/lib/compiler/src/v3_kernel_pp.erl
index 53097d0d7d..ac91039ae0 100644
--- a/lib/compiler/src/v3_kernel_pp.erl
+++ b/lib/compiler/src/v3_kernel_pp.erl
@@ -491,7 +491,7 @@ indent(Ctxt) -> indent(Ctxt#ctxt.indent, Ctxt).
indent(N, _Ctxt) when N =< 0 -> "";
indent(N, Ctxt) ->
T = Ctxt#ctxt.tab_width,
- string:chars($\t, N div T, string:chars($\s, N rem T)).
+ lists:duplicate(N div T, $\t) ++ lists:duplicate(N rem T, $\s).
nl_indent(Ctxt) -> [$\n|indent(Ctxt)].
@@ -508,7 +508,7 @@ unindent([$\t|T], N, Ctxt, C) ->
if N >= Tab ->
unindent(T, N - Tab, Ctxt, C);
true ->
- unindent([string:chars($\s, Tab - N)|T], 0, Ctxt, C)
+ unindent([lists:duplicate(Tab - N, $\s)|T], 0, Ctxt, C)
end;
unindent([L|T], N, Ctxt, C) when is_list(L) ->
unindent(L, N, Ctxt, [T|C]);
diff --git a/lib/compiler/vsn.mk b/lib/compiler/vsn.mk
index 27ee5a3fb7..43fe0c8f6d 100644
--- a/lib/compiler/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/compiler/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-COMPILER_VSN = 7.1.1
+COMPILER_VSN = 7.1.2
diff --git a/lib/crypto/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/crypto/doc/src/notes.xml
index 574353ce7a..9376e6f649 100644
--- a/lib/crypto/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/crypto/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -31,6 +31,52 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to the Crypto application.</p>
+<section><title>Crypto 4.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>On macOS, <c>crypto</c> would crash if <c>observer</c>
+ had been started before <c>crypto</c>. On the beta for
+ macOS 10.13 (High Sierra), <c>crypto</c> would crash.
+ Both of those bugs have been fixed.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14499 Aux Id: ERL-251 ERL-439 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Extend crypto:sign, crypto:verify, public_key:sign and
+ public_key:verify with:</p>
+ <p>
+ * support for RSASSA-PS padding for signatures and for
+ saltlength setting<br/> * X9.31 RSA padding.<br/> * sha,
+ sha224, sha256, sha384, and sha512 for dss signatures as
+ mentioned in NIST SP 800-57 Part 1.<br/> * ripemd160 to
+ be used for rsa signatures.</p>
+ <p>
+ This is a manual merge of half of the pull request 838 by
+ potatosalad from Sept 2015.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-13704 Aux Id: PR838 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ A new tuple in <c>crypto:supports/0</c> reports supported
+ MAC algorithms.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14504</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Crypto 4.0</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/crypto/vsn.mk b/lib/crypto/vsn.mk
index 796e3b6d84..1dceebb4e4 100644
--- a/lib/crypto/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/crypto/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-CRYPTO_VSN = 4.0
+CRYPTO_VSN = 4.1
diff --git a/lib/debugger/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/debugger/doc/src/notes.xml
index fa85567a84..21fe7d449d 100644
--- a/lib/debugger/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/debugger/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -33,6 +33,21 @@
<p>This document describes the changes made to the Debugger
application.</p>
+<section><title>Debugger 4.2.3</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Tools are updated to show Unicode atoms correctly.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14464</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Debugger 4.2.2</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/debugger/src/debugger.app.src b/lib/debugger/src/debugger.app.src
index 446f2b9882..37a41c1a56 100644
--- a/lib/debugger/src/debugger.app.src
+++ b/lib/debugger/src/debugger.app.src
@@ -48,5 +48,5 @@
]},
{registered, [dbg_iserver, dbg_wx_mon, dbg_wx_winman]},
{applications, [kernel, stdlib]},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["wx-1.2","stdlib-2.5","kernel-3.0","erts-6.0",
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["wx-1.2","stdlib-3.4","kernel-5.3","erts-9.0",
"compiler-5.0"]}]}.
diff --git a/lib/debugger/src/i.erl b/lib/debugger/src/i.erl
index 62ce8d0e20..853fa529a0 100644
--- a/lib/debugger/src/i.erl
+++ b/lib/debugger/src/i.erl
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@
-import(lists, [sort/1,foreach/2]).
iv() ->
- Vsn = string:substr(filename:basename(code:lib_dir(debugger)), 10),
+ Vsn = string:slice(filename:basename(code:lib_dir(debugger)), 9),
list_to_atom(Vsn).
%% -------------------------------------------
diff --git a/lib/debugger/vsn.mk b/lib/debugger/vsn.mk
index 3534570ef5..72cedb2240 100644
--- a/lib/debugger/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/debugger/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-DEBUGGER_VSN = 4.2.2
+DEBUGGER_VSN = 4.2.3
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/dialyzer/doc/src/notes.xml
index c26b7aab5e..6a6e65cb94 100644
--- a/lib/dialyzer/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -32,6 +32,40 @@
<p>This document describes the changes made to the Dialyzer
application.</p>
+<section><title>Dialyzer 3.2.2</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p> Fix a bug regarding map types that caused Dialyzer to
+ go into an infinite loop. A consequence of the fix is
+ that compound map keys such as maps and tuples sometimes
+ are handled with less precision than before. </p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14572 Aux Id: seq13319 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p> The check for unknown remote types is improved. </p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14606 Aux Id: OTP-14218 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Dialyzer 3.2.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer.app.src b/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer.app.src
index 5f803875b0..e3a0fc967d 100644
--- a/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer.app.src
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer.app.src
@@ -48,6 +48,6 @@
{registered, []},
{applications, [compiler, hipe, kernel, stdlib, wx]},
{env, []},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["wx-1.2","syntax_tools-2.0","stdlib-3.0",
- "kernel-5.0","hipe-3.15.4","erts-8.0",
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["wx-1.2","syntax_tools-2.0","stdlib-3.4",
+ "kernel-5.3","hipe-3.16.1","erts-9.0",
"compiler-7.0"]}]}.
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_cl.erl b/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_cl.erl
index 0617be6435..1e06d6e974 100644
--- a/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_cl.erl
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_cl.erl
@@ -672,7 +672,7 @@ failed_anal_msg(Reason, LogCache) ->
%%
format_log_cache(LogCache) ->
Str = lists:append(lists:reverse(LogCache)),
- string:join(string:tokens(Str, "\n"), "\n ").
+ lists:join("\n ", string:lexemes(Str, "\n")).
-spec store_warnings(#cl_state{}, [raw_warning()]) -> #cl_state{}.
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_gui_wx.erl b/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_gui_wx.erl
index b4b1872c12..b8414b7d8b 100644
--- a/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_gui_wx.erl
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_gui_wx.erl
@@ -475,7 +475,7 @@ gui_loop(#gui_state{backend_pid = BackendPid, doc_plt = DocPlt,
gui_loop(State);
{BackendPid, ext_types, ExtTypes} ->
Map = fun({M,F,A}) -> io_lib:format("~tp:~tp/~p",[M,F,A]) end,
- ExtTypeString = string:join(lists:map(Map, ExtTypes), "\n"),
+ ExtTypeString = lists:join("\n", lists:map(Map, ExtTypes)),
Msg = io_lib:format("The following remote types are being used "
"but information about them is not available.\n"
"The analysis might get more precise by including "
@@ -638,7 +638,7 @@ output_sms(#gui_state{frame = Frame}, Title, Message, Type) ->
free_editor(#gui_state{gui = Wx, frame = Frame}, Title, Contents0) ->
Contents = lists:flatten(Contents0),
- Tokens = string:tokens(Contents, "\n"),
+ Tokens = string:lexemes(Contents, "\n"),
NofLines = length(Tokens),
LongestLine = lists:max([length(X) || X <- Tokens]),
Height0 = NofLines * 25 + 80,
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_races.erl b/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_races.erl
index 7fe64c3e11..7602faa21d 100644
--- a/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_races.erl
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/src/dialyzer_races.erl
@@ -1270,8 +1270,8 @@ filter_named_tables(NamesList) ->
[] -> [];
[Head|Tail] ->
NewHead =
- case string:rstr(Head, "()") of
- 0 -> [Head];
+ case string:find(Head, "()", trailing) of
+ nomatch -> [Head];
_Other -> []
end,
NewHead ++ filter_named_tables(Tail)
@@ -1558,8 +1558,8 @@ any_args(StrList) ->
case StrList of
[] -> false;
[Head|Tail] ->
- case string:rstr(Head, "()") of
- 0 -> any_args(Tail);
+ case string:find(Head, "()", trailing) of
+ nomatch -> any_args(Tail);
_Other -> true
end
end.
@@ -1765,10 +1765,8 @@ ets_list_args(MaybeList) ->
end.
ets_list_argtypes(ListStr) ->
- ListStr1 = string:strip(ListStr, left, $[),
- ListStr2 = string:strip(ListStr1, right, $]),
- ListStr3 = string:strip(ListStr2, right, $.),
- string:strip(ListStr3, right, $,).
+ ListStr1 = string:trim(ListStr, leading, "$["),
+ string:trim(ListStr1, trailing, "$]$.$,").
ets_tuple_args(MaybeTuple) ->
case is_tuple(MaybeTuple) of
@@ -1810,7 +1808,7 @@ ets_tuple_argtypes2_helper(TupleStr, ElemStr, NestingLevel) ->
{[H|ElemStr], NestingLevel, false}
end,
case Return of
- true -> string:tokens(NewElemStr, " |");
+ true -> string:lexemes(NewElemStr, " |");
false ->
ets_tuple_argtypes2_helper(T, NewElemStr, NewNestingLevel)
end
@@ -1889,44 +1887,44 @@ format_args_2(StrArgList, Call) ->
case Call of
whereis ->
lists_key_replace(2, StrArgList,
- string:tokens(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |"));
+ string:lexemes(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |"));
register ->
lists_key_replace(2, StrArgList,
- string:tokens(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |"));
+ string:lexemes(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |"));
unregister ->
lists_key_replace(2, StrArgList,
- string:tokens(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |"));
+ string:lexemes(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |"));
ets_new ->
StrArgList1 = lists_key_replace(2, StrArgList,
- string:tokens(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |")),
+ string:lexemes(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |")),
lists_key_replace(4, StrArgList1,
- string:tokens(ets_list_argtypes(lists:nth(4, StrArgList1)), " |"));
+ string:lexemes(ets_list_argtypes(lists:nth(4, StrArgList1)), " |"));
ets_lookup ->
StrArgList1 = lists_key_replace(2, StrArgList,
- string:tokens(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |")),
+ string:lexemes(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |")),
lists_key_replace(4, StrArgList1,
- string:tokens(lists:nth(4, StrArgList1), " |"));
+ string:lexemes(lists:nth(4, StrArgList1), " |"));
ets_insert ->
StrArgList1 = lists_key_replace(2, StrArgList,
- string:tokens(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |")),
+ string:lexemes(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |")),
lists_key_replace(4, StrArgList1,
ets_tuple_argtypes2(
ets_tuple_argtypes1(lists:nth(4, StrArgList1), [], [], 0),
[]));
mnesia_dirty_read1 ->
lists_key_replace(2, StrArgList,
- [mnesia_tuple_argtypes(T) || T <- string:tokens(
+ [mnesia_tuple_argtypes(T) || T <- string:lexemes(
lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |")]);
mnesia_dirty_read2 ->
lists_key_replace(2, StrArgList,
- string:tokens(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |"));
+ string:lexemes(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |"));
mnesia_dirty_write1 ->
lists_key_replace(2, StrArgList,
- [mnesia_record_tab(R) || R <- string:tokens(
+ [mnesia_record_tab(R) || R <- string:lexemes(
lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |")]);
mnesia_dirty_write2 ->
lists_key_replace(2, StrArgList,
- string:tokens(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |"));
+ string:lexemes(lists:nth(2, StrArgList), " |"));
function_call -> StrArgList
end.
@@ -1943,18 +1941,16 @@ format_type(Type, State) ->
erl_types:t_to_string(Type, R).
mnesia_record_tab(RecordStr) ->
- case string:str(RecordStr, "#") =:= 1 of
- true ->
- "'" ++
- string:sub_string(RecordStr, 2, string:str(RecordStr, "{") - 1) ++
- "'";
- false -> RecordStr
+ case erl_scan:string(RecordStr) of
+ {ok, [{'#', _}, {atom, _, Name}|_], _} ->
+ io_lib:write_string(atom_to_list(Name), $');
+ _ -> RecordStr
end.
mnesia_tuple_argtypes(TupleStr) ->
- TupleStr1 = string:strip(TupleStr, left, ${),
- [TupleStr2|_T] = string:tokens(TupleStr1, " ,"),
- lists:flatten(string:tokens(TupleStr2, " |")).
+ TupleStr1 = string:trim(TupleStr, leading, "${"),
+ [TupleStr2|_T] = string:lexemes(TupleStr1, " ,"),
+ lists:flatten(string:lexemes(TupleStr2, " |")).
-spec race_var_map(var_to_map1(), var_to_map2(), dict:dict(), op()) ->
dict:dict().
@@ -2237,7 +2233,7 @@ var_type_analysis(FunDefArgs, FunCallTypes, WarnVarArgs, RaceWarnTag,
case lists_key_member_lists(Vars, FunVarArgs) of
0 -> [Vars, WVA2, WVA3, WVA4];
N when is_integer(N) ->
- NewWVA2 = string:tokens(lists:nth(N + 1, FunVarArgs), " |"),
+ NewWVA2 = string:lexemes(lists:nth(N + 1, FunVarArgs), " |"),
[Vars, NewWVA2, WVA3, WVA4]
end;
?WARN_WHEREIS_UNREGISTER ->
@@ -2246,7 +2242,7 @@ var_type_analysis(FunDefArgs, FunCallTypes, WarnVarArgs, RaceWarnTag,
case lists_key_member_lists(Vars, FunVarArgs) of
0 -> [Vars, WVA2];
N when is_integer(N) ->
- NewWVA2 = string:tokens(lists:nth(N + 1, FunVarArgs), " |"),
+ NewWVA2 = string:lexemes(lists:nth(N + 1, FunVarArgs), " |"),
[Vars, NewWVA2]
end;
?WARN_ETS_LOOKUP_INSERT ->
@@ -2256,7 +2252,7 @@ var_type_analysis(FunDefArgs, FunCallTypes, WarnVarArgs, RaceWarnTag,
case lists_key_member_lists(Vars1, FunVarArgs) of
0 -> [Vars1, WVA2];
N1 when is_integer(N1) ->
- NewWVA2 = string:tokens(lists:nth(N1 + 1, FunVarArgs), " |"),
+ NewWVA2 = string:lexemes(lists:nth(N1 + 1, FunVarArgs), " |"),
[Vars1, NewWVA2]
end,
Vars2 =
@@ -2286,10 +2282,10 @@ var_type_analysis(FunDefArgs, FunCallTypes, WarnVarArgs, RaceWarnTag,
NewWVA2 =
case Arity of
1 ->
- [mnesia_record_tab(R) || R <- string:tokens(
+ [mnesia_record_tab(R) || R <- string:lexemes(
lists:nth(2, FunVarArgs), " |")];
2 ->
- string:tokens(lists:nth(N + 1, FunVarArgs), " |")
+ string:lexemes(lists:nth(N + 1, FunVarArgs), " |")
end,
[Vars, NewWVA2|T]
end
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/test/dialyzer_common.erl b/lib/dialyzer/test/dialyzer_common.erl
index 48083a2731..1a8403f486 100644
--- a/lib/dialyzer/test/dialyzer_common.erl
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/test/dialyzer_common.erl
@@ -221,13 +221,9 @@ get_suites(Dir) ->
end.
suffix(String, Suffix) ->
- case string:rstr(String, Suffix) of
- 0 -> no;
- Index ->
- case string:substr(String, Index) =:= Suffix of
- true -> {yes, string:sub_string(String,1,Index-1)};
- false -> no
- end
+ case string:split(String, Suffix, trailing) of
+ [Prefix,[]] -> {yes, Prefix};
+ _ -> no
end.
-spec create_suite(string()) -> 'ok'.
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/loop b/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/loop
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..2e956a5709
--- /dev/null
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/loop
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+
+loop.erl:63: The call loop:start_timer(#loop{state::'idle' | 'waiting',queues::#{'category1'=>#queue{limit::non_neg_integer(),buffer::[any()]}, 'category2'=>#queue{limit::non_neg_integer(),buffer::[any()]}},counters::#{'counter1':=10, 2:=10}}) does not have a term of type #loop{state::'idle' | 'waiting',timer::timer:tref(),queues::#{'category1'=>#queue{limit::non_neg_integer(),buffer::[any()]}, 'category2'=>#queue{limit::non_neg_integer(),buffer::[any()]}},counters::#{'counter1'=>non_neg_integer(), 2=>non_neg_integer()}} (with opaque subterms) as 1st argument
+loop.erl:67: Function wait/1 has no local return
+loop.erl:85: Record construction #loop{state::'idle' | 'waiting',timer::{'error',_} | {'ok',timer:tref()},queues::#{'category1'=>#queue{limit::non_neg_integer(),buffer::[any()]}, 'category2'=>#queue{limit::non_neg_integer(),buffer::[any()]}},counters::#{'counter1'=>non_neg_integer(), 2=>non_neg_integer()}} violates the declared type of field timer::'undefined' | timer:tref()
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/map_galore b/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/map_galore
index c34ba5cf30..9a140de255 100644
--- a/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/map_galore
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/map_galore
@@ -1,11 +1,11 @@
map_galore.erl:1000: A key of type 42 cannot exist in a map of type #{1:='a', 2:='b', 4:='d', 5:='e', float()=>'c' | 'v'}
-map_galore.erl:1080: A key of type 'nonexisting' cannot exist in a map of type #{#{'map':='key', 'one':='small'}:=[32 | 49 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'second':='small'}:=[32 | 50 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'third':='small'}:=[32 | 51 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], 10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 16:='a6', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 26:='b6', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 36:=[54 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]} | #{10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], 'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[54 | 99,...], 16=>'a6', 26=>'b6', 36=>[54 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]}=>[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 100 | 101,...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]}
-map_galore.erl:1082: A key of type 42 cannot exist in a map of type #{#{'map':='key', 'one':='small'}:=[32 | 49 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'second':='small'}:=[32 | 50 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'third':='small'}:=[32 | 51 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], 10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 16:='a6', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 26:='b6', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 36:=[54 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]} | #{10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], 'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[54 | 99,...], 16=>'a6', 26=>'b6', 36=>[54 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]}=>[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 100 | 101,...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]}
-map_galore.erl:1140: The call map_galore:map_guard_sequence_1(#{'seq':=6, 'val':=[101,...]}) will never return since it differs in the 1st argument from the success typing arguments: (#{'seq':=1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5, 'val':=[97 | 98 | 99 | 100 | 101,...], #{'map':='key', 'one':='small'}=>[32 | 49 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'second':='small'}=>[32 | 50 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'third':='small'}=>[32 | 51 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[any(),...]} | #{10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[any(),...], 31:=[any(),...], 32:=[any(),...], 33:=[any(),...], 34:=[any(),...], 35:=[any(),...], 37:=[any(),...], 38:=[any(),...], 39:=[any(),...], 'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[any(),...], 16=>'a6', 26=>'b6', 36=>[any(),...], <<_:16>> | [any(),...] | {_}=>[any(),...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]})
-map_galore.erl:1141: The call map_galore:map_guard_sequence_2(#{'b':=5}) will never return since it differs in the 1st argument from the success typing arguments: (#{'a':='gg' | 'kk' | 'sc' | 3 | 4, 'b'=>'other' | 3 | 4 | 5, 'c'=>'sc2', #{'map':='key', 'one':='small'}=>[32 | 49 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'second':='small'}=>[32 | 50 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'third':='small'}=>[32 | 51 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[any(),...]} | #{10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[any(),...], 31:=[any(),...], 32:=[any(),...], 33:=[any(),...], 34:=[any(),...], 35:=[any(),...], 37:=[any(),...], 38:=[any(),...], 39:=[any(),...], 'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[any(),...], 16=>'a6', 26=>'b6', 36=>[any(),...], <<_:16>> | [any(),...] | {_}=>[any(),...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]})
-map_galore.erl:1209: The call map_galore:map_guard_sequence_1(#{'seq':=6, 'val':=[101,...], #{'map':='key', 'one':='small'}:=[32 | 49 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'second':='small'}:=[32 | 50 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'third':='small'}:=[32 | 51 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], 10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 16:='a6', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 26:='b6', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 36:=[54 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | 3,...]} | #{10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], 'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[54 | 99,...], 16=>'a6', 26=>'b6', 36=>[54 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]}=>[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 100 | 101,...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]}) will never return since it differs in the 1st argument from the success typing arguments: (#{'seq':=1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5, 'val':=[97 | 98 | 99 | 100 | 101,...], #{'map':='key', 'one':='small'}=>[32 | 49 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'second':='small'}=>[32 | 50 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'third':='small'}=>[32 | 51 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[any(),...]} | #{10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[any(),...], 31:=[any(),...], 32:=[any(),...], 33:=[any(),...], 34:=[any(),...], 35:=[any(),...], 37:=[any(),...], 38:=[any(),...], 39:=[any(),...], 'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[any(),...], 16=>'a6', 26=>'b6', 36=>[any(),...], <<_:16>> | [any(),...] | {_}=>[any(),...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]})
-map_galore.erl:1210: The call map_galore:map_guard_sequence_2(#{'b':=5, #{'map':='key', 'one':='small'}:=[32 | 49 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'second':='small'}:=[32 | 50 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'third':='small'}:=[32 | 51 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], 10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 16:='a6', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 26:='b6', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 36:=[54 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | 3,...]} | #{10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], 'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[54 | 99,...], 16=>'a6', 26=>'b6', 36=>[54 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]}=>[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 100 | 101,...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]}) will never return since it differs in the 1st argument from the success typing arguments: (#{'a':='gg' | 'kk' | 'sc' | 3 | 4, 'b'=>'other' | 3 | 4 | 5, 'c'=>'sc2', #{'map':='key', 'one':='small'}=>[32 | 49 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'second':='small'}=>[32 | 50 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], #{'map':='key', 'third':='small'}=>[32 | 51 | 97 | 101 | 107 | 108 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 121,...], 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[any(),...]} | #{10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[any(),...], 31:=[any(),...], 32:=[any(),...], 33:=[any(),...], 34:=[any(),...], 35:=[any(),...], 37:=[any(),...], 38:=[any(),...], 39:=[any(),...], 'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[any(),...], 16=>'a6', 26=>'b6', 36=>[any(),...], <<_:16>> | [any(),...] | {_}=>[any(),...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]})
+map_galore.erl:1080: A key of type 'nonexisting' cannot exist in a map of type #{10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 16:='a6', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 26:='b6', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 36:=[54 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]} | #{'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[54 | 99,...], 'map'=>'key', 'one'=>'small', 'second'=>'small', 'third'=>'small', 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]}=>[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 100 | 101,...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]}
+map_galore.erl:1082: A key of type 42 cannot exist in a map of type #{10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 16:='a6', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 26:='b6', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 36:=[54 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]} | #{'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[54 | 99,...], 'map'=>'key', 'one'=>'small', 'second'=>'small', 'third'=>'small', 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]}=>[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 100 | 101,...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]}
+map_galore.erl:1140: The call map_galore:map_guard_sequence_1(#{'seq':=6, 'val':=[101,...]}) will never return since it differs in the 1st argument from the success typing arguments: (#{'seq':=1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5, 'val':=[97 | 98 | 99 | 100 | 101,...], 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[any(),...]} | #{'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[any(),...], 'map'=>'key', 'one'=>'small', 'second'=>'small', 'third'=>'small', 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[any(),...], 31=>[any(),...], 32=>[any(),...], 33=>[any(),...], 34=>[any(),...], 35=>[any(),...], 36=>[any(),...], 37=>[any(),...], 38=>[any(),...], 39=>[any(),...], <<_:16>> | [any(),...] | {_}=>[any(),...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]})
+map_galore.erl:1141: The call map_galore:map_guard_sequence_2(#{'b':=5}) will never return since it differs in the 1st argument from the success typing arguments: (#{'a':='gg' | 'kk' | 'sc' | 3 | 4, 'b'=>'other' | 3 | 4 | 5, 'c'=>'sc2', 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[any(),...]} | #{'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[any(),...], 'map'=>'key', 'one'=>'small', 'second'=>'small', 'third'=>'small', 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[any(),...], 31=>[any(),...], 32=>[any(),...], 33=>[any(),...], 34=>[any(),...], 35=>[any(),...], 36=>[any(),...], 37=>[any(),...], 38=>[any(),...], 39=>[any(),...], <<_:16>> | [any(),...] | {_}=>[any(),...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]})
+map_galore.erl:1209: The call map_galore:map_guard_sequence_1(#{'seq':=6, 'val':=[101,...], 10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 16:='a6', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 26:='b6', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 36:=[54 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | 3,...]} | #{'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[54 | 99,...], 'map'=>'key', 'one'=>'small', 'second'=>'small', 'third'=>'small', 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]}=>[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 100 | 101,...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]}) will never return since it differs in the 1st argument from the success typing arguments: (#{'seq':=1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5, 'val':=[97 | 98 | 99 | 100 | 101,...], 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[any(),...]} | #{'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[any(),...], 'map'=>'key', 'one'=>'small', 'second'=>'small', 'third'=>'small', 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[any(),...], 31=>[any(),...], 32=>[any(),...], 33=>[any(),...], 34=>[any(),...], 35=>[any(),...], 36=>[any(),...], 37=>[any(),...], 38=>[any(),...], 39=>[any(),...], <<_:16>> | [any(),...] | {_}=>[any(),...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]})
+map_galore.erl:1210: The call map_galore:map_guard_sequence_2(#{'b':=5, 10:='a0', 11:='a1', 12:='a2', 13:='a3', 14:='a4', 15:='a5', 16:='a6', 17:='a7', 18:='a8', 19:='a9', 20:='b0', 21:='b1', 22:='b2', 23:='b3', 24:='b4', 25:='b5', 26:='b6', 27:='b7', 28:='b8', 29:='b9', 30:=[48 | 99,...], 31:=[49 | 99,...], 32:=[50 | 99,...], 33:=[51 | 99,...], 34:=[52 | 99,...], 35:=[53 | 99,...], 36:=[54 | 99,...], 37:=[55 | 99,...], 38:=[56 | 99,...], 39:=[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | 3,...]} | #{'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[54 | 99,...], 'map'=>'key', 'one'=>'small', 'second'=>'small', 'third'=>'small', 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | {[[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...],...]}=>[48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 100 | 101,...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]}) will never return since it differs in the 1st argument from the success typing arguments: (#{'a':='gg' | 'kk' | 'sc' | 3 | 4, 'b'=>'other' | 3 | 4 | 5, 'c'=>'sc2', 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[48 | 99,...], 31=>[49 | 99,...], 32=>[50 | 99,...], 33=>[51 | 99,...], 34=>[52 | 99,...], 35=>[53 | 99,...], 36=>[54 | 99,...], 37=>[55 | 99,...], 38=>[56 | 99,...], 39=>[57 | 99,...], <<_:16>> | [48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57,...] | float() | {[any(),...]} | #{'k16'=>'a6', 'k26'=>'b6', 'k36'=>[any(),...], 'map'=>'key', 'one'=>'small', 'second'=>'small', 'third'=>'small', 10=>'a0', 11=>'a1', 12=>'a2', 13=>'a3', 14=>'a4', 15=>'a5', 16=>'a6', 17=>'a7', 18=>'a8', 19=>'a9', 20=>'b0', 21=>'b1', 22=>'b2', 23=>'b3', 24=>'b4', 25=>'b5', 26=>'b6', 27=>'b7', 28=>'b8', 29=>'b9', 30=>[any(),...], 31=>[any(),...], 32=>[any(),...], 33=>[any(),...], 34=>[any(),...], 35=>[any(),...], 36=>[any(),...], 37=>[any(),...], 38=>[any(),...], 39=>[any(),...], <<_:16>> | [any(),...] | {_}=>[any(),...]}=>atom() | [1..255,...]})
map_galore.erl:1418: Fun application with arguments (#{'s':='none', 'v':='none'}) will never return since it differs in the 1st argument from the success typing arguments: (#{'s':='l' | 't' | 'v', 'v':='none' | <<_:16>> | [<<_:16>>,...] | {<<_:16>>,<<_:16>>}})
map_galore.erl:1491: The test #{} =:= #{'a':=1} can never evaluate to 'true'
map_galore.erl:1492: The test #{'a':=1} =:= #{} can never evaluate to 'true'
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/opaque_key b/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/opaque_key
index 2ae0e0c5c6..8d6379b5e0 100644
--- a/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/opaque_key
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/results/opaque_key
@@ -1,4 +1,5 @@
+opaque_key_adt.erl:35: Invalid type specification for function opaque_key_adt:s2/0. The success typing is () -> #{3:='a'}
opaque_key_adt.erl:41: Invalid type specification for function opaque_key_adt:s4/0. The success typing is () -> #{1:='a'}
opaque_key_adt.erl:44: Invalid type specification for function opaque_key_adt:s5/0. The success typing is () -> #{2:=3}
opaque_key_adt.erl:56: Invalid type specification for function opaque_key_adt:smt1/0. The success typing is () -> #{3:='a'}
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/src/loop.erl b/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/src/loop.erl
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..c861052d9f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/src/loop.erl
@@ -0,0 +1,92 @@
+-module(loop).
+
+-export([timeout/2]).
+
+-export([idle/2, waiting/2]).
+
+-type request_category() :: category1 | category2.
+
+-type counter() :: counter1 | 2.
+
+-type counters() :: #{counter() => non_neg_integer()}.
+
+-record(queue, {limit = 0 :: non_neg_integer(),
+ buffer = [] :: list()}).
+
+-type request_queues() :: #{request_category() => #queue{}}.
+
+-record(?MODULE,
+ {state = idle :: idle | waiting,
+ timer = undefined :: undefined | timer:tref(),
+ queues = #{category1 => #queue{},
+ category2 => #queue{}} :: request_queues(),
+ counters = new_counters() :: counters()}).
+-spec timeout(Ref, Timer :: timer:tref()) -> {noreply, Ref}.
+timeout(Ref, Timer) ->
+ handle_message(Ref, {timeout, Timer}).
+
+-type message() :: {reset, request_category()}
+ | {timeout, timer:tref()}.
+
+-spec handle_message(Ref, Message :: message()) ->
+ {reply, boolean(), Ref} | {noreply, Ref}.
+handle_message(Ref, Msg) ->
+ MV = #?MODULE{state = State} = get(mv),
+ case apply(?MODULE, State, [Msg, MV]) of
+ {reply, Result, NewMV} ->
+ put(mv, NewMV),
+ {reply, Result, Ref};
+ {noreply, NewMV} ->
+ put(mv, NewMV),
+ {noreply, Ref}
+ end.
+
+-spec idle(Message :: message(), #?MODULE{}) ->
+ {reply, boolean(), #?MODULE{}} | {noreply, #?MODULE{}}.
+idle({reset, Category}, MV = #?MODULE{queues = Queues}) ->
+ case Queues of
+ #{Category := #queue{limit = 0}} ->
+ {reply, false, MV};
+ _ ->
+ wait(MV)
+ end;
+idle(_, MV) ->
+ {noreply, MV}.
+
+-spec waiting(Message :: message(), #?MODULE{}) ->
+ {reply, boolean(), #?MODULE{}} | {noreply, #?MODULE{}}.
+waiting({reset, _Category}, MV = #?MODULE{}) ->
+ NewMV = stop_timer(MV),
+ {noreply, NewMV#?MODULE{state = idle}};
+waiting({timeout, Timer}, #?MODULE{timer = Timer} = MV) ->
+ %% The opaque warning is an effect of the call to timer:send_after().
+ {noreply, start_timer(MV#?MODULE{timer = undefined,
+ counters = new_counters()})}.
+
+-spec wait(#?MODULE{}) -> {noreply, #?MODULE{}}.
+wait(MV) ->
+ {noreply, start_timer(MV#?MODULE{state = waiting})}.
+
+-spec stop_timer(#?MODULE{}) -> #?MODULE{}.
+stop_timer(MV) ->
+ case MV#?MODULE.timer of
+ undefined ->
+ MV;
+ Timer ->
+ timer:cancel(Timer),
+ MV#?MODULE{timer = undefined}
+ end.
+
+-spec start_timer(MV :: #?MODULE{}) -> #?MODULE{}.
+start_timer(MV) ->
+ case MV#?MODULE.timer of
+ undefined ->
+ %% Note: timer:send_after() returns {ok, TRef} | {error, _}.
+ MV#?MODULE{timer = timer:send_after(1000, ?MODULE)};
+ _Timer ->
+ start_timer(stop_timer(MV))
+ end.
+
+-spec new_counters() -> counters().
+new_counters() ->
+ #{counter1 => 10, 2 => 10}.
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/src/opaque_key/opaque_key_adt.erl b/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/src/opaque_key/opaque_key_adt.erl
index b98c713c6b..9228cfa413 100644
--- a/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/src/opaque_key/opaque_key_adt.erl
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/test/map_SUITE_data/src/opaque_key/opaque_key_adt.erl
@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ s0() -> #{}.
s1() -> #{3 => a}.
-spec s2() -> s(atom() | 3).
-s2() -> #{3 => a}. %% Contract breakage (not found)
+s2() -> #{3 => a}. %% Contract breakage
-spec s3() -> s(atom() | 3).
s3() -> #{3 => 5, a => 6, 7 => 8}.
diff --git a/lib/dialyzer/vsn.mk b/lib/dialyzer/vsn.mk
index 866a82ee3e..d130b14fec 100644
--- a/lib/dialyzer/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/dialyzer/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-DIALYZER_VSN = 3.2.1
+DIALYZER_VSN = 3.2.2
diff --git a/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_sctp.xml b/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_sctp.xml
index c9b74a9ec5..62e958870e 100644
--- a/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_sctp.xml
+++ b/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_sctp.xml
@@ -1,5 +1,7 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE erlref SYSTEM "erlref.dtd" [
+ <!ENTITY man_tcp_sender
+ '<seealso marker="diameter_tcp#sender">diameter_tcp(3)</seealso>'>
<!ENTITY gen_sctp '<seealso marker="kernel:gen_sctp">gen_sctp(3)</seealso>'>
<!ENTITY gen_sctp_open1
'<seealso marker="kernel:gen_sctp#open-1">gen_sctp:open/1</seealso>'>
@@ -78,7 +80,11 @@ and implements the behaviour documented in
<v>Reason = term()</v>
<v>OwnOpt = {raddr, &ip_address;}
| {rport, integer()}
- | {accept, Match}</v>
+ | {accept, Match}
+ | {unordered, boolean() | pos_integer()}
+ | {packet, boolean() | raw}
+ | {message_cb, &mod_eval;}
+ | {sender, boolean()}</v>
<v>SctpOpt = term()</v>
<v>Match = &ip_address; | string() | [Match]</v>
</type>
@@ -106,6 +112,41 @@ A string-valued <c>Match</c> that does not parse as an address is
interpreted as a regular expression.</p>
<p>
+Option <c>unordered</c> specifies whether or not to use unordered
+delivery, integer <c>N</c> being equivalent to <c>N =&lt; OS</c>,
+where <c>OS</c> is the number of outbound streams negotiated on the
+association in question.
+Regardless of configuration, sending is ordered on stream 0
+until reception of a second incoming message, to ensure that a peer
+receives capabilities exchange messages before any other.
+Defaults to <c>false</c>.</p>
+
+<p>
+Option <c>packet</c> determines how/if an incoming message is
+packaged into a diameter_packet record.
+If <c>false</c> then messages are received as binary().
+If <c>true</c> then as a record with the binary() message in the
+<c>bin</c> field and a <c>{stream, Id}</c> tuple in the
+<c>transport_data</c> field, where <c>Id</c> is the identifier of the
+inbound stream the message was received on.
+If <c>raw</c> then as a record with the received ancillary
+sctp_sndrcvinfo record in the <c>transport_data</c> field.
+Defaults to <c>true</c>.</p>
+
+<p>
+Options <c>message_cb</c> and <c>sender</c> have semantics identical
+to those documented in &man_tcp_sender;, but with the message argument
+to a <c>recv</c> callback being as directed by the <c>packet</c>
+option.</p>
+
+<p>
+An <c>{outstream, Id}</c> tuple in the <c>transport_data</c> field of
+a outgoing diameter_packet record sets the outbound stream on which
+the message is sent, modulo the negotiated number of outbound streams.
+Any other value causes successive such sends to cycle though all
+outbound streams.</p>
+
+<p>
Remaining options are any accepted by &gen_sctp_open1;, with the exception
of options <c>mode</c>, <c>binary</c>, <c>list</c>, <c>active</c>
and <c>sctp_events</c>.
@@ -121,29 +162,16 @@ connecting transport.</p>
<warning>
<p>
-An insufficiently large receive buffer may result in a peer having to
+An small receive buffer may result in a peer having to
resend incoming messages: set the &inet; option <c>recbuf</c> to increase
the buffer size.</p>
<p>
-An insufficiently large send buffer may result in outgoing messages
+An small send buffer may result in outgoing messages
being discarded: set the &inet; option <c>sndbuf</c> to increase
the buffer size.</p>
</warning>
-<p>
-The <c>transport_data</c> field of record <c>diameter_packet</c>
-is used to communicate the stream on which an inbound message
-has been received, or on which an outbound message should be sent.
-The value will be of the form <c>{stream, Id}</c> for an inbound
-message passed to a &app_handle_request; or &app_handle_answer;
-callback.
-For an outbound message, <c>{outstream, Id}</c> in the return value of
-&app_handle_request; or &app_prepare_retransmit; sets the outbound
-stream, the stream id being interpreted modulo the number of outbound
-streams.
-Any other value, or not setting a value, causes successive such sends
-to cycle though all outbound streams.</p>
</desc>
</func>
diff --git a/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_soc.xml b/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_soc.xml
index ae404fcda4..28e01ff1be 100644
--- a/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_soc.xml
+++ b/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_soc.xml
@@ -1,15 +1,22 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE chapter SYSTEM "chapter.dtd" [
+ <!ENTITY gen_sctp '<seealso marker="kernel:gen_sctp">gen_sctp(3)</seealso>'>
+ <!ENTITY gen_tcp '<seealso marker="kernel:gen_tcp">gen_tcp(3)</seealso>'>
+ <!ENTITY service '<seealso marker="diameter#start_service-2">service</seealso>'>
+ <!ENTITY capabilities '<seealso marker="diameter#capability">capabilities</seealso>'>
+ <!ENTITY events '<seealso marker="diameter#service_event">events</seealso>'>
+ <!ENTITY NA '&#8212;'>
+ <!ENTITY BR '<br/>&nbsp;<br/>'>
<!ENTITY % also SYSTEM "seealso.ent" >
%also;
]>
-<chapter xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude">
+<chapter>
<header>
<copyright>
<year>2011</year>
-<year>2016</year>
+<year>2017</year>
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
@@ -41,63 +48,1285 @@ limitations under the License.
</header>
<p>
-Known points of questionable or non-compliance.</p>
+The table below summarizes the diameter application's compliance with
+&the_rfc;.
+Since the diameter application isn't a Diameter node on its own,
+compliance is strictly the responsibility of the user in many cases,
+diameter providing the means for the user to be compliant
+rather than being compliant on its own.</p>
-<!-- ===================================================================== -->
-
-<section>
-<title>&the_rfc;</title>
-
-<list>
-
-<item>
-<p>
-There is no support for DTLS over SCTP.</p>
-</item>
-
-<item>
<p>
-There is no explicit support for peer discovery (section 5.2).
-It can possibly be implemented on top of diameter as is but this is
-probably something that diameter should do.</p>
-</item>
+The Compliance column notes <em>C</em> (Compliant) if the required
+functionality is implemented, <em>PC</em> (Partially Compliant) if
+there are limitations, <em>NC</em> (Not Compliant) if functionality is
+not implemented, or a dash if text is informational or only places
+requirements that must be met by the user's implementation.</p>
-<item>
<p>
-The peer state machine's election process (section 5.6.4) isn't
-implemented as specified since it assumes knowledge of a
-peer's Origin-Host before sending it a CER. (The identity becoming known
-upon reception of CEA.)
-The possibility of configuring
-the peer's Origin-Host could be added, along with handling of the case
-that it sends something else, but for many applications this will
-just be unnecessary configuration of a value that it has no control over.</p>
-</item>
-<!-- Transport protocol plus address/port, which we do know when
- sending and receiving CER, is enough to definitely identify
- the peer. However, there's nothing stopping a peer from using
- different identities on different transport protocols, even
- if it's maybe a bit far-fetched. -->
-
-</list>
-
-<xi:include href="diameter_soc_rfc6733.xml"/>
-
-</section>
+Capitalized <em>Diameter</em> refers to the protocol, lowercase
+<em>diameter</em> to the Erlang application.</p>
<!-- ===================================================================== -->
<section>
-<title>RFC 3539</title>
+<title>&the_rfc; - Diameter Base Protocol</title>
-<p>
-RFC 3539 is more difficult to comply to since it discusses
-problems as much as it requires functionality but all the MUST's are
-covered, the watchdog state machine being the primary one.
-Of the optional functionality, load balancing is left to the
-diameter user (since it's the one deciding who to send to) and
-there is no Congestion Manager.</p>
+<table>
+<row>
+ <cell><em>Section</em></cell>
+ <cell><em>Title</em></cell>
+ <cell><em>Compliance</em></cell>
+ <cell><em>Notes</em></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1</cell>
+ <cell>Introduction</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1.1</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Protocol</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1.1.1</cell>
+ <cell>Description of the Document Set</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1.1.2</cell>
+ <cell>Conventions Used in This Document</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1.1.3</cell>
+ <cell>Changes from RFC 3588</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>It is possible to configure a 3588 dictionary in
+ order to get 3588 semantics, where the differ from 6733.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1.2</cell>
+ <cell>Terminology</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1.3</cell>
+ <cell>Approach to Extensibility</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>The dictionary interface documented in &man_dict; provides
+ extensibility, allowing the user to defined new AVPs, commands, and
+ applications.
+ Ready dictionaries are provided for the &the_rfc; common message, base
+ accounting, and relay applications, as well as for RFC 7683,
+ Diameter Overload Indicator Conveyance.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1.3.1</cell>
+ <cell>Defining New AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1.3.2</cell>
+ <cell>Creating New AVPs</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>New AVPs can be defined using the dictionary interface.
+ Both both RFC data formats and extensions are supported.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1.3.3</cell>
+ <cell>Creating New Commands</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>New commands can be defined using the dictionary interface.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>1.3.4</cell>
+ <cell>Creating New Diameter Applications</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>New applications can be defined using the dictionary interface.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2</cell>
+ <cell>Protocol Overview</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Session state is the responsibility of the user.&BR;
+ The role of a Diameter node is determined by the user's
+ implementation.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.1</cell>
+ <cell>Transport</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>Ports are configured by the user: diameter places no
+ restrictions.&BR;
+ The transport interface documented in &man_transport;
+ allows the user to implement their own methods.
+ Ready support is provided for TCP, TCP/TLS, and SCTP, but not
+ DTLS/SCTP.&BR;
+ Multiple connections to the same peer is possible.
+ ICMP messages are not interpreted.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.1.1</cell>
+ <cell>SCTP Guidelines</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Unordered sending is configurable in &man_sctp;.
+ There is no special handling of DPR/DPA: since a user that cares
+ about pending answers should wait for them before initiating
+ DPR.&BR;
+ A PPID can be configured with a a gen_sctp sctp_default_send_param
+ option.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.2</cell>
+ <cell>Securing Diameter Messages</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>DTLS is not supported by &man_sctp;. See also
+ 2.1.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.3</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Application Compliance</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.4</cell>
+ <cell>Application Identifiers</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>The user configures diameter with the identifiers to send at
+ capabilities exchange, along with corresponding dictionaries
+ defining the messages of the applications.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.5</cell>
+ <cell>Connections vs. Sessions</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Connections are realized by configuring transport. Sessions
+ are the responsibility of the user.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.6</cell>
+ <cell>Peer Table</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>Routing is implemented by the user in callbacks documented in
+ &man_app;.
+ A peer table of the documented form is not exposed to the user.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.7</cell>
+ <cell>Routing Table</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>See 2.6.
+ A routing table of the documented form is not exposed to
+ the user.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.8</cell>
+ <cell>Role of Diameter Agents</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Most role-specific behaviour is implemented by the user.
+ How a node advertises itself at capabilities exchange is determined
+ by user configuration.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.8.1</cell>
+ <cell>Relay Agents</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.8.2</cell>
+ <cell>Proxy Agents</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.8.3</cell>
+ <cell>Redirect Agents</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.8.4</cell>
+ <cell>Translation Agents</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>2.9</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Path Authorization</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Authorization is the responsibility of the user.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>3</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Header</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Hop-by-Hop and End-to-End Identifiers are set by diameter when
+ sending outgoing requests.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>3.1</cell>
+ <cell>Command Codes</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>3.2</cell>
+ <cell>Command Code Format Specification</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Commands are defined as CCF specifications in dictionary
+ files.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>3.3</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Command Naming Conventions</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>4</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter AVPs</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Any required padding is added by diameter when encoding
+ outgoing messages.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>4.1</cell>
+ <cell>AVP Header</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>4.1.1</cell>
+ <cell>Optional Header Elements</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>4.2</cell>
+ <cell>Basic AVP Data Formats</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>4.3</cell>
+ <cell>Derived AVP Data Formats</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Arbitrary derived data formats are supported by the dictionary
+ interface.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>4.3.1</cell>
+ <cell>Common Derived AVP Data Formats</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Beware that RFC 6733 changed the DiameterURI transport/port
+ defaults specified in RFC3588.
+ Relying on the defaults can result in interoperability
+ problems.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>4.4</cell>
+ <cell>Grouped AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>The M-bit on a component AVP of a Grouped AVP that does not
+ set M is ignored: such AVPs are not regarded as erroneous at
+ decode.&BR;
+ Grouped AVPs are defined as CCF specifications in dictionary
+ files.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>4.4.1</cell>
+ <cell>Example AVP with a Grouped Data Type</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>4.5</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Base Protocol AVPs</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>The base AVPs are defined in the common dictionary provided by
+ diameter.
+ There are common dictionaries for both RFC 3588 and RFC 6733 since
+ the latter made changes to both syntax and semantics.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Peers</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.1</cell>
+ <cell>Peer Connections</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>A peer's DiameterIdentity is not required when initiating a
+ connection: the identify is received at capabilities exchange, at
+ which time the connection can be rejected if the identity is
+ objectionable.&BR;
+ The number of connections established depends on the user's
+ configuration. Multiple connections per peer is possible.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.2</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Peer Discovery</cell>
+ <cell>NC</cell>
+ <cell>No form of peer discovery is implemented.
+ The user can implement this independently of diameter if
+ required.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.3</cell>
+ <cell>Capabilities Exchange</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>All supported applications are sent in CEA.
+ The user can reject an incoming CER or CEA in a configured
+ callback.&BR;
+ Both transport security at connection establishment and
+ negotiated via an Inband-Security AVP are supported.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.3.1</cell>
+ <cell>Capabilities-Exchange-Request</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>CER is sent and received by diameter.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.3.2</cell>
+ <cell>Capabilities-Exchange-Answer</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>CEA is sent and received by diameter.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.3.3</cell>
+ <cell>Vendor-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.3.4</cell>
+ <cell>Firmware-Revision AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.3.5</cell>
+ <cell>Host-IP-Address AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.3.6</cell>
+ <cell>Supported-Vendor-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.3.7</cell>
+ <cell>Product-Name AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.4</cell>
+ <cell>Disconnecting Peer Connections</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>DPA will not be answered with error: a peer that wants to a
+ avoid a race can wait for pending answers before sending
+ DPR.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.4.1</cell>
+ <cell>Disconnect-Peer-Request</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>DPR is sent by diameter in response to configuration
+ changes requiring a connection to be broken.
+ The user can also send DPR.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.4.2</cell>
+ <cell>Disconnect-Peer-Answer</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>DPR is answered by diameter.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.4.3</cell>
+ <cell>Disconnect-Cause AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.5</cell>
+ <cell>Transport Failure Detection</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.5.1</cell>
+ <cell>Device-Watchdog-Request</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>DWR is sent and received by diameter.
+ Callbacks notify the user of transitions into and out of the OKAY
+ state.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.5.2</cell>
+ <cell>Device-Watchdog-Answer</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>DWA is sent and received by diameter.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.5.3</cell>
+ <cell>Transport Failure Algorithm</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.5.4</cell>
+ <cell>Failover and Failback Procedures</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.6</cell>
+ <cell>Peer State Machine</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>The election process is modified as described in 5.6.4.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.6.1</cell>
+ <cell>Incoming Connections</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.6.2</cell>
+ <cell>Events</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.6.3</cell>
+ <cell>Actions</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>5.6.4</cell>
+ <cell>The Election Process</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>As documented, the election assumes knowledge of a peer's
+ DiameterIdentity when initiating a connection, which diameter
+ doesn't require. Connections will be accepted if configuration
+ allows multiple connections per peer to be established or there is
+ no existing connection. Note that the election process is only
+ applicable when multiple connections per peer is
+ disallowed.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Message Processing</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.1</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Request Routing Overview</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Routing is performed by the user.
+ A callback from diameter provides a list of available suitable peer
+ connections.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.1.1</cell>
+ <cell>Originating a Request</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Requests are constructed by the user; diameter sets header
+ fields as defined in the relevant dictionary.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.1.2</cell>
+ <cell>Sending a Request</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.1.3</cell>
+ <cell>Receiving Requests</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Loops are detected by diameter when the return value of a
+ request callback asks that a request be forwarded.
+ Loop detection in other cases is the responsibility of the
+ user.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.1.4</cell>
+ <cell>Processing Local Requests</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>The user decides whether or not to process a request locally
+ in the request callback from diameter.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.1.5</cell>
+ <cell>Request Forwarding</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>See 2.6.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.1.6</cell>
+ <cell>Request Routing</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>See 2.7.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.1.7</cell>
+ <cell>Predictive Loop Avoidance</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>See 6.1.3.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.1.8</cell>
+ <cell>Redirecting Requests</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>See 2.6.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.1.9</cell>
+ <cell>Relaying and Proxying Requests</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>A Route-Record AVP is appended by diameter when the return
+ value of a request callback asks that a request be forwarded.
+ Appending the AVP in other cases is the responsibility of the
+ user.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.2</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Answer Processing</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Answer message are constructed by the user, except in the case
+ of some protocol errors, in which case the procedures are
+ followed.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.2.1</cell>
+ <cell>Processing Received Answers</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Answers with an unknown Hop-by-Hop Identifier are
+ discarded.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.2.2</cell>
+ <cell>Relaying and Proxying Answers</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Modifying answers is the responsibility of the user in
+ callbacks from diameter.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.3</cell>
+ <cell>Origin-Host AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>The order of AVPs in an encoded message is determined by
+ the CCF of the message in question.&BR;
+ AVPs defined in the RFC are defined in dictionaries provided by
+ diameter.
+ Their proper use in application messages is the responsibility of
+ the user.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.4</cell>
+ <cell>Origin-Realm AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.5</cell>
+ <cell>Destination-Host AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.6</cell>
+ <cell>Destination-Realm AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.7</cell>
+ <cell>Routing AVPs</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.7.1</cell>
+ <cell>Route-Record AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.7.2</cell>
+ <cell>Proxy-Info AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.7.3</cell>
+ <cell>Proxy-Host AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.7.4</cell>
+ <cell>Proxy-State AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.8</cell>
+ <cell>Auth-Application-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.9</cell>
+ <cell>Acct-Application-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.10</cell>
+ <cell>Inband-Security-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>See 2.1.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.11</cell>
+ <cell>Vendor-Specific-Application-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Note that the CCF of this AVP is not the same as in RFC
+ 3588.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.12</cell>
+ <cell>Redirect-Host AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.13</cell>
+ <cell>Redirect-Host-Usage AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>6.14</cell>
+ <cell>Redirect-Max-Cache-Time AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7</cell>
+ <cell>Error Handling</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Answers are formulated by the user in most cases.
+ Answers setting the E-bit can be sent by diameter itself in response
+ to a request that cannot be handled by the user.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.1</cell>
+ <cell>Result-Code AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.1.1</cell>
+ <cell>Informational</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.1.2</cell>
+ <cell>Success</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.1.3</cell>
+ <cell>Protocol Errors</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Result codes 3001, 3002, 3005, and 3007 can be sent in answers
+ formulated by diameter, if configured to do so.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.1.4</cell>
+ <cell>Transient Failures</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Result code 4003 is sent in CEA if there is an existing
+ connection to the peer in question and configuration does not allow
+ more than one.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.1.5</cell>
+ <cell>Permanent Failures</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>Message reception detects 5001, 5004,
+ 5005, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5014, 5015, and 5017 errors.
+ It ignores 5013 errors at the admonition of sections 3 and 4.1.&BR;
+ Note that RFC 3588 did not allow 5xxx result codes in
+ answers setting the E-bit, while RFC 6733 does.
+ This is a potential interoperability problem since the Diameter
+ protocol version has not changed.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.2</cell>
+ <cell>Error Bit</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.3</cell>
+ <cell>Error-Message AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>The user can include this AVP as required.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.4</cell>
+ <cell>Error-Reporting-Host AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>The user can include this AVP as required.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.5</cell>
+ <cell>Failed-AVP AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell>The user constructs application-specific messages, but
+ diameter provides failed AVPs in message callbacks. Failed component AVPs
+ are grouped within the relevant Grouped AVPs.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.6</cell>
+ <cell>Experimental-Result AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>7.7</cell>
+ <cell>Experimental-Result-Code AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter User Sessions</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Authorization and accounting AVPs are defined in provided
+ dictionaries. Their proper use is the responsibility of the
+ user.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.1</cell>
+ <cell>Authorization Session State Machine</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Authorization is the responsibility of the user: diameter does
+ not implement this state machine.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.2</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting Session State Machine</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting is the responsibility of the user: diameter does
+ not implement this state machine.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.3</cell>
+ <cell>Server-Initiated Re-Auth</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.3.1</cell>
+ <cell>Re-Auth-Request</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.3.2</cell>
+ <cell>Re-Auth-Answer</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.4</cell>
+ <cell>Session Termination</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Session-related messages and AVPs are defined in provided
+ dictionaries. Their proper use is the user's responsibility.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.4.1</cell>
+ <cell>Session-Termination-Request</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.4.2</cell>
+ <cell>Session-Termination-Answer</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.5</cell>
+ <cell>Aborting a Session</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Session-related messages and AVPs are defined in provided
+ dictionaries. Their proper use is the user's responsibility.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.5.1</cell>
+ <cell>Abort-Session-Request</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.5.2</cell>
+ <cell>Abort-Session-Answer</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.6</cell>
+ <cell>Inferring Session Termination from Origin-State-Id</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Session-related messages and AVPs are defined in provided
+ dictionaries. Their proper use is the user's responsibility.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.7</cell>
+ <cell>Auth-Request-Type AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.8</cell>
+ <cell>Session-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.9</cell>
+ <cell>Authorization-Lifetime AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.10</cell>
+ <cell>Auth-Grace-Period AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.11</cell>
+ <cell>Auth-Session-State AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.12</cell>
+ <cell>Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.13</cell>
+ <cell>Session-Timeout AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.14</cell>
+ <cell>User-Name AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.15</cell>
+ <cell>Termination-Cause AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.16</cell>
+ <cell>Origin-State-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.17</cell>
+ <cell>Session-Binding AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.18</cell>
+ <cell>Session-Server-Failover AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.19</cell>
+ <cell>Multi-Round-Time-Out AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.20</cell>
+ <cell>Class AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>8.21</cell>
+ <cell>Event-Timestamp AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting-related messages and AVPs are defined in provided
+ dictionaries. Their proper use is the user's responsibility.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.1</cell>
+ <cell>Server Directed Model</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.2</cell>
+ <cell>Protocol Messages</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.3</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting Application Extension and Requirements</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.4</cell>
+ <cell>Fault Resilience</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.5</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting Records</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.6</cell>
+ <cell>Correlation of Accounting Records</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.7</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting Command Codes</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.7.1</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting-Request</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.7.2</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting-Answer</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.8</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting AVPs</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.8.1</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting-Record-Type AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.8.2</cell>
+ <cell>Acct-Interim-Interval AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.8.3</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting-Record-Number AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.8.4</cell>
+ <cell>Acct-Session-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.8.5</cell>
+ <cell>Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.8.6</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>9.8.7</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP</cell>
+ <cell>C</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>10</cell>
+ <cell>AVP Occurrence Tables</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>10.1</cell>
+ <cell>Base Protocol Command AVP Table</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>10.2</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting AVP Table</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11</cell>
+ <cell>IANA Considerations</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.1</cell>
+ <cell>AVP Header</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.1.1</cell>
+ <cell>AVP Codes</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.1.2</cell>
+ <cell>AVP Flags</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.2</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Header</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.2.1</cell>
+ <cell>Command Codes</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.2.2</cell>
+ <cell>Command Flags</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3</cell>
+ <cell>AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.1</cell>
+ <cell>Experimental-Result-Code AVP</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.2</cell>
+ <cell>Result-Code AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.3</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting-Record-Type AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.4</cell>
+ <cell>Termination-Cause AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.5</cell>
+ <cell>Redirect-Host-Usage AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.6</cell>
+ <cell>Session-Server-Failover AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.7</cell>
+ <cell>Session-Binding AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.8</cell>
+ <cell>Disconnect-Cause AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.9</cell>
+ <cell>Auth-Request-Type AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.10</cell>
+ <cell>Auth-Session-State AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.11</cell>
+ <cell>Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.12</cell>
+ <cell>Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP Values</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.3.13</cell>
+ <cell>Inband-Security-Id AVP (code 299)</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.4</cell>
+ <cell>_diameters Service Name and Port Number Registration</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.5</cell>
+ <cell>SCTP Payload Protocol Identifiers</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>11.6</cell>
+ <cell>S-NAPTR Parameters</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>12</cell>
+ <cell>Diameter Protocol-Related Configurable Parameters</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>13</cell>
+ <cell>Security Considerations</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>See 2.1.&BR;
+ IPsec is transparent to diameter.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>13.1</cell>
+ <cell>TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP Usage</cell>
+ <cell>PC</cell>
+ <cell>See 2.1.</cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>13.2</cell>
+ <cell>Peer-to-Peer Considerations</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>13.3</cell>
+ <cell>AVP Considerations</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>14</cell>
+ <cell>References</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>14.1</cell>
+ <cell>Normative References</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+<row>
+ <cell>14.2</cell>
+ <cell>Informative References</cell>
+ <cell>&NA;</cell>
+ <cell></cell>
+</row>
+
+<tcaption>RFC 6733 Compliance</tcaption>
+</table>
</section>
</chapter>
+
+<!-- LocalWords: AVP AVPs CCF DiameterIdentity CEA CER Inband IP
+-->
+<!-- LocalWords: DPA DPR DWR DWA Failover Failback Proxying Auth
+-->
+<!-- LocalWords: interoperability Multi Timestamp Realtime
+-->
diff --git a/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_soc_rfc6733.xml b/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_soc_rfc6733.xml
deleted file mode 100644
index 2098965706..0000000000
--- a/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_soc_rfc6733.xml
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8693 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
-
-<!--
-
-<copyright>
-<year>2013</year><year>2016</year>
-<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
-</copyright>
-
-<legalnotice>
-Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
-you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
-You may obtain a copy of the License at
-
- http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
-
-Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
-distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
-WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
-See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
-limitations under the License.
-
-</legalnotice>
-
--->
-
-<!DOCTYPE section SYSTEM "chapter.dtd" [
- <!ENTITY gen_sctp '<seealso marker="kernel:gen_sctp">gen_sctp(3)</seealso>'>
- <!ENTITY gen_tcp '<seealso marker="kernel:gen_tcp">gen_tcp(3)</seealso>'>
- <!ENTITY service '<seealso marker="diameter#start_service-2">service</seealso>'>
- <!ENTITY capabilities '<seealso marker="diameter#capability">capabilities</seealso>'>
- <!ENTITY events '<seealso marker="diameter#service_event">events</seealso>'>
- <!ENTITY nada '<p>No comment.</p>'>
- <!ENTITY % also SYSTEM "seealso.ent" >
- %also;
-]>
-
-<section>
-<title>Commentary</title>
-
-<p>
-A more detailed commentary on &the_rfc; follows.
-Its purpose is to (hopefully) clarify not only what is supported but
-how, given that semantics and features discussed in the RFC are not
-solely the responsibility of the diameter application:
-in many cases much depends on the configuration a user passes to
-diameter, the implementation of &man_app; callback modules in
-particular.</p>
-
-<p>
-Comments apply to all text following the preceding comment.
-Be sure to distinguish between capitalized <em>Diameter</em>, the
-protocol defined by the RFC, and lowercase <em>diameter</em>, the
-Erlang application to which the commentary applies.</p>
-
-<warning>
-<p>
-The commentary is not yet complete.
-Comments currently stop at chapter 4.</p>
-</warning>
-
-<pre>
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 6]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-1. Introduction
-
- Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting (AAA) protocols such as
- TACACS [RFC1492] and RADIUS [RFC2865] were initially deployed to
- provide dial-up PPP [RFC1661] and terminal server access. Over time,
- AAA support was needed on many new access technologies, the scale and
- complexity of AAA networks grew, and AAA was also used on new
- applications (such as voice over IP). This led to new demands on AAA
- protocols.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Note that diameter implements the Diameter protocol as defined in
-&the_rfc;.
-It also supported the previous version of the protocol, as defined in
-RFC 3588, when there are differences.
-(Which will be noted below.)
-It does not support RADIUS.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- Network access requirements for AAA protocols are summarized in
- Aboba, et al. [RFC2989]. These include:
-
- Failover
-
- [RFC2865] does not define failover mechanisms and, as a result,
- failover behavior differs between implementations. In order to
- provide well-defined failover behavior, Diameter supports
- application-layer acknowledgements and defines failover algorithms
- and the associated state machine.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
- Transmission-level security
-
- RADIUS [RFC2865] defines an application-layer authentication and
- integrity scheme that is required only for use with response
- packets. While [RFC2869] defines an additional authentication and
- integrity mechanism, use is only required during Extensible
- Authentication Protocol (EAP) [RFC3748] sessions. While attribute
- hiding is supported, [RFC2865] does not provide support for per-
- packet confidentiality. In accounting, [RFC2866] assumes that
- replay protection is provided by the backend billing server rather
- than within the protocol itself.
-
- While [RFC3162] defines the use of IPsec with RADIUS, support for
- IPsec is not required. In order to provide universal support for
- transmission-level security, and enable both intra- and inter-
- domain AAA deployments, Diameter provides support for TLS/TCP and
- DTLS/SCTP. Security is discussed in Section 13.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Whether or not IPsec is used is transparent to diameter.</p>
-
-<p>
-The transport protocol used on a given peer connection is also
-transparent to diameter in that transport to diameter is simply a
-module that implements the transport protocol documented in
-&man_transport;.
-A diameter user configures this module as the &mod_transport_opt;
-<c>transport_module</c>.</p>
-
-<p>
-While a user can implement their own transport modules, diameter
-includes implementations for TCP and SCTP:
-&man_tcp; based on &gen_tcp; and &man_sctp; based on &gen_sctp;.
-The former supports TLS but the latter does not currently support
-DTLS.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- Reliable transport
-
- RADIUS runs over UDP, and does not define retransmission behavior;
- as a result, reliability varies between implementations. As
- described in [RFC2975], this is a major issue in accounting, where
- packet loss may translate directly into revenue loss. In order to
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 7]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- provide well-defined transport behavior, Diameter runs over
- reliable transport mechanisms (TCP, Stream Control Transmission
- Protocol (SCTP)) as defined in [RFC3539].
-
- Agent support
-
- RADIUS does not provide for explicit support for agents, including
- proxies, redirects, and relays. Since the expected behavior is
- not defined, it varies between implementations. Diameter defines
- agent behavior explicitly; this is described in Section 2.8.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
- Server-initiated messages
-
- While server-initiated messages are defined in RADIUS [RFC5176],
- support is optional. This makes it difficult to implement
- features such as unsolicited disconnect or re-authentication/
- re-authorization on demand across a heterogeneous deployment. To
- address this issue, support for server-initiated messages is
- mandatory in Diameter.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-A diameter user can both send and receive messages.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- Transition support
-
- While Diameter does not share a common protocol data unit (PDU)
- with RADIUS, considerable effort has been expended in enabling
- backward compatibility with RADIUS so that the two protocols may
- be deployed in the same network. Initially, it is expected that
- Diameter will be deployed within new network devices, as well as
- within gateways enabling communication between legacy RADIUS
- devices and Diameter agents. This capability enables Diameter
- support to be added to legacy networks, by addition of a gateway
- or server speaking both RADIUS and Diameter.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-RADIUS Attributes can be redefined as Diameter AVP's using diameter's
-&man_dict; interface but diameter provides no such definitions.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- In addition to addressing the above requirements, Diameter also
- provides support for the following:
-
- Capability negotiation
-
- RADIUS does not support error messages, capability negotiation, or
- a mandatory/non-mandatory flag for attributes. Since RADIUS
- clients and servers are not aware of each other's capabilities,
- they may not be able to successfully negotiate a mutually
- acceptable service or, in some cases, even be aware of what
- service has been implemented. Diameter includes support for error
- handling (Section 7), capability negotiation (Section 5.3), and
- mandatory/non-mandatory Attribute-Value Pairs (AVPs)
- (Section 4.1).
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 8]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Peer discovery and configuration
-
- RADIUS implementations typically require that the name or address
- of servers or clients be manually configured, along with the
- corresponding shared secrets. This results in a large
- administrative burden and creates the temptation to reuse the
- RADIUS shared secret, which can result in major security
- vulnerabilities if the Request Authenticator is not globally and
- temporally unique as required in [RFC2865]. Through DNS, Diameter
- enables dynamic discovery of peers (see Section 5.2). Derivation
- of dynamic session keys is enabled via transmission-level
- security.
-
- Over time, the capabilities of Network Access Server (NAS) devices
- have increased substantially. As a result, while Diameter is a
- considerably more sophisticated protocol than RADIUS, it remains
- feasible to implement it within embedded devices.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-1.1. Diameter Protocol
-
- The Diameter base protocol provides the following facilities:
-
- o Ability to exchange messages and deliver AVPs
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-There are two interfaces directly involved in message exchange when
-using diameter: the function &mod_call; for sending outgoing requests,
-and the application callback interface, documented in &man_app; for
-receiving incoming request and answers.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- o Capabilities negotiation
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Capabilities negotiation is the responsibility of diameter:
-a user configures a diameter service and/or transport with
-&capabilities; to provide AVP values for CER and CEA messages but it
-is diameter itself that sends these messages.
-A user receives notification of a successful capabilities exchange by
-way of &app_peer_up; callbacks.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- o Error notification
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-A user can subscribe to &events;, using &mod_subscribe;, in order to
-receive notification of various failures.
-Errors in Diameter messaging are communicated via the application
-callbacks &app_handle_request;, &app_handle_answer; and
-&app_handle_error;.</p>
-
-
-<pre>
-
- o Extensibility, required in [RFC2989], through addition of new
- applications, commands, and AVPs
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Support for applications, commands and AVP's is extensible using
-diameter's dictionary interface, as documented in &man_dict;.
-Dictionaries are compiled to Erlang encode/decode modules using
-&man_compile; or &man_make;.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- o Basic services necessary for applications, such as the handling of
- user sessions or accounting
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Compiled dictionaries are provided for the RFC 3588 and RFC 6733
-Diameter applications: common, base accounting and relay.
-Dictionaries for a number of standardized
-applications are provided in uncompiled form below the <c>examples</c>
-subdirectory of the diameter application directory.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- All data delivered by the protocol is in the form of AVPs. Some of
- these AVP values are used by the Diameter protocol itself, while
- others deliver data associated with particular applications that
- employ Diameter. AVPs may be arbitrarily added to Diameter messages,
- the only restriction being that the Command Code Format (CCF)
- specification (Section 3.2) be satisfied. AVPs are used by the base
- Diameter protocol to support the following required features:
-
- o Transporting of user authentication information, for the purposes
- of enabling the Diameter server to authenticate the user
-
- o Transporting of service-specific authorization information,
- between client and servers, allowing the peers to decide whether a
- user's access request should be granted
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 9]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- o Exchanging resource usage information, which may be used for
- accounting purposes, capacity planning, etc.
-
- o Routing, relaying, proxying, and redirecting of Diameter messages
- through a server hierarchy
-
- The Diameter base protocol satisfies the minimum requirements for a
- AAA protocol, as specified by [RFC2989]. The base protocol may be
- used by itself for accounting purposes only, or it may be used with a
- Diameter application, such as Mobile IPv4 [RFC4004], or network
- access [RFC4005]. It is also possible for the base protocol to be
- extended for use in new applications, via the addition of new
- commands or AVPs. The initial focus of Diameter was network access
- and accounting applications. A truly generic AAA protocol used by
- many applications might provide functionality not provided by
- Diameter. Therefore, it is imperative that the designers of new
- applications understand their requirements before using Diameter.
- See Section 1.3.4 for more information on Diameter applications.
-
- Any node can initiate a request. In that sense, Diameter is a peer-
- to-peer protocol. In this document, a Diameter client is a device at
- the edge of the network that performs access control, such as a
- Network Access Server (NAS) or a Foreign Agent (FA). A Diameter
- client generates Diameter messages to request authentication,
- authorization, and accounting services for the user. A Diameter
- agent is a node that does not provide local user authentication or
- authorization services; agents include proxies, redirects, and relay
- agents. A Diameter server performs authentication and/or
- authorization of the user. A Diameter node may act as an agent for
- certain requests while acting as a server for others.
-
- The Diameter protocol also supports server-initiated messages, such
- as a request to abort service to a particular user.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-1.1.1. Description of the Document Set
-
- The Diameter specification consists of an updated version of the base
- protocol specification (this document) and the Transport Profile
- [RFC3539]. This document obsoletes both RFC 3588 and RFC 5719. A
- summary of the base protocol updates included in this document can be
- found in Section 1.1.3.
-
- This document defines the base protocol specification for AAA, which
- includes support for accounting. There are also a myriad of
- applications documents describing applications that use this base
- specification for Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting.
- These application documents specify how to use the Diameter protocol
- within the context of their application.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 10]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- The Transport Profile document [RFC3539] discusses transport layer
- issues that arise with AAA protocols and recommendations on how to
- overcome these issues. This document also defines the Diameter
- failover algorithm and state machine.
-
- "Clarifications on the Routing of Diameter Request Based on the
- Username and the Realm" [RFC5729] defines specific behavior on how to
- route requests based on the content of the User-Name AVP (Attribute
- Value Pair).
-
-1.1.2. Conventions Used in This Document
-
- The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
- "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
- document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-1.1.3. Changes from RFC 3588
-
- This document obsoletes RFC 3588 but is fully backward compatible
- with that document. The changes introduced in this document focus on
- fixing issues that have surfaced during the implementation of
- Diameter (RFC 3588). An overview of some the major changes are given
- below.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-RFC 6733 is not fully backwards compatible with RFC 3588.
-(For example, in what values of Result-Code values are permissible with
-the E-bit.)
-The implications of incompatibilities for diameter are noted where
-appropriate.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- o Deprecated the use of the Inband-Security AVP for negotiating
- Transport Layer Security (TLS) [RFC5246]. It has been generally
- considered that bootstrapping of TLS via Inband-Security AVP
- creates certain security risks because it does not completely
- protect the information carried in the CER/CEA (Capabilities-
- Exchange-Request/Capabilities-Exchange-Answer). This version of
- Diameter adopts the common approach of defining a well-known
- secured port that peers should use when communicating via TLS/TCP
- and DTLS/SCTP. This new approach augments the existing in-band
- security negotiation, but it does not completely replace it. The
- old method is kept for backward compatibility reasons.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-&man_tcp; supports both methods of negotiating TLS:
-bootstrapping via Inband-Security and directly following connection
-establishment.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- o Deprecated the exchange of CER/CEA messages in the open state.
- This feature was implied in the peer state machine table of RFC
- 3588, but it was not clearly defined anywhere else in that
- document. As work on this document progressed, it became clear
- that the multiplicity of meaning and use of Application-Id AVPs in
- the CER/CEA messages (and the messages themselves) is seen as an
- abuse of the Diameter extensibility rules and thus required
- simplification. Capabilities exchange in the open state has been
- re-introduced in a separate specification [RFC6737], which clearly
- defines new commands for this feature.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Capabilities exchange in the open state is not supported: an incoming
-CER in the open state will cause diameter to ask the relevant
-transport process to terminate, which implies the loss of the peer
-connection in the case of &man_tcp; and &man_sctp;.</p>
-
-<p>
-Capabilities update, as defined by RFC 6737, is not yet supported.
-Support will require diameter to handle CUR/CUA in the same way that
-it handles CER/CEA.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 11]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- o Simplified security requirements. The use of a secured transport
- for exchanging Diameter messages remains mandatory. However, TLS/
- TCP and DTLS/SCTP have become the primary methods of securing
- Diameter with IPsec as a secondary alternative. See Section 13
- for details. The support for the End-to-End security framework
- (E2E-Sequence AVP and 'P'-bit in the AVP header) has also been
- deprecated.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-The End-to-End security framework is not supported since it's use is
-largely unspecified: diameter will set the P-bit in outgoing AVP's as
-directed by the relevant dictionary and/or &app_prepare_request; or
-&app_handle_request; callbacks, but whether or not the P-bit is set on
-incoming AVP's has no consequence.</p>
-
-<p>
-As noted above, DTLS is not currently supported and whether or not
-IPsec is used is transparent to diameter.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- o Changed Diameter extensibility. This includes fixes to the
- Diameter extensibility description (Section 1.3 and others) to
- better aid Diameter application designers; in addition, the new
- specification relaxes the policy with respect to the allocation of
- Command Codes for vendor-specific uses.
-
- o Clarified Application Id usage. Clarify the proper use of
- Application Id information, which can be found in multiple places
- within a Diameter message. This includes correlating Application
- Ids found in the message headers and AVPs. These changes also
- clearly specify the proper Application Id value to use for
- specific base protocol messages (ASR/ASA, STR/STA) as well as
- clarify the content and use of Vendor-Specific-Application-Id.
-
- o Clarified routing fixes. This document more clearly specifies
- what information (AVPs and Application Ids) can be used for making
- general routing decisions. A rule for the prioritization of
- redirect routing criteria when multiple route entries are found
- via redirects has also been added (see Section 6.13).
-
- o Simplified Diameter peer discovery. The Diameter discovery
- process now supports only widely used discovery schemes; the rest
- have been deprecated (see Section 5.2 for details).
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Peer discover is not currently supported: peers to which a node should
-connect must be configured.
-Connection requests are accepted from arbitrary peers but a
-&mod_transport_opt; <c>capabilities_cb</c> can be used to reject a
-peer based on an incoming CER or CEA.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- There are many other miscellaneous fixes that have been introduced in
- this document that may not be considered significant, but they have
- value nonetheless. Examples are removal of obsolete types, fixes to
- the state machine, clarification of the election process, message
- validation, fixes to Failed-AVP and Result-Code AVP values, etc. All
- of the errata filed against RFC 3588 prior to the publication of this
- document have been addressed. A comprehensive list of changes is not
- shown here for practical reasons.
-
-1.2. Terminology
-
- AAA
-
- Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting.
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 12]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- ABNF
-
- Augmented Backus-Naur Form [RFC5234]. A metalanguage with its own
- formal syntax and rules. It is based on the Backus-Naur Form and
- is used to define message exchanges in a bi-directional
- communications protocol.
-
- Accounting
-
- The act of collecting information on resource usage for the
- purpose of capacity planning, auditing, billing, or cost
- allocation.
-
- Accounting Record
-
- An accounting record represents a summary of the resource
- consumption of a user over the entire session. Accounting servers
- creating the accounting record may do so by processing interim
- accounting events or accounting events from several devices
- serving the same user.
-
- Authentication
-
- The act of verifying the identity of an entity (subject).
-
- Authorization
-
- The act of determining whether a requesting entity (subject) will
- be allowed access to a resource (object).
-
- Attribute-Value Pair (AVP)
-
- The Diameter protocol consists of a header followed by one or more
- Attribute-Value-Pairs (AVPs). An AVP includes a header and is
- used to encapsulate protocol-specific data (e.g., routing
- information) as well as authentication, authorization, or
- accounting information.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
- Command Code Format (CCF)
-
- A modified form of ABNF used to define Diameter commands (see
- Section 3.2).
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-The <c>@messages</c> section of the &man_dict; format has the CCF as
-content.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- Diameter Agent
-
- A Diameter Agent is a Diameter node that provides relay, proxy,
- redirect, or translation services.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 13]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Diameter Client
-
- A Diameter client is a Diameter node that supports Diameter client
- applications as well as the base protocol. Diameter clients are
- often implemented in devices situated at the edge of a network and
- provide access control services for that network. Typical
- examples of Diameter clients include the Network Access Server
- (NAS) and the Mobile IP Foreign Agent (FA).
-
- Diameter Node
-
- A Diameter node is a host process that implements the Diameter
- protocol and acts as either a client, an agent, or a server.
-
- Diameter Peer
-
- Two Diameter nodes sharing a direct TCP or SCTP transport
- connection are called Diameter peers.
-
- Diameter Server
-
- A Diameter server is a Diameter node that handles authentication,
- authorization, and accounting requests for a particular realm. By
- its very nature, a Diameter server must support Diameter server
- applications in addition to the base protocol.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-A Diameter Node is implemented by configuring a service
-using &mod_start_service; and one or more transports using
-&mod_add_transport;.
-The service typically represents a Diameter Node but since
-capabilities can be configured on individual transports it's more
-accurate to say that the node is a collection of transports
-advertising the same Origin-Host.</p>
-
-<p>
-The role of a node (agent, client or server) is not something that's
-configured explicitly.
-Transports are either connecting or listening, depending on whether
-diameter should establish a peer connection and send CER or accept
-connections and receive CER, but the role a node implements depends
-largely on dictionary configuration and &man_app; callback
-implementation.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- Downstream
-
- Downstream is used to identify the direction of a particular
- Diameter message from the home server towards the Diameter client.
-
- Home Realm
-
- A Home Realm is the administrative domain with which the user
- maintains an account relationship.
-
- Home Server
-
- A Diameter server that serves the Home Realm.
-
- Interim Accounting
-
- An interim accounting message provides a snapshot of usage during
- a user's session. Typically, it is implemented in order to
- provide for partial accounting of a user's session in case a
- device reboot or other network problem prevents the delivery of a
- session summary message or session record.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 14]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Local Realm
-
- A local realm is the administrative domain providing services to a
- user. An administrative domain may act as a local realm for
- certain users while being a home realm for others.
-
- Multi-session
-
- A multi-session represents a logical linking of several sessions.
- Multi-sessions are tracked by using the Acct-Multi-Session-Id. An
- example of a multi-session would be a Multi-link PPP bundle. Each
- leg of the bundle would be a session while the entire bundle would
- be a multi-session.
-
- Network Access Identifier
-
- The Network Access Identifier, or NAI [RFC4282], is used in the
- Diameter protocol to extract a user's identity and realm. The
- identity is used to identify the user during authentication and/or
- authorization while the realm is used for message routing
- purposes.
-
- Proxy Agent or Proxy
-
- In addition to forwarding requests and responses, proxies make
- policy decisions relating to resource usage and provisioning.
- Typically, this is accomplished by tracking the state of NAS
- devices. While proxies usually do not respond to client requests
- prior to receiving a response from the server, they may originate
- Reject messages in cases where policies are violated. As a
- result, proxies need to understand the semantics of the messages
- passing through them, and they may not support all Diameter
- applications.
-
- Realm
-
- The string in the NAI that immediately follows the '@' character.
- NAI realm names are required to be unique and are piggybacked on
- the administration of the DNS namespace. Diameter makes use of
- the realm, also loosely referred to as domain, to determine
- whether messages can be satisfied locally or whether they must be
- routed or redirected. In RADIUS, realm names are not necessarily
- piggybacked on the DNS namespace but may be independent of it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 15]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Real-Time Accounting
-
- Real-time accounting involves the processing of information on
- resource usage within a defined time window. Typically, time
- constraints are imposed in order to limit financial risk. The
- Diameter Credit-Control Application [RFC4006] is an example of an
- application that defines real-time accounting functionality.
-
- Relay Agent or Relay
-
- Relays forward requests and responses based on routing-related
- AVPs and routing table entries. Since relays do not make policy
- decisions, they do not examine or alter non-routing AVPs. As a
- result, relays never originate messages, do not need to understand
- the semantics of messages or non-routing AVPs, and are capable of
- handling any Diameter application or message type. Since relays
- make decisions based on information in routing AVPs and realm
- forwarding tables, they do not keep state on NAS resource usage or
- sessions in progress.
-
- Redirect Agent
-
- Rather than forwarding requests and responses between clients and
- servers, redirect agents refer clients to servers and allow them
- to communicate directly. Since redirect agents do not sit in the
- forwarding path, they do not alter any AVPs transiting between
- client and server. Redirect agents do not originate messages and
- are capable of handling any message type, although they may be
- configured only to redirect messages of certain types, while
- acting as relay or proxy agents for other types. As with relay
- agents, redirect agents do not keep state with respect to sessions
- or NAS resources.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
- Session
-
- A session is a related progression of events devoted to a
- particular activity. Diameter application documents provide
- guidelines as to when a session begins and ends. All Diameter
- packets with the same Session-Id are considered to be part of the
- same session.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Sessions are not something that diameter is aware of.
-The function &mod_session_id; can be used to construct appropriate
-values for Session-Id AVP's but logic connecting events in the same
-session is the responsibility of the diameter user.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- Stateful Agent
-
- A stateful agent is one that maintains session state information,
- by keeping track of all authorized active sessions. Each
- authorized session is bound to a particular service, and its state
- is considered active either until it is notified otherwise or
- until expiration.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 16]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Sub-session
-
- A sub-session represents a distinct service (e.g., QoS or data
- characteristics) provided to a given session. These services may
- happen concurrently (e.g., simultaneous voice and data transfer
- during the same session) or serially. These changes in sessions
- are tracked with the Accounting-Sub-Session-Id.
-
- Transaction State
-
- The Diameter protocol requires that agents maintain transaction
- state, which is used for failover purposes. Transaction state
- implies that upon forwarding a request, the Hop-by-Hop Identifier
- is saved; the field is replaced with a locally unique identifier,
- which is restored to its original value when the corresponding
- answer is received. The request's state is released upon receipt
- of the answer. A stateless agent is one that only maintains
- transaction state.
-
- Translation Agent
-
- A translation agent (TLA in Figure 4) is a stateful Diameter node
- that performs protocol translation between Diameter and another
- AAA protocol, such as RADIUS.
-
- Upstream
-
- Upstream is used to identify the direction of a particular
- Diameter message from the Diameter client towards the home server.
-
- User
-
- The entity or device requesting or using some resource, in support
- of which a Diameter client has generated a request.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-1.3. Approach to Extensibility
-
- The Diameter protocol is designed to be extensible, using several
- mechanisms, including:
-
- o Defining new AVP values
-
- o Creating new AVPs
-
- o Creating new commands
-
- o Creating new applications
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 17]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- From the point of view of extensibility, Diameter authentication,
- authorization, and accounting applications are treated in the same
- way.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Extensibility in diameter is by way of the dictionary interface
-documented in &man_dict;: a diameter user creates applications,
-commands and AVP's by implementing a new dictionary,
-compiling the dictionary to a codec module using &man_compile; or
-&man_make;, and configuring the resulting dictionary module on a
-service.
-The dictionary modules provided with diameter are all implemented in
-this manner.</p>
-
-<pre>
- Note: Protocol designers should try to reuse existing functionality,
- namely AVP values, AVPs, commands, and Diameter applications. Reuse
- simplifies standardization and implementation. To avoid potential
- interoperability issues, it is important to ensure that the semantics
- of the reused features are well understood. Given that Diameter can
- also carry RADIUS attributes as Diameter AVPs, such reuse
- considerations also apply to existing RADIUS attributes that may be
- useful in a Diameter application.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Reuse in dictionary files is achieved by way of the <c>@inherits</c>
-section.
-AVP's are inherited, commands are not.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-1.3.1. Defining New AVP Values
-
- In order to allocate a new AVP value for AVPs defined in the Diameter
- base protocol, the IETF needs to approve a new RFC that describes the
- AVP value. IANA considerations for these AVP values are discussed in
- Section 11.3.
-
- The allocation of AVP values for other AVPs is guided by the IANA
- considerations of the document that defines those AVPs. Typically,
- allocation of new values for an AVP defined in an RFC would require
- IETF Review [RFC5226], whereas values for vendor-specific AVPs can be
- allocated by the vendor.
-
-1.3.2. Creating New AVPs
-
- A new AVP being defined MUST use one of the data types listed in
- Sections 4.2 or 4.3. If an appropriate derived data type is already
- defined, it SHOULD be used instead of a base data type to encourage
- reusability and good design practice.
-
- In the event that a logical grouping of AVPs is necessary, and
- multiple "groups" are possible in a given command, it is recommended
- that a Grouped AVP be used (see Section 4.4).
-
- The creation of new AVPs can happen in various ways. The recommended
- approach is to define a new general-purpose AVP in a Standards Track
- RFC approved by the IETF. However, as described in Section 11.1.1,
- there are other mechanisms.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Creating new AVP's is an issue for the dictionary designer, not
-diameter.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-1.3.3. Creating New Commands
-
- A new Command Code MUST be allocated when required AVPs (those
- indicated as {AVP} in the CCF definition) are added to, deleted from,
- or redefined in (for example, by changing a required AVP into an
- optional one) an existing command.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 18]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Furthermore, if the transport characteristics of a command are
- changed (for example, with respect to the number of round trips
- required), a new Command Code MUST be registered.
-
- A change to the CCF of a command, such as described above, MUST
- result in the definition of a new Command Code. This subsequently
- leads to the need to define a new Diameter application for any
- application that will use that new command.
-
- The IANA considerations for Command Codes are discussed in
- Section 3.1.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Creating new commands is an issue for the dictionary designer, not
-diameter.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-1.3.4. Creating New Diameter Applications
-
- Every Diameter application specification MUST have an IANA-assigned
- Application Id (see Section 2.4). The managed Application ID space
- is flat, and there is no relationship between different Diameter
- applications with respect to their Application Ids. As such, there
- is no versioning support provided by these Application Ids
- themselves; every Diameter application is a standalone application.
- If the application has a relationship with other Diameter
- applications, such a relationship is not known to Diameter.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Creating new applications is an issue for the dictionary designer,
-not diameter.</p>
-
-<p>
-An application's Application Id is specified in the <c>@id</c> section
-of a dictionary file.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- Before describing the rules for creating new Diameter applications,
- it is important to discuss the semantics of the AVP occurrences as
- stated in the CCF and the M-bit flag (Section 4.1) for an AVP. There
- is no relationship imposed between the two; they are set
- independently.
-
- o The CCF indicates what AVPs are placed into a Diameter command by
- the sender of that command. Often, since there are multiple modes
- of protocol interactions, many of the AVPs are indicated as
- optional.
-
- o The M-bit allows the sender to indicate to the receiver whether or
- not understanding the semantics of an AVP and its content is
- mandatory. If the M-bit is set by the sender and the receiver
- does not understand the AVP or the values carried within that AVP,
- then a failure is generated (see Section 7).
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-The M-bit is set on outgoing AVP's as directed by the relevant
-dictionary.
-For incoming AVP's, an M-bit set on an AVP that isn't
-explicitly included in the definition of the command in question is
-interpreted as a 5001 error, DIAMETER_AVP_UNSUPPORTED, the
-consequences of which depend on the value of the &mod_application_opt;
-<c>answer_errors</c> or <c>request_errors</c>.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- It is the decision of the protocol designer when to develop a new
- Diameter application rather than extending Diameter in other ways.
- However, a new Diameter application MUST be created when one or more
- of the following criteria are met:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 19]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- M-bit Setting
-
- An AVP with the M-bit in the MUST column of the AVP flag table is
- added to an existing Command/Application. An AVP with the M-bit
- in the MAY column of the AVP flag table is added to an existing
- Command/Application.
-
- Note: The M-bit setting for a given AVP is relevant to an
- Application and each command within that application that includes
- the AVP. That is, if an AVP appears in two commands for
- application Foo and the M-bit settings are different in each
- command, then there should be two AVP flag tables describing when
- to set the M-bit.
-
- Commands
-
- A new command is used within the existing application because
- either an additional command is added, an existing command has
- been modified so that a new Command Code had to be registered, or
- a command has been deleted.
-
- AVP Flag bits
-
- If an existing application changes the meaning/semantics of its
- AVP Flags or adds new flag bits, then a new Diameter application
- MUST be created.
-
- If the CCF definition of a command allows it, an implementation may
- add arbitrary optional AVPs with the M-bit cleared (including vendor-
- specific AVPs) to that command without needing to define a new
- application. Please refer to Section 11.1.1 for details.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-2. Protocol Overview
-
- The base Diameter protocol concerns itself with establishing
- connections to peers, capabilities negotiation, how messages are sent
- and routed through peers, and how the connections are eventually torn
- down. The base protocol also defines certain rules that apply to all
- message exchanges between Diameter nodes.
-
- Communication between Diameter peers begins with one peer sending a
- message to another Diameter peer. The set of AVPs included in the
- message is determined by a particular Diameter application. One AVP
- that is included to reference a user's session is the Session-Id.
-
- The initial request for authentication and/or authorization of a user
- would include the Session-Id AVP. The Session-Id is then used in all
- subsequent messages to identify the user's session (see Section 8 for
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 20]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- more information). The communicating party may accept the request or
- reject it by returning an answer message with the Result-Code AVP set
- to indicate that an error occurred. The specific behavior of the
- Diameter server or client receiving a request depends on the Diameter
- application employed.
-
- Session state (associated with a Session-Id) MUST be freed upon
- receipt of the Session-Termination-Request, Session-Termination-
- Answer, expiration of authorized service time in the Session-Timeout
- AVP, and according to rules established in a particular Diameter
- application.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Like Session-Id, session state is maintained by the diameter user:
-diameter has no session state of its own and does not interpret
-STR/STA in any way.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- The base Diameter protocol may be used by itself for accounting
- applications. For authentication and authorization, it is always
- extended for a particular application.
-
- Diameter clients MUST support the base protocol, which includes
- accounting. In addition, they MUST fully support each Diameter
- application that is needed to implement the client's service, e.g.,
- Network Access Server Requirements (NASREQ) [RFC2881] and/or Mobile
- IPv4. A Diameter client MUST be referred to as "Diameter X Client"
- where X is the application that it supports and not a "Diameter
- Client".
-
- Diameter servers MUST support the base protocol, which includes
- accounting. In addition, they MUST fully support each Diameter
- application that is needed to implement the intended service, e.g.,
- NASREQ and/or Mobile IPv4. A Diameter server MUST be referred to as
- "Diameter X Server" where X is the application that it supports, and
- not a "Diameter Server".
-
- Diameter relays and redirect agents are transparent to the Diameter
- applications, but they MUST support the Diameter base protocol, which
- includes accounting, and all Diameter applications.
-
- Diameter proxies MUST support the base protocol, which includes
- accounting. In addition, they MUST fully support each Diameter
- application that is needed to implement proxied services, e.g.,
- NASREQ and/or Mobile IPv4. A Diameter proxy MUST be referred to as
- "Diameter X Proxy" where X is the application which it supports, and
- not a "Diameter Proxy".
-
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 21]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-2.1. Transport
-
- The Diameter Transport profile is defined in [RFC3539].
-
- The base Diameter protocol is run on port 3868 for both TCP [RFC0793]
- and SCTP [RFC4960]. For TLS [RFC5246] and Datagram Transport Layer
- Security (DTLS) [RFC6347], a Diameter node that initiates a
- connection prior to any message exchanges MUST run on port 5658. It
- is assumed that TLS is run on top of TCP when it is used, and DTLS is
- run on top of SCTP when it is used.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Which port a transport connects to or listens on is a matter of
-configuration.
-Both &man_tcp; and &man_sctp; will default to 3868 if no other value
-is specified.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- If the Diameter peer does not support receiving TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP
- connections on port 5658 (i.e., the peer complies only with RFC
- 3588), then the initiator MAY revert to using TCP or SCTP on port
- 3868. Note that this scheme is kept only for the purpose of backward
- compatibility and that there are inherent security vulnerabilities
- when the initial CER/CEA messages are sent unprotected (see
- Section 5.6).
-
- Diameter clients MUST support either TCP or SCTP; agents and servers
- SHOULD support both.
-
- A Diameter node MAY initiate connections from a source port other
- than the one that it declares it accepts incoming connections on, and
- it MUST always be prepared to receive connections on port 3868 for
- TCP or SCTP and port 5658 for TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP connections.
- When DNS-based peer discovery (Section 5.2) is used, the port numbers
- received from SRV records take precedence over the default ports
- (3868 and 5658).
-
- A given Diameter instance of the peer state machine MUST NOT use more
- than one transport connection to communicate with a given peer,
- unless multiple instances exist on the peer, in which, case a
- separate connection per process is allowed.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-The &mod_service_opt; <c>restrict_connection</c> controls to what
-extent a diameter service allows multiple connections to the same
-peer.
-(As identified by the value of Origin-Host received from it
-during capabilities exchange.)</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- When no transport connection exists with a peer, an attempt to
- connect SHOULD be made periodically. This behavior is handled via
- the Tc timer (see Section 12 for details), whose recommended value is
- 30 seconds. There are certain exceptions to this rule, such as when
- a peer has terminated the transport connection stating that it does
- not wish to communicate.
-
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-The frequency of reconnection attempts is configured with the
-&mod_transport_opt; <c>connect_timer</c> and
-<c>watchdog_timer</c>.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- When connecting to a peer and either zero or more transports are
- specified, TLS SHOULD be tried first, followed by DTLS, then by TCP,
- and finally by SCTP. See Section 5.2 for more information on peer
- discovery.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-The order in which different transports are attempted depends on the
-order of &mod_transport_opt; <c>transport_module</c> and
-<c>transport_config</c> tuples in transport configuration.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 22]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Diameter implementations SHOULD be able to interpret ICMP protocol
- port unreachable messages as explicit indications that the server is
- not reachable, subject to security policy on trusting such messages.
- Further guidance regarding the treatment of ICMP errors can be found
- in [RFC5927] and [RFC5461]. Diameter implementations SHOULD also be
- able to interpret a reset from the transport and timed-out connection
- attempts. If Diameter receives data from the lower layer that cannot
- be parsed or identified as a Diameter error made by the peer, the
- stream is compromised and cannot be recovered. The transport
- connection MUST be closed using a RESET call (send a TCP RST bit) or
- an SCTP ABORT message (graceful closure is compromised).
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-ICMP messages and other transport-level errors aren't directly
-visible to diameter but transport implementations like &man_tcp; and
-&man_sctp; propagate these as terminating transport processes.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-2.1.1. SCTP Guidelines
-
- Diameter messages SHOULD be mapped into SCTP streams in a way that
- avoids head-of-the-line (HOL) blocking. Among different ways of
- performing the mapping that fulfill this requirement it is
- RECOMMENDED that a Diameter node send every Diameter message (request
- or response) over stream zero with the unordered flag set. However,
- Diameter nodes MAY select and implement other design alternatives for
- avoiding HOL blocking such as using multiple streams with the
- unordered flag cleared (as originally instructed in RFC 3588). On
- the receiving side, a Diameter entity MUST be ready to receive
- Diameter messages over any stream, and it is free to return responses
- over a different stream. This way, both sides manage the available
- streams in the sending direction, independently of the streams chosen
- by the other side to send a particular Diameter message. These
- messages can be out-of-order and belong to different Diameter
- sessions.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-&man_sctp; allows the sender to specify a stream number explicitly.
-The stream on which an incoming message is received it passed to
-&app_handle_request; and &app_handle_answer; callbacks as
-<c>transport_data</c> in a <c>#diameter_packet{}</c>.</p>
-
-<p>
-Ordered or unordered delivery can be configured per transport.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- Out-of-order delivery has special concerns during a connection
- establishment and termination. When a connection is established, the
- responder side sends a CEA message and moves to R-Open state as
- specified in Section 5.6. If an application message is sent shortly
- after the CEA and delivered out-of-order, the initiator side, still
- in Wait-I-CEA state, will discard the application message and close
- the connection. In order to avoid this race condition, the receiver
- side SHOULD NOT use out-of-order delivery methods until the first
- message has been received from the initiator, proving that it has
- moved to I-Open state. To trigger such a message, the receiver side
- could send a DWR immediately after sending a CEA. Upon reception of
- the corresponding DWA, the receiver side should start using out-of-
- order delivery methods to counter the HOL blocking.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-&man_sctp; does not currently allow the user to switch between ordered
-and unordered delivery, or to specify the manner of sending per
-message: one or the other must be configured, the defaults being
-ordered.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- Another race condition may occur when DPR and DPA messages are used.
- Both DPR and DPA are small in size; thus, they may be delivered to
- the peer faster than application messages when an out-of-order
- delivery mechanism is used. Therefore, it is possible that a DPR/DPA
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 23]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- exchange completes while application messages are still in transit,
- resulting in a loss of these messages. An implementation could
- mitigate this race condition, for example, using timers, and wait for
- a short period of time for pending application level messages to
- arrive before proceeding to disconnect the transport connection.
- Eventually, lost messages are handled by the retransmission mechanism
- described in Section 5.5.4.
-
- A Diameter agent SHOULD use dedicated payload protocol identifiers
- (PPIDs) for clear text and encrypted SCTP DATA chunks instead of only
- using the unspecified payload protocol identifier (value 0). For
- this purpose, two PPID values are allocated: the PPID value 46 is for
- Diameter messages in clear text SCTP DATA chunks, and the PPID value
- 47 is for Diameter messages in protected DTLS/SCTP DATA chunks.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-2.2. Securing Diameter Messages
-
- Connections between Diameter peers SHOULD be protected by TLS/TCP and
- DTLS/SCTP. All Diameter base protocol implementations MUST support
- the use of TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP. If desired, alternative security
- mechanisms that are independent of Diameter, such as IPsec [RFC4301],
- can be deployed to secure connections between peers. The Diameter
- protocol MUST NOT be used without one of TLS, DTLS, or IPsec.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-As noted above, DTLS is not currently supported and IPsec usage is
-transparent to diameter.
-Security is not enforced by diameter.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-2.3. Diameter Application Compliance
-
- Application Ids are advertised during the capabilities exchange phase
- (see Section 5.3). Advertising support of an application implies
- that the sender supports the functionality specified in the
- respective Diameter application specification.
-
- Implementations MAY add arbitrary optional AVPs with the M-bit
- cleared (including vendor-specific AVPs) to a command defined in an
- application, but only if the command's CCF syntax specification
- allows for it. Please refer to Section 11.1.1 for details.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-2.4. Application Identifiers
-
- Each Diameter application MUST have an IANA-assigned Application ID.
- The base protocol does not require an Application Id since its
- support is mandatory. During the capabilities exchange, Diameter
- nodes inform their peers of locally supported applications.
- Furthermore, all Diameter messages contain an Application Id, which
- is used in the message forwarding process.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 24]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- The following Application Id values are defined:
-
- Diameter common message 0
- Diameter base accounting 3
- Relay 0xffffffff
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-These applications are implemented in the dictionary modules
-<c>diameter_gen_base_rfc6733</c>, <c>diameter_gen_acct_rfc6733</c> and
-<c>diameter_relay</c> respectively.
-There are also RFC 3588 versions or the common and accounting
-dictionaries: <c>diameter_gen_base_rfc3588</c> and
-<c>diameter_base_accounting</c>.
-(The inconsistent naming is historical.)
-Dictionary modules are configured using the &mod_application_opt;
-<c>dictionary</c>.</p>
-
-<pre>
- Relay and redirect agents MUST advertise the Relay Application ID,
- while all other Diameter nodes MUST advertise locally supported
- applications. The receiver of a Capabilities Exchange message
- advertising relay service MUST assume that the sender supports all
- current and future applications.
-
- Diameter relay and proxy agents are responsible for finding an
- upstream server that supports the application of a particular
- message. If none can be found, an error message is returned with the
- Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-2.5. Connections vs. Sessions
-
- This section attempts to provide the reader with an understanding of
- the difference between "connection" and "session", which are terms
- used extensively throughout this document.
-
- A connection refers to a transport-level connection between two peers
- that is used to send and receive Diameter messages. A session is a
- logical concept at the application layer that exists between the
- Diameter client and the Diameter server; it is identified via the
- Session-Id AVP.
-
- +--------+ +-------+ +--------+
- | Client | | Relay | | Server |
- +--------+ +-------+ +--------+
- &lt;----------> &lt;---------->
- peer connection A peer connection B
-
- &lt;----------------------------->
- User session x
-
- Figure 1: Diameter Connections and Sessions
-
- In the example provided in Figure 1, peer connection A is established
- between the client and the relay. Peer connection B is established
- between the relay and the server. User session X spans from the
- client via the relay to the server. Each "user" of a service causes
- an auth request to be sent, with a unique session identifier. Once
- accepted by the server, both the client and the server are aware of
- the session.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 25]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- It is important to note that there is no relationship between a
- connection and a session, and that Diameter messages for multiple
- sessions are all multiplexed through a single connection. Also, note
- that Diameter messages pertaining to the session, both application-
- specific and those that are defined in this document such as ASR/ASA,
- RAR/RAA, and STR/STA, MUST carry the Application Id of the
- application. Diameter messages pertaining to peer connection
- establishment and maintenance such as CER/CEA, DWR/DWA, and DPR/DPA
- MUST carry an Application Id of zero (0).
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-As noted above, diameter is not involved in session management.
-This is the responsibility of the diameter user.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-2.6. Peer Table
-
- The Diameter peer table is used in message forwarding and is
- referenced by the routing table. A peer table entry contains the
- following fields:
-
- Host Identity
-
- Following the conventions described for the DiameterIdentity-
- derived AVP data format in Section 4.3.1, this field contains the
- contents of the Origin-Host (Section 6.3) AVP found in the CER or
- CEA message.
-
- StatusT
-
- This is the state of the peer entry, and it MUST match one of the
- values listed in Section 5.6.
-
- Static or Dynamic
-
- Specifies whether a peer entry was statically configured or
- dynamically discovered.
-
- Expiration Time
-
- Specifies the time at which dynamically discovered peer table
- entries are to be either refreshed or expired. If public key
- certificates are used for Diameter security (e.g., with TLS), this
- value MUST NOT be greater than the expiry times in the relevant
- certificates.
-
- TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP Enabled
-
- Specifies whether TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP is to be used when
- communicating with the peer.
-
- Additional security information, when needed (e.g., keys,
- certificates).
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-The Peer Table is not directly accessible to the diameter user.
-Information about connected peers can be retrieved using
-&mod_service_info;.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 26]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-2.7. Routing Table
-
- All Realm-Based routing lookups are performed against what is
- commonly known as the routing table (see Section 12). Each routing
- table entry contains the following fields:
-
- Realm Name
-
- This is the field that MUST be used as a primary key in the
- routing table lookups. Note that some implementations perform
- their lookups based on longest-match-from-the-right on the realm
- rather than requiring an exact match.
-
- Application Identifier
-
- An application is identified by an Application Id. A route entry
- can have a different destination based on the Application Id in
- the message header. This field MUST be used as a secondary key
- field in routing table lookups.
-
- Local Action
-
- The Local Action field is used to identify how a message should be
- treated. The following actions are supported:
-
- 1. LOCAL - Diameter messages that can be satisfied locally and do
- not need to be routed to another Diameter entity.
-
- 2. RELAY - All Diameter messages that fall within this category
- MUST be routed to a next-hop Diameter entity that is indicated
- by the identifier described below. Routing is done without
- modifying any non-routing AVPs. See Section 6.1.9 for
- relaying guidelines.
-
- 3. PROXY - All Diameter messages that fall within this category
- MUST be routed to a next Diameter entity that is indicated by
- the identifier described below. The local server MAY apply
- its local policies to the message by including new AVPs to the
- message prior to routing. See Section 6.1.9 for proxying
- guidelines.
-
- 4. REDIRECT - Diameter messages that fall within this category
- MUST have the identity of the home Diameter server(s)
- appended, and returned to the sender of the message. See
- Section 6.1.8 for redirection guidelines.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 27]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Server Identifier
-
- The identity of one or more servers to which the message is to be
- routed. This identity MUST also be present in the Host Identity
- field of the peer table (Section 2.6). When the Local Action is
- set to RELAY or PROXY, this field contains the identity of the
- server(s) to which the message MUST be routed. When the Local
- Action field is set to REDIRECT, this field contains the identity
- of one or more servers to which the message MUST be redirected.
-
- Static or Dynamic
-
- Specifies whether a route entry was statically configured or
- dynamically discovered.
-
- Expiration Time
-
- Specifies the time at which a dynamically discovered route table
- entry expires. If public key certificates are used for Diameter
- security (e.g., with TLS), this value MUST NOT be greater than the
- expiry time in the relevant certificates.
-
- It is important to note that Diameter agents MUST support at least
- one of the LOCAL, RELAY, PROXY, or REDIRECT modes of operation.
- Agents do not need to support all modes of operation in order to
- conform with the protocol specification, but they MUST follow the
- protocol compliance guidelines in Section 2. Relay agents and
- proxies MUST NOT reorder AVPs.
-
- The routing table MAY include a default entry that MUST be used for
- any requests not matching any of the other entries. The routing
- table MAY consist of only such an entry.
-
- When a request is routed, the target server MUST have advertised the
- Application Id (see Section 2.4) for the given message or have
- advertised itself as a relay or proxy agent. Otherwise, an error is
- returned with the Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Routing does not need specific support in diameter: a user can
-maintain their own routing table if desired and implement any desired
-routing in &man_app; callbacks.
-However, it may be convenient to add more specific routing support to
-diameter in the future.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-2.8. Role of Diameter Agents
-
- In addition to clients and servers, the Diameter protocol introduces
- relay, proxy, redirect, and translation agents, each of which is
- defined in Section 1.2. Diameter agents are useful for several
- reasons:
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-An noted above, the role a node plays is largely a question of
-configuration and &man_app; callback implementation.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- o They can distribute administration of systems to a configurable
- grouping, including the maintenance of security associations.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 28]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- o They can be used for concentration of requests from a number of
- co-located or distributed NAS equipment sets to a set of like user
- groups.
-
- o They can do value-added processing to the requests or responses.
-
- o They can be used for load balancing.
-
- o A complex network will have multiple authentication sources, they
- can sort requests and forward towards the correct target.
-
- The Diameter protocol requires that agents maintain transaction
- state, which is used for failover purposes. Transaction state
- implies that upon forwarding a request, its Hop-by-Hop Identifier is
- saved; the field is replaced with a locally unique identifier, which
- is restored to its original value when the corresponding answer is
- received. The request's state is released upon receipt of the
- answer. A stateless agent is one that only maintains transaction
- state.
-
- The Proxy-Info AVP allows stateless agents to add local state to a
- Diameter request, with the guarantee that the same state will be
- present in the answer. However, the protocol's failover procedures
- require that agents maintain a copy of pending requests.
-
- A stateful agent is one that maintains session state information by
- keeping track of all authorized active sessions. Each authorized
- session is bound to a particular service, and its state is considered
- active until either the agent is notified otherwise or the session
- expires. Each authorized session has an expiration, which is
- communicated by Diameter servers via the Session-Timeout AVP.
-
- Maintaining session state may be useful in certain applications, such
- as:
-
- o Protocol translation (e.g., RADIUS &lt;-> Diameter)
-
- o Limiting resources authorized to a particular user
-
- o Per-user or per-transaction auditing
-
- A Diameter agent MAY act in a stateful manner for some requests and
- be stateless for others. A Diameter implementation MAY act as one
- type of agent for some requests and as another type of agent for
- others.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 29]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-2.8.1. Relay Agents
-
- Relay agents are Diameter agents that accept requests and route
- messages to other Diameter nodes based on information found in the
- messages (e.g., the value of the Destination-Realm AVP Section 6.6).
- This routing decision is performed using a list of supported realms
- and known peers. This is known as the routing table, as is defined
- further in Section 2.7.
-
- Relays may, for example, be used to aggregate requests from multiple
- Network Access Servers (NASes) within a common geographical area
- (Point of Presence, POP). The use of relays is advantageous since it
- eliminates the need for NASes to be configured with the necessary
- security information they would otherwise require to communicate with
- Diameter servers in other realms. Likewise, this reduces the
- configuration load on Diameter servers that would otherwise be
- necessary when NASes are added, changed, or deleted.
-
- Relays modify Diameter messages by inserting and removing routing
- information, but they do not modify any other portion of a message.
- Relays SHOULD NOT maintain session state but MUST maintain
- transaction state.
-
- +------+ ---------> +------+ ---------> +------+
- | | 1. Request | | 2. Request | |
- | NAS | | DRL | | HMS |
- | | 4. Answer | | 3. Answer | |
- +------+ &lt;--------- +------+ &lt;--------- +------+
- example.net example.net example.com
-
- Figure 2: Relaying of Diameter messages
-
- The example provided in Figure 2 depicts a request issued from a NAS,
- which is an access device, for the user [email protected]. Prior to
- issuing the request, the NAS performs a Diameter route lookup, using
- "example.com" as the key, and determines that the message is to be
- relayed to a DRL, which is a Diameter relay. The DRL performs the
- same route lookup as the NAS, and relays the message to the HMS,
- which is example.com's home server. The HMS identifies that the
- request can be locally supported (via the realm), processes the
- authentication and/or authorization request, and replies with an
- answer, which is routed back to the NAS using saved transaction
- state.
-
- Since relays do not perform any application-level processing, they
- provide relaying services for all Diameter applications; therefore,
- they MUST advertise the Relay Application Id.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Requests are relayed by returning a <c>relay</c> tuple from a
-&app_handle_request; callback.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 30]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-2.8.2. Proxy Agents
-
- Similar to relays, proxy agents route Diameter messages using the
- Diameter routing table. However, they differ since they modify
- messages to implement policy enforcement. This requires that proxies
- maintain the state of their downstream peers (e.g., access devices)
- to enforce resource usage, provide admission control, and provide
- provisioning.
-
- Proxies may, for example, be used in call control centers or access
- ISPs that provide outsourced connections; they can monitor the number
- and type of ports in use and make allocation and admission decisions
- according to their configuration.
-
- Since enforcing policies requires an understanding of the service
- being provided, proxies MUST only advertise the Diameter applications
- they support.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-2.8.3. Redirect Agents
-
- Redirect agents are useful in scenarios where the Diameter routing
- configuration needs to be centralized. An example is a redirect
- agent that provides services to all members of a consortium, but does
- not wish to be burdened with relaying all messages between realms.
- This scenario is advantageous since it does not require that the
- consortium provide routing updates to its members when changes are
- made to a member's infrastructure.
-
- Since redirect agents do not relay messages, and only return an
- answer with the information necessary for Diameter agents to
- communicate directly, they do not modify messages. Since redirect
- agents do not receive answer messages, they cannot maintain session
- state.
-
- The example provided in Figure 3 depicts a request issued from the
- access device, NAS, for the user [email protected]. The message is
- forwarded by the NAS to its relay, DRL, which does not have a routing
- entry in its Diameter routing table for example.com. The DRL has a
- default route configured to DRD, which is a redirect agent that
- returns a redirect notification to DRL, as well as the HMS' contact
- information. Upon receipt of the redirect notification, the DRL
- establishes a transport connection with the HMS, if one doesn't
- already exist, and forwards the request to it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 31]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- +------+
- | |
- | DRD |
- | |
- +------+
- ^ |
- 2. Request | | 3. Redirection
- | | Notification
- | v
- +------+ ---------> +------+ ---------> +------+
- | | 1. Request | | 4. Request | |
- | NAS | | DRL | | HMS |
- | | 6. Answer | | 5. Answer | |
- +------+ &lt;--------- +------+ &lt;--------- +------+
- example.net example.net example.com
-
- Figure 3: Redirecting a Diameter Message
-
- Since redirect agents do not perform any application-level
- processing, they provide relaying services for all Diameter
- applications; therefore, they MUST advertise the Relay Application
- ID.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-2.8.4. Translation Agents
-
- A translation agent is a device that provides translation between two
- protocols (e.g., RADIUS&lt;->Diameter, TACACS+&lt;->Diameter). Translation
- agents are likely to be used as aggregation servers to communicate
- with a Diameter infrastructure, while allowing for the embedded
- systems to be migrated at a slower pace.
-
- Given that the Diameter protocol introduces the concept of long-lived
- authorized sessions, translation agents MUST be session stateful and
- MUST maintain transaction state.
-
- Translation of messages can only occur if the agent recognizes the
- application of a particular request; therefore, translation agents
- MUST only advertise their locally supported applications.
-
- +------+ ---------> +------+ ---------> +------+
- | | RADIUS Request | | Diameter Request | |
- | NAS | | TLA | | HMS |
- | | RADIUS Answer | | Diameter Answer | |
- +------+ &lt;--------- +------+ &lt;--------- +------+
- example.net example.net example.com
-
- Figure 4: Translation of RADIUS to Diameter
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 32]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-2.9. Diameter Path Authorization
-
- As noted in Section 2.2, Diameter provides transmission-level
- security for each connection using TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP. Therefore,
- each connection can be authenticated and can be replay and integrity
- protected.
-
- In addition to authenticating each connection, the entire session
- MUST also be authorized. Before initiating a connection, a Diameter
- peer MUST check that its peers are authorized to act in their roles.
- For example, a Diameter peer may be authentic, but that does not mean
- that it is authorized to act as a Diameter server advertising a set
- of Diameter applications.
-
- Prior to bringing up a connection, authorization checks are performed
- at each connection along the path. Diameter capabilities negotiation
- (CER/CEA) also MUST be carried out, in order to determine what
- Diameter applications are supported by each peer. Diameter sessions
- MUST be routed only through authorized nodes that have advertised
- support for the Diameter application required by the session.
-
- As noted in Section 6.1.9, a relay or proxy agent MUST append a
- Route-Record AVP to all requests forwarded. The AVP contains the
- identity of the peer from which the request was received.
-
- The home Diameter server, prior to authorizing a session, MUST check
- the Route-Record AVPs to make sure that the route traversed by the
- request is acceptable. For example, administrators within the home
- realm may not wish to honor requests that have been routed through an
- untrusted realm. By authorizing a request, the home Diameter server
- is implicitly indicating its willingness to engage in the business
- transaction as specified by any contractual relationship between the
- server and the previous hop. A DIAMETER_AUTHORIZATION_REJECTED error
- message (see Section 7.1.5) is sent if the route traversed by the
- request is unacceptable.
-
- A home realm may also wish to check that each accounting request
- message corresponds to a Diameter response authorizing the session.
- Accounting requests without corresponding authorization responses
- SHOULD be subjected to further scrutiny, as should accounting
- requests indicating a difference between the requested and provided
- service.
-
- Forwarding of an authorization response is considered evidence of a
- willingness to take on financial risk relative to the session. A
- local realm may wish to limit this exposure, for example, by
- establishing credit limits for intermediate realms and refusing to
- accept responses that would violate those limits. By issuing an
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 33]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- accounting request corresponding to the authorization response, the
- local realm implicitly indicates its agreement to provide the service
- indicated in the authorization response. If the service cannot be
- provided by the local realm, then a DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_COMPLY error
- message MUST be sent within the accounting request; a Diameter client
- receiving an authorization response for a service that it cannot
- perform MUST NOT substitute an alternate service and then send
- accounting requests for the alternate service instead.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-3. Diameter Header
-
- A summary of the Diameter header format is shown below. The fields
- are transmitted in network byte order.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Version | Message Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Command Flags | Command Code |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Application-ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Hop-by-Hop Identifier |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | End-to-End Identifier |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AVPs ...
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-The Diameter Header is represented by the <c>diameter_header</c>
-record defined in <c>diameter.hrl</c>.
-The <c>diameter_packet</c> record contains a <c>header</c> field whose
-value will be a decoded <c>#diameter_header{}</c> for incoming
-messages passed to &app_handle_request; and &app_handle_answer;
-callbacks.
-In the case of outgoing messages, diameter and the relevant
-dictionary populate the Diameter Header appropriately, although
-&app_prepare_request; and &app_handle_request; callbacks can modify
-header values.
-(Which can be useful in test.)</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- Version
-
- This Version field MUST be set to 1 to indicate Diameter Version
- 1.
-
- Message Length
-
- The Message Length field is three octets and indicates the length
- of the Diameter message including the header fields and the padded
- AVPs. Thus, the Message Length field is always a multiple of 4.
-
- Command Flags
-
- The Command Flags field is eight bits. The following bits are
- assigned:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 34]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |R P E T r r r r|
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
- R(equest)
-
- If set, the message is a request. If cleared, the message is
- an answer.
-
- P(roxiable)
-
- If set, the message MAY be proxied, relayed, or redirected. If
- cleared, the message MUST be locally processed.
-
- E(rror)
-
- If set, the message contains a protocol error, and the message
- will not conform to the CCF described for this command.
- Messages with the 'E' bit set are commonly referred to as error
- messages. This bit MUST NOT be set in request messages (see
- Section 7.2).
-
- T(Potentially retransmitted message)
-
- This flag is set after a link failover procedure, to aid the
- removal of duplicate requests. It is set when resending
- requests not yet acknowledged, as an indication of a possible
- duplicate due to a link failure. This bit MUST be cleared when
- sending a request for the first time; otherwise, the sender
- MUST set this flag. Diameter agents only need to be concerned
- about the number of requests they send based on a single
- received request; retransmissions by other entities need not be
- tracked. Diameter agents that receive a request with the T
- flag set, MUST keep the T flag set in the forwarded request.
- This flag MUST NOT be set if an error answer message (e.g., a
- protocol error) has been received for the earlier message. It
- can be set only in cases where no answer has been received from
- the server for a request, and the request has been sent again.
- This flag MUST NOT be set in answer messages.
-
- r(eserved)
-
- These flag bits are reserved for future use; they MUST be set
- to zero and ignored by the receiver.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Reserved bits are set to 0 in outgoing messages.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 35]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Command Code
-
- The Command Code field is three octets and is used in order to
- communicate the command associated with the message. The 24-bit
- address space is managed by IANA (see Section 3.1). Command Code
- values 16,777,214 and 16,777,215 (hexadecimal values FFFFFE-
- FFFFFF) are reserved for experimental use (see Section 11.2).
-
- Application-ID
-
- Application-ID is four octets and is used to identify for which
- application the message is applicable. The application can be an
- authentication application, an accounting application, or a
- vendor-specific application.
-
- The value of the Application-ID field in the header MUST be the
- same as any relevant Application-Id AVPs contained in the message.
-
- Hop-by-Hop Identifier
-
- The Hop-by-Hop Identifier is an unsigned 32-bit integer field (in
- network byte order) that aids in matching requests and replies.
- The sender MUST ensure that the Hop-by-Hop Identifier in a request
- is unique on a given connection at any given time, and it MAY
- attempt to ensure that the number is unique across reboots. The
- sender of an answer message MUST ensure that the Hop-by-Hop
- Identifier field contains the same value that was found in the
- corresponding request. The Hop-by-Hop Identifier is normally a
- monotonically increasing number, whose start value was randomly
- generated. An answer message that is received with an unknown
- Hop-by-Hop Identifier MUST be discarded.
-
- End-to-End Identifier
-
- The End-to-End Identifier is an unsigned 32-bit integer field (in
- network byte order) that is used to detect duplicate messages.
- Upon reboot, implementations MAY set the high order 12 bits to
- contain the low order 12 bits of current time, and the low order
- 20 bits to a random value. Senders of request messages MUST
- insert a unique identifier on each message. The identifier MUST
- remain locally unique for a period of at least 4 minutes, even
- across reboots. The originator of an answer message MUST ensure
- that the End-to-End Identifier field contains the same value that
- was found in the corresponding request. The End-to-End Identifier
- MUST NOT be modified by Diameter agents of any kind. The
- combination of the Origin-Host AVP (Section 6.3) and this field is
- used to detect duplicates. Duplicate requests SHOULD cause the
- same answer to be transmitted (modulo the Hop-by-Hop Identifier
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 36]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- field and any routing AVPs that may be present), and they MUST NOT
- affect any state that was set when the original request was
- processed. Duplicate answer messages that are to be locally
- consumed (see Section 6.2) SHOULD be silently discarded.
-
- AVPs
-
- AVPs are a method of encapsulating information relevant to the
- Diameter message. See Section 4 for more information on AVPs.
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-3.1. Command Codes
-
- Each command Request/Answer pair is assigned a Command Code, and the
- sub-type (i.e., request or answer) is identified via the 'R' bit in
- the Command Flags field of the Diameter header.
-
- Every Diameter message MUST contain a Command Code in its header's
- Command Code field, which is used to determine the action that is to
- be taken for a particular message. The following Command Codes are
- defined in the Diameter base protocol:
-
- Section
- Command Name Abbrev. Code Reference
- --------------------------------------------------------
- Abort-Session-Request ASR 274 8.5.1
- Abort-Session-Answer ASA 274 8.5.2
- Accounting-Request ACR 271 9.7.1
- Accounting-Answer ACA 271 9.7.2
- Capabilities-Exchange- CER 257 5.3.1
- Request
- Capabilities-Exchange- CEA 257 5.3.2
- Answer
- Device-Watchdog-Request DWR 280 5.5.1
- Device-Watchdog-Answer DWA 280 5.5.2
- Disconnect-Peer-Request DPR 282 5.4.1
- Disconnect-Peer-Answer DPA 282 5.4.2
- Re-Auth-Request RAR 258 8.3.1
- Re-Auth-Answer RAA 258 8.3.2
- Session-Termination- STR 275 8.4.1
- Request
- Session-Termination- STA 275 8.4.2
- Answer
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-These messages are all defined in diameter's implementation of the
-common dictionary in modules <c>diameter_gen_base_rfc6733</c> and
-<c>diameter_gen_base_rfc3588</c>.
-Corresponding record definitions are found in
-<c>diameter_gen_base_rfc6733.hrl</c> and
-<c>diameter_gen_base_rfc3588.hrl</c>.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 37]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-3.2. Command Code Format Specification
-
- Every Command Code defined MUST include a corresponding Command Code
- Format (CCF) specification, which is used to define the AVPs that
- MUST or MAY be present when sending the message. The following ABNF
- specifies the CCF used in the definition:
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-The CCF is what is specified in the <c>@messages</c> section of the
-&man_dict; format, except as noted below.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- command-def = "&lt;" command-name ">" "::=" diameter-message
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-Angle brackets are currently not allowed here.
-This was a change between RFC 3588 and RFC 6733: the former disallowed
-them in the grammar but included them in its own command definitions.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
- command-name = diameter-name
-
- diameter-name = ALPHA *(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-")
-
- diameter-message = header *fixed *required *optional
-
- header = "&lt;Diameter-Header:" command-id
- [r-bit] [p-bit] [e-bit] [application-id]">"
-
- application-id = 1*DIGIT
-
- command-id = 1*DIGIT
- ; The Command Code assigned to the command.
-
- r-bit = ", REQ"
- ; If present, the 'R' bit in the Command
- ; Flags is set, indicating that the message
- ; is a request as opposed to an answer.
-
- p-bit = ", PXY"
- ; If present, the 'P' bit in the Command
- ; Flags is set, indicating that the message
- ; is proxiable.
-
- e-bit = ", ERR"
- ; If present, the 'E' bit in the Command
- ; Flags is set, indicating that the answer
- ; message contains a Result-Code AVP in
- ; the "protocol error" class.
-
- fixed = [qual] "&lt;" avp-spec ">"
- ; Defines the fixed position of an AVP.
-
- required = [qual] "{" avp-spec "}"
- ; The AVP MUST be present and can appear
- ; anywhere in the message.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 38]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- optional = [qual] "[" avp-name "]"
- ; The avp-name in the 'optional' rule cannot
- ; evaluate to any AVP Name that is included
- ; in a fixed or required rule. The AVP can
- ; appear anywhere in the message.
- ;
- ; NOTE: "[" and "]" have a slightly different
- ; meaning than in ABNF. These braces
- ; cannot be used to express optional fixed rules
- ; (such as an optional ICV at the end). To do
- ; this, the convention is '0*1fixed'.
-
- qual = [min] "*" [max]
- ; See ABNF conventions, RFC 5234, Section 4.
- ; The absence of any qualifier depends on
- ; whether it precedes a fixed, required, or
- ; optional rule. If a fixed or required rule has
- ; no qualifier, then exactly one such AVP MUST
- ; be present. If an optional rule has no
- ; qualifier, then 0 or 1 such AVP may be
- ; present. If an optional rule has a qualifier,
- ; then the value of min MUST be 0 if present.
-
- min = 1*DIGIT
- ; The minimum number of times the element may
- ; be present. If absent, the default value is 0
- ; for fixed and optional rules and 1 for
- ; required rules. The value MUST be at least 1
- ; for required rules.
-
- max = 1*DIGIT
- ; The maximum number of times the element may
- ; be present. If absent, the default value is
- ; infinity. A value of 0 implies the AVP MUST
- ; NOT be present.
-
- avp-spec = diameter-name
- ; The avp-spec has to be an AVP Name, defined
- ; in the base or extended Diameter
- ; specifications.
-
- avp-name = avp-spec / "AVP"
- ; The string "AVP" stands for *any* arbitrary AVP
- ; Name, not otherwise listed in that Command Code
- ; definition. The inclusion of this string
- ; is recommended for all CCFs to allow for
- ; extensibility.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 39]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- The following is a definition of a fictitious Command Code:
-
- Example-Request ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 9999999, REQ, PXY >
- { User-Name }
- 1* { Origin-Host }
- * [ AVP ]
-</pre>
-
-&nada;
-
-<pre>
-
-3.3. Diameter Command Naming Conventions
-
- Diameter command names typically includes one or more English words
- followed by the verb "Request" or "Answer". Each English word is
- delimited by a hyphen. A three-letter acronym for both the request
- and answer is also normally provided.
-
- An example is a message set used to terminate a session. The command
- name is Session-Terminate-Request and Session-Terminate-Answer, while
- the acronyms are STR and STA, respectively.
-
- Both the request and the answer for a given command share the same
- Command Code. The request is identified by the R(equest) bit in the
- Diameter header set to one (1), to ask that a particular action be
- performed, such as authorizing a user or terminating a session. Once
- the receiver has completed the request, it issues the corresponding
- answer, which includes a result code that communicates one of the
- following:
-
- o The request was successful
-
- o The request failed
-
- o An additional request has to be sent to provide information the
- peer requires prior to returning a successful or failed answer.
-
- o The receiver could not process the request, but provides
- information about a Diameter peer that is able to satisfy the
- request, known as redirect.
-
- Additional information, encoded within AVPs, may also be included in
- answer messages.
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-The &man_dict; format places no requirement on the naming of commands.</p>
-
-<pre>
-
-4. Diameter AVPs
-
- Diameter AVPs carry specific authentication, accounting,
- authorization, and routing information as well as configuration
- details for the request and reply.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 40]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Each AVP of type OctetString MUST be padded to align on a 32-bit
- boundary, while other AVP types align naturally. A number of zero-
- valued bytes are added to the end of the AVP Data field until a word
- boundary is reached. The length of the padding is not reflected in
- the AVP Length field.
-
-4.1. AVP Header
-
- The fields in the AVP header MUST be sent in network byte order. The
- format of the header is:
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AVP Code |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |V M P r r r r r| AVP Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Vendor-ID (opt) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Data ...
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
- AVP Code
-
- The AVP Code, combined with the Vendor-Id field, identifies the
- attribute uniquely. AVP numbers 1 through 255 are reserved for
- reuse of RADIUS attributes, without setting the Vendor-Id field.
- AVP numbers 256 and above are used for Diameter, which are
- allocated by IANA (see Section 11.1.1).
-
- AVP Flags
-
- The AVP Flags field informs the receiver how each attribute must
- be handled. New Diameter applications SHOULD NOT define
- additional AVP Flag bits. However, note that new Diameter
- applications MAY define additional bits within the AVP header, and
- an unrecognized bit SHOULD be considered an error. The sender of
- the AVP MUST set 'R' (reserved) bits to 0 and the receiver SHOULD
- ignore all 'R' (reserved) bits. The 'P' bit has been reserved for
- future usage of end-to-end security. At the time of writing,
- there are no end-to-end security mechanisms specified; therefore,
- the 'P' bit SHOULD be set to 0.
-
- The 'M' bit, known as the Mandatory bit, indicates whether the
- receiver of the AVP MUST parse and understand the semantics of the
- AVP including its content. The receiving entity MUST return an
- appropriate error message if it receives an AVP that has the M-bit
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 41]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- set but does not understand it. An exception applies when the AVP
- is embedded within a Grouped AVP. See Section 4.4 for details.
- Diameter relay and redirect agents MUST NOT reject messages with
- unrecognized AVPs.
-
- The 'M' bit MUST be set according to the rules defined in the
- application specification that introduces or reuses this AVP.
- Within a given application, the M-bit setting for an AVP is
- defined either for all command types or for each command type.
-
- AVPs with the 'M' bit cleared are informational only; a receiver
- that receives a message with such an AVP that is not supported, or
- whose value is not supported, MAY simply ignore the AVP.
-
- The 'V' bit, known as the Vendor-Specific bit, indicates whether
- the optional Vendor-ID field is present in the AVP header. When
- set, the AVP Code belongs to the specific vendor code address
- space.
-
- AVP Length
-
- The AVP Length field is three octets, and indicates the number of
- octets in this AVP including the AVP Code field, AVP Length field,
- AVP Flags field, Vendor-ID field (if present), and the AVP Data
- field. If a message is received with an invalid attribute length,
- the message MUST be rejected.
-
-4.1.1. Optional Header Elements
-
- The AVP header contains one optional field. This field is only
- present if the respective bit-flag is enabled.
-
- Vendor-ID
-
- The Vendor-ID field is present if the 'V' bit is set in the AVP
- Flags field. The optional four-octet Vendor-ID field contains the
- IANA-assigned "SMI Network Management Private Enterprise Codes"
- [ENTERPRISE] value, encoded in network byte order. Any vendors or
- standardization organizations that are also treated like vendors
- in the IANA-managed "SMI Network Management Private Enterprise
- Codes" space wishing to implement a vendor-specific Diameter AVP
- MUST use their own Vendor-ID along with their privately managed
- AVP address space, guaranteeing that they will not collide with
- any other vendor's vendor-specific AVP(s) or with future IETF
- AVPs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 42]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- A Vendor-ID value of zero (0) corresponds to the IETF-adopted AVP
- values, as managed by IANA. Since the absence of the Vendor-ID
- field implies that the AVP in question is not vendor specific,
- implementations MUST NOT use the value of zero (0) for the
- Vendor-ID field.
-
-4.2. Basic AVP Data Formats
-
- The Data field is zero or more octets and contains information
- specific to the Attribute. The format and length of the Data field
- is determined by the AVP Code and AVP Length fields. The format of
- the Data field MUST be one of the following base data types or a data
- type derived from the base data types. In the event that a new Basic
- AVP Data Format is needed, a new version of this RFC MUST be created.
-
- OctetString
-
- The data contains arbitrary data of variable length. Unless
- otherwise noted, the AVP Length field MUST be set to at least 8
- (12 if the 'V' bit is enabled). AVP values of this type that are
- not a multiple of 4 octets in length are followed by the necessary
- padding so that the next AVP (if any) will start on a 32-bit
- boundary.
-
- Integer32
-
- 32-bit signed value, in network byte order. The AVP Length field
- MUST be set to 12 (16 if the 'V' bit is enabled).
-
- Integer64
-
- 64-bit signed value, in network byte order. The AVP Length field
- MUST be set to 16 (20 if the 'V' bit is enabled).
-
- Unsigned32
-
- 32-bit unsigned value, in network byte order. The AVP Length
- field MUST be set to 12 (16 if the 'V' bit is enabled).
-
- Unsigned64
-
- 64-bit unsigned value, in network byte order. The AVP Length
- field MUST be set to 16 (20 if the 'V' bit is enabled).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 43]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Float32
-
- This represents floating point values of single precision as
- described by [FLOATPOINT]. The 32-bit value is transmitted in
- network byte order. The AVP Length field MUST be set to 12 (16 if
- the 'V' bit is enabled).
-
- Float64
-
- This represents floating point values of double precision as
- described by [FLOATPOINT]. The 64-bit value is transmitted in
- network byte order. The AVP Length field MUST be set to 16 (20 if
- the 'V' bit is enabled).
-
- Grouped
-
- The Data field is specified as a sequence of AVPs. These AVPs are
- concatenated -- including their headers and padding -- in the
- order in which they are specified and the result encapsulated in
- the Data field. The AVP Length field is set to 8 (12 if the 'V'
- bit is enabled) plus the total length of all included AVPs,
- including their headers and padding. Thus, the AVP Length field
- of an AVP of type Grouped is always a multiple of 4.
-
-4.3. Derived AVP Data Formats
-
- In addition to using the Basic AVP Data Formats, applications may
- define data formats derived from the Basic AVP Data Formats. An
- application that defines new Derived AVP Data Formats MUST include
- them in a section titled "Derived AVP Data Formats", using the same
- format as the definitions below. Each new definition MUST be either
- defined or listed with a reference to the RFC that defines the
- format.
-
-4.3.1. Common Derived AVP Data Formats
-
- The following are commonly used Derived AVP Data Formats.
-
- Address
-
- The Address format is derived from the OctetString Basic AVP
- Format. It is a discriminated union representing, for example, a
- 32-bit (IPv4) [RFC0791] or 128-bit (IPv6) [RFC4291] address, most
- significant octet first. The first two octets of the Address AVP
- represent the AddressType, which contains an Address Family,
- defined in [IANAADFAM]. The AddressType is used to discriminate
- the content and format of the remaining octets.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 44]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Time
-
- The Time format is derived from the OctetString Basic AVP Format.
- The string MUST contain four octets, in the same format as the
- first four bytes are in the NTP timestamp format. The NTP
- timestamp format is defined in Section 3 of [RFC5905].
-
- This represents the number of seconds since 0h on 1 January 1900
- with respect to the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
-
- On 6h 28m 16s UTC, 7 February 2036, the time value will overflow.
- Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP) [RFC5905] describes a
- procedure to extend the time to 2104. This procedure MUST be
- supported by all Diameter nodes.
-
- UTF8String
-
- The UTF8String format is derived from the OctetString Basic AVP
- Format. This is a human-readable string represented using the
- ISO/IEC IS 10646-1 character set, encoded as an OctetString using
- the UTF-8 transformation format [RFC3629].
-
- Since additional code points are added by amendments to the 10646
- standard from time to time, implementations MUST be prepared to
- encounter any code point from 0x00000001 to 0x7fffffff. Byte
- sequences that do not correspond to the valid encoding of a code
- point into UTF-8 charset or are outside this range are prohibited.
-
- The use of control codes SHOULD be avoided. When it is necessary
- to represent a new line, the control code sequence CR LF SHOULD be
- used.
-
- The use of leading or trailing white space SHOULD be avoided.
-
- For code points not directly supported by user interface hardware
- or software, an alternative means of entry and display, such as
- hexadecimal, MAY be provided.
-
- For information encoded in 7-bit US-ASCII, the UTF-8 charset is
- identical to the US-ASCII charset.
-
- UTF-8 may require multiple bytes to represent a single character /
- code point; thus, the length of a UTF8String in octets may be
- different from the number of characters encoded.
-
- Note that the AVP Length field of an UTF8String is measured in
- octets not characters.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 45]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- DiameterIdentity
-
- The DiameterIdentity format is derived from the OctetString Basic
- AVP Format.
-
- DiameterIdentity = FQDN/Realm
-
- The DiameterIdentity value is used to uniquely identify either:
-
- * A Diameter node for purposes of duplicate connection and
- routing loop detection.
-
- * A Realm to determine whether messages can be satisfied locally
- or whether they must be routed or redirected.
-
- When a DiameterIdentity value is used to identify a Diameter node,
- the contents of the string MUST be the Fully Qualified Domain Name
- (FQDN) of the Diameter node. If multiple Diameter nodes run on
- the same host, each Diameter node MUST be assigned a unique
- DiameterIdentity. If a Diameter node can be identified by several
- FQDNs, a single FQDN should be picked at startup and used as the
- only DiameterIdentity for that node, whatever the connection on
- which it is sent. In this document, note that DiameterIdentity is
- in ASCII form in order to be compatible with existing DNS
- infrastructure. See Appendix D for interactions between the
- Diameter protocol and Internationalized Domain Names (IDNs).
-
- DiameterURI
-
- The DiameterURI MUST follow the Uniform Resource Identifiers (RFC
- 3986) syntax [RFC3986] rules specified below:
-
- "aaa://" FQDN [ port ] [ transport ] [ protocol ]
-
- ; No transport security
-
- "aaas://" FQDN [ port ] [ transport ] [ protocol ]
-
- ; Transport security used
-
- FQDN = &lt; Fully Qualified Domain Name >
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 46]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- port = ":" 1*DIGIT
-
- ; One of the ports used to listen for
- ; incoming connections.
- ; If absent, the default Diameter port
- ; (3868) is assumed if no transport
- ; security is used and port 5658 when
- ; transport security (TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP)
- ; is used.
-
- transport = ";transport=" transport-protocol
-
- ; One of the transports used to listen
- ; for incoming connections. If absent,
- ; the default protocol is assumed to be TCP.
- ; UDP MUST NOT be used when the aaa-protocol
- ; field is set to diameter.
-
- transport-protocol = ( "tcp" / "sctp" / "udp" )
-
- protocol = ";protocol=" aaa-protocol
-
- ; If absent, the default AAA protocol
- ; is Diameter.
-
- aaa-protocol = ( "diameter" / "radius" / "tacacs+" )
-
- The following are examples of valid Diameter host identities:
-
- aaa://host.example.com;transport=tcp
- aaa://host.example.com:6666;transport=tcp
- aaa://host.example.com;protocol=diameter
- aaa://host.example.com:6666;protocol=diameter
- aaa://host.example.com:6666;transport=tcp;protocol=diameter
- aaa://host.example.com:1813;transport=udp;protocol=radius
-
- Enumerated
-
- The Enumerated format is derived from the Integer32 Basic AVP
- Format. The definition contains a list of valid values and their
- interpretation and is described in the Diameter application
- introducing the AVP.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 47]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- IPFilterRule
-
- The IPFilterRule format is derived from the OctetString Basic AVP
- Format and uses the ASCII charset. The rule syntax is a modified
- subset of ipfw(8) from FreeBSD. Packets may be filtered based on
- the following information that is associated with it:
-
- Direction (in or out)
- Source and destination IP address (possibly masked)
- Protocol
- Source and destination port (lists or ranges)
- TCP flags
- IP fragment flag
- IP options
- ICMP types
-
- Rules for the appropriate direction are evaluated in order, with the
- first matched rule terminating the evaluation. Each packet is
- evaluated once. If no rule matches, the packet is dropped if the
- last rule evaluated was a permit, and passed if the last rule was a
- deny.
-
- IPFilterRule filters MUST follow the format:
-
- action dir proto from src to dst [options]
-
- action permit - Allow packets that match the rule.
- deny - Drop packets that match the rule.
-
- dir "in" is from the terminal, "out" is to the
- terminal.
-
- proto An IP protocol specified by number. The "ip"
- keyword means any protocol will match.
-
- src and dst &lt;address/mask> [ports]
-
- The &lt;address/mask> may be specified as:
- ipno An IPv4 or IPv6 number in dotted-
- quad or canonical IPv6 form. Only
- this exact IP number will match the
- rule.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 48]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- ipno/bits An IP number as above with a mask
- width of the form 192.0.2.10/24. In
- this case, all IP numbers from
- 192.0.2.0 to 192.0.2.255 will match.
- The bit width MUST be valid for the
- IP version, and the IP number MUST
- NOT have bits set beyond the mask.
- For a match to occur, the same IP
- version must be present in the
- packet that was used in describing
- the IP address. To test for a
- particular IP version, the bits part
- can be set to zero. The keyword
- "any" is 0.0.0.0/0 or the IPv6
- equivalent. The keyword "assigned"
- is the address or set of addresses
- assigned to the terminal. For IPv4,
- a typical first rule is often "deny
- in ip! assigned".
-
- The sense of the match can be inverted by
- preceding an address with the not modifier (!),
- causing all other addresses to be matched
- instead. This does not affect the selection of
- port numbers.
-
- With the TCP, UDP, and SCTP protocols, optional
- ports may be specified as:
-
- {port/port-port}[,ports[,...]]
-
- The '-' notation specifies a range of ports
- (including boundaries).
-
- Fragmented packets that have a non-zero offset
- (i.e., not the first fragment) will never match
- a rule that has one or more port
- specifications. See the frag option for
- details on matching fragmented packets.
-
- options:
- frag Match if the packet is a fragment and this is not
- the first fragment of the datagram. frag may not
- be used in conjunction with either tcpflags or
- TCP/UDP port specifications.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 49]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- ipoptions spec
- Match if the IP header contains the comma-separated
- list of options specified in spec. The
- supported IP options are:
-
- ssrr (strict source route), lsrr (loose source
- route), rr (record packet route), and ts
- (timestamp). The absence of a particular option
- may be denoted with a '!'.
-
- tcpoptions spec
- Match if the TCP header contains the comma-separated
- list of options specified in spec. The
- supported TCP options are:
-
- mss (maximum segment size), window (tcp window
- advertisement), sack (selective ack), ts (rfc1323
- timestamp), and cc (rfc1644 t/tcp connection
- count). The absence of a particular option may
- be denoted with a '!'.
-
- established
- TCP packets only. Match packets that have the RST
- or ACK bits set.
-
- setup TCP packets only. Match packets that have the SYN
- bit set but no ACK bit.
-
-
- tcpflags spec
- TCP packets only. Match if the TCP header
- contains the comma-separated list of flags
- specified in spec. The supported TCP flags are:
-
- fin, syn, rst, psh, ack, and urg. The absence of a
- particular flag may be denoted with a '!'. A rule
- that contains a tcpflags specification can never
- match a fragmented packet that has a non-zero
- offset. See the frag option for details on
- matching fragmented packets.
-
- icmptypes types
- ICMP packets only. Match if the ICMP type is in
- the list types. The list may be specified as any
- combination of ranges or individual types
- separated by commas. Both the numeric values and
- the symbolic values listed below can be used. The
- supported ICMP types are:
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 50]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- echo reply (0), destination unreachable (3),
- source quench (4), redirect (5), echo request
- (8), router advertisement (9), router
- solicitation (10), time-to-live exceeded (11), IP
- header bad (12), timestamp request (13),
- timestamp reply (14), information request (15),
- information reply (16), address mask request (17),
- and address mask reply (18).
-
- There is one kind of packet that the access device MUST always
- discard, that is an IP fragment with a fragment offset of one. This
- is a valid packet, but it only has one use, to try to circumvent
- firewalls.
-
- An access device that is unable to interpret or apply a deny rule
- MUST terminate the session. An access device that is unable to
- interpret or apply a permit rule MAY apply a more restrictive rule.
- An access device MAY apply deny rules of its own before the supplied
- rules, for example to protect the access device owner's
- infrastructure.
-
-4.4. Grouped AVP Values
-
- The Diameter protocol allows AVP values of type 'Grouped'. This
- implies that the Data field is actually a sequence of AVPs. It is
- possible to include an AVP with a Grouped type within a Grouped type,
- that is, to nest them. AVPs within an AVP of type Grouped have the
- same padding requirements as non-Grouped AVPs, as defined in
- Section 4.4.
-
- The AVP Code numbering space of all AVPs included in a Grouped AVP is
- the same as for non-Grouped AVPs. Receivers of a Grouped AVP that
- does not have the 'M' (mandatory) bit set and one or more of the
- encapsulated AVPs within the group has the 'M' (mandatory) bit set
- MAY simply be ignored if the Grouped AVP itself is unrecognized. The
- rule applies even if the encapsulated AVP with its 'M' (mandatory)
- bit set is further encapsulated within other sub-groups, i.e., other
- Grouped AVPs embedded within the Grouped AVP.
-
- Every Grouped AVP definition MUST include a corresponding grammar,
- using ABNF [RFC5234] (with modifications), as defined below.
-
- grouped-avp-def = "&lt;" name ">" "::=" avp
-
- name-fmt = ALPHA *(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-")
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 51]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- name = name-fmt
- ; The name has to be the name of an AVP,
- ; defined in the base or extended Diameter
- ; specifications.
-
- avp = header *fixed *required *optional
-
- header = "&lt;" "AVP-Header:" avpcode [vendor] ">"
-
- avpcode = 1*DIGIT
- ; The AVP Code assigned to the Grouped AVP.
-
- vendor = 1*DIGIT
- ; The Vendor-ID assigned to the Grouped AVP.
- ; If absent, the default value of zero is
- ; used.
-
-4.4.1. Example AVP with a Grouped Data Type
-
- The Example-AVP (AVP Code 999999) is of type Grouped and is used to
- clarify how Grouped AVP values work. The Grouped Data field has the
- following CCF grammar:
-
- Example-AVP ::= &lt; AVP Header: 999999 >
- { Origin-Host }
- 1*{ Session-Id }
- *[ AVP ]
-
- An Example-AVP with Grouped Data follows.
-
- The Origin-Host AVP (Section 6.3) is required. In this case:
-
- Origin-Host = "example.com".
-
- One or more Session-Ids must follow. Here there are two:
-
- Session-Id =
- "grump.example.com:33041;23432;893;0AF3B81"
-
- Session-Id =
- "grump.example.com:33054;23561;2358;0AF3B82"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 52]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- optional AVPs included are
-
- Recovery-Policy = &lt;binary>
- 2163bc1d0ad82371f6bc09484133c3f09ad74a0dd5346d54195a7cf0b35
- 2cabc881839a4fdcfbc1769e2677a4c1fb499284c5f70b48f58503a45c5
- c2d6943f82d5930f2b7c1da640f476f0e9c9572a50db8ea6e51e1c2c7bd
- f8bb43dc995144b8dbe297ac739493946803e1cee3e15d9b765008a1b2a
- cf4ac777c80041d72c01e691cf751dbf86e85f509f3988e5875dc905119
- 26841f00f0e29a6d1ddc1a842289d440268681e052b30fb638045f7779c
- 1d873c784f054f688f5001559ecff64865ef975f3e60d2fd7966b8c7f92
-
- Futuristic-Acct-Record = &lt;binary>
- fe19da5802acd98b07a5b86cb4d5d03f0314ab9ef1ad0b67111ff3b90a0
- 57fe29620bf3585fd2dd9fcc38ce62f6cc208c6163c008f4258d1bc88b8
- 17694a74ccad3ec69269461b14b2e7a4c111fb239e33714da207983f58c
- 41d018d56fe938f3cbf089aac12a912a2f0d1923a9390e5f789cb2e5067
- d3427475e49968f841
-
- The data for the optional AVPs is represented in hexadecimal form
- since the format of these AVPs is not known at the time of definition
- of the Example-AVP group nor (likely) at the time when the example
- instance of this AVP is interpreted -- except by Diameter
- implementations that support the same set of AVPs. The encoding
- example illustrates how padding is used and how length fields are
- calculated. Also, note that AVPs may be present in the Grouped AVP
- value that the receiver cannot interpret (here, the Recover-Policy
- and Futuristic-Acct-Record AVPs). The length of the Example-AVP is
- the sum of all the length of the member AVPs, including their
- padding, plus the Example-AVP header size.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 53]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- This AVP would be encoded as follows:
-
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 0 | Example AVP Header (AVP Code = 999999), Length = 496 |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 8 | Origin-Host AVP Header (AVP Code = 264), Length = 19 |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 16 | 'e' | 'x' | 'a' | 'm' | 'p' | 'l' | 'e' | '.' |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 24 | 'c' | 'o' | 'm' |Padding| Session-Id AVP Header |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 32 | (AVP Code = 263), Length = 49 | 'g' | 'r' | 'u' | 'm' |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- . . .
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 72 | 'F' | '3' | 'B' | '8' | '1' |Padding|Padding|Padding|
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 80 | Session-Id AVP Header (AVP Code = 263), Length = 50 |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 88 | 'g' | 'r' | 'u' | 'm' | 'p' | '.' | 'e' | 'x' |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- . . .
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 120| '5' | '8' | ';' | '0' | 'A' | 'F' | '3' | 'B' |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 128| '8' | '2' |Padding|Padding| Recovery-Policy Header (AVP |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 136| Code = 8341), Length = 223 | 0x21 | 0x63 | 0xbc | 0x1d |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 144| 0x0a | 0xd8 | 0x23 | 0x71 | 0xf6 | 0xbc | 0x09 | 0x48 |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- . . .
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 352| 0x8c | 0x7f | 0x92 |Padding| Futuristic-Acct-Record Header |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 328|(AVP Code = 15930),Length = 137| 0xfe | 0x19 | 0xda | 0x58 |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 336| 0x02 | 0xac | 0xd9 | 0x8b | 0x07 | 0xa5 | 0xb8 | 0xc6 |
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- . . .
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- 488| 0xe4 | 0x99 | 0x68 | 0xf8 | 0x41 |Padding|Padding|Padding|
- +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 54]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-4.5. Diameter Base Protocol AVPs
-
- The following table describes the Diameter AVPs defined in the base
- protocol, their AVP Code values, types, and possible flag values.
-
- Due to space constraints, the short form DiamIdent is used to
- represent DiameterIdentity.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 55]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- +----------+
- | AVP Flag |
- | rules |
- |----+-----|
- AVP Section | |MUST |
- Attribute Name Code Defined Data Type |MUST| NOT |
- -----------------------------------------|----+-----|
- Acct- 85 9.8.2 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Interim-Interval | | |
- Accounting- 483 9.8.7 Enumerated | M | V |
- Realtime-Required | | |
- Acct- 50 9.8.5 UTF8String | M | V |
- Multi-Session-Id | | |
- Accounting- 485 9.8.3 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Record-Number | | |
- Accounting- 480 9.8.1 Enumerated | M | V |
- Record-Type | | |
- Acct- 44 9.8.4 OctetString| M | V |
- Session-Id | | |
- Accounting- 287 9.8.6 Unsigned64 | M | V |
- Sub-Session-Id | | |
- Acct- 259 6.9 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Application-Id | | |
- Auth- 258 6.8 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Application-Id | | |
- Auth-Request- 274 8.7 Enumerated | M | V |
- Type | | |
- Authorization- 291 8.9 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Lifetime | | |
- Auth-Grace- 276 8.10 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Period | | |
- Auth-Session- 277 8.11 Enumerated | M | V |
- State | | |
- Re-Auth-Request- 285 8.12 Enumerated | M | V |
- Type | | |
- Class 25 8.20 OctetString| M | V |
- Destination-Host 293 6.5 DiamIdent | M | V |
- Destination- 283 6.6 DiamIdent | M | V |
- Realm | | |
- Disconnect-Cause 273 5.4.3 Enumerated | M | V |
- Error-Message 281 7.3 UTF8String | | V,M |
- Error-Reporting- 294 7.4 DiamIdent | | V,M |
- Host | | |
- Event-Timestamp 55 8.21 Time | M | V |
- Experimental- 297 7.6 Grouped | M | V |
- Result | | |
- -----------------------------------------|----+-----|
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 56]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- +----------+
- | AVP Flag |
- | rules |
- |----+-----|
- AVP Section | |MUST |
- Attribute Name Code Defined Data Type |MUST| NOT |
- -----------------------------------------|----+-----|
- Experimental- 298 7.7 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Result-Code | | |
- Failed-AVP 279 7.5 Grouped | M | V |
- Firmware- 267 5.3.4 Unsigned32 | | V,M |
- Revision | | |
- Host-IP-Address 257 5.3.5 Address | M | V |
- Inband-Security | M | V |
- -Id 299 6.10 Unsigned32 | | |
- Multi-Round- 272 8.19 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Time-Out | | |
- Origin-Host 264 6.3 DiamIdent | M | V |
- Origin-Realm 296 6.4 DiamIdent | M | V |
- Origin-State-Id 278 8.16 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Product-Name 269 5.3.7 UTF8String | | V,M |
- Proxy-Host 280 6.7.3 DiamIdent | M | V |
- Proxy-Info 284 6.7.2 Grouped | M | V |
- Proxy-State 33 6.7.4 OctetString| M | V |
- Redirect-Host 292 6.12 DiamURI | M | V |
- Redirect-Host- 261 6.13 Enumerated | M | V |
- Usage | | |
- Redirect-Max- 262 6.14 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Cache-Time | | |
- Result-Code 268 7.1 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Route-Record 282 6.7.1 DiamIdent | M | V |
- Session-Id 263 8.8 UTF8String | M | V |
- Session-Timeout 27 8.13 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Session-Binding 270 8.17 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Session-Server- 271 8.18 Enumerated | M | V |
- Failover | | |
- Supported- 265 5.3.6 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Vendor-Id | | |
- Termination- 295 8.15 Enumerated | M | V |
- Cause | | |
- User-Name 1 8.14 UTF8String | M | V |
- Vendor-Id 266 5.3.3 Unsigned32 | M | V |
- Vendor-Specific- 260 6.11 Grouped | M | V |
- Application-Id | | |
- -----------------------------------------|----+-----|
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 57]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-5. Diameter Peers
-
- This section describes how Diameter nodes establish connections and
- communicate with peers.
-
-5.1. Peer Connections
-
- Connections between diameter peers are established using their valid
- DiameterIdentity. A Diameter node initiating a connection to a peer
- MUST know the peer's DiameterIdentity. Methods for discovering a
- Diameter peer can be found in Section 5.2.
-
- Although a Diameter node may have many possible peers with which it
- is able to communicate, it may not be economical to have an
- established connection to all of them. At a minimum, a Diameter node
- SHOULD have an established connection with two peers per realm, known
- as the primary and secondary peers. Of course, a node MAY have
- additional connections, if it is deemed necessary. Typically, all
- messages for a realm are sent to the primary peer but, in the event
- that failover procedures are invoked, any pending requests are sent
- to the secondary peer. However, implementations are free to load
- balance requests between a set of peers.
-
- Note that a given peer MAY act as a primary for a given realm while
- acting as a secondary for another realm.
-
- When a peer is deemed suspect, which could occur for various reasons,
- including not receiving a DWA within an allotted time frame, no new
- requests should be forwarded to the peer, but failover procedures are
- invoked. When an active peer is moved to this mode, additional
- connections SHOULD be established to ensure that the necessary number
- of active connections exists.
-
- There are two ways that a peer is removed from the suspect peer list:
-
- 1. The peer is no longer reachable, causing the transport connection
- to be shut down. The peer is moved to the closed state.
-
- 2. Three watchdog messages are exchanged with accepted round-trip
- times, and the connection to the peer is considered stabilized.
-
- In the event the peer being removed is either the primary or
- secondary, an alternate peer SHOULD replace the deleted peer and
- assume the role of either primary or secondary.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 58]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-5.2. Diameter Peer Discovery
-
- Allowing for dynamic Diameter agent discovery makes possible simpler
- and more robust deployment of Diameter services. In order to promote
- interoperable implementations of Diameter peer discovery, the
- following mechanisms (manual configuration and DNS) are described.
- These are based on existing IETF standards. Both mechanisms MUST be
- supported by all Diameter implementations; either MAY be used.
-
- There are two cases where Diameter peer discovery may be performed.
- The first is when a Diameter client needs to discover a first-hop
- Diameter agent. The second case is when a Diameter agent needs to
- discover another agent for further handling of a Diameter operation.
- In both cases, the following 'search order' is recommended:
-
- 1. The Diameter implementation consults its list of statically
- (manually) configured Diameter agent locations. These will be
- used if they exist and respond.
-
- 2. The Diameter implementation performs a NAPTR query for a server
- in a particular realm. The Diameter implementation has to know,
- in advance, in which realm to look for a Diameter agent. This
- could be deduced, for example, from the 'realm' in an NAI on
- which a Diameter implementation needed to perform a Diameter
- operation.
-
- The NAPTR usage in Diameter follows the S-NAPTR DDDS application
- [RFC3958] in which the SERVICE field includes tags for the
- desired application and supported application protocol. The
- application service tag for a Diameter application is 'aaa' and
- the supported application protocol tags are 'diameter.tcp',
- 'diameter.sctp', 'diameter.dtls', or 'diameter.tls.tcp'
- [RFC6408].
-
- The client can follow the resolution process defined by the
- S-NAPTR DDDS [RFC3958] application to find a matching SRV, A, or
- AAAA record of a suitable peer. The domain suffixes in the NAPTR
- replacement field SHOULD match the domain of the original query.
- An example can be found in Appendix B.
-
- 3. If no NAPTR records are found, the requester directly queries for
- one of the following SRV records: for Diameter over TCP, use
- "_diameter._tcp.realm"; for Diameter over TLS, use
- "_diameters._tcp.realm"; for Diameter over SCTP, use
- "_diameter._sctp.realm"; for Diameter over DTLS, use
- "_diameters._sctp.realm". If SRV records are found, then the
- requester can perform address record query (A RR's and/or AAAA
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 59]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- RR's) for the target hostname specified in the SRV records
- following the rules given in [RFC2782]. If no SRV records are
- found, the requester gives up.
-
- If the server is using a site certificate, the domain name in the
- NAPTR query and the domain name in the replacement field MUST both be
- valid based on the site certificate handed out by the server in the
- TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP or Internet Key Exchange Protocol (IKE)
- exchange. Similarly, the domain name in the SRV query and the domain
- name in the target in the SRV record MUST both be valid based on the
- same site certificate. Otherwise, an attacker could modify the DNS
- records to contain replacement values in a different domain, and the
- client could not validate whether this was the desired behavior or
- the result of an attack.
-
- Also, the Diameter peer MUST check to make sure that the discovered
- peers are authorized to act in its role. Authentication via IKE or
- TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP, or validation of DNS RRs via DNSSEC is not
- sufficient to conclude this. For example, a web server may have
- obtained a valid TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP certificate, and secured RRs
- may be included in the DNS, but this does not imply that it is
- authorized to act as a Diameter server.
-
- Authorization can be achieved, for example, by the configuration of a
- Diameter server Certification Authority (CA). The server CA issues a
- certificate to the Diameter server, which includes an Object
- Identifier (OID) to indicate the subject is a Diameter server in the
- Extended Key Usage extension [RFC5280]. This certificate is then
- used during TLS/TCP, DTLS/SCTP, or IKE security negotiation.
- However, note that, at the time of writing, no Diameter server
- Certification Authorities exist.
-
- A dynamically discovered peer causes an entry in the peer table (see
- Section 2.6) to be created. Note that entries created via DNS MUST
- expire (or be refreshed) within the DNS Time to Live (TTL). If a
- peer is discovered outside of the local realm, a routing table entry
- (see Section 2.7) for the peer's realm is created. The routing table
- entry's expiration MUST match the peer's expiration value.
-
-5.3. Capabilities Exchange
-
- When two Diameter peers establish a transport connection, they MUST
- exchange the Capabilities Exchange messages, as specified in the peer
- state machine (see Section 5.6). This message allows the discovery
- of a peer's identity and its capabilities (protocol version number,
- the identifiers of supported Diameter applications, security
- mechanisms, etc.).
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 60]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- The receiver only issues commands to its peers that have advertised
- support for the Diameter application that defines the command. A
- Diameter node MUST cache the supported Application Ids in order to
- ensure that unrecognized commands and/or AVPs are not unnecessarily
- sent to a peer.
-
- A receiver of a Capabilities-Exchange-Request (CER) message that does
- not have any applications in common with the sender MUST return a
- Capabilities-Exchange-Answer (CEA) with the Result-Code AVP set to
- DIAMETER_NO_COMMON_APPLICATION and SHOULD disconnect the transport
- layer connection. Note that receiving a CER or CEA from a peer
- advertising itself as a relay (see Section 2.4) MUST be interpreted
- as having common applications with the peer.
-
- The receiver of the Capabilities-Exchange-Request (CER) MUST
- determine common applications by computing the intersection of its
- own set of supported Application Ids against all of the
- Application-Id AVPs (Auth-Application-Id, Acct-Application-Id, and
- Vendor-Specific-Application-Id) present in the CER. The value of the
- Vendor-Id AVP in the Vendor-Specific-Application-Id MUST NOT be used
- during computation. The sender of the Capabilities-Exchange-Answer
- (CEA) SHOULD include all of its supported applications as a hint to
- the receiver regarding all of its application capabilities.
-
- Diameter implementations SHOULD first attempt to establish a TLS/TCP
- and DTLS/SCTP connection prior to the CER/CEA exchange. This
- protects the capabilities information of both peers. To support
- older Diameter implementations that do not fully conform to this
- document, the transport security MAY still be negotiated via an
- Inband-Security AVP. In this case, the receiver of a Capabilities-
- Exchange-Request (CER) message that does not have any security
- mechanisms in common with the sender MUST return a Capabilities-
- Exchange-Answer (CEA) with the Result-Code AVP set to
- DIAMETER_NO_COMMON_SECURITY and SHOULD disconnect the transport layer
- connection.
-
- CERs received from unknown peers MAY be silently discarded, or a CEA
- MAY be issued with the Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_UNKNOWN_PEER.
- In both cases, the transport connection is closed. If the local
- policy permits receiving CERs from unknown hosts, a successful CEA
- MAY be returned. If a CER from an unknown peer is answered with a
- successful CEA, the lifetime of the peer entry is equal to the
- lifetime of the transport connection. In case of a transport
- failure, all the pending transactions destined to the unknown peer
- can be discarded.
-
- The CER and CEA messages MUST NOT be proxied, redirected, or relayed.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 61]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Since the CER/CEA messages cannot be proxied, it is still possible
- that an upstream agent will receive a message for which it has no
- available peers to handle the application that corresponds to the
- Command Code. In such instances, the 'E' bit is set in the answer
- message (Section 7) with the Result-Code AVP set to
- DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER to inform the downstream agent to take
- action (e.g., re-routing request to an alternate peer).
-
- With the exception of the Capabilities-Exchange-Request message, a
- message of type Request that includes the Auth-Application-Id or
- Acct-Application-Id AVPs, or a message with an application-specific
- Command Code MAY only be forwarded to a host that has explicitly
- advertised support for the application (or has advertised the Relay
- Application Id).
-
-5.3.1. Capabilities-Exchange-Request
-
- The Capabilities-Exchange-Request (CER), indicated by the Command
- Code set to 257 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit set, is sent to
- exchange local capabilities. Upon detection of a transport failure,
- this message MUST NOT be sent to an alternate peer.
-
- When Diameter is run over SCTP [RFC4960] or DTLS/SCTP [RFC6083],
- which allow for connections to span multiple interfaces and multiple
- IP addresses, the Capabilities-Exchange-Request message MUST contain
- one Host-IP-Address AVP for each potential IP address that MAY be
- locally used when transmitting Diameter messages.
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;CER> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 257, REQ >
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- 1* { Host-IP-Address }
- { Vendor-Id }
- { Product-Name }
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- * [ Supported-Vendor-Id ]
- * [ Auth-Application-Id ]
- * [ Inband-Security-Id ]
- * [ Acct-Application-Id ]
- * [ Vendor-Specific-Application-Id ]
- [ Firmware-Revision ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 62]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-5.3.2. Capabilities-Exchange-Answer
-
- The Capabilities-Exchange-Answer (CEA), indicated by the Command Code
- set to 257 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit cleared, is sent in
- response to a CER message.
-
- When Diameter is run over SCTP [RFC4960] or DTLS/SCTP [RFC6083],
- which allow connections to span multiple interfaces, hence, multiple
- IP addresses, the Capabilities-Exchange-Answer message MUST contain
- one Host-IP-Address AVP for each potential IP address that MAY be
- locally used when transmitting Diameter messages.
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;CEA> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 257 >
- { Result-Code }
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- 1* { Host-IP-Address }
- { Vendor-Id }
- { Product-Name }
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- [ Error-Message ]
- [ Failed-AVP ]
- * [ Supported-Vendor-Id ]
- * [ Auth-Application-Id ]
- * [ Inband-Security-Id ]
- * [ Acct-Application-Id ]
- * [ Vendor-Specific-Application-Id ]
- [ Firmware-Revision ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-5.3.3. Vendor-Id AVP
-
- The Vendor-Id AVP (AVP Code 266) is of type Unsigned32 and contains
- the IANA "SMI Network Management Private Enterprise Codes"
- [ENTERPRISE] value assigned to the Diameter Software vendor. It is
- envisioned that the combination of the Vendor-Id, Product-Name
- (Section 5.3.7), and Firmware-Revision (Section 5.3.4) AVPs may
- provide useful debugging information.
-
- A Vendor-Id value of zero in the CER or CEA message is reserved and
- indicates that this field is ignored.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 63]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-5.3.4. Firmware-Revision AVP
-
- The Firmware-Revision AVP (AVP Code 267) is of type Unsigned32 and is
- used to inform a Diameter peer of the firmware revision of the
- issuing device.
-
- For devices that do not have a firmware revision (general-purpose
- computers running Diameter software modules, for instance), the
- revision of the Diameter software module may be reported instead.
-
-5.3.5. Host-IP-Address AVP
-
- The Host-IP-Address AVP (AVP Code 257) is of type Address and is used
- to inform a Diameter peer of the sender's IP address. All source
- addresses that a Diameter node expects to use with SCTP [RFC4960] or
- DTLS/SCTP [RFC6083] MUST be advertised in the CER and CEA messages by
- including a Host-IP-Address AVP for each address.
-
-5.3.6. Supported-Vendor-Id AVP
-
- The Supported-Vendor-Id AVP (AVP Code 265) is of type Unsigned32 and
- contains the IANA "SMI Network Management Private Enterprise Codes"
- [ENTERPRISE] value assigned to a vendor other than the device vendor
- but including the application vendor. This is used in the CER and
- CEA messages in order to inform the peer that the sender supports (a
- subset of) the Vendor-Specific AVPs defined by the vendor identified
- in this AVP. The value of this AVP MUST NOT be set to zero.
- Multiple instances of this AVP containing the same value SHOULD NOT
- be sent.
-
-5.3.7. Product-Name AVP
-
- The Product-Name AVP (AVP Code 269) is of type UTF8String and
- contains the vendor-assigned name for the product. The Product-Name
- AVP SHOULD remain constant across firmware revisions for the same
- product.
-
-5.4. Disconnecting Peer Connections
-
- When a Diameter node disconnects one of its transport connections,
- its peer cannot know the reason for the disconnect and will most
- likely assume that a connectivity problem occurred or that the peer
- has rebooted. In these cases, the peer may periodically attempt to
- reconnect, as stated in Section 2.1. In the event that the
- disconnect was a result of either a shortage of internal resources or
- simply that the node in question has no intentions of forwarding any
- Diameter messages to the peer in the foreseeable future, a periodic
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 64]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- connection request would not be welcomed. The Disconnection-Reason
- AVP contains the reason the Diameter node issued the Disconnect-Peer-
- Request message.
-
- The Disconnect-Peer-Request message is used by a Diameter node to
- inform its peer of its intent to disconnect the transport layer and
- that the peer shouldn't reconnect unless it has a valid reason to do
- so (e.g., message to be forwarded). Upon receipt of the message, the
- Disconnect-Peer-Answer message is returned, which SHOULD contain an
- error if messages have recently been forwarded, and are likely in
- flight, which would otherwise cause a race condition.
-
- The receiver of the Disconnect-Peer-Answer message initiates the
- transport disconnect. The sender of the Disconnect-Peer-Answer
- message should be able to detect the transport closure and clean up
- the connection.
-
-5.4.1. Disconnect-Peer-Request
-
- The Disconnect-Peer-Request (DPR), indicated by the Command Code set
- to 282 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit set, is sent to a peer to
- inform it of its intentions to shut down the transport connection.
- Upon detection of a transport failure, this message MUST NOT be sent
- to an alternate peer.
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;DPR> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 282, REQ >
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- { Disconnect-Cause }
- * [ AVP ]
-
-5.4.2. Disconnect-Peer-Answer
-
- The Disconnect-Peer-Answer (DPA), indicated by the Command Code set
- to 282 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit cleared, is sent as a response
- to the Disconnect-Peer-Request message. Upon receipt of this
- message, the transport connection is shut down.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 65]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;DPA> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 282 >
- { Result-Code }
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- [ Error-Message ]
- [ Failed-AVP ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-
-5.4.3. Disconnect-Cause AVP
-
- The Disconnect-Cause AVP (AVP Code 273) is of type Enumerated. A
- Diameter node MUST include this AVP in the Disconnect-Peer-Request
- message to inform the peer of the reason for its intention to shut
- down the transport connection. The following values are supported:
-
- REBOOTING 0
- A scheduled reboot is imminent. A receiver of a DPR with
- above result code MAY attempt reconnection.
-
- BUSY 1
- The peer's internal resources are constrained, and it has
- determined that the transport connection needs to be closed.
- A receiver of a DPR with above result code SHOULD NOT attempt
- reconnection.
-
- DO_NOT_WANT_TO_TALK_TO_YOU 2
- The peer has determined that it does not see a need for the
- transport connection to exist, since it does not expect any
- messages to be exchanged in the near future. A receiver of a
- DPR with above result code SHOULD NOT attempt reconnection.
-
-5.5. Transport Failure Detection
-
- Given the nature of the Diameter protocol, it is recommended that
- transport failures be detected as soon as possible. Detecting such
- failures will minimize the occurrence of messages sent to unavailable
- agents, resulting in unnecessary delays, and will provide better
- failover performance. The Device-Watchdog-Request and Device-
- Watchdog-Answer messages, defined in this section, are used to pro-
- actively detect transport failures.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 66]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-5.5.1. Device-Watchdog-Request
-
- The Device-Watchdog-Request (DWR), indicated by the Command Code set
- to 280 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit set, is sent to a peer when no
- traffic has been exchanged between two peers (see Section 5.5.3).
- Upon detection of a transport failure, this message MUST NOT be sent
- to an alternate peer.
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;DWR> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 280, REQ >
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-5.5.2. Device-Watchdog-Answer
-
- The Device-Watchdog-Answer (DWA), indicated by the Command Code set
- to 280 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit cleared, is sent as a response
- to the Device-Watchdog-Request message.
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;DWA> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 280 >
- { Result-Code }
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- [ Error-Message ]
- [ Failed-AVP ]
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-5.5.3. Transport Failure Algorithm
-
- The transport failure algorithm is defined in [RFC3539]. All
- Diameter implementations MUST support the algorithm defined in that
- specification in order to be compliant to the Diameter base protocol.
-
-5.5.4. Failover and Failback Procedures
-
- In the event that a transport failure is detected with a peer, it is
- necessary for all pending request messages to be forwarded to an
- alternate agent, if possible. This is commonly referred to as
- "failover".
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 67]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- In order for a Diameter node to perform failover procedures, it is
- necessary for the node to maintain a pending message queue for a
- given peer. When an answer message is received, the corresponding
- request is removed from the queue. The Hop-by-Hop Identifier field
- is used to match the answer with the queued request.
-
- When a transport failure is detected, if possible, all messages in
- the queue are sent to an alternate agent with the T flag set. On
- booting a Diameter client or agent, the T flag is also set on any
- remaining records in non-volatile storage that are still waiting to
- be transmitted. An example of a case where it is not possible to
- forward the message to an alternate server is when the message has a
- fixed destination, and the unavailable peer is the message's final
- destination (see Destination-Host AVP). Such an error requires that
- the agent return an answer message with the 'E' bit set and the
- Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER.
-
- It is important to note that multiple identical requests or answers
- MAY be received as a result of a failover. The End-to-End Identifier
- field in the Diameter header along with the Origin-Host AVP MUST be
- used to identify duplicate messages.
-
- As described in Section 2.1, a connection request should be
- periodically attempted with the failed peer in order to re-establish
- the transport connection. Once a connection has been successfully
- established, messages can once again be forwarded to the peer. This
- is commonly referred to as "failback".
-
-5.6. Peer State Machine
-
- This section contains a finite state machine that MUST be observed by
- all Diameter implementations. Each Diameter node MUST follow the
- state machine described below when communicating with each peer.
- Multiple actions are separated by commas, and may continue on
- succeeding lines, as space requires. Similarly, state and next state
- may also span multiple lines, as space requires.
-
- This state machine is closely coupled with the state machine
- described in [RFC3539], which is used to open, close, failover,
- probe, and reopen transport connections. In particular, note that
- [RFC3539] requires the use of watchdog messages to probe connections.
- For Diameter, DWR and DWA messages are to be used.
-
- The I- prefix is used to represent the initiator (connecting)
- connection, while the R- prefix is used to represent the responder
- (listening) connection. The lack of a prefix indicates that the
- event or action is the same regardless of the connection on which the
- event occurred.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 68]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- The stable states that a state machine may be in are Closed, I-Open,
- and R-Open; all other states are intermediate. Note that I-Open and
- R-Open are equivalent except for whether the initiator or responder
- transport connection is used for communication.
-
- A CER message is always sent on the initiating connection immediately
- after the connection request is successfully completed. In the case
- of an election, one of the two connections will shut down. The
- responder connection will survive if the Origin-Host of the local
- Diameter entity is higher than that of the peer; the initiator
- connection will survive if the peer's Origin-Host is higher. All
- subsequent messages are sent on the surviving connection. Note that
- the results of an election on one peer are guaranteed to be the
- inverse of the results on the other.
-
- For TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP usage, a TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP handshake
- SHOULD begin when both ends are in the closed state prior to any
- Diameter message exchanges. The TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP connection
- SHOULD be established before sending any CER or CEA message to secure
- and protect the capabilities information of both peers. The TLS/TCP
- and DTLS/SCTP connection SHOULD be disconnected when the state
- machine moves to the closed state. When connecting to responders
- that do not conform to this document (i.e., older Diameter
- implementations that are not prepared to received TLS/TCP and DTLS/
- SCTP connections in the closed state), the initial TLS/TCP and DTLS/
- SCTP connection attempt will fail. The initiator MAY then attempt to
- connect via TCP or SCTP and initiate the TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP
- handshake when both ends are in the open state. If the handshake is
- successful, all further messages will be sent via TLS/TCP and DTLS/
- SCTP. If the handshake fails, both ends move to the closed state.
-
- The state machine constrains only the behavior of a Diameter
- implementation as seen by Diameter peers through events on the wire.
-
- Any implementation that produces equivalent results is considered
- compliant.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 69]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- state event action next state
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- Closed Start I-Snd-Conn-Req Wait-Conn-Ack
- R-Conn-CER R-Accept, R-Open
- Process-CER,
- R-Snd-CEA
-
- Wait-Conn-Ack I-Rcv-Conn-Ack I-Snd-CER Wait-I-CEA
- I-Rcv-Conn-Nack Cleanup Closed
- R-Conn-CER R-Accept, Wait-Conn-Ack/
- Process-CER Elect
- Timeout Error Closed
-
- Wait-I-CEA I-Rcv-CEA Process-CEA I-Open
- R-Conn-CER R-Accept, Wait-Returns
- Process-CER,
- Elect
- I-Peer-Disc I-Disc Closed
- I-Rcv-Non-CEA Error Closed
- Timeout Error Closed
-
- Wait-Conn-Ack/ I-Rcv-Conn-Ack I-Snd-CER,Elect Wait-Returns
- Elect I-Rcv-Conn-Nack R-Snd-CEA R-Open
- R-Peer-Disc R-Disc Wait-Conn-Ack
- R-Conn-CER R-Reject Wait-Conn-Ack/
- Elect
- Timeout Error Closed
-
- Wait-Returns Win-Election I-Disc,R-Snd-CEA R-Open
- I-Peer-Disc I-Disc, R-Open
- R-Snd-CEA
- I-Rcv-CEA R-Disc I-Open
- R-Peer-Disc R-Disc Wait-I-CEA
- R-Conn-CER R-Reject Wait-Returns
- Timeout Error Closed
-
- R-Open Send-Message R-Snd-Message R-Open
- R-Rcv-Message Process R-Open
- R-Rcv-DWR Process-DWR, R-Open
- R-Snd-DWA
- R-Rcv-DWA Process-DWA R-Open
- R-Conn-CER R-Reject R-Open
- Stop R-Snd-DPR Closing
- R-Rcv-DPR R-Snd-DPA Closing
- R-Peer-Disc R-Disc Closed
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 70]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- I-Open Send-Message I-Snd-Message I-Open
- I-Rcv-Message Process I-Open
- I-Rcv-DWR Process-DWR, I-Open
- I-Snd-DWA
- I-Rcv-DWA Process-DWA I-Open
- R-Conn-CER R-Reject I-Open
- Stop I-Snd-DPR Closing
- I-Rcv-DPR I-Snd-DPA Closing
- I-Peer-Disc I-Disc Closed
-
- Closing I-Rcv-DPA I-Disc Closed
- R-Rcv-DPA R-Disc Closed
- Timeout Error Closed
- I-Peer-Disc I-Disc Closed
- R-Peer-Disc R-Disc Closed
-
-5.6.1. Incoming Connections
-
- When a connection request is received from a Diameter peer, it is
- not, in the general case, possible to know the identity of that peer
- until a CER is received from it. This is because host and port
- determine the identity of a Diameter peer; the source port of an
- incoming connection is arbitrary. Upon receipt of a CER, the
- identity of the connecting peer can be uniquely determined from the
- Origin-Host.
-
- For this reason, a Diameter peer must employ logic separate from the
- state machine to receive connection requests, accept them, and await
- the CER. Once the CER arrives on a new connection, the Origin-Host
- that identifies the peer is used to locate the state machine
- associated with that peer, and the new connection and CER are passed
- to the state machine as an R-Conn-CER event.
-
- The logic that handles incoming connections SHOULD close and discard
- the connection if any message other than a CER arrives or if an
- implementation-defined timeout occurs prior to receipt of CER.
-
- Because handling of incoming connections up to and including receipt
- of a CER requires logic, separate from that of any individual state
- machine associated with a particular peer, it is described separately
- in this section rather than in the state machine above.
-
-5.6.2. Events
-
- Transitions and actions in the automaton are caused by events. In
- this section, we will ignore the I- and R- prefixes, since the actual
- event would be identical, but it would occur on one of two possible
- connections.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 71]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Start The Diameter application has signaled that a
- connection should be initiated with the peer.
-
- R-Conn-CER An acknowledgement is received stating that the
- transport connection has been established, and the
- associated CER has arrived.
-
- Rcv-Conn-Ack A positive acknowledgement is received confirming that
- the transport connection is established.
-
- Rcv-Conn-Nack A negative acknowledgement was received stating that
- the transport connection was not established.
-
- Timeout An application-defined timer has expired while waiting
- for some event.
-
- Rcv-CER A CER message from the peer was received.
-
- Rcv-CEA A CEA message from the peer was received.
-
- Rcv-Non-CEA A message, other than a CEA, from the peer was
- received.
-
- Peer-Disc A disconnection indication from the peer was received.
-
- Rcv-DPR A DPR message from the peer was received.
-
- Rcv-DPA A DPA message from the peer was received.
-
- Win-Election An election was held, and the local node was the
- winner.
-
- Send-Message A message is to be sent.
-
- Rcv-Message A message other than CER, CEA, DPR, DPA, DWR, or DWA
- was received.
-
- Stop The Diameter application has signaled that a
- connection should be terminated (e.g., on system
- shutdown).
-
-5.6.3. Actions
-
- Actions in the automaton are caused by events and typically indicate
- the transmission of packets and/or an action to be taken on the
- connection. In this section, we will ignore the I- and R- prefixes,
- since the actual action would be identical, but it would occur on one
- of two possible connections.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 72]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Snd-Conn-Req A transport connection is initiated with the peer.
-
- Accept The incoming connection associated with the R-Conn-CER
- is accepted as the responder connection.
-
- Reject The incoming connection associated with the R-Conn-CER
- is disconnected.
-
- Process-CER The CER associated with the R-Conn-CER is processed.
-
- Snd-CER A CER message is sent to the peer.
-
- Snd-CEA A CEA message is sent to the peer.
-
- Cleanup If necessary, the connection is shut down, and any
- local resources are freed.
-
- Error The transport layer connection is disconnected,
- either politely or abortively, in response to
- an error condition. Local resources are freed.
-
- Process-CEA A received CEA is processed.
-
- Snd-DPR A DPR message is sent to the peer.
-
- Snd-DPA A DPA message is sent to the peer.
-
- Disc The transport layer connection is disconnected,
- and local resources are freed.
-
- Elect An election occurs (see Section 5.6.4 for more
- information).
-
- Snd-Message A message is sent.
-
- Snd-DWR A DWR message is sent.
-
- Snd-DWA A DWA message is sent.
-
- Process-DWR The DWR message is serviced.
-
- Process-DWA The DWA message is serviced.
-
- Process A message is serviced.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 73]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-5.6.4. The Election Process
-
- The election is performed on the responder. The responder compares
- the Origin-Host received in the CER with its own Origin-Host as two
- streams of octets. If the local Origin-Host lexicographically
- succeeds the received Origin-Host, a Win-Election event is issued
- locally. Diameter identities are in ASCII form; therefore, the
- lexical comparison is consistent with DNS case insensitivity, where
- octets that fall in the ASCII range 'a' through 'z' MUST compare
- equally to their uppercase counterparts between 'A' and 'Z'. See
- Appendix D for interactions between the Diameter protocol and
- Internationalized Domain Name (IDNs).
-
- The winner of the election MUST close the connection it initiated.
- Historically, maintaining the responder side of a connection was more
- efficient than maintaining the initiator side. However, current
- practices makes this distinction irrelevant.
-
-6. Diameter Message Processing
-
- This section describes how Diameter requests and answers are created
- and processed.
-
-6.1. Diameter Request Routing Overview
-
- A request is sent towards its final destination using one of the
- following three combinations of the Destination-Realm and
- Destination-Host AVPs:
-
- o A request that is not able to be proxied (such as a CER) MUST NOT
- contain either Destination-Realm or Destination-Host AVPs.
-
- o A request that needs to be sent to a home server serving a
- specific realm, but not to a specific server (such as the first
- request of a series of round trips), MUST contain a Destination-
- Realm AVP but MUST NOT contain a Destination-Host AVP. For
- Diameter clients, the value of the Destination-Realm AVP MAY be
- extracted from the User-Name AVP, or other methods.
-
- o Otherwise, a request that needs to be sent to a specific home
- server among those serving a given realm MUST contain both the
- Destination-Realm and Destination-Host AVPs.
-
- The Destination-Host AVP is used as described above when the
- destination of the request is fixed, which includes:
-
- o Authentication requests that span multiple round trips.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 74]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- o A Diameter message that uses a security mechanism that makes use
- of a pre-established session key shared between the source and the
- final destination of the message.
-
- o Server-initiated messages that MUST be received by a specific
- Diameter client (e.g., access device), such as the Abort-Session-
- Request message, which is used to request that a particular user's
- session be terminated.
-
- Note that an agent can only forward a request to a host described in
- the Destination-Host AVP if the host in question is included in its
- peer table (see Section 2.6). Otherwise, the request is routed based
- on the Destination-Realm only (see Section 6.1.6).
-
- When a message is received, the message is processed in the following
- order:
-
- o If the message is destined for the local host, the procedures
- listed in Section 6.1.4 are followed.
-
- o If the message is intended for a Diameter peer with whom the local
- host is able to directly communicate, the procedures listed in
- Section 6.1.5 are followed. This is known as "Request
- Forwarding".
-
- o The procedure listed in Section 6.1.6 is followed, which is known
- as "Request Routing".
-
- o If none of the above are successful, an answer is returned with
- the Result-Code set to DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER, with the 'E'
- bit set.
-
- For routing of Diameter messages to work within an administrative
- domain, all Diameter nodes within the realm MUST be peers.
-
- The overview contained in this section (6.1) is intended to provide
- general guidelines to Diameter developers. Implementations are free
- to use different methods than the ones described here as long as they
- conform to the requirements specified in Sections 6.1.1 through
- 6.1.9. See Section 7 for more details on error handling.
-
-6.1.1. Originating a Request
-
- When creating a request, in addition to any other procedures
- described in the application definition for that specific request,
- the following procedures MUST be followed:
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 75]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- o the Command Code is set to the appropriate value;
-
- o the 'R' bit is set;
-
- o the End-to-End Identifier is set to a locally unique value;
-
- o the Origin-Host and Origin-Realm AVPs MUST be set to the
- appropriate values, used to identify the source of the message;
- and
-
- o the Destination-Host and Destination-Realm AVPs MUST be set to the
- appropriate values, as described in Section 6.1.
-
-6.1.2. Sending a Request
-
- When sending a request, originated either locally or as the result of
- a forwarding or routing operation, the following procedures SHOULD be
- followed:
-
- o The Hop-by-Hop Identifier SHOULD be set to a locally unique value.
-
- o The message SHOULD be saved in the list of pending requests.
-
- Other actions to perform on the message based on the particular role
- the agent is playing are described in the following sections.
-
-6.1.3. Receiving Requests
-
- A relay or proxy agent MUST check for forwarding loops when receiving
- requests. A loop is detected if the server finds its own identity in
- a Route-Record AVP. When such an event occurs, the agent MUST answer
- with the Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_LOOP_DETECTED.
-
-6.1.4. Processing Local Requests
-
- A request is known to be for local consumption when one of the
- following conditions occurs:
-
- o The Destination-Host AVP contains the local host's identity;
-
- o The Destination-Host AVP is not present, the Destination-Realm AVP
- contains a realm the server is configured to process locally, and
- the Diameter application is locally supported; or
-
- o Both the Destination-Host and the Destination-Realm are not
- present.
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 76]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- When a request is locally processed, the rules in Section 6.2 should
- be used to generate the corresponding answer.
-
-6.1.5. Request Forwarding
-
- Request forwarding is done using the Diameter peer table. The
- Diameter peer table contains all of the peers with which the local
- node is able to directly communicate.
-
- When a request is received, and the host encoded in the Destination-
- Host AVP is one that is present in the peer table, the message SHOULD
- be forwarded to the peer.
-
-6.1.6. Request Routing
-
- Diameter request message routing is done via realms and Application
- Ids. A Diameter message that may be forwarded by Diameter agents
- (proxies, redirect agents, or relay agents) MUST include the target
- realm in the Destination-Realm AVP. Request routing SHOULD rely on
- the Destination-Realm AVP and the Application Id present in the
- request message header to aid in the routing decision. The realm MAY
- be retrieved from the User-Name AVP, which is in the form of a
- Network Access Identifier (NAI). The realm portion of the NAI is
- inserted in the Destination-Realm AVP.
-
- Diameter agents MAY have a list of locally supported realms and
- applications, and they MAY have a list of externally supported realms
- and applications. When a request is received that includes a realm
- and/or application that is not locally supported, the message is
- routed to the peer configured in the routing table (see Section 2.7).
-
- Realm names and Application Ids are the minimum supported routing
- criteria, additional information may be needed to support redirect
- semantics.
-
-6.1.7. Predictive Loop Avoidance
-
- Before forwarding or routing a request, Diameter agents, in addition
- to performing the processing described in Section 6.1.3, SHOULD check
- for the presence of a candidate route's peer identity in any of the
- Route-Record AVPs. In the event of the agent detecting the presence
- of a candidate route's peer identity in a Route-Record AVP, the agent
- MUST ignore such a route for the Diameter request message and attempt
- alternate routes if any exist. In case all the candidate routes are
- eliminated by the above criteria, the agent SHOULD return a
- DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER message.
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 77]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-6.1.8. Redirecting Requests
-
- When a redirect agent receives a request whose routing entry is set
- to REDIRECT, it MUST reply with an answer message with the 'E' bit
- set, while maintaining the Hop-by-Hop Identifier in the header, and
- include the Result-Code AVP to DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION. Each of
- the servers associated with the routing entry are added in a separate
- Redirect-Host AVP.
-
- +------------------+
- | Diameter |
- | Redirect Agent |
- +------------------+
- ^ | 2. command + 'E' bit
- 1. Request | | Result-Code =
- [email protected] | | DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION +
- | | Redirect-Host AVP(s)
- | v
- +-------------+ 3. Request +-------------+
- | example.com |------------->| example.net |
- | Relay | | Diameter |
- | Agent |&lt;-------------| Server |
- +-------------+ 4. Answer +-------------+
-
- Figure 5: Diameter Redirect Agent
-
- The receiver of an answer message with the 'E' bit set and the
- Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION uses the Hop-by-
- Hop Identifier in the Diameter header to identify the request in the
- pending message queue (see Section 5.5.4) that is to be redirected.
- If no transport connection exists with the new peer, one is created,
- and the request is sent directly to it.
-
- Multiple Redirect-Host AVPs are allowed. The receiver of the answer
- message with the 'E' bit set selects exactly one of these hosts as
- the destination of the redirected message.
-
- When the Redirect-Host-Usage AVP included in the answer message has a
- non-zero value, a route entry for the redirect indications is created
- and cached by the receiver. The redirect usage for such a route
- entry is set by the value of Redirect-Host-Usage AVP and the lifetime
- of the cached route entry is set by Redirect-Max-Cache-Time AVP
- value.
-
- It is possible that multiple redirect indications can create multiple
- cached route entries differing only in their redirect usage and the
- peer to forward messages to. As an example, two(2) route entries
- that are created by two(2) redirect indications results in two(2)
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 78]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- cached routes for the same realm and Application Id. However, one
- has a redirect usage of ALL_SESSION, where matching requests will be
- forwarded to one peer; the other has a redirect usage of ALL_REALM,
- where request are forwarded to another peer. Therefore, an incoming
- request that matches the realm and Application Id of both routes will
- need additional resolution. In such a case, a routing precedence
- rule MUST be used against the redirect usage value to resolve the
- contention. The precedence rule can be found in Section 6.13.
-
-6.1.9. Relaying and Proxying Requests
-
- A relay or proxy agent MUST append a Route-Record AVP to all requests
- forwarded. The AVP contains the identity of the peer from which the
- request was received.
-
- The Hop-by-Hop Identifier in the request is saved and replaced with a
- locally unique value. The source of the request is also saved, which
- includes the IP address, port, and protocol.
-
- A relay or proxy agent MAY include the Proxy-Info AVP in requests if
- it requires access to any local state information when the
- corresponding response is received. The Proxy-Info AVP has security
- implications as state information is distributed to other entities.
- As such, it is RECOMMENDED that the content of the Proxy-Info AVP be
- protected with cryptographic mechanisms, for example, by using a
- keyed message digest such as HMAC-SHA1 [RFC2104]. Such a mechanism,
- however, requires the management of keys, although only locally at
- the Diameter server. Still, a full description of the management of
- the keys used to protect the Proxy-Info AVP is beyond the scope of
- this document. Below is a list of common recommendations:
-
- o The keys should be generated securely following the randomness
- recommendations in [RFC4086].
-
- o The keys and cryptographic protection algorithms should be at
- least 128 bits in strength.
-
- o The keys should not be used for any other purpose than generating
- and verifying instances of the Proxy-Info AVP.
-
- o The keys should be changed regularly.
-
- o The keys should be changed if the AVP format or cryptographic
- protection algorithms change.
-
- The message is then forwarded to the next hop, as identified in the
- routing table.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 79]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Figure 6 provides an example of message routing using the procedures
- listed in these sections.
-
- (Origin-Host=nas.example.net) (Origin-Host=nas.example.net)
- (Origin-Realm=example.net) (Origin-Realm=example.net)
- (Destination-Realm=example.com) (Destination-Realm=example.com)
- (Route-Record=nas.example.net)
- +------+ ------> +------+ ------> +------+
- | | (Request) | | (Request) | |
- | NAS +-------------------+ DRL +-------------------+ HMS |
- | | | | | |
- +------+ &lt;------ +------+ &lt;------ +------+
- example.net (Answer) example.net (Answer) example.com
- (Origin-Host=hms.example.com) (Origin-Host=hms.example.com)
- (Origin-Realm=example.com) (Origin-Realm=example.com)
-
- Figure 6: Routing of Diameter messages
-
- Relay and proxy agents are not required to perform full inspection of
- incoming messages. At a minimum, validation of the message header
- and relevant routing AVPs has to be done when relaying messages.
- Proxy agents may optionally perform more in-depth message validation
- for applications in which it is interested.
-
-6.2. Diameter Answer Processing
-
- When a request is locally processed, the following procedures MUST be
- applied to create the associated answer, in addition to any
- additional procedures that MAY be discussed in the Diameter
- application defining the command:
-
- o The same Hop-by-Hop Identifier in the request is used in the
- answer.
-
- o The local host's identity is encoded in the Origin-Host AVP.
-
- o The Destination-Host and Destination-Realm AVPs MUST NOT be
- present in the answer message.
-
- o The Result-Code AVP is added with its value indicating success or
- failure.
-
- o If the Session-Id is present in the request, it MUST be included
- in the answer.
-
- o Any Proxy-Info AVPs in the request MUST be added to the answer
- message, in the same order they were present in the request.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 80]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- o The 'P' bit is set to the same value as the one in the request.
-
- o The same End-to-End identifier in the request is used in the
- answer.
-
- Note that the error messages (see Section 7) are also subjected to
- the above processing rules.
-
-6.2.1. Processing Received Answers
-
- A Diameter client or proxy MUST match the Hop-by-Hop Identifier in an
- answer received against the list of pending requests. The
- corresponding message should be removed from the list of pending
- requests. It SHOULD ignore answers received that do not match a
- known Hop-by-Hop Identifier.
-
-6.2.2. Relaying and Proxying Answers
-
- If the answer is for a request that was proxied or relayed, the agent
- MUST restore the original value of the Diameter header's Hop-by-Hop
- Identifier field.
-
- If the last Proxy-Info AVP in the message is targeted to the local
- Diameter server, the AVP MUST be removed before the answer is
- forwarded.
-
- If a relay or proxy agent receives an answer with a Result-Code AVP
- indicating a failure, it MUST NOT modify the contents of the AVP.
- Any additional local errors detected SHOULD be logged but not
- reflected in the Result-Code AVP. If the agent receives an answer
- message with a Result-Code AVP indicating success, and it wishes to
- modify the AVP to indicate an error, it MUST modify the Result-Code
- AVP to contain the appropriate error in the message destined towards
- the access device as well as include the Error-Reporting-Host AVP; it
- MUST also issue an STR on behalf of the access device towards the
- Diameter server.
-
- The agent MUST then send the answer to the host that it received the
- original request from.
-
-6.3. Origin-Host AVP
-
- The Origin-Host AVP (AVP Code 264) is of type DiameterIdentity, and
- it MUST be present in all Diameter messages. This AVP identifies the
- endpoint that originated the Diameter message. Relay agents MUST NOT
- modify this AVP.
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 81]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- The value of the Origin-Host AVP is guaranteed to be unique within a
- single host.
-
- Note that the Origin-Host AVP may resolve to more than one address as
- the Diameter peer may support more than one address.
-
- This AVP SHOULD be placed as close to the Diameter header as
- possible.
-
-6.4. Origin-Realm AVP
-
- The Origin-Realm AVP (AVP Code 296) is of type DiameterIdentity.
- This AVP contains the Realm of the originator of any Diameter message
- and MUST be present in all messages.
-
- This AVP SHOULD be placed as close to the Diameter header as
- possible.
-
-6.5. Destination-Host AVP
-
- The Destination-Host AVP (AVP Code 293) is of type DiameterIdentity.
- This AVP MUST be present in all unsolicited agent initiated messages,
- MAY be present in request messages, and MUST NOT be present in answer
- messages.
-
- The absence of the Destination-Host AVP will cause a message to be
- sent to any Diameter server supporting the application within the
- realm specified in Destination-Realm AVP.
-
- This AVP SHOULD be placed as close to the Diameter header as
- possible.
-
-6.6. Destination-Realm AVP
-
- The Destination-Realm AVP (AVP Code 283) is of type DiameterIdentity
- and contains the realm to which the message is to be routed. The
- Destination-Realm AVP MUST NOT be present in answer messages.
- Diameter clients insert the realm portion of the User-Name AVP.
- Diameter servers initiating a request message use the value of the
- Origin-Realm AVP from a previous message received from the intended
- target host (unless it is known a priori). When present, the
- Destination-Realm AVP is used to perform message routing decisions.
-
- The CCF for a request message that includes the Destination-Realm AVP
- SHOULD list the Destination-Realm AVP as a required AVP (an AVP
- indicated as {AVP}); otherwise, the message is inherently a non-
- routable message.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 82]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- This AVP SHOULD be placed as close to the Diameter header as
- possible.
-
-6.7. Routing AVPs
-
- The AVPs defined in this section are Diameter AVPs used for routing
- purposes. These AVPs change as Diameter messages are processed by
- agents.
-
-6.7.1. Route-Record AVP
-
- The Route-Record AVP (AVP Code 282) is of type DiameterIdentity. The
- identity added in this AVP MUST be the same as the one received in
- the Origin-Host of the Capabilities Exchange message.
-
-6.7.2. Proxy-Info AVP
-
- The Proxy-Info AVP (AVP Code 284) is of type Grouped. This AVP
- contains the identity and local state information of the Diameter
- node that creates and adds it to a message. The Grouped Data field
- has the following CCF grammar:
-
- Proxy-Info ::= &lt; AVP Header: 284 >
- { Proxy-Host }
- { Proxy-State }
- * [ AVP ]
-
-6.7.3. Proxy-Host AVP
-
- The Proxy-Host AVP (AVP Code 280) is of type DiameterIdentity. This
- AVP contains the identity of the host that added the Proxy-Info AVP.
-
-6.7.4. Proxy-State AVP
-
- The Proxy-State AVP (AVP Code 33) is of type OctetString. It
- contains state information that would otherwise be stored at the
- Diameter entity that created it. As such, this AVP MUST be treated
- as opaque data by other Diameter entities.
-
-6.8. Auth-Application-Id AVP
-
- The Auth-Application-Id AVP (AVP Code 258) is of type Unsigned32 and
- is used in order to advertise support of the Authentication and
- Authorization portion of an application (see Section 2.4). If
- present in a message other than CER and CEA, the value of the Auth-
- Application-Id AVP MUST match the Application Id present in the
- Diameter message header.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 83]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-6.9. Acct-Application-Id AVP
-
- The Acct-Application-Id AVP (AVP Code 259) is of type Unsigned32 and
- is used in order to advertise support of the accounting portion of an
- application (see Section 2.4). If present in a message other than
- CER and CEA, the value of the Acct-Application-Id AVP MUST match the
- Application Id present in the Diameter message header.
-
-6.10. Inband-Security-Id AVP
-
- The Inband-Security-Id AVP (AVP Code 299) is of type Unsigned32 and
- is used in order to advertise support of the security portion of the
- application. The use of this AVP in CER and CEA messages is NOT
- RECOMMENDED. Instead, discovery of a Diameter entity's security
- capabilities can be done either through static configuration or via
- Diameter Peer Discovery as described in Section 5.2.
-
- The following values are supported:
-
-
- NO_INBAND_SECURITY 0
-
- This peer does not support TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP. This is the
- default value, if the AVP is omitted.
-
- TLS 1
-
- This node supports TLS/TCP [RFC5246] and DTLS/SCTP [RFC6083]
- security.
-
-6.11. Vendor-Specific-Application-Id AVP
-
- The Vendor-Specific-Application-Id AVP (AVP Code 260) is of type
- Grouped and is used to advertise support of a vendor-specific
- Diameter application. Exactly one instance of either Auth-
- Application-Id or Acct-Application-Id AVP MUST be present. The
- Application Id carried by either Auth-Application-Id or Acct-
- Application-Id AVP MUST comply with vendor-specific Application Id
- assignment described in Section 11.3. It MUST also match the
- Application Id present in the Diameter header except when used in a
- CER or CEA message.
-
- The Vendor-Id AVP is an informational AVP pertaining to the vendor
- who may have authorship of the vendor-specific Diameter application.
- It MUST NOT be used as a means of defining a completely separate
- vendor-specific Application Id space.
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 84]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- The Vendor-Specific-Application-Id AVP SHOULD be placed as close to
- the Diameter header as possible.
-
- AVP Format
-
- &lt;Vendor-Specific-Application-Id> ::= &lt; AVP Header: 260 >
- { Vendor-Id }
- [ Auth-Application-Id ]
- [ Acct-Application-Id ]
-
- A Vendor-Specific-Application-Id AVP MUST contain exactly one of
- either Auth-Application-Id or Acct-Application-Id. If a Vendor-
- Specific-Application-Id is received without one of these two AVPs,
- then the recipient SHOULD issue an answer with a Result-Code set to
- DIAMETER_MISSING_AVP. The answer SHOULD also include a Failed-AVP,
- which MUST contain an example of an Auth-Application-Id AVP and an
- Acct-Application-Id AVP.
-
- If a Vendor-Specific-Application-Id is received that contains both
- Auth-Application-Id and Acct-Application-Id, then the recipient MUST
- issue an answer with Result-Code set to
- DIAMETER_AVP_OCCURS_TOO_MANY_TIMES. The answer MUST also include a
- Failed-AVP, which MUST contain the received Auth-Application-Id AVP
- and Acct-Application-Id AVP.
-
-6.12. Redirect-Host AVP
-
- The Redirect-Host AVP (AVP Code 292) is of type DiameterURI. One or
- more instances of this AVP MUST be present if the answer message's
- 'E' bit is set and the Result-Code AVP is set to
- DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION.
-
- Upon receiving the above, the receiving Diameter node SHOULD forward
- the request directly to one of the hosts identified in these AVPs.
- The server contained in the selected Redirect-Host AVP SHOULD be used
- for all messages matching the criteria set by the Redirect-Host-Usage
- AVP.
-
-6.13. Redirect-Host-Usage AVP
-
- The Redirect-Host-Usage AVP (AVP Code 261) is of type Enumerated.
- This AVP MAY be present in answer messages whose 'E' bit is set and
- the Result-Code AVP is set to DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION.
-
- When present, this AVP provides hints about how the routing entry
- resulting from the Redirect-Host is to be used. The following values
- are supported:
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 85]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- DONT_CACHE 0
-
- The host specified in the Redirect-Host AVP SHOULD NOT be cached.
- This is the default value.
-
- ALL_SESSION 1
-
- All messages within the same session, as defined by the same value
- of the Session-ID AVP SHOULD be sent to the host specified in the
- Redirect-Host AVP.
-
- ALL_REALM 2
-
- All messages destined for the realm requested SHOULD be sent to
- the host specified in the Redirect-Host AVP.
-
- REALM_AND_APPLICATION 3
-
- All messages for the application requested to the realm specified
- SHOULD be sent to the host specified in the Redirect-Host AVP.
-
- ALL_APPLICATION 4
-
- All messages for the application requested SHOULD be sent to the
- host specified in the Redirect-Host AVP.
-
- ALL_HOST 5
-
- All messages that would be sent to the host that generated the
- Redirect-Host SHOULD be sent to the host specified in the
- Redirect-Host AVP.
-
- ALL_USER 6
-
- All messages for the user requested SHOULD be sent to the host
- specified in the Redirect-Host AVP.
-
- When multiple cached routes are created by redirect indications and
- they differ only in redirect usage and peers to forward requests to
- (see Section 6.1.8), a precedence rule MUST be applied to the
- redirect usage values of the cached routes during normal routing to
- resolve contentions that may occur. The precedence rule is the order
- that dictate which redirect usage should be considered before any
- other as they appear. The order is as follows:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 86]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- 1. ALL_SESSION
-
- 2. ALL_USER
-
- 3. REALM_AND_APPLICATION
-
- 4. ALL_REALM
-
- 5. ALL_APPLICATION
-
- 6. ALL_HOST
-
-6.14. Redirect-Max-Cache-Time AVP
-
- The Redirect-Max-Cache-Time AVP (AVP Code 262) is of type Unsigned32.
- This AVP MUST be present in answer messages whose 'E' bit is set,
- whose Result-Code AVP is set to DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION, and
- whose Redirect-Host-Usage AVP set to a non-zero value.
-
- This AVP contains the maximum number of seconds the peer and route
- table entries, created as a result of the Redirect-Host, SHOULD be
- cached. Note that once a host is no longer reachable, any associated
- cache, peer, and routing table entries MUST be deleted.
-
-7. Error Handling
-
- There are two different types of errors in Diameter; protocol errors
- and application errors. A protocol error is one that occurs at the
- base protocol level and MAY require per-hop attention (e.g., a
- message routing error). Application errors, on the other hand,
- generally occur due to a problem with a function specified in a
- Diameter application (e.g., user authentication, missing AVP).
-
- Result-Code AVP values that are used to report protocol errors MUST
- only be present in answer messages whose 'E' bit is set. When a
- request message is received that causes a protocol error, an answer
- message is returned with the 'E' bit set, and the Result-Code AVP is
- set to the appropriate protocol error value. As the answer is sent
- back towards the originator of the request, each proxy or relay agent
- MAY take action on the message.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 87]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- 1. Request +---------+ Link Broken
- +-------------------------->|Diameter |----///----+
- | +---------------------| | v
- +------+--+ | 2. answer + 'E' set | Relay 2 | +--------+
- |Diameter |&lt;-+ (Unable to Forward) +---------+ |Diameter|
- | | | Home |
- | Relay 1 |--+ +---------+ | Server |
- +---------+ | 3. Request |Diameter | +--------+
- +-------------------->| | ^
- | Relay 3 |-----------+
- +---------+
-
- Figure 7: Example of Protocol Error Causing Answer Message
-
- Figure 7 provides an example of a message forwarded upstream by a
- Diameter relay. When the message is received by Relay 2, and it
- detects that it cannot forward the request to the home server, an
- answer message is returned with the 'E' bit set and the Result-Code
- AVP set to DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER. Given that this error falls
- within the protocol error category, Relay 1 would take special
- action, and given the error, attempt to route the message through its
- alternate Relay 3.
-
- +---------+ 1. Request +---------+ 2. Request +---------+
- | Access |------------>|Diameter |------------>|Diameter |
- | | | | | Home |
- | Device |&lt;------------| Relay |&lt;------------| Server |
- +---------+ 4. Answer +---------+ 3. Answer +---------+
- (Missing AVP) (Missing AVP)
-
- Figure 8: Example of Application Error Answer Message
-
- Figure 8 provides an example of a Diameter message that caused an
- application error. When application errors occur, the Diameter
- entity reporting the error clears the 'R' bit in the Command Flags
- and adds the Result-Code AVP with the proper value. Application
- errors do not require any proxy or relay agent involvement;
- therefore, the message would be forwarded back to the originator of
- the request.
-
- In the case where the answer message itself contains errors, any
- related session SHOULD be terminated by sending an STR or ASR
- message. The Termination-Cause AVP in the STR MAY be filled with the
- appropriate value to indicate the cause of the error. An application
- MAY also send an application-specific request instead of an STR or
- ASR message to signal the error in the case where no state is
- maintained or to allow for some form of error recovery with the
- corresponding Diameter entity.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 88]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- There are certain Result-Code AVP application errors that require
- additional AVPs to be present in the answer. In these cases, the
- Diameter node that sets the Result-Code AVP to indicate the error
- MUST add the AVPs. Examples are as follows:
-
- o A request with an unrecognized AVP is received with the 'M' bit
- (Mandatory bit) set causes an answer to be sent with the Result-
- Code AVP set to DIAMETER_AVP_UNSUPPORTED and the Failed-AVP AVP
- containing the offending AVP.
-
- o A request with an AVP that is received with an unrecognized value
- causes an answer to be returned with the Result-Code AVP set to
- DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_VALUE, with the Failed-AVP AVP containing the
- AVP causing the error.
-
- o A received command that is missing AVPs that are defined as
- required in the commands CCF; examples are AVPs indicated as
- {AVP}. The receiver issues an answer with the Result-Code set to
- DIAMETER_MISSING_AVP and creates an AVP with the AVP Code and
- other fields set as expected in the missing AVP. The created AVP
- is then added to the Failed-AVP AVP.
-
- The Result-Code AVP describes the error that the Diameter node
- encountered in its processing. In case there are multiple errors,
- the Diameter node MUST report only the first error it encountered
- (detected possibly in some implementation-dependent order). The
- specific errors that can be described by this AVP are described in
- the following section.
-
-7.1. Result-Code AVP
-
- The Result-Code AVP (AVP Code 268) is of type Unsigned32 and
- indicates whether a particular request was completed successfully or
- an error occurred. All Diameter answer messages in IETF-defined
- Diameter application specifications MUST include one Result-Code AVP.
- A non-successful Result-Code AVP (one containing a non-2xxx value
- other than DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION) MUST include the Error-
- Reporting-Host AVP if the host setting the Result-Code AVP is
- different from the identity encoded in the Origin-Host AVP.
-
- The Result-Code data field contains an IANA-managed 32-bit address
- space representing errors (see Section 11.3.2). Diameter provides
- the following classes of errors, all identified by the thousands
- digit in the decimal notation:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 89]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- o 1xxx (Informational)
-
- o 2xxx (Success)
-
- o 3xxx (Protocol Errors)
-
- o 4xxx (Transient Failures)
-
- o 5xxx (Permanent Failure)
-
- An unrecognized class (one whose first digit is not defined in this
- section) MUST be handled as a permanent failure.
-
-7.1.1. Informational
-
- Errors that fall within this category are used to inform the
- requester that a request could not be satisfied, and additional
- action is required on its part before access is granted.
-
- DIAMETER_MULTI_ROUND_AUTH 1001
-
- This informational error is returned by a Diameter server to
- inform the access device that the authentication mechanism being
- used requires multiple round trips, and a subsequent request needs
- to be issued in order for access to be granted.
-
-7.1.2. Success
-
- Errors that fall within the Success category are used to inform a
- peer that a request has been successfully completed.
-
- DIAMETER_SUCCESS 2001
-
- The request was successfully completed.
-
- DIAMETER_LIMITED_SUCCESS 2002
-
- When returned, the request was successfully completed, but
- additional processing is required by the application in order to
- provide service to the user.
-
-7.1.3. Protocol Errors
-
- Errors that fall within the Protocol Error category SHOULD be treated
- on a per-hop basis, and Diameter proxies MAY attempt to correct the
- error, if it is possible. Note that these errors MUST only be used
- in answer messages whose 'E' bit is set.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 90]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- DIAMETER_COMMAND_UNSUPPORTED 3001
-
- This error code is used when a Diameter entity receives a message
- with a Command Code that it does not support.
-
- DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER 3002
-
- This error is given when Diameter cannot deliver the message to
- the destination, either because no host within the realm
- supporting the required application was available to process the
- request or because the Destination-Host AVP was given without the
- associated Destination-Realm AVP.
-
- DIAMETER_REALM_NOT_SERVED 3003
-
- The intended realm of the request is not recognized.
-
- DIAMETER_TOO_BUSY 3004
-
- When returned, a Diameter node SHOULD attempt to send the message
- to an alternate peer. This error MUST only be used when a
- specific server is requested, and it cannot provide the requested
- service.
-
- DIAMETER_LOOP_DETECTED 3005
-
- An agent detected a loop while trying to get the message to the
- intended recipient. The message MAY be sent to an alternate peer,
- if one is available, but the peer reporting the error has
- identified a configuration problem.
-
- DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION 3006
-
- A redirect agent has determined that the request could not be
- satisfied locally, and the initiator of the request SHOULD direct
- the request directly to the server, whose contact information has
- been added to the response. When set, the Redirect-Host AVP MUST
- be present.
-
- DIAMETER_APPLICATION_UNSUPPORTED 3007
-
- A request was sent for an application that is not supported.
-
- DIAMETER_INVALID_HDR_BITS 3008
-
- A request was received whose bits in the Diameter header were set
- either to an invalid combination or to a value that is
- inconsistent with the Command Code's definition.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 91]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_BITS 3009
-
- A request was received that included an AVP whose flag bits are
- set to an unrecognized value or that is inconsistent with the
- AVP's definition.
-
- DIAMETER_UNKNOWN_PEER 3010
-
- A CER was received from an unknown peer.
-
-7.1.4. Transient Failures
-
- Errors that fall within the transient failures category are used to
- inform a peer that the request could not be satisfied at the time it
- was received but MAY be able to satisfy the request in the future.
- Note that these errors MUST be used in answer messages whose 'E' bit
- is not set.
-
- DIAMETER_AUTHENTICATION_REJECTED 4001
-
- The authentication process for the user failed, most likely due to
- an invalid password used by the user. Further attempts MUST only
- be tried after prompting the user for a new password.
-
- DIAMETER_OUT_OF_SPACE 4002
-
- A Diameter node received the accounting request but was unable to
- commit it to stable storage due to a temporary lack of space.
-
- ELECTION_LOST 4003
-
- The peer has determined that it has lost the election process and
- has therefore disconnected the transport connection.
-
-7.1.5. Permanent Failures
-
- Errors that fall within the permanent failures category are used to
- inform the peer that the request failed and should not be attempted
- again. Note that these errors SHOULD be used in answer messages
- whose 'E' bit is not set. In error conditions where it is not
- possible or efficient to compose application-specific answer grammar,
- answer messages with the 'E' bit set and which comply to the grammar
- described in Section 7.2 MAY also be used for permanent errors.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 92]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- DIAMETER_AVP_UNSUPPORTED 5001
-
- The peer received a message that contained an AVP that is not
- recognized or supported and was marked with the 'M' (Mandatory)
- bit. A Diameter message with this error MUST contain one or more
- Failed-AVP AVPs containing the AVPs that caused the failure.
-
- DIAMETER_UNKNOWN_SESSION_ID 5002
-
- The request contained an unknown Session-Id.
-
- DIAMETER_AUTHORIZATION_REJECTED 5003
-
- A request was received for which the user could not be authorized.
- This error could occur if the service requested is not permitted
- to the user.
-
- DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_VALUE 5004
-
- The request contained an AVP with an invalid value in its data
- portion. A Diameter message indicating this error MUST include
- the offending AVPs within a Failed-AVP AVP.
-
- DIAMETER_MISSING_AVP 5005
-
- The request did not contain an AVP that is required by the Command
- Code definition. If this value is sent in the Result-Code AVP, a
- Failed-AVP AVP SHOULD be included in the message. The Failed-AVP
- AVP MUST contain an example of the missing AVP complete with the
- Vendor-Id if applicable. The value field of the missing AVP
- should be of correct minimum length and contain zeroes.
-
- DIAMETER_RESOURCES_EXCEEDED 5006
-
- A request was received that cannot be authorized because the user
- has already expended allowed resources. An example of this error
- condition is when a user that is restricted to one dial-up PPP
- port attempts to establish a second PPP connection.
-
- DIAMETER_CONTRADICTING_AVPS 5007
-
- The Home Diameter server has detected AVPs in the request that
- contradicted each other, and it is not willing to provide service
- to the user. The Failed-AVP AVP MUST be present, which contain
- the AVPs that contradicted each other.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 93]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- DIAMETER_AVP_NOT_ALLOWED 5008
-
- A message was received with an AVP that MUST NOT be present. The
- Failed-AVP AVP MUST be included and contain a copy of the
- offending AVP.
-
- DIAMETER_AVP_OCCURS_TOO_MANY_TIMES 5009
-
- A message was received that included an AVP that appeared more
- often than permitted in the message definition. The Failed-AVP
- AVP MUST be included and contain a copy of the first instance of
- the offending AVP that exceeded the maximum number of occurrences.
-
- DIAMETER_NO_COMMON_APPLICATION 5010
-
- This error is returned by a Diameter node that receives a CER
- whereby no applications are common between the CER sending peer
- and the CER receiving peer.
-
- DIAMETER_UNSUPPORTED_VERSION 5011
-
- This error is returned when a request was received, whose version
- number is unsupported.
-
- DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_COMPLY 5012
-
- This error is returned when a request is rejected for unspecified
- reasons.
-
- DIAMETER_INVALID_BIT_IN_HEADER 5013
-
- This error is returned when a reserved bit in the Diameter header
- is set to one (1) or the bits in the Diameter header are set
- incorrectly.
-
- DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_LENGTH 5014
-
- The request contained an AVP with an invalid length. A Diameter
- message indicating this error MUST include the offending AVPs
- within a Failed-AVP AVP. In cases where the erroneous AVP length
- value exceeds the message length or is less than the minimum AVP
- header length, it is sufficient to include the offending AVP
- header and a zero filled payload of the minimum required length
- for the payloads data type. If the AVP is a Grouped AVP, the
- Grouped AVP header with an empty payload would be sufficient to
- indicate the offending AVP. In the case where the offending AVP
- header cannot be fully decoded when the AVP length is less than
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 94]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- the minimum AVP header length, it is sufficient to include an
- offending AVP header that is formulated by padding the incomplete
- AVP header with zero up to the minimum AVP header length.
-
- DIAMETER_INVALID_MESSAGE_LENGTH 5015
-
- This error is returned when a request is received with an invalid
- message length.
-
- DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_BIT_COMBO 5016
-
- The request contained an AVP with which is not allowed to have the
- given value in the AVP Flags field. A Diameter message indicating
- this error MUST include the offending AVPs within a Failed-AVP
- AVP.
-
- DIAMETER_NO_COMMON_SECURITY 5017
-
- This error is returned when a CER message is received, and there
- are no common security mechanisms supported between the peers. A
- Capabilities-Exchange-Answer (CEA) message MUST be returned with
- the Result-Code AVP set to DIAMETER_NO_COMMON_SECURITY.
-
-7.2. Error Bit
-
- The 'E' (Error Bit) in the Diameter header is set when the request
- caused a protocol-related error (see Section 7.1.3). A message with
- the 'E' bit MUST NOT be sent as a response to an answer message.
- Note that a message with the 'E' bit set is still subjected to the
- processing rules defined in Section 6.2. When set, the answer
- message will not conform to the CCF specification for the command;
- instead, it and will conform to the following CCF:
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;answer-message> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: code, ERR [, PXY] >
- 0*1&lt; Session-Id >
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- { Result-Code }
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- [ Error-Message ]
- [ Error-Reporting-Host ]
- [ Failed-AVP ]
- [ Experimental-Result ]
- * [ Proxy-Info ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 95]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Note that the code used in the header is the same than the one found
- in the request message, but with the 'R' bit cleared and the 'E' bit
- set. The 'P' bit in the header is set to the same value as the one
- found in the request message.
-
-7.3. Error-Message AVP
-
- The Error-Message AVP (AVP Code 281) is of type UTF8String. It MAY
- accompany a Result-Code AVP as a human-readable error message. The
- Error-Message AVP is not intended to be useful in an environment
- where error messages are processed automatically. It SHOULD NOT be
- expected that the content of this AVP be parsed by network entities.
-
-7.4. Error-Reporting-Host AVP
-
- The Error-Reporting-Host AVP (AVP Code 294) is of type
- DiameterIdentity. This AVP contains the identity of the Diameter
- host that sent the Result-Code AVP to a value other than 2001
- (Success), only if the host setting the Result-Code is different from
- the one encoded in the Origin-Host AVP. This AVP is intended to be
- used for troubleshooting purposes, and it MUST be set when the
- Result-Code AVP indicates a failure.
-
-7.5. Failed-AVP AVP
-
- The Failed-AVP AVP (AVP Code 279) is of type Grouped and provides
- debugging information in cases where a request is rejected or not
- fully processed due to erroneous information in a specific AVP. The
- value of the Result-Code AVP will provide information on the reason
- for the Failed-AVP AVP. A Diameter answer message SHOULD contain an
- instance of the Failed-AVP AVP that corresponds to the error
- indicated by the Result-Code AVP. For practical purposes, this
- Failed-AVP would typically refer to the first AVP processing error
- that a Diameter node encounters.
-
- The possible reasons for this AVP are the presence of an improperly
- constructed AVP, an unsupported or unrecognized AVP, an invalid AVP
- value, the omission of a required AVP, the presence of an explicitly
- excluded AVP (see tables in Section 10) or the presence of two or
- more occurrences of an AVP that is restricted to 0, 1, or 0-1
- occurrences.
-
- A Diameter message SHOULD contain one Failed-AVP AVP, containing the
- entire AVP that could not be processed successfully. If the failure
- reason is omission of a required AVP, an AVP with the missing AVP
- code, the missing Vendor-Id, and a zero-filled payload of the minimum
- required length for the omitted AVP will be added. If the failure
- reason is an invalid AVP length where the reported length is less
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 96]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- than the minimum AVP header length or greater than the reported
- message length, a copy of the offending AVP header and a zero-filled
- payload of the minimum required length SHOULD be added.
-
- In the case where the offending AVP is embedded within a Grouped AVP,
- the Failed-AVP MAY contain the grouped AVP, which in turn contains
- the single offending AVP. The same method MAY be employed if the
- grouped AVP itself is embedded in yet another grouped AVP and so on.
- In this case, the Failed-AVP MAY contain the grouped AVP hierarchy up
- to the single offending AVP. This enables the recipient to detect
- the location of the offending AVP when embedded in a group.
-
- AVP Format
-
- &lt;Failed-AVP> ::= &lt; AVP Header: 279 >
- 1* {AVP}
-
-7.6. Experimental-Result AVP
-
- The Experimental-Result AVP (AVP Code 297) is of type Grouped, and
- indicates whether a particular vendor-specific request was completed
- successfully or whether an error occurred. This AVP has the
- following structure:
-
- AVP Format
-
- Experimental-Result ::= &lt; AVP Header: 297 >
- { Vendor-Id }
- { Experimental-Result-Code }
-
- The Vendor-Id AVP (see Section 5.3.3) in this grouped AVP identifies
- the vendor responsible for the assignment of the result code that
- follows. All Diameter answer messages defined in vendor-specific
- applications MUST include either one Result-Code AVP or one
- Experimental-Result AVP.
-
-7.7. Experimental-Result-Code AVP
-
- The Experimental-Result-Code AVP (AVP Code 298) is of type Unsigned32
- and contains a vendor-assigned value representing the result of
- processing the request.
-
- It is recommended that vendor-specific result codes follow the same
- conventions given for the Result-Code AVP regarding the different
- types of result codes and the handling of errors (for non-2xxx
- values).
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 97]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-8. Diameter User Sessions
-
- In general, Diameter can provide two different types of services to
- applications. The first involves authentication and authorization,
- and it can optionally make use of accounting. The second only makes
- use of accounting.
-
- When a service makes use of the authentication and/or authorization
- portion of an application, and a user requests access to the network,
- the Diameter client issues an auth request to its local server. The
- auth request is defined in a service-specific Diameter application
- (e.g., NASREQ). The request contains a Session-Id AVP, which is used
- in subsequent messages (e.g., subsequent authorization, accounting,
- etc.) relating to the user's session. The Session-Id AVP is a means
- for the client and servers to correlate a Diameter message with a
- user session.
-
- When a Diameter server authorizes a user to implement network
- resources for a finite amount of time, and it is willing to extend
- the authorization via a future request, it MUST add the
- Authorization- Lifetime AVP to the answer message. The
- Authorization-Lifetime AVP defines the maximum number of seconds a
- user MAY make use of the resources before another authorization
- request is expected by the server. The Auth-Grace-Period AVP
- contains the number of seconds following the expiration of the
- Authorization-Lifetime, after which the server will release all state
- information related to the user's session. Note that if payment for
- services is expected by the serving realm from the user's home realm,
- the Authorization-Lifetime AVP, combined with the Auth-Grace-Period
- AVP, implies the maximum length of the session for which the home
- realm is willing to be fiscally responsible. Services provided past
- the expiration of the Authorization-Lifetime and Auth-Grace-Period
- AVPs are the responsibility of the access device. Of course, the
- actual cost of services rendered is clearly outside the scope of the
- protocol.
-
- An access device that does not expect to send a re-authorization or a
- session termination request to the server MAY include the Auth-
- Session-State AVP with the value set to NO_STATE_MAINTAINED as a hint
- to the server. If the server accepts the hint, it agrees that since
- no session termination message will be received once service to the
- user is terminated, it cannot maintain state for the session. If the
- answer message from the server contains a different value in the
- Auth-Session-State AVP (or the default value if the AVP is absent),
- the access device MUST follow the server's directives. Note that the
- value NO_STATE_MAINTAINED MUST NOT be set in subsequent re-
- authorization requests and answers.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 98]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- The base protocol does not include any authorization request
- messages, since these are largely application-specific and are
- defined in a Diameter application document. However, the base
- protocol does define a set of messages that are used to terminate
- user sessions. These are used to allow servers that maintain state
- information to free resources.
-
- When a service only makes use of the accounting portion of the
- Diameter protocol, even in combination with an application, the
- Session-Id is still used to identify user sessions. However, the
- session termination messages are not used, since a session is
- signaled as being terminated by issuing an accounting stop message.
-
- Diameter may also be used for services that cannot be easily
- categorized as authentication, authorization, or accounting (e.g.,
- certain Third Generation Partnership Project Internet Multimedia
- System (3GPP IMS) interfaces). In such cases, the finite state
- machine defined in subsequent sections may not be applicable.
- Therefore, the application itself MAY need to define its own finite
- state machine. However, such application-specific state machines
- SHOULD follow the general state machine framework outlined in this
- document such as the use of Session-Id AVPs and the use of STR/STA,
- ASR/ASA messages for stateful sessions.
-
-8.1. Authorization Session State Machine
-
- This section contains a set of finite state machines, which represent
- the life cycle of Diameter sessions and which MUST be observed by all
- Diameter implementations that make use of the authentication and/or
- authorization portion of a Diameter application. The term "Service-
- Specific" below refers to a message defined in a Diameter application
- (e.g., Mobile IPv4, NASREQ).
-
- There are four different authorization session state machines
- supported in the Diameter base protocol. The first two describe a
- session in which the server is maintaining session state, indicated
- by the value of the Auth-Session-State AVP (or its absence). One
- describes the session from a client perspective, the other from a
- server perspective. The second two state machines are used when the
- server does not maintain session state. Here again, one describes
- the session from a client perspective, the other from a server
- perspective.
-
- When a session is moved to the Idle state, any resources that were
- allocated for the particular session must be released. Any event not
- listed in the state machines MUST be considered an error condition,
- and an answer, if applicable, MUST be returned to the originator of
- the message.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 99]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- In the case that an application does not support re-auth, the state
- transitions related to server-initiated re-auth, when both client and
- server sessions maintain state (e.g., Send RAR, Pending, Receive
- RAA), MAY be ignored.
-
- In the state table, the event "Failure to send X" means that the
- Diameter agent is unable to send command X to the desired
- destination. This could be due to the peer being down or due to the
- peer sending back a transient failure or temporary protocol error
- notification DIAMETER_TOO_BUSY or DIAMETER_LOOP_DETECTED in the
- Result-Code AVP of the corresponding Answer command. The event 'X
- successfully sent' is the complement of 'Failure to send X'.
-
- The following state machine is observed by a client when state is
- maintained on the server:
-
- CLIENT, STATEFUL
- State Event Action New State
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- Idle Client or device requests Send Pending
- access service-
- specific
- auth req
-
- Idle ASR Received Send ASA Idle
- for unknown session with
- Result-Code =
- UNKNOWN_
- SESSION_ID
-
- Idle RAR Received Send RAA Idle
- for unknown session with
- Result-Code =
- UNKNOWN_
- SESSION_ID
-
- Pending Successful service-specific Grant Open
- authorization answer Access
- received with default
- Auth-Session-State value
-
- Pending Successful service-specific Sent STR Discon
- authorization answer received,
- but service not provided
-
- Pending Error processing successful Sent STR Discon
- service-specific authorization
- answer
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 100]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Pending Failed service-specific Clean up Idle
- authorization answer received
-
- Open User or client device Send Open
- requests access to service service-
- specific
- auth req
-
- Open Successful service-specific Provide Open
- authorization answer received service
-
- Open Failed service-specific Discon. Idle
- authorization answer user/device
- received.
-
- Open RAR received and client will Send RAA Open
- perform subsequent re-auth with
- Result-Code =
- SUCCESS
-
- Open RAR received and client will Send RAA Idle
- not perform subsequent with
- re-auth Result-Code !=
- SUCCESS,
- Discon.
- user/device
-
- Open Session-Timeout expires on Send STR Discon
- access device
-
- Open ASR received, Send ASA Discon
- client will comply with
- with request to end the Result-Code =
- session = SUCCESS,
- Send STR.
-
- Open ASR Received, Send ASA Open
- client will not comply with
- with request to end the Result-Code !=
- session != SUCCESS
-
- Open Authorization-Lifetime + Send STR Discon
- Auth-Grace-Period expires on
- access device
-
- Discon ASR received Send ASA Discon
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 101]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Discon STA received Discon. Idle
- user/device
-
- The following state machine is observed by a server when it is
- maintaining state for the session:
-
- SERVER, STATEFUL
- State Event Action New State
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- Idle Service-specific authorization Send Open
- request received, and successful
- user is authorized service-
- specific
- answer
-
- Idle Service-specific authorization Send Idle
- request received, and failed
- user is not authorized service-
- specific
- answer
-
- Open Service-specific authorization Send Open
- request received, and user successful
- is authorized service-
- specific
- answer
-
- Open Service-specific authorization Send Idle
- request received, and user failed
- is not authorized service-
- specific
- answer,
- Clean up
-
- Open Home server wants to confirm Send RAR Pending
- authentication and/or
- authorization of the user
-
- Pending Received RAA with a failed Clean up Idle
- Result-Code
-
- Pending Received RAA with Result-Code Update Open
- = SUCCESS session
-
- Open Home server wants to Send ASR Discon
- terminate the service
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 102]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Open Authorization-Lifetime (and Clean up Idle
- Auth-Grace-Period) expires
- on home server
-
- Open Session-Timeout expires on Clean up Idle
- home server
-
- Discon Failure to send ASR Wait, Discon
- resend ASR
-
- Discon ASR successfully sent and Clean up Idle
- ASA Received with Result-Code
-
- Not ASA Received None No Change
- Discon
-
- Any STR Received Send STA, Idle
- Clean up
-
- The following state machine is observed by a client when state is not
- maintained on the server:
-
- CLIENT, STATELESS
- State Event Action New State
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- Idle Client or device requests Send Pending
- access service-
- specific
- auth req
-
- Pending Successful service-specific Grant Open
- authorization answer access
- received with Auth-Session-
- State set to
- NO_STATE_MAINTAINED
-
- Pending Failed service-specific Clean up Idle
- authorization answer
- received
-
- Open Session-Timeout expires on Discon. Idle
- access device user/device
-
- Open Service to user is terminated Discon. Idle
- user/device
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 103]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- The following state machine is observed by a server when it is not
- maintaining state for the session:
-
- SERVER, STATELESS
- State Event Action New State
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- Idle Service-specific authorization Send Idle
- request received, and service-
- successfully processed specific
- answer
-
-8.2. Accounting Session State Machine
-
- The following state machines MUST be supported for applications that
- have an accounting portion or that require only accounting services.
- The first state machine is to be observed by clients.
-
- See Section 9.7 for Accounting Command Codes and Section 9.8 for
- Accounting AVPs.
-
- The server side in the accounting state machine depends in some cases
- on the particular application. The Diameter base protocol defines a
- default state machine that MUST be followed by all applications that
- have not specified other state machines. This is the second state
- machine in this section described below.
-
- The default server side state machine requires the reception of
- accounting records in any order and at any time, and it does not
- place any standards requirement on the processing of these records.
- Implementations of Diameter may perform checking, ordering,
- correlation, fraud detection, and other tasks based on these records.
- AVPs may need to be inspected as a part of these tasks. The tasks
- can happen either immediately after record reception or in a post-
- processing phase. However, as these tasks are typically application
- or even policy dependent, they are not standardized by the Diameter
- specifications. Applications MAY define requirements on when to
- accept accounting records based on the used value of Accounting-
- Realtime-Required AVP, credit-limit checks, and so on.
-
- However, the Diameter base protocol defines one optional server side
- state machine that MAY be followed by applications that require
- keeping track of the session state at the accounting server. Note
- that such tracking is incompatible with the ability to sustain long
- duration connectivity problems. Therefore, the use of this state
- machine is recommended only in applications where the value of the
- Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP is DELIVER_AND_GRANT; hence,
- accounting connectivity problems are required to cause the serviced
- user to be disconnected. Otherwise, records produced by the client
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 104]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- may be lost by the server, which no longer accepts them after the
- connectivity is re-established. This state machine is the third
- state machine in this section. The state machine is supervised by a
- supervision session timer Ts, whose value should be reasonably higher
- than the Acct_Interim_Interval value. Ts MAY be set to two times the
- value of the Acct_Interim_Interval so as to avoid the accounting
- session in the Diameter server to change to Idle state in case of
- short transient network failure.
-
- Any event not listed in the state machines MUST be considered as an
- error condition, and a corresponding answer, if applicable, MUST be
- returned to the originator of the message.
-
- In the state table, the event "Failure to send" means that the
- Diameter client is unable to communicate with the desired
- destination. This could be due to the peer being down, or due to the
- peer sending back a transient failure or temporary protocol error
- notification DIAMETER_OUT_OF_SPACE, DIAMETER_TOO_BUSY, or
- DIAMETER_LOOP_DETECTED in the Result-Code AVP of the Accounting
- Answer command.
-
- The event "Failed answer" means that the Diameter client received a
- non-transient failure notification in the Accounting Answer command.
-
- Note that the action "Disconnect user/dev" MUST also have an effect
- on the authorization session state table, e.g., cause the STR message
- to be sent, if the given application has both authentication/
- authorization and accounting portions.
-
- The states PendingS, PendingI, PendingL, PendingE, and PendingB stand
- for pending states to wait for an answer to an accounting request
- related to a Start, Interim, Stop, Event, or buffered record,
- respectively.
-
- CLIENT, ACCOUNTING
- State Event Action New State
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- Idle Client or device requests Send PendingS
- access accounting
- start req.
-
- Idle Client or device requests Send PendingE
- a one-time service accounting
- event req
-
- Idle Records in storage Send PendingB
- record
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 105]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- PendingS Successful accounting Open
- start answer received
-
- PendingS Failure to send and buffer Store Open
- space available and real time Start
- not equal to DELIVER_AND_GRANT Record
-
- PendingS Failure to send and no buffer Open
- space available and real time
- equal to GRANT_AND_LOSE
-
- PendingS Failure to send and no Disconnect Idle
- buffer space available and user/dev
- real time not equal to
- GRANT_AND_LOSE
-
- PendingS Failed accounting start answer Open
- received and real time equal
- to GRANT_AND_LOSE
-
- PendingS Failed accounting start answer Disconnect Idle
- received and real time not user/dev
- equal to GRANT_AND_LOSE
-
- PendingS User service terminated Store PendingS
- stop
- record
-
- Open Interim interval elapses Send PendingI
- accounting
- interim
- record
-
- Open User service terminated Send PendingL
- accounting
- stop req.
-
- PendingI Successful accounting interim Open
- answer received
-
- PendingI Failure to send and (buffer Store Open
- space available or old interim
- record can be overwritten) record
- and real time not equal to
- DELIVER_AND_GRANT
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 106]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- PendingI Failure to send and no buffer Open
- space available and real time
- equal to GRANT_AND_LOSE
-
- PendingI Failure to send and no Disconnect Idle
- buffer space available and user/dev
- real time not equal to
- GRANT_AND_LOSE
-
- PendingI Failed accounting interim Open
- answer received and real time
- equal to GRANT_AND_LOSE
-
- PendingI Failed accounting interim Disconnect Idle
- answer received and user/dev
- real time not equal to
- GRANT_AND_LOSE
-
- PendingI User service terminated Store PendingI
- stop
- record
- PendingE Successful accounting Idle
- event answer received
-
- PendingE Failure to send and buffer Store Idle
- space available event
- record
-
- PendingE Failure to send and no buffer Idle
- space available
-
- PendingE Failed accounting event answer Idle
- received
-
- PendingB Successful accounting answer Delete Idle
- received record
-
- PendingB Failure to send Idle
-
- PendingB Failed accounting answer Delete Idle
- received record
-
- PendingL Successful accounting Idle
- stop answer received
-
- PendingL Failure to send and buffer Store Idle
- space available stop
- record
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 107]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- PendingL Failure to send and no buffer Idle
- space available
-
- PendingL Failed accounting stop answer Idle
- received
-
-
- SERVER, STATELESS ACCOUNTING
- State Event Action New State
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Idle Accounting start request Send Idle
- received and successfully accounting
- processed. start
- answer
-
- Idle Accounting event request Send Idle
- received and successfully accounting
- processed. event
- answer
-
- Idle Interim record received Send Idle
- and successfully processed. accounting
- interim
- answer
-
- Idle Accounting stop request Send Idle
- received and successfully accounting
- processed stop answer
-
- Idle Accounting request received; Send Idle
- no space left to store accounting
- records answer;
- Result-Code =
- OUT_OF_
- SPACE
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 108]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- SERVER, STATEFUL ACCOUNTING
- State Event Action New State
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Idle Accounting start request Send Open
- received and successfully accounting
- processed. start
- answer;
- Start Ts
-
- Idle Accounting event request Send Idle
- received and successfully accounting
- processed. event
- answer
- Idle Accounting request received; Send Idle
- no space left to store accounting
- records answer;
- Result-Code =
- OUT_OF_
- SPACE
-
- Open Interim record received Send Open
- and successfully processed. accounting
- interim
- answer;
- Restart Ts
-
- Open Accounting stop request Send Idle
- received and successfully accounting
- processed stop answer;
- Stop Ts
-
- Open Accounting request received; Send Idle
- no space left to store accounting
- records answer;
- Result-Code =
- OUT_OF_
- SPACE;
- Stop Ts
-
- Open Session supervision timer Ts Stop Ts Idle
- expired
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 109]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-8.3. Server-Initiated Re-Auth
-
- A Diameter server may initiate a re-authentication and/or re-
- authorization service for a particular session by issuing a Re-Auth-
- Request (RAR).
-
- For example, for prepaid services, the Diameter server that
- originally authorized a session may need some confirmation that the
- user is still using the services.
-
- An access device that receives an RAR message with the Session-Id
- equal to a currently active session MUST initiate a re-auth towards
- the user, if the service supports this particular feature. Each
- Diameter application MUST state whether server-initiated re-auth is
- supported, since some applications do not allow access devices to
- prompt the user for re-auth.
-
-8.3.1. Re-Auth-Request
-
- The Re-Auth-Request (RAR), indicated by the Command Code set to 258
- and the message flags' 'R' bit set, may be sent by any server to the
- access device that is providing session service, to request that the
- user be re-authenticated and/or re-authorized.
-
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;RAR> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 258, REQ, PXY >
- &lt; Session-Id >
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- { Destination-Realm }
- { Destination-Host }
- { Auth-Application-Id }
- { Re-Auth-Request-Type }
- [ User-Name ]
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- * [ Proxy-Info ]
- * [ Route-Record ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-8.3.2. Re-Auth-Answer
-
- The Re-Auth-Answer (RAA), indicated by the Command Code set to 258
- and the message flags' 'R' bit clear, is sent in response to the RAR.
- The Result-Code AVP MUST be present, and it indicates the disposition
- of the request.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 110]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- A successful RAA message MUST be followed by an application-specific
- authentication and/or authorization message.
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;RAA> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 258, PXY >
- &lt; Session-Id >
- { Result-Code }
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- [ User-Name ]
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- [ Error-Message ]
- [ Error-Reporting-Host ]
- [ Failed-AVP ]
- * [ Redirect-Host ]
- [ Redirect-Host-Usage ]
- [ Redirect-Max-Cache-Time ]
- * [ Proxy-Info ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-8.4. Session Termination
-
- It is necessary for a Diameter server that authorized a session, for
- which it is maintaining state, to be notified when that session is no
- longer active, both for tracking purposes as well as to allow
- stateful agents to release any resources that they may have provided
- for the user's session. For sessions whose state is not being
- maintained, this section is not used.
-
- When a user session that required Diameter authorization terminates,
- the access device that provided the service MUST issue a Session-
- Termination-Request (STR) message to the Diameter server that
- authorized the service, to notify it that the session is no longer
- active. An STR MUST be issued when a user session terminates for any
- reason, including user logoff, expiration of Session-Timeout,
- administrative action, termination upon receipt of an Abort-Session-
- Request (see below), orderly shutdown of the access device, etc.
-
- The access device also MUST issue an STR for a session that was
- authorized but never actually started. This could occur, for
- example, due to a sudden resource shortage in the access device, or
- because the access device is unwilling to provide the type of service
- requested in the authorization, or because the access device does not
- support a mandatory AVP returned in the authorization, etc.
-
- It is also possible that a session that was authorized is never
- actually started due to action of a proxy. For example, a proxy may
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 111]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- modify an authorization answer, converting the result from success to
- failure, prior to forwarding the message to the access device. If
- the answer did not contain an Auth-Session-State AVP with the value
- NO_STATE_MAINTAINED, a proxy that causes an authorized session not to
- be started MUST issue an STR to the Diameter server that authorized
- the session, since the access device has no way of knowing that the
- session had been authorized.
-
- A Diameter server that receives an STR message MUST clean up
- resources (e.g., session state) associated with the Session-Id
- specified in the STR and return a Session-Termination-Answer.
-
- A Diameter server also MUST clean up resources when the Session-
- Timeout expires, or when the Authorization-Lifetime and the Auth-
- Grace-Period AVPs expire without receipt of a re-authorization
- request, regardless of whether an STR for that session is received.
- The access device is not expected to provide service beyond the
- expiration of these timers; thus, expiration of either of these
- timers implies that the access device may have unexpectedly shut
- down.
-
-8.4.1. Session-Termination-Request
-
- The Session-Termination-Request (STR), indicated by the Command Code
- set to 275 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit set, is sent by a Diameter
- client or by a Diameter proxy to inform the Diameter server that an
- authenticated and/or authorized session is being terminated.
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;STR> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 275, REQ, PXY >
- &lt; Session-Id >
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- { Destination-Realm }
- { Auth-Application-Id }
- { Termination-Cause }
- [ User-Name ]
- [ Destination-Host ]
- * [ Class ]
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- * [ Proxy-Info ]
- * [ Route-Record ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 112]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-8.4.2. Session-Termination-Answer
-
- The Session-Termination-Answer (STA), indicated by the Command Code
- set to 275 and the message flags' 'R' bit clear, is sent by the
- Diameter server to acknowledge the notification that the session has
- been terminated. The Result-Code AVP MUST be present, and it MAY
- contain an indication that an error occurred while servicing the STR.
-
- Upon sending or receipt of the STA, the Diameter server MUST release
- all resources for the session indicated by the Session-Id AVP. Any
- intermediate server in the Proxy-Chain MAY also release any
- resources, if necessary.
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;STA> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 275, PXY >
- &lt; Session-Id >
- { Result-Code }
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- [ User-Name ]
- * [ Class ]
- [ Error-Message ]
- [ Error-Reporting-Host ]
- [ Failed-AVP ]
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- * [ Redirect-Host ]
- [ Redirect-Host-Usage ]
- [ Redirect-Max-Cache-Time ]
- * [ Proxy-Info ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-8.5. Aborting a Session
-
- A Diameter server may request that the access device stop providing
- service for a particular session by issuing an Abort-Session-Request
- (ASR).
-
- For example, the Diameter server that originally authorized the
- session may be required to cause that session to be stopped for lack
- of credit or other reasons that were not anticipated when the session
- was first authorized.
-
- An access device that receives an ASR with Session-ID equal to a
- currently active session MAY stop the session. Whether the access
- device stops the session or not is implementation and/or
- configuration dependent. For example, an access device may honor
- ASRs from certain agents only. In any case, the access device MUST
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 113]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- respond with an Abort-Session-Answer, including a Result-Code AVP to
- indicate what action it took.
-
-8.5.1. Abort-Session-Request
-
- The Abort-Session-Request (ASR), indicated by the Command Code set to
- 274 and the message flags' 'R' bit set, may be sent by any Diameter
- server or any Diameter proxy to the access device that is providing
- session service, to request that the session identified by the
- Session-Id be stopped.
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;ASR> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 274, REQ, PXY >
- &lt; Session-Id >
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- { Destination-Realm }
- { Destination-Host }
- { Auth-Application-Id }
- [ User-Name ]
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- * [ Proxy-Info ]
- * [ Route-Record ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-8.5.2. Abort-Session-Answer
-
- The Abort-Session-Answer (ASA), indicated by the Command Code set to
- 274 and the message flags' 'R' bit clear, is sent in response to the
- ASR. The Result-Code AVP MUST be present and indicates the
- disposition of the request.
-
- If the session identified by Session-Id in the ASR was successfully
- terminated, the Result-Code is set to DIAMETER_SUCCESS. If the
- session is not currently active, the Result-Code is set to
- DIAMETER_UNKNOWN_SESSION_ID. If the access device does not stop the
- session for any other reason, the Result-Code is set to
- DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_COMPLY.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 114]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;ASA> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 274, PXY >
- &lt; Session-Id >
- { Result-Code }
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- [ User-Name ]
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- [ Error-Message ]
- [ Error-Reporting-Host ]
- [ Failed-AVP ]
- * [ Redirect-Host ]
- [ Redirect-Host-Usage ]
- [ Redirect-Max-Cache-Time ]
- * [ Proxy-Info ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-8.6. Inferring Session Termination from Origin-State-Id
-
- The Origin-State-Id is used to allow detection of terminated sessions
- for which no STR would have been issued, due to unanticipated
- shutdown of an access device.
-
- A Diameter client or access device increments the value of the
- Origin-State-Id every time it is started or powered up. The new
- Origin-State-Id is then sent in the CER/CEA message immediately upon
- connection to the server. The Diameter server receiving the new
- Origin-State-Id can determine whether the sending Diameter client had
- abruptly shut down by comparing the old value of the Origin-State-Id
- it has kept for that specific client is less than the new value and
- whether it has un-terminated sessions originating from that client.
-
- An access device can also include the Origin-State-Id in request
- messages other than the CER if there are relays or proxies in between
- the access device and the server. In this case, however, the server
- cannot discover that the access device has been restarted unless and
- until it receives a new request from it. Therefore, this mechanism
- is more opportunistic across proxies and relays.
-
- The Diameter server may assume that all sessions that were active
- prior to detection of a client restart have been terminated. The
- Diameter server MAY clean up all session state associated with such
- lost sessions, and it MAY also issue STRs for all such lost sessions
- that were authorized on upstream servers, to allow session state to
- be cleaned up globally.
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 115]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-8.7. Auth-Request-Type AVP
-
- The Auth-Request-Type AVP (AVP Code 274) is of type Enumerated and is
- included in application-specific auth requests to inform the peers
- whether a user is to be authenticated only, authorized only, or both.
- Note any value other than both MAY cause RADIUS interoperability
- issues. The following values are defined:
-
- AUTHENTICATE_ONLY 1
-
- The request being sent is for authentication only, and it MUST
- contain the relevant application-specific authentication AVPs that
- are needed by the Diameter server to authenticate the user.
-
- AUTHORIZE_ONLY 2
-
- The request being sent is for authorization only, and it MUST
- contain the application-specific authorization AVPs that are
- necessary to identify the service being requested/offered.
-
- AUTHORIZE_AUTHENTICATE 3
-
- The request contains a request for both authentication and
- authorization. The request MUST include both the relevant
- application-specific authentication information and authorization
- information necessary to identify the service being requested/
- offered.
-
-8.8. Session-Id AVP
-
- The Session-Id AVP (AVP Code 263) is of type UTF8String and is used
- to identify a specific session (see Section 8). All messages
- pertaining to a specific session MUST include only one Session-Id
- AVP, and the same value MUST be used throughout the life of a
- session. When present, the Session-Id SHOULD appear immediately
- following the Diameter header (see Section 3).
-
- The Session-Id MUST be globally and eternally unique, as it is meant
- to uniquely identify a user session without reference to any other
- information, and it may be needed to correlate historical
- authentication information with accounting information. The
- Session-Id includes a mandatory portion and an implementation-defined
- portion; a recommended format for the implementation-defined portion
- is outlined below.
-
- The Session-Id MUST begin with the sender's identity encoded in the
- DiameterIdentity type (see Section 4.3.1). The remainder of the
- Session-Id is delimited by a ";" character, and it MAY be any
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 116]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- sequence that the client can guarantee to be eternally unique;
- however, the following format is recommended, (square brackets []
- indicate an optional element):
-
- &lt;DiameterIdentity>;&lt;high 32 bits>;&lt;low 32 bits>[;&lt;optional value>]
-
- &lt;high 32 bits> and &lt;low 32 bits> are decimal representations of the
- high and low 32 bits of a monotonically increasing 64-bit value. The
- 64-bit value is rendered in two part to simplify formatting by 32-bit
- processors. At startup, the high 32 bits of the 64-bit value MAY be
- initialized to the time in NTP format [RFC5905], and the low 32 bits
- MAY be initialized to zero. This will for practical purposes
- eliminate the possibility of overlapping Session-Ids after a reboot,
- assuming the reboot process takes longer than a second.
- Alternatively, an implementation MAY keep track of the increasing
- value in non-volatile memory.
-
-
- &lt;optional value> is implementation specific, but it may include a
- modem's device Id, a Layer 2 address, timestamp, etc.
-
- Example, in which there is no optional value:
-
- accesspoint7.example.com;1876543210;523
-
- Example, in which there is an optional value:
-
- accesspoint7.example.com;1876543210;523;[email protected]
-
- The Session-Id is created by the Diameter application initiating the
- session, which, in most cases, is done by the client. Note that a
- Session-Id MAY be used for both the authentication, authorization,
- and accounting commands of a given application.
-
-8.9. Authorization-Lifetime AVP
-
- The Authorization-Lifetime AVP (AVP Code 291) is of type Unsigned32
- and contains the maximum number of seconds of service to be provided
- to the user before the user is to be re-authenticated and/or re-
- authorized. Care should be taken when the Authorization-Lifetime
- value is determined, since a low, non-zero value could create
- significant Diameter traffic, which could congest both the network
- and the agents.
-
- A value of zero (0) means that immediate re-auth is necessary by the
- access device. The absence of this AVP, or a value of all ones
- (meaning all bits in the 32-bit field are set to one) means no re-
- auth is expected.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 117]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- If both this AVP and the Session-Timeout AVP are present in a
- message, the value of the latter MUST NOT be smaller than the
- Authorization-Lifetime AVP.
-
- An Authorization-Lifetime AVP MAY be present in re-authorization
- messages, and it contains the number of seconds the user is
- authorized to receive service from the time the re-auth answer
- message is received by the access device.
-
- This AVP MAY be provided by the client as a hint of the maximum
- lifetime that it is willing to accept. The server MUST return a
- value that is equal to, or smaller than, the one provided by the
- client.
-
-8.10. Auth-Grace-Period AVP
-
- The Auth-Grace-Period AVP (AVP Code 276) is of type Unsigned32 and
- contains the number of seconds the Diameter server will wait
- following the expiration of the Authorization-Lifetime AVP before
- cleaning up resources for the session.
-
-8.11. Auth-Session-State AVP
-
- The Auth-Session-State AVP (AVP Code 277) is of type Enumerated and
- specifies whether state is maintained for a particular session. The
- client MAY include this AVP in requests as a hint to the server, but
- the value in the server's answer message is binding. The following
- values are supported:
-
- STATE_MAINTAINED 0
-
- This value is used to specify that session state is being
- maintained, and the access device MUST issue a session termination
- message when service to the user is terminated. This is the
- default value.
-
- NO_STATE_MAINTAINED 1
-
- This value is used to specify that no session termination messages
- will be sent by the access device upon expiration of the
- Authorization-Lifetime.
-
-8.12. Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP
-
- The Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP (AVP Code 285) is of type Enumerated and
- is included in application-specific auth answers to inform the client
- of the action expected upon expiration of the Authorization-Lifetime.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 118]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- If the answer message contains an Authorization-Lifetime AVP with a
- positive value, the Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP MUST be present in an
- answer message. The following values are defined:
-
- AUTHORIZE_ONLY 0
-
- An authorization only re-auth is expected upon expiration of the
- Authorization-Lifetime. This is the default value if the AVP is
- not present in answer messages that include the Authorization-
- Lifetime.
-
- AUTHORIZE_AUTHENTICATE 1
-
- An authentication and authorization re-auth is expected upon
- expiration of the Authorization-Lifetime.
-
-8.13. Session-Timeout AVP
-
- The Session-Timeout AVP (AVP Code 27) [RFC2865] is of type Unsigned32
- and contains the maximum number of seconds of service to be provided
- to the user before termination of the session. When both the
- Session-Timeout and the Authorization-Lifetime AVPs are present in an
- answer message, the former MUST be equal to or greater than the value
- of the latter.
-
- A session that terminates on an access device due to the expiration
- of the Session-Timeout MUST cause an STR to be issued, unless both
- the access device and the home server had previously agreed that no
- session termination messages would be sent (see Section 8).
-
- A Session-Timeout AVP MAY be present in a re-authorization answer
- message, and it contains the remaining number of seconds from the
- beginning of the re-auth.
-
- A value of zero, or the absence of this AVP, means that this session
- has an unlimited number of seconds before termination.
-
- This AVP MAY be provided by the client as a hint of the maximum
- timeout that it is willing to accept. However, the server MAY return
- a value that is equal to, or smaller than, the one provided by the
- client.
-
-8.14. User-Name AVP
-
- The User-Name AVP (AVP Code 1) [RFC2865] is of type UTF8String, which
- contains the User-Name, in a format consistent with the NAI
- specification [RFC4282].
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 119]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-8.15. Termination-Cause AVP
-
- The Termination-Cause AVP (AVP Code 295) is of type Enumerated, and
- is used to indicate the reason why a session was terminated on the
- access device. The currently assigned values for this AVP can be
- found in the IANA registry for Termination-Cause AVP Values
- [IANATCV].
-
-8.16. Origin-State-Id AVP
-
- The Origin-State-Id AVP (AVP Code 278), of type Unsigned32, is a
- monotonically increasing value that is advanced whenever a Diameter
- entity restarts with loss of previous state, for example, upon
- reboot. Origin-State-Id MAY be included in any Diameter message,
- including CER.
-
- A Diameter entity issuing this AVP MUST create a higher value for
- this AVP each time its state is reset. A Diameter entity MAY set
- Origin-State-Id to the time of startup, or it MAY use an incrementing
- counter retained in non-volatile memory across restarts.
-
- The Origin-State-Id, if present, MUST reflect the state of the entity
- indicated by Origin-Host. If a proxy modifies Origin-Host, it MUST
- either remove Origin-State-Id or modify it appropriately as well.
- Typically, Origin-State-Id is used by an access device that always
- starts up with no active sessions; that is, any session active prior
- to restart will have been lost. By including Origin-State-Id in a
- message, it allows other Diameter entities to infer that sessions
- associated with a lower Origin-State-Id are no longer active. If an
- access device does not intend for such inferences to be made, it MUST
- either not include Origin-State-Id in any message or set its value to
- 0.
-
-8.17. Session-Binding AVP
-
- The Session-Binding AVP (AVP Code 270) is of type Unsigned32, and it
- MAY be present in application-specific authorization answer messages.
- If present, this AVP MAY inform the Diameter client that all future
- application-specific re-auth and Session-Termination-Request messages
- for this session MUST be sent to the same authorization server.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 120]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- This field is a bit mask, and the following bits have been defined:
-
- RE_AUTH 1
-
- When set, future re-auth messages for this session MUST NOT
- include the Destination-Host AVP. When cleared, the default
- value, the Destination-Host AVP MUST be present in all re-auth
- messages for this session.
-
- STR 2
-
- When set, the STR message for this session MUST NOT include the
- Destination-Host AVP. When cleared, the default value, the
- Destination-Host AVP MUST be present in the STR message for this
- session.
-
- ACCOUNTING 4
-
- When set, all accounting messages for this session MUST NOT
- include the Destination-Host AVP. When cleared, the default
- value, the Destination-Host AVP, if known, MUST be present in all
- accounting messages for this session.
-
-8.18. Session-Server-Failover AVP
-
- The Session-Server-Failover AVP (AVP Code 271) is of type Enumerated
- and MAY be present in application-specific authorization answer
- messages that either do not include the Session-Binding AVP or
- include the Session-Binding AVP with any of the bits set to a zero
- value. If present, this AVP MAY inform the Diameter client that if a
- re-auth or STR message fails due to a delivery problem, the Diameter
- client SHOULD issue a subsequent message without the Destination-Host
- AVP. When absent, the default value is REFUSE_SERVICE.
-
- The following values are supported:
-
- REFUSE_SERVICE 0
-
- If either the re-auth or the STR message delivery fails, terminate
- service with the user and do not attempt any subsequent attempts.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 121]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- TRY_AGAIN 1
-
- If either the re-auth or the STR message delivery fails, resend
- the failed message without the Destination-Host AVP present.
-
- ALLOW_SERVICE 2
-
- If re-auth message delivery fails, assume that re-authorization
- succeeded. If STR message delivery fails, terminate the session.
-
- TRY_AGAIN_ALLOW_SERVICE 3
-
- If either the re-auth or the STR message delivery fails, resend
- the failed message without the Destination-Host AVP present. If
- the second delivery fails for re-auth, assume re-authorization
- succeeded. If the second delivery fails for STR, terminate the
- session.
-
-8.19. Multi-Round-Time-Out AVP
-
- The Multi-Round-Time-Out AVP (AVP Code 272) is of type Unsigned32 and
- SHOULD be present in application-specific authorization answer
- messages whose Result-Code AVP is set to DIAMETER_MULTI_ROUND_AUTH.
- This AVP contains the maximum number of seconds that the access
- device MUST provide the user in responding to an authentication
- request.
-
-8.20. Class AVP
-
- The Class AVP (AVP Code 25) is of type OctetString and is used by
- Diameter servers to return state information to the access device.
- When one or more Class AVPs are present in application-specific
- authorization answer messages, they MUST be present in subsequent re-
- authorization, session termination and accounting messages. Class
- AVPs found in a re-authorization answer message override the ones
- found in any previous authorization answer message. Diameter server
- implementations SHOULD NOT return Class AVPs that require more than
- 4096 bytes of storage on the Diameter client. A Diameter client that
- receives Class AVPs whose size exceeds local available storage MUST
- terminate the session.
-
-8.21. Event-Timestamp AVP
-
- The Event-Timestamp (AVP Code 55) is of type Time and MAY be included
- in an Accounting-Request and Accounting-Answer messages to record the
- time that the reported event occurred, in seconds since January 1,
- 1900 00:00 UTC.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 122]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-9. Accounting
-
- This accounting protocol is based on a server directed model with
- capabilities for real-time delivery of accounting information.
- Several fault resilience methods [RFC2975] have been built into the
- protocol in order minimize loss of accounting data in various fault
- situations and under different assumptions about the capabilities of
- the used devices.
-
-9.1. Server Directed Model
-
- The server directed model means that the device generating the
- accounting data gets information from either the authorization server
- (if contacted) or the accounting server regarding the way accounting
- data shall be forwarded. This information includes accounting record
- timeliness requirements.
-
- As discussed in [RFC2975], real-time transfer of accounting records
- is a requirement, such as the need to perform credit-limit checks and
- fraud detection. Note that batch accounting is not a requirement,
- and is therefore not supported by Diameter. Should batched
- accounting be required in the future, a new Diameter application will
- need to be created, or it could be handled using another protocol.
- Note, however, that even if at the Diameter layer, accounting
- requests are processed one by one; transport protocols used under
- Diameter typically batch several requests in the same packet under
- heavy traffic conditions. This may be sufficient for many
- applications.
-
- The authorization server (chain) directs the selection of proper
- transfer strategy, based on its knowledge of the user and
- relationships of roaming partnerships. The server (or agents) uses
- the Acct-Interim-Interval and Accounting-Realtime-Required AVPs to
- control the operation of the Diameter peer operating as a client.
- The Acct-Interim-Interval AVP, when present, instructs the Diameter
- node acting as a client to produce accounting records continuously
- even during a session. Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP is used to
- control the behavior of the client when the transfer of accounting
- records from the Diameter client is delayed or unsuccessful.
-
- The Diameter accounting server MAY override the interim interval or
- the real-time requirements by including the Acct-Interim-Interval or
- Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP in the Accounting-Answer message.
- When one of these AVPs is present, the latest value received SHOULD
- be used in further accounting activities for the same session.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 123]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-9.2. Protocol Messages
-
- A Diameter node that receives a successful authentication and/or
- authorization message from the Diameter server SHOULD collect
- accounting information for the session. The Accounting-Request
- message is used to transmit the accounting information to the
- Diameter server, which MUST reply with the Accounting-Answer message
- to confirm reception. The Accounting-Answer message includes the
- Result-Code AVP, which MAY indicate that an error was present in the
- accounting message. The value of the Accounting-Realtime-Required
- AVP received earlier for the session in question may indicate that
- the user's session has to be terminated when a rejected Accounting-
- Request message was received.
-
-9.3. Accounting Application Extension and Requirements
-
- Each Diameter application (e.g., NASREQ, Mobile IP) SHOULD define its
- service-specific AVPs that MUST be present in the Accounting-Request
- message in a section titled "Accounting AVPs". The application MUST
- assume that the AVPs described in this document will be present in
- all Accounting messages, so only their respective service-specific
- AVPs need to be defined in that section.
-
- Applications have the option of using one or both of the following
- accounting application extension models:
-
- Split Accounting Service
-
- The accounting message will carry the Application Id of the
- Diameter base accounting application (see Section 2.4).
- Accounting messages may be routed to Diameter nodes other than the
- corresponding Diameter application. These nodes might be
- centralized accounting servers that provide accounting service for
- multiple different Diameter applications. These nodes MUST
- advertise the Diameter base accounting Application Id during
- capabilities exchange.
-
- Coupled Accounting Service
-
- The accounting message will carry the Application Id of the
- application that is using it. The application itself will process
- the received accounting records or forward them to an accounting
- server. There is no accounting application advertisement required
- during capabilities exchange, and the accounting messages will be
- routed the same way as any of the other application messages.
-
- In cases where an application does not define its own accounting
- service, it is preferred that the split accounting model be used.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 124]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-9.4. Fault Resilience
-
- Diameter base protocol mechanisms are used to overcome small message
- loss and network faults of a temporary nature.
-
- Diameter peers acting as clients MUST implement the use of failover
- to guard against server failures and certain network failures.
- Diameter peers acting as agents or related off-line processing
- systems MUST detect duplicate accounting records caused by the
- sending of the same record to several servers and duplication of
- messages in transit. This detection MUST be based on the inspection
- of the Session-Id and Accounting-Record-Number AVP pairs. Appendix C
- discusses duplicate detection needs and implementation issues.
-
- Diameter clients MAY have non-volatile memory for the safe storage of
- accounting records over reboots or extended network failures, network
- partitions, and server failures. If such memory is available, the
- client SHOULD store new accounting records there as soon as the
- records are created and until a positive acknowledgement of their
- reception from the Diameter server has been received. Upon a reboot,
- the client MUST start sending the records in the non-volatile memory
- to the accounting server with the appropriate modifications in
- termination cause, session length, and other relevant information in
- the records.
-
- A further application of this protocol may include AVPs to control
- the maximum number of accounting records that may be stored in the
- Diameter client without committing them to the non-volatile memory or
- transferring them to the Diameter server.
-
- The client SHOULD NOT remove the accounting data from any of its
- memory areas before the correct Accounting-Answer has been received.
- The client MAY remove the oldest, undelivered, or as yet
- unacknowledged accounting data if it runs out of resources such as
- memory. It is an implementation-dependent matter for the client to
- accept new sessions under this condition.
-
-9.5. Accounting Records
-
- In all accounting records, the Session-Id AVP MUST be present; the
- User-Name AVP MUST be present if it is available to the Diameter
- client.
-
- Different types of accounting records are sent depending on the
- actual type of accounted service and the authorization server's
- directions for interim accounting. If the accounted service is a
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 125]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- one-time event, meaning that the start and stop of the event are
- simultaneous, then the Accounting-Record-Type AVP MUST be present and
- set to the value EVENT_RECORD.
-
- If the accounted service is of a measurable length, then the AVP MUST
- use the values START_RECORD, STOP_RECORD, and possibly,
- INTERIM_RECORD. If the authorization server has not directed interim
- accounting to be enabled for the session, two accounting records MUST
- be generated for each service of type session. When the initial
- Accounting-Request for a given session is sent, the Accounting-
- Record-Type AVP MUST be set to the value START_RECORD. When the last
- Accounting-Request is sent, the value MUST be STOP_RECORD.
-
- If the authorization server has directed interim accounting to be
- enabled, the Diameter client MUST produce additional records between
- the START_RECORD and STOP_RECORD, marked INTERIM_RECORD. The
- production of these records is directed by Acct-Interim-Interval as
- well as any re-authentication or re-authorization of the session.
- The Diameter client MUST overwrite any previous interim accounting
- records that are locally stored for delivery, if a new record is
- being generated for the same session. This ensures that only one
- pending interim record can exist on an access device for any given
- session.
-
- A particular value of Accounting-Sub-Session-Id MUST appear only in
- one sequence of accounting records from a Diameter client, except for
- the purposes of retransmission. The one sequence that is sent MUST
- be either one record with Accounting-Record-Type AVP set to the value
- EVENT_RECORD or several records starting with one having the value
- START_RECORD, followed by zero or more INTERIM_RECORDs and a single
- STOP_RECORD. A particular Diameter application specification MUST
- define the type of sequences that MUST be used.
-
-9.6. Correlation of Accounting Records
-
- If an application uses accounting messages, it can correlate
- accounting records with a specific application session by using the
- Session-Id of the particular application session in the accounting
- messages. Accounting messages MAY also use a different Session-Id
- from that of the application sessions, in which case, other session-
- related information is needed to perform correlation.
-
- In cases where an application requires multiple accounting sub-
- sessions, an Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP is used to differentiate
- each sub-session. The Session-Id would remain constant for all sub-
- sessions and is used to correlate all the sub-sessions to a
- particular application session. Note that receiving a STOP_RECORD
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 126]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- with no Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP when sub-sessions were
- originally used in the START_RECORD messages implies that all sub-
- sessions are terminated.
-
- There are also cases where an application needs to correlate multiple
- application sessions into a single accounting record; the accounting
- record may span multiple different Diameter applications and sessions
- used by the same user at a given time. In such cases, the Acct-
- Multi-Session-Id AVP is used. The Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP SHOULD
- be signaled by the server to the access device (typically, during
- authorization) when it determines that a request belongs to an
- existing session. The access device MUST then include the Acct-
- Multi-Session-Id AVP in all subsequent accounting messages.
-
- The Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP MAY include the value of the original
- Session-Id. Its contents are implementation specific, but the MUST
- be globally unique across other Acct-Multi-Session-Ids and MUST NOT
- change during the life of a session.
-
- A Diameter application document MUST define the exact concept of a
- session that is being accounted, and it MAY define the concept of a
- multi-session. For instance, the NASREQ DIAMETER application treats
- a single PPP connection to a Network Access Server as one session and
- a set of Multilink PPP sessions as one multi-session.
-
-9.7. Accounting Command Codes
-
- This section defines Command Code values that MUST be supported by
- all Diameter implementations that provide accounting services.
-
-9.7.1. Accounting-Request
-
- The Accounting-Request (ACR) command, indicated by the Command Code
- field set to 271 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit set, is sent by a
- Diameter node, acting as a client, in order to exchange accounting
- information with a peer.
-
- In addition to the AVPs listed below, Accounting-Request messages
- SHOULD include service-specific accounting AVPs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 127]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;ACR> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 271, REQ, PXY >
- &lt; Session-Id >
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- { Destination-Realm }
- { Accounting-Record-Type }
- { Accounting-Record-Number }
- [ Acct-Application-Id ]
- [ Vendor-Specific-Application-Id ]
- [ User-Name ]
- [ Destination-Host ]
- [ Accounting-Sub-Session-Id ]
- [ Acct-Session-Id ]
- [ Acct-Multi-Session-Id ]
- [ Acct-Interim-Interval ]
- [ Accounting-Realtime-Required ]
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- [ Event-Timestamp ]
- * [ Proxy-Info ]
- * [ Route-Record ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-9.7.2. Accounting-Answer
-
- The Accounting-Answer (ACA) command, indicated by the Command Code
- field set to 271 and the Command Flags' 'R' bit cleared, is used to
- acknowledge an Accounting-Request command. The Accounting-Answer
- command contains the same Session-Id as the corresponding request.
-
- Only the target Diameter server, known as the home Diameter server,
- SHOULD respond with the Accounting-Answer command.
-
- In addition to the AVPs listed below, Accounting-Answer messages
- SHOULD include service-specific accounting AVPs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 128]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Message Format
-
- &lt;ACA> ::= &lt; Diameter Header: 271, PXY >
- &lt; Session-Id >
- { Result-Code }
- { Origin-Host }
- { Origin-Realm }
- { Accounting-Record-Type }
- { Accounting-Record-Number }
- [ Acct-Application-Id ]
- [ Vendor-Specific-Application-Id ]
- [ User-Name ]
- [ Accounting-Sub-Session-Id ]
- [ Acct-Session-Id ]
- [ Acct-Multi-Session-Id ]
- [ Error-Message ]
- [ Error-Reporting-Host ]
- [ Failed-AVP ]
- [ Acct-Interim-Interval ]
- [ Accounting-Realtime-Required ]
- [ Origin-State-Id ]
- [ Event-Timestamp ]
- * [ Proxy-Info ]
- * [ AVP ]
-
-9.8. Accounting AVPs
-
- This section contains AVPs that describe accounting usage information
- related to a specific session.
-
-9.8.1. Accounting-Record-Type AVP
-
- The Accounting-Record-Type AVP (AVP Code 480) is of type Enumerated
- and contains the type of accounting record being sent. The following
- values are currently defined for the Accounting-Record-Type AVP:
-
- EVENT_RECORD 1
-
- An Accounting Event Record is used to indicate that a one-time
- event has occurred (meaning that the start and end of the event
- are simultaneous). This record contains all information relevant
- to the service, and it is the only record of the service.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 129]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- START_RECORD 2
-
- Accounting Start, Interim, and Stop Records are used to indicate
- that a service of a measurable length has been given. An
- Accounting Start Record is used to initiate an accounting session
- and contains accounting information that is relevant to the
- initiation of the session.
-
- INTERIM_RECORD 3
-
- An Interim Accounting Record contains cumulative accounting
- information for an existing accounting session. Interim
- Accounting Records SHOULD be sent every time a re-authentication
- or re-authorization occurs. Further, additional interim record
- triggers MAY be defined by application-specific Diameter
- applications. The selection of whether to use INTERIM_RECORD
- records is done by the Acct-Interim-Interval AVP.
-
- STOP_RECORD 4
-
- An Accounting Stop Record is sent to terminate an accounting
- session and contains cumulative accounting information relevant to
- the existing session.
-
-9.8.2. Acct-Interim-Interval AVP
-
- The Acct-Interim-Interval AVP (AVP Code 85) is of type Unsigned32 and
- is sent from the Diameter home authorization server to the Diameter
- client. The client uses information in this AVP to decide how and
- when to produce accounting records. With different values in this
- AVP, service sessions can result in one, two, or two+N accounting
- records, based on the needs of the home organization. The following
- accounting record production behavior is directed by the inclusion of
- this AVP:
-
- 1. The omission of the Acct-Interim-Interval AVP or its inclusion
- with Value field set to 0 means that EVENT_RECORD, START_RECORD,
- and STOP_RECORD are produced, as appropriate for the service.
-
- 2. The inclusion of the AVP with Value field set to a non-zero value
- means that INTERIM_RECORD records MUST be produced between the
- START_RECORD and STOP_RECORD records. The Value field of this
- AVP is the nominal interval between these records in seconds.
- The Diameter node that originates the accounting information,
- known as the client, MUST produce the first INTERIM_RECORD record
- roughly at the time when this nominal interval has elapsed from
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 130]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- the START_RECORD, the next one again as the interval has elapsed
- once more, and so on until the session ends and a STOP_RECORD
- record is produced.
-
- The client MUST ensure that the interim record production times
- are randomized so that large accounting message storms are not
- created either among records or around a common service start
- time.
-
-9.8.3. Accounting-Record-Number AVP
-
- The Accounting-Record-Number AVP (AVP Code 485) is of type Unsigned32
- and identifies this record within one session. As Session-Id AVPs
- are globally unique, the combination of Session-Id and Accounting-
- Record-Number AVPs is also globally unique and can be used in
- matching accounting records with confirmations. An easy way to
- produce unique numbers is to set the value to 0 for records of type
- EVENT_RECORD and START_RECORD and set the value to 1 for the first
- INTERIM_RECORD, 2 for the second, and so on until the value for
- STOP_RECORD is one more than for the last INTERIM_RECORD.
-
-9.8.4. Acct-Session-Id AVP
-
- The Acct-Session-Id AVP (AVP Code 44) is of type OctetString is only
- used when RADIUS/Diameter translation occurs. This AVP contains the
- contents of the RADIUS Acct-Session-Id attribute.
-
-9.8.5. Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP
-
- The Acct-Multi-Session-Id AVP (AVP Code 50) is of type UTF8String,
- following the format specified in Section 8.8. The Acct-Multi-
- Session-Id AVP is used to link multiple related accounting sessions,
- where each session would have a unique Session-Id but the same Acct-
- Multi-Session-Id AVP. This AVP MAY be returned by the Diameter
- server in an authorization answer, and it MUST be used in all
- accounting messages for the given session.
-
-9.8.6. Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP
-
- The Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP (AVP Code 287) is of type
- Unsigned64 and contains the accounting sub-session identifier. The
- combination of the Session-Id and this AVP MUST be unique per sub-
- session, and the value of this AVP MUST be monotonically increased by
- one for all new sub-sessions. The absence of this AVP implies no
- sub-sessions are in use, with the exception of an Accounting-Request
- whose Accounting-Record-Type is set to STOP_RECORD. A STOP_RECORD
- message with no Accounting-Sub-Session-Id AVP present will signal the
- termination of all sub-sessions for a given Session-Id.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 131]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-9.8.7. Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP
-
- The Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP (AVP Code 483) is of type
- Enumerated and is sent from the Diameter home authorization server to
- the Diameter client or in the Accounting-Answer from the accounting
- server. The client uses information in this AVP to decide what to do
- if the sending of accounting records to the accounting server has
- been temporarily prevented due to, for instance, a network problem.
-
- DELIVER_AND_GRANT 1
-
- The AVP with Value field set to DELIVER_AND_GRANT means that the
- service MUST only be granted as long as there is a connection to
- an accounting server. Note that the set of alternative accounting
- servers are treated as one server in this sense. Having to move
- the accounting record stream to a backup server is not a reason to
- discontinue the service to the user.
-
- GRANT_AND_STORE 2
-
- The AVP with Value field set to GRANT_AND_STORE means that service
- SHOULD be granted if there is a connection, or as long as records
- can still be stored as described in Section 9.4.
-
- This is the default behavior if the AVP isn't included in the
- reply from the authorization server.
-
- GRANT_AND_LOSE 3
-
- The AVP with Value field set to GRANT_AND_LOSE means that service
- SHOULD be granted even if the records cannot be delivered or
- stored.
-
-10. AVP Occurrence Tables
-
- The following tables present the AVPs defined in this document and
- specify in which Diameter messages they MAY or MAY NOT be present.
- AVPs that occur only inside a Grouped AVP are not shown in these
- tables.
-
- The tables use the following symbols:
-
- 0 The AVP MUST NOT be present in the message.
-
- 0+ Zero or more instances of the AVP MAY be present in the
- message.
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 132]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- 0-1 Zero or one instance of the AVP MAY be present in the message.
- It is considered an error if there are more than one instance
- of the AVP.
-
- 1 One instance of the AVP MUST be present in the message.
-
- 1+ At least one instance of the AVP MUST be present in the
- message.
-
-10.1. Base Protocol Command AVP Table
-
- The table in this section is limited to the non-Accounting Command
- Codes defined in this specification.
-
- +-----------------------------------------------+
- | Command Code |
- +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
- Attribute Name |CER|CEA|DPR|DPA|DWR|DWA|RAR|RAA|ASR|ASA|STR|STA|
- --------------------+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
- Acct-Interim- |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0-1|0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Interval | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- Accounting-Realtime-|0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0-1|0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Required | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- Acct-Application-Id |0+ |0+ |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Auth-Application-Id |0+ |0+ |0 |0 |0 |0 |1 |0 |1 |0 |1 |0 |
- Auth-Grace-Period |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Auth-Request-Type |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Auth-Session-State |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Authorization- |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Lifetime | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- Class |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0+ |0+ |
- Destination-Host |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |1 |0 |1 |0 |0-1|0 |
- Destination-Realm |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |1 |0 |1 |0 |1 |0 |
- Disconnect-Cause |0 |0 |1 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Error-Message |0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|
- Error-Reporting-Host|0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|
- Failed-AVP |0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|
- Firmware-Revision |0-1|0-1|0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Host-IP-Address |1+ |1+ |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Inband-Security-Id |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Multi-Round-Time-Out|0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 133]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Origin-Host |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |
- Origin-Realm |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |
- Origin-State-Id |0-1|0-1|0 |0 |0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|
- Product-Name |1 |1 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Proxy-Info |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0+ |0+ |0+ |0+ |0+ |0+ |
- Redirect-Host |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0+ |0 |0+ |0 |0+ |
- Redirect-Host-Usage |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|
- Redirect-Max-Cache- |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0-1|0 |0-1|0 |0-1|
- Time | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- Result-Code |0 |1 |0 |1 |0 |1 |0 |1 |0 |1 |0 |1 |
- Re-Auth-Request-Type|0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |1 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Route-Record |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0+ |0 |0+ |0 |0+ |0 |
- Session-Binding |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Session-Id |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |1 |
- Session-Server- |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Failover | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- Session-Timeout |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Supported-Vendor-Id |0+ |0+ |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Termination-Cause |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |1 |0 |
- User-Name |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|0-1|
- Vendor-Id |1 |1 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Vendor-Specific- |0+ |0+ |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
- Application-Id | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- --------------------+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
-
-10.2. Accounting AVP Table
-
- The table in this section is used to represent which AVPs defined in
- this document are to be present in the Accounting messages. These
- AVP occurrence requirements are guidelines, which may be expanded,
- and/or overridden by application-specific requirements in the
- Diameter applications documents.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 134]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- +-----------+
- | Command |
- | Code |
- +-----+-----+
- Attribute Name | ACR | ACA |
- ------------------------------+-----+-----+
- Acct-Interim-Interval | 0-1 | 0-1 |
- Acct-Multi-Session-Id | 0-1 | 0-1 |
- Accounting-Record-Number | 1 | 1 |
- Accounting-Record-Type | 1 | 1 |
- Acct-Session-Id | 0-1 | 0-1 |
- Accounting-Sub-Session-Id | 0-1 | 0-1 |
- Accounting-Realtime-Required | 0-1 | 0-1 |
- Acct-Application-Id | 0-1 | 0-1 |
- Auth-Application-Id | 0 | 0 |
- Class | 0+ | 0+ |
- Destination-Host | 0-1 | 0 |
- Destination-Realm | 1 | 0 |
- Error-Reporting-Host | 0 | 0+ |
- Event-Timestamp | 0-1 | 0-1 |
- Failed-AVP | 0 | 0-1 |
- Origin-Host | 1 | 1 |
- Origin-Realm | 1 | 1 |
- Proxy-Info | 0+ | 0+ |
- Route-Record | 0+ | 0 |
- Result-Code | 0 | 1 |
- Session-Id | 1 | 1 |
- Termination-Cause | 0 | 0 |
- User-Name | 0-1 | 0-1 |
- Vendor-Specific-Application-Id| 0-1 | 0-1 |
- ------------------------------+-----+-----+
-
-11. IANA Considerations
-
- This section provides guidance to the Internet Assigned Numbers
- Authority (IANA) regarding registration of values related to the
- Diameter protocol, in accordance with [RFC5226]. Existing IANA
- registries and assignments put in place by RFC 3588 remain the same
- unless explicitly updated or deprecated in this section.
-
-11.1. AVP Header
-
- As defined in Section 4, the AVP header contains three fields that
- require IANA namespace management: the AVP Code, Vendor-ID, and Flags
- fields.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 135]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-11.1.1. AVP Codes
-
- There are multiple namespaces. Vendors can have their own AVP Codes
- namespace that will be identified by their Vendor-ID (also known as
- Enterprise-Number), and they control the assignments of their vendor-
- specific AVP Codes within their own namespace. The absence of a
- Vendor-ID or a Vendor-ID value of zero (0) identifies the IETF AVP
- Codes namespace, which is under IANA control. The AVP Codes and
- sometimes possible values in an AVP are controlled and maintained by
- IANA. AVP Code 0 is not used. AVP Codes 1-255 are managed
- separately as RADIUS Attribute Types. Where a Vendor-Specific AVP is
- implemented by more than one vendor, allocation of global AVPs should
- be encouraged instead.
-
- AVPs may be allocated following Expert Review (by a Designated
- Expert) with Specification Required [RFC5226]. A block allocation
- (release of more than three AVPs at a time for a given purpose)
- requires IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.1.2. AVP Flags
-
- Section 4.1 describes the existing AVP Flags. The remaining bits can
- only be assigned via a Standards Action [RFC5226].
-
-11.2. Diameter Header
-
-11.2.1. Command Codes
-
- For the Diameter header, the Command Code namespace allocation has
- changed. The new allocation rules are as follows:
-
- The Command Code values 256 - 8,388,607 (0x100 to 0x7fffff) are
- for permanent, standard commands, allocated by IETF Review
- [RFC5226].
-
- The values 8,388,608 - 16,777,213 (0x800000 - 0xfffffd) are
- reserved for vendor-specific Command Codes, to be allocated on a
- First Come, First Served basis by IANA [RFC5226]. The request to
- IANA for a Vendor-Specific Command Code SHOULD include a reference
- to a publicly available specification that documents the command
- in sufficient detail to aid in interoperability between
- independent implementations. If the specification cannot be made
- publicly available, the request for a vendor-specific Command Code
- MUST include the contact information of persons and/or entities
- responsible for authoring and maintaining the command.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 136]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- The values 16,777,214 and 16,777,215 (hexadecimal values 0xfffffe
- - 0xffffff) are reserved for experimental commands. As these
- codes are only for experimental and testing purposes, no guarantee
- is made for interoperability between Diameter peers using
- experimental commands.
-
-11.2.2. Command Flags
-
- Section 3 describes the existing Command Flags field. The remaining
- bits can only be assigned via a Standards Action [RFC5226].
-
-11.3. AVP Values
-
- For AVP values, the Experimental-Result-Code AVP value allocation has
- been added; see Section 11.3.1. The old AVP value allocation rule,
- IETF Consensus, has been updated to IETF Review as per [RFC5226], and
- affected AVPs are listed as reminders.
-
-11.3.1. Experimental-Result-Code AVP
-
- Values for this AVP are purely local to the indicated vendor, and no
- IANA registry is maintained for them.
-
-11.3.2. Result-Code AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.3.3. Accounting-Record-Type AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.3.4. Termination-Cause AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.3.5. Redirect-Host-Usage AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.3.6. Session-Server-Failover AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.3.7. Session-Binding AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 137]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-11.3.8. Disconnect-Cause AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.3.9. Auth-Request-Type AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.3.10. Auth-Session-State AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.3.11. Re-Auth-Request-Type AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.3.12. Accounting-Realtime-Required AVP Values
-
- New values are available for assignment via IETF Review [RFC5226].
-
-11.3.13. Inband-Security-Id AVP (code 299)
-
- The use of this AVP has been deprecated.
-
-11.4. _diameters Service Name and Port Number Registration
-
- IANA has registered the "_diameters" service name and assigned port
- numbers for TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP according to the guidelines given
- in [RFC6335].
-
- Service Name: _diameters
-
- Transport Protocols: TCP, SCTP
-
- Assignee: IESG &lt;[email protected]>
-
- Contact: IETF Chair &lt;[email protected]>
-
- Description: Diameter over TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP
-
- Reference: RFC 6733
-
- Port Number: 5868, from the User Range
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 138]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-11.5. SCTP Payload Protocol Identifiers
-
- Two SCTP payload protocol identifiers have been registered in the
- SCTP Payload Protocol Identifiers registry:
-
-
- Value | SCTP Payload Protocol Identifier
- -------|-----------------------------------
- 46 | Diameter in a SCTP DATA chunk
- 47 | Diameter in a DTLS/SCTP DATA chunk
-
-
-11.6. S-NAPTR Parameters
-
- The following tag has been registered in the S-NAPTR Application
- Protocol Tags registry:
-
- Tag | Protocol
- -------------------|---------
- diameter.dtls.sctp | DTLS/SCTP
-
-12. Diameter Protocol-Related Configurable Parameters
-
- This section contains the configurable parameters that are found
- throughout this document:
-
- Diameter Peer
-
- A Diameter entity MAY communicate with peers that are statically
- configured. A statically configured Diameter peer would require
- that either the IP address or the fully qualified domain name
- (FQDN) be supplied, which would then be used to resolve through
- DNS.
-
- Routing Table
-
- A Diameter proxy server routes messages based on the realm portion
- of a Network Access Identifier (NAI). The server MUST have a
- table of Realm Names, and the address of the peer to which the
- message must be forwarded. The routing table MAY also include a
- "default route", which is typically used for all messages that
- cannot be locally processed.
-
- Tc timer
-
- The Tc timer controls the frequency that transport connection
- attempts are done to a peer with whom no active transport
- connection exists. The recommended value is 30 seconds.
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 139]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-13. Security Considerations
-
- The Diameter base protocol messages SHOULD be secured by using TLS
- [RFC5246] or DTLS/SCTP [RFC6083]. Additional security mechanisms
- such as IPsec [RFC4301] MAY also be deployed to secure connections
- between peers. However, all Diameter base protocol implementations
- MUST support the use of TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP, and the Diameter
- protocol MUST NOT be used without one of TLS, DTLS, or IPsec.
-
- If a Diameter connection is to be protected via TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP
- or IPsec, then TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP or IPsec/IKE SHOULD begin prior
- to any Diameter message exchange. All security parameters for TLS/
- TCP and DTLS/SCTP or IPsec are configured independent of the Diameter
- protocol. All Diameter messages will be sent through the TLS/TCP and
- DTLS/SCTP or IPsec connection after a successful setup.
-
- For TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP connections to be established in the open
- state, the CER/CEA exchange MUST include an Inband-Security-ID AVP
- with a value of TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP. The TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP
- handshake will begin when both ends successfully reach the open
- state, after completion of the CER/CEA exchange. If the TLS/TCP and
- DTLS/SCTP handshake is successful, all further messages will be sent
- via TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP. If the handshake fails, both ends MUST
- move to the closed state. See Section 13.1 for more details.
-
-13.1. TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP Usage
-
- Diameter nodes using TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP for security MUST mutually
- authenticate as part of TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP session establishment.
- In order to ensure mutual authentication, the Diameter node acting as
- the TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP server MUST request a certificate from the
- Diameter node acting as TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP client, and the
- Diameter node acting as the TLS/TCP and DTLS/SCTP client MUST be
- prepared to supply a certificate on request.
-
- Diameter nodes MUST be able to negotiate the following TLS/TCP and
- DTLS/SCTP cipher suites:
-
- TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_MD5
- TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA
- TLS_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA
-
- Diameter nodes SHOULD be able to negotiate the following TLS/TCP and
- DTLS/SCTP cipher suite:
-
- TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 140]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- Note that it is quite possible that support for the
- TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA cipher suite will be REQUIRED at some
- future date. Diameter nodes MAY negotiate other TLS/TCP and DTLS/
- SCTP cipher suites.
-
- If public key certificates are used for Diameter security (for
- example, with TLS), the value of the expiration times in the routing
- and peer tables MUST NOT be greater than the expiry time in the
- relevant certificates.
-
-13.2. Peer-to-Peer Considerations
-
- As with any peer-to-peer protocol, proper configuration of the trust
- model within a Diameter peer is essential to security. When
- certificates are used, it is necessary to configure the root
- certificate authorities trusted by the Diameter peer. These root CAs
- are likely to be unique to Diameter usage and distinct from the root
- CAs that might be trusted for other purposes such as Web browsing.
- In general, it is expected that those root CAs will be configured so
- as to reflect the business relationships between the organization
- hosting the Diameter peer and other organizations. As a result, a
- Diameter peer will typically not be configured to allow connectivity
- with any arbitrary peer. With certificate authentication, Diameter
- peers may not be known beforehand and therefore peer discovery may be
- required.
-
-13.3. AVP Considerations
-
- Diameter AVPs often contain security-sensitive data; for example,
- user passwords and location data, network addresses and cryptographic
- keys. The following AVPs defined in this document are considered to
- be security-sensitive:
-
- o Acct-Interim-Interval
-
- o Accounting-Realtime-Required
-
- o Acct-Multi-Session-Id
-
- o Accounting-Record-Number
-
- o Accounting-Record-Type
-
- o Accounting-Session-Id
-
- o Accounting-Sub-Session-Id
-
- o Class
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 141]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- o Session-Id
-
- o Session-Binding
-
- o Session-Server-Failover
-
- o User-Name
-
- Diameter messages containing these or any other AVPs considered to be
- security-sensitive MUST only be sent protected via mutually
- authenticated TLS or IPsec. In addition, those messages MUST NOT be
- sent via intermediate nodes unless there is end-to-end security
- between the originator and recipient or the originator has locally
- trusted configuration that indicates that end-to-end security is not
- needed. For example, end-to-end security may not be required in the
- case where an intermediary node is known to be operated as part of
- the same administrative domain as the endpoints so that an ability to
- successfully compromise the intermediary would imply a high
- probability of being able to compromise the endpoints as well. Note
- that no end-to-end security mechanism is specified in this document.
-
-14. References
-
-14.1. Normative References
-
- [FLOATPOINT]
- Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "IEEE
- Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic, ANSI/IEEE
- Standard 754-1985", August 1985.
-
- [IANAADFAM]
- IANA, "Address Family Numbers",
- &lt;http://www.iana.org/assignments/address-family-numbers>.
-
- [RFC0791] Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791,
- September 1981.
-
- [RFC0793] Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,
- RFC 793, September 1981.
-
- [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
- Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
-
- [RFC3492] Costello, A., "Punycode: A Bootstring encoding of Unicode
- for Internationalized Domain Names in Applications
- (IDNA)", RFC 3492, March 2003.
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 142]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- [RFC3539] Aboba, B. and J. Wood, "Authentication, Authorization and
- Accounting (AAA) Transport Profile", RFC 3539, June 2003.
-
- [RFC3629] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
- 10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003.
-
- [RFC3958] Daigle, L. and A. Newton, "Domain-Based Application
- Service Location Using SRV RRs and the Dynamic Delegation
- Discovery Service (DDDS)", RFC 3958, January 2005.
-
- [RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
- Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,
- RFC 3986, January 2005.
-
- [RFC4004] Calhoun, P., Johansson, T., Perkins, C., Hiller, T., and
- P. McCann, "Diameter Mobile IPv4 Application", RFC 4004,
- August 2005.
-
- [RFC4005] Calhoun, P., Zorn, G., Spence, D., and D. Mitton,
- "Diameter Network Access Server Application", RFC 4005,
- August 2005.
-
- [RFC4006] Hakala, H., Mattila, L., Koskinen, J-P., Stura, M., and J.
- Loughney, "Diameter Credit-Control Application", RFC 4006,
- August 2005.
-
- [RFC4086] Eastlake, D., Schiller, J., and S. Crocker, "Randomness
- Requirements for Security", BCP 106, RFC 4086, June 2005.
-
- [RFC4282] Aboba, B., Beadles, M., Arkko, J., and P. Eronen, "The
- Network Access Identifier", RFC 4282, December 2005.
-
- [RFC4291] Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
- Architecture", RFC 4291, February 2006.
-
- [RFC4960] Stewart, R., "Stream Control Transmission Protocol",
- RFC 4960, September 2007.
-
- [RFC5226] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an
- IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226,
- May 2008.
-
- [RFC5234] Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
- Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, January 2008.
-
- [RFC5246] Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security
- (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246, August 2008.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 143]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- [RFC5280] Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,
- Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key
- Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List
- (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, May 2008.
-
- [RFC5729] Korhonen, J., Jones, M., Morand, L., and T. Tsou,
- "Clarifications on the Routing of Diameter Requests Based
- on the Username and the Realm", RFC 5729, December 2009.
-
- [RFC5890] Klensin, J., "Internationalized Domain Names for
- Applications (IDNA): Definitions and Document Framework",
- RFC 5890, August 2010.
-
- [RFC5891] Klensin, J., "Internationalized Domain Names in
- Applications (IDNA): Protocol", RFC 5891, August 2010.
-
- [RFC6083] Tuexen, M., Seggelmann, R., and E. Rescorla, "Datagram
- Transport Layer Security (DTLS) for Stream Control
- Transmission Protocol (SCTP)", RFC 6083, January 2011.
-
- [RFC6347] Rescorla, E. and N. Modadugu, "Datagram Transport Layer
- Security Version 1.2", RFC 6347, January 2012.
-
- [RFC6408] Jones, M., Korhonen, J., and L. Morand, "Diameter
- Straightforward-Naming Authority Pointer (S-NAPTR) Usage",
- RFC 6408, November 2011.
-
-14.2. Informative References
-
- [ENTERPRISE] IANA, "SMI Network Management Private Enterprise
- Codes",
- &lt;http://www.iana.org/assignments/enterprise-numbers>.
-
- [IANATCV] IANA, "Termination-Cause AVP Values (code 295)",
- &lt;http://www.iana.org/assignments/aaa-parameters/
- aaa-parameters.xml#aaa-parameters-16>.
-
- [RFC1492] Finseth, C., "An Access Control Protocol, Sometimes
- Called TACACS", RFC 1492, July 1993.
-
- [RFC1661] Simpson, W., "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)",
- STD 51, RFC 1661, July 1994.
-
- [RFC2104] Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M., and R. Canetti, "HMAC:
- Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC 2104,
- February 1997.
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 144]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- [RFC2782] Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR
- for specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)",
- RFC 2782, February 2000.
-
- [RFC2865] Rigney, C., Willens, S., Rubens, A., and W. Simpson,
- "Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)",
- RFC 2865, June 2000.
-
- [RFC2866] Rigney, C., "RADIUS Accounting", RFC 2866, June 2000.
-
- [RFC2869] Rigney, C., Willats, W., and P. Calhoun, "RADIUS
- Extensions", RFC 2869, June 2000.
-
- [RFC2881] Mitton, D. and M. Beadles, "Network Access Server
- Requirements Next Generation (NASREQNG) NAS Model",
- RFC 2881, July 2000.
-
- [RFC2975] Aboba, B., Arkko, J., and D. Harrington, "Introduction
- to Accounting Management", RFC 2975, October 2000.
-
- [RFC2989] Aboba, B., Calhoun, P., Glass, S., Hiller, T., McCann,
- P., Shiino, H., Walsh, P., Zorn, G., Dommety, G.,
- Perkins, C., Patil, B., Mitton, D., Manning, S.,
- Beadles, M., Chen, X., Sivalingham, S., Hameed, A.,
- Munson, M., Jacobs, S., Lim, B., Hirschman, B., Hsu,
- R., Koo, H., Lipford, M., Campbell, E., Xu, Y., Baba,
- S., and E. Jaques, "Criteria for Evaluating AAA
- Protocols for Network Access", RFC 2989, November 2000.
-
- [RFC3162] Aboba, B., Zorn, G., and D. Mitton, "RADIUS and IPv6",
- RFC 3162, August 2001.
-
- [RFC3748] Aboba, B., Blunk, L., Vollbrecht, J., Carlson, J., and
- H. Levkowetz, "Extensible Authentication Protocol
- (EAP)", RFC 3748, June 2004.
-
- [RFC4301] Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the
- Internet Protocol", RFC 4301, December 2005.
-
- [RFC4690] Klensin, J., Faltstrom, P., Karp, C., and IAB, "Review
- and Recommendations for Internationalized Domain Names
- (IDNs)", RFC 4690, September 2006.
-
- [RFC5176] Chiba, M., Dommety, G., Eklund, M., Mitton, D., and B.
- Aboba, "Dynamic Authorization Extensions to Remote
- Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)",
- RFC 5176, January 2008.
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 145]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- [RFC5461] Gont, F., "TCP's Reaction to Soft Errors", RFC 5461,
- February 2009.
-
- [RFC5905] Mills, D., Martin, J., Burbank, J., and W. Kasch,
- "Network Time Protocol Version 4: Protocol and
- Algorithms Specification", RFC 5905, June 2010.
-
- [RFC5927] Gont, F., "ICMP Attacks against TCP", RFC 5927,
- July 2010.
-
- [RFC6335] Cotton, M., Eggert, L., Touch, J., Westerlund, M., and
- S. Cheshire, "Internet Assigned Numbers Authority
- (IANA) Procedures for the Management of the Service
- Name and Transport Protocol Port Number Registry",
- BCP 165, RFC 6335, August 2011.
-
- [RFC6737] Kang, J. and G. Zorn, "The Diameter Capabilities Update
- Application", RFC 6737, October 2012.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 146]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
-Appendix A. Acknowledgements
-
-A.1. This Document
-
- The authors would like to thank the following people that have
- provided proposals and contributions to this document:
-
- To Vishnu Ram and Satendra Gera for their contributions on
- capabilities updates, predictive loop avoidance, as well as many
- other technical proposals. To Tolga Asveren for his insights and
- contributions on almost all of the proposed solutions incorporated
- into this document. To Timothy Smith for helping on the capabilities
- Update and other topics. To Tony Zhang for providing fixes to
- loopholes on composing Failed-AVPs as well as many other issues and
- topics. To Jan Nordqvist for clearly stating the usage of
- Application Ids. To Anders Kristensen for providing needed technical
- opinions. To David Frascone for providing invaluable review of the
- document. To Mark Jones for providing clarifying text on vendor
- command codes and other vendor-specific indicators. To Victor
- Pascual and Sebastien Decugis for new text and recommendations on
- SCTP/DTLS. To Jouni Korhonen for taking over the editing task and
- resolving last bits from versions 27 through 29.
-
- Special thanks to the Diameter extensibility design team, which
- helped resolve the tricky question of mandatory AVPs and ABNF
- semantics. The members of this team are as follows:
-
- Avi Lior, Jari Arkko, Glen Zorn, Lionel Morand, Mark Jones, Tolga
- Asveren, Jouni Korhonen, and Glenn McGregor.
-
- Special thanks also to people who have provided invaluable comments
- and inputs especially in resolving controversial issues:
-
- Glen Zorn, Yoshihiro Ohba, Marco Stura, Stephen Farrel, Pete Resnick,
- Peter Saint-Andre, Robert Sparks, Krishna Prasad, Sean Turner, Barry
- Leiba, and Pasi Eronen.
-
- Finally, we would like to thank the original authors of this
- document:
-
- Pat Calhoun, John Loughney, Jari Arkko, Erik Guttman, and Glen Zorn.
-
- Their invaluable knowledge and experience has given us a robust and
- flexible AAA protocol that many people have seen great value in
- adopting. We greatly appreciate their support and stewardship for
- the continued improvements of Diameter as a protocol. We would also
- like to extend our gratitude to folks aside from the authors who have
-
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 147]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- assisted and contributed to the original version of this document.
- Their efforts significantly contributed to the success of Diameter.
-
-A.2. RFC 3588
-
- The authors would like to thank Nenad Trifunovic, Tony Johansson and
- Pankaj Patel for their participation in the pre-IETF Document Reading
- Party. Allison Mankin, Jonathan Wood, and Bernard Aboba provided
- invaluable assistance in working out transport issues and this was
- also the case with Steven Bellovin in the security area.
-
- Paul Funk and David Mitton were instrumental in getting the Peer
- State Machine correct, and our deep thanks go to them for their time.
-
- Text in this document was also provided by Paul Funk, Mark Eklund,
- Mark Jones, and Dave Spence. Jacques Caron provided many great
- comments as a result of a thorough review of the spec.
-
- The authors would also like to acknowledge the following people for
- their contribution in the development of the Diameter protocol:
-
- Allan C. Rubens, Haseeb Akhtar, William Bulley, Stephen Farrell,
- David Frascone, Daniel C. Fox, Lol Grant, Ignacio Goyret, Nancy
- Greene, Peter Heitman, Fredrik Johansson, Mark Jones, Martin Julien,
- Bob Kopacz, Paul Krumviede, Fergal Ladley, Ryan Moats, Victor Muslin,
- Kenneth Peirce, John Schnizlein, Sumit Vakil, John R. Vollbrecht, and
- Jeff Weisberg.
-
- Finally, Pat Calhoun would like to thank Sun Microsystems since most
- of the effort put into this document was done while he was in their
- employ.
-
-Appendix B. S-NAPTR Example
-
- As an example, consider a client that wishes to resolve aaa:
- ex1.example.com. The client performs a NAPTR query for that domain,
- and the following NAPTR records are returned:
-
- ;; order pref flags service regexp replacement
- IN NAPTR 50 50 "s" "aaa:diameter.tls.tcp" ""
- _diameter._tls.ex1.example.com
- IN NAPTR 100 50 "s" "aaa:diameter.tcp" ""
- _aaa._tcp.ex1.example.com
- IN NAPTR 150 50 "s" "aaa:diameter.sctp" ""
- _diameter._sctp.ex1.example.com
-
- This indicates that the server supports TLS, TCP, and SCTP in that
- order. If the client supports TLS, TLS will be used, targeted to a
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 148]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- host determined by an SRV lookup of _diameter._tls.ex1.example.com.
- That lookup would return:
-
- ;; Priority Weight Port Target
- IN SRV 0 1 5060 server1.ex1.example.com
- IN SRV 0 2 5060 server2.ex1.example.com
-
- As an alternative example, a client that wishes to resolve aaa:
- ex2.example.com. The client performs a NAPTR query for that domain,
- and the following NAPTR records are returned:
-
- ;; order pref flags service regexp replacement
- IN NAPTR 150 50 "a" "aaa:diameter.tls.tcp" ""
- server1.ex2.example.com
- IN NAPTR 150 50 "a" "aaa:diameter.tls.tcp" ""
- server2.ex2.example.com
-
- This indicates that the server supports TCP available at the returned
- host names.
-
-Appendix C. Duplicate Detection
-
- As described in Section 9.4, accounting record duplicate detection is
- based on session identifiers. Duplicates can appear for various
- reasons:
-
- o Failover to an alternate server. Where close to real-time
- performance is required, failover thresholds need to be kept low.
- This may lead to an increased likelihood of duplicates. Failover
- can occur at the client or within Diameter agents.
-
- o Failure of a client or agent after sending a record from non-
- volatile memory, but prior to receipt of an application-layer ACK
- and deletion of the record to be sent. This will result in
- retransmission of the record soon after the client or agent has
- rebooted.
-
- o Duplicates received from RADIUS gateways. Since the
- retransmission behavior of RADIUS is not defined within [RFC2865],
- the likelihood of duplication will vary according to the
- implementation.
-
- o Implementation problems and misconfiguration.
-
- The T flag is used as an indication of an application-layer
- retransmission event, e.g., due to failover to an alternate server.
- It is defined only for request messages sent by Diameter clients or
- agents. For instance, after a reboot, a client may not know whether
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 149]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- it has already tried to send the accounting records in its non-
- volatile memory before the reboot occurred. Diameter servers MAY use
- the T flag as an aid when processing requests and detecting duplicate
- messages. However, servers that do this MUST ensure that duplicates
- are found even when the first transmitted request arrives at the
- server after the retransmitted request. It can be used only in cases
- where no answer has been received from the server for a request and
- the request is sent again, (e.g., due to a failover to an alternate
- peer, due to a recovered primary peer or due to a client re-sending a
- stored record from non-volatile memory such as after reboot of a
- client or agent).
-
- In some cases, the Diameter accounting server can delay the duplicate
- detection and accounting record processing until a post-processing
- phase takes place. At that time records are likely to be sorted
- according to the included User-Name and duplicate elimination is easy
- in this case. In other situations, it may be necessary to perform
- real-time duplicate detection, such as when credit limits are imposed
- or real-time fraud detection is desired.
-
- In general, only generation of duplicates due to failover or re-
- sending of records in non-volatile storage can be reliably detected
- by Diameter clients or agents. In such cases, the Diameter client or
- agents can mark the message as a possible duplicate by setting the T
- flag. Since the Diameter server is responsible for duplicate
- detection, it can choose whether or not to make use of the T flag, in
- order to optimize duplicate detection. Since the T flag does not
- affect interoperability, and it may not be needed by some servers,
- generation of the T flag is REQUIRED for Diameter clients and agents,
- but it MAY be implemented by Diameter servers.
-
- As an example, it can be usually be assumed that duplicates appear
- within a time window of longest recorded network partition or device
- fault, perhaps a day. So only records within this time window need
- to be looked at in the backward direction. Secondly, hashing
- techniques or other schemes, such as the use of the T flag in the
- received messages, may be used to eliminate the need to do a full
- search even in this set except for rare cases.
-
- The following is an example of how the T flag may be used by the
- server to detect duplicate requests.
-
- A Diameter server MAY check the T flag of the received message to
- determine if the record is a possible duplicate. If the T flag is
- set in the request message, the server searches for a duplicate
- within a configurable duplication time window backward and
- forward. This limits database searching to those records where
- the T flag is set. In a well-run network, network partitions and
-
-
-
-Fajardo, et al. Standards Track [Page 150]
-
-RFC 6733 Diameter Base Protocol October 2012
-
-
- device faults will presumably be rare events, so this approach
- represents a substantial optimization of the duplicate detection
- process. During failover, it is possible for the original record
- to be received after the T-flag-marked record, due to differences
- in network delays experienced along the path by the original and
- duplicate transmissions. The likelihood of this occurring
- increases as the failover interval is decreased. In order to be
- able to detect duplicates that are out of order, the Diameter
- server should use backward and forward time windows when
- performing duplicate checking for the T-flag-marked request. For
- example, in order to allow time for the original record to exit
- the network and be recorded by the accounting server, the Diameter
- server can delay processing records with the T flag set until a
- time period TIME_WAIT + RECORD_PROCESSING_TIME has elapsed after
- the closing of the original transport connection. After this time
- period, it may check the T-flag-marked records against the
- database with relative assurance that the original records, if
- sent, have been received and recorded.
-
-Appendix D. Internationalized Domain Names
-
- To be compatible with the existing DNS infrastructure and simplify
- host and domain name comparison, Diameter identities (FQDNs) are
- represented in ASCII form. This allows the Diameter protocol to fall
- in-line with the DNS strategy of being transparent from the effects
- of Internationalized Domain Names (IDNs) by following the
- recommendations in [RFC4690] and [RFC5890]. Applications that
- provide support for IDNs outside of the Diameter protocol but
- interacting with it SHOULD use the representation and conversion
- framework described in [RFC5890], [RFC5891], and [RFC3492].
-</pre>
-
-</section>
diff --git a/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_tcp.xml b/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_tcp.xml
index 1d65d14257..9f84eeb9fd 100644
--- a/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_tcp.xml
+++ b/lib/diameter/doc/src/diameter_tcp.xml
@@ -27,7 +27,8 @@
<erlref>
<header>
<copyright>
-<year>2011</year><year>2016</year>
+<year>2011</year>
+<year>2017</year>
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
@@ -99,7 +100,9 @@ before configuring TLS capability on diameter transports.</p>
| {rport, integer()}
| {accept, Match}
| {port, integer()}
- | {fragment_timer, infinity | 0..16#FFFFFFFF}</v>
+ | {fragment_timer, infinity | 0..16#FFFFFFFF}
+ | {message_cb, &mod_eval;}
+ | {sender, boolean()}</v>
<v>SslOpt = {ssl_options, true | list()}</v>
<v>TcpOpt = term()</v>
<v>Match = &ip_address; | string() | [Match]</v>
@@ -140,6 +143,44 @@ such a message is received over the transport interface after
two successive timeouts without the reception of additional bytes.
Defaults to 1000.</p>
+<marker id="sender"/>
+<p>
+Option <c>sender</c> specifies whether or not to use a dedicated
+process for sending outgoing messages, which avoids the possibility of
+send blocking reception.
+Defaults to <c>false</c>.
+If set to <c>true</c> then a <c>message_cb</c> that avoids the
+possibility of messages being queued in the sender process without
+bound should be configured.</p>
+
+<p>
+Option <c>message_cb</c> specifies a callback that is invoked on
+incoming and outgoing messages, that can be used to implement
+flow control.
+It is applied to two arguments: an atom indicating the
+reason for the callback (<c>send</c>, <c>recv</c>, or <c>ack</c> after
+a completed send), and the message in question (binary() on
+<c>recv</c>, binary() or diameter_packet record on <c>send</c> or
+<c>ack</c>, or <c>false</c> on <c>ack</c> when an incoming request has
+been discarded).
+It should return a list of actions and a new callback as
+tail; eg. <c>[fun cb/3, State]</c>.
+Valid actions are the atoms <c>send</c> or <c>recv</c>, to
+cause a following message-valued action to be sent/received,
+a message to send/receive (binary() or
+diameter_packet record), or a boolean() to enable/disable reading on
+the socket.
+More than one <c>send</c>/<c>recv</c>/message sequence can be
+returned from the same callback, and an initial
+<c>send</c>/<c>recv</c> can be omitted if the same as the value passed
+as the callback's first argument.
+Reading is initially enabled, and returning <c>false</c> does not
+imply there cannot be subsequent <c>recv</c> callbacks since
+messages may already have been read.
+An empty tail is equivalent to the prevailing callback.
+Defaults to a callback equivalent to <c>fun(ack, _) -> []; (_, Msg) ->
+[Msg] end</c>.</p>
+
<p>
Remaining options are any accepted by &ssl_connect3; or
&gen_tcp_connect3; for
diff --git a/lib/diameter/doc/src/files.mk b/lib/diameter/doc/src/files.mk
index cb4f88a375..4c1297f6cc 100644
--- a/lib/diameter/doc/src/files.mk
+++ b/lib/diameter/doc/src/files.mk
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
# %CopyrightBegin%
#
-# Copyright Ericsson AB 2010-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+# Copyright Ericsson AB 2010-2017. All Rights Reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -40,8 +40,7 @@ XML_PART_FILES = \
user_man.xml
XML_EXTRA_FILES = \
- seealso.ent \
- diameter_soc_rfc6733.xml
+ seealso.ent
XML_CHAPTER_FILES = \
diameter_intro.xml \
diff --git a/lib/diameter/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/diameter/doc/src/notes.xml
index 60478606ad..d1ad00de5c 100644
--- a/lib/diameter/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/diameter/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -43,6 +43,208 @@ first.</p>
<!-- ===================================================================== -->
+<section><title>diameter 2.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix handling of Proxy-Info in answer messages setting the
+ E-bit.</p>
+ <p>
+ RFC 6733 requires that Proxy-Info AVPs in an incoming
+ request be echoed in an outgoing answer. This was not
+ done in answers formulated by diameter; for example, as a
+ result of a handle_request callback having returned an
+ 'answer-message' or protocol_error tuple.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-9869</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ React to nodeup/nodedown when sharing peer connections.</p>
+ <p>
+ Service configuration share_peers and use_shared_peers
+ did not respond to the coming and going of remote nodes.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14011</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix inappropriate message callbacks.</p>
+ <p>
+ An incoming CER or DPR was regarded as discarded,
+ resulting in a corresponding message callback (if
+ configured) in diameter_tcp/sctp.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14486</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix handling of 5009 errors (DIAMETER_AVP_OCCURS_TOO_MANY
+ TIMES).</p>
+ <p>
+ RFC 6733 says that the first AVP that exceeds the bound
+ should be reported, but the suggestions in the errors
+ field of a diameter_packet record counted AVPs from the
+ rear of the message, not the front. Additionally,
+ diameter 2.0 in OTP 20.0 broke the counting by accepting
+ one more AVP than the message grammar in question
+ allowed.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14512</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Match case insensitively in diameter_tcp/sctp accept
+ tuple.</p>
+ <p>
+ Matching of remote addresses when accepting connections
+ in a listening transport was case-sensitive, causing the
+ semantics to change as a consequence of (kernel)
+ OTP-13006.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14535 Aux Id: OTP-13006 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix backwards incompatibility of remote send when sharing
+ transports.</p>
+ <p>
+ The sending of requests over a transport connection on a
+ remote node running an older version of diameter was
+ broken by diameter 2.0 in OTP 20.0.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14552</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix diameter_packet.avps decode of Grouped AVP errors in
+ Failed-AVP.</p>
+ <p>
+ Decode didn't produce a list of diameter_avp records, so
+ information about faulty component AVPs was lost.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14607</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Let unordered delivery be configured in diameter_sctp.</p>
+ <p>
+ With option {unordered, boolean() | pos_integer()}, with
+ false the default, and N equivalent to OS =&lt; N, where
+ OS is the number of outbound streams negotiated on the
+ association in question. If configured, unordered sending
+ commences upon reception of a second message, outgoing
+ messages being sent on stream 0 before this.</p>
+ <p>
+ The default false is for backwards compatibility, but
+ false or 1 should be set to follow RFC 6733's
+ recommendation on the use of unordered sending to avoid
+ head-of-line blocking. There is typically no meaningful
+ order to preserve, since the order in which outgoing
+ messages are received by a transport process isn't known
+ to the sender.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10889</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Complete/simplify Standards Compliance in User's Guide.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10927</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Add service option decode_format.</p>
+ <p>
+ To allow incoming messages to be decoded into maps or
+ lists instead of records. Messages can be presented in
+ any of the formats for encode.</p>
+ <p>
+ Decode performance has also been improved.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14511 Aux Id: OTP-14343 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Add service option traffic_counters.</p>
+ <p>
+ To let message-related counters be disabled, which can be
+ a performance improvement in some usecases.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14521</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Allow loopback/any as local addresses in
+ diameter_tcp/sctp.</p>
+ <p>
+ The atoms were implied by documentation, but not handled
+ in code.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14544</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Add transport option strict_capx.</p>
+ <p>
+ To allow the RFC 6733 requirement that a transport
+ connection be closed if a message is received before
+ capabilities exchange to be relaxed.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14546</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Be consistent with service/transport configuration.</p>
+ <p>
+ For options for which it's meaningful, defaults values
+ for transport options can now be configured on a service.
+ This was previously the case only for an arbitrary subset
+ of options.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14555</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Add service/transport option avp_dictionaries.</p>
+ <p>
+ To provide better support for AVPs that are not defined
+ in the application dictionary: configuring additional
+ dictionaries in an avp_dictionaries tuple allows their
+ AVPs to be encoded/decoded in much the same fashion as
+ application AVPs.</p>
+ <p>
+ The motivation is RFC 7683 Diameter Overload, Indicator
+ Conveyance (DOIC), that defines AVPs intended to be
+ piggybacked onto arbitrary messages. A DOIC dictionary
+ has been included in the installation, in module
+ diameter_gen_doic_rfc7683.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14588</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Decode application AVPs in answers setting the E-bit.</p>
+ <p>
+ AVPs defined in the application of the message being sent
+ were previously not decoded, only those in the common
+ application that defines the answer-message grammar.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14596</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>diameter 2.0</title>
<section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
diff --git a/lib/diameter/src/base/diameter_traffic.erl b/lib/diameter/src/base/diameter_traffic.erl
index f510f40a17..d2856ae530 100644
--- a/lib/diameter/src/base/diameter_traffic.erl
+++ b/lib/diameter/src/base/diameter_traffic.erl
@@ -684,7 +684,7 @@ resend(false,
Route = #diameter_avp{data = {Dict0, 'Route-Record', OH}},
Seq = diameter_session:sequence(Mask),
Hdr = Hdr0#diameter_header{hop_by_hop_id = Seq},
- Msg = [Hdr, Route | Avps], %% reordered at encode
+ Msg = [Hdr | Avps ++ [Route]],
case send_request(SvcName, App, Msg, Opts) of
#diameter_packet{} = Ans ->
Ans;
diff --git a/lib/diameter/src/diameter.appup.src b/lib/diameter/src/diameter.appup.src
index 07d0389bfd..7566cf25c3 100644
--- a/lib/diameter/src/diameter.appup.src
+++ b/lib/diameter/src/diameter.appup.src
@@ -52,7 +52,8 @@
{"1.11.2", [{restart_application, diameter}]}, %% 18.3
{"1.12", [{restart_application, diameter}]}, %% 19.0
{"1.12.1", [{restart_application, diameter}]}, %% 19.1
- {"1.12.2", [{restart_application, diameter}]} %% 19.3
+ {"1.12.2", [{restart_application, diameter}]}, %% 19.3
+ {"2.0", [{restart_application, diameter}]} %% 20.0
],
[
{"0.9", [{restart_application, diameter}]},
@@ -86,6 +87,7 @@
{"1.11.2", [{restart_application, diameter}]},
{"1.12", [{restart_application, diameter}]},
{"1.12.1", [{restart_application, diameter}]},
- {"1.12.2", [{restart_application, diameter}]}
+ {"1.12.2", [{restart_application, diameter}]},
+ {"2.0", [{restart_application, diameter}]}
]
}.
diff --git a/lib/diameter/src/transport/diameter_sctp.erl b/lib/diameter/src/transport/diameter_sctp.erl
index 4eb3379d59..64b34da690 100644
--- a/lib/diameter/src/transport/diameter_sctp.erl
+++ b/lib/diameter/src/transport/diameter_sctp.erl
@@ -103,6 +103,8 @@
| undefined,
os = 0 :: uint(), %% next output stream
rotate = 1 :: boolean() | 0 | 1, %% rotate os?
+ unordered = false :: boolean() %% always send unordered?
+ | pos_integer(),% or if =< N outbound streams?
packet = true :: boolean() %% legacy transport_data?
| raw,
message_cb = false :: false | diameter:eval(),
@@ -242,8 +244,11 @@ i(#monitor{transport = TPid} = S) ->
i({listen, Ref, {Opts, SvcPid, Addrs}}) ->
monitor(process, SvcPid),
[_] = diameter_config:subscribe(Ref, transport), %% assert existence
- {Split, Rest}
- = proplists:split(Opts, [accept, packet, sender, message_cb]),
+ {Split, Rest} = proplists:split(Opts, [accept,
+ packet,
+ sender,
+ message_cb,
+ unordered]),
OwnOpts = lists:append(Split),
{LAs, Sock} = AS = open(Addrs, Rest, ?DEFAULT_PORT),
ok = gen_sctp:listen(Sock, true),
@@ -255,12 +260,16 @@ i({listen, Ref, {Opts, SvcPid, Addrs}}) ->
opts = [[[M] || {accept, M} <- OwnOpts],
proplists:get_value(packet, OwnOpts, true)
| [proplists:get_value(K, OwnOpts, false)
- || K <- [sender, message_cb]]]};
+ || K <- [sender, message_cb, unordered]]]};
%% A connecting transport.
i({connect, Pid, Opts, Addrs, Ref}) ->
- {[Ps | Split], Rest}
- = proplists:split(Opts, [rport, raddr, packet, sender, message_cb]),
+ {[Ps | Split], Rest} = proplists:split(Opts, [rport,
+ raddr,
+ packet,
+ sender,
+ message_cb,
+ unordered]),
OwnOpts = lists:append(Split),
CB = proplists:get_value(message_cb, OwnOpts, false),
false == CB orelse (Pid ! {diameter, ack}),
@@ -274,6 +283,7 @@ i({connect, Pid, Opts, Addrs, Ref}) ->
mode = {connect, connect(Sock, RAs, RP, [])},
socket = Sock,
message_cb = CB,
+ unordered = proplists:get_value(ordered, OwnOpts, false),
packet = proplists:get_value(packet, OwnOpts, true),
send = proplists:get_value(sender, OwnOpts, false)};
@@ -311,12 +321,13 @@ i({K, Ref}, #transport{mode = {accept, _}} = S) ->
S#transport{parent = Pid};
{K, T, Opts} when K == peeloff -> %% association
{sctp, Sock, _RA, _RP, _Data} = T,
- [Matches, Packet, Sender, CB] = Opts,
+ [Matches, Packet, Sender, CB, Unordered] = Opts,
ok = accept_peer(Sock, Matches),
demonitor(Ref, [flush]),
false == CB orelse (S#transport.parent ! {diameter, ack}),
t(T, S#transport{socket = Sock,
message_cb = CB,
+ unordered = Unordered,
packet = Packet,
send = Sender});
accept_timeout = T ->
@@ -799,14 +810,30 @@ recv(#transport{rotate = B} = S)
when is_boolean(B) ->
S;
-recv(#transport{rotate = 0, streams = {_,N}, socket = Sock} = S) ->
- ok = inet:setopts(Sock, [{sctp_default_send_param,
- #sctp_sndrcvinfo{flags = [unordered]}}]),
- S#transport{rotate = 1 < N};
+recv(#transport{rotate = 0,
+ streams = {_,OS},
+ socket = Sock,
+ unordered = B}
+ = S) ->
+ ok = unordered(Sock, OS, B),
+ S#transport{rotate = 1 < OS};
recv(#transport{rotate = N} = S) ->
S#transport{rotate = N-1}.
+%% unordered/3
+
+unordered(Sock, OS, B)
+ when B;
+ is_integer(B), OS =< B ->
+ inet:setopts(Sock, [{sctp_default_send_param,
+ #sctp_sndrcvinfo{flags = [unordered]}}]);
+
+unordered(_, OS, B)
+ when not B;
+ is_integer(B), B < OS ->
+ ok.
+
%% publish/4
publish(T, Ref, Id, Sock) ->
diff --git a/lib/diameter/test/diameter_traffic_SUITE.erl b/lib/diameter/test/diameter_traffic_SUITE.erl
index ffb4a508cd..c224f9a27e 100644
--- a/lib/diameter/test/diameter_traffic_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/diameter/test/diameter_traffic_SUITE.erl
@@ -533,9 +533,10 @@ add_transports(Config) ->
LRef = ?util:listen(SN,
[T,
{sender, SS},
- {message_cb, ST andalso {?MODULE, message, [0]}}
- | [{packet, hd(?util:scramble([false, raw]))}
- || T == sctp andalso CS]],
+ {message_cb, ST andalso {?MODULE, message, [0]}}]
+ ++ [{packet, hd(?util:scramble([false, raw]))}
+ || T == sctp andalso CS]
+ ++ [{unordered, unordered()} || T == sctp],
[{capabilities_cb, fun capx/2},
{pool_size, 8}
| server_apps()]
@@ -551,13 +552,17 @@ add_transports(Config) ->
Id <- [{D,E}]],
?util:write_priv(Config, "transport", [LRef | Cs]).
+unordered() ->
+ element(rand:uniform(4), {true, false, 1, 2}).
+
client_opts(tcp) ->
[];
client_opts(sctp) ->
- [{sctp_initmsg, #sctp_initmsg{num_ostreams = N,
- max_instreams = 5}}
- || N <- [rand:uniform(8)],
- N =< 6].
+ [{unordered, unordered()}
+ | [{sctp_initmsg, #sctp_initmsg{num_ostreams = N,
+ max_instreams = 5}}
+ || N <- [rand:uniform(8)],
+ N =< 6]].
server_apps() ->
B = have_nas(),
diff --git a/lib/diameter/vsn.mk b/lib/diameter/vsn.mk
index 4801f542fb..e6dfddb5b2 100644
--- a/lib/diameter/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/diameter/vsn.mk
@@ -17,5 +17,5 @@
# %CopyrightEnd%
APPLICATION = diameter
-DIAMETER_VSN = 2.0
+DIAMETER_VSN = 2.1
APP_VSN = $(APPLICATION)-$(DIAMETER_VSN)$(PRE_VSN)
diff --git a/lib/edoc/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/edoc/doc/src/notes.xml
index 7894811c78..96d7597d83 100644
--- a/lib/edoc/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/edoc/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -32,6 +32,21 @@
<p>This document describes the changes made to the EDoc
application.</p>
+<section><title>Edoc 0.9.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Tools are updated to show Unicode atoms correctly.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14464</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Edoc 0.9</title>
<section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
diff --git a/lib/edoc/src/edoc_layout.erl b/lib/edoc/src/edoc_layout.erl
index eafab0588e..baa147410b 100644
--- a/lib/edoc/src/edoc_layout.erl
+++ b/lib/edoc/src/edoc_layout.erl
@@ -608,7 +608,7 @@ etypef([Cs | L], St, O, R, Opts) ->
app_fix(L, Opts) ->
try
{"//" ++ R1,L2} = app_fix1(L, 1),
- [App, Mod] = string:tokens(R1, "/"),
+ [App, Mod] = string:lexemes(R1, "/"),
"//" ++ atom(App, Opts) ++ "/" ++ atom(Mod, Opts) ++ L2
catch _:_ -> L
end.
@@ -1120,13 +1120,13 @@ ot_integer(E) ->
{integer,0,list_to_integer(get_attrval(value, E))}.
ot_range(E) ->
- [I1, I2] = string:tokens(get_attrval(value, E), "."),
+ [I1, I2] = string:lexemes(get_attrval(value, E), "."),
{type,0,range,[{integer,0,list_to_integer(I1)},
{integer,0,list_to_integer(I2)}]}.
ot_binary(E) ->
{Base, Unit} =
- case string:tokens(get_attrval(value, E), ",:*><") of
+ case string:lexemes(get_attrval(value, E), ",:*><") of
[] ->
{0, 0};
["_",B] ->
diff --git a/lib/edoc/src/edoc_specs.erl b/lib/edoc/src/edoc_specs.erl
index fb04bfce0e..26b7202462 100644
--- a/lib/edoc/src/edoc_specs.erl
+++ b/lib/edoc/src/edoc_specs.erl
@@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ spec(Form, Clause) ->
%% the given Erlang spec and an empty list of arguments.
dummy_spec(Form) ->
{#t_name{name = Name}, Arity, TypeSpecs} = get_spec(Form),
- As = string:join(lists:duplicate(Arity, "_X"), ","),
+ As = lists:join(",", lists:duplicate(Arity, "_X")),
S = lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~p(~s) -> true\n", [Name, As])),
#tag{name = spec, line = get_line(element(2, hd(TypeSpecs))),
origin = code, data = S}.
diff --git a/lib/edoc/vsn.mk b/lib/edoc/vsn.mk
index 1a933b2ad8..065944ccef 100644
--- a/lib/edoc/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/edoc/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-EDOC_VSN = 0.9
+EDOC_VSN = 0.9.1
diff --git a/lib/eldap/src/eldap.erl b/lib/eldap/src/eldap.erl
index 625309271b..2b84872b92 100644
--- a/lib/eldap/src/eldap.erl
+++ b/lib/eldap/src/eldap.erl
@@ -1368,9 +1368,9 @@ rm_leading_slash(Tail) -> Tail.
parse_attributes([$?|Tail]) ->
case split_string(Tail,$?) of
{[],Attributes} ->
- {[],{attributes,string:tokens(Attributes,",")}};
+ {[],{attributes,string:lexemes(Attributes,",")}};
{Attributes,Rest} ->
- {Rest,{attributes,string:tokens(Attributes,",")}}
+ {Rest,{attributes,string:lexemes(Attributes,",")}}
end.
parse_hostport(Str) ->
diff --git a/lib/erl_docgen/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/erl_docgen/doc/src/notes.xml
index 59a268d6ac..59c65665d4 100644
--- a/lib/erl_docgen/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/erl_docgen/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -31,7 +31,22 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to the <em>erl_docgen</em> application.</p>
- <section><title>Erl_Docgen 0.7</title>
+ <section><title>Erl_Docgen 0.7.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>Erl_Docgen 0.7</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
<list>
diff --git a/lib/erl_docgen/priv/dtd/chapter.dtd b/lib/erl_docgen/priv/dtd/chapter.dtd
index a4c9e4040d..8d940b90f7 100644
--- a/lib/erl_docgen/priv/dtd/chapter.dtd
+++ b/lib/erl_docgen/priv/dtd/chapter.dtd
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@
<!-- Structure -->
<!ELEMENT chapter (header,(%block;|quote|warning|note|dont|do|br|
- image|marker|table)*,section+) >
+ image|marker|table)*,section*) >
<!ELEMENT section (marker*,title,
(%block;|quote|warning|note|dont|do|br|image|marker|
table|section)*) >
diff --git a/lib/erl_docgen/src/docgen_edoc_xml_cb.erl b/lib/erl_docgen/src/docgen_edoc_xml_cb.erl
index 7cdbb502d9..67e6e33c93 100644
--- a/lib/erl_docgen/src/docgen_edoc_xml_cb.erl
+++ b/lib/erl_docgen/src/docgen_edoc_xml_cb.erl
@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@
%% limitations under the License.
%%
%% Copyright (c) 2001-2016 Richard Carlsson. Parts written by Ericsson
-%% are Copyright (c) Ericsson AB 2001-2012. All Rights Reserved.
+%% are Copyright (c) Ericsson AB 2001-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
-module(docgen_edoc_xml_cb).
@@ -113,7 +113,7 @@ root_attributes(Element, Opts) ->
%% epp:default_encoding/0 returns 'utf8'
reformat_encoding(utf8) -> "UTF-8";
reformat_encoding(List) when is_list(List) ->
- case string:to_lower(List) of
+ case string:lowercase(List) of
"utf8" -> "UTF-8";
_ -> List
end;
diff --git a/lib/erl_docgen/src/docgen_otp_specs.erl b/lib/erl_docgen/src/docgen_otp_specs.erl
index 126229ecc9..9f2b401f93 100644
--- a/lib/erl_docgen/src/docgen_otp_specs.erl
+++ b/lib/erl_docgen/src/docgen_otp_specs.erl
@@ -297,7 +297,7 @@ indent(L) ->
app_fix(L) ->
try
{"//" ++ R1,L2} = app_fix(L, 1),
- [App, Mod] = string:tokens(R1, "/"),
+ [App, Mod] = string:lexemes(R1, "/"),
"//" ++ atom(App) ++ "/" ++ atom(Mod) ++ L2
catch _:_ -> L
end.
@@ -585,13 +585,13 @@ ot_integer(E) ->
{integer,0,list_to_integer(get_attrval(value, E))}.
ot_range(E) ->
- [I1, I2] = string:tokens(get_attrval(value, E), "."),
+ [I1, I2] = string:lexemes(get_attrval(value, E), "."),
{type,0,range,[{integer,0,list_to_integer(I1)},
{integer,0,list_to_integer(I2)}]}.
ot_binary(E) ->
{Base, Unit} =
- case string:tokens(get_attrval(value, E), ",:*><") of
+ case string:lexemes(get_attrval(value, E), ",:*><") of
[] ->
{0, 0};
["_",B] ->
diff --git a/lib/erl_docgen/src/erl_docgen.app.src b/lib/erl_docgen/src/erl_docgen.app.src
index d63d880d89..171c697585 100644
--- a/lib/erl_docgen/src/erl_docgen.app.src
+++ b/lib/erl_docgen/src/erl_docgen.app.src
@@ -9,6 +9,6 @@
{registered,[]},
{applications, [kernel,stdlib]},
{env, []},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["xmerl-1.3.7","stdlib-2.5","edoc-0.7.13","erts-6.0"]}
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["xmerl-1.3.7","stdlib-3.4","edoc-0.7.13","erts-9.0"]}
]
}.
diff --git a/lib/erl_docgen/vsn.mk b/lib/erl_docgen/vsn.mk
index 8fad061b26..17a7c483f4 100644
--- a/lib/erl_docgen/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/erl_docgen/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-ERL_DOCGEN_VSN = 0.7
+ERL_DOCGEN_VSN = 0.7.1
diff --git a/lib/et/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/et/doc/src/notes.xml
index 5300d2e4ef..f0995b7c19 100644
--- a/lib/et/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/et/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -37,6 +37,21 @@
one section in this document. The title of each section is the
version number of <c>Event Tracer (ET)</c>.</p>
+<section><title>ET 1.6.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Tools are updated to show Unicode atoms correctly.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14464</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>ET 1.6</title>
<section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
diff --git a/lib/et/src/et.app.src b/lib/et/src/et.app.src
index 7a5928d6ab..f4e32f734d 100644
--- a/lib/et/src/et.app.src
+++ b/lib/et/src/et.app.src
@@ -33,6 +33,6 @@
{registered, [et_collector]},
{applications, [stdlib, kernel]},
{env, []},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["wx-1.2","stdlib-2.0","runtime_tools-1.10",
- "kernel-3.0","erts-8.0"]}
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["wx-1.2","stdlib-3.4","runtime_tools-1.10",
+ "kernel-5.3","erts-9.0"]}
]}.
diff --git a/lib/et/src/et_collector.erl b/lib/et/src/et_collector.erl
index b0f016a8ea..ffe244324c 100644
--- a/lib/et/src/et_collector.erl
+++ b/lib/et/src/et_collector.erl
@@ -1135,7 +1135,7 @@ handle_info(Info, S) ->
noreply(S).
listen_on_trace_port(Node, Port, S) ->
- [_Name, Host] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(Node), [$@]),
+ [_Name, Host] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(Node), [$@]),
case catch start_trace_client(self(), ip, {Host, Port}) of
{trace_client_pid, RemotePid} ->
rpc:call(Node, et_selector, change_pattern, [S#state.trace_pattern]),
diff --git a/lib/et/test/et_test_lib.erl b/lib/et/test/et_test_lib.erl
index df2c308b28..fc469f646a 100644
--- a/lib/et/test/et_test_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/et/test/et_test_lib.erl
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
%% %CopyrightEnd%
-module(et_test_lib).
--compile(export_all).
+-compile([export_all, nowarn_export_all]).
-include("et_test_lib.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/et/test/ett.erl b/lib/et/test/ett.erl
index b1b769b7ac..2b276eab1a 100644
--- a/lib/et/test/ett.erl
+++ b/lib/et/test/ett.erl
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
%% %CopyrightEnd%
-module(ett).
--compile(export_all).
+-compile([export_all, nowarn_export_all]).
%% Modules or suites can be shortcuts, for example wx expands to et_wx_SUITE.
%%
diff --git a/lib/et/vsn.mk b/lib/et/vsn.mk
index a37fec083b..aab63a402e 100644
--- a/lib/et/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/et/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-ET_VSN = 1.6
+ET_VSN = 1.6.1
diff --git a/lib/eunit/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/eunit/doc/src/notes.xml
index 2a4ca6d12c..7133befe37 100644
--- a/lib/eunit/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/eunit/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -33,6 +33,21 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to the EUnit application.</p>
+<section><title>Eunit 2.3.4</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Tools are updated to show Unicode atoms correctly.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14464</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Eunit 2.3.3</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/eunit/src/eunit.app.src b/lib/eunit/src/eunit.app.src
index b4ff6c9242..cc75a0f790 100644
--- a/lib/eunit/src/eunit.app.src
+++ b/lib/eunit/src/eunit.app.src
@@ -19,4 +19,4 @@
{registered,[]},
{applications, [kernel,stdlib]},
{env, []},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["stdlib-2.5","kernel-3.0","erts-6.0"]}]}.
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["stdlib-3.4","kernel-5.3","erts-9.0"]}]}.
diff --git a/lib/eunit/src/eunit_lib.erl b/lib/eunit/src/eunit_lib.erl
index e340f50a3c..d1bd160ea1 100644
--- a/lib/eunit/src/eunit_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/eunit/src/eunit_lib.erl
@@ -391,7 +391,7 @@ fun_parent(F) ->
-ifdef(TEST).
fun_parent_test() ->
- {?MODULE,fun_parent_test,0} = fun_parent(fun () -> ok end).
+ {?MODULE,fun_parent_test,0} = fun_parent(fun (A) -> {ok,A} end).
-endif.
%% ---------------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git a/lib/eunit/vsn.mk b/lib/eunit/vsn.mk
index 107ad5c101..25bb0dec17 100644
--- a/lib/eunit/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/eunit/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-EUNIT_VSN = 2.3.3
+EUNIT_VSN = 2.3.4
diff --git a/lib/hipe/cerl/erl_types.erl b/lib/hipe/cerl/erl_types.erl
index f4746fc9d0..d8d707c05e 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/cerl/erl_types.erl
+++ b/lib/hipe/cerl/erl_types.erl
@@ -1630,8 +1630,8 @@ lift_list_to_pos_empty(?list(Content, Termination, _)) ->
%% * The keys in Pairs are singleton types.
%% * The values of Pairs must not be unit, and may only be none if the
%% mandatoriness tag is 'optional'.
-%% * Optional must contain no pair {K,V} s.t. K is a subtype of DefaultKey and
-%% V is equal to DefaultKey.
+%% * There is no pair {K, 'optional', V} in Pairs s.t.
+%% K is a subtype of DefaultKey and V is equal to DefaultValue.
%% * DefaultKey must be the empty type iff DefaultValue is the empty type.
%% * DefaultKey must not be a singleton type.
%% * For every key K in Pairs, DefaultKey - K must not be representable; i.e.
@@ -4249,13 +4249,13 @@ t_to_string(?identifier(Set), _RecDict) ->
case Set of
?any -> "identifier()";
_ ->
- string:join([flat_format("~w()", [T]) || T <- set_to_list(Set)], " | ")
+ flat_join([flat_format("~w()", [T]) || T <- set_to_list(Set)], " | ")
end;
t_to_string(?opaque(Set), RecDict) ->
- string:join([opaque_type(Mod, Name, Args, S, RecDict) ||
- #opaque{mod = Mod, name = Name, struct = S, args = Args}
- <- set_to_list(Set)],
- " | ");
+ flat_join([opaque_type(Mod, Name, Args, S, RecDict) ||
+ #opaque{mod = Mod, name = Name, struct = S, args = Args}
+ <- set_to_list(Set)],
+ " | ");
t_to_string(?matchstate(Pres, Slots), RecDict) ->
flat_format("ms(~ts,~ts)", [t_to_string(Pres, RecDict),
t_to_string(Slots,RecDict)]);
@@ -4346,9 +4346,9 @@ t_to_string(?map(Pairs0,DefK,DefV), RecDict) ->
end end,
StrMand = [{Tos(K),Tos(V)}||{K,?mand,V}<-Pairs],
StrOpt = [{Tos(K),Tos(V)}||{K,?opt,V}<-Pairs],
- "#{" ++ string:join([K ++ ":=" ++ V||{K,V}<-StrMand]
- ++ [K ++ "=>" ++ V||{K,V}<-StrOpt]
- ++ ExtraEl, ", ") ++ "}";
+ "#{" ++ flat_join([K ++ ":=" ++ V||{K,V}<-StrMand]
+ ++ [K ++ "=>" ++ V||{K,V}<-StrOpt]
+ ++ ExtraEl, ", ") ++ "}";
t_to_string(?tuple(?any, ?any, ?any), _RecDict) -> "tuple()";
t_to_string(?tuple(Elements, _Arity, ?any), RecDict) ->
"{" ++ comma_sequence(Elements, RecDict) ++ "}";
@@ -4371,7 +4371,7 @@ t_to_string(?var(Id), _RecDict) when is_integer(Id) ->
record_to_string(Tag, [_|Fields], FieldNames, RecDict) ->
FieldStrings = record_fields_to_string(Fields, FieldNames, RecDict, []),
- "#" ++ atom_to_string(Tag) ++ "{" ++ string:join(FieldStrings, ",") ++ "}".
+ "#" ++ atom_to_string(Tag) ++ "{" ++ flat_join(FieldStrings, ",") ++ "}".
record_fields_to_string([F|Fs], [{FName, _Abstr, DefType}|FDefs],
RecDict, Acc) ->
@@ -4397,7 +4397,7 @@ record_field_diffs_to_string(?tuple([_|Fs], Arity, Tag), RecDict) ->
{ok, FieldNames} = lookup_record(TagAtom, Arity-1, RecDict),
%% io:format("RecCElems = ~p\nRecTypes = ~p\n", [Fs, FieldNames]),
FieldDiffs = field_diffs(Fs, FieldNames, RecDict, []),
- string:join(FieldDiffs, " and ").
+ flat_join(FieldDiffs, " and ").
field_diffs([F|Fs], [{FName, _Abstr, DefType}|FDefs], RecDict, Acc) ->
%% Don't care about opacity for now.
@@ -4417,11 +4417,11 @@ comma_sequence(Types, RecDict) ->
true -> "_";
false -> t_to_string(T, RecDict)
end || T <- Types],
- string:join(List, ",").
+ flat_join(List, ",").
union_sequence(Types, RecDict) ->
List = [t_to_string(T, RecDict) || T <- Types],
- string:join(List, " | ").
+ flat_join(List, " | ").
-ifdef(DEBUG).
opaque_type(Mod, Name, _Args, S, RecDict) ->
@@ -4675,7 +4675,8 @@ from_form({type, _L, map, List}, S, D0, L, C) ->
end
end(List, L, C),
try
- {Pairs, DefK, DefV} = map_from_form(Pairs1, [], [], [], ?none, ?none),
+ Pairs2 = singleton_elements(Pairs1),
+ {Pairs, DefK, DefV} = map_from_form(Pairs2, [], [], [], ?none, ?none),
{t_map(Pairs, DefK, DefV), L5, C5}
catch none -> {t_none(), L5, C5}
end;
@@ -5026,6 +5027,30 @@ list_from_form([H|Tail], S, D, L, C) ->
{T1, L2, C2} = list_from_form(Tail, S, D, L1, C1),
{[H1|T1], L2, C2}.
+%% Separates singleton types in keys (see is_singleton_type/1).
+singleton_elements([]) ->
+ [];
+singleton_elements([{K,?mand,V}=Pair|Pairs]) ->
+ case is_singleton_type(K) of
+ true ->
+ [Pair|singleton_elements(Pairs)];
+ false ->
+ singleton_elements([{K,?opt,V}|Pairs])
+ end;
+singleton_elements([{Key0,MNess,Val}|Pairs]) ->
+ [{Key,MNess,Val} || Key <- separate_key(Key0)] ++ singleton_elements(Pairs).
+
+%% To be in sync with is_singleton_type/1.
+%% Does not separate tuples and maps as doing that has potential
+%% to be very expensive.
+separate_key(?atom(Atoms)) when Atoms =/= ?any ->
+ [t_atom(A) || A <- Atoms];
+separate_key(?number(_, _) = T) ->
+ t_elements(T);
+separate_key(?union(List)) ->
+ lists:append([separate_key(K) || K <- List, not t_is_none(K)]);
+separate_key(Key) -> [Key].
+
%% Sorts, combines non-singleton pairs, and applies precendence and
%% mandatoriness rules.
map_from_form([], ShdwPs, MKs, Pairs, DefK, DefV) ->
@@ -5236,7 +5261,7 @@ t_form_to_string({ann_type, _L, [Var, Type]}) ->
t_form_to_string({paren_type, _L, [Type]}) ->
flat_format("(~ts)", [t_form_to_string(Type)]);
t_form_to_string({remote_type, _L, [{atom, _, Mod}, {atom, _, Name}, Args]}) ->
- ArgString = "(" ++ string:join(t_form_to_string_list(Args), ",") ++ ")",
+ ArgString = "(" ++ flat_join(t_form_to_string_list(Args), ",") ++ ")",
flat_format("~w:~tw", [Mod, Name]) ++ ArgString;
t_form_to_string({type, _L, arity, []}) -> "arity()";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, binary, []}) -> "binary()";
@@ -5259,7 +5284,7 @@ t_form_to_string({type, _L, 'fun', []}) -> "fun()";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, 'fun', [{type, _, any}, Range]}) ->
"fun(...) -> " ++ t_form_to_string(Range);
t_form_to_string({type, _L, 'fun', [{type, _, product, Domain}, Range]}) ->
- "fun((" ++ string:join(t_form_to_string_list(Domain), ",") ++ ") -> "
+ "fun((" ++ flat_join(t_form_to_string_list(Domain), ",") ++ ") -> "
++ t_form_to_string(Range) ++ ")";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, iodata, []}) -> "iodata()";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, iolist, []}) -> "iolist()";
@@ -5267,7 +5292,7 @@ t_form_to_string({type, _L, list, [Type]}) ->
"[" ++ t_form_to_string(Type) ++ "]";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, map, any}) -> "map()";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, map, Args}) ->
- "#{" ++ string:join(t_form_to_string_list(Args), ",") ++ "}";
+ "#{" ++ flat_join(t_form_to_string_list(Args), ",") ++ "}";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, map_field_assoc, [Key, Val]}) ->
t_form_to_string(Key) ++ "=>" ++ t_form_to_string(Val);
t_form_to_string({type, _L, map_field_exact, [Key, Val]}) ->
@@ -5279,7 +5304,7 @@ t_form_to_string({type, _L, nonempty_list, [Type]}) ->
"[" ++ t_form_to_string(Type) ++ ",...]";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, nonempty_string, []}) -> "nonempty_string()";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, product, Elements}) ->
- "<" ++ string:join(t_form_to_string_list(Elements), ",") ++ ">";
+ "<" ++ flat_join(t_form_to_string_list(Elements), ",") ++ ">";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, range, [From, To]} = Type) ->
case {erl_eval:partial_eval(From), erl_eval:partial_eval(To)} of
{{integer, _, FromVal}, {integer, _, ToVal}} ->
@@ -5289,7 +5314,7 @@ t_form_to_string({type, _L, range, [From, To]} = Type) ->
t_form_to_string({type, _L, record, [{atom, _, Name}]}) ->
flat_format("#~tw{}", [Name]);
t_form_to_string({type, _L, record, [{atom, _, Name}|Fields]}) ->
- FieldString = string:join(t_form_to_string_list(Fields), ","),
+ FieldString = flat_join(t_form_to_string_list(Fields), ","),
flat_format("#~tw{~ts}", [Name, FieldString]);
t_form_to_string({type, _L, field_type, [{atom, _, Name}, Type]}) ->
flat_format("~tw::~ts", [Name, t_form_to_string(Type)]);
@@ -5297,9 +5322,9 @@ t_form_to_string({type, _L, term, []}) -> "term()";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, timeout, []}) -> "timeout()";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, tuple, any}) -> "tuple()";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, tuple, Args}) ->
- "{" ++ string:join(t_form_to_string_list(Args), ",") ++ "}";
+ "{" ++ flat_join(t_form_to_string_list(Args), ",") ++ "}";
t_form_to_string({type, _L, union, Args}) ->
- string:join(t_form_to_string_list(Args), " | ");
+ flat_join(t_form_to_string_list(Args), " | ");
t_form_to_string({type, _L, Name, []} = T) ->
try
M = mod,
@@ -5317,7 +5342,7 @@ t_form_to_string({type, _L, Name, []} = T) ->
end;
t_form_to_string({user_type, _L, Name, List}) ->
flat_format("~tw(~ts)",
- [Name, string:join(t_form_to_string_list(List), ",")]);
+ [Name, flat_join(t_form_to_string_list(List), ",")]);
t_form_to_string({type, L, Name, List}) ->
%% Compatibility: modules compiled before Erlang/OTP 18.0.
t_form_to_string({user_type, L, Name, List}).
@@ -5475,7 +5500,8 @@ t_is_singleton(Type) ->
t_is_singleton(Type, Opaques) ->
do_opaque(Type, Opaques, fun is_singleton_type/1).
-%% Incomplete; not all representable singleton types are included.
+%% To be in sync with separate_key/1.
+%% Used to also recognize maps and tuples.
is_singleton_type(?nil) -> true;
is_singleton_type(?atom(?any)) -> false;
is_singleton_type(?atom(Set)) ->
@@ -5483,13 +5509,6 @@ is_singleton_type(?atom(Set)) ->
is_singleton_type(?int_range(V, V)) -> true;
is_singleton_type(?int_set(Set)) ->
ordsets:size(Set) =:= 1;
-is_singleton_type(?tuple(Types, Arity, _)) when is_integer(Arity) ->
- lists:all(fun is_singleton_type/1, Types);
-is_singleton_type(?tuple_set([{Arity, [OnlyTuple]}])) when is_integer(Arity) ->
- is_singleton_type(OnlyTuple);
-is_singleton_type(?map(Pairs, ?none, ?none)) ->
- lists:all(fun({_,MNess,V}) -> MNess =:= ?mand andalso is_singleton_type(V)
- end, Pairs);
is_singleton_type(_) ->
false.
@@ -5584,7 +5603,7 @@ set_to_string(Set) ->
true -> io_lib:write_string(atom_to_list(X), $'); % stupid emacs '
false -> flat_format("~tw", [X])
end || X <- set_to_list(Set)],
- string:join(L, " | ").
+ flat_join(L, " | ").
set_min([H|_]) -> H.
@@ -5594,6 +5613,9 @@ set_max(Set) ->
flat_format(F, S) ->
lists:flatten(io_lib:format(F, S)).
+flat_join(List, Sep) ->
+ lists:flatten(lists:join(Sep, List)).
+
%%=============================================================================
%%
%% Utilities for the binary type
diff --git a/lib/hipe/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/hipe/doc/src/notes.xml
index 9167d0aaec..eadaee50e2 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/hipe/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -31,6 +31,35 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to HiPE.</p>
+<section><title>Hipe 3.16.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p> Fix a bug regarding map types that caused Dialyzer to
+ go into an infinite loop. A consequence of the fix is
+ that compound map keys such as maps and tuples sometimes
+ are handled with less precision than before. </p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14572 Aux Id: seq13319 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Hipe 3.16</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_llvm.erl b/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_llvm.erl
index 641d3fda0a..ccd40162cb 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_llvm.erl
+++ b/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_llvm.erl
@@ -1005,11 +1005,12 @@ pp_ins(Dev, Ver, I) ->
write(Dev, [" ", adj_stack_offset(I),")\n"]);
#llvm_meta{} ->
write(Dev, ["!", meta_id(I), " = !{ "]),
- write(Dev, string:join([if is_list(Op) -> ["!\"", Op, "\""];
- is_integer(Op) -> ["i32 ", integer_to_list(Op)];
- is_record(Op, llvm_meta) ->
- ["!", meta_id(Op)]
- end || Op <- meta_operands(I)], ", ")),
+ write(Dev, lists:join(", ",
+ [if is_list(Op) -> ["!\"", Op, "\""];
+ is_integer(Op) -> ["i32 ", integer_to_list(Op)];
+ is_record(Op, llvm_meta) ->
+ ["!", meta_id(Op)]
+ end || Op <- meta_operands(I)])),
write(Dev, " }\n");
Other ->
exit({?MODULE, pp_ins, {"Unknown LLVM instruction", Other}})
diff --git a/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_llvm_main.erl b/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_llvm_main.erl
index 4eec0c752b..54c435c127 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_llvm_main.erl
+++ b/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_llvm_main.erl
@@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ compiler_target_opt() ->
%% @doc Join options.
fix_opts(Opts) ->
- string:join(Opts, " ").
+ lists:flatten(lists:join(" ", Opts)).
%% @doc Translate optimization-level flag (default is "O2").
trans_optlev_flag(Tool, Options) ->
diff --git a/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_rtl_to_llvm.erl b/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_rtl_to_llvm.erl
index 79e1bfd381..934717efc1 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_rtl_to_llvm.erl
+++ b/lib/hipe/llvm/hipe_rtl_to_llvm.erl
@@ -1537,7 +1537,7 @@ declare_switch_table({Name, {switch, {TableType, Labels, _, _}, _}}, FunName) ->
LabelList = [mk_jump_label(L) || L <- Labels],
Fun1 = fun(X) -> "i8* blockaddress(@" ++ FunName ++ ", " ++ X ++ ")" end,
List2 = lists:map(Fun1, LabelList),
- List3 = string:join(List2, ",\n"),
+ List3 = lists:flatten(lists:join(",\n", List2)),
List4 = "[\n" ++ List3 ++ "\n]\n",
hipe_llvm:mk_const_decl("@" ++ Name, "constant", TableType, List4).
@@ -1553,7 +1553,7 @@ declare_closure_labels(ClosureLabels, Relocs, Fun) ->
Relocs1 = relocs_store("table_closures", {table_closures, ArityList}, Relocs),
List2 =
["i8* blockaddress(@" ++ FunName ++ ", " ++ L ++ ")" || L <- LabelList],
- List3 = string:join(List2, ",\n"),
+ List3 = lists:flatten(lists:join(",\n", List2)),
List4 = "[\n" ++ List3 ++ "\n]\n",
NrLabels = length(LabelList),
ByteTyPtr = hipe_llvm:mk_pointer(hipe_llvm:mk_int(?BITS_IN_BYTE)),
diff --git a/lib/hipe/main/hipe.app.src b/lib/hipe/main/hipe.app.src
index 3c3a1004f1..5b2280594f 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/main/hipe.app.src
+++ b/lib/hipe/main/hipe.app.src
@@ -235,5 +235,5 @@
{registered,[]},
{applications, [kernel,stdlib]},
{env, []},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["syntax_tools-1.6.14","stdlib-2.5","kernel-3.0",
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["syntax_tools-1.6.14","stdlib-3.4","kernel-5.3",
"erts-9.0","compiler-5.0"]}]}.
diff --git a/lib/hipe/main/hipe.erl b/lib/hipe/main/hipe.erl
index 19b4e8bfe2..f5f5bf5830 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/main/hipe.erl
+++ b/lib/hipe/main/hipe.erl
@@ -1616,11 +1616,11 @@ llvm_support_available() ->
get_llvm_version() ->
OptStr = os:cmd("opt -version"),
SubStr = "LLVM version ", N = length(SubStr),
- case string:str(OptStr, SubStr) of
- 0 -> % No opt available
+ case string:find(OptStr, SubStr) of
+ nomatch -> % No opt available
{0, 0};
S ->
- case string:tokens(string:sub_string(OptStr, S + N), ".") of
+ case string:lexemes(string:slice(S, N), ".") of
[MajorS, MinorS | _] ->
case {string:to_integer(MajorS), string:to_integer(MinorS)} of
{{Major, ""}, {Minor, _}}
diff --git a/lib/hipe/test/hipe_testsuite_driver.erl b/lib/hipe/test/hipe_testsuite_driver.erl
index 88576775ca..ee9c57a908 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/test/hipe_testsuite_driver.erl
+++ b/lib/hipe/test/hipe_testsuite_driver.erl
@@ -29,13 +29,9 @@ get_suites(SuitesWithSuiteSuffix) ->
[S || {yes, S} <- Prefixes].
suffix(String, Suffix) ->
- case string:rstr(String, Suffix) of
- 0 -> no;
- Index ->
- case string:substr(String, Index) =:= Suffix of
- true -> {yes, string:sub_string(String, 1, Index-1)};
- false -> no
- end
+ case string:split(String, Suffix, trailing) of
+ [Prefix,[]] -> {yes, Prefix};
+ _ -> no
end.
-spec file_type(file:filename()) -> {ok, file_type()} | {error, ext_posix()}.
diff --git a/lib/hipe/test/opt_verify_SUITE.erl b/lib/hipe/test/opt_verify_SUITE.erl
index 86083fa02b..24f43af275 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/test/opt_verify_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/hipe/test/opt_verify_SUITE.erl
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ call_elim(Config) ->
Icode5 = call_elim_test_file(Config, F3, icode_call_elim),
0 = substring_count(binary:bin_to_list(Icode5), "is_key"),
Icode6 = call_elim_test_file(Config, F3, no_icode_call_elim),
- 3 = substring_count(binary:bin_to_list(Icode6), "is_key"),
+ 2 = substring_count(binary:bin_to_list(Icode6), "is_key"),
ok.
call_elim_test_file(Config, FileName, Option) ->
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ call_elim_test_file(Config, FileName, Option) ->
substring_count(Icode, Substring) ->
substring_count(Icode, Substring, 0).
substring_count(Icode, Substring, N) ->
- case string:str(Icode, Substring) of
- 0 -> N;
- I -> substring_count(lists:nthtail(I, Icode), Substring, N+1)
+ case string:find(Icode, Substring) of
+ nomatch -> N;
+ Prefix -> substring_count(string:prefix(Prefix, Substring), Substring, N+1)
end.
diff --git a/lib/hipe/test/opt_verify_SUITE_data/call_elim_test_branches_opt_poss.erl b/lib/hipe/test/opt_verify_SUITE_data/call_elim_test_branches_opt_poss.erl
index c8ddfa1e75..12875f41af 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/test/opt_verify_SUITE_data/call_elim_test_branches_opt_poss.erl
+++ b/lib/hipe/test/opt_verify_SUITE_data/call_elim_test_branches_opt_poss.erl
@@ -6,17 +6,11 @@ test(A) ->
if A > 0 ->
true = has_a_field(#{a=>true}),
true = has_a_field(#{b=>1, a=>"2"}),
- true = has_a_field(#{a=>5, c=>4}),
- true = has_tuple_field(#{{ab, 1}=><<"qq">>, 1 =>0}),
- true = has_tuple_field(#{up =>down, {ab, 1}=>[]}),
- true = has_tuple_field(#{{ab, 1}=>42});
+ true = has_a_field(#{a=>5, c=>4});
A =< 0 ->
true = has_a_field(#{a=>q, 'A' =>nej}),
true = has_a_field(#{a=>"hej", false=>true}),
- true = has_a_field(#{a=>3}),
- true = has_tuple_field(#{{ab, 1}=>q, 'A' =>nej}),
- true = has_tuple_field(#{{ab, 1}=>"hej", false=>true}),
- true = has_tuple_field(#{{ab, 1}=>3})
+ true = has_a_field(#{a=>3})
end,
true = has_nil_field(#{[] =>3, b =>"seven"}),
true = has_nil_field(#{"seventeen"=>17, []=>nil}),
diff --git a/lib/hipe/vsn.mk b/lib/hipe/vsn.mk
index 0ef4aa7f09..f88d9147b1 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/hipe/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-HIPE_VSN = 3.16
+HIPE_VSN = 3.16.1
diff --git a/lib/inets/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/inets/doc/src/notes.xml
index c85600d0be..10ef84d7cf 100644
--- a/lib/inets/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/inets/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -33,7 +33,29 @@
<file>notes.xml</file>
</header>
- <section><title>Inets 6.4.1</title>
+ <section><title>Inets 6.4.2</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Make sure mod_log uses the correct status code</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14510</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Correct behaviour of mod_disk_log to proparly handle
+ repair options</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14530</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>Inets 6.4.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
<list>
diff --git a/lib/inets/vsn.mk b/lib/inets/vsn.mk
index c4314f1ab5..34b6902747 100644
--- a/lib/inets/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/inets/vsn.mk
@@ -19,6 +19,6 @@
# %CopyrightEnd%
APPLICATION = inets
-INETS_VSN = 6.4.1
+INETS_VSN = 6.4.2
PRE_VSN =
APP_VSN = "$(APPLICATION)-$(INETS_VSN)$(PRE_VSN)"
diff --git a/lib/kernel/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/kernel/doc/src/notes.xml
index 9cd03ffcad..a5316dd476 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/kernel/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -31,6 +31,50 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to the Kernel application.</p>
+<section><title>Kernel 5.4</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Processes which did output after switching jobs (Ctrl+G)
+ could be left forever stuck in the io request.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14571 Aux Id: ERL-472 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>Lock counting can now be fully toggled at runtime in
+ the lock counting emulator (<c>-emu_type lcnt</c>).
+ Everything is enabled by default to match the old
+ behavior, but specific categories can be toggled at will
+ with minimal runtime overhead when disabled. Refer to the
+ documentation on <c>lcnt:rt_mask/1</c> for details.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-13170</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p><c>lcnt:collect</c> and <c>lcnt:clear</c> will no
+ longer block all other threads in the runtime system.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14412</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Kernel 5.3.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/erl_boot_server.erl b/lib/kernel/src/erl_boot_server.erl
index ac81cc9689..2a38266579 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/erl_boot_server.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/erl_boot_server.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1996-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1996-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -253,9 +253,9 @@ handle_info({udp, U, IP, Port, Data}, S0) ->
"~w is not a valid address ** ~n", [IP]),
{noreply,S0};
{true,_,_} ->
- case catch string:substr(Data, 1, length(?EBOOT_REQUEST)) of
+ case catch string:slice(Data, 0, length(?EBOOT_REQUEST)) of
?EBOOT_REQUEST ->
- Vsn = string:substr(Data, length(?EBOOT_REQUEST)+1, length(Data)),
+ Vsn = string:slice(Data, length(?EBOOT_REQUEST), length(Data)),
error_logger:error_msg("** Illegal boot server connection attempt: "
"client version is ~s ** ~n", [Vsn]);
_ ->
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/erl_reply.erl b/lib/kernel/src/erl_reply.erl
index e1e046cbb4..e1c4ffe839 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/erl_reply.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/erl_reply.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1997-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ reply(_) ->
%% convert ip number to tuple
ip_string_to_tuple(Ip) ->
- [Ip1,Ip2,Ip3,Ip4] = string:tokens(Ip,"."),
+ [Ip1,Ip2,Ip3,Ip4] = string:lexemes(Ip,"."),
{list_to_integer(Ip1),
list_to_integer(Ip2),
list_to_integer(Ip3),
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/error_logger.erl b/lib/kernel/src/error_logger.erl
index f07ec52cfa..585507c545 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/error_logger.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/error_logger.erl
@@ -499,16 +499,31 @@ display4(A = [_|_]) ->
display4(A) ->
erlang:display(A).
-
-string_p(Term) when is_list(Term) ->
- string_p1(lists:flatten(Term));
-string_p(_Term) ->
- false.
-
-string_p1([]) ->
+string_p([]) ->
false;
-string_p1(FlatList) ->
- io_lib:printable_list(FlatList).
+string_p(Term) ->
+ string_p1(Term).
+
+string_p1([H|T]) when is_integer(H), H >= $\040, H =< $\176 ->
+ string_p1(T);
+string_p1([H|T]) when is_integer(H), H >= 16#A0, H < 16#D800;
+ is_integer(H), H > 16#DFFF, H < 16#FFFE;
+ is_integer(H), H > 16#FFFF, H =< 16#10FFFF ->
+ string_p1(T);
+string_p1([$\n|T]) -> string_p1(T);
+string_p1([$\r|T]) -> string_p1(T);
+string_p1([$\t|T]) -> string_p1(T);
+string_p1([$\v|T]) -> string_p1(T);
+string_p1([$\b|T]) -> string_p1(T);
+string_p1([$\f|T]) -> string_p1(T);
+string_p1([$\e|T]) -> string_p1(T);
+string_p1([H|T]) when is_list(H) ->
+ case string_p1(H) of
+ true -> string_p1(T);
+ _ -> false
+ end;
+string_p1([]) -> true;
+string_p1(_) -> false.
-spec limit_term(term()) -> term().
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/erts_debug.erl b/lib/kernel/src/erts_debug.erl
index 480db6814e..2887014c1c 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/erts_debug.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/erts_debug.erl
@@ -378,16 +378,11 @@ df(Mod, Func, Arity) when is_atom(Mod), is_atom(Func) ->
catch _:_ -> {undef,Mod}
end.
-dff(File, Fs) when is_pid(File), is_list(Fs) ->
- lists:foreach(fun(Mfa) ->
- disassemble_function(File, Mfa),
- io:nl(File)
- end, Fs);
-dff(Name, Fs) when is_list(Name) ->
- case file:open(Name, [write]) of
+dff(Name, Fs) ->
+ case file:open(Name, [write,raw,delayed_write]) of
{ok,F} ->
try
- dff(F, Fs)
+ dff_1(F, Fs)
after
_ = file:close(F)
end;
@@ -395,12 +390,18 @@ dff(Name, Fs) when is_list(Name) ->
{error,{badopen,Reason}}
end.
+dff_1(File, Fs) ->
+ lists:foreach(fun(Mfa) ->
+ disassemble_function(File, Mfa),
+ file:write(File, "\n")
+ end, Fs).
+
disassemble_function(File, {_,_,_}=MFA) ->
cont_dis(File, erts_debug:disassemble(MFA), MFA).
cont_dis(_, false, _) -> ok;
cont_dis(File, {Addr,Str,MFA}, MFA) ->
- io:put_chars(File, binary_to_list(Str)),
+ ok = file:write(File, Str),
cont_dis(File, erts_debug:disassemble(Addr), MFA);
cont_dis(_, {_,_,_}, _) -> ok.
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/group.erl b/lib/kernel/src/group.erl
index bf785959ff..a5210901f2 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/group.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/group.erl
@@ -793,9 +793,9 @@ search_up_stack(Stack, Substr) ->
case up_stack(Stack) of
{none,NewStack} -> {none,NewStack};
{L, NewStack} ->
- case string:str(L, Substr) of
- 0 -> search_up_stack(NewStack, Substr);
- _ -> {string:strip(L,right,$\n), NewStack}
+ case string:find(L, Substr) of
+ nomatch -> search_up_stack(NewStack, Substr);
+ _ -> {string:trim(L, trailing, "$\n"), NewStack}
end
end.
@@ -803,9 +803,9 @@ search_down_stack(Stack, Substr) ->
case down_stack(Stack) of
{none,NewStack} -> {none,NewStack};
{L, NewStack} ->
- case string:str(L, Substr) of
- 0 -> search_down_stack(NewStack, Substr);
- _ -> {string:strip(L,right,$\n), NewStack}
+ case string:find(L, Substr) of
+ nomatch -> search_down_stack(NewStack, Substr);
+ _ -> {string:trim(L, trailing, "$\n"), NewStack}
end
end.
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/inet_config.erl b/lib/kernel/src/inet_config.erl
index 4bbc520449..9f76360b8b 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/inet_config.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/inet_config.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1997-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -369,7 +369,7 @@ win32_load1(Reg,Type,HFileKey) ->
end.
win32_split_line(Line,nt) -> inet_parse:split_line(Line);
-win32_split_line(Line,windows) -> string:tokens(Line, ",").
+win32_split_line(Line,windows) -> string:lexemes(Line, ",").
win32_get_strings(Reg, Names) ->
win32_get_strings(Reg, Names, []).
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/inet_dns.erl b/lib/kernel/src/inet_dns.erl
index d5f982cc51..f1f58bc872 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/inet_dns.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/inet_dns.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1997-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@
-export([decode/1, encode/1]).
--import(lists, [reverse/1, reverse/2, nthtail/2]).
+-import(lists, [reverse/1]).
-include("inet_int.hrl").
-include("inet_dns.hrl").
@@ -473,7 +473,7 @@ decode_data(<<Order:16,Preference:16,Data0/binary>>, _, ?S_NAPTR, Buffer) ->
{Data2,Services} = decode_string(Data1),
{Data,Regexp} = decode_characters(Data2, utf8),
Replacement = decode_domain(Data, Buffer),
- {Order,Preference,string:to_lower(Flags),string:to_lower(Services),
+ {Order,Preference,string:lowercase(Flags),string:lowercase(Services),
Regexp,Replacement};
%% ?S_OPT falls through to default
decode_data(Data, _, ?S_TXT, _) ->
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/inet_parse.erl b/lib/kernel/src/inet_parse.erl
index 29804dc50b..e9685c6554 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/inet_parse.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/inet_parse.erl
@@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ hosts(Fname,File) ->
%% interface with a %if suffix. These kind of
%% addresses maybe need to be gracefully handled
%% throughout inet* and inet_drv.
- case string:tokens(Address, "%") of
+ case string:lexemes(Address, "%") of
[Addr,_] ->
{ok,_} = address(Addr),
skip;
@@ -407,7 +407,7 @@ is_dom1([C | Cs]) when C >= $a, C =< $z -> is_dom_ldh(Cs);
is_dom1([C | Cs]) when C >= $A, C =< $Z -> is_dom_ldh(Cs);
is_dom1([C | Cs]) when C >= $0, C =< $9 ->
case is_dom_ldh(Cs) of
- true -> is_dom2(string:tokens([C | Cs],"."));
+ true -> is_dom2(string:lexemes([C | Cs],"."));
false -> false
end;
is_dom1(_) -> false.
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/inet_res.erl b/lib/kernel/src/inet_res.erl
index 90e49ddfdf..49aa5f8bda 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/inet_res.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/inet_res.erl
@@ -859,15 +859,17 @@ query_ns(S0, Id, Buffer, IP, Port, Timer, Retry, I,
{ok,S} ->
Timeout =
inet:timeout( (Tm * (1 bsl I)) div Retry, Timer),
- {S,
case query_udp(
S, Id, Buffer, IP, Port, Timeout, Verbose) of
{ok,#dns_rec{header=H}} when H#dns_header.tc ->
TcpTimeout = inet:timeout(Tm*5, Timer),
- query_tcp(
- TcpTimeout, Id, Buffer, IP, Port, Verbose);
- Reply -> Reply
- end};
+ {S, query_tcp(
+ TcpTimeout, Id, Buffer, IP, Port, Verbose)};
+ {error, econnrefused} = Err ->
+ ok = udp_close(S),
+ {#sock{}, Err};
+ Reply -> {S, Reply}
+ end;
Error ->
{S0,Error}
end
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/kernel.app.src b/lib/kernel/src/kernel.app.src
index 2a11b04310..2a88cc7e26 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/kernel.app.src
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/kernel.app.src
@@ -120,6 +120,6 @@
{applications, []},
{env, [{error_logger, tty}]},
{mod, {kernel, []}},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["erts-9.1", "stdlib-3.0", "sasl-3.0"]}
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["erts-9.1", "stdlib-3.4", "sasl-3.0"]}
]
}.
diff --git a/lib/kernel/src/os.erl b/lib/kernel/src/os.erl
index 0250783632..209899d587 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/src/os.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/src/os.erl
@@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ verify_executable(Name0, [Ext|Rest], OrigExtensions) ->
end;
verify_executable(Name, [], OrigExtensions) when OrigExtensions =/= [""] -> %% Windows
%% Will only happen on windows, hence case insensitivity
- case can_be_full_name(string:to_lower(Name),OrigExtensions) of
+ case can_be_full_name(string:lowercase(Name),OrigExtensions) of
true ->
verify_executable(Name,[""],[""]);
_ ->
diff --git a/lib/kernel/test/code_SUITE.erl b/lib/kernel/test/code_SUITE.erl
index 6f8e949aac..612f77149d 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/test/code_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/kernel/test/code_SUITE.erl
@@ -35,6 +35,7 @@
purge_stacktrace/1, mult_lib_roots/1, bad_erl_libs/1,
code_archive/1, code_archive2/1, on_load/1, on_load_binary/1,
on_load_embedded/1, on_load_errors/1, on_load_update/1,
+ on_load_trace_on_load/1,
on_load_purge/1, on_load_self_call/1, on_load_pending/1,
on_load_deleted/1,
big_boot_embedded/1,
@@ -66,14 +67,16 @@ all() ->
ext_mod_dep, clash, where_is_file,
purge_stacktrace, mult_lib_roots,
bad_erl_libs, code_archive, code_archive2, on_load,
- on_load_binary, on_load_embedded, on_load_errors, on_load_update,
+ on_load_binary, on_load_embedded, on_load_errors,
+ {group, sequence},
on_load_purge, on_load_self_call, on_load_pending,
on_load_deleted,
module_status,
big_boot_embedded, native_early_modules, get_mode, normalized_paths].
-groups() ->
- [].
+%% These need to run in order
+groups() -> [{sequence, [sequence], [on_load_update,
+ on_load_trace_on_load]}].
init_per_group(_GroupName, Config) ->
Config.
@@ -1493,7 +1496,7 @@ do_on_load_error(ReturnValue) ->
{undef,[{on_load_error,main,[],_}|_]} = Exit
end.
-on_load_update(_Config) ->
+on_load_update(Config) ->
{Mod,Code1} = on_load_update_code(1),
{module,Mod} = code:load_binary(Mod, "", Code1),
42 = Mod:a(),
@@ -1503,7 +1506,7 @@ on_load_update(_Config) ->
{Mod,Code2} = on_load_update_code(2),
{error,on_load_failure} = code:load_binary(Mod, "", Code2),
42 = Mod:a(),
- 100 = Mod:b(99),
+ 78 = Mod:b(77),
{'EXIT',{undef,_}} = (catch Mod:never()),
4 = erlang:trace_pattern({Mod,'_','_'}, false),
@@ -1514,6 +1517,9 @@ on_load_update(_Config) ->
{'EXIT',{undef,_}} = (catch Mod:b(10)),
{'EXIT',{undef,_}} = (catch Mod:never()),
+ code:purge(Mod),
+ code:delete(Mod),
+ code:purge(Mod),
ok.
on_load_update_code(Version) ->
@@ -1545,6 +1551,40 @@ on_load_update_code_1(3, Mod) ->
"f() -> ok.\n",
"c() -> 100.\n"]).
+%% Test -on_load while trace feature 'on_load' is enabled (OTP-14612)
+on_load_trace_on_load(Config) ->
+ Papa = self(),
+ Tracer = spawn_link(fun F() -> receive M -> Papa ! M end, F() end),
+ {tracer,[]} = erlang:trace_info(self(),tracer),
+ erlang:trace(self(), true, [call, {tracer, Tracer}]),
+ erlang:trace_pattern(on_load, true, []),
+ on_load_update(Config),
+ erlang:trace_pattern(on_load, false, []),
+ erlang:trace(self(), false, [call]),
+
+ %% WE GET TRACES FOR CALLS TO UNDEFINED FUNCTIONS ???
+ %% Remove filter when that is fixed.
+ Ms = lists:filter(fun({trace,Papa,call,
+ {error_handler,undefined_function,
+ [on_load_update_code,_,_]}})
+ -> false;
+ (_) -> true
+ end,
+ flush()),
+
+ [{trace, Papa, call, {on_load_update_code, a, []}},
+ {trace, Papa, call, {on_load_update_code, b, [99]}},
+ {trace, Papa, call, {on_load_update_code, c, []}}] = Ms,
+
+ exit(Tracer, normal),
+ ok.
+
+flush() ->
+ receive M -> [M | flush()]
+ after 100 -> []
+ end.
+
+
on_load_purge(_Config) ->
Mod = ?FUNCTION_NAME,
register(Mod, self()),
diff --git a/lib/kernel/vsn.mk b/lib/kernel/vsn.mk
index c9463241d1..cef54dd41a 100644
--- a/lib/kernel/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/kernel/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-KERNEL_VSN = 5.3.1
+KERNEL_VSN = 5.4
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/doc/src/company.erl b/lib/mnesia/doc/src/company.erl
index 20e3235347..5a3b122394 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/doc/src/company.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/doc/src/company.erl
@@ -19,7 +19,12 @@
%%
-module(company).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([init/0,insert_emp/3,mk_projs/2,females/0,all_females/0,
+ g/0,female_bosses/0, raise_females/1, over_write/2, raise/2,
+ bad_raise/2, get_emps/2, get_emps2/2, filter/2, filter_deps/3,
+ search_deps/3, bench1/0, dotimes/2, dist_init/0, remove_proj/1,
+ del_in_projs/1, sync/0, tabs/0, find_male_on_second_floor/0,
+ panic/1, fill_tables/0]).
%0
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/doc/src/company_o.erl b/lib/mnesia/doc/src/company_o.erl
index 7300e9d4bb..650b6cdeca 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/doc/src/company_o.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/doc/src/company_o.erl
@@ -19,7 +19,11 @@
%%
-module(company_o).
--compile(export_all).
+
+-export([sinit/0, init/0,insert_emp/3,females/0,
+ female_bosses/0, raise_females/1, over_write/2, raise/2,
+ bad_raise/2, get_emps/2, get_emps2/2]).
+
-import(mnesia, [transaction/1]).
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/mnesia/doc/src/notes.xml
index 3ca4026190..e9243f7fc9 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/mnesia/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -39,7 +39,22 @@
thus constitutes one section in this document. The title of each
section is the version number of Mnesia.</p>
- <section><title>Mnesia 4.15</title>
+ <section><title>Mnesia 4.15.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>Mnesia 4.15</title>
<section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
<list>
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/src/mnesia.app.src b/lib/mnesia/src/mnesia.app.src
index 6b49fc6c88..c755b4d4b9 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/src/mnesia.app.src
+++ b/lib/mnesia/src/mnesia.app.src
@@ -49,4 +49,4 @@
]},
{applications, [kernel, stdlib]},
{mod, {mnesia_app, []}},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["stdlib-2.0","kernel-3.0","erts-7.0"]}]}.
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["stdlib-3.4","kernel-5.3","erts-9.0"]}]}.
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_SUITE.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_SUITE.erl
index 3ec4847c5d..279744dbb0 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_SUITE.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,12 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_SUITE).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ suite/0, all/0, groups/0]).
+-export([app/1, appup/1, clean_up_suite/1, silly/0]).
+
-include_lib("common_test/include/ct.hrl").
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
@@ -92,16 +97,8 @@ groups() ->
%% benchmarks
{heavy, [], [{group, measure}]},
{measure, [], [{mnesia_measure_test, all}]},
- {prediction, [],
- [{group, mnesia_measure_test, prediction}]},
- {fairness, [],
- [{group, mnesia_measure_test, fairness}]},
{benchmarks, [],
[{group, mnesia_measure_test, benchmarks}]},
- {consumption, [],
- [{group, mnesia_measure_test, consumption}]},
- {scalability, [],
- [{group, mnesia_measure_test, scalability}]},
%% This test suite is an extract of the grand Mnesia suite
%% it contains OTP R4B specific test cases
{otp_r4b, [],
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_atomicity_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_atomicity_test.erl
index cc32ba3826..58a5dc1d40 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_atomicity_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_atomicity_test.erl
@@ -22,9 +22,37 @@
-module(mnesia_atomicity_test).
-author('[email protected]').
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+-export([explicit_abort_in_middle_of_trans/1,
+ runtime_error_in_middle_of_trans/1,
+ mnesia_down_during_infinite_trans/1,
+ kill_self_in_middle_of_trans/1, throw_in_middle_of_trans/1,
+ lock_waiter_sw_r/1, lock_waiter_sw_rt/1, lock_waiter_sw_wt/1,
+ lock_waiter_wr_r/1, lock_waiter_srw_r/1, lock_waiter_sw_sw/1,
+ lock_waiter_sw_w/1, lock_waiter_sw_wr/1, lock_waiter_sw_srw/1,
+ lock_waiter_wr_wt/1, lock_waiter_srw_wt/1,
+ lock_waiter_wr_sw/1, lock_waiter_srw_sw/1, lock_waiter_wr_w/1,
+ lock_waiter_srw_w/1, lock_waiter_r_sw/1, lock_waiter_r_w/1,
+ lock_waiter_r_wt/1, lock_waiter_rt_sw/1, lock_waiter_rt_w/1,
+ lock_waiter_rt_wt/1, lock_waiter_wr_wr/1,
+ lock_waiter_srw_srw/1, lock_waiter_wt_r/1, lock_waiter_wt_w/1,
+ lock_waiter_wt_rt/1, lock_waiter_wt_wt/1, lock_waiter_wt_wr/1,
+ lock_waiter_wt_srw/1, lock_waiter_wt_sw/1, lock_waiter_w_wr/1,
+ lock_waiter_w_srw/1, lock_waiter_w_sw/1, lock_waiter_w_r/1,
+ lock_waiter_w_w/1, lock_waiter_w_rt/1, lock_waiter_w_wt/1,
+ restart_r_one/1, restart_w_one/1, restart_rt_one/1,
+ restart_wt_one/1, restart_wr_one/1, restart_sw_one/1,
+ restart_r_two/1, restart_w_two/1, restart_rt_two/1,
+ restart_wt_two/1, restart_wr_two/1, restart_sw_two/1
+ ]
+ ).
+
+-export([perform_restarted_transaction/1, sync_tid_release/0]).
+
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
mnesia_test_lib:init_per_testcase(Func, Conf).
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_bench_SUITE.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_bench_SUITE.erl
index 7c86db383d..5cc01867c4 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_bench_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_bench_SUITE.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,13 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_bench_SUITE).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile(export_all).
+
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ suite/0, all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([tpcb_conflict_ramcopies/1, tpcb_conflict_disk_only_copies/1]).
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
suite() -> [{ct_hooks,[{ts_install_cth,[{nodenames,2}]}]}].
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_consistency_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_consistency_test.erl
index 2fe1bd34e6..7a2678cee3 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_consistency_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_consistency_test.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,78 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_consistency_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([consistency_after_change_table_copy_type/1,
+ consistency_after_rename_of_node/1,
+ consistency_after_restart_1_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_restart_1_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_restart_1_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_restart_2_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_restart_2_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_restart_2_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_dump_tables_1_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_dump_tables_2_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_add_replica_2_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_add_replica_2_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_add_replica_2_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_add_replica_3_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_add_replica_3_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_add_replica_3_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_del_replica_2_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_del_replica_2_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_del_replica_2_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_del_replica_3_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_del_replica_3_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_del_replica_3_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_move_replica_2_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_move_replica_2_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_move_replica_2_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_move_replica_3_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_move_replica_3_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_move_replica_3_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_transform_table_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_transform_table_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_transform_table_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_fallback_2_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_fallback_2_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_fallback_2_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_fallback_3_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_fallback_3_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_fallback_3_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_restore_clear_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_restore_clear_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_restore_clear_disc_only/1,
+ consistency_after_restore_recreate_ram/1,
+ consistency_after_restore_recreate_disc/1,
+ consistency_after_restore_recreate_disc_only/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_activation_1_ram/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_activation_1_disc/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_activation_1_disc_only/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_activation_2_ram/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_activation_2_disc/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_activation_2_disc_only/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_activation_3_ram/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_activation_3_disc/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_activation_3_disc_only/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_iteration_2_ram/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_iteration_2_disc/1,
+ updates_during_checkpoint_iteration_2_disc_only/1,
+ load_table_with_activated_checkpoint_ram/1,
+ load_table_with_activated_checkpoint_disc/1,
+ load_table_with_activated_checkpoint_disc_only/1,
+ add_table_copy_to_table_checkpoint_ram/1,
+ add_table_copy_to_table_checkpoint_disc/1,
+ add_table_copy_to_table_checkpoint_disc_only/1,
+ inst_fallback_process_dies/1, fatal_when_inconsistency/1,
+ after_delete/1,cause_switch_before/1, cause_switch_after/1,
+ cause_abort_before/1, cause_abort_after/1,
+ change_schema_before/1, change_schema_after/1]).
+
+-export([change_tab/3]).
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_cost.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_cost.erl
index a3fc8dfe20..4d0dd7b0ee 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_cost.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_cost.erl
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_cost).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([go/0, go/1]).
%% This code exercises the mnesia system and produces a bunch
%% of measurements on what various things cost
@@ -156,64 +156,3 @@ do_dirty(I, F) when I /= 0 ->
F(),
do_dirty(I-1, F);
do_dirty(_,_) -> ok.
-
-
-
-table_load([N1,N2| _ ] = Ns) ->
- Nodes = [N1,N2],
- rpc:multicall(Ns, mnesia, lkill, []),
- ok = mnesia:delete_schema(Ns),
- ok = mnesia:create_schema(Nodes),
- rpc:multicall(Nodes, mnesia, start, []),
- TabDef = [{disc_copies,[N1]},{ram_copies,[N2]},
- {attributes,record_info(fields,item)},{record_name,item}],
- Tabs = [list_to_atom("tab" ++ integer_to_list(I)) || I <- lists:seq(1,400)],
-
- [mnesia:create_table(Tab,TabDef) || Tab <- Tabs],
-
-%% InitTab = fun(Tab) ->
-%% mnesia:write_lock_table(Tab),
-%% InitRec = fun(Key) -> mnesia:write(Tab,#item{a=Key},write) end,
-%% lists:foreach(InitRec, lists:seq(1,100))
-%% end,
-%%
-%% {Time,{atomic,ok}} = timer:tc(mnesia,transaction, [fun() ->lists:foreach(InitTab, Tabs) end]),
- mnesia:dump_log(),
-%% io:format("Init took ~p msec ~n", [Time/1000]),
- rpc:call(N2, mnesia, stop, []), timer:sleep(1000),
- mnesia:stop(), timer:sleep(500),
- %% Warmup
- ok = mnesia:start([{no_table_loaders, 1}]),
- timer:tc(mnesia, wait_for_tables, [Tabs, infinity]),
- mnesia:dump_log(),
- rpc:call(N2, mnesia, dump_log, []),
- io:format("Initialized ~n",[]),
-
- mnesia:stop(), timer:sleep(1000),
- ok = mnesia:start([{no_table_loaders, 1}]),
- {T1, ok} = timer:tc(mnesia, wait_for_tables, [Tabs, infinity]),
- io:format("Loading from disc with 1 loader ~p msec~n",[T1/1000]),
- mnesia:stop(), timer:sleep(1000),
- ok = mnesia:start([{no_table_loaders, 4}]),
- {T2, ok} = timer:tc(mnesia, wait_for_tables, [Tabs, infinity]),
- io:format("Loading from disc with 4 loader ~p msec~n",[T2/1000]),
-
- %% Warmup
- rpc:call(N2, ?MODULE, remote_load, [Tabs,4]),
- io:format("Initialized ~n",[]),
-
-
- T3 = rpc:call(N2, ?MODULE, remote_load, [Tabs,1]),
- io:format("Loading from net with 1 loader ~p msec~n",[T3/1000]),
-
- T4 = rpc:call(N2, ?MODULE, remote_load, [Tabs,4]),
- io:format("Loading from net with 4 loader ~p msec~n",[T4/1000]),
-
- ok.
-
-remote_load(Tabs,Loaders) ->
- ok = mnesia:start([{no_table_loaders, Loaders}]),
-%% io:format("~p ~n", [mnesia_controller:get_info(500)]),
- {Time, ok} = timer:tc(mnesia, wait_for_tables, [Tabs, infinity]),
- timer:sleep(1000), mnesia:stop(), timer:sleep(1000),
- Time.
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_dirty_access_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_dirty_access_test.erl
index 6d970ac990..92124ebc65 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_dirty_access_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_dirty_access_test.erl
@@ -21,9 +21,37 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_dirty_access_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([dirty_write_ram/1, dirty_write_disc/1, dirty_write_disc_only/1, dirty_write_xets/1,
+ dirty_read_ram/1, dirty_read_disc/1, dirty_read_disc_only/1, dirty_read_xets/1,
+ dirty_update_counter_ram/1, dirty_update_counter_disc/1,
+ dirty_update_counter_disc_only/1, dirty_update_counter_xets/1,
+ dirty_delete_ram/1, dirty_delete_disc/1, dirty_delete_disc_only/1, dirty_delete_xets/1,
+ dirty_delete_object_ram/1, dirty_delete_object_disc/1,
+ dirty_delete_object_disc_only/1, dirty_delete_object_xets/1,
+ dirty_match_object_ram/1, dirty_match_object_disc/1,
+ dirty_match_object_disc_only/1, dirty_match_object_xets/1,
+ dirty_index_match_object_ram/1, dirty_index_match_object_disc/1,
+ dirty_index_match_object_disc_only/1, dirty_index_match_object_xets/1,
+ dirty_index_read_ram/1, dirty_index_read_disc/1,
+ dirty_index_read_disc_only/1, dirty_index_read_xets/1,
+ dirty_index_update_set_ram/1, dirty_index_update_set_disc/1,
+ dirty_index_update_set_disc_only/1, dirty_index_update_set_xets/1,
+ dirty_index_update_bag_ram/1, dirty_index_update_bag_disc/1,
+ dirty_index_update_bag_disc_only/1, dirty_index_update_bag_xets/1,
+ dirty_iter_ram/1, dirty_iter_disc/1, dirty_iter_disc_only/1,dirty_iter_xets/1,
+ del_table_copy_1/1, del_table_copy_2/1, del_table_copy_3/1,
+ add_table_copy_1/1, add_table_copy_2/1, add_table_copy_3/1,
+ add_table_copy_4/1, move_table_copy_1/1, move_table_copy_2/1,
+ move_table_copy_3/1, move_table_copy_4/1]).
+
+-export([update_trans/3]).
+
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
mnesia_test_lib:init_per_testcase(Func, Conf).
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_durability_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_durability_test.erl
index 97bc84a2d8..2fac5cac82 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_durability_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_durability_test.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,33 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_durability_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([durability_of_disc_copies/1,
+ durability_of_disc_only_copies/1,
+ load_latest_data/1, load_local_contents_directly/1,
+ load_directly_when_all_are_ram_copiesA/1,
+ load_directly_when_all_are_ram_copiesB/1,
+ load_when_last_replica_becomes_available/1,
+ load_when_down_from_all_other_replica_nodes/1,
+ late_load_transforms_into_disc_load/1,
+ late_load_leads_to_hanging/1,
+ force_load_when_nobody_intents_to_load/1,
+ force_load_when_someone_has_decided_to_load/1,
+ force_load_when_someone_else_has_loaded/1,
+ force_load_when_we_has_loaded/1,
+ force_load_on_a_non_local_table/1,
+ force_load_when_the_table_does_not_exist/1,
+ late_load_all_ram_cs_ram_nodes1/1,
+ late_load_all_ram_cs_ram_nodes2/1,
+ master_nodes/1, starting_master_nodes/1,
+ master_on_non_local_tables/1,
+ remote_force_load_with_local_master_node/1,
+ dump_ram_copies/1, dump_disc_copies/1, dump_disc_only/1]).
+
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_evil_backup.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_evil_backup.erl
index 0fa72c4305..45b11f2f3f 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_evil_backup.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_evil_backup.erl
@@ -28,10 +28,23 @@
-module(mnesia_evil_backup).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile(export_all).
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
-%%-export([Function/Arity, ...]).
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([backup/1, bad_backup/1, global_backup_checkpoint/1,
+ traverse_backup/1,
+ selective_backup_checkpoint/1,
+ incremental_backup_checkpoint/1, install_fallback/1,
+ uninstall_fallback/1, local_fallback/1,
+ sops_with_checkpoint/1,
+ restore_errors/1, restore_clear/1, restore_keep/1,
+ restore_recreate/1, restore_clear_ram/1
+ ]).
+
+-export([check_tab/2]).
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
mnesia_test_lib:init_per_testcase(Func, Conf).
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_evil_coverage_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_evil_coverage_test.erl
index 6e34040bc4..074967469b 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_evil_coverage_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_evil_coverage_test.erl
@@ -23,7 +23,32 @@
-author('[email protected]').
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
--compile([export_all]).
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([system_info/1, table_info/1, error_description/1,
+ db_node_lifecycle/1, evil_delete_db_node/1, start_and_stop/1,
+ checkpoint/1, table_lifecycle/1, storage_options/1,
+ add_copy_conflict/1, add_copy_when_going_down/1,
+ replica_management/1, clear_table_during_load/1,
+ schema_availability/1, local_content/1,
+ replica_location/1, user_properties/1, unsupp_user_props/1,
+ sorted_ets/1,
+ change_table_access_mode/1, change_table_load_order/1,
+ set_master_nodes/1, offline_set_master_nodes/1,
+ dump_tables/1, dump_log/1, wait_for_tables/1, force_load_table/1,
+ snmp_open_table/1, snmp_close_table/1, snmp_get_next_index/1,
+ snmp_get_row/1, snmp_get_mnesia_key/1, snmp_update_counter/1,
+ snmp_order/1, subscribe_standard/1, subscribe_extended/1,
+ foldl/1, info/1, schema_0/1, schema_1/1, view_0/1, view_1/1, view_2/1,
+ lkill/1, kill/1,
+ record_name_dirty_access_ram/1,
+ record_name_dirty_access_disc/1,
+ record_name_dirty_access_disc_only/1,
+ record_name_dirty_access_xets/1]).
+
+-export([info_check/8]).
-define(cleanup(N, Config),
mnesia_test_lib:prepare_test_case([{reload_appls, [mnesia]}],
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_examples_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_examples_test.erl
index 808e62d9c2..f1259abf90 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_examples_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_examples_test.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,14 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_examples_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+-export([bup/1, company/1, meter/1,
+ replica_test/1, sticky_replica_test/1, dist_test/1,
+ conflict_test/1, frag_test/1, frag2_test/1, remote_test/1,
+ remote_frag2_test/1, opt_load/1]).
+
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_frag_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_frag_test.erl
index 9f2102beb2..7371792fda 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_frag_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_frag_test.erl
@@ -23,7 +23,17 @@
-author('[email protected]').
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
--compile([export_all]).
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+
+-export([nice_single/1, nice_multi/1, nice_access/1, iter_access/1,
+ consistency/1, evil_create/1, evil_delete/1, evil_change/1, evil_combine/1,
+ evil_loop/1, evil_delete_db_node/1]).
+
+
+-export([frag_dist/1]).
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
mnesia_test_lib:init_per_testcase(Func, Conf).
@@ -845,16 +855,7 @@ frag_rec_dist(Tab) ->
Fun = fun() -> mnesia:table_info(Tab, frag_size) end,
[Size || {_, Size} <- mnesia:activity(sync_dirty, Fun, mnesia_frag)].
-table_size(Tab) ->
- Node = mnesia:table_info(Tab, where_to_read),
- rpc:call(Node, mnesia, table_info, [Tab, size]).
-
sort_res(List) when is_list(List) ->
lists:sort(List);
sort_res(Else) ->
Else.
-
-rev_res(List) when is_list(List) ->
- lists:reverse(List);
-rev_res(Else) ->
- Else.
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_install_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_install_test.erl
index 103f85b3d6..3f67396eb0 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_install_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_install_test.erl
@@ -21,8 +21,13 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_install_test).
-author('[email protected]').
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([silly_durability/1, silly_move/1, silly_upgrade/1, conflict/1, dist/1,
+ silly/0, silly2/1]).
--compile([export_all]).
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_isolation_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_isolation_test.erl
index 63940ec05c..1c3ea5ec92 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_isolation_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_isolation_test.erl
@@ -22,7 +22,36 @@
-module(mnesia_isolation_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([no_conflict/1, simple_queue_conflict/1,
+ advanced_queue_conflict/1, simple_deadlock_conflict/1,
+ advanced_deadlock_conflict/1, schema_deadlock/1, lock_burst/1,
+ nasty/1, basic_sticky_functionality/1,
+ unbound1/1, unbound2/1,
+ create_table/1, delete_table/1, move_table_copy/1,
+ add_table_index/1, del_table_index/1, transform_table/1,
+ snmp_open_table/1, snmp_close_table/1,
+ change_table_copy_type/1, change_table_access/1,
+ add_table_copy/1, del_table_copy/1, dump_tables/1,
+ del_table_copy_1/1, del_table_copy_2/1, del_table_copy_3/1,
+ add_table_copy_1/1, add_table_copy_2/1, add_table_copy_3/1,
+ add_table_copy_4/1, move_table_copy_1/1, move_table_copy_2/1,
+ move_table_copy_3/1, move_table_copy_4/1,
+ dirty_updates_visible_direct/1,
+ dirty_reads_regardless_of_trans/1,
+ trans_update_invisibible_outside_trans/1,
+ trans_update_visible_inside_trans/1, write_shadows/1,
+ delete_shadows/1, write_delete_shadows_bag/1,
+ write_delete_shadows_bag2/1,
+ shadow_search/1, snmp_shadows/1,
+ rr_kill_copy/1, foldl/1, first_next/1]).
+
+-export([do_fun/4, burst_counter/3, burst_incr/2, get_held/0, get_info/1,
+ get_sticky/0, op/4, update_own/3, update_shared/3]).
+
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
@@ -668,16 +697,6 @@ unbound2(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
{B, {atomic, [{ul,{key,{17,42}},val}]}}]),
ok.
-receiver() ->
- receive
- {_Pid, begin_trans} ->
- receiver();
- Else ->
- Else
- after
- 10000 ->
- timeout
- end.
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_majority_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_majority_test.erl
index 9811de6ae7..eb82617b60 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_majority_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_majority_test.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,13 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_majority_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile(export_all).
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ all/0]).
+
+-export([write/1, wread/1, delete/1, clear_table/1, frag/1,
+ change_majority/1, frag_change_majority/1
+ ]).
+
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_measure_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_measure_test.erl
index ad71fafecb..4e63eaee22 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_measure_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_measure_test.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,15 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_measure_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([cost/1, dbn_meters/1,
+ ram_tpcb/1, disc_tpcb/1, disc_only_tpcb/1,
+ ram_meter/1, disc_meter/1, disc_only_meter/1]).
+
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
@@ -39,41 +47,12 @@ end_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
all() ->
- [{group, prediction}, {group, consumption},
- {group, scalability}, {group, benchmarks}].
+ [{group, benchmarks}].
groups() ->
- [{prediction, [],
- [reader_disturbed_by_node_down,
- writer_disturbed_by_node_down,
- reader_disturbed_by_node_up,
- writer_disturbed_by_node_up,
- reader_disturbed_by_schema_ops,
- writer_disturbed_by_schema_ops,
- reader_disturbed_by_checkpoint,
- writer_disturbed_by_checkpoint,
- reader_disturbed_by_dump_log,
- writer_disturbed_by_dump_log,
- reader_disturbed_by_backup, writer_disturbed_by_backup,
- reader_disturbed_by_restore,
- writer_disturbed_by_restore, {group, fairness}]},
- {fairness, [],
- [reader_competing_with_reader,
- reader_competing_with_writer,
- writer_competing_with_reader,
- writer_competing_with_writer]},
- {consumption, [],
- [measure_resource_consumption,
- determine_resource_leakage]},
- {scalability, [],
- [determine_system_limits, performance_at_min_config,
- performance_at_max_config, performance_at_full_load,
- resource_consumption_at_min_config,
- resource_consumption_at_max_config,
- resource_consumption_at_full_load]},
- {benchmarks, [],
+ [{benchmarks, [],
[{group, meter}, cost, dbn_meters,
- measure_all_api_functions, {group, tpcb}]},
+ {group, tpcb}]},
{tpcb, [], [ram_tpcb, disc_tpcb, disc_only_tpcb]},
{meter, [], [ram_meter, disc_meter, disc_only_meter]}].
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_nice_coverage_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_nice_coverage_test.erl
index ffbe36e48d..7c96d6e6a0 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_nice_coverage_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_nice_coverage_test.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,13 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_nice_coverage_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([nice/1]).
+
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
-record(nice_tab, {key, val}).
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_qlc_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_qlc_test.erl
index 5067e86521..262a6b4abc 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_qlc_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_qlc_test.erl
@@ -21,9 +21,18 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_qlc_test).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([frag/1, info/1, mnesia_down/1,
+ dirty_nice_ram_copies/1, dirty_nice_disc_copies/1,
+ dirty_nice_disc_only_copies/1,
+ trans_nice_ram_copies/1, trans_nice_disc_copies/1,
+ trans_nice_disc_only_copies/1, atomic_eval/1,
+ nested_qlc/1
+ ]).
--export([all/0,groups/0,init_per_group/2,end_per_group/2]).
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
-include_lib("stdlib/include/qlc.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_recovery_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_recovery_test.erl
index 130b87346f..82d6e6ac6a 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_recovery_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_recovery_test.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,80 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_recovery_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([coord_dies/1, after_full_disc_partition/1,
+ disc_less/1, garb_decision/1,
+ system_upgrade/1,
+ delete_during_start/1,
+ no_master_2/1, no_master_3/1, one_master_2/1, one_master_3/1,
+ two_master_2/1, two_master_3/1, all_master_2/1,
+ all_master_3/1,
+ dirty_read_during_down/1, trans_read_during_down/1,
+ mnesia_down_during_startup_disk_ram/1,
+ mnesia_down_during_startup_init_ram/1,
+ mnesia_down_during_startup_init_disc/1,
+ mnesia_down_during_startup_init_disc_only/1,
+ mnesia_down_during_startup_tm_ram/1,
+ mnesia_down_during_startup_tm_disc/1,
+ mnesia_down_during_startup_tm_disc_only/1,
+ with_checkpoint_same/1, with_checkpoint_other/1,
+ explicit_stop_during_snmp/1,
+ sym_trans_before_commit_kill_coord_node/1,
+ sym_trans_before_commit_kill_coord_pid/1,
+ sym_trans_before_commit_kill_part_after_ask/1,
+ sym_trans_before_commit_kill_part_before_ask/1,
+ sym_trans_after_commit_kill_coord_node/1,
+ sym_trans_after_commit_kill_coord_pid/1,
+ sym_trans_after_commit_kill_part_after_ask/1,
+ sym_trans_after_commit_kill_part_do_commit_pre/1,
+ sym_trans_after_commit_kill_part_do_commit_post/1,
+ sync_dirty_pre_kill_part/1,
+ sync_dirty_pre_kill_coord_node/1,
+ sync_dirty_pre_kill_coord_pid/1,
+ sync_dirty_post_kill_part/1,
+ sync_dirty_post_kill_coord_node/1,
+ sync_dirty_post_kill_coord_pid/1,
+ async_dirty_pre_kill_part/1,
+ async_dirty_pre_kill_coord_node/1,
+ async_dirty_pre_kill_coord_pid/1,
+ async_dirty_post_kill_part/1,
+ async_dirty_post_kill_coord_node/1,
+ async_dirty_post_kill_coord_pid/1,
+ asymtrans_part_ask/1,
+ asymtrans_part_commit_vote/1,
+ asymtrans_part_pre_commit/1,
+ asymtrans_part_log_commit/1,
+ asymtrans_part_do_commit/1,
+ asymtrans_coord_got_votes/1,
+ asymtrans_coord_pid_got_votes/1,
+ asymtrans_coord_log_commit_rec/1,
+ asymtrans_coord_pid_log_commit_rec/1,
+ asymtrans_coord_log_commit_dec/1,
+ asymtrans_coord_pid_log_commit_dec/1,
+ asymtrans_coord_rec_acc_pre_commit_log_commit/1,
+ asymtrans_coord_pid_rec_acc_pre_commit_log_commit/1,
+ asymtrans_coord_rec_acc_pre_commit_done_commit/1,
+ asymtrans_coord_pid_rec_acc_pre_commit_done_commit/1,
+ after_corrupt_files_decision_log_head/1,
+ after_corrupt_files_decision_log_tail/1,
+ after_corrupt_files_latest_log_head/1,
+ after_corrupt_files_latest_log_tail/1,
+ after_corrupt_files_table_dat_head/1,
+ after_corrupt_files_table_dat_tail/1,
+ after_corrupt_files_schema_dat_head/1,
+ after_corrupt_files_schema_dat_tail/1]).
+
+-export([reader/2, check/0, get_all_retainers/1,
+ verify_data/2, verify_where2read/1,
+ do_trans_loop/2,
+ start_stop/3, do_sym_trans/2, do_sync_dirty/2, do_async_dirty/2,
+ do_asym_trans/2, garb_handler/1, mymnesia_start/1
+ ]).
+
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
-include_lib("kernel/include/file.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_registry_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_registry_test.erl
index 3df37a2c8c..08157f1be3 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_registry_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_registry_test.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,12 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_registry_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([good_dump/1, bad_dump/1, dump_registry/2, restore_registry/2]).
+
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_schema_recovery_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_schema_recovery_test.erl
index ca2dd74b34..5e7627ca47 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_schema_recovery_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_schema_recovery_test.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,79 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_schema_recovery_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([interrupted_before_create_ram/1,
+ interrupted_before_create_disc/1,
+ interrupted_before_create_do/1,
+ interrupted_before_create_nostore/1,
+ interrupted_before_delete_ram/1,
+ interrupted_before_delete_disc/1,
+ interrupted_before_delete_do/1,
+ interrupted_before_add_ram/1,
+ interrupted_before_add_disc/1,
+ interrupted_before_add_do/1,
+ interrupted_before_add_kill_copier/1,
+ interrupted_before_move_ram/1,
+ interrupted_before_move_disc/1,
+ interrupted_before_move_do/1,
+ interrupted_before_move_kill_copier/1,
+ interrupted_before_delcopy_ram/1,
+ interrupted_before_delcopy_disc/1,
+ interrupted_before_delcopy_do/1,
+ interrupted_before_delcopy_kill_copier/1,
+ interrupted_before_addindex_ram/1,
+ interrupted_before_addindex_disc/1,
+ interrupted_before_addindex_do/1,
+ interrupted_before_delindex_ram/1,
+ interrupted_before_delindex_disc/1,
+ interrupted_before_delindex_do/1,
+ interrupted_before_change_type_ram2disc/1,
+ interrupted_before_change_type_ram2do/1,
+ interrupted_before_change_type_disc2ram/1,
+ interrupted_before_change_type_disc2do/1,
+ interrupted_before_change_type_do2ram/1,
+ interrupted_before_change_type_do2disc/1,
+ interrupted_before_change_type_other_node/1,
+ interrupted_before_change_schema_type/1,
+ interrupted_after_create_ram/1,
+ interrupted_after_create_disc/1,
+ interrupted_after_create_do/1,
+ interrupted_after_create_nostore/1,
+ interrupted_after_delete_ram/1,
+ interrupted_after_delete_disc/1,
+ interrupted_after_delete_do/1,
+ interrupted_after_add_ram/1,
+ interrupted_after_add_disc/1,
+ interrupted_after_add_do/1,
+ interrupted_after_add_kill_copier/1,
+ interrupted_after_move_ram/1,
+ interrupted_after_move_disc/1,
+ interrupted_after_move_do/1,
+ interrupted_after_move_kill_copier/1,
+ interrupted_after_delcopy_ram/1,
+ interrupted_after_delcopy_disc/1,
+ interrupted_after_delcopy_do/1,
+ interrupted_after_delcopy_kill_copier/1,
+ interrupted_after_addindex_ram/1,
+ interrupted_after_addindex_disc/1,
+ interrupted_after_addindex_do/1,
+ interrupted_after_delindex_ram/1,
+ interrupted_after_delindex_disc/1,
+ interrupted_after_delindex_do/1,
+ interrupted_after_change_type_ram2disc/1,
+ interrupted_after_change_type_ram2do/1,
+ interrupted_after_change_type_disc2ram/1,
+ interrupted_after_change_type_disc2do/1,
+ interrupted_after_change_type_do2ram/1,
+ interrupted_after_change_type_do2disc/1,
+ interrupted_after_change_type_other_node/1,
+ interrupted_after_change_schema_type/1]).
+
+
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_test_lib.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_test_lib.erl
index 0fabdc7929..78dbe7ffde 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_test_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_test_lib.erl
@@ -774,7 +774,7 @@ init_nodes([], _File, _Line) ->
%% Returns [Name, Host]
node_to_name_and_host(Node) ->
- string:tokens(atom_to_list(Node), [$@]).
+ string:lexemes(atom_to_list(Node), [$@]).
lookup_config(Key,Config) ->
case lists:keysearch(Key,1,Config) of
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_trans_access_test.erl b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_trans_access_test.erl
index 4ed73ea859..c00a1ed51f 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_trans_access_test.erl
+++ b/lib/mnesia/test/mnesia_trans_access_test.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,28 @@
%%
-module(mnesia_trans_access_test).
-author('[email protected]').
--compile([export_all]).
+
+-export([init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2,
+ init_per_group/2, end_per_group/2,
+ all/0, groups/0]).
+
+-export([write/1, read/1, wread/1, delete/1, delete_object/1,
+ match_object/1, select/1, select14/1, all_keys/1, transaction/1,
+ basic_nested/1, mix_of_nested_activities/1,
+ nested_trans_both_ok/1, nested_trans_child_dies/1,
+ nested_trans_parent_dies/1, nested_trans_both_dies/1,
+ index_match_object/1, index_read/1,index_write/1,
+ index_update_set/1, index_update_bag/1,
+ add_table_index_ram/1, add_table_index_disc/1,
+ add_table_index_disc_only/1, create_live_table_index_ram/1,
+ create_live_table_index_disc/1,
+ create_live_table_index_disc_only/1, del_table_index_ram/1,
+ del_table_index_disc/1, del_table_index_disc_only/1,
+ idx_schema_changes_ram/1, idx_schema_changes_disc/1,
+ idx_schema_changes_disc_only/1]).
+
+-export([do_nested/1]).
+
-include("mnesia_test_lib.hrl").
init_per_testcase(Func, Conf) ->
diff --git a/lib/mnesia/vsn.mk b/lib/mnesia/vsn.mk
index 81b15d65db..a95f468ba2 100644
--- a/lib/mnesia/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/mnesia/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-MNESIA_VSN = 4.15
+MNESIA_VSN = 4.15.1
diff --git a/lib/observer/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/observer/doc/src/notes.xml
index d329be5d5a..05ea550964 100644
--- a/lib/observer/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/observer/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -32,6 +32,57 @@
<p>This document describes the changes made to the Observer
application.</p>
+<section><title>Observer 2.5</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>The following improvements are done to Crashdump
+ Viewer:</p> <list> <item>Reading of crash dumps with many
+ binaries is optimized.</item> <item>A progress bar is
+ shown when the detail view for a process is
+ opened.</item> <item>The <c>cdv</c> script now sets
+ <c>ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=0</c> to avoid generating a new
+ crash dump from the node running the Crashdump
+ Viewer.</item> <item>A warning dialog is shown if the
+ node running the Crashdump Viewer could potentially
+ overwrite the crash dump under inspection.</item>
+ <item>Bugfix: In some situations, Crashdump Viewer could
+ not find the end of the 'Last calls' section in a crash
+ dump, and would erroneously mark the crash dump as
+ truncated. This is now corrected.</item> <item>Bugfix: In
+ some situations, process info for a specific process
+ would be marked as truncated by Crashdump Viewer, even if
+ the crash dump was truncated in the binary section - and
+ not related to the process in question. This is now
+ corrected.</item> </list>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14386</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Tools are updated to show Unicode atoms correctly.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14464</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Add system statistics and limits to frontpage in
+ observer.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14536</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Observer 2.4</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/observer/priv/bin/cdv b/lib/observer/priv/bin/cdv
index d14fd47e41..2a509c16af 100755
--- a/lib/observer/priv/bin/cdv
+++ b/lib/observer/priv/bin/cdv
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
#!/bin/sh
-erl -noinput -s crashdump_viewer script_start $@
+erl -env ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS 0 -noinput -s crashdump_viewer script_start $@
diff --git a/lib/observer/priv/bin/cdv.bat b/lib/observer/priv/bin/cdv.bat
index 18136a30d6..fa87c08adf 100644
--- a/lib/observer/priv/bin/cdv.bat
+++ b/lib/observer/priv/bin/cdv.bat
@@ -1,2 +1,2 @@
@ECHO OFF
-CALL werl -s crashdump_viewer script_start %*
+CALL werl -env ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS 0 -s crashdump_viewer script_start %*
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/cdv_detail_wx.erl b/lib/observer/src/cdv_detail_wx.erl
index 4c26e447a6..f6d282638a 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/cdv_detail_wx.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/cdv_detail_wx.erl
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
-behaviour(wx_object).
--export([start_link/4]).
+-export([start_link/5]).
-export([init/1, handle_event/2, handle_cast/2, terminate/2, code_change/3,
handle_call/3, handle_info/2]).
@@ -39,27 +39,42 @@
-define(ID_NOTEBOOK, 604).
%% Detail view
-start_link(Id, Data, ParentFrame, Callback) ->
- wx_object:start_link(?MODULE, [Id, Data, ParentFrame, Callback, self()], []).
+start_link(Id, Data, ParentFrame, Callback, App) ->
+ wx_object:start_link(?MODULE,[Id,Data,ParentFrame,Callback,App,self()],[]).
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
-init([Id, Data, ParentFrame, Callback, Parent]) ->
+init([Id, Data, ParentFrame, Callback, App, Parent]) ->
+ display_progress(ParentFrame,App),
case Callback:get_details(Id, Data) of
{ok,Details} ->
- init(Id,ParentFrame,Callback,Parent,Details);
+ init(Id,ParentFrame,Callback,App,Parent,Details);
{yes_no, Info, Fun} ->
+ destroy_progress(App),
case observer_lib:display_yes_no_dialog(Info) of
?wxID_YES -> Fun();
?wxID_NO -> ok
end,
{stop,normal};
{info,Info} ->
+ destroy_progress(App),
observer_lib:display_info_dialog(ParentFrame,Info),
{stop,normal}
end.
-init(Id,ParentFrame,Callback,Parent,{Title,Info,TW}) ->
+%% Display progress bar only if the calling app is crashdump_viewer
+display_progress(ParentFrame,cdv) ->
+ observer_lib:display_progress_dialog(ParentFrame,
+ "Crashdump Viewer",
+ "Reading data");
+display_progress(_,_) ->
+ ok.
+destroy_progress(cdv) ->
+ observer_lib:destroy_progress_dialog();
+destroy_progress(_) ->
+ ok.
+
+init(Id,ParentFrame,Callback,App,Parent,{Title,Info,TW}) ->
Frame=wxFrame:new(ParentFrame, ?wxID_ANY, [Title],
[{style, ?wxDEFAULT_FRAME_STYLE}, {size, {850,600}}]),
MenuBar = wxMenuBar:new(),
@@ -88,6 +103,7 @@ init(Id,ParentFrame,Callback,Parent,{Title,Info,TW}) ->
wxFrame:connect(Frame, close_window),
wxMenu:connect(Frame, command_menu_selected),
wxFrame:show(Frame),
+ destroy_progress(App),
{Frame, #state{parent=Parent,
id=Id,
frame=Frame,
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/cdv_dist_cb.erl b/lib/observer/src/cdv_dist_cb.erl
index 2b4c9f56d1..aeb34e5baf 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/cdv_dist_cb.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/cdv_dist_cb.erl
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ init_gen_page(Parent, Info) ->
cdv_info_wx:start_link(Parent,{Fields,Info,[]}).
format({creations,Creations}) ->
- string:join([integer_to_list(C) || C <- Creations],",");
+ lists:flatten(lists:join(",",[integer_to_list(C) || C <- Creations]));
format(D) ->
D.
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/cdv_html_wx.erl b/lib/observer/src/cdv_html_wx.erl
index 5158e95a65..4b43b6a840 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/cdv_html_wx.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/cdv_html_wx.erl
@@ -52,8 +52,12 @@ init([ParentWin, HtmlText]) ->
init(ParentWin, HtmlText, undefined, cdv).
init(ParentWin, HtmlText, Tab, App) ->
+ %% If progress dialog is shown, remove it now - and sett cursor busy instead
+ observer_lib:destroy_progress_dialog(),
+ wx_misc:beginBusyCursor(),
HtmlWin = observer_lib:html_window(ParentWin),
wxHtmlWindow:setPage(HtmlWin,HtmlText),
+ wx_misc:endBusyCursor(),
{HtmlWin, #state{panel=HtmlWin,expand_table=Tab,app=App}}.
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% Callbacks %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
@@ -123,11 +127,12 @@ handle_event(Event, State) ->
%%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
%%% Internal
-expand(Id,Callback,#state{expand_wins=Opened0}=State) ->
+expand(Id,Callback,#state{expand_wins=Opened0, app=App}=State) ->
Opened =
case lists:keyfind(Id,1,Opened0) of
false ->
- EW = cdv_detail_wx:start_link(Id,[],State#state.panel,Callback),
+ EW = cdv_detail_wx:start_link(Id,[],State#state.panel,
+ Callback,App),
wx_object:get_pid(EW) ! active,
[{Id,EW}|Opened0];
{_,EW} ->
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/cdv_mem_cb.erl b/lib/observer/src/cdv_mem_cb.erl
index abeddc7335..925487786c 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/cdv_mem_cb.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/cdv_mem_cb.erl
@@ -49,9 +49,7 @@ gen_mem_info_fields([]) ->
[].
upper(Key) ->
- string:join([string:to_upper([H]) ++ T ||
- [H|T] <- string:tokens(Key,"_")]," ").
-
+ lists:join(" ", [string:titlecase(Word) || Word <- string:split(Key, "_", all)]).
%%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
%%% Allocated areas page
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/cdv_term_cb.erl b/lib/observer/src/cdv_term_cb.erl
index f206d7e4c9..bdcb13f22d 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/cdv_term_cb.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/cdv_term_cb.erl
@@ -30,23 +30,31 @@ detail_pages() ->
[{"Term", fun init_term_page/2}].
init_term_page(ParentWin, {Type, [Term, Tab]}) ->
+ observer_lib:report_progress({ok,"Expanding term"}),
+ observer_lib:report_progress({ok,start_pulse}),
Expanded = expand(Term, true),
BinSaved = expand(Term, Tab),
+ observer_lib:report_progress({ok,stop_pulse}),
cdv_multi_wx:start_link(
ParentWin,
[{"Format \~p",cdv_html_wx,{Type, format_term_fun("~p",BinSaved,Tab)}},
{"Format \~tp",cdv_html_wx,{Type,format_term_fun("~tp",BinSaved,Tab)}},
{"Format \~w",cdv_html_wx,{Type,format_term_fun("~w",BinSaved,Tab)}},
+ {"Format \~tw",cdv_html_wx,{Type,format_term_fun("~tw",BinSaved,Tab)}},
{"Format \~s",cdv_html_wx,{Type,format_term_fun("~s",Expanded,Tab)}},
{"Format \~ts",cdv_html_wx,{Type,format_term_fun("~ts",Expanded,Tab)}}]).
format_term_fun(Format,Term,Tab) ->
fun() ->
+ observer_lib:report_progress({ok,"Formatting term"}),
+ observer_lib:report_progress({ok,start_pulse}),
try io_lib:format(Format,[Term]) of
Str -> {expand, plain_html(Str), Tab}
catch error:badarg ->
Warning = "This term can not be formatted with " ++ Format,
observer_html_lib:warning(Warning)
+ after
+ observer_lib:report_progress({ok,stop_pulse})
end
end.
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/cdv_virtual_list_wx.erl b/lib/observer/src/cdv_virtual_list_wx.erl
index f3daae8e4d..33c0c880b1 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/cdv_virtual_list_wx.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/cdv_virtual_list_wx.erl
@@ -174,7 +174,7 @@ do_start_detail_win(Id, #state{panel=Panel,detail_wins=Opened,
case lists:keyfind(Id, 1, Opened) of
false ->
Data = call(Holder, {get_data, self(), Id}),
- case cdv_detail_wx:start_link(Id, Data, Panel, Callback) of
+ case cdv_detail_wx:start_link(Id, Data, Panel, Callback, cdv) of
{error, _} -> Opened;
IW -> [{Id, IW} | Opened]
end;
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/cdv_wx.erl b/lib/observer/src/cdv_wx.erl
index 898f39ded2..0e33c9e618 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/cdv_wx.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/cdv_wx.erl
@@ -130,8 +130,9 @@ init(File0) ->
{ok,File} ->
%% Set window title
T1 = "Crashdump Viewer: ",
+ FileLength = string:length(File),
Title =
- if length(File) > 70 ->
+ if FileLength > 70 ->
T1 ++ filename:basename(File);
true ->
T1 ++ File
@@ -412,15 +413,25 @@ load_dump(Frame,undefined) ->
error
end;
load_dump(Frame,FileName) ->
- ok = observer_lib:display_progress_dialog("Crashdump Viewer",
+ case maybe_warn_filename(FileName) of
+ continue ->
+ do_load_dump(Frame,FileName);
+ stop ->
+ error
+ end.
+
+do_load_dump(Frame,FileName) ->
+ ok = observer_lib:display_progress_dialog(wx:null(),
+ "Crashdump Viewer",
"Loading crashdump"),
crashdump_viewer:read_file(FileName),
case observer_lib:wait_for_progress() of
ok ->
%% Set window title
T1 = "Crashdump Viewer: ",
+ FileLength = string:length(FileName),
Title =
- if length(FileName) > 70 ->
+ if FileLength > 70 ->
T1 ++ filename:basename(FileName);
true ->
T1 ++ FileName
@@ -431,6 +442,33 @@ load_dump(Frame,FileName) ->
error
end.
+maybe_warn_filename(FileName) ->
+ case os:getenv("ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS")=="0" orelse
+ os:getenv("ERL_CRASH_DUMP_BYTES")=="0" of
+ true ->
+ continue;
+ false ->
+ DumpName = case os:getenv("ERL_CRASH_DUMP") of
+ false -> filename:absname("erl_crash.dump");
+ Name -> filename:absname(Name)
+ end,
+ case filename:absname(FileName) of
+ DumpName ->
+ Warning =
+ "WARNING: the current crashdump might be overwritten "
+ "if the crashdump_viewer node crashes.\n\n"
+ "Renaming the file before inspecting it will "
+ "remove the problem.\n\n"
+ "Do you want to continue?",
+ case observer_lib:display_yes_no_dialog(Warning) of
+ ?wxID_YES -> continue;
+ ?wxID_NO -> stop
+ end;
+ _ ->
+ continue
+ end
+ end.
+
%%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
%%% Find help document (HTML files)
get_help_doc(HelpId) ->
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/crashdump_viewer.erl b/lib/observer/src/crashdump_viewer.erl
index fd8b3b9e67..51ff69fd69 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/crashdump_viewer.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/crashdump_viewer.erl
@@ -36,7 +36,6 @@
%% file: The name of the crashdump currently viewed.
%% dump_vsn: The version number of the crashdump
%% wordsize: 4 | 8, the number of bytes in a word.
-%% binaries: a gb_tree containing binaries or links to binaries in the dump
%%
%% User API
@@ -87,6 +86,7 @@
-define(max_line_size,100). % max number of bytes (i.e. characters) the
% line_head/1 function can return
-define(not_available,"N/A").
+-define(binary_size_progress_limit,10000).
%% All possible tags - use macros in order to avoid misspelling in the code
@@ -106,6 +106,8 @@
-define(internal_ets,internal_ets).
-define(loaded_modules,loaded_modules).
-define(memory,memory).
+-define(memory_map,memory_map).
+-define(memory_status,memory_status).
-define(mod,mod).
-define(no_distribution,no_distribution).
-define(node,node).
@@ -122,7 +124,7 @@
-define(visible_node,visible_node).
--record(state,{file,dump_vsn,wordsize=4,num_atoms="unknown",binaries}).
+-record(state,{file,dump_vsn,wordsize=4,num_atoms="unknown"}).
%%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
%%% Debugging
@@ -203,7 +205,8 @@ do_script_start(StartFun) ->
io:format("\ncdv crash: ~tp\n",[Reason])
end;
_ ->
- io:format("\ncdv crash: ~p\n",[unknown_reason])
+ %io:format("\ncdv crash: ~p\n",[unknown_reason])
+ ok
end;
Error ->
io:format("\ncdv start failed: ~tp\n",[Error])
@@ -305,6 +308,8 @@ expand_binary(Pos) ->
init([]) ->
ets:new(cdv_dump_index_table,[ordered_set,named_table,public]),
ets:new(cdv_reg_proc_table,[ordered_set,named_table,public]),
+ ets:new(cdv_binary_index_table,[ordered_set,named_table,public]),
+ ets:new(cdv_heap_file_chars,[ordered_set,named_table,public]),
{ok, #state{}}.
%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -348,9 +353,9 @@ handle_call(procs_summary,_From,State=#state{file=File,wordsize=WS}) ->
Procs = procs_summary(File,WS),
{reply,{ok,Procs,TW},State};
handle_call({proc_details,Pid},_From,
- State=#state{file=File,wordsize=WS,dump_vsn=DumpVsn,binaries=B})->
+ State=#state{file=File,wordsize=WS,dump_vsn=DumpVsn})->
Reply =
- case get_proc_details(File,Pid,WS,DumpVsn,B) of
+ case get_proc_details(File,Pid,WS,DumpVsn) of
{ok,Proc,TW} ->
{ok,Proc,TW};
Other ->
@@ -462,9 +467,9 @@ handle_call(schedulers,_From,State=#state{file=File}) ->
%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
handle_cast({read_file,File}, _State) ->
case do_read_file(File) of
- {ok,Binaries,DumpVsn} ->
+ {ok,DumpVsn} ->
observer_lib:report_progress({ok,done}),
- {noreply, #state{file=File,binaries=Binaries,dump_vsn=DumpVsn}};
+ {noreply, #state{file=File,dump_vsn=DumpVsn}};
Error ->
end_progress(Error),
{noreply, #state{}}
@@ -746,32 +751,6 @@ get_rest_of_line_1(Fd, <<>>, Acc) ->
eof -> {eof,lists:reverse(Acc)}
end.
-get_lines_to_empty(Fd) ->
- case get_chunk(Fd) of
- {ok,Bin} ->
- get_lines_to_empty(Fd,Bin,[],[]);
- eof ->
- []
- end.
-get_lines_to_empty(Fd,<<$\n:8,Bin/binary>>,[],Lines) ->
- put_chunk(Fd,Bin),
- lists:reverse(Lines);
-get_lines_to_empty(Fd,<<$\n:8,Bin/binary>>,Acc,Lines) ->
- get_lines_to_empty(Fd,Bin,[],[byte_list_to_string(lists:reverse(Acc))|Lines]);
-get_lines_to_empty(Fd,<<$\r:8,Bin/binary>>,Acc,Lines) ->
- get_lines_to_empty(Fd,Bin,Acc,Lines);
-get_lines_to_empty(Fd,<<$\s:8,Bin/binary>>,[],Lines) ->
- get_lines_to_empty(Fd,Bin,[],Lines);
-get_lines_to_empty(Fd,<<Char:8,Bin/binary>>,Acc,Lines) ->
- get_lines_to_empty(Fd,Bin,[Char|Acc],Lines);
-get_lines_to_empty(Fd,<<>>,Acc,Lines) ->
- case get_chunk(Fd) of
- {ok,Bin} ->
- get_lines_to_empty(Fd,Bin,Acc,Lines);
- eof ->
- lists:reverse(Lines,[byte_list_to_string(lists:reverse(Acc))])
- end.
-
split(Str) ->
split($ ,Str,[]).
split(Char,Str) ->
@@ -817,18 +796,17 @@ do_read_file(File) ->
{Tag,Id,Rest,N1} = tag(Fd,TagAndRest,1),
case Tag of
?erl_crash_dump ->
- reset_index_table(),
+ reset_tables(),
insert_index(Tag,Id,N1+1),
put_last_tag(Tag,""),
- indexify(Fd,Rest,N1),
+ DumpVsn = [list_to_integer(L) ||
+ L<-string:lexemes(Id,".")],
+ AddrAdj = get_bin_addr_adj(DumpVsn),
+ indexify(Fd,AddrAdj,Rest,N1),
end_progress(),
check_if_truncated(),
- [{DumpVsn0,_}] = lookup_index(?erl_crash_dump),
- DumpVsn = [list_to_integer(L) ||
- L<-string:tokens(DumpVsn0,".")],
- Binaries = read_binaries(Fd,DumpVsn),
close(Fd),
- {ok,Binaries,DumpVsn};
+ {ok,DumpVsn};
_Other ->
R = io_lib:format(
"~ts is not an Erlang crash dump~n",
@@ -856,15 +834,31 @@ do_read_file(File) ->
{error,R}
end.
-indexify(Fd,Bin,N) ->
+indexify(Fd,AddrAdj,Bin,N) ->
case binary:match(Bin,<<"\n=">>) of
{Start,Len} ->
Pos = Start+Len,
<<_:Pos/binary,TagAndRest/binary>> = Bin,
{Tag,Id,Rest,N1} = tag(Fd,TagAndRest,N+Pos),
- insert_index(Tag,Id,N1+1), % +1 to get past newline
- put_last_tag(Tag,Id),
- indexify(Fd,Rest,N1);
+ NewPos = N1+1, % +1 to get past newline
+ case Tag of
+ ?binary ->
+ %% Binaries are stored in a separate table in
+ %% order to minimize lookup time. Key is the
+ %% translated address.
+ {HexAddr,_} = get_hex(Id),
+ Addr = HexAddr bor AddrAdj,
+ insert_binary_index(Addr,NewPos);
+ _ ->
+ insert_index(Tag,Id,NewPos)
+ end,
+ case put_last_tag(Tag,Id) of
+ {?proc_heap,LastId} ->
+ [{_,LastPos}] = lookup_index(?proc_heap,LastId),
+ ets:insert(cdv_heap_file_chars,{LastId,N+Start+1-LastPos});
+ _ -> ok
+ end,
+ indexify(Fd,AddrAdj,Rest,N1);
nomatch ->
case progress_read(Fd) of
{ok,Chunk0} when is_binary(Chunk0) ->
@@ -875,7 +869,7 @@ indexify(Fd,Bin,N) ->
_ ->
{Chunk0,N+byte_size(Bin)}
end,
- indexify(Fd,Chunk,N1);
+ indexify(Fd,AddrAdj,Chunk,N1);
eof ->
eof
end
@@ -911,7 +905,11 @@ check_if_truncated() ->
find_truncated_proc(TruncatedTag)
end.
-find_truncated_proc({?atoms,_Id}) ->
+find_truncated_proc({Tag,_Id}) when Tag==?atoms;
+ Tag==?binary;
+ Tag==?instr_data;
+ Tag==?memory_status;
+ Tag==?memory_map ->
put(truncated_proc,false);
find_truncated_proc({Tag,Pid}) ->
case is_proc_tag(Tag) of
@@ -1060,14 +1058,14 @@ procs_summary(File,WS) ->
%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
%% Page with one process
-get_proc_details(File,Pid,WS,DumpVsn,Binaries) ->
+get_proc_details(File,Pid,WS,DumpVsn) ->
case lookup_index(?proc,Pid) of
[{_,Start}] ->
Fd = open(File),
{{Stack,MsgQ,Dict},TW} =
case truncated_warning([{?proc,Pid}]) of
[] ->
- {expand_memory(Fd,Pid,DumpVsn,Binaries),[]};
+ {expand_memory(Fd,Pid,DumpVsn),[]};
TW0 ->
{{[],[],[]},TW0}
end,
@@ -1176,7 +1174,7 @@ all_procinfo(Fd,Fun,Proc,WS,LineHead) ->
get_procinfo(Fd,Fun,Proc#proc{old_heap_end=bytes(Fd)},WS);
%% - END - moved from get_procinfo -
"Last calls" ->
- get_procinfo(Fd,Fun,Proc#proc{last_calls=get_lines_to_empty(Fd)},WS);
+ get_procinfo(Fd,Fun,Proc#proc{last_calls=get_last_calls(Fd)},WS);
"Link list" ->
{Links,Monitors,MonitoredBy} = parse_link_list(bytes(Fd),[],[],[]),
get_procinfo(Fd,Fun,Proc#proc{links=Links,
@@ -1200,6 +1198,66 @@ all_procinfo(Fd,Fun,Proc,WS,LineHead) ->
get_procinfo(Fd,Fun,Proc,WS)
end.
+%% The end of the 'Last calls' section is meant to be an empty line,
+%% but in some cases this is not the case, so we also need to look for
+%% the next heading which currently (OTP-20.1) can be "Link list: ",
+%% "Dictionary: " or "Reductions: ". We do this by looking for ": "
+%% and when found, pushing the heading back into the saved chunk.
+%%
+%% Note that the 'Last calls' section is only present if the
+%% 'save_calls' process flag is set.
+get_last_calls(Fd) ->
+ case get_chunk(Fd) of
+ {ok,Bin} ->
+ get_last_calls(Fd,Bin,[],[]);
+ eof ->
+ []
+ end.
+get_last_calls(Fd,<<$\n:8,Bin/binary>>,[],Lines) ->
+ %% Empty line - we're done
+ put_chunk(Fd,Bin),
+ lists:reverse(Lines);
+get_last_calls(Fd,<<$::8>>,Acc,Lines) ->
+ case get_chunk(Fd) of
+ {ok,Bin} ->
+ %% Could be a colon followed by a space - see next function clause
+ get_last_calls(Fd,<<$::8,Bin/binary>>,Acc,Lines);
+ eof ->
+ %% Truncated here - either we've got the next heading, or
+ %% it was truncated in a last call function, in which case
+ %% we note that it was truncated
+ case byte_list_to_string(lists:reverse(Acc)) of
+ NextHeading when NextHeading=="Link list";
+ NextHeading=="Dictionary";
+ NextHeading=="Reductions" ->
+ put_chunk(Fd,list_to_binary(NextHeading++":")),
+ lists:reverse(Lines);
+ LastCallFunction->
+ lists:reverse(Lines,[LastCallFunction++":...(truncated)"])
+ end
+ end;
+get_last_calls(Fd,<<$\::8,$\s:8,Bin/binary>>,Acc,Lines) ->
+ %% ": " - means we have the next heading in Acc - save it back
+ %% into the chunk and return the lines we've found
+ HeadingBin = list_to_binary(lists:reverse(Acc,[$:])),
+ put_chunk(Fd,<<HeadingBin/binary,Bin/binary>>),
+ lists:reverse(Lines);
+get_last_calls(Fd,<<$\n:8,Bin/binary>>,Acc,Lines) ->
+ get_last_calls(Fd,Bin,[],[byte_list_to_string(lists:reverse(Acc))|Lines]);
+get_last_calls(Fd,<<$\r:8,Bin/binary>>,Acc,Lines) ->
+ get_last_calls(Fd,Bin,Acc,Lines);
+get_last_calls(Fd,<<$\s:8,Bin/binary>>,[],Lines) ->
+ get_last_calls(Fd,Bin,[],Lines);
+get_last_calls(Fd,<<Char:8,Bin/binary>>,Acc,Lines) ->
+ get_last_calls(Fd,Bin,[Char|Acc],Lines);
+get_last_calls(Fd,<<>>,Acc,Lines) ->
+ case get_chunk(Fd) of
+ {ok,Bin} ->
+ get_last_calls(Fd,Bin,Acc,Lines);
+ eof ->
+ lists:reverse(Lines,[byte_list_to_string(lists:reverse(Acc))])
+ end.
+
parse_link_list([SB|Str],Links,Monitors,MonitoredBy) when SB==$[; SB==$] ->
parse_link_list(Str,Links,Monitors,MonitoredBy);
parse_link_list("#Port"++_=Str,Links,Monitors,MonitoredBy) ->
@@ -1235,12 +1293,12 @@ parse_monitor("{"++Str) ->
%% Named process
{Name,Node,Rest1} = parse_name_node(Str,[]),
Pid = get_pid_from_name(Name,Node),
- case parse_link(string:strip(Rest1,left,$,),[]) of
+ case parse_link(string:trim(Rest1,leading,","),[]) of
{Ref,"}"++Rest2} ->
%% Bug in break.c - prints an extra "}" for remote
%% nodes... thus the strip
{{Pid,"{"++Name++","++Node++"} ("++Ref++")"},
- string:strip(Rest2,left,$})};
+ string:trim(Rest2,leading,"}")};
{Ref,[]} ->
{{Pid,"{"++Name++","++Node++"} ("++Ref++")"},[]}
end;
@@ -1325,10 +1383,10 @@ maybe_other_node2(Channel) ->
end.
-expand_memory(Fd,Pid,DumpVsn,Binaries) ->
+expand_memory(Fd,Pid,DumpVsn) ->
BinAddrAdj = get_bin_addr_adj(DumpVsn),
put(fd,Fd),
- Dict = read_heap(Fd,Pid,BinAddrAdj,Binaries),
+ Dict = read_heap(Fd,Pid,BinAddrAdj,gb_trees:empty()),
Expanded = {read_stack_dump(Fd,Pid,BinAddrAdj,Dict),
read_messages(Fd,Pid,BinAddrAdj,Dict),
read_dictionary(Fd,Pid,BinAddrAdj,Dict)},
@@ -1346,25 +1404,6 @@ get_bin_addr_adj(_) ->
0.
%%%
-%%% Read binaries.
-%%%
-read_binaries(Fd,DumpVsn) ->
- AllBinaries = lookup_index(?binary),
- AddrAdj = get_bin_addr_adj(DumpVsn),
- Fun = fun({Addr0,Pos},Dict0) ->
- pos_bof(Fd,Pos),
- {HexAddr,_} = get_hex(Addr0),
- Addr = HexAddr bor AddrAdj,
- Bin =
- case line_head(Fd) of
- {eof,_} -> '#CDVTruncatedBinary';
- _Size -> {'#CDVBin',Pos}
- end,
- gb_trees:enter(Addr,Bin,Dict0)
- end,
- progress_foldl("Processing binaries",Fun,gb_trees:empty(),AllBinaries).
-
-%%%
%%% Read top level section.
%%%
@@ -1454,6 +1493,8 @@ parse_dictionary(Line0, BinAddrAdj, D) ->
read_heap(Fd,Pid,BinAddrAdj,Dict0) ->
case lookup_index(?proc_heap,Pid) of
[{_,Pos}] ->
+ [{_,Chars}] = ets:lookup(cdv_heap_file_chars,Pid),
+ init_progress("Reading process heap",Chars),
pos_bof(Fd,Pos),
read_heap(BinAddrAdj,Dict0);
[] ->
@@ -1464,13 +1505,16 @@ read_heap(BinAddrAdj,Dict0) ->
%% This function is never called if the dump is truncated in {?proc_heap,Pid}
case get(fd) of
end_of_heap ->
+ end_progress(),
Dict0;
Fd ->
case bytes(Fd) of
"=" ++ _next_tag ->
+ end_progress(),
put(fd, end_of_heap),
Dict0;
Line ->
+ update_progress(length(Line)+1),
Dict = parse(Line,BinAddrAdj,Dict0),
read_heap(BinAddrAdj,Dict)
end
@@ -1506,7 +1550,7 @@ get_ports(File) ->
%% Converting port string to tuple to secure correct sorting. This is
%% converted back in cdv_port_cb:format/1.
port_to_tuple("#Port<"++Port) ->
- [I1,I2] = string:tokens(Port,".>"),
+ [I1,I2] = string:lexemes(Port,".>"),
{list_to_integer(I1),list_to_integer(I2)}.
get_portinfo(Fd,Port) ->
@@ -1529,9 +1573,9 @@ get_portinfo(Fd,Port) ->
"Registered as" ->
get_portinfo(Fd,Port#port{name=string(Fd)});
"Monitors" ->
- Monitors0 = string:tokens(bytes(Fd),"()"),
+ Monitors0 = string:lexemes(bytes(Fd),"()"),
Monitors = [begin
- [Pid,Ref] = string:tokens(Mon,","),
+ [Pid,Ref] = string:lexemes(Mon,","),
{Pid,Pid++" ("++Ref++")"}
end || Mon <- Monitors0],
get_portinfo(Fd,Port#port{monitors=Monitors});
@@ -1592,7 +1636,7 @@ get_etsinfo(Fd,EtsTable = #ets_table{details=Ds},WS) ->
"Buckets" ->
%% A bug in erl_db_hash.c prints a space after the buckets
%% - need to strip the string to make list_to_integer/1 happy.
- Buckets = list_to_integer(string:strip(bytes(Fd))),
+ Buckets = list_to_integer(string:trim(bytes(Fd),both,"\s")),
get_etsinfo(Fd,EtsTable#ets_table{buckets=Buckets},WS);
"Objects" ->
get_etsinfo(Fd,EtsTable#ets_table{size=list_to_integer(bytes(Fd))},WS);
@@ -1610,7 +1654,9 @@ get_etsinfo(Fd,EtsTable = #ets_table{details=Ds},WS) ->
Val = bytes(Fd),
get_etsinfo(Fd,EtsTable#ets_table{details=Ds#{chain_min=>Val}},WS);
"Chain Length Avg" ->
- Val = try list_to_float(string:strip(bytes(Fd))) catch _:_ -> "-" end,
+ Val = try list_to_float(string:trim(bytes(Fd),both,"\s"))
+ catch _:_ -> "-"
+ end,
get_etsinfo(Fd,EtsTable#ets_table{details=Ds#{chain_avg=>Val}},WS);
"Chain Length Max" ->
Val = bytes(Fd),
@@ -1767,7 +1813,7 @@ get_nodeinfo(Fd,Nod) ->
Creations = lists:flatmap(fun(C) -> try [list_to_integer(C)]
catch error:badarg -> []
end
- end, string:tokens(bytes(Fd)," ")),
+ end, string:lexemes(bytes(Fd)," ")),
get_nodeinfo(Fd,Nod#nod{creation={creations,Creations}});
"Remote link" ->
Procs = bytes(Fd), % e.g. "<0.31.0> <4322.54.0>"
@@ -2213,7 +2259,7 @@ get_size_value(Key,Data) ->
%% and Value is the sum over all allocator instances of each type.
sort_allocator_types([{Name,Data}|Allocators],Acc,DoTotal) ->
Type =
- case string:tokens(Name,"[]") of
+ case string:lexemes(Name,"[]") of
[T,_Id] -> T;
[Name] -> Name;
Other -> Other
@@ -2524,9 +2570,9 @@ parse_heap_term("Yc"++Line0, Addr, BinAddrAdj, D0) -> %Reference-counted binary.
{Offset,":"++Line2} = get_hex(Line1),
{Sz,Line} = get_hex(Line2),
Binp = Binp0 bor BinAddrAdj,
- Term = case gb_trees:lookup(Binp, D0) of
- {value,Bin} -> cdvbin(Offset,Sz,Bin);
- none -> '#CDVNonexistingBinary'
+ Term = case lookup_binary_index(Binp) of
+ [{_,Start}] -> cdvbin(Offset,Sz,{'#CDVBin',Start});
+ [] -> '#CDVNonexistingBinary'
end,
D = gb_trees:insert(Addr, Term, D0),
{Term,Line,D};
@@ -2535,15 +2581,14 @@ parse_heap_term("Ys"++Line0, Addr, BinAddrAdj, D0) -> %Sub binary.
{Offset,":"++Line2} = get_hex(Line1),
{Sz,Line} = get_hex(Line2),
Binp = Binp0 bor BinAddrAdj,
- Term = case gb_trees:lookup(Binp, D0) of
- {value,Bin} -> cdvbin(Offset,Sz,Bin);
- none when Binp0=/=Binp ->
+ Term = case lookup_binary_index(Binp) of
+ [{_,Start}] -> cdvbin(Offset,Sz,{'#CDVBin',Start});
+ [] ->
%% Might it be on the heap?
- case gb_trees:lookup(Binp0, D0) of
+ case gb_trees:lookup(Binp, D0) of
{value,Bin} -> cdvbin(Offset,Sz,Bin);
none -> '#CDVNonexistingBinary'
- end;
- none -> '#CDVNonexistingBinary'
+ end
end,
D = gb_trees:insert(Addr, Term, D0),
{Term,Line,D}.
@@ -2634,6 +2679,7 @@ deref_ptr(Ptr, Line, BinAddrAdj, D0) ->
put(fd, end_of_heap),
deref_ptr(Ptr, Line, BinAddrAdj, D0);
L ->
+ update_progress(length(L)+1),
D = parse(L, BinAddrAdj, D0),
deref_ptr(Ptr, Line, BinAddrAdj, D)
end
@@ -2699,19 +2745,33 @@ get_label([H|T], Acc) ->
get_label(T, [H|Acc]).
get_binary(Line0) ->
- {N,":"++Line} = get_hex(Line0),
- do_get_binary(N, Line, []).
+ case get_hex(Line0) of
+ {N,":"++Line} ->
+ do_get_binary(N, Line, [], false);
+ _ ->
+ {'#CDVTruncatedBinary',[]}
+ end.
get_binary(Offset,Size,Line0) ->
- {_N,":"++Line} = get_hex(Line0),
- do_get_binary(Size, lists:sublist(Line,(Offset*2)+1,Size*2), []).
-
-do_get_binary(0, Line, Acc) ->
+ case get_hex(Line0) of
+ {_N,":"++Line} ->
+ Progress = Size>?binary_size_progress_limit,
+ Progress andalso init_progress("Reading binary",Size),
+ do_get_binary(Size, lists:sublist(Line,(Offset*2)+1,Size*2), [],
+ Progress);
+ _ ->
+ {'#CDVTruncatedBinary',[]}
+ end.
+
+do_get_binary(0, Line, Acc, Progress) ->
+ Progress andalso end_progress(),
{list_to_binary(lists:reverse(Acc)),Line};
-do_get_binary(N, [A,B|Line], Acc) ->
+do_get_binary(N, [A,B|Line], Acc, Progress) ->
Byte = (get_hex_digit(A) bsl 4) bor get_hex_digit(B),
- do_get_binary(N-1, Line, [Byte|Acc]);
-do_get_binary(_N, [], _Acc) ->
+ Progress andalso update_progress(),
+ do_get_binary(N-1, Line, [Byte|Acc], Progress);
+do_get_binary(_N, [], _Acc, Progress) ->
+ Progress andalso end_progress(),
{'#CDVTruncatedBinary',[]}.
cdvbin(Offset,Size,{'#CDVBin',Pos}) ->
@@ -2719,12 +2779,17 @@ cdvbin(Offset,Size,{'#CDVBin',Pos}) ->
cdvbin(Offset,Size,['#CDVBin',_,_,Pos]) ->
['#CDVBin',Offset,Size,Pos];
cdvbin(_,_,'#CDVTruncatedBinary') ->
- '#CDVTruncatedBinary'.
+ '#CDVTruncatedBinary';
+cdvbin(_,_,'#CDVNonexistingBinary') ->
+ '#CDVNonexistingBinary'.
%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
-%% Functions for accessing the cdv_dump_index_table
-reset_index_table() ->
- ets:delete_all_objects(cdv_dump_index_table).
+%% Functions for accessing tables
+reset_tables() ->
+ ets:delete_all_objects(cdv_dump_index_table),
+ ets:delete_all_objects(cdv_reg_proc_table),
+ ets:delete_all_objects(cdv_binary_index_table),
+ ets:delete_all_objects(cdv_heap_file_chars).
insert_index(Tag,Id,Pos) ->
ets:insert(cdv_dump_index_table,{{Tag,Pos},Id}).
@@ -2739,6 +2804,11 @@ lookup_index(Tag,Id) ->
count_index(Tag) ->
ets:select_count(cdv_dump_index_table,[{{{Tag,'_'},'_'},[],[true]}]).
+insert_binary_index(Addr,Pos) ->
+ ets:insert(cdv_binary_index_table,{Addr,Pos}).
+
+lookup_binary_index(Addr) ->
+ ets:lookup(cdv_binary_index_table,Addr).
%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
%% Convert tags read from crashdump to atoms used as first part of key
@@ -2809,23 +2879,6 @@ to_value_list(Record) ->
Values.
%%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
-%%% Fold over List and report progress in percent.
-%%% Report is the text to be presented in the progress dialog.
-%%% Acc0 is the initial accumulator and will be passed to Fun as the
-%%% second arguement, i.e. Fun = fun(Item,Acc) -> NewAcc end.
-progress_foldl(Report,Fun,Acc0,List) ->
- init_progress(Report, length(List)),
- progress_foldl1(Fun,Acc0,List).
-
-progress_foldl1(Fun,Acc,[H|T]) ->
- update_progress(),
- progress_foldl1(Fun,Fun(H,Acc),T);
-progress_foldl1(_Fun,Acc,[]) ->
- end_progress(),
- Acc.
-
-
-%%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
%%% Map over List and report progress in percent.
%%% Report is the text to be presented in the progress dialog.
%%% Distribute the load over a number of processes, and File is opened
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/observer.app.src b/lib/observer/src/observer.app.src
index 3a5bd172e7..f682e3dc7b 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/observer.app.src
+++ b/lib/observer/src/observer.app.src
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@
{registered, []},
{applications, [kernel, stdlib]},
{env, []},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["wx-1.2","stdlib-2.0","runtime_tools-1.8.14",
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["wx-1.2","stdlib-3.4","runtime_tools-1.8.14",
"kernel-3.0","inets-5.10","et-1.5",
"erts-7.0"]}]}.
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/observer_html_lib.erl b/lib/observer/src/observer_html_lib.erl
index 3dfcc42ada..68381bcc7b 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/observer_html_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/observer_html_lib.erl
@@ -278,24 +278,24 @@ href_proc_port("['#CDVPort'"++T,Acc,LTB) ->
%% Port written by crashdump_viewer:parse_term(...)
{Port0,Rest} = split($],T),
PortStr=
- case string:tokens(Port0,",.|") of
+ case string:lexemes(Port0,",.|") of
[X,Y] ->
Port = "#Port&lt;"++X++"."++Y++"&gt;",
href(Port,Port);
Ns ->
- "#Port&lt;" ++ string:join(Ns,".") ++"...&gt;"
+ "#Port&lt;" ++ lists:join($.,Ns) ++"...&gt;"
end,
href_proc_port(Rest,[PortStr|Acc],LTB);
href_proc_port("['#CDVPid'"++T,Acc,LTB) ->
%% Pid written by crashdump_viewer:parse_term(...)
{Pid0,Rest} = split($],T),
PidStr =
- case string:tokens(Pid0,",.|") of
+ case string:lexemes(Pid0,",.|") of
[X,Y,Z] ->
Pid = "&lt;"++X++"."++Y++"."++Z++"&gt;",
href(Pid,Pid);
Ns ->
- "&lt;" ++ string:join(Ns,".") ++ "...&gt;"
+ "&lt;" ++ lists:join($.,Ns) ++ "...&gt;"
end,
href_proc_port(Rest,[PidStr|Acc],LTB);
href_proc_port("'#CDVIncompleteHeap'"++T,Acc,LTB)->
@@ -332,22 +332,29 @@ href_proc_port([],Acc,_) ->
href_proc_bin(From, T, Acc, LTB) ->
{OffsetSizePos,Rest} = split($],T),
BinStr =
- case string:tokens(OffsetSizePos,",.| \n") of
+ case string:lexemes(OffsetSizePos,",.| \n") of
[Offset,SizeStr,Pos] when From =:= cdv ->
Size = list_to_integer(SizeStr),
PreviewSize = min(Size,10),
Id = {list_to_integer(Offset),PreviewSize,list_to_integer(Pos)},
- {ok,PreviewBin} = crashdump_viewer:expand_binary(Id),
- PreviewStr = preview_string(Size, PreviewBin),
- if LTB ->
- href("TARGET=\"expanded\"",
- ["#Binary?offset="++Offset++
- "&size="++SizeStr++
- "&pos="++Pos],
- PreviewStr);
- true ->
- PreviewStr
- end;
+ case crashdump_viewer:expand_binary(Id) of
+ {ok, '#CDVTruncatedBinary'} ->
+ lists:flatten(
+ "<FONT COLOR=\"#FF0000\">"
+ "&lt;&lt;...(Truncated Binary)&gt;&gt;"
+ "</FONT>");
+ {ok, PreviewBin} ->
+ PreviewStr = preview_string(Size, PreviewBin),
+ if LTB ->
+ href("TARGET=\"expanded\"",
+ ["#Binary?offset="++Offset++
+ "&size="++SizeStr++
+ "&pos="++Pos],
+ PreviewStr);
+ true ->
+ PreviewStr
+ end
+ end;
[PreviewIntStr,SizeStr,Md5] when From =:= obs ->
Size = list_to_integer(SizeStr),
PreviewInt = list_to_integer(PreviewIntStr),
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/observer_lib.erl b/lib/observer/src/observer_lib.erl
index 463fb5b8ef..e5ffe61d25 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/observer_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/observer_lib.erl
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@
-export([get_wx_parent/1,
display_info_dialog/2, display_yes_no_dialog/1,
- display_progress_dialog/2, destroy_progress_dialog/0,
+ display_progress_dialog/3, destroy_progress_dialog/0,
wait_for_progress/0, report_progress/1,
user_term/3, user_term_multiline/3,
interval_dialog/4, start_timer/1, start_timer/2, stop_timer/1, timer_config/1,
@@ -40,6 +40,7 @@
-define(SINGLE_LINE_STYLE, ?wxBORDER_NONE bor ?wxTE_READONLY bor ?wxTE_RICH2).
-define(MULTI_LINE_STYLE, ?SINGLE_LINE_STYLE bor ?wxTE_MULTILINE).
+-define(pulse_timeout,50).
get_wx_parent(Window) ->
Parent = wxWindow:getParent(Window),
@@ -477,7 +478,7 @@ create_box(Parent, Data) ->
link_entry(Panel,Value);
_ ->
Value = to_str(Value0),
- case string:sub_word(lists:sublist(Value, 80),1,$\n) of
+ case string:nth_lexeme(lists:sublist(Value, 80),1, [$\n]) of
Value ->
%% Short string, no newlines - show all
wxStaticText:new(Panel, ?wxID_ANY, Value);
@@ -688,11 +689,11 @@ create_status_bar(Panel) ->
%%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
%%% Progress dialog
-define(progress_handler,cdv_progress_handler).
-display_progress_dialog(Title,Str) ->
+display_progress_dialog(Parent,Title,Str) ->
Caller = self(),
Env = wx:get_env(),
spawn_link(fun() ->
- progress_handler(Caller,Env,Title,Str)
+ progress_handler(Caller,Env,Parent,Title,Str)
end),
ok.
@@ -716,31 +717,38 @@ report_progress(Progress) ->
ok
end.
-progress_handler(Caller,Env,Title,Str) ->
+progress_handler(Caller,Env,Parent,Title,Str) ->
register(?progress_handler,self()),
wx:set_env(Env),
- PD = progress_dialog(Env,Title,Str),
- try progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller)
+ PD = progress_dialog(Env,Parent,Title,Str),
+ try progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller,infinity)
catch closed -> normal end.
-progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller) ->
+progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller,Pulse) ->
receive
{progress,{ok,done}} -> % to make wait_for_progress/0 return
Caller ! continue,
- progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller);
+ progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller,Pulse);
+ {progress,{ok,start_pulse}} ->
+ update_progress_pulse(PD),
+ progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller,?pulse_timeout);
+ {progress,{ok,stop_pulse}} ->
+ progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller,infinity);
{progress,{ok,Percent}} when is_integer(Percent) ->
update_progress(PD,Percent),
- progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller);
+ progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller,Pulse);
{progress,{ok,Msg}} ->
update_progress_text(PD,Msg),
- progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller);
+ progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller,Pulse);
{progress,{error, Reason}} ->
+ {Dialog,_,_} = PD,
+ Parent = wxWindow:getParent(Dialog),
finish_progress(PD),
FailMsg =
if is_list(Reason) -> Reason;
true -> file:format_error(Reason)
end,
- display_info_dialog(PD,"Crashdump Viewer Error",FailMsg),
+ display_info_dialog(Parent,"Crashdump Viewer Error",FailMsg),
Caller ! error,
unregister(?progress_handler),
unlink(Caller);
@@ -748,28 +756,57 @@ progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller) ->
finish_progress(PD),
unregister(?progress_handler),
unlink(Caller)
+ after Pulse ->
+ update_progress_pulse(PD),
+ progress_loop(Title,PD,Caller,?pulse_timeout)
end.
-progress_dialog(_Env,Title,Str) ->
- PD = wxProgressDialog:new(Title,Str,
- [{maximum,101},
- {style,
- ?wxPD_APP_MODAL bor
- ?wxPD_SMOOTH bor
- ?wxPD_AUTO_HIDE}]),
- wxProgressDialog:setMinSize(PD,{200,-1}),
- PD.
+progress_dialog(_Env,Parent,Title,Str) ->
+ progress_dialog_new(Parent,Title,Str).
update_progress(PD,Value) ->
- try wxProgressDialog:update(PD,Value)
+ try progress_dialog_update(PD,Value)
catch _:_ -> throw(closed) %% Port or window have died
end.
update_progress_text(PD,Text) ->
- try wxProgressDialog:update(PD,0,[{newmsg,Text}])
+ try progress_dialog_update(PD,Text)
+ catch _:_ -> throw(closed) %% Port or window have died
+ end.
+update_progress_pulse(PD) ->
+ try progress_dialog_pulse(PD)
catch _:_ -> throw(closed) %% Port or window have died
end.
finish_progress(PD) ->
- wxProgressDialog:destroy(PD).
+ try progress_dialog_update(PD,100)
+ catch _:_ -> ok
+ after progress_dialog_destroy(PD)
+ end.
+
+progress_dialog_new(Parent,Title,Str) ->
+ Dialog = wxDialog:new(Parent, ?wxID_ANY, Title,
+ [{style,?wxDEFAULT_DIALOG_STYLE}]),
+ Panel = wxPanel:new(Dialog),
+ Sizer = wxBoxSizer:new(?wxVERTICAL),
+ Message = wxStaticText:new(Panel, 1, Str),
+ Gauge = wxGauge:new(Panel, 2, 100, [{size, {170, -1}},
+ {style, ?wxGA_HORIZONTAL}]),
+ SizerFlags = ?wxEXPAND bor ?wxLEFT bor ?wxRIGHT bor ?wxTOP,
+ wxSizer:add(Sizer, Message, [{flag,SizerFlags},{border,15}]),
+ wxSizer:add(Sizer, Gauge, [{flag, SizerFlags bor ?wxBOTTOM},{border,15}]),
+ wxPanel:setSizer(Panel, Sizer),
+ wxSizer:setSizeHints(Sizer, Dialog),
+ wxDialog:show(Dialog),
+ {Dialog,Message,Gauge}.
+
+progress_dialog_update({_,_,Gauge},Value) when is_integer(Value) ->
+ wxGauge:setValue(Gauge,Value);
+progress_dialog_update({_,Message,Gauge},Text) when is_list(Text) ->
+ wxGauge:setValue(Gauge,0),
+ wxStaticText:setLabel(Message,Text).
+progress_dialog_pulse({_,_,Gauge}) ->
+ wxGauge:pulse(Gauge).
+progress_dialog_destroy({Dialog,_,_}) ->
+ wxDialog:destroy(Dialog).
make_obsbin(Bin,Tab) ->
Size = byte_size(Bin),
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/observer_procinfo.erl b/lib/observer/src/observer_procinfo.erl
index 963def958b..4ce38e439d 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/observer_procinfo.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/observer_procinfo.erl
@@ -151,7 +151,7 @@ handle_event(#wx{event=#wxHtmlLink{linkInfo=#wxHtmlLinkInfo{href=Href}}},
Opened =
case lists:keyfind(Id,1,Opened0) of
false ->
- Win = cdv_detail_wx:start_link(Id,[],Frame,Callback),
+ Win = cdv_detail_wx:start_link(Id,[],Frame,Callback,obs),
[{Id,Win}|Opened0];
{_,Win} ->
wxFrame:raise(Win),
@@ -454,7 +454,8 @@ local_pid_str(Pid) ->
global_pid_node_pref(Pid) ->
%% Global PID node prefix : X of <X.Y.Z>
- string:strip(string:sub_word(pid_to_list(Pid),1,$.),left,$<).
+ [NodePrefix|_] = string:lexemes(pid_to_list(Pid),"<."),
+ NodePrefix.
io_get_data(Pid) ->
Pid ! {self(), get_data_and_close},
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/observer_wx.erl b/lib/observer/src/observer_wx.erl
index be93b1d5f1..453e3bdc2d 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/observer_wx.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/observer_wx.erl
@@ -732,7 +732,7 @@ get_nodes() ->
{Nodes, lists:reverse(Menues)}.
epmd_nodes(Names) ->
- [_, Host] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@"),
+ [_, Host] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@"),
[list_to_atom(Name ++ [$@|Host]) || {Name, _} <- Names].
update_node_list(State = #state{menubar=MenuBar}) ->
diff --git a/lib/observer/src/ttb.erl b/lib/observer/src/ttb.erl
index 940fdc9818..29a572d7fe 100644
--- a/lib/observer/src/ttb.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/src/ttb.erl
@@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ do_tracer(Clients,PI,Traci) ->
{ok, H} = inet:gethostname(),
H;
_ ->
- [_,H] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(N),"@"),
+ [_,H] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(N),"@"),
H
end,
case catch dbg:tracer(N,port,dbg:trace_port(ip,IpPortSpec)) of
@@ -976,7 +976,7 @@ decode_filename(3,Bin,latin1) ->
File.
host(Node) ->
- [_name,Host] = string:tokens(atom_to_list(Node),"@"),
+ [_name,Host] = string:lexemes(atom_to_list(Node),"@"),
Host.
wait_for_fetch([]) ->
@@ -1064,7 +1064,7 @@ collect_files(Dirs) ->
lists:map(fun(Dir) ->
MetaFiles = filelib:wildcard(filename:join(Dir,"*.ti")),
lists:map(fun(M) ->
- Sub = string:left(M,length(M)-3),
+ Sub = filename:rootname(M,".ti"),
case filelib:is_file(Sub) of
true -> Sub;
false -> Sub++".*.wrp"
diff --git a/lib/observer/test/Makefile b/lib/observer/test/Makefile
index fcb1b73911..a44e54fc52 100644
--- a/lib/observer/test/Makefile
+++ b/lib/observer/test/Makefile
@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ RELSYSDIR = $(RELEASE_PATH)/observer_test
# FLAGS
# ----------------------------------------------------
ERL_MAKE_FLAGS +=
-ERL_COMPILE_FLAGS += +nowarn_export_all
+ERL_COMPILE_FLAGS += +warnings_as_errors +nowarn_export_all
EBIN = .
diff --git a/lib/observer/test/crashdump_viewer_SUITE.erl b/lib/observer/test/crashdump_viewer_SUITE.erl
index 77cf086d4b..f9ac884743 100644
--- a/lib/observer/test/crashdump_viewer_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/test/crashdump_viewer_SUITE.erl
@@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ end_per_testcase(Case, Config) ->
end,
ok.
-suite() -> [{ct_hooks,[ts_install_cth]}].
+suite() -> [].
all() ->
[start_stop,
@@ -364,6 +364,9 @@ special(File,Procs) ->
crashdump_viewer:expand_binary({SOffset,SSize,SPos}),
io:format(" expand binary ok",[]),
+ #proc{last_calls=LastCalls} = ProcDetails,
+ true = length(LastCalls) =< 4,
+
['#CDVPid',X1,Y1,Z1] = proplists:get_value(ext_pid,Dict),
ChannelStr1 = integer_to_list(X1),
ExtPid =
@@ -413,19 +416,90 @@ special(File,Procs) ->
old_attrib=undefined,
old_comp_info=undefined}=Mod2,
ok;
- %% ".strangemodname" ->
- %% {ok,Mods,[]} = crashdump_viewer:loaded_modules(),
- %% lookat_all_mods(Mods),
- %% ok;
- %% ".sort" ->
- %% %% sort ports, atoms and modules ????
- %% ok;
- %% ".trunc" ->
- %% %% ????
- %% ok;
- ".trunc.bytes" ->
+ ".trunc_bin1" ->
+ %% This is 'full_dist' truncated after the first
+ %% "=binary:"
+ %% i.e. no binary exist in the dump
+ [#proc{pid=Pid0}|_Rest] = lists:keysort(#proc.name,Procs),
+ Pid = pid_to_list(Pid0),
+ {ok,ProcDetails=#proc{},[]} = crashdump_viewer:proc_details(Pid),
+ io:format(" process details ok",[]),
+
+ #proc{dict=Dict} = ProcDetails,
+
+ '#CDVNonexistingBinary' = proplists:get_value(bin,Dict),
+ '#CDVNonexistingBinary' = proplists:get_value(sub_bin,Dict),
+
+ io:format(" nonexisting binaries ok",[]),
+ ok;
+ ".trunc_bin2" ->
+ %% This is 'full_dist' truncated after the first
+ %% "=binary:Addr\n
+ %% Size"
+ %% i.e. binaries are truncated
+ [#proc{pid=Pid0}|_Rest] = lists:keysort(#proc.name,Procs),
+ Pid = pid_to_list(Pid0),
+ {ok,ProcDetails=#proc{},[]} = crashdump_viewer:proc_details(Pid),
+ io:format(" process details ok",[]),
+
+ #proc{dict=Dict} = ProcDetails,
+
+ ['#CDVBin',Offset,Size,Pos] = proplists:get_value(bin,Dict),
+ {ok,'#CDVTruncatedBinary'} =
+ crashdump_viewer:expand_binary({Offset,Size,Pos}),
+ ['#CDVBin',SOffset,SSize,SPos] = proplists:get_value(sub_bin,Dict),
+ {ok,'#CDVTruncatedBinary'} =
+ crashdump_viewer:expand_binary({SOffset,SSize,SPos}),
+
+ io:format(" expand truncated binary ok",[]),
+ ok;
+ ".trunc_bin3" ->
+ %% This is 'full_dist' truncated after the first
+ %% "=binary:Addr\n
+ %% Size:"
+ %% i.e. same as 'trunc_bin2', except the colon exists also
+ [#proc{pid=Pid0}|_Rest] = lists:keysort(#proc.name,Procs),
+ Pid = pid_to_list(Pid0),
+ {ok,ProcDetails=#proc{},[]} = crashdump_viewer:proc_details(Pid),
+ io:format(" process details ok",[]),
+
+ #proc{dict=Dict} = ProcDetails,
+
+ ['#CDVBin',Offset,Size,Pos] = proplists:get_value(bin,Dict),
+ {ok,'#CDVTruncatedBinary'} =
+ crashdump_viewer:expand_binary({Offset,Size,Pos}),
+ ['#CDVBin',SOffset,SSize,SPos] = proplists:get_value(sub_bin,Dict),
+ {ok,'#CDVTruncatedBinary'} =
+ crashdump_viewer:expand_binary({SOffset,SSize,SPos}),
+
+ io:format(" expand truncated binary ok",[]),
+ ok;
+ ".trunc_bin4" ->
+ %% This is 'full_dist' truncated after the first
+ %% "=binary:Addr\n
+ %% Size:BinaryMissinOneByte"
+ %% i.e. the full binary is truncated, but the sub binary is complete
+ [#proc{pid=Pid0}|_Rest] = lists:keysort(#proc.name,Procs),
+ Pid = pid_to_list(Pid0),
+ {ok,ProcDetails=#proc{},[]} = crashdump_viewer:proc_details(Pid),
+ io:format(" process details ok",[]),
+
+ #proc{dict=Dict} = ProcDetails,
+
+ ['#CDVBin',Offset,Size,Pos] = proplists:get_value(bin,Dict),
+ {ok,'#CDVTruncatedBinary'} =
+ crashdump_viewer:expand_binary({Offset,Size,Pos}),
+ io:format(" expand truncated binary ok",[]),
+ ['#CDVBin',SOffset,SSize,SPos] = proplists:get_value(sub_bin,Dict),
+ {ok,<<_:SSize/binary>>} =
+ crashdump_viewer:expand_binary({SOffset,SSize,SPos}),
+ io:format(" expand complete sub binary ok",[]),
+
+ ok;
+ ".trunc_bytes" ->
{ok,_,[TW]} = crashdump_viewer:general_info(),
{match,_} = re:run(TW,"CRASH DUMP SIZE LIMIT REACHED"),
+ io:format(" size limit information ok",[]),
ok;
".unicode" ->
#proc{pid=Pid0} =
@@ -500,16 +574,45 @@ do_create_dumps(DataDir,Rel) ->
current ->
CD3 = dump_with_args(DataDir,Rel,"instr","+Mim true"),
CD4 = dump_with_strange_module_name(DataDir,Rel,"strangemodname"),
- Bytes = rand:uniform(300000) + 100,
- CD5 = dump_with_args(DataDir,Rel,"trunc.bytes",
+ Tmp = dump_with_args(DataDir,Rel,"trunc_bytes",""),
+ {ok,#file_info{size=Max}} = file:read_file_info(Tmp),
+ ok = file:delete(Tmp),
+ Bytes = max(15,rand:uniform(Max)),
+ CD5 = dump_with_args(DataDir,Rel,"trunc_bytes",
"-env ERL_CRASH_DUMP_BYTES " ++
integer_to_list(Bytes)),
CD6 = dump_with_unicode_atoms(DataDir,Rel,"unicode"),
- {[CD1,CD2,CD3,CD4,CD5,CD6], DosDump};
+ TruncatedDumps = truncate_dump(CD1),
+ {[CD1,CD2,CD3,CD4,CD5,CD6|TruncatedDumps], DosDump};
_ ->
{[CD1,CD2], DosDump}
end.
+truncate_dump(File) ->
+ {ok,Bin} = file:read_file(File),
+ BinTag = <<"\n=binary:">>,
+ Colon = <<":">>,
+ NewLine = case os:type() of
+ {win32,_} -> <<"\r\n">>;
+ _ -> <<"\n">>
+ end,
+ [StartBin,AfterTag] = binary:split(Bin,BinTag),
+ [AddrAndSize,BinaryAndRest] = binary:split(AfterTag,Colon),
+ [Binary,_Rest] = binary:split(BinaryAndRest,NewLine),
+ TruncSize = byte_size(Binary) - 2,
+ <<TruncBinary:TruncSize/binary,_/binary>> = Binary,
+ TruncName = filename:rootname(File) ++ ".trunc_bin",
+ write_trunc_files(TruncName,StartBin,
+ [BinTag,AddrAndSize,Colon,TruncBinary],1).
+
+write_trunc_files(TruncName0,Bin,[Part|Parts],N) ->
+ TruncName = TruncName0++integer_to_list(N),
+ Bin1 = <<Bin/binary,Part/binary>>,
+ ok = file:write_file(TruncName,Bin1),
+ [TruncName|write_trunc_files(TruncName0,Bin1,Parts,N+1)];
+write_trunc_files(_,_,[],_) ->
+ [].
+
%% Create a dump which has three visible nodes, one hidden and one
%% not connected node, and with monitors and links between nodes.
diff --git a/lib/observer/test/observer_SUITE.erl b/lib/observer/test/observer_SUITE.erl
index 41726b1521..0db2c1ea77 100644
--- a/lib/observer/test/observer_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/test/observer_SUITE.erl
@@ -115,6 +115,7 @@ basic(doc) -> [""];
basic(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
timer:send_after(100, "foobar"), %% Otherwise the timer server gets added to procs
ProcsBefore = processes(),
+ ProcInfoBefore = [{P,process_info(P)} || P <- ProcsBefore],
NumProcsBefore = length(ProcsBefore),
ok = observer:start(),
@@ -145,8 +146,10 @@ basic(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
ProcsAfter = processes(),
NumProcsAfter = length(ProcsAfter),
if NumProcsAfter=/=NumProcsBefore ->
+ BeforeNotAfter = ProcsBefore -- ProcsAfter,
ct:log("Before but not after:~n~p~n",
- [[{P,process_info(P)} || P <- ProcsBefore -- ProcsAfter]]),
+ [[{P,I} || {P,I} <- ProcInfoBefore,
+ lists:member(P,BeforeNotAfter)]]),
ct:log("After but not before:~n~p~n",
[[{P,process_info(P)} || P <- ProcsAfter -- ProcsBefore]]),
ct:fail("leaking processes");
@@ -304,10 +307,10 @@ table_win(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
%% Test PR-1296/OTP-14151
%% Clicking a link to a port before the port tab has been activated the
%% first time crashes observer.
-port_win_when_tab_not_initiated(Config) ->
+port_win_when_tab_not_initiated(_Config) ->
{ok,Port} = gen_tcp:listen(0,[]),
ok = observer:start(),
- Notebook = setup_whitebox_testing(),
+ _Notebook = setup_whitebox_testing(),
observer ! {open_link,erlang:port_to_list(Port)},
timer:sleep(1000),
observer:stop(),
diff --git a/lib/observer/test/ttb_SUITE.erl b/lib/observer/test/ttb_SUITE.erl
index c06ec21f36..ed62efbb58 100644
--- a/lib/observer/test/ttb_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/observer/test/ttb_SUITE.erl
@@ -222,7 +222,7 @@ file_fetch(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
?line ?t:capture_stop(),
?line [StoreString] = ?t:capture_get(),
?line UploadDir =
- lists:last(string:tokens(lists:flatten(StoreString),"$ \n")),
+ lists:last(string:lexemes(lists:flatten(StoreString),"$ \n")),
%% check that files are no longer in original directories...
?line ok = check_gone(ThisDir,atom_to_list(Node)++"-file_fetch"),
@@ -778,37 +778,37 @@ otp_4967_2(suite) ->
otp_4967_2(doc) ->
["OTP-4967: Trace message sent to {Name, Node}"];
otp_4967_2(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- io:format("1: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("1: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line Privdir = priv_dir(Config),
- io:format("2: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("2: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line File = filename:join(Privdir,"otp_4967"),
- io:format("3: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("3: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line S = self(),
- io:format("4: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("4: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line {ok,[Node]} =
ttb:tracer(node(),[{file, File},
{handler,{fun myhandler/4, S}}]),
- io:format("5: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("5: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
%% Test that delayed registration of a process works.
receive after 200 -> ok end,
?line register(otp_4967,self()),
- io:format("6: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("6: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line {ok,[{S,[{matched,Node,1}]}]} = ttb:p(self(),s),
- io:format("7: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("7: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line {otp_4967,node()} ! heihopp,
- io:format("8: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("8: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line stopped = ttb:stop([format]),
- io:format("9: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("9: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line Msgs = flush(),
- io:format("10: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("10: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line io:format("Messages received: \n~p\n",[Msgs]),
- io:format("11: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("11: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line true = lists:member(heihopp,Msgs), % the heihopp message itself
- io:format("13: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("13: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line {value,{trace_ts,_,send,heihopp,{_,otp_4967,Node},{_,_,_}}} =
lists:keysearch(heihopp,4,Msgs), % trace trace of the heihopp message
- io:format("14: ~p",[now()]),
+ io:format("14: ~p",[erlang:timestamp()]),
?line end_of_trace = lists:last(Msgs), % end of the trace
ok.
@@ -1035,8 +1035,8 @@ logfile_name_in_fetch_dir(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
?line {ServerNode, ClientNode} = start_client_and_server(),
?line begin_trace(ServerNode, ClientNode, {local, ?FNAME}),
?line {_,Dir} = ttb:stop([return_fetch_dir]),
- ?line P1 = lists:nth(3, string:tokens(filename:basename(Dir), "_")),
- ?line P2 = hd(string:tokens(P1, "-")),
+ ?line P1 = lists:nth(3, string:lexemes(filename:basename(Dir), "_")),
+ ?line P2 = hd(string:lexemes(P1, "-")),
?line _File = P2.
logfile_name_in_fetch_dir(cleanup,_Config) ->
?line stop_client_and_server().
diff --git a/lib/observer/vsn.mk b/lib/observer/vsn.mk
index 21edfcd184..5f43198f85 100644
--- a/lib/observer/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/observer/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-OBSERVER_VSN = 2.4
+OBSERVER_VSN = 2.5
diff --git a/lib/os_mon/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/os_mon/doc/src/notes.xml
index df4151147c..b29a64155e 100644
--- a/lib/os_mon/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/os_mon/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -31,6 +31,23 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to the OS_Mon application.</p>
+<section><title>Os_Mon 2.4.3</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ On macOS 10.13 (High Sierra), disksup could not grab
+ information for any disks that used the new APFS file
+ system. That has been corrected.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14560 Aux Id: ERL-461 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Os_Mon 2.4.2</title>
<section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
diff --git a/lib/os_mon/src/cpu_sup.erl b/lib/os_mon/src/cpu_sup.erl
index e758b63d19..c1c972b5b1 100644
--- a/lib/os_mon/src/cpu_sup.erl
+++ b/lib/os_mon/src/cpu_sup.erl
@@ -244,7 +244,7 @@ get_uint32_measurement(Request, #internal{os_type = {unix, Sys}}) when Sys == ir
%% Get the load average using uptime.
%% "8:01pm up 2 days, 22:12, 4 users, load average: 0.70, 0.58, 0.43"
D = os:cmd("uptime") -- "\n",
- Avg = lists:reverse(hd(string:tokens(lists:reverse(D), ":"))),
+ Avg = lists:reverse(hd(string:lexemes(lists:reverse(D), ":"))),
{ok, [L1, L5, L15], _} = io_lib:fread("~f, ~f, ~f", Avg),
case Request of
?avg1 -> sunify(L1);
diff --git a/lib/os_mon/src/memsup.erl b/lib/os_mon/src/memsup.erl
index 0a9a883390..95cb798ba5 100644
--- a/lib/os_mon/src/memsup.erl
+++ b/lib/os_mon/src/memsup.erl
@@ -705,7 +705,7 @@ get_os_wordsize_with_uname() ->
_ -> 32
end.
-clean_string(String) -> lists:flatten(string:tokens(String,"\r\n\t ")).
+clean_string(String) -> lists:flatten(string:lexemes(String,"\r\n\t ")).
%%--Replying to pending clients-----------------------------------------
diff --git a/lib/os_mon/vsn.mk b/lib/os_mon/vsn.mk
index 59a3d9dee4..e4250f577b 100644
--- a/lib/os_mon/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/os_mon/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-OS_MON_VSN = 2.4.2
+OS_MON_VSN = 2.4.3
diff --git a/lib/parsetools/src/leex.erl b/lib/parsetools/src/leex.erl
index e2e7d7359f..8a4a5e8d86 100644
--- a/lib/parsetools/src/leex.erl
+++ b/lib/parsetools/src/leex.erl
@@ -37,7 +37,6 @@
-import(lists, [member/2,reverse/1,sort/1,delete/2,
keysort/2,keydelete/3,
map/2,foldl/3,foreach/2,flatmap/2]).
--import(string, [substr/2,substr/3,span/2]).
-import(ordsets, [is_element/2,add_element/2,union/2]).
-import(orddict, [store/3]).
@@ -251,10 +250,10 @@ is_filename(T) ->
shorten_filename(Name0) ->
{ok,Cwd} = file:get_cwd(),
- case lists:prefix(Cwd, Name0) of
- false -> Name0;
- true ->
- case lists:nthtail(length(Cwd), Name0) of
+ case string:prefix(Name0, Cwd) of
+ nomatch -> Name0;
+ Rest ->
+ case unicode:characters_to_list(Rest) of
"/"++N -> N;
N -> N
end
@@ -490,12 +489,9 @@ parse_rules_end(_, NextLine, REAs, As, St) ->
%% action has been read. Keep track of line number.
collect_rule(Ifile, Chars, L0) ->
- %% Erlang strings are 1 based, but re 0 :-(
- {match,[{St0,Len}|_]} = re:run(Chars, "[^ \t\r\n]+", [unicode]),
- St = St0 + 1,
- %%io:fwrite("RE = ~p~n", [substr(Chars, St, Len)]),
- case collect_action(Ifile, substr(Chars, St+Len), L0, []) of
- {ok,[{':',_}|Toks],L1} -> {ok,substr(Chars, St, Len),Toks,L1};
+ {RegExp,Rest} = string:take(Chars, " \t\r\n", true),
+ case collect_action(Ifile, Rest, L0, []) of
+ {ok,[{':',_}|Toks],L1} -> {ok,RegExp,Toks,L1};
{ok,_,_} -> {error,{L0,leex,bad_rule}};
{eof,L1} -> {error,{L1,leex,bad_rule}};
{error,E,_} -> {error,E}
@@ -549,7 +545,7 @@ var_used(Name, Toks) ->
parse_rule_regexp(RE0, [{M,Exp}|Ms], St) ->
Split= re:split(RE0, "\\{" ++ M ++ "\\}", [{return,list},unicode]),
- RE1 = string:join(Split, Exp),
+ RE1 = lists:append(lists:join(Exp, Split)),
parse_rule_regexp(RE1, Ms, St);
parse_rule_regexp(RE, [], St) ->
%%io:fwrite("RE = ~p~n", [RE]),
@@ -589,9 +585,9 @@ nextline(Ifile, L, St) ->
eof -> {eof,L};
{error, _} -> add_error({L+1, leex, cannot_parse}, St);
Chars ->
- case substr(Chars, span(Chars, " \t\n")+1) of
- [$%|_Rest] -> nextline(Ifile, L+1, St);
- [] -> nextline(Ifile, L+1, St);
+ case string:take(Chars, " \t\n") of
+ {_, [$%|_Rest]} -> nextline(Ifile, L+1, St);
+ {_, []} -> nextline(Ifile, L+1, St);
_Other -> {ok,Chars,L+1}
end
end.
@@ -824,7 +820,7 @@ re_char_class(Cs, Cc, _) -> {reverse(Cc),Cs}. % Preserve order
%% posix_cc("space" ++ Cs) -> {space,Cs};
%% posix_cc("upper" ++ Cs) -> {upper,Cs};
%% posix_cc("xdigit" ++ Cs) -> {xdigit,Cs};
-%% posix_cc(Cs) -> parse_error({posix_cc,substr(Cs, 1, 5)}).
+%% posix_cc(Cs) -> parse_error({posix_cc,string:slice(Cs, 0, 5)}).
escape_char($n) -> $\n; % \n = LF
escape_char($r) -> $\r; % \r = CR
@@ -863,7 +859,7 @@ escape_char(C) -> C. % Pass it straight through
%% re_number(Cs, Acc) -> {Acc,Cs}.
string_between(Cs1, Cs2) ->
- substr(Cs1, 1, length(Cs1)-length(Cs2)).
+ string:slice(Cs1, 0, string:length(Cs1)-string:length(Cs2)).
%% We use standard methods, Thompson's construction and subset
%% construction, to create first an NFA and then a DFA from the
@@ -1343,7 +1339,7 @@ out_file(Ifile, Ofile, St, DFA, DF, Actions, Code, L) ->
eof -> output_file_directive(Ofile, St#leex.ifile, L);
{error, _} -> add_error(St#leex.ifile, {L, leex, cannot_parse}, St);
Line ->
- case substr(Line, 1, 5) of
+ case string:slice(Line, 0, 5) of
"##mod" -> out_module(Ofile, St);
"##cod" -> out_erlang_code(Ofile, St, Code, L);
"##dfa" -> out_dfa(Ofile, St, DFA, Code, DF, L);
@@ -1523,7 +1519,7 @@ prep_out_actions(As) ->
Name = list_to_atom(lists:concat([yyaction_,A])),
[Chars,Len,Line,_,_] = Vars,
Args = [V || V <- [Chars,Len,Line], V =/= "_"],
- ArgsChars = string:join(Args, ", "),
+ ArgsChars = lists:join(", ", Args),
{A,Code,Vars,Name,Args,ArgsChars}
end, As).
diff --git a/lib/parsetools/src/yecc.erl b/lib/parsetools/src/yecc.erl
index 36e33b52a4..b4e1cfe5e3 100644
--- a/lib/parsetools/src/yecc.erl
+++ b/lib/parsetools/src/yecc.erl
@@ -365,10 +365,10 @@ is_filename(T) ->
shorten_filename(Name0) ->
{ok,Cwd} = file:get_cwd(),
- case lists:prefix(Cwd, Name0) of
- false -> Name0;
- true ->
- case lists:nthtail(length(Cwd), Name0) of
+ case string:prefix(Name0, Cwd) of
+ nomatch -> Name0;
+ Rest ->
+ case unicode:characters_to_list(Rest) of
"/"++N -> N;
N -> N
end
@@ -2196,8 +2196,8 @@ output_reduce(St0, State, Terminal,
St20;
true ->
Ns = "Nss",
- Tmp = string:join(lists:duplicate(NmbrOfDaughters - 1, "_"),
- ","),
+ Tmp = lists:join(",",
+ lists:duplicate(NmbrOfDaughters - 1, "_")),
fwrite(St20, <<" [~s|Nss] = Ss,\n">>, [Tmp])
end,
St40 = case tokens(RuleNmbr, St30) of
diff --git a/lib/public_key/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/public_key/doc/src/notes.xml
index 64592a6d87..7a7c828760 100644
--- a/lib/public_key/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/public_key/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -35,6 +35,76 @@
<file>notes.xml</file>
</header>
+<section><title>Public_Key 1.5</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ public_key now handles elliptic curve parameters in a
+ consistent way so that decoded ECDSA keys can be
+ correctly re-encoded.</p>
+ <p>
+ *** POTENTIAL INCOMPATIBILITY ***</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14621 Aux Id: ERL-480, ERL-481 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Extend crypto:sign, crypto:verify, public_key:sign and
+ public_key:verify with:</p>
+ <p>
+ * support for RSASSA-PS padding for signatures and for
+ saltlength setting<br/> * X9.31 RSA padding.<br/> * sha,
+ sha224, sha256, sha384, and sha512 for dss signatures as
+ mentioned in NIST SP 800-57 Part 1.<br/> * ripemd160 to
+ be used for rsa signatures.</p>
+ <p>
+ This is a manual merge of half of the pull request 838 by
+ potatosalad from Sept 2015.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-13704 Aux Id: PR838 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Add API function pkix_test_data/1 for facilitating
+ automated testing. This is useful for applications that
+ preform X509-certifcate path validation of so called
+ certificate chains, such as TLS.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14181</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Improved error propagation and reports</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14236</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ RSAPrivateKey version is set to 'two-prime' instead of
+ using the underlying enumeration value directly.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14534</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Deprecated function <c>crypto:rand_uniform/2</c> is
+ replaced by <c>rand:uniform/1</c>.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14608</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Public_Key 1.4.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/public_key/doc/src/public_key.xml b/lib/public_key/doc/src/public_key.xml
index 942203bd12..fcf37a7a4d 100644
--- a/lib/public_key/doc/src/public_key.xml
+++ b/lib/public_key/doc/src/public_key.xml
@@ -119,6 +119,10 @@
<tag><c>ec_private_key() =</c></tag>
<item><p><c>#'ECPrivateKey'{}</c></p></item>
+ <tag><c>key_params() =</c></tag>
+ <item><p> #'DHParameter'{} | {namedCurve, oid()} | #'ECParameters'{}
+ | {rsa, Size::integer(), PubExp::integer()} </p></item>
+
<tag><c>public_crypt_options() =</c></tag>
<item><p><c>[{rsa_pad, rsa_padding()}]</c></p></item>
@@ -347,8 +351,7 @@
<name>generate_key(Params) -> {Public::binary(), Private::binary()} | #'ECPrivateKey'{} | #'RSAPrivateKey'{}</name>
<fsummary>Generates a new keypair.</fsummary>
<type>
- <v>Params = #'DHParameter'{} | {namedCurve, oid()} | #'ECParameters'{}
- | {rsa, Size::integer(), PubExp::integer} </v>
+ <v>Params = key_params()</v>
</type>
<desc>
<p>Generates a new keypair. Note that except for Diffie-Hellman
@@ -769,6 +772,85 @@ fun(#'DistributionPoint'{}, #'CertificateList'{},
</desc>
</func>
+ <func>
+ <name>pkix_test_data(Options) -> Config </name>
+ <fsummary>Creates certificate test data.</fsummary>
+ <type>
+ <v>Options = #{chain_type() := chain_opts()} </v>
+ <d>Options for ROOT, Intermediate and Peer certs</d>
+
+ <v>chain_type() = server_chain | client_chain </v>
+
+ <v>chain_opts() = #{chain_end() := [cert_opt()],
+ intermediates => [[cert_opt()]]}</v>
+ <d>A valid chain must have at least a ROOT and a peer cert</d>
+
+ <v>chain_end() = root | peer </v>
+
+ <v>cert_opt() = {Key, Value}</v>
+ <d>For available options see <seealso marker="#cert_opt"> cert_opt()</seealso> below.</d>
+
+ <v>Config = #{server_config := [conf_opt()],
+ client_config := [conf_opt()]}</v>
+
+ <v>conf_opt() = {cert, der_encoded()} | {key, der_encoded()} |{cacerts, [der_encoded()]}</v>
+ <d>This is a subset of the type <seealso marker="ssl:ssl#type-ssloption"> ssl:ssl_option()</seealso> </d>
+ </type>
+
+ <desc>
+ <p>Creates certificate test data to facilitate automated testing
+ of applications using X509-certificates often through
+ SSL/TLS. The test data can be used when you have control
+ over both the client and the server in a test scenario.
+ </p>
+
+ <p> The <marker id="cert_opt"/> cert_opt() type consists of the following options: </p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag> {digest, digest_type()}</tag>
+ <item><p>Hash algorithm to be used for
+ signing the certificate together with the key option. Defaults to sha that is sha1.
+ </p></item>
+ <tag> {key, key_params() | private_key()}</tag>
+ <item><p>Parameters to be used to call public_key:generate_key/1, to generate a key, or an existing
+ key. Defaults to generating an ECDSA key. Note this could fail if Erlang/OTP is compiled with a very old
+ cryptolib.</p></item>
+ <tag> {validity, {From::erlang:timestamp(), To::erlang:timestamp()}} </tag>
+ <item><p>The validity period of the certificate.</p></item>
+ <tag> {extensions, [#'Extension'{}]}</tag>
+ <item><p> Extensions to include in the certificate.</p>
+
+ <p>Default extensions included in CA certificates if not
+ otherwise specified are: </p>
+ <code>[#'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-keyUsage',
+ extnValue = [keyCertSign, cRLSign],
+ critical = false},
+#'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-basicConstraints',
+ extnValue = #'BasicConstraints'{cA = true},
+ critical = true}]
+ </code>
+
+ <p>Default extensions included in the server peer cert if not
+ otherwise specified are: </p>
+ <code>[#'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-keyUsage',
+ extnValue = [digitalSignature, keyAgreement],
+ critical = false},
+#'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-subjectAltName',
+ extnValue = [{dNSName, Hostname}],
+ critical = false}]
+ </code>
+ <p>Hostname is the result of calling net_adm:localhost() in the Erlang node
+ where this funcion is called.
+ </p></item>
+
+ </taglist>
+
+ <note><p>
+ Note that the generated certificates and keys does not provide a formally correct PKIX-trust-chain
+ and they can not be used to achieve real security. This function is provided for testing purposes only.
+</p></note>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+
<func>
<name>pkix_verify(Cert, Key) -> boolean()</name>
<fsummary>Verifies PKIX x.509 certificate signature.</fsummary>
diff --git a/lib/public_key/doc/src/public_key_records.xml b/lib/public_key/doc/src/public_key_records.xml
index d34f3ed9a3..739310c88b 100644
--- a/lib/public_key/doc/src/public_key_records.xml
+++ b/lib/public_key/doc/src/public_key_records.xml
@@ -171,9 +171,9 @@
#'ECPrivateKey'{
version, % integer()
privateKey, % binary()
- parameters, % der_encoded() - {'EcpkParameters', #'ECParameters'{}} |
- {'EcpkParameters', {namedCurve, oid()}} |
- {'EcpkParameters', 'NULL'} % Inherited by CA
+ parameters, % {ecParameters, #'ECParameters'{}} |
+ % {namedCurve, Oid::tuple()} |
+ % {implicitlyCA, 'NULL'}
publicKey % bitstring()
}.
diff --git a/lib/public_key/src/pubkey_cert.erl b/lib/public_key/src/pubkey_cert.erl
index f45f2c2e9a..13833830a7 100644
--- a/lib/public_key/src/pubkey_cert.erl
+++ b/lib/public_key/src/pubkey_cert.erl
@@ -32,12 +32,25 @@
is_issuer/2, issuer_id/2, distribution_points/1,
is_fixed_dh_cert/1, verify_data/1, verify_fun/4,
select_extension/2, match_name/3,
- extensions_list/1, cert_auth_key_id/1, time_str_2_gregorian_sec/1]).
+ extensions_list/1, cert_auth_key_id/1, time_str_2_gregorian_sec/1,
+ gen_test_certs/1]).
-define(NULL, 0).
-
+
+-export_type([chain_opts/0, test_config/0]).
+
+-type cert_opt() :: {digest, public_key:digest_type()} |
+ {key, public_key:key_params() | public_key:private_key()} |
+ {validity, {From::erlang:timestamp(), To::erlang:timestamp()}} |
+ {extensions, [#'Extension'{}]}.
+-type chain_end() :: root | peer.
+-type chain_opts() :: #{chain_end() := [cert_opt()], intermediates => [[cert_opt()]]}.
+-type conf_opt() :: {cert, public_key:der_encoded()} |
+ {key, public_key:der_encoded()} |
+ {cacerts, [public_key:der_encoded()]}.
+-type test_config() :: #{server_config := [conf_opt()], client_config := [conf_opt()]}.
%%====================================================================
-%% Internal application API
+%% Internal application APIu
%%====================================================================
%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -417,6 +430,31 @@ match_name(Fun, Name, PermittedName, [Head | Tail]) ->
false ->
match_name(Fun, Name, Head, Tail)
end.
+%%%
+-spec gen_test_certs(#{server_chain:= chain_opts(), client_chain:= chain_opts()}) -> test_config().
+
+%% Generates server and and client configuration for testing
+%% purposes. All certificate options have default values
+gen_test_certs(#{client_chain := #{root := ClientRootConf,
+ intermediates := ClientCAs,
+ peer := ClientPeer},
+ server_chain :=
+ #{root := ServerRootConf,
+ intermediates := ServerCAs,
+ peer := ServerPeer}}) ->
+ SRootKey = gen_key(proplists:get_value(key, ServerRootConf, default_key_gen())),
+ CRootKey = gen_key(proplists:get_value(key, ClientRootConf, default_key_gen())),
+ ServerRoot = root_cert("server", SRootKey, ClientRootConf),
+ ClientRoot = root_cert("client", CRootKey, ServerRootConf),
+
+ [{ServerDERCert, ServerDERKey} | ServerCAsKeys] = config(server, ServerRoot,
+ SRootKey, lists:reverse([ServerPeer | lists:reverse(ServerCAs)])),
+ [{ClientDERCert, ClientDERKey} | ClientCAsKeys] = config(client, ClientRoot,
+ CRootKey, lists:reverse([ClientPeer | lists:reverse(ClientCAs)])),
+ ServerDERCA = ca_config(ClientRoot, ServerCAsKeys),
+ ClientDERCA = ca_config(ServerRoot, ClientCAsKeys),
+ #{server_config => [{cert, ServerDERCert}, {key, ServerDERKey}, {cacerts, ServerDERCA}],
+ client_config => [{cert, ClientDERCert}, {key, ClientDERKey}, {cacerts, ClientDERCA}]}.
%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
%%% Internal functions
@@ -1064,3 +1102,212 @@ missing_basic_constraints(OtpCert, SelfSigned, ValidationState, VerifyFun, UserS
Len - 1},
UserState}
end.
+
+ gen_key(KeyGen) ->
+ case is_key(KeyGen) of
+ true ->
+ KeyGen;
+ false ->
+ public_key:generate_key(KeyGen)
+ end.
+
+is_key(#'DSAPrivateKey'{}) ->
+ true;
+is_key(#'RSAPrivateKey'{}) ->
+ true;
+is_key(#'ECPrivateKey'{}) ->
+ true;
+is_key(_) ->
+ false.
+
+root_cert(Role, PrivKey, Opts) ->
+ TBS = cert_template(),
+ Issuer = issuer("root", Role, " ROOT CA"),
+ OTPTBS = TBS#'OTPTBSCertificate'{
+ signature = sign_algorithm(PrivKey, Opts),
+ issuer = Issuer,
+ validity = validity(Opts),
+ subject = Issuer,
+ subjectPublicKeyInfo = public_key(PrivKey),
+ extensions = extensions(Role, ca, Opts)
+ },
+ public_key:pkix_sign(OTPTBS, PrivKey).
+
+cert_template() ->
+ #'OTPTBSCertificate'{
+ version = v3,
+ serialNumber = trunc(rand:uniform()*100000000)*10000 + 1,
+ issuerUniqueID = asn1_NOVALUE,
+ subjectUniqueID = asn1_NOVALUE
+ }.
+issuer(Contact, Role, Name) ->
+ subject(Contact, Role ++ Name).
+
+subject(Contact, Name) ->
+ Opts = [{email, Contact ++ "@erlang.org"},
+ {name, Name},
+ {city, "Stockholm"},
+ {country, "SE"},
+ {org, "erlang"},
+ {org_unit, "automated testing"}],
+ subject(Opts).
+
+subject(SubjectOpts) when is_list(SubjectOpts) ->
+ Encode = fun(Opt) ->
+ {Type,Value} = subject_enc(Opt),
+ [#'AttributeTypeAndValue'{type=Type, value=Value}]
+ end,
+ {rdnSequence, [Encode(Opt) || Opt <- SubjectOpts]}.
+
+subject_enc({name, Name}) ->
+ {?'id-at-commonName', {printableString, Name}};
+subject_enc({email, Email}) ->
+ {?'id-emailAddress', Email};
+subject_enc({city, City}) ->
+ {?'id-at-localityName', {printableString, City}};
+subject_enc({org, Org}) ->
+ {?'id-at-organizationName', {printableString, Org}};
+subject_enc({org_unit, OrgUnit}) ->
+ {?'id-at-organizationalUnitName', {printableString, OrgUnit}};
+subject_enc({country, Country}) ->
+ {?'id-at-countryName', Country}.
+
+validity(Opts) ->
+ DefFrom0 = calendar:gregorian_days_to_date(calendar:date_to_gregorian_days(date())-1),
+ DefTo0 = calendar:gregorian_days_to_date(calendar:date_to_gregorian_days(date())+7),
+ {DefFrom, DefTo} = proplists:get_value(validity, Opts, {DefFrom0, DefTo0}),
+ Format = fun({Y,M,D}) ->
+ lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~w~2..0w~2..0w000000Z",[Y,M,D]))
+ end,
+ #'Validity'{notBefore={generalTime, Format(DefFrom)},
+ notAfter ={generalTime, Format(DefTo)}}.
+
+sign_algorithm(#'RSAPrivateKey'{}, Opts) ->
+ Type = rsa_digest_oid(proplists:get_value(digest, Opts, sha1)),
+ #'SignatureAlgorithm'{algorithm = Type,
+ parameters = 'NULL'};
+sign_algorithm(#'DSAPrivateKey'{p=P, q=Q, g=G}, _Opts) ->
+ #'SignatureAlgorithm'{algorithm = ?'id-dsa-with-sha1',
+ parameters = {params,#'Dss-Parms'{p=P, q=Q, g=G}}};
+sign_algorithm(#'ECPrivateKey'{parameters = Parms}, Opts) ->
+ Type = ecdsa_digest_oid(proplists:get_value(digest, Opts, sha1)),
+ #'SignatureAlgorithm'{algorithm = Type,
+ parameters = Parms}.
+rsa_digest_oid(sha1) ->
+ ?'sha1WithRSAEncryption';
+rsa_digest_oid(sha512) ->
+ ?'sha512WithRSAEncryption';
+rsa_digest_oid(sha384) ->
+ ?'sha384WithRSAEncryption';
+rsa_digest_oid(sha256) ->
+ ?'sha256WithRSAEncryption';
+rsa_digest_oid(md5) ->
+ ?'md5WithRSAEncryption'.
+
+ecdsa_digest_oid(sha1) ->
+ ?'ecdsa-with-SHA1';
+ecdsa_digest_oid(sha512) ->
+ ?'ecdsa-with-SHA512';
+ecdsa_digest_oid(sha384) ->
+ ?'ecdsa-with-SHA384';
+ecdsa_digest_oid(sha256) ->
+ ?'ecdsa-with-SHA256'.
+
+config(Role, Root, Key, Opts) ->
+ cert_chain(Role, Root, Key, Opts).
+
+cert_chain(Role, Root, RootKey, Opts) ->
+ cert_chain(Role, Root, RootKey, Opts, 0, []).
+
+cert_chain(Role, IssuerCert, IssuerKey, [PeerOpts], _, Acc) ->
+ Key = gen_key(proplists:get_value(key, PeerOpts, default_key_gen())),
+ Cert = cert(Role, public_key:pkix_decode_cert(IssuerCert, otp),
+ IssuerKey, Key, "admin", " Peer cert", PeerOpts, peer),
+ [{Cert, Key}, {IssuerCert, IssuerKey} | Acc];
+cert_chain(Role, IssuerCert, IssuerKey, [CAOpts | Rest], N, Acc) ->
+ Key = gen_key(proplists:get_value(key, CAOpts, default_key_gen())),
+ Cert = cert(Role, public_key:pkix_decode_cert(IssuerCert, otp), IssuerKey, Key, "webadmin",
+ " Intermidiate CA " ++ integer_to_list(N), CAOpts, ca),
+ cert_chain(Role, Cert, Key, Rest, N+1, [{IssuerCert, IssuerKey} | Acc]).
+
+cert(Role, #'OTPCertificate'{tbsCertificate = #'OTPTBSCertificate'{subject = Issuer}},
+ PrivKey, Key, Contact, Name, Opts, Type) ->
+ TBS = cert_template(),
+ OTPTBS = TBS#'OTPTBSCertificate'{
+ signature = sign_algorithm(PrivKey, Opts),
+ issuer = Issuer,
+ validity = validity(Opts),
+ subject = subject(Contact, atom_to_list(Role) ++ Name),
+ subjectPublicKeyInfo = public_key(Key),
+ extensions = extensions(Role, Type, Opts)
+
+ },
+ public_key:pkix_sign(OTPTBS, PrivKey).
+
+ca_config(Root, CAsKeys) ->
+ [Root | [CA || {CA, _} <- CAsKeys]].
+
+default_key_gen() ->
+ case crypto:ec_curves() of
+ [] ->
+ {rsa, 2048, 17};
+ [Curve |_] ->
+ Oid = pubkey_cert_records:namedCurves(Curve),
+ {namedCurve, Oid}
+ end.
+
+public_key(#'RSAPrivateKey'{modulus=N, publicExponent=E}) ->
+ Public = #'RSAPublicKey'{modulus=N, publicExponent=E},
+ Algo = #'PublicKeyAlgorithm'{algorithm= ?rsaEncryption, parameters='NULL'},
+ #'OTPSubjectPublicKeyInfo'{algorithm = Algo,
+ subjectPublicKey = Public};
+public_key(#'DSAPrivateKey'{p=P, q=Q, g=G, y=Y}) ->
+ Algo = #'PublicKeyAlgorithm'{algorithm= ?'id-dsa',
+ parameters={params, #'Dss-Parms'{p=P, q=Q, g=G}}},
+ #'OTPSubjectPublicKeyInfo'{algorithm = Algo, subjectPublicKey = Y};
+public_key(#'ECPrivateKey'{version = _Version,
+ privateKey = _PrivKey,
+ parameters = Params,
+ publicKey = PubKey}) ->
+ Algo = #'PublicKeyAlgorithm'{algorithm= ?'id-ecPublicKey', parameters=Params},
+ #'OTPSubjectPublicKeyInfo'{algorithm = Algo,
+ subjectPublicKey = #'ECPoint'{point = PubKey}}.
+
+extensions(Role, Type, Opts) ->
+ Exts = proplists:get_value(extensions, Opts, []),
+ add_default_extensions(Role, Type, Exts).
+
+add_default_extensions(_, ca, Exts) ->
+ Default = [#'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-keyUsage',
+ extnValue = [keyCertSign, cRLSign],
+ critical = false},
+ #'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-basicConstraints',
+ extnValue = #'BasicConstraints'{cA = true},
+ critical = true}],
+ add_default_extensions(Default, Exts);
+
+add_default_extensions(server, peer, Exts) ->
+ Hostname = net_adm:localhost(),
+ Default = [#'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-keyUsage',
+ extnValue = [digitalSignature, keyAgreement],
+ critical = false},
+ #'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-subjectAltName',
+ extnValue = [{dNSName, Hostname}],
+ critical = false}
+ ],
+ add_default_extensions(Default, Exts);
+
+add_default_extensions(_, peer, Exts) ->
+ Exts.
+
+add_default_extensions(Defaults0, Exts) ->
+ Defaults = lists:filtermap(fun(#'Extension'{extnID = ID} = Ext) ->
+ case lists:keymember(ID, 2, Exts) of
+ true ->
+ false;
+ false ->
+ {true, Ext}
+ end
+ end, Defaults0),
+ Exts ++ Defaults.
+
diff --git a/lib/public_key/src/public_key.erl b/lib/public_key/src/public_key.erl
index c2060c144c..cc01b61433 100644
--- a/lib/public_key/src/public_key.erl
+++ b/lib/public_key/src/public_key.erl
@@ -58,11 +58,13 @@
pkix_match_dist_point/2,
pkix_crl_verify/2,
pkix_crl_issuer/1,
- short_name_hash/1
+ short_name_hash/1,
+ pkix_test_data/1
]).
-export_type([public_key/0, private_key/0, pem_entry/0,
- pki_asn1_type/0, asn1_type/0, ssh_file/0, der_encoded/0]).
+ pki_asn1_type/0, asn1_type/0, ssh_file/0, der_encoded/0,
+ key_params/0, digest_type/0]).
-type public_key() :: rsa_public_key() | dsa_public_key() | ec_public_key().
-type private_key() :: rsa_private_key() | dsa_private_key() | ec_private_key().
@@ -71,8 +73,12 @@
-type rsa_private_key() :: #'RSAPrivateKey'{}.
-type dsa_private_key() :: #'DSAPrivateKey'{}.
-type dsa_public_key() :: {integer(), #'Dss-Parms'{}}.
--type ec_public_key() :: {#'ECPoint'{},{namedCurve, Oid::tuple()} | #'ECParameters'{}}.
+-type ecpk_parameters() :: {ecParameters, #'ECParameters'{}} | {namedCurve, Oid::tuple()}.
+-type ecpk_parameters_api() :: ecpk_parameters() | #'ECParameters'{} | {namedCurve, Name::atom()}.
+-type ec_public_key() :: {#'ECPoint'{}, ecpk_parameters_api()}.
-type ec_private_key() :: #'ECPrivateKey'{}.
+-type key_params() :: #'DHParameter'{} | {namedCurve, oid()} | #'ECParameters'{} |
+ {rsa, Size::integer(), PubExp::integer()}.
-type der_encoded() :: binary().
-type pki_asn1_type() :: 'Certificate' | 'RSAPrivateKey' | 'RSAPublicKey'
| 'DSAPrivateKey' | 'DSAPublicKey' | 'DHParameter'
@@ -100,6 +106,7 @@
-type crl_reason() :: unspecified | keyCompromise | cACompromise | affiliationChanged | superseded
| cessationOfOperation | certificateHold | privilegeWithdrawn | aACompromise.
-type oid() :: tuple().
+-type chain_type() :: server_chain | client_chain.
-define(UINT32(X), X:32/unsigned-big-integer).
-define(DER_NULL, <<5, 0>>).
@@ -399,9 +406,7 @@ dh_gex_group(Min, N, Max, Groups) ->
%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
-spec generate_key(#'DHParameter'{}) ->
{Public::binary(), Private::binary()};
- ({namedCurve, Name ::oid()}) ->
- #'ECPrivateKey'{};
- (#'ECParameters'{}) ->
+ (ecpk_parameters_api()) ->
#'ECPrivateKey'{};
({rsa, Size::pos_integer(), PubExp::pos_integer()}) ->
#'RSAPrivateKey'{}.
@@ -412,6 +417,8 @@ generate_key(#'DHParameter'{prime = P, base = G}) ->
crypto:generate_key(dh, [P, G]);
generate_key({namedCurve, _} = Params) ->
ec_generate_key(Params);
+generate_key({ecParameters, _} = Params) ->
+ ec_generate_key(Params);
generate_key(#'ECParameters'{} = Params) ->
ec_generate_key(Params);
generate_key({rsa, ModulusSize, PublicExponent}) ->
@@ -1025,6 +1032,22 @@ short_name_hash({rdnSequence, _Attributes} = Name) ->
<<HashValue:32/little, _/binary>> = crypto:hash(sha, HashThis),
string:to_lower(string:right(integer_to_list(HashValue, 16), 8, $0)).
+
+%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
+-spec pkix_test_data(#{chain_type() := pubkey_cert:chain_opts()}) ->
+ pubkey_cert:test_config().
+
+%% Description: Generates OpenSSL-style hash of a name.
+%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+pkix_test_data(#{client_chain := ClientChain0,
+ server_chain := ServerChain0}) ->
+ Default = #{intermediates => []},
+ ClientChain = maps:merge(Default, ClientChain0),
+ ServerChain = maps:merge(Default, ServerChain0),
+ pubkey_cert:gen_test_certs(#{client_chain => ClientChain,
+ server_chain => ServerChain}).
+
%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
%%% Internal functions
%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -1286,22 +1309,34 @@ format_rsa_private_key(#'RSAPrivateKey'{modulus = N, publicExponent = E,
is_integer(D) ->
[E, N, D].
+-spec ec_generate_key(ecpk_parameters_api()) -> #'ECPrivateKey'{}.
ec_generate_key(Params) ->
Curve = ec_curve_spec(Params),
Term = crypto:generate_key(ecdh, Curve),
- ec_key(Term, Params).
+ NormParams = ec_normalize_params(Params),
+ ec_key(Term, NormParams).
+-spec ec_normalize_params(ecpk_parameters_api()) -> ecpk_parameters().
+ec_normalize_params({namedCurve, Name}) when is_atom(Name) ->
+ {namedCurve, pubkey_cert_records:namedCurves(Name)};
+ec_normalize_params(#'ECParameters'{} = ECParams) ->
+ {ecParameters, ECParams};
+ec_normalize_params(Other) -> Other.
+
+-spec ec_curve_spec(ecpk_parameters_api()) -> term().
ec_curve_spec( #'ECParameters'{fieldID = FieldId, curve = PCurve, base = Base, order = Order, cofactor = CoFactor }) ->
Field = {pubkey_cert_records:supportedCurvesTypes(FieldId#'FieldID'.fieldType),
FieldId#'FieldID'.parameters},
Curve = {PCurve#'Curve'.a, PCurve#'Curve'.b, none},
{Field, Curve, Base, Order, CoFactor};
+ec_curve_spec({ecParameters, ECParams}) ->
+ ec_curve_spec(ECParams);
ec_curve_spec({namedCurve, OID}) when is_tuple(OID), is_integer(element(1,OID)) ->
ec_curve_spec({namedCurve, pubkey_cert_records:namedCurves(OID)});
ec_curve_spec({namedCurve, Name}) when is_atom(Name) ->
crypto:ec_curve(Name).
-
+-spec ec_key({PubKey::term(), PrivateKey::term()}, Params::ecpk_parameters()) -> #'ECPrivateKey'{}.
ec_key({PubKey, PrivateKey}, Params) ->
#'ECPrivateKey'{version = 1,
privateKey = PrivateKey,
diff --git a/lib/public_key/test/public_key_SUITE.erl b/lib/public_key/test/public_key_SUITE.erl
index 80895ce97c..374fb20375 100644
--- a/lib/public_key/test/public_key_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/public_key/test/public_key_SUITE.erl
@@ -48,6 +48,8 @@ all() ->
pkix_verify_hostname_cn,
pkix_verify_hostname_subjAltName,
pkix_verify_hostname_options,
+ pkix_test_data_all_default,
+ pkix_test_data,
short_cert_issuer_hash, short_crl_issuer_hash,
ssh_hostkey_fingerprint_md5_implicit,
ssh_hostkey_fingerprint_md5,
@@ -60,7 +62,8 @@ all() ->
groups() ->
[{pem_decode_encode, [], [dsa_pem, rsa_pem, ec_pem, encrypted_pem,
- dh_pem, cert_pem, pkcs7_pem, pkcs10_pem]},
+ dh_pem, cert_pem, pkcs7_pem, pkcs10_pem, ec_pem2,
+ ec_pem_encode_generated]},
{ssh_public_key_decode_encode, [],
[ssh_rsa_public_key, ssh_dsa_public_key, ssh_ecdsa_public_key,
ssh_rfc4716_rsa_comment, ssh_rfc4716_dsa_comment,
@@ -92,6 +95,14 @@ init_per_group(_GroupName, Config) ->
end_per_group(_GroupName, Config) ->
Config.
%%-------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+init_per_testcase(pkix_test_data_all_default, Config) ->
+ case crypto:ec_curves() of
+ [] ->
+ {skip, missing_ecc_support};
+ _ ->
+ init_common_per_testcase(Config)
+ end;
init_per_testcase(TestCase, Config) ->
case TestCase of
ssh_hostkey_fingerprint_md5_implicit -> init_fingerprint_testcase([md5], Config);
@@ -101,6 +112,7 @@ init_per_testcase(TestCase, Config) ->
ssh_hostkey_fingerprint_sha384 -> init_fingerprint_testcase([sha384], Config);
ssh_hostkey_fingerprint_sha512 -> init_fingerprint_testcase([sha512], Config);
ssh_hostkey_fingerprint_list -> init_fingerprint_testcase([sha,md5], Config);
+ ec_pem_encode_generated -> init_ec_pem_encode_generated(Config);
_ -> init_common_per_testcase(Config)
end.
@@ -217,9 +229,47 @@ ec_pem(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
true = check_entry_type(ECParams, 'EcpkParameters'),
ECPrivKey = public_key:pem_entry_decode(Entry2),
true = check_entry_type(ECPrivKey, 'ECPrivateKey'),
+ true = check_entry_type(ECPrivKey#'ECPrivateKey'.parameters, 'EcpkParameters'),
ECPemNoEndNewLines = strip_superfluous_newlines(ECPrivPem),
ECPemNoEndNewLines = strip_superfluous_newlines(public_key:pem_encode([Entry1, Entry2])).
+ec_pem2() ->
+ [{doc, "EC key w/explicit params PEM-file decode/encode"}].
+ec_pem2(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
+ Datadir = proplists:get_value(data_dir, Config),
+
+ %% Load key with explicit curve parameters. Generated with...
+ %% openssl ecparam -name secp521r1 -genkey -param_enc explicit -out ec_key2.pem
+ {ok, ECPrivPem} = file:read_file(filename:join(Datadir, "ec_key2.pem")),
+ [{'EcpkParameters', _, not_encrypted} = Entry1,
+ {'ECPrivateKey', _, not_encrypted} = Entry2] = public_key:pem_decode(ECPrivPem),
+
+ ECParams = public_key:pem_entry_decode(Entry1),
+ true = check_entry_type(ECParams, 'EcpkParameters'),
+ ECPrivKey = public_key:pem_entry_decode(Entry2),
+ true = check_entry_type(ECPrivKey, 'ECPrivateKey'),
+ true = check_entry_type(ECPrivKey#'ECPrivateKey'.parameters, 'EcpkParameters'),
+ ECPemNoEndNewLines = strip_superfluous_newlines(ECPrivPem),
+ ECPemNoEndNewLines = strip_superfluous_newlines(public_key:pem_encode([Entry1, Entry2])).
+
+
+init_ec_pem_encode_generated(Config) ->
+ case catch true = lists:member('secp384r1', crypto:ec_curves()) of
+ {'EXIT', _} -> {skip, {'secp384r1', not_supported}};
+ _ -> init_common_per_testcase(Config)
+ end.
+
+ec_pem_encode_generated() ->
+ [{doc, "PEM-encode generated EC key"}].
+ec_pem_encode_generated(Config) ->
+
+ Key1 = public_key:generate_key({namedCurve, 'secp384r1'}),
+ public_key:pem_entry_encode('ECPrivateKey', Key1),
+
+ Key2 = public_key:generate_key({namedCurve, ?'secp384r1'}),
+ public_key:pem_entry_encode('ECPrivateKey', Key2).
+
+
%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
encrypted_pem() ->
@@ -1007,6 +1057,84 @@ general_name(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
authorityCertSerialNumber =
1}).
%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+pkix_test_data_all_default() ->
+ [{doc, "Test API function pkix_test_data/1"}].
+
+pkix_test_data_all_default(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
+ #{server_config := ServerConf0,
+ client_config := ClientConf0} = public_key:pkix_test_data(#{server_chain =>
+ #{root => [],
+ intermediates => [[]],
+ peer => []},
+ client_chain =>
+ #{root => [],
+ intermediates => [[]],
+ peer => []}}),
+ check_conf_member(ServerConf0, [key, cert, cacerts]),
+ check_conf_member(ClientConf0, [key, cert, cacerts]),
+
+ 3 = length(proplists:get_value(cacerts, ServerConf0)),
+ 3 = length(proplists:get_value(cacerts, ServerConf0)),
+
+ #{server_config := ServerConf1,
+ client_config := ClientConf1} = public_key:pkix_test_data(#{server_chain =>
+ #{root => [],
+ peer => []},
+ client_chain =>
+ #{root => [],
+ peer => []}}),
+ 2 = length(proplists:get_value(cacerts, ServerConf1)),
+ 2 = length(proplists:get_value(cacerts, ServerConf1)),
+
+ check_conf_member(ServerConf1, [key, cert, cacerts]),
+ check_conf_member(ClientConf1, [key, cert, cacerts]).
+
+
+pkix_test_data() ->
+ [{doc, "Test API function pkix_test_data/1"}].
+
+pkix_test_data(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
+ {Year, Month, Day} = date(),
+ Keygen =
+ case crypto:ec_curves() of
+ [] ->
+ {rsa, 2048, 17};
+ [Curve |_] ->
+ Oid = pubkey_cert_records:namedCurves(Curve),
+ {namedCurve, Oid}
+ end,
+ #{server_config := ServerConf0,
+ client_config := ClientConf0} =
+ public_key:pkix_test_data(#{server_chain =>
+ #{root => [],
+ intermediates => [],
+ peer => [{key, hardcode_rsa_key()}]},
+ client_chain =>
+ #{root => [{validity, {{Year-2, Month, Day},
+ {Year-1, Month, Day}}}],
+ intermediates =>
+ [[{extensions, [#'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-basicConstraints',
+ extnValue = #'BasicConstraints'{cA=true,
+ pathLenConstraint = 1},
+ critical = true}]}]],
+ peer => [{key, Keygen}, {digest, sha1}]}}),
+ check_conf_member(ServerConf0, [key, cert, cacerts]),
+ check_conf_member(ClientConf0, [key, cert, cacerts]).
+
+
+
+check_conf_member(_, []) ->
+ true;
+check_conf_member(Conf, [Member | Rest]) ->
+ case lists:keymember(Member, 1, Conf) of
+ true ->
+ check_conf_member(Conf, Rest);
+ false ->
+ ct:fail({misssing_conf, Member})
+ end.
+
+%%--------------------------------------------------------------------
short_cert_issuer_hash() ->
[{doc, "Test OpenSSL-style hash for certificate issuer"}].
@@ -1095,7 +1223,7 @@ check_entry_type(#'ECPrivateKey'{}, 'ECPrivateKey') ->
true;
check_entry_type({namedCurve, _}, 'EcpkParameters') ->
true;
-check_entry_type(#'ECParameters'{}, 'EcpkParameters') ->
+check_entry_type({ecParameters, #'ECParameters'{}}, 'EcpkParameters') ->
true;
check_entry_type(_,_) ->
false.
@@ -1128,3 +1256,15 @@ ssh_hostkey(rsa) ->
public_key),
PKdecoded.
+hardcode_rsa_key() ->
+ #'RSAPrivateKey'{
+ version = 'two-prime',
+ modulus = 23995666614853919027835084074500048897452890537492185072956789802729257783422306095699263934587064480357348855732149402060270996295002843755712064937715826848741191927820899197493902093529581182351132392364214171173881547273475904587683433713767834856230531387991145055273426806331200574039205571401702219159773947658558490957010003143162250693492642996408861265758000254664396313741422909188635443907373976005987612936763564996605457102336549804831742940035613780926178523017685712710473543251580072875247250504243621640157403744718833162626193206685233710319205099867303242759099560438381385658382486042995679707669,
+ publicExponent = 17,
+ privateExponent = 11292078406990079542510627799764728892919007311761028269626724613049062486316379339152594792746853873109340637991599718616598115903530750002688030558925094987642913848386305504703012749896273497577003478759630198199473669305165131570674557041773098755873191241407597673069847908861741446606684974777271632545629600685952292605647052193819136445675100211504432575554351515262198132231537860917084269870590492135731720141577986787033006338680118008484613510063003323516659048210893001173583018220214626635609151105287049126443102976056146630518124476470236027123782297108342869049542023328584384300970694412006494684657,
+ prime1 = 169371138592582642967021557955633494538845517070305333860805485424261447791289944610138334410987654265476540480228705481960508520379619587635662291973699651583489223555422528867090299996446070521801757353675026048850480903160224210802452555900007597342687137394192939372218903554801584969667104937092080815197,
+ prime2 = 141675062317286527042995673340952251894209529891636708844197799307963834958115010129693036021381525952081167155681637592199810112261679449166276939178032066869788822014115556349519329537177920752776047051833616197615329017439297361972726138285974555338480581117881706656603857310337984049152655480389797687577,
+ exponent1 = 119556097830058336212015217380447172615655659108450823901745048534772786676204666783627059584226579481512852103690850928442711896738555003036938088452023283470698275450886490965004917644550167427154181661417665446247398284583687678213495921811770068712485038160606780733330990744565824684470897602653233516609,
+ exponent2 = 41669135975672507953822256864985956439473391144599032012999352737636422046504414744027363535700448809435637398729893409470532385959317485048904982111185902020526124121798693043976273393287623750816484427009887116945685005129205106462566511260580751570141347387612266663707016855981760014456663376585234613993,
+ coefficient = 76837684977089699359024365285678488693966186052769523357232308621548155587515525857011429902602352279058920284048929101483304120686557782043616693940283344235057989514310975192908256494992960578961614059245280827077951132083993754797053182279229469590276271658395444955906108899267024101096069475145863928441,
+ otherPrimeInfos = asn1_NOVALUE}.
diff --git a/lib/public_key/test/public_key_SUITE_data/ec_key2.pem b/lib/public_key/test/public_key_SUITE_data/ec_key2.pem
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..56b8169e86
--- /dev/null
+++ b/lib/public_key/test/public_key_SUITE_data/ec_key2.pem
@@ -0,0 +1,29 @@
+-----BEGIN EC PARAMETERS-----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+-----END EC PARAMETERS-----
+-----BEGIN EC PRIVATE KEY-----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+-----END EC PRIVATE KEY-----
diff --git a/lib/public_key/vsn.mk b/lib/public_key/vsn.mk
index 83a77d2a28..bb96c2237d 100644
--- a/lib/public_key/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/public_key/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-PUBLIC_KEY_VSN = 1.4.1
+PUBLIC_KEY_VSN = 1.5
diff --git a/lib/reltool/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/reltool/doc/src/notes.xml
index 8593a1017f..d7ad7c8dcc 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/reltool/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -38,7 +38,26 @@
thus constitutes one section in this document. The title of each
section is the version number of Reltool.</p>
- <section><title>Reltool 0.7.4</title>
+ <section><title>Reltool 0.7.5</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Files generated by <c>release_handler</c> and
+ <c>reltool</c>, which might contain Unicode characters,
+ are now encoded as UTF-8 and written with format "~tp" or
+ "~ts". If the file is to be read by
+ <c>file:consult/1</c>, an encoding comment is added.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14463</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>Reltool 0.7.4</title>
<section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
<list>
diff --git a/lib/reltool/src/reltool.app.src b/lib/reltool/src/reltool.app.src
index 90f93d2901..dc21c1cfce 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/src/reltool.app.src
+++ b/lib/reltool/src/reltool.app.src
@@ -36,6 +36,6 @@
{registered, []},
{applications, [stdlib, kernel]},
{env, []},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["wx-1.2","tools-2.6.14","stdlib-2.0","sasl-2.4",
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["wx-1.2","tools-2.6.14","stdlib-3.4","sasl-2.4",
"kernel-3.0","erts-7.0"]}
]}.
diff --git a/lib/reltool/src/reltool_mod_win.erl b/lib/reltool/src/reltool_mod_win.erl
index 894d6e2ecb..dcd802a5de 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/src/reltool_mod_win.erl
+++ b/lib/reltool/src/reltool_mod_win.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2009-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2009-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
diff --git a/lib/reltool/src/reltool_target.erl b/lib/reltool/src/reltool_target.erl
index 1b1461178e..676ce70aea 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/src/reltool_target.erl
+++ b/lib/reltool/src/reltool_target.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2009-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2009-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
diff --git a/lib/reltool/src/reltool_utils.erl b/lib/reltool/src/reltool_utils.erl
index 3891b5ae4d..1a00671f13 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/src/reltool_utils.erl
+++ b/lib/reltool/src/reltool_utils.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2009-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2009-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
diff --git a/lib/reltool/test/reltool_app_SUITE.erl b/lib/reltool/test/reltool_app_SUITE.erl
index 18c74bea6c..a51ee8875a 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/test/reltool_app_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/reltool/test/reltool_app_SUITE.erl
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@
%%----------------------------------------------------------------------
-module(reltool_app_SUITE).
--compile(export_all).
+-compile([export_all, nowarn_export_all]).
-include("reltool_test_lib.hrl").
-include_lib("common_test/include/ct.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/reltool/test/reltool_manual_gui_SUITE.erl b/lib/reltool/test/reltool_manual_gui_SUITE.erl
index eebe2303fb..44da4ffd2c 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/test/reltool_manual_gui_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/reltool/test/reltool_manual_gui_SUITE.erl
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@
init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2]).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([config/1, depgraphs/1]).
-include_lib("common_test/include/ct.hrl").
-include("reltool_test_lib.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/reltool/test/reltool_server_SUITE.erl b/lib/reltool/test/reltool_server_SUITE.erl
index e8dfea94da..db13c56238 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/test/reltool_server_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/reltool/test/reltool_server_SUITE.erl
@@ -19,11 +19,7 @@
-module(reltool_server_SUITE).
--export([all/0, suite/0,groups/0,init_per_group/2,end_per_group/2,
- init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
- init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2]).
-
--compile(export_all).
+-compile([export_all, nowarn_export_all]).
-include_lib("reltool/src/reltool.hrl").
-include("reltool_test_lib.hrl").
@@ -2549,7 +2545,7 @@ undefined_regexp(_Config) ->
%% Library functions
erl_libs() ->
- string:tokens(os:getenv("ERL_LIBS", ""), ":;").
+ string:lexemes(os:getenv("ERL_LIBS", ""), ":;").
datadir(Config) ->
%% Removes the trailing slash...
@@ -2559,7 +2555,7 @@ latest(App) ->
AppStr = atom_to_list(App),
AppDirs = filelib:wildcard(filename:join(code:lib_dir(),AppStr++"-*")),
[LatestAppDir|_] = lists:reverse(AppDirs),
- [_,Vsn] = string:tokens(filename:basename(LatestAppDir),"-"),
+ [_,Vsn] = string:lexemes(filename:basename(LatestAppDir),"-"),
Vsn.
rm_missing_app(Apps) ->
@@ -2635,16 +2631,11 @@ os_cmd(Cmd) when is_list(Cmd) ->
Return->
%% Find the position of the status code wich is last in the string
%% prepended with #
- case string:rchr(Return, $#) of
-
- %% This happens only if the sh command pipe is somehow interrupted
- 0->
- {98, Return};
-
- Position->
- Result = string:left(Return,Position - 1),
- Status = string:substr(Return,Position + 1, length(Return) - Position - 1),
- {list_to_integer(Status), Result}
+ case string:split(Return, "$#", trailing) of
+ [_] -> %% This happens only if the sh command pipe is somehow interrupted
+ {98, Return};
+ [Result, Status0] ->
+ {list_to_integer(string:trim(Status0)), Result}
end
end.
diff --git a/lib/reltool/test/reltool_test_lib.erl b/lib/reltool/test/reltool_test_lib.erl
index 6cc2d259fb..53aeb8c08c 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/test/reltool_test_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/reltool/test/reltool_test_lib.erl
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
%% %CopyrightEnd%
-module(reltool_test_lib).
--compile(export_all).
+-compile([export_all, nowarn_export_all]).
-include("reltool_test_lib.hrl").
-define(timeout, 20). % minutes
diff --git a/lib/reltool/test/reltool_wx_SUITE.erl b/lib/reltool/test/reltool_wx_SUITE.erl
index ac820db21c..19707894ae 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/test/reltool_wx_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/reltool/test/reltool_wx_SUITE.erl
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@
init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2]).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([start_all_windows/1, check_no_win_crash/0, wait_terminate/1]).
-include("reltool_test_lib.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/reltool/test/rtt.erl b/lib/reltool/test/rtt.erl
index 173ffc5166..d9e8e5520d 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/test/rtt.erl
+++ b/lib/reltool/test/rtt.erl
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
%% %CopyrightEnd%
-module(rtt).
--compile(export_all).
+-compile([export_all, nowarn_export_all]).
%% Modules or suites can be shortcuts, for example server expands to reltool_server_SUITE.
%%
diff --git a/lib/reltool/vsn.mk b/lib/reltool/vsn.mk
index 3617f6e0d9..49997b1e52 100644
--- a/lib/reltool/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/reltool/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-RELTOOL_VSN = 0.7.4
+RELTOOL_VSN = 0.7.5
diff --git a/lib/runtime_tools/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/runtime_tools/doc/src/notes.xml
index d50994306b..8b4d437c26 100644
--- a/lib/runtime_tools/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/runtime_tools/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -32,6 +32,21 @@
<p>This document describes the changes made to the Runtime_Tools
application.</p>
+<section><title>Runtime_Tools 1.12.2</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Runtime_Tools 1.12.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/runtime_tools/src/erts_alloc_config.erl b/lib/runtime_tools/src/erts_alloc_config.erl
index 514530332c..342363d08d 100644
--- a/lib/runtime_tools/src/erts_alloc_config.erl
+++ b/lib/runtime_tools/src/erts_alloc_config.erl
@@ -621,7 +621,7 @@ format_header(FTO) ->
[Y, Mo, D, H, Mi, S]),
fcp(FTO,
"~s was used when generating the configuration.",
- [string:strip(erlang:system_info(system_version), both, $\n)]),
+ [string:trim(erlang:system_info(system_version), both, "$\n")]),
case erlang:system_info(schedulers) of
1 -> ok;
Schdlrs ->
@@ -698,28 +698,32 @@ fc(IODev, Frmt, Args) ->
fc(IODev, lists:flatten(io_lib:format(Frmt, Args))).
fc(IODev, String) ->
- fc_aux(IODev, string:tokens(String, " "), 0).
+ fc_aux(IODev, string:lexemes(String, " "), 0).
fc_aux(_IODev, [], 0) ->
ok;
fc_aux(IODev, [], _Len) ->
format(IODev, "~n");
fc_aux(IODev, [T|Ts], 0) ->
- Len = 2 + length(T),
+ Len = 2 + string:length(T),
format(IODev, "# ~s", [T]),
fc_aux(IODev, Ts, Len);
-fc_aux(IODev, [T|_Ts] = ATs, Len) when (length(T) + Len) >= ?PRINT_WITDH ->
- format(IODev, "~n"),
- fc_aux(IODev, ATs, 0);
-fc_aux(IODev, [T|Ts], Len) ->
- NewLen = Len + 1 + length(T),
- format(IODev, " ~s", [T]),
- fc_aux(IODev, Ts, NewLen).
+fc_aux(IODev, [T|Ts] = ATs, Len) ->
+ TLength = string:length(T),
+ case (TLength + Len) >= ?PRINT_WITDH of
+ true ->
+ format(IODev, "~n"),
+ fc_aux(IODev, ATs, 0);
+ false ->
+ NewLen = Len + 1 + TLength,
+ format(IODev, " ~s", [T]),
+ fc_aux(IODev, Ts, NewLen)
+ end.
%% fcl: format comment line
fcl(FTO) ->
EndStr = "# ",
- Precision = length(EndStr),
+ Precision = string:length(EndStr),
FieldWidth = -1*(?PRINT_WITDH),
format(FTO, "~*.*.*s~n", [FieldWidth, Precision, $-, EndStr]).
@@ -727,6 +731,6 @@ fcl(FTO, A) when is_atom(A) ->
fcl(FTO, atom_to_list(A));
fcl(FTO, Str) when is_list(Str) ->
Str2 = "# --- " ++ Str ++ " ",
- Precision = length(Str2),
+ Precision = string:length(Str2),
FieldWidth = -1*(?PRINT_WITDH),
format(FTO, "~*.*.*s~n", [FieldWidth, Precision, $-, Str2]).
diff --git a/lib/runtime_tools/src/system_information.erl b/lib/runtime_tools/src/system_information.erl
index df25297eb9..92109c9a74 100644
--- a/lib/runtime_tools/src/system_information.erl
+++ b/lib/runtime_tools/src/system_information.erl
@@ -590,12 +590,12 @@ vsnstr2vsn(VsnStr) ->
list_to_tuple(lists:map(fun (Part) ->
list_to_integer(Part)
end,
- string:tokens(VsnStr, "."))).
+ string:lexemes(VsnStr, "."))).
rtdepstrs2rtdeps([]) ->
[];
rtdepstrs2rtdeps([RTDep | RTDeps]) ->
- [AppStr, VsnStr] = string:tokens(RTDep, "-"),
+ [AppStr, VsnStr] = string:lexemes(RTDep, "-"),
[{list_to_atom(AppStr), vsnstr2vsn(VsnStr)} | rtdepstrs2rtdeps(RTDeps)].
build_app_table([], AppTab) ->
diff --git a/lib/runtime_tools/vsn.mk b/lib/runtime_tools/vsn.mk
index 7296221033..d8a4ede136 100644
--- a/lib/runtime_tools/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/runtime_tools/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-RUNTIME_TOOLS_VSN = 1.12.1
+RUNTIME_TOOLS_VSN = 1.12.2
diff --git a/lib/sasl/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/sasl/doc/src/notes.xml
index bc35939d7e..b144122c4b 100644
--- a/lib/sasl/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/sasl/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -31,6 +31,41 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to the SASL application.</p>
+<section><title>SASL 3.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Files generated by <c>release_handler</c> and
+ <c>reltool</c>, which might contain Unicode characters,
+ are now encoded as UTF-8 and written with format "~tp" or
+ "~ts". If the file is to be read by
+ <c>file:consult/1</c>, an encoding comment is added.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14463</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The SASL error logger event handler,
+ <c>sasl_report_file_h</c>, will now by default open its
+ log file with encoding UTF-8. This can be overridden when
+ configuring SASL, see configuration parameter
+ <c>sasl_error_logger</c> in the SASL reference manual.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14618</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>SASL 3.0.4</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/sasl/src/erlsrv.erl b/lib/sasl/src/erlsrv.erl
index 29d40d362f..e0bbd37ee3 100644
--- a/lib/sasl/src/erlsrv.erl
+++ b/lib/sasl/src/erlsrv.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1998-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1998-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ erlsrv(EVer) ->
filename:join([Root, "erts-" ++ EVer, "bin", "erlsrv.exe"]).
current_version() ->
- hd(string:tokens(erlang:system_info(version),"_ ")).
+ hd(string:lexemes(erlang:system_info(version),"_ ")).
%%% Returns {ok, Output} | failed | {error, Reason}
run_erlsrv(Command) ->
@@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ get_all_services() ->
[];
{ok, [_H|T]} ->
F = fun(X) ->
- hd(string:tokens(X,"\t "))
+ hd(string:lexemes(X,"\t "))
end,
lists:map(F,T);
_ ->
@@ -191,8 +191,8 @@ get_service(EVer, ServiceName) ->
%%% have in the environment list...
EnvParts = lists:map(
fun(S) ->
- X = string:strip(S,left,$\t),
- case hd(string:tokens(X,"=")) of
+ X = string:trim(S, leading, "$\t"),
+ case hd(string:lexemes(X,"=")) of
X ->
%% Can this happen?
{X,""};
@@ -371,7 +371,7 @@ split_arglist([H|T]) ->
parse_arglist(Str) ->
lists:reverse(parse_arglist(Str,[])).
parse_arglist(Str,Accum) ->
- Stripped = string:strip(Str,left),
+ Stripped = string:trim(Str, leading),
case length(Stripped) of
0 ->
Accum;
@@ -432,14 +432,9 @@ split_by_env(Data) ->
splitline(Line) ->
- case string:chr(Line,$:) of
- 0 ->
+ case string:split(Line, ":") of
+ [_] ->
{Line, ""};
- N ->
- case length(string:substr(Line,N)) of
- 1 ->
- {string:substr(Line,1,N-1),""};
- _ ->
- {string:substr(Line,1,N-1),string:substr(Line,N+2)}
- end
+ [N, V] ->
+ {N, string:slice(V, 1)}
end.
diff --git a/lib/sasl/src/format_lib_supp.erl b/lib/sasl/src/format_lib_supp.erl
index 80dcdc91da..cfe2ec7668 100644
--- a/lib/sasl/src/format_lib_supp.erl
+++ b/lib/sasl/src/format_lib_supp.erl
@@ -100,13 +100,13 @@ print_newlines(Device, N) when N > 0 ->
print_one_line(Device, Line, Key, Value) ->
Modifier = misc_supp:modifier(Device),
StrKey = term_to_string(Key,Modifier),
- KeyLen = lists:min([length(StrKey), Line]),
+ KeyLen = lists:min([string:length(StrKey), Line]),
ValueLen = Line - KeyLen,
Format1 = lists:concat(["~-", KeyLen, Modifier, "s"]),
Format2 = lists:concat(["~", ValueLen, Modifier, "s~n"]),
io:format(Device, Format1, [StrKey]),
Try = term_to_string(Value,Modifier),
- Length = length(Try),
+ Length = string:length(Try),
if
Length < ValueLen ->
io:format(Device, Format2, [Try]);
@@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ print_one_line(Device, Line, Key, Value) ->
end.
term_to_string(Value,Modifier) ->
- lists:flatten(io_lib:format(get_format(Value,Modifier), [Value])).
+ io_lib:format(get_format(Value,Modifier), [Value]).
get_format([],_) ->
"~p";
diff --git a/lib/sasl/src/rb.erl b/lib/sasl/src/rb.erl
index 6595d29a9c..28829132a1 100644
--- a/lib/sasl/src/rb.erl
+++ b/lib/sasl/src/rb.erl
@@ -586,14 +586,14 @@ find_widths([], _Modifier, DescrWidth, DateWidth, Data) ->
{DescrWidth+1, DateWidth+1, lists:reverse(Data)};
find_widths([H|T], Modifier, DescrWidth, DateWidth, Data) ->
DescrTerm = element(3,H),
- Descr = lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~"++Modifier++"w", [DescrTerm])),
- DescrTry = length(Descr),
+ Descr = io_lib:format("~"++Modifier++"w", [DescrTerm]),
+ DescrTry = string:length(Descr),
NewDescrWidth =
if
DescrTry > DescrWidth -> DescrTry;
true -> DescrWidth
end,
- DateTry = length(element(4, H)),
+ DateTry = string:length(element(4, H)),
NewDateWitdh =
if
DateTry > DateWidth -> DateTry;
diff --git a/lib/sasl/src/rb_format_supp.erl b/lib/sasl/src/rb_format_supp.erl
index 1eda43dae4..b5b7aba151 100644
--- a/lib/sasl/src/rb_format_supp.erl
+++ b/lib/sasl/src/rb_format_supp.erl
@@ -108,7 +108,7 @@ print(Date, Report, Device) ->
format_h(Line, Header, Pid, Date) ->
NHeader = lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~s ~w", [Header, Pid])),
- DateLen = length(Date),
+ DateLen = string:length(Date),
HeaderLen = Line - DateLen,
Format = lists:concat(["~-", HeaderLen, "s~", DateLen, "s"]),
io_lib:format(Format, [NHeader, Date]).
diff --git a/lib/sasl/src/release_handler.erl b/lib/sasl/src/release_handler.erl
index d0a7c7332d..bfa49fc05d 100644
--- a/lib/sasl/src/release_handler.erl
+++ b/lib/sasl/src/release_handler.erl
@@ -420,7 +420,7 @@ upgrade_app(App, NewDir) ->
%% located in the ebin dir of the _current_ version
%%-----------------------------------------------------------------
downgrade_app(App, OldDir) ->
- case string:tokens(filename:basename(OldDir), "-") of
+ case string:lexemes(filename:basename(OldDir), "-") of
[_AppS, OldVsn] ->
downgrade_app(App, OldVsn, OldDir);
_ ->
@@ -1174,8 +1174,8 @@ new_emulator_rm_tmp_release(_,_,_,_,Releases,_) ->
%% Rename the tempoarary service (for erts ugprade) to the real ToVsn
rename_tmp_service(EVsn,TmpVsn,NewVsn) ->
- FromName = hd(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@")) ++ "_" ++ TmpVsn,
- ToName = hd(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@")) ++ "_" ++ NewVsn,
+ FromName = hd(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@")) ++ "_" ++ TmpVsn,
+ ToName = hd(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@")) ++ "_" ++ NewVsn,
case erlsrv:get_service(EVsn,ToName) of
{error, _Error} ->
ok;
@@ -1207,9 +1207,9 @@ rename_service(EVsn,FromName,ToName) ->
%%% in which case we try to rename the old service to the new name and try
%%% to update heart's view of what service we are really running.
do_make_services_permanent(PermanentVsn,Vsn, PermanentEVsn, EVsn) ->
- PermName = hd(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@"))
+ PermName = hd(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@"))
++ "_" ++ PermanentVsn,
- Name = hd(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@"))
+ Name = hd(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@"))
++ "_" ++ Vsn,
case erlsrv:get_service(EVsn,Name) of
{error, _Error} ->
@@ -1296,7 +1296,7 @@ do_make_permanent(#state{releases = Releases,
do_back_service(OldVersion, CurrentVersion,OldEVsn,CurrentEVsn) ->
- NN = hd(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@")),
+ NN = hd(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@")),
OldName = NN ++ "_" ++ OldVersion,
CurrentName = NN ++ "_" ++ CurrentVersion,
UpdData = case erlsrv:get_service(CurrentEVsn,CurrentName) of
@@ -1385,7 +1385,7 @@ do_remove_service(Vsn) ->
%% Very unconditionally remove the service.
%% Note that the service could already have been removed when
%% making another release permanent.
- ServiceName = hd(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@"))
+ ServiceName = hd(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@"))
++ "_" ++ Vsn,
case erlsrv:get_service(ServiceName) of
{error, _Error} ->
@@ -1670,9 +1670,9 @@ flush() ->
prepare_restart_nt(#release{erts_vsn = EVsn, vsn = Vsn},
#release{erts_vsn = PermEVsn, vsn = PermVsn},
DataFileName) ->
- CurrentServiceName = hd(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@"))
+ CurrentServiceName = hd(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@"))
++ "_" ++ PermVsn,
- FutureServiceName = hd(string:tokens(atom_to_list(node()),"@"))
+ FutureServiceName = hd(string:lexemes(atom_to_list(node()),"@"))
++ "_" ++ Vsn,
CurrentService = case erlsrv:get_service(PermEVsn,CurrentServiceName) of
{error, _} = Error1 ->
diff --git a/lib/sasl/src/sasl.app.src b/lib/sasl/src/sasl.app.src
index d75543a91b..1e8e58a978 100644
--- a/lib/sasl/src/sasl.app.src
+++ b/lib/sasl/src/sasl.app.src
@@ -43,6 +43,6 @@
{env, [{sasl_error_logger, tty},
{errlog_type, all}]},
{mod, {sasl, []}},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["tools-2.6.14","stdlib-3.0","kernel-5.0",
- "erts-8.1"]}]}.
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["tools-2.6.14","stdlib-3.4","kernel-5.3",
+ "erts-9.0"]}]}.
diff --git a/lib/sasl/vsn.mk b/lib/sasl/vsn.mk
index 2608ca5e00..e980a42688 100644
--- a/lib/sasl/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/sasl/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-SASL_VSN = 3.0.4
+SASL_VSN = 3.1
diff --git a/lib/snmp/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/snmp/doc/src/notes.xml
index b902e421ca..e8527ded93 100644
--- a/lib/snmp/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/snmp/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -34,7 +34,24 @@
</header>
- <section><title>SNMP 5.2.6</title>
+ <section><title>SNMP 5.2.7</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ A bug in the SNMP MIB compiler has been fixed. An
+ AUGMENTS referring to a table defined later in the MIB
+ did not work.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-13014 Aux Id: ERL-375 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>SNMP 5.2.6</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
<list>
diff --git a/lib/snmp/src/app/snmp.appup.src b/lib/snmp/src/app/snmp.appup.src
index db09ec3dc5..bde637744c 100644
--- a/lib/snmp/src/app/snmp.appup.src
+++ b/lib/snmp/src/app/snmp.appup.src
@@ -8,8 +8,17 @@
%% {update, snmpa_local_db, soft, soft_purge, soft_purge, []}
%% {add_module, snmpm_net_if_mt}
[
+ {<<"5\\.2\\.6">>,
+ [{load_module, snmpc, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ {load_module, snmpc_lib, soft_purge, soft_purge, []}]},
+ {<<"5\\.2\\.5">>,
+ [{load_module, snmpc, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ {load_module, snmpc_lib, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ {load_module, snmp_generic, soft_purge, soft_purge, []}]},
{<<"5\\.2\\.4">>,
- [{load_module, snmp, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ [{load_module, snmpc, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ {load_module, snmp_generic, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ {load_module, snmp, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
{load_module, snmpc_lib, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
{load_module, snmpc_mib_gram, soft_purge, soft_purge, []}]},
{<<"5\\..*">>, [{restart_application, snmp}]},
@@ -21,8 +30,17 @@
%% {remove, {snmpm_net_if_mt, soft_purge, soft_purge}}
[
+ {<<"5\\.2\\.6">>,
+ [{load_module, snmpc, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ {load_module, snmpc_lib, soft_purge, soft_purge, []}]},
+ {<<"5\\.2\\.5">>,
+ [{load_module, snmpc, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ {load_module, snmpc_lib, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ {load_module, snmp_generic, soft_purge, soft_purge, []}]},
{<<"5\\.2\\.4">>,
- [{load_module, snmp, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ [{load_module, snmpc, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ {load_module, snmp_generic, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
+ {load_module, snmp, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
{load_module, snmpc_lib, soft_purge, soft_purge, []},
{load_module, snmpc_mib_gram, soft_purge, soft_purge, []}]},
{<<"5\\..*">>, [{restart_application, snmp}]},
diff --git a/lib/snmp/src/compile/snmpc.erl b/lib/snmp/src/compile/snmpc.erl
index 416353508e..4416626a4c 100644
--- a/lib/snmp/src/compile/snmpc.erl
+++ b/lib/snmp/src/compile/snmpc.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1997-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -455,7 +455,8 @@ compile_parsed_data(#pdata{mib_name = MibName,
Deprecated = get_deprecated(Opts),
RelChk = get_relaxed_row_name_assign_check(Opts),
Data = #dldata{deprecated = Deprecated,
- relaxed_row_name_assign_check = RelChk},
+ relaxed_row_name_assign_check = RelChk},
+ put(augmentations, false),
definitions_loop(Definitions, Data),
MibName.
@@ -1211,7 +1212,39 @@ definitions_loop([{Obj,Line}|T], Data) ->
definitions_loop([], _Data) ->
?vlog("defloop -> done", []),
- ok.
+ case get(augmentations) of
+ true ->
+ CData = get(cdata),
+ put(cdata, CData#cdata{mes = augmentations(CData#cdata.mes)}),
+ ok;
+ false ->
+ ok
+ end.
+
+augmentations(
+ [#me{
+ aliasname = AliasName,
+ assocList =
+ [{table_info,
+ #table_info{
+ index_types =
+ {augments, SrcTableEntry, Line}} = TableInfo}|Ref]} = Me
+ |Mes]) ->
+ ?vlog("augmentations(~w) ->"
+ "~n NameOfTable: ~p"
+ "~n IndexingInfo: ~p"
+ "~n Sline: ~p",
+ [?LINE, AliasName, {augments, SrcTableEntry}, Line]),
+ NewTableInfo = snmpc_lib:fix_table_info_augmentation(TableInfo),
+ [Me#me{assocList = [{table_info,NewTableInfo}|Ref]}
+ |augmentations(Mes)];
+augmentations([Me | Mes]) ->
+ [Me|augmentations(Mes)];
+augmentations([]) ->
+ ?vlog("augmentations -> done", []),
+ [].
+
+
safe_elem(N,T) ->
case catch(element(N,T)) of
diff --git a/lib/snmp/src/compile/snmpc_lib.erl b/lib/snmp/src/compile/snmpc_lib.erl
index 33ddd78308..19a6bc8851 100644
--- a/lib/snmp/src/compile/snmpc_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/snmp/src/compile/snmpc_lib.erl
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@
-export([test_father/4, make_ASN1type/1, import/1, makeInternalNode2/2,
is_consistent/1, resolve_defval/1, make_variable_info/1,
check_trap_name/3, make_table_info/5, get_final_mib/2, set_dir/2,
- look_at/1, add_cdata/2,
+ fix_table_info_augmentation/1, look_at/1, add_cdata/2,
check_object_group/4, check_notification_group/4,
check_notification/3,
register_oid/4,
@@ -710,25 +710,34 @@ check_trap_name(EnterpriseName, Line, MEs) ->
%% functions for tables.
%%----------------------------------------------------------------------
+fix_table_info_augmentation(
+ #table_info{index_types = {augments, SrcTableEntry, Line}} = TableInfo) ->
+ MEs = (get(cdata))#cdata.mes,
+ Aug =
+ case lookup(SrcTableEntry, MEs) of
+ false ->
+ print_error(
+ "Cannot AUGMENT the non-existing table entry ~p",
+ [SrcTableEntry], Line),
+ {augments, error};
+ {value, ME} ->
+ {augments,
+ {SrcTableEntry, translate_type(ME#me.asn1_type)}}
+ end,
+ TableInfo#table_info{index_types = Aug}.
+
+
make_table_info(Line, TableName, {augments, SrcTableEntry}, _, ColumnMEs) ->
ColMEs = lists:keysort(#me.oid, ColumnMEs),
- Nbr_of_Cols = length(ColMEs),
- MEs = ColMEs ++ (get(cdata))#cdata.mes,
- Aug = case lookup(SrcTableEntry, MEs) of
- false ->
- print_error("Cannot AUGMENT the non-existing table entry ~p",
- [SrcTableEntry], Line),
- {augments, error};
- {value, ME} ->
- {augments, {SrcTableEntry, translate_type(ME#me.asn1_type)}}
- end,
- FirstNonIdxCol = augments_first_non_index_column(ColMEs),
+ Nbr_of_Cols = length(ColMEs),
+ put(augmentations, true),
+ FirstNonIdxCol = augments_first_non_index_column(ColMEs),
NoAccs = list_not_accessible(FirstNonIdxCol, ColMEs),
FirstAcc = first_accessible(TableName, ColMEs),
#table_info{nbr_of_cols = Nbr_of_Cols,
- first_accessible = FirstAcc,
- not_accessible = NoAccs,
- index_types = Aug};
+ first_accessible = FirstAcc,
+ not_accessible = NoAccs,
+ index_types = {augments, SrcTableEntry, Line}};
make_table_info(Line, TableName, {indexes, []}, _, _ColumnMEs) ->
print_error("Table ~w lacks indexes.", [TableName],Line),
#table_info{};
diff --git a/lib/snmp/test/snmp_compiler_test.erl b/lib/snmp/test/snmp_compiler_test.erl
index 9b3c2bfd2c..2b6bba4ee6 100644
--- a/lib/snmp/test/snmp_compiler_test.erl
+++ b/lib/snmp/test/snmp_compiler_test.erl
@@ -57,8 +57,8 @@
otp_8595/1,
otp_10799/1,
otp_10808/1,
- otp_14145/1
-
+ otp_14145/1,
+ otp_13014/1
]).
%%----------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -137,7 +137,8 @@ all() ->
groups() ->
[{tickets, [],
- [otp_6150, otp_8574, otp_8595, otp_10799, otp_10808, otp_14145]}].
+ [otp_6150, otp_8574, otp_8595, otp_10799, otp_10808, otp_14145,
+ otp_13014]}].
init_per_group(_GroupName, Config) ->
Config.
@@ -436,7 +437,7 @@ otp_10808(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
otp_14145(suite) ->
[];
otp_14145(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- put(tname, otp10808),
+ put(tname, otp14145),
p("starting with Config: ~p~n", [Config]),
Dir = ?config(case_top_dir, Config),
@@ -457,6 +458,40 @@ otp_14145(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
%%======================================================================
+otp_13014(suite) ->
+ [];
+otp_13014(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
+ put(tname, otp13014),
+ p("starting with Config: ~p~n", [Config]),
+
+ Dir = ?config(case_top_dir, Config),
+ MibDir = ?config(mib_dir, Config),
+ MibName = "Test-LLDP-MIB",
+ MibFile = join(MibDir, MibName++".mib"),
+ ?line {ok, MibBin} =
+ snmpc:compile(MibFile, [{outdir, Dir},
+ {verbosity, log},
+ {group_check, false},
+ module_compliance]),
+ p("Mib: ~n~p~n", [MibBin]),
+ #mib{mes = MEs} = read_mib(MibBin),
+ Oid = [1,0,8802,1,1,2,1,1,7],
+ #me{
+ entrytype = table,
+ aliasname = lldpConfigManAddrTable,
+ assocList = [{table_info,TableInfo}]} =
+ lists:keyfind(Oid, #me.oid, MEs),
+ #table_info{
+ nbr_of_cols = 1,
+ first_accessible = 1,
+ not_accessible = [],
+ index_types = {augments,{lldpLocManAddrEntry,undefined}}} =
+ TableInfo,
+ ok.
+
+
+%%======================================================================
+
augments_extra_info(suite) ->
[];
augments_extra_info(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
diff --git a/lib/snmp/test/snmp_test_data/Test-LLDP-MIB.mib b/lib/snmp/test/snmp_test_data/Test-LLDP-MIB.mib
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..40a9fc79e1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/lib/snmp/test/snmp_test_data/Test-LLDP-MIB.mib
@@ -0,0 +1,251 @@
+Test-LLDP-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
+
+IMPORTS
+ MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE, Integer32, Counter32, NOTIFICATION-TYPE
+ FROM SNMPv2-SMI
+ TEXTUAL-CONVENTION, TimeStamp, TruthValue
+ FROM SNMPv2-TC
+ SnmpAdminString
+ FROM SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB
+ MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP, NOTIFICATION-GROUP
+ FROM SNMPv2-CONF;
+
+t-lldpMIB MODULE-IDENTITY
+ LAST-UPDATED "200505060000Z" -- May 06, 2005
+ ORGANIZATION "IEEE 802.1 Working Group"
+ CONTACT-INFO
+ " Contact: The Erlang/OTP team at Ericsson AB, Sweden
+
+ WG-URL: http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/1/index.html
+ WG-EMail: [email protected]
+
+ Contact: Paul Congdon
+ Postal: Hewlett-Packard Company
+ 8000 Foothills Blvd.
+ Roseville, CA 95747
+ USA
+ Tel: +1-916-785-5753
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "This is the ripped out bits and pieces of LLDP-MIB
+ that triggered a compilation problem for Erlang/OTP's
+ MIB compiler due to an AUGMENTS in lldpConfigManAddrEntry
+ refering to a not yet defined OBJECT-TYPE lldpLocManAddrEntry.
+ Rip and rewrite done 2017.
+
+ Management Information Base module for LLDP configuration,
+ statistics, local system data and remote systems data
+ components.
+
+ Copyright (C) IEEE (2005). This version of this MIB module
+ is published as subclause 12.1 of IEEE Std 802.1AB-2005;
+ see the standard itself for full legal notices."
+ REVISION "200505060000Z" -- May 06, 2005
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "Published as part of IEEE Std 802.1AB-2005 initial version."
+ ::= { iso std(0) iso8802(8802) ieee802dot1(1) ieee802dot1mibs(1) 2 }
+
+--lldpNotifications OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { lldpMIB 0 }
+lldpObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { t-lldpMIB 1 }
+lldpConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { t-lldpMIB 2 }
+
+--
+-- LLDP MIB Objects
+--
+
+lldpConfiguration OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { lldpObjects 1 }
+--lldpStatistics OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { lldpObjects 2 }
+lldpLocalSystemData OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { lldpObjects 3 }
+--lldpRemoteSystemsData OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { lldpObjects 4 }
+--lldpExtensions OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { lldpObjects 5 }
+
+
+
+LldpPortList ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "Each octet within this value specifies a set of eight ports,
+ with the first octet specifying ports 1 through 8, the second
+ octet specifying ports 9 through 16, etc. Within each octet,
+ the most significant bit represents the lowest numbered port,
+ and the least significant bit represents the highest numbered
+ port. Thus, each port of the system is represented by a
+ single bit within the value of this object. If that bit has
+ a value of '1' then that port is included in the set of ports;
+ the port is not included if its bit has a value of '0'."
+ REFERENCE
+ "IETF RFC 2674 section 5"
+ SYNTAX OCTET STRING(SIZE(0..512))
+
+
+
+--
+-- lldpManAddrConfigTxPortsTable : selection of management addresses
+-- to be transmitted on a specified set
+-- of ports.
+--
+
+lldpConfigManAddrTable OBJECT-TYPE
+ SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF LldpConfigManAddrEntry
+ MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "The table that controls selection of LLDP management address
+ TLV instances to be transmitted on individual ports."
+ ::= { lldpConfiguration 7 }
+
+lldpConfigManAddrEntry OBJECT-TYPE
+ SYNTAX LldpConfigManAddrEntry
+ MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "LLDP configuration information that specifies the set
+ of ports (represented as a PortList) on which the local
+ system management address instance will be transmitted.
+
+ This configuration object augments the lldpLocManAddrEntry,
+ therefore it is only present along with the management
+ address instance contained in the associated
+ lldpLocManAddrEntry entry.
+
+ Each active lldpConfigManAddrEntry must be restored from
+ non-volatile and re-created (along with the corresponding
+ lldpLocManAddrEntry) after a re-initialization of the
+ management system."
+ AUGMENTS { lldpLocManAddrEntry }
+ ::= { lldpConfigManAddrTable 1 }
+
+LldpConfigManAddrEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
+ lldpConfigManAddrPortsTxEnable LldpPortList
+}
+
+lldpConfigManAddrPortsTxEnable OBJECT-TYPE
+ SYNTAX LldpPortList
+ MAX-ACCESS read-write
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "A set of ports that are identified by a PortList, in which
+ each port is represented as a bit. The corresponding local
+ system management address instance will be transmitted on the
+ member ports of the lldpManAddrPortsTxEnable.
+
+ The default value for lldpConfigManAddrPortsTxEnable object
+ is empty binary string, which means no ports are specified
+ for advertising indicated management address instance."
+ REFERENCE
+ "IEEE 802.1AB-2005 10.2.1.1"
+ DEFVAL { ''H } -- empty binary string
+ ::= { lldpConfigManAddrEntry 1 }
+
+
+--
+-- lldpLocManAddrTable : Management addresses of the local system
+--
+
+lldpLocManAddrTable OBJECT-TYPE
+ SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF LldpLocManAddrEntry
+ MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "This table contains management address information on the
+ local system known to this agent."
+ ::= { lldpLocalSystemData 8 }
+
+lldpLocManAddrEntry OBJECT-TYPE
+ SYNTAX LldpLocManAddrEntry
+ MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "Management address information about a particular chassis
+ component. There may be multiple management addresses
+ configured on the system identified by a particular
+ lldpLocChassisId. Each management address should have
+ distinct 'management address type' (lldpLocManAddrSubtype) and
+ 'management address' (lldpLocManAddr.)
+
+ Entries may be created and deleted in this table by the
+ agent."
+ INDEX { lldpLocManAddrIfId,
+ lldpLocManAddrLen }
+ ::= { lldpLocManAddrTable 1 }
+
+LldpLocManAddrEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
+ lldpLocManAddrIfId Integer32,
+ lldpLocManAddrLen Integer32,
+ lldpLocManAddrOID OBJECT IDENTIFIER
+}
+
+lldpLocManAddrIfId OBJECT-TYPE
+ SYNTAX Integer32
+ MAX-ACCESS read-only
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "The integer value used to identify the interface number
+ regarding the management address component associated with
+ the local system."
+ REFERENCE
+ "IEEE 802.1AB-2005 9.5.9.6"
+ ::= { lldpLocManAddrEntry 1 }
+
+lldpLocManAddrLen OBJECT-TYPE
+ SYNTAX Integer32
+ MAX-ACCESS read-only
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "The total length of the management address subtype and the
+ management address fields in LLDPDUs transmitted by the
+ local LLDP agent.
+
+ The management address length field is needed so that the
+ receiving systems that do not implement SNMP will not be
+ required to implement an iana family numbers/address length
+ equivalency table in order to decode the management adress."
+ REFERENCE
+ "IEEE 802.1AB-2005 9.5.9.2"
+ ::= { lldpLocManAddrEntry 2 }
+
+lldpLocManAddrOID OBJECT-TYPE
+ SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER
+ MAX-ACCESS read-only
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "The OID value used to identify the type of hardware component
+ or protocol entity associated with the management address
+ advertised by the local system agent."
+ REFERENCE
+ "IEEE 802.1AB-2005 9.5.9.8"
+ ::= { lldpLocManAddrEntry 3 }
+
+
+lldpGroups OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { lldpConformance 1 }
+
+lldpLocSysGroup OBJECT-GROUP
+ OBJECTS {
+ lldpLocManAddrIfId,
+ lldpLocManAddrLen,
+ lldpLocManAddrOID
+ }
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "The collection of objects which are used to represent LLDP
+ Local System Information.
+
+ This group is mandatory for agents which implement the LLDP
+ and have the capability of transmitting LLDP frames."
+ ::= { lldpGroups 6 }
+
+lldpConfigTxGroup OBJECT-GROUP
+ OBJECTS {
+ lldpConfigManAddrPortsTxEnable
+ }
+ STATUS current
+ DESCRIPTION
+ "The collection of objects which are used to configure the
+ LLDP implementation behavior.
+
+ This group is mandatory for agents which implement the LLDP
+ and have the capability of transmitting LLDP frames."
+ ::= { lldpGroups 3 }
+
+
+END
diff --git a/lib/snmp/vsn.mk b/lib/snmp/vsn.mk
index d41b1999cc..207f0084d8 100644
--- a/lib/snmp/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/snmp/vsn.mk
@@ -19,6 +19,6 @@
# %CopyrightEnd%
APPLICATION = snmp
-SNMP_VSN = 5.2.6
+SNMP_VSN = 5.2.7
PRE_VSN =
APP_VSN = "$(APPLICATION)-$(SNMP_VSN)$(PRE_VSN)"
diff --git a/lib/ssh/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/ssh/doc/src/notes.xml
index 5826d14a4a..4ba75b761f 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/ssh/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -30,6 +30,48 @@
<file>notes.xml</file>
</header>
+<section><title>Ssh 4.6</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Enables the <c>ssh_io module</c> to also accept binary
+ values when reading standard_io instead of getting stuck
+ in the receive clause.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14506 Aux Id: PR1503 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Previously, the file owner access permission in response
+ to ssh_sftp:read_file_info/2 function was always
+ <c>read_write</c>. With this fix, the actual value of
+ file owner access permission is added to the returning
+ record. That value is calculated from file mode value.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14550 Aux Id: PR1533 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ A new option <c>modify_algorithms</c> is implemented. It
+ enables specifying changes on the default algorithms
+ list. See the reference manual and the SSH User's Guide
+ chapter "Configuring algorithms in SSH".</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14568</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Ssh 4.5.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/ssh/vsn.mk b/lib/ssh/vsn.mk
index 006228f8e7..c201e70d82 100644
--- a/lib/ssh/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/ssh/vsn.mk
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
#-*-makefile-*- ; force emacs to enter makefile-mode
-SSH_VSN = 4.5.1
+SSH_VSN = 4.6
APP_VSN = "ssh-$(SSH_VSN)"
diff --git a/lib/ssl/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/ssl/doc/src/notes.xml
index 5a39cac9bc..4c6a204e63 100644
--- a/lib/ssl/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/ssl/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -28,6 +28,40 @@
<p>This document describes the changes made to the SSL application.</p>
+<section><title>SSL 8.2.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Max session table works correctly again</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14556</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Customize alert handling for DTLS over UDP to mitigate
+ DoS attacks</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14078</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Improved error propagation and reports</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14236</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>SSL 8.2</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/ssl/src/ssl.app.src b/lib/ssl/src/ssl.app.src
index afb9c0f14c..c5b55641a1 100644
--- a/lib/ssl/src/ssl.app.src
+++ b/lib/ssl/src/ssl.app.src
@@ -62,7 +62,5 @@
{applications, [crypto, public_key, kernel, stdlib]},
{env, []},
{mod, {ssl_app, []}},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["stdlib-3.2","public_key-1.2","kernel-6.0",
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["stdlib-3.2","public_key-1.5","kernel-6.0",
"erts-10.0","crypto-3.3", "inets-5.10.7"]}]}.
-
-
diff --git a/lib/ssl/test/ssl_ECC_SUITE.erl b/lib/ssl/test/ssl_ECC_SUITE.erl
index 64e8042b25..f38c0a7416 100644
--- a/lib/ssl/test/ssl_ECC_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/ssl/test/ssl_ECC_SUITE.erl
@@ -232,103 +232,150 @@ end_per_testcase(_TestCase, Config) ->
%% ECDH_RSA
client_ecdh_rsa_server_ecdh_rsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
ecdh_rsa, ecdh_rsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdh_rsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
client_ecdhe_rsa_server_ecdh_rsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([], ecdhe_rsa, ecdh_rsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_rsa, ecdh_rsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdh_rsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
client_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_ecdh_rsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdh_rsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdh_rsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdh_rsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
%% ECDHE_RSA
client_ecdh_rsa_server_ecdhe_rsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([], ecdh_rsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdh_rsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdhe_rsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
client_ecdhe_rsa_server_ecdhe_rsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([], ecdhe_rsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_rsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdhe_rsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
client_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_ecdhe_rsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdh_ecdsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdh_ecdsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdhe_rsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
-
+
%% ECDH_ECDSA
client_ecdh_ecdsa_server_ecdh_ecdsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{key_usage, [keyEncipherment]
- }]}]}],
+ Ext = x509_test:extensions([{key_usage, [keyEncipherment]}]),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain,
+ [[], [], [{extensions, Ext}]]},
+ {client_chain,
+ ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf()}],
ecdh_ecdsa, ecdh_ecdsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts,
[{check_keyex, ecdh_ecdsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
client_ecdhe_rsa_server_ecdh_ecdsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{key_usage, [keyEncipherment]
- }]}]}],
- ecdhe_rsa, ecdh_ecdsa, Config),
- basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdh_ecdsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
+ Ext = x509_test:extensions([{key_usage, [keyEncipherment]}]),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain,
+ [[], [], [{extensions, Ext}]]},
+ {client_chain,
+ ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf()}],
+ ecdhe_rsa, ecdh_ecdsa, Config),
+ basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdh_ecdsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
client_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_ecdh_ecdsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{key_usage, [keyEncipherment]
- }]}]}],
- ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdh_ecdsa, Config),
+ Ext = x509_test:extensions([{key_usage, [keyEncipherment]}]),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain,
+ [[], [], [{extensions, Ext}]]},
+ {client_chain,
+ ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf()}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdh_ecdsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts,
[{check_keyex, ecdh_ecdsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
%% ECDHE_ECDSA
client_ecdh_rsa_server_ecdhe_ecdsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([], ecdh_rsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdh_rsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdhe_ecdsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
client_ecdh_ecdsa_server_ecdhe_ecdsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([], ecdh_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdh_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdhe_ecdsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
client_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_ecdhe_ecdsa(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([], ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
basic_test(COpts, SOpts, [{check_keyex, ecdhe_ecdsa} | proplists:delete(check_keyex, Config)]).
client_ecdsa_server_ecdsa_with_raw_key(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([], ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}]
+ , ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ServerKeyFile = proplists:get_value(keyfile, SOpts),
{ok, PemBin} = file:read_file(ServerKeyFile),
PemEntries = public_key:pem_decode(PemBin),
- {'ECPrivateKey', Key, not_encrypted} = proplists:lookup('ECPrivateKey', PemEntries),
+ {'ECPrivateKey', Key, not_encrypted} = proplists:lookup('ECPrivateKey', PemEntries),
ServerKey = {'ECPrivateKey', Key},
SType = proplists:get_value(server_type, Config),
CType = proplists:get_value(client_type, Config),
{Server, Port} = start_server_with_raw_key(SType,
[{key, ServerKey} | proplists:delete(keyfile, SOpts)],
- Config),
+ Config),
Client = start_client(CType, Port, COpts, Config),
- check_result(Server, SType, Client, CType),
+ check_result(Server, SType, Client, CType),
close(Server, Client).
ecc_default_order(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [],
case supported_eccs([{eccs, [sect571r1]}]) of
true -> ecc_test(sect571r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
false -> {skip, "unsupported named curves"}
- end.
+ end.
ecc_default_order_custom_curves(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
- true -> ecc_test(sect571r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
+ true -> ecc_test(sect571r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
false -> {skip, "unsupported named curves"}
end.
ecc_client_order(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{honor_ecc_order, false}],
case supported_eccs([{eccs, [sect571r1]}]) of
- true -> ecc_test(sect571r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
+ true -> ecc_test(sect571r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
false -> {skip, "unsupported named curves"}
end.
ecc_client_order_custom_curves(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{honor_ecc_order, false}, {eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
true -> ecc_test(sect571r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
@@ -336,45 +383,62 @@ ecc_client_order_custom_curves(Config) ->
end.
ecc_unknown_curve(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{eccs, ['123_fake_curve']}],
ecc_test_error(COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config).
client_ecdh_rsa_server_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_custom(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdh_rsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdh_rsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{honor_ecc_order, true}, {eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
- case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
- true -> ecc_test(secp256r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
- false -> {skip, "unsupported named curves"}
- end.
+ case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
+ true -> ecc_test(secp256r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
+ false -> {skip, "unsupported named curves"}
+ end.
client_ecdh_rsa_server_ecdhe_rsa_server_custom(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdh_rsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
- ECCOpts = [{honor_ecc_order, true}, {eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdh_rsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
+ ECCOpts = [{honor_ecc_order, true}, {eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
true -> ecc_test(undefined, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
false -> {skip, "unsupported named curves"}
end.
client_ecdhe_rsa_server_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_custom(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdhe_rsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_rsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{honor_ecc_order, true}, {eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
- true -> ecc_test(secp256r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
+ true -> ecc_test(secp256r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
false -> {skip, "unsupported named curves"}
end.
client_ecdhe_rsa_server_ecdhe_rsa_server_custom(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([], ecdhe_rsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_rsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{honor_ecc_order, true}, {eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
true -> ecc_test(undefined, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
false -> {skip, "unsupported named curves"}
- end.
+ end.
client_ecdhe_rsa_server_ecdh_rsa_server_custom(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{key_usage, [keyEncipherment]
- }]}]}], ecdhe_rsa, ecdh_rsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ Ext = x509_test:extensions([{key_usage, [keyEncipherment]}]),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, [[], [], [{extensions, Ext}]]},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_rsa, ecdh_rsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{honor_ecc_order, true}, {eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
true -> ecc_test(undefined, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
@@ -382,7 +446,10 @@ client_ecdhe_rsa_server_ecdh_rsa_server_custom(Config) ->
end.
client_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_custom(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([], ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{honor_ecc_order, true}, {eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
true -> ecc_test(secp256r1, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
@@ -390,7 +457,10 @@ client_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_custom(Config) ->
end.
client_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_ecdhe_rsa_server_custom(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_rsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{honor_ecc_order, true}, {eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
true -> ecc_test(undefined, COpts, SOpts, [], ECCOpts, Config);
@@ -398,7 +468,10 @@ client_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_ecdhe_rsa_server_custom(Config) ->
end.
client_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_ecdhe_ecdsa_client_custom(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_ecdsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
true -> ecc_test(secp256r1, COpts, SOpts, ECCOpts, [], Config);
@@ -406,7 +479,10 @@ client_ecdhe_ecdsa_server_ecdhe_ecdsa_client_custom(Config) ->
end.
client_ecdhe_rsa_server_ecdhe_ecdsa_client_custom(Config) ->
- {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([],ecdhe_rsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
+ Default = ssl_test_lib:default_cert_chain_conf(),
+ {COpts, SOpts} = ssl_test_lib:make_ec_cert_chains([{server_chain, Default},
+ {client_chain, Default}],
+ ecdhe_rsa, ecdhe_ecdsa, Config),
ECCOpts = [{eccs, [secp256r1, sect571r1]}],
case supported_eccs(ECCOpts) of
true -> ecc_test(secp256r1, COpts, SOpts, ECCOpts, [], Config);
diff --git a/lib/ssl/test/ssl_certificate_verify_SUITE.erl b/lib/ssl/test/ssl_certificate_verify_SUITE.erl
index c3fd73bf09..0bc265fa10 100644
--- a/lib/ssl/test/ssl_certificate_verify_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/ssl/test/ssl_certificate_verify_SUITE.erl
@@ -439,7 +439,7 @@ server_require_peer_cert_partial_chain_fun_fail(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
[{_,_,_}, {_, IntermidiateCA, _} | _] = public_key:pem_decode(ServerCAs),
PartialChain = fun(_CertChain) ->
- ture = false %% crash on purpose
+ ture = false %% crash on purpose
end,
Server = ssl_test_lib:start_server_error([{node, ServerNode}, {port, 0},
@@ -567,9 +567,12 @@ cert_expired() ->
cert_expired(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
{Year, Month, Day} = date(),
Active = proplists:get_value(active, Config),
- {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{server_ca_0,
- [{validity, {{Year-2, Month, Day},
- {Year-1, Month, Day}}}]}],
+ {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{server_chain,
+ [[],
+ [{validity, {{Year-2, Month, Day},
+ {Year-1, Month, Day}}}],
+ []
+ ]}],
Config, "_expired"),
ClientOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ClientOpts0, Config),
ServerOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ServerOpts0, Config),
@@ -598,11 +601,11 @@ extended_key_usage_verify_server() ->
[{doc,"Test cert that has a critical extended_key_usage extension in server cert"}].
extended_key_usage_verify_server(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{server_peer_opts,
- [{extensions,
- [{?'id-ce-extKeyUsage',
- [?'id-kp-serverAuth'], true}]
- }]}], Config, "_keyusage_server"),
+ Ext = x509_test:extensions([{?'id-ce-extKeyUsage',
+ [?'id-kp-serverAuth'], true}]),
+ {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{server_chain,
+ [[],[], [{extensions, Ext}]]}], Config,
+ "_keyusage_server"),
ClientOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ClientOpts0, Config),
ServerOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ServerOpts0, Config),
Active = proplists:get_value(active, Config),
@@ -632,14 +635,13 @@ extended_key_usage_verify_both() ->
[{doc,"Test cert that has a critical extended_key_usage extension in client verify_peer mode"}].
extended_key_usage_verify_both(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{server_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{?'id-ce-extKeyUsage',
- [?'id-kp-serverAuth'], true}]
- }]},
- {client_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{?'id-ce-extKeyUsage',
- [?'id-kp-clientAuth'], true}]
- }]}], Config, "_keyusage_both"),
+ ServerExt = x509_test:extensions([{?'id-ce-extKeyUsage',
+ [?'id-kp-serverAuth'], true}]),
+ ClientExt = x509_test:extensions([{?'id-ce-extKeyUsage',
+ [?'id-kp-clientAuth'], true}]),
+ {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{client_chain, [[],[],[{extensions, ClientExt}]]},
+ {server_chain, [[],[],[{extensions, ServerExt}]]}],
+ Config, "_keyusage_both"),
ClientOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ClientOpts0, Config),
ServerOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ServerOpts0, Config),
Active = proplists:get_value(active, Config),
@@ -668,10 +670,10 @@ critical_extension_verify_server() ->
[{doc,"Test cert that has a critical unknown extension in verify_peer mode"}].
critical_extension_verify_server(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{client_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{{2,16,840,1,113730,1,1},
- <<3,2,6,192>>, true}]
- }]}], Config, "_client_unknown_extension"),
+ Ext = x509_test:extensions([{{2,16,840,1,113730,1,1}, <<3,2,6,192>>, true}]),
+ {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{client_chain,
+ [[],[], [{extensions, Ext}]]}],
+ Config, "_client_unknown_extension"),
ClientOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ClientOpts0, Config),
ServerOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ServerOpts0, Config),
Active = proplists:get_value(active, Config),
@@ -705,10 +707,10 @@ critical_extension_verify_client() ->
[{doc,"Test cert that has a critical unknown extension in verify_peer mode"}].
critical_extension_verify_client(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{server_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{{2,16,840,1,113730,1,1},
- <<3,2,6,192>>, true}]
- }]}], Config, "_server_unknown_extensions"),
+ Ext = x509_test:extensions([{{2,16,840,1,113730,1,1}, <<3,2,6,192>>, true}]),
+ {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{server_chain,
+ [[],[],[{extensions, Ext}]]}],
+ Config, "_server_unknown_extensions"),
ClientOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ClientOpts0, Config),
ServerOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ServerOpts0, Config),
Active = proplists:get_value(active, Config),
@@ -741,11 +743,10 @@ critical_extension_verify_none() ->
[{doc,"Test cert that has a critical unknown extension in verify_none mode"}].
critical_extension_verify_none(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{client_peer_opts,
- [{extensions,
- [{{2,16,840,1,113730,1,1},
- <<3,2,6,192>>, true}]
- }]}], Config, "_unknown_extensions"),
+ Ext = x509_test:extensions([{{2,16,840,1,113730,1,1}, <<3,2,6,192>>, true}]),
+ {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{server_chain,
+ [[],[], [{extensions, Ext}]]}],
+ Config, "_unknown_extensions"),
ClientOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ClientOpts0, Config),
ServerOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ServerOpts0, Config),
Active = proplists:get_value(active, Config),
@@ -780,12 +781,7 @@ no_authority_key_identifier() ->
" but are present in trusted certs db."}].
no_authority_key_identifier(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{server_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{auth_key_id, undefined}]
- }]},
- {client_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{auth_key_id, undefined}]
- }]}], Config, "_peer_no_auth_key_id"),
+ {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([], Config, "_peer_no_auth_key_id"),
ClientOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ClientOpts0, Config),
ServerOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ServerOpts0, Config),
@@ -822,14 +818,10 @@ no_authority_key_identifier_keyEncipherment() ->
" authorityKeyIdentifier extension, but are present in trusted certs db."}].
no_authority_key_identifier_keyEncipherment(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{server_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{auth_key_id, undefined},
- {key_usage, [digitalSignature,
- keyEncipherment]}]
- }]},
- {client_peer_opts,
- [{extensions, [{auth_key_id, undefined}]
- }]}], Config, "_peer_keyEncipherment"),
+ ClientExt = x509_test:extensions([{key_usage, [digitalSignature, keyEncipherment]}]),
+ {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{client_chain,
+ [[],[],[{extensions, ClientExt}]]}],
+ Config, "_peer_keyEncipherment"),
ClientOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ClientOpts0, Config),
ServerOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ServerOpts0, Config),
{ClientNode, ServerNode, Hostname} = ssl_test_lib:run_where(Config),
@@ -932,12 +924,10 @@ client_with_cert_cipher_suites_handshake() ->
[{doc, "Test that client with a certificate without keyEncipherment usage "
" extension can connect to a server with restricted cipher suites "}].
client_with_cert_cipher_suites_handshake(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{client_peer_opts,
- [{extensions,
- [{key_usage, [digitalSignature]}]
- }]}], Config, "_sign_only_extensions"),
-
-
+ Ext = x509_test:extensions([{key_usage, [digitalSignature]}]),
+ {ClientOpts0, ServerOpts0} = ssl_test_lib:make_rsa_cert_chains([{client_chain,
+ [[], [], [{extensions, Ext}]]}],
+ Config, "_sign_only_extensions"),
ClientOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ClientOpts0, Config),
ServerOpts = ssl_test_lib:ssl_options(ServerOpts0, Config),
diff --git a/lib/ssl/test/ssl_test_lib.erl b/lib/ssl/test/ssl_test_lib.erl
index a5f03a1f15..4e7252f469 100644
--- a/lib/ssl/test/ssl_test_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/ssl/test/ssl_test_lib.erl
@@ -449,11 +449,12 @@ make_dsa_cert(Config) ->
CryptoSupport = crypto:supports(),
case proplists:get_bool(dss, proplists:get_value(public_keys, CryptoSupport)) of
true ->
+ ClientChain = proplists:get_value(client_chain, Config, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ ServerChain = proplists:get_value(server_chain, Config, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ CertChainConf = gen_conf(dsa, dsa, ClientChain, ServerChain),
ClientFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), "dsa"]),
ServerFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), "dsa"]),
- KeyGenSpec = key_gen_info(dsa, dsa),
-
- GenCertData = x509_test:gen_test_certs([{digest, sha} | KeyGenSpec]),
+ GenCertData = public_key:pkix_test_data(CertChainConf),
[{server_config, ServerConf},
{client_config, ClientConf}] =
x509_test:gen_pem_config_files(GenCertData, ClientFileBase, ServerFileBase),
@@ -469,12 +470,13 @@ make_dsa_cert(Config) ->
false ->
Config
end.
-make_rsa_cert_chains(ChainConf, Config, Suffix) ->
- CryptoSupport = crypto:supports(),
- KeyGenSpec = key_gen_info(rsa, rsa),
+make_rsa_cert_chains(UserConf, Config, Suffix) ->
+ ClientChain = proplists:get_value(client_chain, UserConf, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ ServerChain = proplists:get_value(server_chain, UserConf, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ CertChainConf = gen_conf(rsa, rsa, ClientChain, ServerChain),
ClientFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), "rsa" ++ Suffix]),
ServerFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), "rsa" ++ Suffix]),
- GenCertData = x509_test:gen_test_certs([{digest, appropriate_sha(CryptoSupport)} | KeyGenSpec] ++ ChainConf),
+ GenCertData = public_key:pkix_test_data(CertChainConf),
[{server_config, ServerConf},
{client_config, ClientConf}] =
x509_test:gen_pem_config_files(GenCertData, ClientFileBase, ServerFileBase),
@@ -482,12 +484,13 @@ make_rsa_cert_chains(ChainConf, Config, Suffix) ->
[{reuseaddr, true}, {verify, verify_peer} | ServerConf]
}.
-make_ec_cert_chains(ChainConf, ClientChainType, ServerChainType, Config) ->
- CryptoSupport = crypto:supports(),
- KeyGenSpec = key_gen_info(ClientChainType, ServerChainType),
+make_ec_cert_chains(UserConf, ClientChainType, ServerChainType, Config) ->
+ ClientChain = proplists:get_value(client_chain, UserConf, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ ServerChain = proplists:get_value(server_chain, UserConf, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ CertChainConf = gen_conf(ClientChainType, ServerChainType, ClientChain, ServerChain),
ClientFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), atom_to_list(ClientChainType)]),
ServerFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), atom_to_list(ServerChainType)]),
- GenCertData = x509_test:gen_test_certs([{digest, appropriate_sha(CryptoSupport)} | KeyGenSpec] ++ ChainConf),
+ GenCertData = public_key:pkix_test_data(CertChainConf),
[{server_config, ServerConf},
{client_config, ClientConf}] =
x509_test:gen_pem_config_files(GenCertData, ClientFileBase, ServerFileBase),
@@ -495,56 +498,113 @@ make_ec_cert_chains(ChainConf, ClientChainType, ServerChainType, Config) ->
[{reuseaddr, true}, {verify, verify_peer} | ServerConf]
}.
-key_gen_info(ClientChainType, ServerChainType) ->
- key_gen_spec("client", ClientChainType) ++ key_gen_spec("server", ServerChainType).
+default_cert_chain_conf() ->
+ %% Use only default options
+ [[],[],[]].
+
+gen_conf(ClientChainType, ServerChainType, UserClient, UserServer) ->
+ ClientTag = conf_tag("client"),
+ ServerTag = conf_tag("server"),
+
+ DefaultClient = chain_spec(client, ClientChainType),
+ DefaultServer = chain_spec(server, ServerChainType),
+
+ ClientConf = merge_chain_spec(UserClient, DefaultClient, []),
+ ServerConf = merge_chain_spec(UserServer, DefaultServer, []),
+
+ new_format([{ClientTag, ClientConf}, {ServerTag, ServerConf}]).
+
+new_format(Conf) ->
+ CConf = proplists:get_value(client_chain, Conf),
+ SConf = proplists:get_value(server_chain, Conf),
+ #{server_chain => proplist_to_map(SConf),
+ client_chain => proplist_to_map(CConf)}.
+
+proplist_to_map([Head | Rest]) ->
+ [Last | Tail] = lists:reverse(Rest),
+ #{root => Head,
+ intermediates => lists:reverse(Tail),
+ peer => Last}.
+
+conf_tag(Role) ->
+ list_to_atom(Role ++ "_chain").
-key_gen_spec(Role, ecdh_rsa) ->
+chain_spec(_Role, ecdh_rsa) ->
+ Digest = {digest, appropriate_sha(crypto:supports())},
CurveOid = hd(tls_v1:ecc_curves(0)),
- [{list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen"), {namedCurve, CurveOid}},
- {list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen_chain"), [hardcode_rsa_key(1),
- {namedCurve, CurveOid}]}
- ];
-key_gen_spec(Role, ecdhe_ecdsa) ->
+ [[Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}],
+ [Digest, {key, hardcode_rsa_key(1)}],
+ [Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}]];
+
+chain_spec(_Role, ecdhe_ecdsa) ->
+ Digest = {digest, appropriate_sha(crypto:supports())},
CurveOid = hd(tls_v1:ecc_curves(0)),
- [{list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen"), {namedCurve, CurveOid}},
- {list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen_chain"), [{namedCurve, CurveOid},
- {namedCurve, CurveOid}]}
- ];
-key_gen_spec(Role, ecdh_ecdsa) ->
+ [[Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}],
+ [Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}],
+ [Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}]];
+
+chain_spec(_Role, ecdh_ecdsa) ->
+ Digest = {digest, appropriate_sha(crypto:supports())},
CurveOid = hd(tls_v1:ecc_curves(0)),
- [{list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen"), {namedCurve, CurveOid}},
- {list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen_chain"), [{namedCurve, CurveOid},
- {namedCurve, CurveOid}]}
- ];
-key_gen_spec(Role, ecdhe_rsa) ->
- [{list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen"), hardcode_rsa_key(1)},
- {list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen_chain"), [hardcode_rsa_key(2),
- hardcode_rsa_key(3)]}
- ];
-key_gen_spec(Role, rsa) ->
- [{list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen"), hardcode_rsa_key(1)},
- {list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen_chain"), [hardcode_rsa_key(2),
- hardcode_rsa_key(3)]}
- ];
-key_gen_spec(Role, dsa) ->
- [{list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen"), hardcode_dsa_key(1)},
- {list_to_atom(Role ++ "_key_gen_chain"), [hardcode_dsa_key(2),
- hardcode_dsa_key(3)]}
- ].
+ [[Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}],
+ [Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}],
+ [Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}]];
+chain_spec(_Role, ecdhe_rsa) ->
+ Digest = {digest, appropriate_sha(crypto:supports())},
+ [[Digest, {key, hardcode_rsa_key(1)}],
+ [Digest, {key, hardcode_rsa_key(2)}],
+ [Digest, {key, hardcode_rsa_key(3)}]];
+chain_spec(_Role, ecdsa) ->
+ Digest = {digest, appropriate_sha(crypto:supports())},
+ CurveOid = hd(tls_v1:ecc_curves(0)),
+ [[Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}],
+ [Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}],
+ [Digest, {key, {namedCurve, CurveOid}}]];
+chain_spec(_Role, rsa) ->
+ Digest = {digest, appropriate_sha(crypto:supports())},
+ [[Digest, {key, hardcode_rsa_key(1)}],
+ [Digest, {key, hardcode_rsa_key(2)}],
+ [Digest, {key, hardcode_rsa_key(3)}]];
+chain_spec(_Role, dsa) ->
+ Digest = {digest, appropriate_sha(crypto:supports())},
+ [[Digest, {key, hardcode_dsa_key(1)}],
+ [Digest, {key, hardcode_dsa_key(2)}],
+ [Digest, {key, hardcode_dsa_key(3)}]].
+
+merge_chain_spec([], [], Acc)->
+ lists:reverse(Acc);
+merge_chain_spec([User| UserRest], [Default | DefaultRest], Acc) ->
+ Merge = merge_spec(User, Default, confs(), []),
+ merge_chain_spec(UserRest, DefaultRest, [Merge | Acc]).
+
+confs() ->
+ [key, digest, validity, extensions].
+
+merge_spec(_, _, [], Acc) ->
+ Acc;
+merge_spec(User, Default, [Conf | Rest], Acc) ->
+ case proplists:get_value(Conf, User, undefined) of
+ undefined ->
+ case proplists:get_value(Conf, Default, undefined) of
+ undefined ->
+ merge_spec(User, Default, Rest, Acc);
+ Value ->
+ merge_spec(User, Default, Rest, [{Conf, Value} | Acc])
+ end;
+ Value ->
+ merge_spec(User, Default, Rest, [{Conf, Value} | Acc])
+ end.
+
make_ecdsa_cert(Config) ->
CryptoSupport = crypto:supports(),
case proplists:get_bool(ecdsa, proplists:get_value(public_keys, CryptoSupport)) of
true ->
ClientFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), "ecdsa"]),
ServerFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), "ecdsa"]),
- CurveOid = hd(tls_v1:ecc_curves(0)),
- GenCertData = x509_test:gen_test_certs([{server_key_gen, {namedCurve, CurveOid}},
- {client_key_gen, {namedCurve, CurveOid}},
- {server_key_gen_chain, [{namedCurve, CurveOid},
- {namedCurve, CurveOid}]},
- {client_key_gen_chain, [{namedCurve, CurveOid},
- {namedCurve, CurveOid}]},
- {digest, appropriate_sha(CryptoSupport)}]),
+ ClientChain = proplists:get_value(client_chain, Config, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ ServerChain = proplists:get_value(server_chain, Config, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ CertChainConf = gen_conf(ecdsa, ecdsa, ClientChain, ServerChain),
+ GenCertData = public_key:pkix_test_data(CertChainConf),
[{server_config, ServerConf},
{client_config, ClientConf}] =
x509_test:gen_pem_config_files(GenCertData, ClientFileBase, ServerFileBase),
@@ -563,13 +623,10 @@ make_rsa_cert(Config) ->
true ->
ClientFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), "rsa"]),
ServerFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), "rsa"]),
- GenCertData = x509_test:gen_test_certs([{server_key_gen, hardcode_rsa_key(1)},
- {client_key_gen, hardcode_rsa_key(2)},
- {server_key_gen_chain, [hardcode_rsa_key(3),
- hardcode_rsa_key(4)]},
- {client_key_gen_chain, [hardcode_rsa_key(5),
- hardcode_rsa_key(6)]},
- {digest, appropriate_sha(CryptoSupport)}]),
+ ClientChain = proplists:get_value(client_chain, Config, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ ServerChain = proplists:get_value(server_chain, Config, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ CertChainConf = gen_conf(rsa, rsa, ClientChain, ServerChain),
+ GenCertData = public_key:pkix_test_data(CertChainConf),
[{server_config, ServerConf},
{client_config, ClientConf}] =
x509_test:gen_pem_config_files(GenCertData, ClientFileBase, ServerFileBase),
@@ -601,16 +658,10 @@ make_ecdh_rsa_cert(Config) ->
true ->
ClientFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), "ecdh_rsa"]),
ServerFileBase = filename:join([proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config), "ecdh_rsa"]),
- CurveOid = hd(tls_v1:ecc_curves(0)),
- GenCertData = x509_test:gen_test_certs([{server_key_gen, {namedCurve, CurveOid}},
- {client_key_gen, {namedCurve, CurveOid}},
- {server_key_gen_chain, [hardcode_rsa_key(1),
- {namedCurve, CurveOid}
- ]},
- {client_key_gen_chain, [hardcode_rsa_key(2),
- {namedCurve, CurveOid}
- ]},
- {digest, appropriate_sha(CryptoSupport)}]),
+ ClientChain = proplists:get_value(client_chain, Config, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ ServerChain = proplists:get_value(server_chain, Config, default_cert_chain_conf()),
+ CertChainConf = gen_conf(ecdh_rsa, ecdh_rsa, ClientChain, ServerChain),
+ GenCertData = public_key:pkix_test_data(CertChainConf),
[{server_config, ServerConf},
{client_config, ClientConf}] =
x509_test:gen_pem_config_files(GenCertData, ClientFileBase, ServerFileBase),
@@ -1509,73 +1560,79 @@ tls_version(Atom) ->
tls_record:protocol_version(Atom).
hardcode_rsa_key(1) ->
- {'RSAPrivateKey', 'two-prime',
- 23995666614853919027835084074500048897452890537492185072956789802729257783422306095699263934587064480357348855732149402060270996295002843755712064937715826848741191927820899197493902093529581182351132392364214171173881547273475904587683433713767834856230531387991145055273426806331200574039205571401702219159773947658558490957010003143162250693492642996408861265758000254664396313741422909188635443907373976005987612936763564996605457102336549804831742940035613780926178523017685712710473543251580072875247250504243621640157403744718833162626193206685233710319205099867303242759099560438381385658382486042995679707669,
- 17,
- 11292078406990079542510627799764728892919007311761028269626724613049062486316379339152594792746853873109340637991599718616598115903530750002688030558925094987642913848386305504703012749896273497577003478759630198199473669305165131570674557041773098755873191241407597673069847908861741446606684974777271632545629600685952292605647052193819136445675100211504432575554351515262198132231537860917084269870590492135731720141577986787033006338680118008484613510063003323516659048210893001173583018220214626635609151105287049126443102976056146630518124476470236027123782297108342869049542023328584384300970694412006494684657,
- 169371138592582642967021557955633494538845517070305333860805485424261447791289944610138334410987654265476540480228705481960508520379619587635662291973699651583489223555422528867090299996446070521801757353675026048850480903160224210802452555900007597342687137394192939372218903554801584969667104937092080815197,
- 141675062317286527042995673340952251894209529891636708844197799307963834958115010129693036021381525952081167155681637592199810112261679449166276939178032066869788822014115556349519329537177920752776047051833616197615329017439297361972726138285974555338480581117881706656603857310337984049152655480389797687577,
- 119556097830058336212015217380447172615655659108450823901745048534772786676204666783627059584226579481512852103690850928442711896738555003036938088452023283470698275450886490965004917644550167427154181661417665446247398284583687678213495921811770068712485038160606780733330990744565824684470897602653233516609,
- 41669135975672507953822256864985956439473391144599032012999352737636422046504414744027363535700448809435637398729893409470532385959317485048904982111185902020526124121798693043976273393287623750816484427009887116945685005129205106462566511260580751570141347387612266663707016855981760014456663376585234613993,
- 76837684977089699359024365285678488693966186052769523357232308621548155587515525857011429902602352279058920284048929101483304120686557782043616693940283344235057989514310975192908256494992960578961614059245280827077951132083993754797053182279229469590276271658395444955906108899267024101096069475145863928441,
- asn1_NOVALUE};
+ #'RSAPrivateKey'{
+ version = 'two-prime',
+ modulus = 23995666614853919027835084074500048897452890537492185072956789802729257783422306095699263934587064480357348855732149402060270996295002843755712064937715826848741191927820899197493902093529581182351132392364214171173881547273475904587683433713767834856230531387991145055273426806331200574039205571401702219159773947658558490957010003143162250693492642996408861265758000254664396313741422909188635443907373976005987612936763564996605457102336549804831742940035613780926178523017685712710473543251580072875247250504243621640157403744718833162626193206685233710319205099867303242759099560438381385658382486042995679707669,
+ publicExponent = 17,
+ privateExponent = 11292078406990079542510627799764728892919007311761028269626724613049062486316379339152594792746853873109340637991599718616598115903530750002688030558925094987642913848386305504703012749896273497577003478759630198199473669305165131570674557041773098755873191241407597673069847908861741446606684974777271632545629600685952292605647052193819136445675100211504432575554351515262198132231537860917084269870590492135731720141577986787033006338680118008484613510063003323516659048210893001173583018220214626635609151105287049126443102976056146630518124476470236027123782297108342869049542023328584384300970694412006494684657,
+ prime1 = 169371138592582642967021557955633494538845517070305333860805485424261447791289944610138334410987654265476540480228705481960508520379619587635662291973699651583489223555422528867090299996446070521801757353675026048850480903160224210802452555900007597342687137394192939372218903554801584969667104937092080815197,
+ prime2 = 141675062317286527042995673340952251894209529891636708844197799307963834958115010129693036021381525952081167155681637592199810112261679449166276939178032066869788822014115556349519329537177920752776047051833616197615329017439297361972726138285974555338480581117881706656603857310337984049152655480389797687577,
+ exponent1 = 119556097830058336212015217380447172615655659108450823901745048534772786676204666783627059584226579481512852103690850928442711896738555003036938088452023283470698275450886490965004917644550167427154181661417665446247398284583687678213495921811770068712485038160606780733330990744565824684470897602653233516609,
+ exponent2 = 41669135975672507953822256864985956439473391144599032012999352737636422046504414744027363535700448809435637398729893409470532385959317485048904982111185902020526124121798693043976273393287623750816484427009887116945685005129205106462566511260580751570141347387612266663707016855981760014456663376585234613993,
+ coefficient = 76837684977089699359024365285678488693966186052769523357232308621548155587515525857011429902602352279058920284048929101483304120686557782043616693940283344235057989514310975192908256494992960578961614059245280827077951132083993754797053182279229469590276271658395444955906108899267024101096069475145863928441,
+ otherPrimeInfos = asn1_NOVALUE};
hardcode_rsa_key(2) ->
-{'RSAPrivateKey', 'two-prime',
- 21343679768589700771839799834197557895311746244621307033143551583788179817796325695589283169969489517156931770973490560582341832744966317712674900833543896521418422508485833901274928542544381247956820115082240721897193055368570146764204557110415281995205343662628196075590438954399631753508888358737971039058298703003743872818150364935790613286541190842600031570570099801682794056444451081563070538409720109449780410837763602317050353477918147758267825417201591905091231778937606362076129350476690460157227101296599527319242747999737801698427160817755293383890373574621116766934110792127739174475029121017282777887777,
- 17,
- 18832658619343853622211588088997845201745658451136447382185486691577805721584993260814073385267196632785528033211903435807948675951440868570007265441362261636545666919252206383477878125774454042314841278013741813438699754736973658909592256273895837054592950290554290654932740253882028017801960316533503857992358685308186680144968293076156011747178275038098868263178095174694099811498968993700538293188879611375604635940554394589807673542938082281934965292051746326331046224291377703201248790910007232374006151098976879987912446997911775904329728563222485791845480864283470332826504617837402078265424772379987120023773,
- 146807662748886761089048448970170315054939768171908279335181627815919052012991509112344782731265837727551849787333310044397991034789843793140419387740928103541736452627413492093463231242466386868459637115999163097726153692593711599245170083315894262154838974616739452594203727376460632750934355508361223110419,
- 145385325050081892763917667176962991350872697916072592966410309213561884732628046256782356731057378829876640317801978404203665761131810712267778698468684631707642938779964806354584156202882543264893826268426566901882487709510744074274965029453915224310656287149777603803201831202222853023280023478269485417083,
- 51814469205489445090252393754177758254684624060673510353593515699736136004585238510239335081623236845018299924941168250963996835808180162284853901555621683602965806809675350150634081614988136541809283687999704622726877773856604093851236499993845033701707873394143336209718962603456693912094478414715725803677,
- 51312467664734785681382706062457526359131540440966797517556579722433606376221663384746714140373192528191755406283051201483646739222992016094510128871300458249756331334105225772206172777487956446433115153562317730076172132768497908567634716277852432109643395464627389577600646306666889302334125933506877206029,
- 30504662229874176232343608562807118278893368758027179776313787938167236952567905398252901545019583024374163153775359371298239336609182249464886717948407152570850677549297935773605431024166978281486607154204888016179709037883348099374995148481968169438302456074511782717758301581202874062062542434218011141540,
- asn1_NOVALUE};
-
+ #'RSAPrivateKey'{
+ version = 'two-prime',
+ modulus = 21343679768589700771839799834197557895311746244621307033143551583788179817796325695589283169969489517156931770973490560582341832744966317712674900833543896521418422508485833901274928542544381247956820115082240721897193055368570146764204557110415281995205343662628196075590438954399631753508888358737971039058298703003743872818150364935790613286541190842600031570570099801682794056444451081563070538409720109449780410837763602317050353477918147758267825417201591905091231778937606362076129350476690460157227101296599527319242747999737801698427160817755293383890373574621116766934110792127739174475029121017282777887777,
+ publicExponent = 17,
+ privateExponent = 18832658619343853622211588088997845201745658451136447382185486691577805721584993260814073385267196632785528033211903435807948675951440868570007265441362261636545666919252206383477878125774454042314841278013741813438699754736973658909592256273895837054592950290554290654932740253882028017801960316533503857992358685308186680144968293076156011747178275038098868263178095174694099811498968993700538293188879611375604635940554394589807673542938082281934965292051746326331046224291377703201248790910007232374006151098976879987912446997911775904329728563222485791845480864283470332826504617837402078265424772379987120023773,
+ prime1 = 146807662748886761089048448970170315054939768171908279335181627815919052012991509112344782731265837727551849787333310044397991034789843793140419387740928103541736452627413492093463231242466386868459637115999163097726153692593711599245170083315894262154838974616739452594203727376460632750934355508361223110419,
+ prime2 = 145385325050081892763917667176962991350872697916072592966410309213561884732628046256782356731057378829876640317801978404203665761131810712267778698468684631707642938779964806354584156202882543264893826268426566901882487709510744074274965029453915224310656287149777603803201831202222853023280023478269485417083,
+ exponent1 = 51814469205489445090252393754177758254684624060673510353593515699736136004585238510239335081623236845018299924941168250963996835808180162284853901555621683602965806809675350150634081614988136541809283687999704622726877773856604093851236499993845033701707873394143336209718962603456693912094478414715725803677,
+ exponent2 = 51312467664734785681382706062457526359131540440966797517556579722433606376221663384746714140373192528191755406283051201483646739222992016094510128871300458249756331334105225772206172777487956446433115153562317730076172132768497908567634716277852432109643395464627389577600646306666889302334125933506877206029,
+ coefficient = 30504662229874176232343608562807118278893368758027179776313787938167236952567905398252901545019583024374163153775359371298239336609182249464886717948407152570850677549297935773605431024166978281486607154204888016179709037883348099374995148481968169438302456074511782717758301581202874062062542434218011141540,
+ otherPrimeInfos = asn1_NOVALUE};
hardcode_rsa_key(3) ->
-{'RSAPrivateKey', 'two-prime',
- 25089040456112869869472694987833070928503703615633809313972554887193090845137746668197820419383804666271752525807484521370419854590682661809972833718476098189250708650325307850184923546875260207894844301992963978994451844985784504212035958130279304082438876764367292331581532569155681984449177635856426023931875082020262146075451989132180409962870105455517050416234175675478291534563995772675388370042873175344937421148321291640477650173765084699931690748536036544188863178325887393475703801759010864779559318631816411493486934507417755306337476945299570726975433250753415110141783026008347194577506976486290259135429,
- 17,
- 8854955455098659953931539407470495621824836570223697404931489960185796768872145882893348383311931058684147950284994536954265831032005645344696294253579799360912014817761873358888796545955974191021709753644575521998041827642041589721895044045980930852625485916835514940558187965584358347452650930302268008446431977397918214293502821599497633970075862760001650736520566952260001423171553461362588848929781360590057040212831994258783694027013289053834376791974167294527043946669963760259975273650548116897900664646809242902841107022557239712438496384819445301703021164043324282687280801738470244471443835900160721870265,
- 171641816401041100605063917111691927706183918906535463031548413586331728772311589438043965564336865070070922328258143588739626712299625805650832695450270566547004154065267940032684307994238248203186986569945677705100224518137694769557564475390859269797990555863306972197736879644001860925483629009305104925823,
- 146170909759497809922264016492088453282310383272504533061020897155289106805616042710009332510822455269704884883705830985184223718261139908416790475825625309815234508695722132706422885088219618698987115562577878897003573425367881351537506046253616435685549396767356003663417208105346307649599145759863108910523,
- 60579464612132153154728441333538327425711971378777222246428851853999433684345266860486105493295364142377972586444050678378691780811632637288529186629507258781295583787741625893888579292084087601124818789392592131211843947578009918667375697196773859928702549128225990187436545756706539150170692591519448797349,
- 137572620950115585809189662580789132500998007785886619351549079675566218169991569609420548245479957900898715184664311515467504676010484619686391036071176762179044243478326713135456833024206699951987873470661533079532774988581535389682358631768109586527575902839864474036157372334443583670210960715165278974609,
- 15068630434698373319269196003209754243798959461311186548759287649485250508074064775263867418602372588394608558985183294561315208336731894947137343239541687540387209051236354318837334154993136528453613256169847839789803932725339395739618592522865156272771578671216082079933457043120923342632744996962853951612,
- asn1_NOVALUE};
+ #'RSAPrivateKey'{
+ version = 'two-prime',
+ modulus = 25089040456112869869472694987833070928503703615633809313972554887193090845137746668197820419383804666271752525807484521370419854590682661809972833718476098189250708650325307850184923546875260207894844301992963978994451844985784504212035958130279304082438876764367292331581532569155681984449177635856426023931875082020262146075451989132180409962870105455517050416234175675478291534563995772675388370042873175344937421148321291640477650173765084699931690748536036544188863178325887393475703801759010864779559318631816411493486934507417755306337476945299570726975433250753415110141783026008347194577506976486290259135429,
+ publicExponent = 17,
+ privateExponent = 8854955455098659953931539407470495621824836570223697404931489960185796768872145882893348383311931058684147950284994536954265831032005645344696294253579799360912014817761873358888796545955974191021709753644575521998041827642041589721895044045980930852625485916835514940558187965584358347452650930302268008446431977397918214293502821599497633970075862760001650736520566952260001423171553461362588848929781360590057040212831994258783694027013289053834376791974167294527043946669963760259975273650548116897900664646809242902841107022557239712438496384819445301703021164043324282687280801738470244471443835900160721870265,
+ prime1 = 171641816401041100605063917111691927706183918906535463031548413586331728772311589438043965564336865070070922328258143588739626712299625805650832695450270566547004154065267940032684307994238248203186986569945677705100224518137694769557564475390859269797990555863306972197736879644001860925483629009305104925823,
+ prime2 =146170909759497809922264016492088453282310383272504533061020897155289106805616042710009332510822455269704884883705830985184223718261139908416790475825625309815234508695722132706422885088219618698987115562577878897003573425367881351537506046253616435685549396767356003663417208105346307649599145759863108910523,
+ exponent1 = 60579464612132153154728441333538327425711971378777222246428851853999433684345266860486105493295364142377972586444050678378691780811632637288529186629507258781295583787741625893888579292084087601124818789392592131211843947578009918667375697196773859928702549128225990187436545756706539150170692591519448797349,
+ exponent2 = 137572620950115585809189662580789132500998007785886619351549079675566218169991569609420548245479957900898715184664311515467504676010484619686391036071176762179044243478326713135456833024206699951987873470661533079532774988581535389682358631768109586527575902839864474036157372334443583670210960715165278974609,
+ coefficient = 15068630434698373319269196003209754243798959461311186548759287649485250508074064775263867418602372588394608558985183294561315208336731894947137343239541687540387209051236354318837334154993136528453613256169847839789803932725339395739618592522865156272771578671216082079933457043120923342632744996962853951612,
+ otherPrimeInfos = asn1_NOVALUE};
hardcode_rsa_key(4) ->
-{'RSAPrivateKey', 'two-prime',
- 28617237755030755643854803617273584643843067580642149032833640135949799721163782522787597288521902619948688786051081993247908700824196122780349730169173433743054172191054872553484065655968335396052034378669869864779940355219732200954630251223541048434478476115391643898092650304645086338265930608997389611376417609043761464100338332976874588396803891301015812818307951159858145399281035705713082131199940309445719678087542976246147777388465712394062188801177717719764254900022006288880246925156931391594131839991579403409541227225173269459173129377291869028712271737734702830877034334838181789916127814298794576266389,
- 17,
- 26933870828264240605980991639786903194205240075898493207372837775011576208154148256741268036255908348187001210401018346586267012540419880263858569570986761169933338532757527109161473558558433313931326474042230460969355628442100895016122589386862163232450330461545076609969553227901257730132640573174013751883368376011370428995523268034111482031427024082719896108094847702954695363285832195666458915142143884210891427766607838346722974883433132513540317964796373298134261669479023445911856492129270184781873446960437310543998533283339488055776892320162032014809906169940882070478200435536171854883284366514852906334641,
- 177342190816702392178883147766999616783253285436834252111702533617098994535049411784501174309695427674025956656849179054202187436663487378682303508229883753383891163725167367039879190685255046547908384208614573353917213168937832054054779266431207529839577747601879940934691505396807977946728204814969824442867,
- 161367340863680900415977542864139121629424927689088951345472941851682581254789586032968359551717004797621579428672968948552429138154521719743297455351687337112710712475376510559020211584326773715482918387500187602625572442687231345855402020688502483137168684570635690059254866684191216155909970061793538842967,
- 62591361464718491357252875682470452982324688977706206627659717747211409835899792394529826226951327414362102349476180842659595565881230839534930649963488383547255704844176717778780890830090016428673547367746320007264898765507470136725216211681602657590439205035957626212244060728285168687080542875871702744541,
- 28476589564178982426348978152495139111074987239250991413906989738532220221433456358759122273832412611344984605059935696803369847909621479954699550944415412431654831613301737157474154985469430655673456186029444871051571607533040825739188591886206320553618003159523945304574388238386685203984112363845918619347,
- 34340318160575773065401929915821192439103777558577109939078671096408836197675640654693301707202885840826672396546056002756167635035389371579540325327619480512374920136684787633921441576901246290213545161954865184290700344352088099063404416346968182170720521708773285279884132629954461545103181082503707725012,
- asn1_NOVALUE};
+ #'RSAPrivateKey'{
+ version ='two-prime',
+ modulus = 28617237755030755643854803617273584643843067580642149032833640135949799721163782522787597288521902619948688786051081993247908700824196122780349730169173433743054172191054872553484065655968335396052034378669869864779940355219732200954630251223541048434478476115391643898092650304645086338265930608997389611376417609043761464100338332976874588396803891301015812818307951159858145399281035705713082131199940309445719678087542976246147777388465712394062188801177717719764254900022006288880246925156931391594131839991579403409541227225173269459173129377291869028712271737734702830877034334838181789916127814298794576266389,
+ publicExponent = 17,
+ privateExponent = 26933870828264240605980991639786903194205240075898493207372837775011576208154148256741268036255908348187001210401018346586267012540419880263858569570986761169933338532757527109161473558558433313931326474042230460969355628442100895016122589386862163232450330461545076609969553227901257730132640573174013751883368376011370428995523268034111482031427024082719896108094847702954695363285832195666458915142143884210891427766607838346722974883433132513540317964796373298134261669479023445911856492129270184781873446960437310543998533283339488055776892320162032014809906169940882070478200435536171854883284366514852906334641,
+ prime1 = 177342190816702392178883147766999616783253285436834252111702533617098994535049411784501174309695427674025956656849179054202187436663487378682303508229883753383891163725167367039879190685255046547908384208614573353917213168937832054054779266431207529839577747601879940934691505396807977946728204814969824442867,
+ prime2 = 161367340863680900415977542864139121629424927689088951345472941851682581254789586032968359551717004797621579428672968948552429138154521719743297455351687337112710712475376510559020211584326773715482918387500187602625572442687231345855402020688502483137168684570635690059254866684191216155909970061793538842967,
+ exponent1 = 62591361464718491357252875682470452982324688977706206627659717747211409835899792394529826226951327414362102349476180842659595565881230839534930649963488383547255704844176717778780890830090016428673547367746320007264898765507470136725216211681602657590439205035957626212244060728285168687080542875871702744541,
+ exponent2 = 28476589564178982426348978152495139111074987239250991413906989738532220221433456358759122273832412611344984605059935696803369847909621479954699550944415412431654831613301737157474154985469430655673456186029444871051571607533040825739188591886206320553618003159523945304574388238386685203984112363845918619347,
+ coefficient = 34340318160575773065401929915821192439103777558577109939078671096408836197675640654693301707202885840826672396546056002756167635035389371579540325327619480512374920136684787633921441576901246290213545161954865184290700344352088099063404416346968182170720521708773285279884132629954461545103181082503707725012,
+ otherPrimeInfos = asn1_NOVALUE};
+
hardcode_rsa_key(5) ->
-{'RSAPrivateKey', 'two-prime',
- 26363170152814518327068346871197765236382539835597898797762992537312221863402655353436079974302838986536256364057947538018476963115004626096654613827403121905035011992899481598437933532388248462251770039307078647864188314916665766359828262009578648593031111569685489178543405615478739906285223620987558499488359880003693226535420421293716164794046859453204135383236667988765227190694994861629971618548127529849059769249520775574008363789050621665120207265361610436965088511042779948238320901918522125988916609088415989475825860046571847719492980547438560049874493788767083330042728150253120940100665370844282489982633,
- 17,
- 10855423004100095781734025182257903332628104638187370093196526338893267826106975733767797636477639582691399679317978398007608161282648963686857782164224814902073240232370374775827384395689278778574258251479385325591136364965685903795223402003944149420659869469870495544106108194608892902588033255700759382142132115013969680562678811046675523365751498355532768935784747314021422035957153013494814430893022253205880275287307995039363642554998244274484818208792520243113824379110193356010059999642946040953102866271737127640405568982049887176990990501963784502429481034227543991366980671390566584211881030995602076468001,
- 163564135568104310461344551909369650951960301778977149705601170951529791054750122905880591964737953456660497440730575925978769763154927541340839715938951226089095007207042122512586007411328664679011914120351043948122025612160733403945093961374276707993674792189646478659304624413958625254578122842556295400709,
- 161179405627326572739107057023381254841260287988433675196680483761672455172873134522398837271764104320975746111042211695289319249471386600030523328069395763313848583139553961129874895374324504709512019736703349829576024049432816885712623938437949550266365056310544300920756181033500610331519029869549723159637,
- 115457036871603042678596154288966812436677860079277988027483179495197499568058910286503947269226790675289762899339230065396778656344654735064122152427494983121714122734382674714766593466820233891067233496718383963380253373289929461608301619793607087995535147427985749641862087821617853120878674947686796753441,
- 142217122612346975946270932667689342506994371754500301644129838613240401623123353990351915239791856753802128921507833848784693455415929352968108818884760967629866396887841730408713142977345151214275311532385308673155315337734838428569962298621720191411498579097539089047726042088382891468987379296661520434973,
- 40624877259097915043489529504071755460170951428490878553842519165800720914888257733191322215286203357356050737713125202129282154441426952501134581314792133018830748896123382106683994268028624341502298766844710276939303555637478596035491641473828661569958212421472263269629366559343208764012473880251174832392,
- asn1_NOVALUE};
+ #'RSAPrivateKey'{
+ version= 'two-prime',
+ modulus = 26363170152814518327068346871197765236382539835597898797762992537312221863402655353436079974302838986536256364057947538018476963115004626096654613827403121905035011992899481598437933532388248462251770039307078647864188314916665766359828262009578648593031111569685489178543405615478739906285223620987558499488359880003693226535420421293716164794046859453204135383236667988765227190694994861629971618548127529849059769249520775574008363789050621665120207265361610436965088511042779948238320901918522125988916609088415989475825860046571847719492980547438560049874493788767083330042728150253120940100665370844282489982633,
+ publicExponent = 17,
+ privateExponent = 10855423004100095781734025182257903332628104638187370093196526338893267826106975733767797636477639582691399679317978398007608161282648963686857782164224814902073240232370374775827384395689278778574258251479385325591136364965685903795223402003944149420659869469870495544106108194608892902588033255700759382142132115013969680562678811046675523365751498355532768935784747314021422035957153013494814430893022253205880275287307995039363642554998244274484818208792520243113824379110193356010059999642946040953102866271737127640405568982049887176990990501963784502429481034227543991366980671390566584211881030995602076468001,
+ prime1 =163564135568104310461344551909369650951960301778977149705601170951529791054750122905880591964737953456660497440730575925978769763154927541340839715938951226089095007207042122512586007411328664679011914120351043948122025612160733403945093961374276707993674792189646478659304624413958625254578122842556295400709,
+ prime2 = 161179405627326572739107057023381254841260287988433675196680483761672455172873134522398837271764104320975746111042211695289319249471386600030523328069395763313848583139553961129874895374324504709512019736703349829576024049432816885712623938437949550266365056310544300920756181033500610331519029869549723159637,
+ exponent1 = 115457036871603042678596154288966812436677860079277988027483179495197499568058910286503947269226790675289762899339230065396778656344654735064122152427494983121714122734382674714766593466820233891067233496718383963380253373289929461608301619793607087995535147427985749641862087821617853120878674947686796753441,
+ exponent2 = 142217122612346975946270932667689342506994371754500301644129838613240401623123353990351915239791856753802128921507833848784693455415929352968108818884760967629866396887841730408713142977345151214275311532385308673155315337734838428569962298621720191411498579097539089047726042088382891468987379296661520434973,
+ coefficient = 40624877259097915043489529504071755460170951428490878553842519165800720914888257733191322215286203357356050737713125202129282154441426952501134581314792133018830748896123382106683994268028624341502298766844710276939303555637478596035491641473828661569958212421472263269629366559343208764012473880251174832392,
+ otherPrimeInfos = asn1_NOVALUE};
hardcode_rsa_key(6) ->
-{'RSAPrivateKey', 'two-prime',
- 22748888494866396715768692484866595111939200209856056370972713870125588774286266397044592487895293134537316190976192161177144143633669641697309689280475257429554879273045671863645233402796222694405634510241820106743648116753479926387434021380537483429927516962909367257212902212159798399531316965145618774905828756510318897899298783143203190245236381440043169622358239226123652592179006905016804587837199618842875361941208299410035232803124113612082221121192550063791073372276763648926636149384299189072950588522522800393261949880796214514243704858378436010975184294077063518776479282353562934591448646412389762167039,
- 17,
- 6690849557313646092873144848490175032923294179369428344403739373566349639495960705013115437616262686628622409110644753287395336362844012263914614494257428655751435080307550548130951000822418439531068973600535325512837681398082331290421770994275730420566916753796872722709677121223470117509210872101652580854566448661533030419787125312956120661097410038933324613372774190658239039998357548275441758790939430824924502690997433186652165055694361752689819209062683281242276039100201318203707142383491769671330743466041394101421674581185260900666085723130684175548215193875544802254923825103844262661010117443222587769713,
- 164748737139489923768181260808494855987398781964531448608652166632780898215212977127034263859971474195908846263894581556691971503119888726148555271179103885786024920582830105413607436718060544856016793981261118694063993837665813285582095833772675610567592660039821387740255651489996976698808018635344299728063,
- 138082323967104548254375818343885141517788525705334488282154811252858957969378263753268344088034079842223206527922445018725900110643394926788280539200323021781309918753249061620424428562366627334409266756720941754364262467100514166396917565961434203543659974860389803369482625510495464845206228470088664021953,
- 19382204369351755737433089506881747763223386113474288071606137250915399790025056132592266336467232258342217207517009594904937823896457497193947678962247515974826461245038835931012639613889475865413740468383661022831058098548919210068481862796785365949128548239978986792971253116470232552800943368864035262125,
- 48734937870742781736838524121371226418043009072470995864289933383361985165662916618800592031070851709019955245149098241903258862580021738866451955011878713569874088971734962924855680669070574353320917678842685325069739694270769705787147376221682660074232932303666989424523279591939575827719845342384234360689,
- 81173034184183681160439870161505779100040258708276674532866007896310418779840630960490793104541748007902477778658270784073595697910785917474138815202903114440800310078464142273778315781957021015333260021813037604142367434117205299831740956310682461174553260184078272196958146289378701001596552915990080834227,
- asn1_NOVALUE}.
+ #'RSAPrivateKey'{
+ version = 'two-prime',
+ modulus = 22748888494866396715768692484866595111939200209856056370972713870125588774286266397044592487895293134537316190976192161177144143633669641697309689280475257429554879273045671863645233402796222694405634510241820106743648116753479926387434021380537483429927516962909367257212902212159798399531316965145618774905828756510318897899298783143203190245236381440043169622358239226123652592179006905016804587837199618842875361941208299410035232803124113612082221121192550063791073372276763648926636149384299189072950588522522800393261949880796214514243704858378436010975184294077063518776479282353562934591448646412389762167039,
+ publicExponent = 17,
+ privateExponent = 6690849557313646092873144848490175032923294179369428344403739373566349639495960705013115437616262686628622409110644753287395336362844012263914614494257428655751435080307550548130951000822418439531068973600535325512837681398082331290421770994275730420566916753796872722709677121223470117509210872101652580854566448661533030419787125312956120661097410038933324613372774190658239039998357548275441758790939430824924502690997433186652165055694361752689819209062683281242276039100201318203707142383491769671330743466041394101421674581185260900666085723130684175548215193875544802254923825103844262661010117443222587769713,
+ prime1 = 164748737139489923768181260808494855987398781964531448608652166632780898215212977127034263859971474195908846263894581556691971503119888726148555271179103885786024920582830105413607436718060544856016793981261118694063993837665813285582095833772675610567592660039821387740255651489996976698808018635344299728063,
+ prime2 = 138082323967104548254375818343885141517788525705334488282154811252858957969378263753268344088034079842223206527922445018725900110643394926788280539200323021781309918753249061620424428562366627334409266756720941754364262467100514166396917565961434203543659974860389803369482625510495464845206228470088664021953,
+ exponent1 = 19382204369351755737433089506881747763223386113474288071606137250915399790025056132592266336467232258342217207517009594904937823896457497193947678962247515974826461245038835931012639613889475865413740468383661022831058098548919210068481862796785365949128548239978986792971253116470232552800943368864035262125,
+ exponent2 = 48734937870742781736838524121371226418043009072470995864289933383361985165662916618800592031070851709019955245149098241903258862580021738866451955011878713569874088971734962924855680669070574353320917678842685325069739694270769705787147376221682660074232932303666989424523279591939575827719845342384234360689,
+ coefficient = 81173034184183681160439870161505779100040258708276674532866007896310418779840630960490793104541748007902477778658270784073595697910785917474138815202903114440800310078464142273778315781957021015333260021813037604142367434117205299831740956310682461174553260184078272196958146289378701001596552915990080834227,
+ otherPrimeInfos = asn1_NOVALUE}.
hardcode_dsa_key(1) ->
{'DSAPrivateKey',0,
@@ -1585,19 +1642,21 @@ hardcode_dsa_key(1) ->
48598545580251057979126570873881530215432219542526130654707948736559463436274835406081281466091739849794036308281564299754438126857606949027748889019480936572605967021944405048011118039171039273602705998112739400664375208228641666852589396502386172780433510070337359132965412405544709871654840859752776060358,
1457508827177594730669011716588605181448418352823};
hardcode_dsa_key(2) ->
- {'DSAPrivateKey',0,
- 145447354557382582722944332987784622105075065624518040072393858097520305927329240484963764783346271194321683798321743658303478090647837211867389721684646254999291098347011037298359107547264573476540026676832159205689428125157386525591130716464335426605521884822982379206842523670736739023467072341958074788151,
- 742801637799670234315651916144768554943688916729,
- 79727684678125120155622004643594683941478642656111969487719464672433839064387954070113655822700268007902716505761008423792735229036965034283173483862273639257533568978482104785033927768441235063983341565088899599358397638308472931049309161811156189887217888328371767967629005149630676763492409067382020352505,
- 35853727034965131665219275925554159789667905059030049940938124723126925435403746979702929280654735557166864135215989313820464108440192507913554896358611966877432546584986661291483639036057475682547385322659469460385785257933737832719745145778223672383438466035853830832837226950912832515496378486927322864228,
- 801315110178350279541885862867982846569980443911};
+ #'DSAPrivateKey'{
+ version = 0,
+ p = 145447354557382582722944332987784622105075065624518040072393858097520305927329240484963764783346271194321683798321743658303478090647837211867389721684646254999291098347011037298359107547264573476540026676832159205689428125157386525591130716464335426605521884822982379206842523670736739023467072341958074788151,
+ q = 742801637799670234315651916144768554943688916729,
+ g = 79727684678125120155622004643594683941478642656111969487719464672433839064387954070113655822700268007902716505761008423792735229036965034283173483862273639257533568978482104785033927768441235063983341565088899599358397638308472931049309161811156189887217888328371767967629005149630676763492409067382020352505,
+ y = 35853727034965131665219275925554159789667905059030049940938124723126925435403746979702929280654735557166864135215989313820464108440192507913554896358611966877432546584986661291483639036057475682547385322659469460385785257933737832719745145778223672383438466035853830832837226950912832515496378486927322864228,
+ x = 801315110178350279541885862867982846569980443911};
hardcode_dsa_key(3) ->
- {'DSAPrivateKey',0,
- 99438313664986922963487511141216248076486724382260996073922424025828494981416579966171753999204426907349400798052572573634137057487829150578821328280864500098312146772602202702021153757550650696224643730869835650674962433068943942837519621267815961566259265204876799778977478160416743037274938277357237615491,
- 1454908511695148818053325447108751926908854531909,
- 20302424198893709525243209250470907105157816851043773596964076323184805650258390738340248469444700378962907756890306095615785481696522324901068493502141775433048117442554163252381401915027666416630898618301033737438756165023568220631119672502120011809327566543827706483229480417066316015458225612363927682579,
- 48598545580251057979126570873881530215432219542526130654707948736559463436274835406081281466091739849794036308281564299754438126857606949027748889019480936572605967021944405048011118039171039273602705998112739400664375208228641666852589396502386172780433510070337359132965412405544709871654840859752776060358,
- 1457508827177594730669011716588605181448418352823}.
+ #'DSAPrivateKey'{
+ version = 0,
+ p = 99438313664986922963487511141216248076486724382260996073922424025828494981416579966171753999204426907349400798052572573634137057487829150578821328280864500098312146772602202702021153757550650696224643730869835650674962433068943942837519621267815961566259265204876799778977478160416743037274938277357237615491,
+ q = 1454908511695148818053325447108751926908854531909,
+ g = 20302424198893709525243209250470907105157816851043773596964076323184805650258390738340248469444700378962907756890306095615785481696522324901068493502141775433048117442554163252381401915027666416630898618301033737438756165023568220631119672502120011809327566543827706483229480417066316015458225612363927682579,
+ y = 48598545580251057979126570873881530215432219542526130654707948736559463436274835406081281466091739849794036308281564299754438126857606949027748889019480936572605967021944405048011118039171039273602705998112739400664375208228641666852589396502386172780433510070337359132965412405544709871654840859752776060358,
+ x = 1457508827177594730669011716588605181448418352823}.
dtls_hello() ->
[1,
diff --git a/lib/ssl/test/x509_test.erl b/lib/ssl/test/x509_test.erl
index 4da1537ef6..031fad1216 100644
--- a/lib/ssl/test/x509_test.erl
+++ b/lib/ssl/test/x509_test.erl
@@ -24,23 +24,10 @@
-include_lib("public_key/include/public_key.hrl").
- -export([gen_test_certs/1, gen_pem_config_files/3]).
+-export([extensions/1, gen_pem_config_files/3]).
- gen_test_certs(Opts) ->
- SRootKey = gen_key(proplists:get_value(server_key_gen, Opts)),
- CRootKey = gen_key(proplists:get_value(client_key_gen, Opts)),
- ServerRoot = root_cert("server", SRootKey, Opts),
- ClientRoot = root_cert("client", CRootKey, Opts),
- [{ServerCert, ServerKey} | ServerCAsKeys] = config(server, ServerRoot, SRootKey, Opts),
- [{ClientCert, ClientKey} | ClientCAsKeys] = config(client, ClientRoot, CRootKey, Opts),
- ServerCAs = ca_config(ClientRoot, ServerCAsKeys),
- ClientCAs = ca_config(ServerRoot, ClientCAsKeys),
- [{server_config, [{cert, ServerCert}, {key, ServerKey}, {cacerts, ServerCAs}]},
- {client_config, [{cert, ClientCert}, {key, ClientKey}, {cacerts, ClientCAs}]}].
-
-gen_pem_config_files(GenCertData, ClientBase, ServerBase) ->
- ServerConf = proplists:get_value(server_config, GenCertData),
- ClientConf = proplists:get_value(client_config, GenCertData),
+gen_pem_config_files(#{server_config := ServerConf,
+ client_config := ClientConf}, ClientBase, ServerBase) ->
ServerCaCertFile = ServerBase ++ "_server_cacerts.pem",
ServerCertFile = ServerBase ++ "_server_cert.pem",
@@ -62,147 +49,33 @@ gen_pem_config_files(GenCertData, ClientBase, ServerBase) ->
{keyfile, ServerKeyFile}, {cacertfile, ServerCaCertFile}]},
{client_config, [{certfile, ClientCertFile},
{keyfile, ClientKeyFile}, {cacertfile, ClientCaCertFile}]}].
-
-
- do_gen_pem_config_files(Config, CertFile, KeyFile, CAFile) ->
- CAs = proplists:get_value(cacerts, Config),
- Cert = proplists:get_value(cert, Config),
- Key = proplists:get_value(key, Config),
- der_to_pem(CertFile, [cert_entry(Cert)]),
- der_to_pem(KeyFile, [key_entry(Key)]),
- der_to_pem(CAFile, ca_entries(CAs)).
-
- cert_entry(Cert) ->
- {'Certificate', Cert, not_encrypted}.
-
- key_entry(Key = #'RSAPrivateKey'{}) ->
- Der = public_key:der_encode('RSAPrivateKey', Key),
- {'RSAPrivateKey', Der, not_encrypted};
- key_entry(Key = #'DSAPrivateKey'{}) ->
- Der = public_key:der_encode('DSAPrivateKey', Key),
- {'DSAPrivateKey', Der, not_encrypted};
- key_entry(Key = #'ECPrivateKey'{}) ->
- Der = public_key:der_encode('ECPrivateKey', Key),
- {'ECPrivateKey', Der, not_encrypted}.
-
- ca_entries(CAs) ->
- [{'Certificate', CACert, not_encrypted} || CACert <- CAs].
-
- gen_key(KeyGen) ->
- case is_key(KeyGen) of
- true ->
- KeyGen;
- false ->
- public_key:generate_key(KeyGen)
- end.
-
-root_cert(Role, PrivKey, Opts) ->
- TBS = cert_template(),
- Issuer = issuer("root", Role, " ROOT CA"),
- OTPTBS = TBS#'OTPTBSCertificate'{
- signature = sign_algorithm(PrivKey, Opts),
- issuer = Issuer,
- validity = validity(Opts),
- subject = Issuer,
- subjectPublicKeyInfo = public_key(PrivKey),
- extensions = extensions(Role, ca, Opts)
- },
- public_key:pkix_sign(OTPTBS, PrivKey).
-
-config(Role, Root, Key, Opts) ->
- KeyGenOpt = list_to_atom(atom_to_list(Role) ++ "_key_gen_chain"),
- KeyGens = proplists:get_value(KeyGenOpt, Opts, default_key_gen()),
- Keys = lists:map(fun gen_key/1, KeyGens),
- cert_chain(Role, Root, Key, Opts, Keys).
-
-cert_template() ->
- #'OTPTBSCertificate'{
- version = v3,
- serialNumber = trunc(rand:uniform()*100000000)*10000 + 1,
- issuerUniqueID = asn1_NOVALUE,
- subjectUniqueID = asn1_NOVALUE
- }.
-
-issuer(Contact, Role, Name) ->
- subject(Contact, Role ++ Name).
-
-subject(Contact, Name) ->
- Opts = [{email, Contact ++ "@erlang.org"},
- {name, Name},
- {city, "Stockholm"},
- {country, "SE"},
- {org, "erlang"},
- {org_unit, "automated testing"}],
- subject(Opts).
-
-subject(SubjectOpts) when is_list(SubjectOpts) ->
- Encode = fun(Opt) ->
- {Type,Value} = subject_enc(Opt),
- [#'AttributeTypeAndValue'{type=Type, value=Value}]
- end,
- {rdnSequence, [Encode(Opt) || Opt <- SubjectOpts]}.
-
-subject_enc({name, Name}) ->
- {?'id-at-commonName', {printableString, Name}};
-subject_enc({email, Email}) ->
- {?'id-emailAddress', Email};
-subject_enc({city, City}) ->
- {?'id-at-localityName', {printableString, City}};
-subject_enc({state, State}) ->
- {?'id-at-stateOrProvinceName', {printableString, State}};
-subject_enc({org, Org}) ->
- {?'id-at-organizationName', {printableString, Org}};
-subject_enc({org_unit, OrgUnit}) ->
- {?'id-at-organizationalUnitName', {printableString, OrgUnit}};
-subject_enc({country, Country}) ->
- {?'id-at-countryName', Country};
-subject_enc({serial, Serial}) ->
- {?'id-at-serialNumber', Serial};
-subject_enc({title, Title}) ->
- {?'id-at-title', {printableString, Title}};
-subject_enc({dnQualifer, DnQ}) ->
- {?'id-at-dnQualifier', DnQ};
-subject_enc(Other) ->
- Other.
-
-validity(Opts) ->
- DefFrom0 = calendar:gregorian_days_to_date(calendar:date_to_gregorian_days(date())-1),
- DefTo0 = calendar:gregorian_days_to_date(calendar:date_to_gregorian_days(date())+7),
- {DefFrom, DefTo} = proplists:get_value(validity, Opts, {DefFrom0, DefTo0}),
- Format = fun({Y,M,D}) ->
- lists:flatten(io_lib:format("~w~2..0w~2..0w000000Z",[Y,M,D]))
- end,
- #'Validity'{notBefore={generalTime, Format(DefFrom)},
- notAfter ={generalTime, Format(DefTo)}}.
-
-extensions(Role, Type, Opts) ->
- Exts = proplists:get_value(extensions, Opts, []),
- lists:flatten([extension(Ext) || Ext <- default_extensions(Role, Type, Exts)]).
-
-%% Common extension: name_constraints, policy_constraints, ext_key_usage, inhibit_any,
-%% auth_key_id, subject_key_id, policy_mapping,
-
-default_extensions(_, ca, Exts) ->
- Def = [{key_usage, [keyCertSign, cRLSign]},
- {basic_constraints, default}],
- add_default_extensions(Def, Exts);
-
-default_extensions(server, peer, Exts) ->
- Hostname = net_adm:localhost(),
- Def = [{key_usage, [digitalSignature, keyAgreement]},
- {subject_alt, Hostname}],
- add_default_extensions(Def, Exts);
-
-default_extensions(_, peer, Exts) ->
- Exts.
-
-add_default_extensions(Def, Exts) ->
- Filter = fun({Key, _}, D) ->
- lists:keydelete(Key, 1, D);
- ({Key, _, _}, D) ->
- lists:keydelete(Key, 1, D)
- end,
- Exts ++ lists:foldl(Filter, Def, Exts).
+extensions(Exts) ->
+ [extension(Ext) || Ext <- Exts].
+
+
+do_gen_pem_config_files(Config, CertFile, KeyFile, CAFile) ->
+ CAs = proplists:get_value(cacerts, Config),
+ Cert = proplists:get_value(cert, Config),
+ Key = proplists:get_value(key, Config),
+ der_to_pem(CertFile, [cert_entry(Cert)]),
+ der_to_pem(KeyFile, [key_entry(Key)]),
+ der_to_pem(CAFile, ca_entries(CAs)).
+
+cert_entry(Cert) ->
+ {'Certificate', Cert, not_encrypted}.
+
+key_entry(Key = #'RSAPrivateKey'{}) ->
+ Der = public_key:der_encode('RSAPrivateKey', Key),
+ {'RSAPrivateKey', Der, not_encrypted};
+key_entry(Key = #'DSAPrivateKey'{}) ->
+ Der = public_key:der_encode('DSAPrivateKey', Key),
+ {'DSAPrivateKey', Der, not_encrypted};
+key_entry(Key = #'ECPrivateKey'{}) ->
+ Der = public_key:der_encode('ECPrivateKey', Key),
+ {'ECPrivateKey', Der, not_encrypted}.
+
+ca_entries(CAs) ->
+ [{'Certificate', CACert, not_encrypted} || CACert <- CAs].
extension({_, undefined}) ->
[];
@@ -222,13 +95,6 @@ extension({basic_constraints, Data}) ->
#'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-basicConstraints',
extnValue = Data}
end;
-extension({auth_key_id, {Oid, Issuer, SNr}}) ->
- #'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-authorityKeyIdentifier',
- extnValue = #'AuthorityKeyIdentifier'{
- keyIdentifier = Oid,
- authorityCertIssuer = Issuer,
- authorityCertSerialNumber = SNr},
- critical = false};
extension({key_usage, Value}) ->
#'Extension'{extnID = ?'id-ce-keyUsage',
extnValue = Value,
@@ -240,113 +106,6 @@ extension({subject_alt, Hostname}) ->
extension({Id, Data, Critical}) ->
#'Extension'{extnID = Id, extnValue = Data, critical = Critical}.
-public_key(#'RSAPrivateKey'{modulus=N, publicExponent=E}) ->
- Public = #'RSAPublicKey'{modulus=N, publicExponent=E},
- Algo = #'PublicKeyAlgorithm'{algorithm= ?rsaEncryption, parameters='NULL'},
- #'OTPSubjectPublicKeyInfo'{algorithm = Algo,
- subjectPublicKey = Public};
-public_key(#'DSAPrivateKey'{p=P, q=Q, g=G, y=Y}) ->
- Algo = #'PublicKeyAlgorithm'{algorithm= ?'id-dsa',
- parameters={params, #'Dss-Parms'{p=P, q=Q, g=G}}},
- #'OTPSubjectPublicKeyInfo'{algorithm = Algo, subjectPublicKey = Y};
-public_key(#'ECPrivateKey'{version = _Version,
- privateKey = _PrivKey,
- parameters = Params,
- publicKey = PubKey}) ->
- Algo = #'PublicKeyAlgorithm'{algorithm= ?'id-ecPublicKey', parameters=Params},
- #'OTPSubjectPublicKeyInfo'{algorithm = Algo,
- subjectPublicKey = #'ECPoint'{point = PubKey}}.
-
-sign_algorithm(#'RSAPrivateKey'{}, Opts) ->
- Type = rsa_digest_oid(proplists:get_value(digest, Opts, sha1)),
- #'SignatureAlgorithm'{algorithm = Type,
- parameters = 'NULL'};
-sign_algorithm(#'DSAPrivateKey'{p=P, q=Q, g=G}, _Opts) ->
- #'SignatureAlgorithm'{algorithm = ?'id-dsa-with-sha1',
- parameters = {params,#'Dss-Parms'{p=P, q=Q, g=G}}};
-sign_algorithm(#'ECPrivateKey'{parameters = Parms}, Opts) ->
- Type = ecdsa_digest_oid(proplists:get_value(digest, Opts, sha1)),
- #'SignatureAlgorithm'{algorithm = Type,
- parameters = Parms}.
-
-rsa_digest_oid(sha1) ->
- ?'sha1WithRSAEncryption';
-rsa_digest_oid(sha512) ->
- ?'sha512WithRSAEncryption';
-rsa_digest_oid(sha384) ->
- ?'sha384WithRSAEncryption';
-rsa_digest_oid(sha256) ->
- ?'sha256WithRSAEncryption';
-rsa_digest_oid(md5) ->
- ?'md5WithRSAEncryption'.
-
-ecdsa_digest_oid(sha1) ->
- ?'ecdsa-with-SHA1';
-ecdsa_digest_oid(sha512) ->
- ?'ecdsa-with-SHA512';
-ecdsa_digest_oid(sha384) ->
- ?'ecdsa-with-SHA384';
-ecdsa_digest_oid(sha256) ->
- ?'ecdsa-with-SHA256'.
-
-ca_config(Root, CAsKeys) ->
- [Root | [CA || {CA, _} <- CAsKeys]].
-
-cert_chain(Role, Root, RootKey, Opts, Keys) ->
- cert_chain(Role, Root, RootKey, Opts, Keys, 0, []).
-
-cert_chain(Role, IssuerCert, IssuerKey, Opts, [Key], _, Acc) ->
- PeerOpts = list_to_atom(atom_to_list(Role) ++ "_peer_opts"),
- Cert = cert(Role, public_key:pkix_decode_cert(IssuerCert, otp),
- IssuerKey, Key, "admin", " Peer cert", Opts, PeerOpts, peer),
- [{Cert, Key}, {IssuerCert, IssuerKey} | Acc];
-cert_chain(Role, IssuerCert, IssuerKey, Opts, [Key | Keys], N, Acc) ->
- CAOpts = list_to_atom(atom_to_list(Role) ++ "_ca_" ++ integer_to_list(N)),
- Cert = cert(Role, public_key:pkix_decode_cert(IssuerCert, otp), IssuerKey, Key, "webadmin",
- " Intermidiate CA " ++ integer_to_list(N), Opts, CAOpts, ca),
- cert_chain(Role, Cert, Key, Opts, Keys, N+1, [{IssuerCert, IssuerKey} | Acc]).
-
-cert(Role, #'OTPCertificate'{tbsCertificate = #'OTPTBSCertificate'{subject = Issuer,
- serialNumber = SNr
- }},
- PrivKey, Key, Contact, Name, Opts, CertOptsName, Type) ->
- CertOpts = proplists:get_value(CertOptsName, Opts, []),
- TBS = cert_template(),
- OTPTBS = TBS#'OTPTBSCertificate'{
- signature = sign_algorithm(PrivKey, Opts),
- issuer = Issuer,
- validity = validity(CertOpts),
- subject = subject(Contact, atom_to_list(Role) ++ Name),
- subjectPublicKeyInfo = public_key(Key),
- extensions = extensions(Role, Type,
- add_default_extensions([{auth_key_id, {auth_key_oid(Role), Issuer, SNr}}],
- CertOpts))
- },
- public_key:pkix_sign(OTPTBS, PrivKey).
-
-is_key(#'DSAPrivateKey'{}) ->
- true;
-is_key(#'RSAPrivateKey'{}) ->
- true;
-is_key(#'ECPrivateKey'{}) ->
- true;
-is_key(_) ->
- false.
-
der_to_pem(File, Entries) ->
PemBin = public_key:pem_encode(Entries),
file:write_file(File, PemBin).
-
-default_key_gen() ->
- case tls_v1:ecc_curves(0) of
- [] ->
- [{rsa, 2048, 17}, {rsa, 2048, 17}];
- [_|_] ->
- [{namedCurve, hd(tls_v1:ecc_curves(0))},
- {namedCurve, hd(tls_v1:ecc_curves(0))}]
- end.
-
-auth_key_oid(server) ->
- ?'id-kp-serverAuth';
-auth_key_oid(client) ->
- ?'id-kp-clientAuth'.
diff --git a/lib/ssl/vsn.mk b/lib/ssl/vsn.mk
index 25b2a2bec0..bb77326751 100644
--- a/lib/ssl/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/ssl/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-SSL_VSN = 8.2
+SSL_VSN = 8.2.1
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/doc/src/ets.xml b/lib/stdlib/doc/src/ets.xml
index 95af2b77a5..576959b1c8 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/doc/src/ets.xml
+++ b/lib/stdlib/doc/src/ets.xml
@@ -325,7 +325,7 @@
<p><c><anno>Acc0</anno></c> is returned if the table is empty.
This function is similar to
<seealso marker="lists#foldl/3"><c>lists:foldl/3</c></seealso>.
- The table elements are traversed is unspecified order, except for
+ The table elements are traversed in an unspecified order, except for
<c>ordered_set</c> tables, where they are traversed first to last.</p>
<p>If <c><anno>Function</anno></c> inserts objects into the table,
or another
@@ -341,7 +341,7 @@
<p><c><anno>Acc0</anno></c> is returned if the table is empty.
This function is similar to
<seealso marker="lists#foldr/3"><c>lists:foldr/3</c></seealso>.
- The table elements are traversed is unspecified order, except for
+ The table elements are traversed in an unspecified order, except for
<c>ordered_set</c> tables, where they are traversed last to first.</p>
<p>If <c><anno>Function</anno></c> inserts objects into the table,
or another
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/stdlib/doc/src/notes.xml
index 604d758db3..d396f1de8f 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/stdlib/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -31,6 +31,56 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to the STDLIB application.</p>
+<section><title>STDLIB 3.4.2</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p> Fix a bug in the Erlang shell where recursively
+ defined records with typed fields could cause a loop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14488 Aux Id: PR-1489 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Make edlin handle grapheme clusters instead of codepoints
+ to improve the handling multi-codepoints characters.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14542</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>There could be false warnings for
+ <c>erlang:get_stacktrace/0</c> being used outside of a
+ <c>try</c> block when using multiple <c>catch</c>
+ clauses.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14600 Aux Id: ERL-478 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p> The Erlang code linter no longer checks that the
+ functions mentioned in <c>nowarn_deprecated_function</c>
+ options are declared in the module. </p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14378</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>STDLIB 3.4.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/doc/src/rand.xml b/lib/stdlib/doc/src/rand.xml
index a68fb7d55f..89fb858823 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/doc/src/rand.xml
+++ b/lib/stdlib/doc/src/rand.xml
@@ -35,12 +35,19 @@
<module>rand</module>
<modulesummary>Pseudo random number generation.</modulesummary>
<description>
- <p>This module provides a random number generator. The module contains
- a number of algorithms. The uniform distribution algorithms use the
- <url href="http://xorshift.di.unimi.it">scrambled Xorshift algorithms by
- Sebastiano Vigna</url>. The normal distribution algorithm uses the
- <url href="http://www.jstatsoft.org/v05/i08">Ziggurat Method by Marsaglia
- and Tsang</url>.</p>
+ <p>
+ This module provides a pseudo random number generator.
+ The module contains a number of algorithms.
+ The uniform distribution algorithms use the
+ <url href="http://xorshift.di.unimi.it">
+ xoroshiro116+ and xorshift1024* algorithms by Sebastiano Vigna.
+ </url>
+ The normal distribution algorithm uses the
+ <url href="http://www.jstatsoft.org/v05/i08">
+ Ziggurat Method by Marsaglia and Tsang
+ </url>
+ on top of the uniform distribution algorithm.
+ </p>
<p>For some algorithms, jump functions are provided for generating
non-overlapping sequences for parallel computations.
The jump functions perform calculations
@@ -393,9 +400,34 @@ tests. We suggest to use a sign test to extract a random Boolean value.</pre>
<name name="uniform" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Return a random float.</fsummary>
<desc><marker id="uniform-0"/>
- <p>Returns a random float uniformly distributed in the value
+ <p>
+ Returns a random float uniformly distributed in the value
range <c>0.0 =&lt; <anno>X</anno> &lt; 1.0</c> and
- updates the state in the process dictionary.</p>
+ updates the state in the process dictionary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The generated numbers are on the form N * 2.0^(-53),
+ that is; equally spaced in the interval.
+ </p>
+ <warning>
+ <p>
+ This function may return exactly <c>0.0</c> which can be
+ fatal for certain applications. If that is undesired
+ you can use <c>(1.0 - rand:uniform())</c> to get the
+ interval <c>0.0 &lt; <anno>X</anno> =&lt; 1.0</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If neither endpoint is desired you can test and re-try
+ like this:
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+my_uniform() ->
+ case rand:uniform() of
+ 0.0 -> my_uniform();
+ X -> X
+ end
+end.</pre>
+ </warning>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -414,9 +446,34 @@ tests. We suggest to use a sign test to extract a random Boolean value.</pre>
<name name="uniform_s" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Return a random float.</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>Returns, for a specified state, random float
+ <p>
+ Returns, for a specified state, random float
uniformly distributed in the value range <c>0.0 =&lt;
- <anno>X</anno> &lt; 1.0</c> and a new state.</p>
+ <anno>X</anno> &lt; 1.0</c> and a new state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The generated numbers are on the form N * 2.0^(-53),
+ that is; equally spaced in the interval.
+ </p>
+ <warning>
+ <p>
+ This function may return exactly <c>0.0</c> which can be
+ fatal for certain applications. If that is undesired
+ you can use <c>(1.0 - rand:uniform(State))</c> to get the
+ interval <c>0.0 &lt; <anno>X</anno> =&lt; 1.0</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If neither endpoint is desired you can test and re-try
+ like this:
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+my_uniform(State) ->
+ case rand:uniform(State) of
+ {0.0, NewState} -> my_uniform(NewState);
+ Result -> Result
+ end
+end.</pre>
+ </warning>
</desc>
</func>
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/doc/src/string.xml b/lib/stdlib/doc/src/string.xml
index 9d5edd9ecf..130fc74a28 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/doc/src/string.xml
+++ b/lib/stdlib/doc/src/string.xml
@@ -109,10 +109,8 @@
<p>This module has been reworked in Erlang/OTP 20 to
handle <seealso marker="unicode#type-chardata">
<c>unicode:chardata()</c></seealso> and operate on grapheme
- clusters. The <seealso marker="#oldapi"> <c>old
- functions</c></seealso> that only work on Latin-1 lists as input
- are still available but should not be
- used. They will be deprecated in Erlang/OTP 21.
+ clusters. The <c>old functions</c> that only work on Latin-1 lists as input
+ are kept for backwards compatibility reasons but should not be used.
</p>
</description>
@@ -594,7 +592,7 @@ ÖÄÅ</pre>
or <c>both</c>, indicates from which direction characters
are to be removed.
</p>
- <p> Default <c><anno>Characters</anno></c> are the set of
+ <p> Default <c><anno>Characters</anno></c> is the set of
nonbreakable whitespace codepoints, defined as
Pattern_White_Space in
<url href="http://unicode.org/reports/tr31/">Unicode Standard Annex #31</url>.
@@ -631,393 +629,5 @@ ÖÄÅ</pre>
</func>
</funcs>
-
- <section>
- <marker id="oldapi"/>
- <title>Obsolete API functions</title>
- <p>Here follows the function of the old API.
- These functions only work on a list of Latin-1 characters.
- </p>
- <note><p>
- The functions are kept for backward compatibility, but are
- not recommended.
- They will be deprecated in Erlang/OTP 21.
- </p>
- <p>Any undocumented functions in <c>string</c> are not to be used.</p>
- </note>
- </section>
-
- <funcs>
- <func>
- <name name="centre" arity="2"/>
- <name name="centre" arity="3"/>
- <fsummary>Center a string.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns a string, where <c><anno>String</anno></c> is centered in the
- string and surrounded by blanks or <c><anno>Character</anno></c>.
- The resulting string has length <c><anno>Number</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#pad/3"><c>pad/3</c></seealso>.
- </p>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="chars" arity="2"/>
- <name name="chars" arity="3"/>
- <fsummary>Return a string consisting of numbers of characters.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns a string consisting of <c><anno>Number</anno></c> characters
- <c><anno>Character</anno></c>. Optionally, the string can end with
- string <c><anno>Tail</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="lists#duplicate/2"><c>lists:duplicate/2</c></seealso>.</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="chr" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Return the index of the first occurrence of
- a character in a string.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns the index of the first occurrence of
- <c><anno>Character</anno></c> in <c><anno>String</anno></c>. Returns
- <c>0</c> if <c><anno>Character</anno></c> does not occur.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#find/2"><c>find/2</c></seealso>.</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="concat" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Concatenate two strings.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Concatenates <c><anno>String1</anno></c> and
- <c><anno>String2</anno></c> to form a new string
- <c><anno>String3</anno></c>, which is returned.</p>
- <p>
- This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use <c>[<anno>String1</anno>, <anno>String2</anno>]</c> as
- <c>Data</c> argument, and call
- <seealso marker="unicode#characters_to_list/2">
- <c>unicode:characters_to_list/2</c></seealso> or
- <seealso marker="unicode#characters_to_binary/2">
- <c>unicode:characters_to_binary/2</c></seealso>
- to flatten the output.
- </p>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="copies" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Copy a string.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns a string containing <c><anno>String</anno></c> repeated
- <c><anno>Number</anno></c> times.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="lists#duplicate/2"><c>lists:duplicate/2</c></seealso>.</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="cspan" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Span characters at start of a string.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns the length of the maximum initial segment of
- <c><anno>String</anno></c>, which consists entirely of characters
- not from <c><anno>Chars</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#take/3"><c>take/3</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> string:cspan("\t abcdef", " \t").
-0</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="join" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Join a list of strings with separator.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns a string with the elements of <c><anno>StringList</anno></c>
- separated by the string in <c><anno>Separator</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="lists#join/2"><c>lists:join/2</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> join(["one", "two", "three"], ", ").
-"one, two, three"</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="left" arity="2"/>
- <name name="left" arity="3"/>
- <fsummary>Adjust left end of a string.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns <c><anno>String</anno></c> with the length adjusted in
- accordance with <c><anno>Number</anno></c>. The left margin is
- fixed. If <c>length(<anno>String</anno>)</c> &lt;
- <c><anno>Number</anno></c>, then <c><anno>String</anno></c> is padded
- with blanks or <c><anno>Character</anno></c>s.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#pad/2"><c>pad/2</c></seealso> or
- <seealso marker="#pad/3"><c>pad/3</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> string:left("Hello",10,$.).
-"Hello....."</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="len" arity="1"/>
- <fsummary>Return the length of a string.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns the number of characters in <c><anno>String</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#length/1"><c>length/1</c></seealso>.</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="rchr" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Return the index of the last occurrence of
- a character in a string.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns the index of the last occurrence of
- <c><anno>Character</anno></c> in <c><anno>String</anno></c>. Returns
- <c>0</c> if <c><anno>Character</anno></c> does not occur.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#find/3"><c>find/3</c></seealso>.</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="right" arity="2"/>
- <name name="right" arity="3"/>
- <fsummary>Adjust right end of a string.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns <c><anno>String</anno></c> with the length adjusted in
- accordance with <c><anno>Number</anno></c>. The right margin is
- fixed. If the length of <c>(<anno>String</anno>)</c> &lt;
- <c><anno>Number</anno></c>, then <c><anno>String</anno></c> is padded
- with blanks or <c><anno>Character</anno></c>s.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#pad/3"><c>pad/3</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> string:right("Hello", 10, $.).
-".....Hello"</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="rstr" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Find the index of a substring.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns the position where the last occurrence of
- <c><anno>SubString</anno></c> begins in <c><anno>String</anno></c>.
- Returns <c>0</c> if <c><anno>SubString</anno></c>
- does not exist in <c><anno>String</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#find/3"><c>find/3</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> string:rstr(" Hello Hello World World ", "Hello World").
-8</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="span" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Span characters at start of a string.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns the length of the maximum initial segment of
- <c><anno>String</anno></c>, which consists entirely of characters
- from <c><anno>Chars</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#take/2"><c>take/2</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> string:span("\t abcdef", " \t").
-5</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="str" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Find the index of a substring.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns the position where the first occurrence of
- <c><anno>SubString</anno></c> begins in <c><anno>String</anno></c>.
- Returns <c>0</c> if <c><anno>SubString</anno></c>
- does not exist in <c><anno>String</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#find/2"><c>find/2</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> string:str(" Hello Hello World World ", "Hello World").
-8</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="strip" arity="1"/>
- <name name="strip" arity="2"/>
- <name name="strip" arity="3"/>
- <fsummary>Strip leading or trailing characters.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns a string, where leading or trailing, or both, blanks or a
- number of <c><anno>Character</anno></c> have been removed.
- <c><anno>Direction</anno></c>, which can be <c>left</c>, <c>right</c>,
- or <c>both</c>, indicates from which direction blanks are to be
- removed. <c>strip/1</c> is equivalent to
- <c>strip(String, both)</c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#trim/3"><c>trim/3</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> string:strip("...Hello.....", both, $.).
-"Hello"</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="sub_string" arity="2"/>
- <name name="sub_string" arity="3"/>
- <fsummary>Extract a substring.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns a substring of <c><anno>String</anno></c>, starting at
- position <c><anno>Start</anno></c> to the end of the string, or to
- and including position <c><anno>Stop</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#slice/3"><c>slice/3</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-sub_string("Hello World", 4, 8).
-"lo Wo"</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="substr" arity="2"/>
- <name name="substr" arity="3"/>
- <fsummary>Return a substring of a string.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns a substring of <c><anno>String</anno></c>, starting at
- position <c><anno>Start</anno></c>, and ending at the end of the
- string or at length <c><anno>Length</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#slice/3"><c>slice/3</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> substr("Hello World", 4, 5).
-"lo Wo"</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="sub_word" arity="2"/>
- <name name="sub_word" arity="3"/>
- <fsummary>Extract subword.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns the word in position <c><anno>Number</anno></c> of
- <c><anno>String</anno></c>. Words are separated by blanks or
- <c><anno>Character</anno></c>s.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#nth_lexeme/3"><c>nth_lexeme/3</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> string:sub_word(" Hello old boy !",3,$o).
-"ld b"</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="to_lower" arity="1" clause_i="1"/>
- <name name="to_lower" arity="1" clause_i="2"/>
- <name name="to_upper" arity="1" clause_i="1"/>
- <name name="to_upper" arity="1" clause_i="2"/>
- <fsummary>Convert case of string (ISO/IEC 8859-1).</fsummary>
- <type variable="String" name_i="1"/>
- <type variable="Result" name_i="1"/>
- <type variable="Char"/>
- <type variable="CharResult"/>
- <desc>
- <p>The specified string or character is case-converted. Notice that
- the supported character set is ISO/IEC 8859-1 (also called Latin 1);
- all values outside this set are unchanged</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso> use
- <seealso marker="#lowercase/1"><c>lowercase/1</c></seealso>,
- <seealso marker="#uppercase/1"><c>uppercase/1</c></seealso>,
- <seealso marker="#titlecase/1"><c>titlecase/1</c></seealso> or
- <seealso marker="#casefold/1"><c>casefold/1</c></seealso>.</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="tokens" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Split string into tokens.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns a list of tokens in <c><anno>String</anno></c>, separated
- by the characters in <c><anno>SeparatorList</anno></c>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> tokens("abc defxxghix jkl", "x ").
-["abc", "def", "ghi", "jkl"]</code>
- <p>Notice that, as shown in this example, two or more
- adjacent separator characters in <c><anno>String</anno></c>
- are treated as one. That is, there are no empty
- strings in the resulting list of tokens.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#lexemes/2"><c>lexemes/2</c></seealso>.</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
-
- <func>
- <name name="words" arity="1"/>
- <name name="words" arity="2"/>
- <fsummary>Count blank separated words.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns the number of words in <c><anno>String</anno></c>, separated
- by blanks or <c><anno>Character</anno></c>.</p>
- <p>This function is <seealso marker="#oldapi">obsolete</seealso>.
- Use
- <seealso marker="#lexemes/2"><c>lexemes/2</c></seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>Example:</em></p>
- <code type="none">
-> words(" Hello old boy!", $o).
-4</code>
- </desc>
- </func>
- </funcs>
-
- <section>
- <title>Notes</title>
- <p>Some of the general string functions can seem to overlap each
- other. The reason is that this string package is the
- combination of two earlier packages and all functions of
- both packages have been retained.</p>
- </section>
-
</erlref>
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/epp.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/epp.erl
index 31d0d499e3..00e6a10d8a 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/epp.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/epp.erl
@@ -479,7 +479,7 @@ com_enc(_B, _Fun, _N, L, Ps) ->
com_enc_end([L | Ps]).
com_enc_end(Ps0) ->
- Ps = lists:reverse([lists:reverse(string:to_lower(P)) || P <- Ps0]),
+ Ps = lists:reverse([lists:reverse(lowercase(P)) || P <- Ps0]),
com_encoding(Ps).
com_encoding(["latin","1"|_]) ->
@@ -489,6 +489,9 @@ com_encoding(["utf","8"|_]) ->
com_encoding(_) ->
throw(no). % Don't try any further
+lowercase(S) ->
+ unicode:characters_to_list(string:lowercase(S)).
+
normalize_typed_record_fields([]) ->
{typed, []};
normalize_typed_record_fields(Fields) ->
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/erl_lint.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/erl_lint.erl
index 9cd4727dc3..f58cb35cea 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/erl_lint.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/erl_lint.erl
@@ -3910,10 +3910,9 @@ check_format_string(Fmt) ->
extract_sequences(Fmt, []).
extract_sequences(Fmt, Need0) ->
- case string:chr(Fmt, $~) of
- 0 -> {ok,lists:reverse(Need0)}; %That's it
- Pos ->
- Fmt1 = string:substr(Fmt, Pos+1), %Skip ~
+ case string:find(Fmt, [$~]) of
+ nomatch -> {ok,lists:reverse(Need0)}; %That's it
+ [$~|Fmt1] ->
case extract_sequence(1, Fmt1, Need0) of
{ok,Need1,Rest} -> extract_sequences(Rest, Need1);
Error -> Error
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/erl_pp.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/erl_pp.erl
index b0064aadb8..367dbefb82 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/erl_pp.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/erl_pp.erl
@@ -237,13 +237,20 @@ lform({attribute,Line,Name,Arg}, Opts) ->
lform({function,Line,Name,Arity,Clauses}, Opts) ->
lfunction({function,Line,Name,Arity,Clauses}, Opts);
%% These are specials to make it easier for the compiler.
-lform({error,E}, _Opts) ->
- leaf(format("~p\n", [{error,E}]));
-lform({warning,W}, _Opts) ->
- leaf(format("~p\n", [{warning,W}]));
+lform({error,_}=E, Opts) ->
+ message(E, Opts);
+lform({warning,_}=W, Opts) ->
+ message(W, Opts);
lform({eof,_Line}, _Opts) ->
$\n.
+message(M, #options{encoding = Encoding}) ->
+ F = case Encoding of
+ latin1 -> "~p\n";
+ unicode -> "~tp\n"
+ end,
+ leaf(format(F, [M])).
+
lattribute({attribute,_Line,type,Type}, Opts) ->
[typeattr(type, Type, Opts),leaf(".\n")];
lattribute({attribute,_Line,opaque,Type}, Opts) ->
@@ -902,7 +909,7 @@ maybe_paren(_P, _Prec, Expr) ->
Expr.
leaf(S) ->
- {leaf,chars_size(S),S}.
+ {leaf,string:length(S),S}.
%%% Do the formatting. Currently nothing fancy. Could probably have
%%% done it in one single pass.
@@ -962,7 +969,7 @@ f({seq,Before,After,Sep,LItems}, I0, ST, WT, PP) ->
Sizes = BSizeL ++ SizeL,
NSepChars = if
is_list(Sep), Sep =/= [] ->
- erlang:max(0, length(CharsL)-1);
+ erlang:max(0, length(CharsL)-1); % not string:length
true ->
0
end,
@@ -1118,7 +1125,7 @@ incr(I, Incr) ->
I+Incr.
indentation(E, I) when I < 0 ->
- chars_size(E);
+ string:length(E);
indentation(E, I0) ->
I = io_lib_format:indentation(E, I0),
case has_nl(E) of
@@ -1155,19 +1162,19 @@ write_a_string(S, I, PP) ->
write_a_string([], _N, _Len, _PP) ->
[];
write_a_string(S, N, Len, PP) ->
- SS = string:sub_string(S, 1, N),
+ SS = string:slice(S, 0, N),
Sl = write_string(SS, PP),
- case (chars_size(Sl) > Len) and (N > ?MIN_SUBSTRING) of
+ case (string:length(Sl) > Len) and (N > ?MIN_SUBSTRING) of
true ->
write_a_string(S, N-1, Len, PP);
false ->
[flat_leaf(Sl) |
- write_a_string(lists:nthtail(length(SS), S), Len, Len, PP)]
+ write_a_string(string:slice(S, string:length(SS)), Len, Len, PP)]
end.
flat_leaf(S) ->
L = lists:flatten(S),
- {leaf,length(L),L}.
+ {leaf,string:length(L),L}.
write_value(V, PP) ->
(PP#pp.value_fun)(V).
@@ -1188,15 +1195,6 @@ write_char(C, PP) ->
a0() ->
erl_anno:new(0).
-chars_size([C | Es]) when is_integer(C) ->
- 1 + chars_size(Es);
-chars_size([E | Es]) ->
- chars_size(E) + chars_size(Es);
-chars_size([]) ->
- 0;
-chars_size(B) when is_binary(B) ->
- byte_size(B).
-
-define(N_SPACES, 30).
spacetab() ->
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/erl_scan.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/erl_scan.erl
index 47223b129c..4774c4bf19 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/erl_scan.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/erl_scan.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1996-2015. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 1996-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -752,7 +752,7 @@ scan_string(Cs, St, Line, Col, Toks, {Wcs,Str,Line0,Col0}) ->
{char_error,Ncs,Error,Nline,Ncol,EndCol} ->
scan_error(Error, Nline, Ncol, Nline, EndCol, Ncs);
{error,Nline,Ncol,Nwcs,Ncs} ->
- Estr = string:substr(Nwcs, 1, 16), % Expanded escape chars.
+ Estr = string:slice(Nwcs, 0, 16), % Expanded escape chars.
scan_error({string,$\",Estr}, Line0, Col0, Nline, Ncol, Ncs); %"
{Ncs,Nline,Ncol,Nstr,Nwcs} ->
Anno = anno(Line0, Col0, St, Nstr),
@@ -767,7 +767,7 @@ scan_qatom(Cs, St, Line, Col, Toks, {Wcs,Str,Line0,Col0}) ->
{char_error,Ncs,Error,Nline,Ncol,EndCol} ->
scan_error(Error, Nline, Ncol, Nline, EndCol, Ncs);
{error,Nline,Ncol,Nwcs,Ncs} ->
- Estr = string:substr(Nwcs, 1, 16), % Expanded escape chars.
+ Estr = string:slice(Nwcs, 0, 16), % Expanded escape chars.
scan_error({string,$\',Estr}, Line0, Col0, Nline, Ncol, Ncs); %'
{Ncs,Nline,Ncol,Nstr,Nwcs} ->
case catch list_to_atom(Nwcs) of
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/escript.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/escript.erl
index 2b9d8ff65b..132f8efbbe 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/escript.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/escript.erl
@@ -224,8 +224,8 @@ return_sections(S, Bin) ->
normalize_section(Name, undefined) ->
{Name, undefined};
normalize_section(shebang, "#!" ++ Chars) ->
- Chopped = string:strip(Chars, right, $\n),
- Stripped = string:strip(Chopped, both),
+ Chopped = string:trim(Chars, trailing, "$\n"),
+ Stripped = string:trim(Chopped, both),
if
Stripped =:= ?SHEBANG ->
{shebang, default};
@@ -233,8 +233,8 @@ normalize_section(shebang, "#!" ++ Chars) ->
{shebang, Stripped}
end;
normalize_section(comment, Chars) ->
- Chopped = string:strip(Chars, right, $\n),
- Stripped = string:strip(string:strip(Chopped, left, $%), both),
+ Chopped = string:trim(Chars, trailing, "$\n"),
+ Stripped = string:trim(string:trim(Chopped, leading, "$%"), both),
if
Stripped =:= ?COMMENT ->
{comment, default};
@@ -242,8 +242,8 @@ normalize_section(comment, Chars) ->
{comment, Stripped}
end;
normalize_section(emu_args, "%%!" ++ Chars) ->
- Chopped = string:strip(Chars, right, $\n),
- Stripped = string:strip(Chopped, both),
+ Chopped = string:trim(Chars, trailing, "$\n"),
+ Stripped = string:trim(Chopped, both),
{emu_args, Stripped};
normalize_section(Name, Chars) ->
{Name, Chars}.
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/ets.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/ets.erl
index b5d3cd3c8d..4858c8d13c 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/ets.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/ets.erl
@@ -1717,7 +1717,7 @@ get_line(P, Default) ->
line_string(Binary) when is_binary(Binary) -> unicode:characters_to_list(Binary);
line_string(Other) -> Other.
-nonl(S) -> string:strip(S, right, $\n).
+nonl(S) -> string:trim(S, trailing, "$\n").
print_number(Tab, Key, Num) ->
Os = ets:lookup(Tab, Key),
@@ -1746,7 +1746,7 @@ do_display_item(_Height, Width, I, Opos) ->
L = to_string(I),
L2 = if
length(L) > Width - 8 ->
- string:substr(L, 1, Width-13) ++ " ...";
+ string:slice(L, 0, Width-13) ++ " ...";
true ->
L
end,
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/filename.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/filename.erl
index 9bf4290916..63cfeae57b 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/filename.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/filename.erl
@@ -1036,10 +1036,10 @@ basedir_linux(Type) ->
user_log -> getenv("XDG_CACHE_HOME", ?basedir_linux_user_log, true);
site_data ->
Base = getenv("XDG_DATA_DIRS",?basedir_linux_site_data,false),
- string:tokens(Base,":");
+ string:lexemes(Base, ":");
site_config ->
Base = getenv("XDG_CONFIG_DIRS",?basedir_linux_site_config,false),
- string:tokens(Base,":")
+ string:lexemes(Base, ":")
end.
-define(basedir_darwin_user_data, "Library/Application Support").
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/io_lib_format.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/io_lib_format.erl
index 4b2d15c8b3..e345810ca0 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/io_lib_format.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/io_lib_format.erl
@@ -380,7 +380,7 @@ float_e(_Fl, {Ds,E}, P) ->
{Fs,false} -> [Fs|float_exp(E-1)]
end.
-%% float_man([Digit], Icount, Dcount) -> {[Chars],CarryFlag}.
+%% float_man([Digit], Icount, Dcount) -> {[Char],CarryFlag}.
%% Generate the characters in the mantissa from the digits with Icount
%% characters before the '.' and Dcount decimals. Handle carry and let
%% caller decide what to do at top.
@@ -395,7 +395,7 @@ float_man([D|Ds], I, Dc) ->
{Cs,false} -> {[D|Cs],false}
end;
float_man([], I, Dc) -> %Pad with 0's
- {string:chars($0, I, [$.|string:chars($0, Dc)]),false}.
+ {lists:duplicate(I, $0) ++ [$.|lists:duplicate(Dc, $0)],false}.
float_man([D|_], 0) when D >= $5 -> {[],true};
float_man([_|_], 0) -> {[],false};
@@ -405,7 +405,7 @@ float_man([D|Ds], Dc) ->
{Cs,true} -> {[D+1|Cs],false};
{Cs,false} -> {[D|Cs],false}
end;
-float_man([], Dc) -> {string:chars($0, Dc),false}. %Pad with 0's
+float_man([], Dc) -> {lists:duplicate(Dc, $0),false}. %Pad with 0's
%% float_exp(Exponent) -> [Char].
%% Generate the exponent of a floating point number. Always include sign.
@@ -429,7 +429,7 @@ fwrite_f(Fl, F, Adj, P, Pad) when P >= 1 ->
float_f(Fl, Fd, P) when Fl < 0.0 ->
[$-|float_f(-Fl, Fd, P)];
float_f(Fl, {Ds,E}, P) when E =< 0 ->
- float_f(Fl, {string:chars($0, -E+1, Ds),1}, P); %Prepend enough 0's
+ float_f(Fl, {lists:duplicate(-E+1, $0)++Ds,1}, P); %Prepend enough 0's
float_f(_Fl, {Ds,E}, P) ->
case float_man(Ds, E, P) of
{Fs,true} -> "1" ++ Fs; %Handle carry
@@ -751,7 +751,7 @@ adjust(Data, Pad, right) -> [Pad|Data].
flat_trunc(List, N) when is_integer(N), N >= 0 ->
string:slice(List, 0, N).
-%% A deep version of string:chars/2,3
+%% A deep version of lists:duplicate/2
chars(_C, 0) ->
[];
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/lib.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/lib.erl
index c6eb0d7915..a7980cc294 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/lib.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/lib.erl
@@ -646,7 +646,7 @@ pp_arguments(PF, As, I, Enc) ->
Ll = length(L),
A = list_to_atom(lists:duplicate(Ll, $a)),
S0 = unicode:characters_to_list(PF([A | T], I+1), Enc),
- brackets_to_parens([$[,L,string:sub_string(S0, 2+Ll)], Enc);
+ brackets_to_parens([$[,L,string:slice(S0, 1+Ll)], Enc);
_ ->
brackets_to_parens(PF(As, I+1), Enc)
end.
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/otp_internal.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/otp_internal.erl
index c59db903dc..122b476ddb 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/otp_internal.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/otp_internal.erl
@@ -466,8 +466,6 @@ obsolete_1(inviso, _, _) ->
{removed,"the inviso application was removed in R16"};
%% Added in R15B01.
-obsolete_1(gs, _, _) ->
- {removed,"the gs application has been removed; use the wx application instead"};
obsolete_1(ssh, sign_data, 2) ->
{removed,"removed in R16A; use public_key:pem_decode/1, public_key:pem_entry_decode/1 "
"and public_key:sign/3 instead"};
@@ -611,6 +609,52 @@ obsolete_1(filename, find_src, 2) ->
obsolete_1(erlang, hash, 2) ->
{removed, {erlang, phash2, 2}, "20.0"};
+%% Added in OTP-21
+obsolete_1(string, len, 1) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:length/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, concat, 2) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use [Str1,Str2] instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, str, 2) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:find/2 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, rstr, 2) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:find/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, chr, 2) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:find/2 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, rchr, 2) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:find/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, span, 2) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:take/2 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, cspan, 2) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:take/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, substr, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:slice/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, tokens, 2) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:lexemes/2 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, chars, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use lists:duplicate/2 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, copies, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use lists:duplicate/2 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, words, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:lexemes/2 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, strip, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:trim/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, sub_word, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:nth_lexeme/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, sub_string, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:slice/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, left, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:pad/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, right, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:pad/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, centre, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:pad/3 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, join, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use lists:join/2 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, to_upper, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:uppercase/1 or string:titlecase/1 instead"};
+obsolete_1(string, to_lower, _) ->
+ {deprecated, "deprecated; use string:lowercase/1 or string:casefold/1 instead"};
+
%% not obsolete
obsolete_1(_, _, _) ->
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/pool.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/pool.erl
index 05950a1d7c..b12ff205b1 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/pool.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/pool.erl
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@
%% with the least load !!!!
%% This function is callable from any node including the master
%% That is part of the pool
-%% nodes are scheduled on a per usgae basis and per load basis,
+%% nodes are scheduled on a per usage basis and per load basis,
%% Whenever we use a node, we put at the end of the queue, and whenever
%% a node report a change in load, we insert it accordingly
@@ -197,7 +197,7 @@ pure_insert({Load,Node},[{L,N}|Tail]) when Load < L ->
pure_insert(L,[H|T]) -> [H|pure_insert(L,T)].
%% Really should not measure the contributions from
-%% the back ground processes here .... which we do :-(
+%% the background processes here .... which we do :-(
%% We don't have to monitor the master, since we're slaves anyway
statistic_collector() ->
@@ -213,7 +213,7 @@ statistic_collector(I) ->
stat_loop(M, 999999)
end.
-%% Do not tell the master about our load if it has not changed
+%% Do not tell the master about our load if it has not changed
stat_loop(M, Old) ->
sleep(2000),
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/slave.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/slave.erl
index d7cf6386f5..b3f3206d67 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/slave.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/slave.erl
@@ -320,7 +320,7 @@ mk_cmd(Host, Name, Args, Waiter, Prog0) ->
%% emulator and flags as the test node. The return from lib:progname()
%% could then typically be '/<full_path_to>/cerl -gcov').
quote_progname(Progname) ->
- do_quote_progname(string:tokens(to_list(Progname)," ")).
+ do_quote_progname(string:lexemes(to_list(Progname)," ")).
do_quote_progname([Prog]) ->
"\""++Prog++"\"";
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/src/string.erl b/lib/stdlib/src/string.erl
index 4972da297d..5a4d2df2a6 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/src/string.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/src/string.erl
@@ -87,6 +87,16 @@
%%% May be removed
-export([list_to_float/1, list_to_integer/1]).
+-deprecated([{len,1},{concat,2},
+ {str,2},{chr,2},{rchr,2},{rstr,2},
+ {span,2},{cspan,2},{substr,'_'},{tokens,2},
+ {chars,'_'},
+ {copies,2},{words,'_'},{strip,'_'},
+ {sub_word,'_'},{left,'_'},{right,'_'},
+ {sub_string,'_'},{centre,'_'},{join,2},
+ {to_upper,1}, {to_lower,1}
+ ]).
+
%% Uses bifs: string:list_to_float/1 and string:list_to_integer/1
-spec list_to_float(String) -> {Float, Rest} | {'error', Reason} when
String :: string(),
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/test/Makefile b/lib/stdlib/test/Makefile
index 7b79dcf04d..523cb95065 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/test/Makefile
+++ b/lib/stdlib/test/Makefile
@@ -69,6 +69,7 @@ MODULES= \
sets_test_lib \
sofs_SUITE \
stdlib_SUITE \
+ stdlib_bench_SUITE \
string_SUITE \
supervisor_1 \
supervisor_2 \
@@ -146,7 +147,7 @@ release_spec: opt
release_tests_spec: make_emakefile
$(INSTALL_DIR) "$(RELSYSDIR)"
- $(INSTALL_DATA) stdlib.spec $(EMAKEFILE) \
+ $(INSTALL_DATA) stdlib.spec stdlib_bench.spec $(EMAKEFILE) \
$(ERL_FILES) $(COVERFILE) "$(RELSYSDIR)"
chmod -R u+w "$(RELSYSDIR)"
@tar cf - *_SUITE_data | (cd "$(RELSYSDIR)"; tar xf -)
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/test/stdlib.spec b/lib/stdlib/test/stdlib.spec
index 3768e494b2..91712b8963 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/test/stdlib.spec
+++ b/lib/stdlib/test/stdlib.spec
@@ -1 +1,2 @@
{suites,"../stdlib_test",all}.
+{skip_suites,"../stdlib_test",stdlib_bench_SUITE, "bench only"}.
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/test/stdlib_bench.spec b/lib/stdlib/test/stdlib_bench.spec
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..a5d1e1db80
--- /dev/null
+++ b/lib/stdlib/test/stdlib_bench.spec
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
+%% Needed to compile ,unicode_util_SUITE and string_SUITE...
+{cases,"../stdlib_test",unicode_util_SUITE, []}.
+{cases,"../stdlib_test",string_SUITE, []}.
+{skip_suites,"../stdlib_test",unicode_util_SUITE, "bench only"}.
+{skip_suites,"../stdlib_test",string_SUITE, "bench only"}.
+
+{suites,"../stdlib_test",[stdlib_bench_SUITE]}.
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/test/stdlib_bench_SUITE.erl b/lib/stdlib/test/stdlib_bench_SUITE.erl
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..8670e7029c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/lib/stdlib/test/stdlib_bench_SUITE.erl
@@ -0,0 +1,107 @@
+%%
+%% %CopyrightBegin%
+%%
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2012-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%%
+%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+%% You may obtain a copy of the License at
+%%
+%% http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
+%%
+%% Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+%% distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+%% WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+%% See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+%% limitations under the License.
+%%
+%% %CopyrightEnd%
+%%
+
+%%
+-module(stdlib_bench_SUITE).
+-compile([export_all, nowarn_export_all]).
+-include_lib("common_test/include/ct_event.hrl").
+
+%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
+suite() -> [{ct_hooks,[{ts_install_cth,[{nodenames,2}]}]}].
+
+
+all() ->
+ [{group,unicode}].
+
+groups() ->
+ [{unicode,[{repeat,5}],
+ [norm_nfc_list, norm_nfc_deep_l, norm_nfc_binary,
+ string_lexemes_list, string_lexemes_binary
+ ]}].
+
+init_per_group(_GroupName, Config) ->
+ Config.
+
+end_per_group(_GroupName, Config) ->
+ Config.
+
+init_per_suite(Config) ->
+ Config.
+
+end_per_suite(Config) ->
+ Config.
+
+init_per_testcase(_Func, Conf) ->
+ Conf.
+
+end_per_testcase(_Func, _Conf) ->
+ ok.
+
+
+%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
+-define(REPEAT_NORM, 5).
+
+norm_nfc_list(Config) ->
+ Bin = norm_data(Config),
+ {_N, Mean, _Stddev, Res} = unicode_util_SUITE:time_count(nfc, list, Bin, ?REPEAT_NORM),
+ report(1000.0*Res / Mean).
+
+norm_nfc_deep_l(Config) ->
+ Bin = norm_data(Config),
+ {_N, Mean, _Stddev, Res} = unicode_util_SUITE:time_count(nfc, deep_l, Bin, ?REPEAT_NORM),
+ report(1000.0*Res / Mean).
+
+norm_nfc_binary(Config) ->
+ Bin = norm_data(Config),
+ {_N, Mean, _Stddev, Res} = unicode_util_SUITE:time_count(nfc, binary, Bin, ?REPEAT_NORM),
+ report(1000.0*Res / Mean).
+
+
+string_lexemes_list(Config) ->
+ %% Use nth_lexeme instead of lexemes to avoid building a result of
+ %% large lists which causes large differences between test runs, gc?
+ Bin = norm_data(Config),
+ Fun = fun(Str) -> string:nth_lexeme(Str, 200000, [$;,$\n,$\r]), 200000 end,
+ {_N, Mean, _Stddev, Res} = string_SUITE:time_func(Fun, list, Bin, 15),
+ report(1000.0*Res / Mean).
+
+string_lexemes_binary(Config) ->
+ %% Use nth_lexeme instead of lexemes to avoid building a result of
+ %% large lists which causes large differences between test runs, gc?
+ Bin = norm_data(Config),
+ Fun = fun(Str) -> string:nth_lexeme(Str, 200000, [$;,$\n,$\r]), 200000 end,
+ {_N, Mean, _Stddev, Res} = string_SUITE:time_func(Fun, binary, Bin, ?REPEAT_NORM),
+ report(1000.0*Res / Mean).
+
+%%%
+report(Tps) ->
+ ct_event:notify(#event{name = benchmark_data,
+ data = [{suite,"stdlib_unicode"},{value,round(Tps)}]}),
+ Tps.
+
+norm_data(Config) ->
+ DataDir0 = proplists:get_value(data_dir, Config),
+ DataDir = filename:join(lists:droplast(filename:split(DataDir0))),
+ File = filename:join([DataDir,"unicode_util_SUITE_data","NormalizationTest.txt"]),
+ {ok, Bin} = file:read_file(File),
+ Bin.
+
+%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
+
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/test/string_SUITE.erl b/lib/stdlib/test/string_SUITE.erl
index 90f980c0e5..05f18ef238 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/test/string_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/test/string_SUITE.erl
@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@
-export([to_upper_to_lower/1]).
%% Run tests when debugging them
--export([debug/0]).
+-export([debug/0, time_func/4]).
suite() ->
[{ct_hooks,[ts_install_cth]},
@@ -728,7 +728,7 @@ do_measure(TestDir) ->
{ok, Bin} = file:read_file(File),
io:format("~p~n",[byte_size(Bin)]),
Do = fun(Name, Func, Mode) ->
- {N, Mean, Stddev, _} = time_func(Func, Mode, Bin),
+ {N, Mean, Stddev, _} = time_func(Func, Mode, Bin, 50),
io:format("~10w ~6w ~6.2fms ±~4.2fms #~.2w gc included~n",
[Name, Mode, Mean/1000, Stddev/1000, N])
end,
@@ -938,19 +938,19 @@ needs_check(_) -> true.
%%%% Timer stuff
-time_func(Fun, Mode, Bin) ->
+time_func(Fun, Mode, Bin, Repeat) ->
timer:sleep(100), %% Let emulator catch up and clean things before test runs
Self = self(),
Pid = spawn_link(fun() ->
Str = mode(Mode, Bin),
- Self ! {self(),time_func(0,0,0, Fun, Str, undefined)}
+ Self ! {self(),time_func(0,0,0, Fun, Str, undefined, Repeat)}
end),
receive {Pid,Msg} -> Msg end.
-time_func(N,Sum,SumSq, Fun, Str, _) when N < 50 ->
+time_func(N,Sum,SumSq, Fun, Str, _, Repeat) when N < Repeat ->
{Time, Res} = timer:tc(fun() -> Fun(Str) end),
- time_func(N+1,Sum+Time,SumSq+Time*Time, Fun, Str, Res);
-time_func(N,Sum,SumSq, _, _, Res) ->
+ time_func(N+1,Sum+Time,SumSq+Time*Time, Fun, Str, Res, Repeat);
+time_func(N,Sum,SumSq, _, _, Res, _) ->
Mean = round(Sum / N),
Stdev = round(math:sqrt((SumSq - (Sum*Sum/N))/(N - 1))),
{N, Mean, Stdev, Res}.
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/test/unicode_util_SUITE.erl b/lib/stdlib/test/unicode_util_SUITE.erl
index 03c24c7027..7dba0a2fd0 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/test/unicode_util_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/stdlib/test/unicode_util_SUITE.erl
@@ -29,7 +29,9 @@
get/1,
count/1]).
--export([debug/0, id/1, bin_split/1, uc_loaded_size/0]).
+-export([debug/0, id/1, bin_split/1, uc_loaded_size/0,
+ time_count/4 %% Used by stdlib_bench_SUITE
+ ]).
suite() ->
[{ct_hooks,[ts_install_cth]},
@@ -323,7 +325,7 @@ do_measure(Config) ->
File = DataDir ++ "/NormalizationTest.txt",
{ok, Bin} = file:read_file(File),
Do = fun(Func, Mode) ->
- {N, Mean, Stddev, Res} = time_count(Func, Mode, Bin),
+ {N, Mean, Stddev, Res} = time_count(Func, Mode, Bin, 10),
io:format("~4w ~6w ~.10w ~.6wms ±~.2wms #~.2w~n",
[Func, Mode, Res, Mean div 1000, Stddev div 1000, N])
end,
@@ -345,19 +347,19 @@ uc_loaded_size([_|Rest]) ->
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
-time_count(Fun, Mode, Bin) ->
+time_count(Fun, Mode, Bin, Repeat) ->
timer:sleep(100), %% Let emulator catch up and clean things before test runs
Self = self(),
Pid = spawn_link(fun() ->
Str = mode(Mode, Bin),
- Self ! {self(),do_count(0,0,0, Fun, Str, undefined)}
+ Self ! {self(),do_count(0,0,0, Fun, Str, undefined, Repeat)}
end),
receive {Pid,Msg} -> Msg end.
-do_count(N,Sum,SumSq, Fun, Str, _) when N < 10 ->
+do_count(N,Sum,SumSq, Fun, Str, _, Repeat) when N < Repeat ->
{Time, Res} = do_count(Fun, Str),
- do_count(N+1,Sum+Time,SumSq+Time*Time, Fun, Str, Res);
-do_count(N,Sum,SumSq, _, _, Res) ->
+ do_count(N+1,Sum+Time,SumSq+Time*Time, Fun, Str, Res, Repeat);
+do_count(N,Sum,SumSq, _, _, Res, _) ->
Mean = round(Sum / N),
Stdev = round(math:sqrt((SumSq - (Sum*Sum/N))/(N - 1))),
{N, Mean, Stdev, Res}.
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/uc_spec/gen_unicode_mod.escript b/lib/stdlib/uc_spec/gen_unicode_mod.escript
index 5b8763f576..674e5a0628 100755
--- a/lib/stdlib/uc_spec/gen_unicode_mod.escript
+++ b/lib/stdlib/uc_spec/gen_unicode_mod.escript
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ main(_) ->
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
parse_unicode_data(Line0, Acc) ->
- Line = string:strip(Line0, right, $\n),
+ Line = string:chomp(Line0),
[CodePoint,Name,_Cat,Class,_BiDi,Decomp,
_N1,_N2,_N3,_BDMirror,_Uni1,_Iso|Case] = tokens(Line, ";"),
{Dec,Comp} = case to_decomp(Decomp) of
@@ -78,14 +78,14 @@ parse_unicode_data(Line0, Acc) ->
|Acc].
to_class(String) ->
- list_to_integer(string:strip(String, both)).
+ list_to_integer(string:trim(String, both)).
to_decomp("") -> [];
to_decomp("<" ++ Str) ->
- [Tag,Rest] = string:tokens(Str, ">"),
+ [Tag,Rest] = string:lexemes(Str, ">"),
{list_to_atom(Tag), to_decomp(Rest)};
to_decomp(CodePoints) ->
- CPL = string:tokens(CodePoints, " "),
+ CPL = string:lexemes(CodePoints, " "),
[hex_to_int(CP) || CP <- CPL].
to_case(["","",""]) -> [];
@@ -105,20 +105,20 @@ parse_special_casing(Line, Table) ->
array:set(CP, Entry#cp{cs=Case}, Table).
to_scase([Lower,Title,Upper|_]) ->
- {unlist([hex_to_int(CP) || CP <- string:strip(string:tokens(Upper, " "), both)]),
- unlist([hex_to_int(CP) || CP <- string:strip(string:tokens(Lower, " "), both)]),
- unlist([hex_to_int(CP) || CP <- string:strip(string:tokens(Title, " "), both)]),
+ {unlist([hex_to_int(CP) || CP <- string:lexemes(Upper, " ")]),
+ unlist([hex_to_int(CP) || CP <- string:lexemes(Lower, " ")]),
+ unlist([hex_to_int(CP) || CP <- string:lexemes(Title, " ")]),
[]}.
parse_case_folding(Line, Table) ->
[CodePoint, Class0, CaseStr |_Comments] = tokens(Line, ";"),
- Class = string:strip(Class0, both),
+ Class = string:trim(Class0, both),
if Class =:= "T" -> Table; %% Do not support localization yet
Class =:= "S" -> Table; %% Ignore simple
true ->
CP = hex_to_int(CodePoint),
Case = unlist([hex_to_int(CPC) ||
- CPC <- string:strip(string:tokens(CaseStr, " "), both)]),
+ CPC <- string:lexemes(CaseStr, " ")]),
#cp{cs={U,L,T,_}} = Entry = array:get(CP, Table),
array:set(CP, Entry#cp{cs={U,L,T,Case}}, Table)
end.
@@ -869,10 +869,10 @@ optimize_ranges_1(Rs) ->
hex_to_int([]) -> [];
hex_to_int(HexStr) ->
- list_to_integer(string:strip(HexStr, both), 16).
+ list_to_integer(string:trim(HexStr, both), 16).
to_atom(Str) ->
- list_to_atom(string:to_lower(string:strip(Str, both))).
+ list_to_atom(string:lowercase(string:trim(Str, both))).
foldl(Fun, Acc, Fd) ->
Get = fun() -> file:read_line(Fd) end,
@@ -892,7 +892,7 @@ foldl_1(Fun, Acc, Get) ->
-%% Differs from string:tokens, it returns empty string as token between two delimiters
+%% Differs from string:lexemes, it returns empty string as token between two delimiters
tokens(S, [C]) ->
tokens(lists:reverse(S), C, []).
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/vsn.mk b/lib/stdlib/vsn.mk
index 8a83cdec1e..48db5dc900 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/stdlib/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-STDLIB_VSN = 3.4.1
+STDLIB_VSN = 3.4.2
diff --git a/lib/syntax_tools/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/syntax_tools/doc/src/notes.xml
index f85d963919..8c91f01e3b 100644
--- a/lib/syntax_tools/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/syntax_tools/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -32,6 +32,27 @@
<p>This document describes the changes made to the Syntax_Tools
application.</p>
+<section><title>Syntax_Tools 2.1.3</title>
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p> A process trapping exits and calling <c>erl_tidy</c>
+ no longer hangs if an error occurs. </p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14471 Aux Id: ERL-413 </p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Syntax_Tools 2.1.2</title>
<section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
diff --git a/lib/syntax_tools/src/erl_comment_scan.erl b/lib/syntax_tools/src/erl_comment_scan.erl
index 07e501e553..e3eb95b819 100644
--- a/lib/syntax_tools/src/erl_comment_scan.erl
+++ b/lib/syntax_tools/src/erl_comment_scan.erl
@@ -208,7 +208,7 @@ scan_comment([], Cs1, L, Col, M, Ack) ->
seen_comment(Cs, Cs1, L, Col, M, Ack) ->
%% Compute indentation and strip trailing spaces
N = Col - M,
- Text = lists:reverse(string:strip(Cs1, left)),
+ Text = lists:reverse(string:trim(Cs1, leading)),
Ack1 = [{L, Col + 1, N, Text} | Ack],
scan_lines(Cs, L + 1, 0, 0, Ack1).
diff --git a/lib/syntax_tools/src/merl_transform.erl b/lib/syntax_tools/src/merl_transform.erl
index b298bc407f..571d7e4d86 100644
--- a/lib/syntax_tools/src/merl_transform.erl
+++ b/lib/syntax_tools/src/merl_transform.erl
@@ -196,7 +196,7 @@ var_name(V) -> V.
var_to_tag(V) when is_integer(V) -> V;
var_to_tag(V) ->
- list_to_atom(string:to_lower(atom_to_list(V))).
+ list_to_atom(string:lowercase(atom_to_list(V))).
pre_expand_case(Expr, Clauses, Line) ->
merl:qquote(Line, "merl:switch(_@expr, _@clauses)",
diff --git a/lib/syntax_tools/src/syntax_tools.app.src b/lib/syntax_tools/src/syntax_tools.app.src
index 5c6008a5f0..af50b7495b 100644
--- a/lib/syntax_tools/src/syntax_tools.app.src
+++ b/lib/syntax_tools/src/syntax_tools.app.src
@@ -18,4 +18,4 @@
{applications, [stdlib]},
{env, []},
{runtime_dependencies,
- ["compiler-7.0","erts-8.0","kernel-5.0","stdlib-3.0"]}]}.
+ ["compiler-7.0","erts-9.0","kernel-5.0","stdlib-3.4"]}]}.
diff --git a/lib/syntax_tools/vsn.mk b/lib/syntax_tools/vsn.mk
index 9b33f1e1f4..e0880d61ee 100644
--- a/lib/syntax_tools/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/syntax_tools/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-SYNTAX_TOOLS_VSN = 2.1.2
+SYNTAX_TOOLS_VSN = 2.1.3
diff --git a/lib/tools/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/tools/doc/src/notes.xml
index f0df43bf2b..3eaa2058a0 100644
--- a/lib/tools/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/tools/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -31,6 +31,75 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to the Tools application.</p>
+<section><title>Tools 2.11</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p> The predefined Xref analysis <c>locals_not_used</c>
+ no longer reports unused functions with the
+ <c>-on_load()</c> attribute.</p> <p> The new predefined
+ Xref variable <c>OL</c> holds all functions with the
+ <c>-on_load()</c> attribute. </p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14344</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ In fprof when sampling multiple processes and analyzing
+ with totals set to true, the output now sums together all
+ caller and callee entries which concerns the same
+ function. Previous behaviour was to report each
+ contributing entry separately.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14500</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>Lock counting can now be fully toggled at runtime in
+ the lock counting emulator (<c>-emu_type lcnt</c>).
+ Everything is enabled by default to match the old
+ behavior, but specific categories can be toggled at will
+ with minimal runtime overhead when disabled. Refer to the
+ documentation on <c>lcnt:rt_mask/1</c> for details.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-13170</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p><c>lcnt:collect</c> and <c>lcnt:clear</c> will no
+ longer block all other threads in the runtime system.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14412</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Tools are updated to show Unicode atoms correctly.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14464</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>Add <c>erlang:iolist_to_iovec/1</c>, which converts an
+ iolist() to an erlang:iovec(), which suitable for use
+ with <c>enif_inspect_iovec</c>.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14520</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Tools 2.10.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/tools/src/cover.erl b/lib/tools/src/cover.erl
index 5517882ffa..801bbc7461 100644
--- a/lib/tools/src/cover.erl
+++ b/lib/tools/src/cover.erl
@@ -2439,11 +2439,11 @@ do_analyse_to_file1(Module, OutFile, ErlFile, HTML) ->
Timestamp =
io_lib:format("~p-~s-~s at ~s:~s:~s",
[Y,
- string:right(integer_to_list(Mo), 2, $0),
- string:right(integer_to_list(D), 2, $0),
- string:right(integer_to_list(H), 2, $0),
- string:right(integer_to_list(Mi), 2, $0),
- string:right(integer_to_list(S), 2, $0)]),
+ string:pad(integer_to_list(Mo), 2, leading, $0),
+ string:pad(integer_to_list(D), 2, leading, $0),
+ string:pad(integer_to_list(H), 2, leading, $0),
+ string:pad(integer_to_list(Mi), 2, leading, $0),
+ string:pad(integer_to_list(S), 2, leading, $0)]),
H2Bin = unicode:characters_to_binary(
["File generated from ",ErlFile," by COVER ",
@@ -2493,12 +2493,12 @@ print_lines(Module, CovLines, InFd, OutFd, L, HTML) ->
if N=:=0, HTML=:=true ->
LineNoNL = Line -- "\n",
Str = " 0",
- %%Str = string:right("0", 6, 32),
+ %%Str = string:pad("0", 6, leading, $\s),
RedLine = ["<font color=red>",Str,fill1(),
LineNoNL,"</font>\n"],
ok = file:write(OutFd, RedLine);
N < 1000000 ->
- Str = string:right(integer_to_list(N), 6, 32),
+ Str = string:pad(integer_to_list(N), 6, leading, $\s),
ok = file:write(OutFd, [Str,fill1(),Line]);
N < 10000000 ->
Str = integer_to_list(N),
diff --git a/lib/tools/src/fprof.erl b/lib/tools/src/fprof.erl
index 2fe42beb03..fb657c2928 100644
--- a/lib/tools/src/fprof.erl
+++ b/lib/tools/src/fprof.erl
@@ -1136,7 +1136,7 @@ ensure_open(Pid, _Options) when is_pid(Pid) ->
ensure_open([], _Options) ->
{already_open, undefined};
ensure_open(Filename, Options) when is_atom(Filename); is_list(Filename) ->
- file:open(Filename, Options).
+ file:open(Filename, [{encoding, utf8} | Options]).
%%%---------------------------------
%%% Fairly generic utility functions
diff --git a/lib/tools/src/tools.app.src b/lib/tools/src/tools.app.src
index 8beef49bf9..f8c6aa22cb 100644
--- a/lib/tools/src/tools.app.src
+++ b/lib/tools/src/tools.app.src
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@
{env, [{file_util_search_methods,[{"", ""}, {"ebin", "esrc"}, {"ebin", "src"}]}
]
},
- {runtime_dependencies, ["stdlib-3.1","runtime_tools-1.8.14",
+ {runtime_dependencies, ["stdlib-3.4","runtime_tools-1.8.14",
"kernel-5.4","erts-9.1","compiler-5.0"]}
]
}.
diff --git a/lib/tools/src/xref_utils.erl b/lib/tools/src/xref_utils.erl
index 02e207d40c..eca751337b 100644
--- a/lib/tools/src/xref_utils.erl
+++ b/lib/tools/src/xref_utils.erl
@@ -557,12 +557,9 @@ subdir(Dir, SubDir, true) ->
%% Avoid "App-01.01" - the zeroes will be lost.
filename2appl(File) ->
- Pos = string:rstr(File, "-"),
- true = Pos > 1,
- V = string:sub_string(File, Pos+1),
- true = string:len(V) > 0,
- VsnT = string:tokens(V, "."),
- ApplName = string:sub_string(File, 1, Pos-1),
+ [ApplName, V] = string:split(File, "-", trailing),
+ true = string:length(V) > 0,
+ VsnT = string:lexemes(V, "."),
Vsn = [list_to_integer(Vsn) || Vsn <- VsnT],
{list_to_atom(ApplName),Vsn}.
diff --git a/lib/tools/test/fprof_SUITE.erl b/lib/tools/test/fprof_SUITE.erl
index affb45b7a6..8fd164a4b3 100644
--- a/lib/tools/test/fprof_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/tools/test/fprof_SUITE.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2001-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2001-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@
%% Test suites
-export([stack_seq/1, tail_seq/1, create_file_slow/1, spawn_simple/1,
imm_tail_seq/1, imm_create_file_slow/1, imm_compile/1,
- cpu_create_file_slow/1]).
+ cpu_create_file_slow/1, unicode/1]).
%% Other exports
-export([create_file_slow/2]).
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ all() ->
false ->
[stack_seq, tail_seq, create_file_slow, spawn_simple,
imm_tail_seq, imm_create_file_slow, imm_compile,
- cpu_create_file_slow]
+ cpu_create_file_slow, unicode]
end.
@@ -533,6 +533,17 @@ cpu_create_file_slow(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
TestResult.
+unicode(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
+ DataDir = proplists:get_value(data_dir, Config),
+ SourceFile = filename:join(DataDir, "fprof_unicode.erl"),
+ PrivDir = proplists:get_value(priv_dir, Config),
+ AnalysisFile = filename:join(PrivDir, "fprof_unicode.analysis"),
+ {ok, fprof_unicode} = compile:file(SourceFile, [{outdir, PrivDir}]),
+ true = code:add_path(PrivDir),
+ fprof:apply(fprof_unicode, t, []),
+ ok = fprof:profile(dump, AnalysisFile),
+ ok = fprof:analyse(dest, AnalysisFile).
+
%%%---------------------------------------------------------------------
%%% Functions to test
%%%---------------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git a/lib/tools/test/fprof_SUITE_data/fprof_unicode.erl b/lib/tools/test/fprof_SUITE_data/fprof_unicode.erl
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..8b58efc5fe
--- /dev/null
+++ b/lib/tools/test/fprof_SUITE_data/fprof_unicode.erl
@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
+-module(fprof_unicode).
+
+-export([t/0, 'кирилли́ческий атом'/0, annan/0, c_break/1,
+ 'кирилли́ческий атомB'/1]).
+
+t() ->
+ _Atom = 'кирилли́ческий атом',
+ 'кирилли́ческий атом'().
+
+'кирилли́ческий атом'() ->
+ 'кирилли́ческий атом'('кирилли́ческий атом').
+
+'кирилли́ческий атом'(_Atom) ->
+ self() ! 'кирилли́ческий атом',
+ G = fun (X) ->
+ catch foo:bar()
+ end,
+ G("кирилли́ческий атом"), % line 17
+ Pid = spawn_link(fun() -> waiting() end),
+ true = register('кирилли́ческий атом', Pid),
+ F = fun() -> 'кирилли́ческий атом' end,
+ F().
+
+annan() ->
+ foo.
+
+waiting() ->
+ receive
+ X -> X
+ end.
+
+c_break(_B) ->
+ true.
+
+'кирилли́ческий атомB'(_B) ->
+ true.
diff --git a/lib/tools/vsn.mk b/lib/tools/vsn.mk
index 831d850217..b9249ae45c 100644
--- a/lib/tools/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/tools/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-TOOLS_VSN = 2.10.1
+TOOLS_VSN = 2.11
diff --git a/lib/wx/api_gen/gl_gen_erl.erl b/lib/wx/api_gen/gl_gen_erl.erl
index 3ad14825dd..45f5fd8f4c 100644
--- a/lib/wx/api_gen/gl_gen_erl.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/api_gen/gl_gen_erl.erl
@@ -35,6 +35,9 @@
open_write/1, open_write/2, close/0, erl_copyright/0, w/2,
args/3, args/4, strip_name/2]).
+
+-define(HTTP_TOP, "https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/").
+
gl_defines(Defs) ->
open_write("../include/gl.hrl"),
erl_copyright(),
@@ -96,7 +99,7 @@ gl_api(Fs) ->
w("~n%% OPENGL API~n~n", []),
w("%% This file is generated DO NOT EDIT~n~n", []),
w("%% @doc Standard OpenGL api.~n", []),
- w("%% See <a href=\"http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/\">www.opengl.org</a>~n",[]),
+ w("%% See <a href=\""++ ?HTTP_TOP ++ "\">www.khronos.org</a>~n",[]),
w("%%~n", []),
w("%% Booleans are represented by integers 0 and 1.~n~n", []),
@@ -158,7 +161,7 @@ glu_api(Fs) ->
w("~n%% OPENGL UTILITY API~n~n", []),
w("%% This file is generated DO NOT EDIT~n~n", []),
w("%% @doc A part of the standard OpenGL Utility api.~n", []),
- w("%% See <a href=\"http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/\">www.opengl.org</a>~n",[]),
+ w("%% See <a href=\""++ ?HTTP_TOP ++ "\">www.khronos.org</a>~n",[]),
w("%%~n", []),
w("%% Booleans are represented by integers 0 and 1.~n~n", []),
@@ -300,8 +303,7 @@ gen_doc(Name0, Alt, Export) ->
Name = doc_name(Name0, Alt),
case get({doc, Name}) of
undefined ->
- GLDoc = "http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/",
- case parse_doc(Name, _Dir1 ="gl_man4", _Dir2="gl_man2") of
+ case parse_doc(Name, Dir1 ="gl_man4", Dir2="gl_man2") of
{error, _} ->
case reverse(Name) of
"BRA" ++ _ -> ok;
@@ -311,13 +313,18 @@ gen_doc(Name0, Alt, Export) ->
%% [Name, Name0, Dir1, Dir2]),
ok
end,
- w("%% @doc ~s~n%%~n%% See <a href=\"~s~s.xml\">external</a> documentation.~n",
- [Name, GLDoc, Name]);
- Doc ->
+ w("%% @doc ~s~n%%~n"
+ "%% See <a href=\"~s\">external</a> documentation.~n",
+ [Name, ?HTTP_TOP]);
+ {Found, Doc} ->
+ {Dir,Ext} = case Found of
+ Dir1 -> {"gl4/html", "xhtml"};
+ Dir2 -> {"gl2.1/xhtml", "xml"}
+ end,
put({doc, Name}, Export),
format_doc(Doc, ?LINE_LEN),
- w("~n%%~n%% See <a href=\"~s~s.xml\">external</a> documentation.~n",
- [GLDoc, Name])
+ w("~n%%~n%% See <a href=\"~s~s/~s.~s\">external</a> documentation.~n",
+ [?HTTP_TOP, Dir, Name, Ext])
end;
Where ->
w("%% @doc ~n", []),
@@ -327,9 +334,12 @@ gen_doc(Name0, Alt, Export) ->
parse_doc(Name, Dir1, Dir2) ->
case gl_scan_doc:file(filename:join(Dir1, Name++".xml"), []) of
{error, {_, "no such" ++ _}} ->
- gl_scan_doc:file(filename:join(Dir2, Name++".xml"), []);
+ case gl_scan_doc:file(filename:join(Dir2, Name++".xml"), []) of
+ {error, _} = Err -> Err;
+ Doc -> {Dir2, Doc}
+ end;
Doc ->
- Doc
+ {Dir1, Doc}
end.
format_doc(Strs, Count) when Count < 0 ->
diff --git a/lib/wx/api_gen/gl_scan_doc.erl b/lib/wx/api_gen/gl_scan_doc.erl
index 0a1c25ae13..6ed5438608 100644
--- a/lib/wx/api_gen/gl_scan_doc.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/api_gen/gl_scan_doc.erl
@@ -209,6 +209,10 @@ gen_output({startElement, _Uri, "para", _QName, _Attributes}, #state{gen_output=
State#state{str=[para|Str]}
end;
+gen_output({endElement, _Uri, "para", _QName}, #state{gen_output=true, str=Str} = State) ->
+ %% Pick only the first paragraph in the descriptions
+ State#state{gen_output=false};
+
%% gen_output({startElement, _Uri, What, _QName, _Attributes}, State) ->
%% io:format("Skipped ~s~n",[What]),
%% State;
diff --git a/lib/wx/doc/src/notes.xml b/lib/wx/doc/src/notes.xml
index d300ab5128..599b5b64fd 100644
--- a/lib/wx/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/lib/wx/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -32,6 +32,36 @@
<p>This document describes the changes made to the wxErlang
application.</p>
+<section><title>Wx 1.8.2</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Do not deprecate
+ <c>wxGraphicsContext:createLinearGradientBrush/7</c> and
+ <c>wxGraphicsContext:createRadialGradientBrush/8</c>
+ which are still available in wxWidgets-3.0.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14539</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ General Unicode improvements.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-14462</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Wx 1.8.1</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/lib/wx/examples/simple/hello.erl b/lib/wx/examples/simple/hello.erl
index 36bce56329..bf870c6f3e 100644
--- a/lib/wx/examples/simple/hello.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/examples/simple/hello.erl
@@ -29,7 +29,6 @@
-include_lib("wx/include/wx.hrl").
-export([start/0]).
--compile(export_all).
start() ->
Wx = wx:new(),
diff --git a/lib/wx/examples/simple/hello2.erl b/lib/wx/examples/simple/hello2.erl
index 671b23d892..b9da622b6b 100644
--- a/lib/wx/examples/simple/hello2.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/examples/simple/hello2.erl
@@ -29,8 +29,9 @@
-module(hello2).
-include_lib("wx/include/wx.hrl").
--export([start/0]).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([start/0,
+ init/1, handle_info/2, handle_event/2, handle_call/3,
+ code_change/3, terminate/2]).
-behavoiur(wx_object).
diff --git a/lib/wx/examples/simple/menu.erl b/lib/wx/examples/simple/menu.erl
index 479df1ef98..93573fb97d 100644
--- a/lib/wx/examples/simple/menu.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/examples/simple/menu.erl
@@ -29,7 +29,6 @@
-include_lib("wx/include/wx.hrl").
-export([start/0]).
--compile(export_all).
%%%Lots of IDs to declare!
-define(menuID_FILE_QUIT, ?wxID_EXIT).
@@ -228,36 +227,6 @@ create_menubar_menu() ->
%%
%%
%%
-create_submenu_menu() ->
- SubMenuMenu = wxMenu:new(),
- wxMenu:append(SubMenuMenu, wxMenuItem:new([
- {id, ?menuID_SUBMENU_NORMAL},
- {text, "&Normal submenu item"},
- {help, "Disabled submenu item"}
- ])),
- %% note different way of adding check menu item
- wxMenu:appendCheckItem(SubMenuMenu,
- ?menuID_SUBMENU_CHECK,
- "&Check submenu item",
- [{help, "Check submenu item"}]),
- wxMenu:appendRadioItem(SubMenuMenu,
- ?menuID_SUBMENU_RADIO_1,
- "Radio item &1",
- [{help, "Radio item"}]),
- wxMenu:appendRadioItem(SubMenuMenu,
- ?menuID_SUBMENU_RADIO_2,
- "Radio item &2",
- [{help, "Radio item"}]),
- wxMenu:appendRadioItem(SubMenuMenu,
- ?menuID_SUBMENU_RADIO_3,
- "Radio item &3",
- [{help, "Radio item"}]),
- SubMenuMenu.
-
-
-%%
-%%
-%%
create_menu_menu() ->
MenuMenu = wxMenu:new(),
wxMenu:append(MenuMenu, wxMenuItem:new([
diff --git a/lib/wx/examples/simple/minimal.erl b/lib/wx/examples/simple/minimal.erl
index 9f6365e008..346f86433a 100644
--- a/lib/wx/examples/simple/minimal.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/examples/simple/minimal.erl
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@
-include_lib("wx/include/wx.hrl").
-export([start/0]).
--compile(export_all).
+
start() ->
Wx = wx:new(),
diff --git a/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku.erl b/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku.erl
index 97f35870de..353f90d86f 100644
--- a/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku.erl
@@ -26,9 +26,8 @@
-module(sudoku).
--export([go/0]).
+-export([go/0, start/0]).
--compile(export_all).
-include("sudoku.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku_game.erl b/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku_game.erl
index 1e579a7c88..aa15c05653 100644
--- a/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku_game.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku_game.erl
@@ -18,7 +18,9 @@
%% %CopyrightEnd%
-module(sudoku_game).
--compile(export_all).
+
+-export([init/1,
+ indx/1, rcm/1, level/1]).
-include("sudoku.hrl").
init(GFX) ->
@@ -128,17 +130,6 @@ rebuild_all(_, S0) ->
add(rcm(Indx),Val,Acc)
end, S1, Solved).
-is_ok({RI,CI,MI}, Vals) ->
- [Ri,Ci,Mi] = all(RI,CI,MI),
- case element(indx(RI,CI),Vals) of
- 0 -> true;
- Val ->
- Vs = [[element(indx(R,C),Vals)||{R,C} <- Obs,
- not ((R == RI) and (C == CI))]
- || Obs <- [Ri,Ci,Mi]],
- not lists:member(Val,lists:flatten(Vs))
- end.
-
test() -> %% Known to solvable
[{{1,2},6}, {{1,4},1}, {{1,6},4}, {{1,8},5},
{{2,3},8}, {{2,4},3}, {{2,6},5}, {{2,7},6},
@@ -377,14 +368,6 @@ get_poss([H|R],What,Tot) ->
%% io:format("~p~n",[H]),
get_poss(R,What, gb_sets:union(element(H,What),Tot)).
-r2rs(R) ->
- R0 = (R-1)*3,
- [R0+1,R0+2,R0+3].
-
-c2cs(C) ->
- C0 = (C-1) rem 9,
- [C0+1, C0+10, C0+19].
-
mindx(row,Indx) ->
{R,_C,M} = rcm(Indx),
mindx(R,M);
diff --git a/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku_gui.erl b/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku_gui.erl
index 81d20814e1..4c4ad83cd7 100644
--- a/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku_gui.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/examples/sudoku/sudoku_gui.erl
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@
-export([init/1, handle_info/2, handle_call/3, handle_cast/2, handle_event/2,
terminate/2, code_change/3]).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([new/1]).
-behaviour(wx_object).
diff --git a/lib/wx/examples/xrc/xrc.erl b/lib/wx/examples/xrc/xrc.erl
index 729f4ad0db..7e967777d2 100644
--- a/lib/wx/examples/xrc/xrc.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/examples/xrc/xrc.erl
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@
%%%-------------------------------------------------------------------
-module(xrc).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([start/0]).
-include("../../include/wx.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/wx/src/gen/gl.erl b/lib/wx/src/gen/gl.erl
index 4a178ea1e4..47afb25c5d 100644
--- a/lib/wx/src/gen/gl.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/src/gen/gl.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2008-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2008-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
%% This file is generated DO NOT EDIT
%% @doc Standard OpenGL api.
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/">www.opengl.org</a>
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">www.khronos.org</a>
%%
%% Booleans are represented by integers 0 and 1.
@@ -324,7 +324,7 @@ send_bin(Tuple) when is_tuple(Tuple) ->
%% value is then masked with 2 m-1, where m is the number of bits in a color index stored
%% in the frame buffer.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClearIndex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glClearIndex.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clearIndex(C) -> 'ok' when C :: float().
clearIndex(C) ->
cast(5037, <<C:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -335,7 +335,7 @@ clearIndex(C) ->
%% to clear the color buffers. Values specified by ``gl:clearColor'' are clamped to the
%% range [0 1].
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClearColor.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glClearColor.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clearColor(Red, Green, Blue, Alpha) -> 'ok' when Red :: clamp(),Green :: clamp(),Blue :: clamp(),Alpha :: clamp().
clearColor(Red,Green,Blue,Alpha) ->
cast(5038, <<Red:?GLclampf,Green:?GLclampf,Blue:?GLclampf,Alpha:?GLclampf>>).
@@ -346,26 +346,7 @@ clearColor(Red,Green,Blue,Alpha) ->
%% , ``gl:clearDepth'', and ``gl:clearStencil''. Multiple color buffers can be cleared
%% simultaneously by selecting more than one buffer at a time using {@link gl:drawBuffer/1} .
%%
-%% The pixel ownership test, the scissor test, dithering, and the buffer writemasks affect
-%% the operation of ``gl:clear''. The scissor box bounds the cleared region. Alpha function,
-%% blend function, logical operation, stenciling, texture mapping, and depth-buffering are
-%% ignored by ``gl:clear''.
-%%
-%% ``gl:clear'' takes a single argument that is the bitwise OR of several values indicating
-%% which buffer is to be cleared.
-%%
-%% The values are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT': Indicates the buffers currently enabled for color writing.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT': Indicates the depth buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_BUFFER_BIT': Indicates the stencil buffer.
-%%
-%% The value to which each buffer is cleared depends on the setting of the clear value for
-%% that buffer.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClear.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glClear.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clear(Mask) -> 'ok' when Mask :: integer().
clear(Mask) ->
cast(5039, <<Mask:?GLbitfield>>).
@@ -378,11 +359,7 @@ clear(Mask) ->
%% to the corresponding bit in the color index buffer (or buffers). Where a 0 (zero) appears,
%% the corresponding bit is write-protected.
%%
-%% This mask is used only in color index mode, and it affects only the buffers currently
-%% selected for writing (see {@link gl:drawBuffer/1} ). Initially, all bits are enabled for
-%% writing.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIndexMask.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glIndexMask.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec indexMask(Mask) -> 'ok' when Mask :: integer().
indexMask(Mask) ->
cast(5040, <<Mask:?GLuint>>).
@@ -395,10 +372,7 @@ indexMask(Mask) ->
%% is `?GL_FALSE', for example, no change is made to the red component of any pixel
%% in any of the color buffers, regardless of the drawing operation attempted.
%%
-%% Changes to individual bits of components cannot be controlled. Rather, changes are either
-%% enabled or disabled for entire color components.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glColorMask.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glColorMask.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec colorMask(Red, Green, Blue, Alpha) -> 'ok' when Red :: 0|1,Green :: 0|1,Blue :: 0|1,Alpha :: 0|1.
colorMask(Red,Green,Blue,Alpha) ->
cast(5041, <<Red:?GLboolean,Green:?GLboolean,Blue:?GLboolean,Alpha:?GLboolean>>).
@@ -411,37 +385,7 @@ colorMask(Red,Green,Blue,Alpha) ->
%% testing is enabled. By default, it is not enabled. (See {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1}
%% of `?GL_ALPHA_TEST'.)
%%
-%% `Func' and `Ref' specify the conditions under which the pixel is drawn. The
-%% incoming alpha value is compared to `Ref' using the function specified by `Func' .
-%% If the value passes the comparison, the incoming fragment is drawn if it also passes subsequent
-%% stencil and depth buffer tests. If the value fails the comparison, no change is made to
-%% the frame buffer at that pixel location. The comparison functions are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEVER': Never passes.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LESS': Passes if the incoming alpha value is less than the reference value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_EQUAL': Passes if the incoming alpha value is equal to the reference value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LEQUAL': Passes if the incoming alpha value is less than or equal to the reference
-%% value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_GREATER': Passes if the incoming alpha value is greater than the reference
-%% value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NOTEQUAL': Passes if the incoming alpha value is not equal to the reference
-%% value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_GEQUAL': Passes if the incoming alpha value is greater than or equal to the
-%% reference value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ALWAYS': Always passes (initial value).
-%%
-%% ``gl:alphaFunc'' operates on all pixel write operations, including those resulting from
-%% the scan conversion of points, lines, polygons, and bitmaps, and from pixel draw and copy
-%% operations. ``gl:alphaFunc'' does not affect screen clear operations.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glAlphaFunc.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glAlphaFunc.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec alphaFunc(Func, Ref) -> 'ok' when Func :: enum(),Ref :: clamp().
alphaFunc(Func,Ref) ->
cast(5042, <<Func:?GLenum,Ref:?GLclampf>>).
@@ -453,70 +397,7 @@ alphaFunc(Func,Ref) ->
%% is initially disabled. Use {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_BLEND'
%% to enable and disable blending.
%%
-%% ``gl:blendFunc'' defines the operation of blending for all draw buffers when it is enabled.
-%% ``gl:blendFunci'' defines the operation of blending for a single draw buffer specified
-%% by `Buf' when enabled for that draw buffer. `Sfactor' specifies which method
-%% is used to scale the source color components. `Dfactor' specifies which method is
-%% used to scale the destination color components. Both parameters must be one of the following
-%% symbolic constants: `?GL_ZERO', `?GL_ONE', `?GL_SRC_COLOR', `?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR'
-%% , `?GL_DST_COLOR', `?GL_ONE_MINUS_DST_COLOR', `?GL_SRC_ALPHA', `?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'
-%% , `?GL_DST_ALPHA', `?GL_ONE_MINUS_DST_ALPHA', `?GL_CONSTANT_COLOR', `?GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_COLOR'
-%% , `?GL_CONSTANT_ALPHA', `?GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_ALPHA', `?GL_SRC_ALPHA_SATURATE'
-%% , `?GL_SRC1_COLOR', `?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC1_COLOR', `?GL_SRC1_ALPHA', and `?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC1_ALPHA'
-%% . The possible methods are described in the following table. Each method defines four
-%% scale factors, one each for red, green, blue, and alpha. In the table and in subsequent
-%% equations, first source, second source and destination color components are referred to
-%% as (R s0 G s0 B s0 A s0), (R s1 G s1 B s1 A s1) and (R d G d B d A d), respectively. The color specified by {@link gl:blendColor/4} is referred to
-%% as (R c G c B c A c). They are understood to have integer values between 0 and (k R k G k B k A), where
-%%
-%% k c=2(m c)-1
-%%
-%% and (m R m G m B m A) is the number of red, green, blue, and alpha bitplanes.
-%%
-%% Source and destination scale factors are referred to as (s R s G s B s A) and (d R d G d B d A). The scale factors described
-%% in the table, denoted (f R f G f B f A), represent either source or destination factors. All scale factors
-%% have range [0 1].
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Parameter '</td><td>(f R f G f B f A)</td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ZERO'
-%% </td><td>(0 0 0 0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE'</td><td>(1 1 1 1)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SRC_COLOR'</td>
-%% <td>(R s0 k/R G s0 k/G B s0 k/B A s0 k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR'</td><td>(1 1 1 1)-(R s0 k/R G s0 k/G B s0 k/B
-%% A s0 k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DST_COLOR'
-%% </td><td>(R d k/R G d k/G B d k/B A d k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_DST_COLOR'</td><td>(1 1 1 1)-(R d k/R G d k/G B d k/B
-%% A d k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'
-%% </td><td>(A s0 k/A A s0 k/A A s0 k/A A s0 k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(1 1 1 1)-(A s0 k/A A s0 k/A A s0
-%% k/A A s0 k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DST_ALPHA'
-%% </td><td>(A d k/A A d k/A A d k/A A d k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_DST_ALPHA'</td><td>(1 1 1 1)-(A d k/A A d k/A A d k/A
-%% A d k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_CONSTANT_COLOR'
-%% </td><td>(R c G c B c A c)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_COLOR'</td><td>(1 1 1 1)-(R c G c B c A c)</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_CONSTANT_ALPHA'</td><td>(A c A c A c A c)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_ALPHA'</td>
-%% <td>(1 1 1 1)-(A c A c A c A c)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA_SATURATE'</td><td>(i i i 1)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SRC1_COLOR'
-%% </td><td>(R s1 k/R G s1 k/G B s1 k/B A s1 k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC1_COLOR'</td><td>(1 1 1 1)-(R s1 k/R G s1 k/G B
-%% s1 k/B A s1 k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SRC1_ALPHA'
-%% </td><td>(A s1 k/A A s1 k/A A s1 k/A A s1 k/A)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC1_ALPHA'</td><td>(1 1 1 1)-(A s1 k/A A s1 k/A A
-%% s1 k/A A s1 k/A)</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%%
-%% In the table,
-%%
-%% i=min(A s k A-A d) k/A
-%%
-%% To determine the blended RGBA values of a pixel, the system uses the following equations:
-%%
-%%
-%% R d=min(k R R s s R+R d d R) G d=min(k G G s s G+G d d G) B d=min(k B B s s B+B d d B) A d=min(k A A s s A+A d d A)
-%%
-%% Despite the apparent precision of the above equations, blending arithmetic is not exactly
-%% specified, because blending operates with imprecise integer color values. However, a blend
-%% factor that should be equal to 1 is guaranteed not to modify its multiplicand, and a blend
-%% factor equal to 0 reduces its multiplicand to 0. For example, when `Sfactor' is `?GL_SRC_ALPHA'
-%% , `Dfactor' is `?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA', and A s is equal to k A, the equations
-%% reduce to simple replacement:
-%%
-%% R d=R s G d=G s B d=B s A d=A s
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBlendFunc.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBlendFunc.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec blendFunc(Sfactor, Dfactor) -> 'ok' when Sfactor :: enum(),Dfactor :: enum().
blendFunc(Sfactor,Dfactor) ->
cast(5043, <<Sfactor:?GLenum,Dfactor:?GLenum>>).
@@ -528,25 +409,7 @@ blendFunc(Sfactor,Dfactor) ->
%% buffer. To enable or disable the logical operation, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1}
%% using the symbolic constant `?GL_COLOR_LOGIC_OP'. The initial value is disabled.
%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Opcode '</td><td>` Resulting Operation '</td></tr></tbody>
-%% <tbody><tr><td>`?GL_CLEAR'</td><td> 0 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SET'</td><td> 1 </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_COPY'</td><td> s </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_COPY_INVERTED'</td><td>
-%% ~s </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_NOOP'</td><td> d </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INVERT'</td><td>
-%% ~d </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_AND'</td><td> s &amp; d </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_NAND'</td>
-%% <td> ~(s &amp; d) </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_OR'</td><td> s | d </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_NOR'
-%% </td><td> ~(s | d) </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_XOR'</td><td> s ^ d </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_EQUIV'
-%% </td><td> ~(s ^ d) </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_AND_REVERSE'</td><td> s &amp; ~d </td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_AND_INVERTED'</td><td> ~s &amp; d </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_OR_REVERSE'
-%% </td><td> s | ~d </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_OR_INVERTED'</td><td> ~s | d </td></tr></tbody>
-%% </table>
-%%
-%% `Opcode' is a symbolic constant chosen from the list above. In the explanation of
-%% the logical operations, `s' represents the incoming color and `d' represents
-%% the color in the frame buffer. Standard C-language operators are used. As these bitwise
-%% operators suggest, the logical operation is applied independently to each bit pair of
-%% the source and destination colors.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLogicOp.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glLogicOp.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec logicOp(Opcode) -> 'ok' when Opcode :: enum().
logicOp(Opcode) ->
cast(5044, <<Opcode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -559,10 +422,7 @@ logicOp(Opcode) ->
%% commands with the argument `?GL_CULL_FACE'. Facets include triangles, quadrilaterals,
%% polygons, and rectangles.
%%
-%% {@link gl:frontFace/1} specifies which of the clockwise and counterclockwise facets are
-%% front-facing and back-facing. See {@link gl:frontFace/1} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCullFace.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCullFace.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec cullFace(Mode) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum().
cullFace(Mode) ->
cast(5045, <<Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -574,18 +434,7 @@ cullFace(Mode) ->
%% rendering of the image. To enable and disable elimination of back-facing polygons, call {@link gl:enable/1}
%% and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_CULL_FACE'.
%%
-%% The projection of a polygon to window coordinates is said to have clockwise winding if
-%% an imaginary object following the path from its first vertex, its second vertex, and so
-%% on, to its last vertex, and finally back to its first vertex, moves in a clockwise direction
-%% about the interior of the polygon. The polygon's winding is said to be counterclockwise
-%% if the imaginary object following the same path moves in a counterclockwise direction
-%% about the interior of the polygon. ``gl:frontFace'' specifies whether polygons with
-%% clockwise winding in window coordinates, or counterclockwise winding in window coordinates,
-%% are taken to be front-facing. Passing `?GL_CCW' to `Mode' selects counterclockwise
-%% polygons as front-facing; `?GL_CW' selects clockwise polygons as front-facing. By
-%% default, counterclockwise polygons are taken to be front-facing.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFrontFace.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glFrontFace.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec frontFace(Mode) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum().
frontFace(Mode) ->
cast(5046, <<Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -597,7 +446,7 @@ frontFace(Mode) ->
%% will be used to rasterize points. Otherwise, the value written to the shading language
%% built-in variable gl_PointSize will be used.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPointSize.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glPointSize.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pointSize(Size) -> 'ok' when Size :: float().
pointSize(Size) ->
cast(5047, <<Size:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -609,27 +458,7 @@ pointSize(Size) ->
%% is enabled. To enable and disable line antialiasing, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1}
%% with argument `?GL_LINE_SMOOTH'. Line antialiasing is initially disabled.
%%
-%% If line antialiasing is disabled, the actual width is determined by rounding the supplied
-%% width to the nearest integer. (If the rounding results in the value 0, it is as if the
-%% line width were 1.) If |&amp;Delta; x|&gt;=|&amp;Delta; y|, `i' pixels are filled in each column that is rasterized,
-%% where `i' is the rounded value of `Width' . Otherwise, `i' pixels are filled
-%% in each row that is rasterized.
-%%
-%% If antialiasing is enabled, line rasterization produces a fragment for each pixel square
-%% that intersects the region lying within the rectangle having width equal to the current
-%% line width, length equal to the actual length of the line, and centered on the mathematical
-%% line segment. The coverage value for each fragment is the window coordinate area of the
-%% intersection of the rectangular region with the corresponding pixel square. This value
-%% is saved and used in the final rasterization step.
-%%
-%% Not all widths can be supported when line antialiasing is enabled. If an unsupported
-%% width is requested, the nearest supported width is used. Only width 1 is guaranteed to
-%% be supported; others depend on the implementation. Likewise, there is a range for aliased
-%% line widths as well. To query the range of supported widths and the size difference between
-%% supported widths within the range, call {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with arguments `?GL_ALIASED_LINE_WIDTH_RANGE'
-%% , `?GL_SMOOTH_LINE_WIDTH_RANGE', and `?GL_SMOOTH_LINE_WIDTH_GRANULARITY'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLineWidth.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glLineWidth.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec lineWidth(Width) -> 'ok' when Width :: float().
lineWidth(Width) ->
cast(5048, <<Width:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -641,27 +470,7 @@ lineWidth(Width) ->
%% stipple pattern `Pattern' , the repeat count `Factor' , and an integer stipple
%% counter s.
%%
-%% Counter s is reset to 0 whenever {@link gl:'begin'/1} is called and before each line segment
-%% of a {@link gl:'begin'/1} (`?GL_LINES')/ {@link gl:'begin'/1} sequence is generated. It is
-%% incremented after each fragment of a unit width aliased line segment is generated or after
-%% each i fragments of an i width line segment are generated. The i fragments associated
-%% with count s are masked out if
-%%
-%% `Pattern' bit (s/factor)% 16
-%%
-%% is 0, otherwise these fragments are sent to the frame buffer. Bit zero of `Pattern'
-%% is the least significant bit.
-%%
-%% Antialiased lines are treated as a sequence of 1×width rectangles for purposes of stippling.
-%% Whether rectangle s is rasterized or not depends on the fragment rule described for
-%% aliased lines, counting rectangles rather than groups of fragments.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable line stippling, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1}
-%% with argument `?GL_LINE_STIPPLE'. When enabled, the line stipple pattern is applied
-%% as described above. When disabled, it is as if the pattern were all 1's. Initially, line
-%% stippling is disabled.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLineStipple.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glLineStipple.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec lineStipple(Factor, Pattern) -> 'ok' when Factor :: integer(),Pattern :: integer().
lineStipple(Factor,Pattern) ->
cast(5049, <<Factor:?GLint,Pattern:?GLushort>>).
@@ -674,22 +483,7 @@ lineStipple(Factor,Pattern) ->
%% polygon's vertices are lit and the polygon is clipped and possibly culled before these
%% modes are applied.
%%
-%% Three modes are defined and can be specified in `Mode' :
-%%
-%% `?GL_POINT': Polygon vertices that are marked as the start of a boundary edge are
-%% drawn as points. Point attributes such as `?GL_POINT_SIZE' and `?GL_POINT_SMOOTH'
-%% control the rasterization of the points. Polygon rasterization attributes other than `?GL_POLYGON_MODE'
-%% have no effect.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINE': Boundary edges of the polygon are drawn as line segments. Line attributes
-%% such as `?GL_LINE_WIDTH' and `?GL_LINE_SMOOTH' control the rasterization of
-%% the lines. Polygon rasterization attributes other than `?GL_POLYGON_MODE' have no
-%% effect.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FILL': The interior of the polygon is filled. Polygon attributes such as `?GL_POLYGON_SMOOTH'
-%% control the rasterization of the polygon.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPolygonMode.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glPolygonMode.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec polygonMode(Face, Mode) -> 'ok' when Face :: enum(),Mode :: enum().
polygonMode(Face,Mode) ->
cast(5050, <<Face:?GLenum,Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -704,10 +498,7 @@ polygonMode(Face,Mode) ->
%% a resolvable offset for a given implementation. The offset is added before the depth test
%% is performed and before the value is written into the depth buffer.
%%
-%% ``gl:polygonOffset'' is useful for rendering hidden-line images, for applying decals
-%% to surfaces, and for rendering solids with highlighted edges.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPolygonOffset.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glPolygonOffset.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec polygonOffset(Factor, Units) -> 'ok' when Factor :: float(),Units :: float().
polygonOffset(Factor,Units) ->
cast(5051, <<Factor:?GLfloat,Units:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -718,27 +509,7 @@ polygonOffset(Factor,Units) ->
%% fragments produced by rasterization, creating a pattern. Stippling is independent of polygon
%% antialiasing.
%%
-%% `Pattern' is a pointer to a 32×32 stipple pattern that is stored in memory just
-%% like the pixel data supplied to a {@link gl:drawPixels/5} call with height and `width'
-%% both equal to 32, a pixel format of `?GL_COLOR_INDEX', and data type of `?GL_BITMAP'
-%% . That is, the stipple pattern is represented as a 32×32 array of 1-bit color indices
-%% packed in unsigned bytes. {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} parameters like `?GL_UNPACK_SWAP_BYTES'
-%% and `?GL_UNPACK_LSB_FIRST' affect the assembling of the bits into a stipple pattern.
-%% Pixel transfer operations (shift, offset, pixel map) are not applied to the stipple image,
-%% however.
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a stipple pattern is specified, `Pattern' is
-%% treated as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable polygon stippling, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1}
-%% with argument `?GL_POLYGON_STIPPLE'. Polygon stippling is initially disabled. If
-%% it's enabled, a rasterized polygon fragment with window coordinates x w and y w is
-%% sent to the next stage of the GL if and only if the ( x w% 32)th bit in the ( y w% 32)th
-%% row of the stipple pattern is 1 (one). When polygon stippling is disabled, it is as if
-%% the stipple pattern consists of all 1's.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPolygonStipple.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glPolygonStipple.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec polygonStipple(Mask) -> 'ok' when Mask :: binary().
polygonStipple(Mask) ->
send_bin(Mask),
@@ -753,11 +524,7 @@ polygonStipple(Mask) ->
%% Unlike {@link gl:readPixels/7} , however, pixel transfer operations (shift, offset, pixel
%% map) are not applied to the returned stipple image.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a polygon stipple pattern is requested, `Pattern'
-%% is treated as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetPolygonStipple.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetPolygonStipple.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getPolygonStipple() -> binary().
getPolygonStipple() ->
call(5053, <<>>).
@@ -771,13 +538,7 @@ getPolygonStipple() ->
%% of a nonboundary edge. ``gl:edgeFlag'' sets the edge flag bit to `?GL_TRUE' if `Flag'
%% is `?GL_TRUE' and to `?GL_FALSE' otherwise.
%%
-%% The vertices of connected triangles and connected quadrilaterals are always marked as
-%% boundary, regardless of the value of the edge flag.
-%%
-%% Boundary and nonboundary edge flags on vertices are significant only if `?GL_POLYGON_MODE'
-%% is set to `?GL_POINT' or `?GL_LINE'. See {@link gl:polygonMode/2} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glEdgeFlag.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glEdgeFlag.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec edgeFlag(Flag) -> 'ok' when Flag :: 0|1.
edgeFlag(Flag) ->
cast(5054, <<Flag:?GLboolean>>).
@@ -792,17 +553,7 @@ edgeFlagv({Flag}) -> edgeFlag(Flag).
%% first two arguments, `X' and `Y' , specify the lower left corner of the box. `Width'
%% and `Height' specify the width and height of the box.
%%
-%% To enable and disable the scissor test, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1}
-%% with argument `?GL_SCISSOR_TEST'. The test is initially disabled. While the test
-%% is enabled, only pixels that lie within the scissor box can be modified by drawing commands.
-%% Window coordinates have integer values at the shared corners of frame buffer pixels. glScissor(0,0,1,1)
-%% allows modification of only the lower left pixel in the window, and glScissor(0,0,0,0)
-%% doesn't allow modification of any pixels in the window.
-%%
-%% When the scissor test is disabled, it is as though the scissor box includes the entire
-%% window.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glScissor.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glScissor.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec scissor(X, Y, Width, Height) -> 'ok' when X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer().
scissor(X,Y,Width,Height) ->
cast(5055, <<X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -817,20 +568,7 @@ scissor(X,Y,Width,Height) ->
%% clipping planes. Because the resulting clipping region is the intersection of the defined
%% half-spaces, it is always convex.
%%
-%% ``gl:clipPlane'' specifies a half-space using a four-component plane equation. When ``gl:clipPlane''
-%% is called, `Equation' is transformed by the inverse of the modelview matrix and
-%% stored in the resulting eye coordinates. Subsequent changes to the modelview matrix have
-%% no effect on the stored plane-equation components. If the dot product of the eye coordinates
-%% of a vertex with the stored plane equation components is positive or zero, the vertex is `in'
-%% with respect to that clipping plane. Otherwise, it is `out'.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable clipping planes, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1}
-%% with the argument `?GL_CLIP_PLANE'`i', where `i' is the plane number.
-%%
-%% All clipping planes are initially defined as (0, 0, 0, 0) in eye coordinates and are
-%% disabled.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClipPlane.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glClipPlane.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clipPlane(Plane, Equation) -> 'ok' when Plane :: enum(),Equation :: {float(),float(),float(),float()}.
clipPlane(Plane,{E1,E2,E3,E4}) ->
cast(5056, <<Plane:?GLenum,0:32,E1:?GLdouble,E2:?GLdouble,E3:?GLdouble,E4:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -840,7 +578,7 @@ clipPlane(Plane,{E1,E2,E3,E4}) ->
%% ``gl:getClipPlane'' returns in `Equation' the four coefficients of the plane equation
%% for `Plane' .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetClipPlane.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetClipPlane.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getClipPlane(Plane) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Plane :: enum().
getClipPlane(Plane) ->
call(5057, <<Plane:?GLenum>>).
@@ -850,44 +588,7 @@ getClipPlane(Plane) ->
%% When colors are written to the frame buffer, they are written into the color buffers
%% specified by ``gl:drawBuffer''. The specifications are as follows:
%%
-%% `?GL_NONE': No color buffers are written.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRONT_LEFT': Only the front left color buffer is written.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRONT_RIGHT': Only the front right color buffer is written.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BACK_LEFT': Only the back left color buffer is written.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BACK_RIGHT': Only the back right color buffer is written.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRONT': Only the front left and front right color buffers are written. If there
-%% is no front right color buffer, only the front left color buffer is written.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BACK': Only the back left and back right color buffers are written. If there
-%% is no back right color buffer, only the back left color buffer is written.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LEFT': Only the front left and back left color buffers are written. If there
-%% is no back left color buffer, only the front left color buffer is written.
-%%
-%% `?GL_RIGHT': Only the front right and back right color buffers are written. If there
-%% is no back right color buffer, only the front right color buffer is written.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRONT_AND_BACK': All the front and back color buffers (front left, front right,
-%% back left, back right) are written. If there are no back color buffers, only the front
-%% left and front right color buffers are written. If there are no right color buffers, only
-%% the front left and back left color buffers are written. If there are no right or back
-%% color buffers, only the front left color buffer is written.
-%%
-%% If more than one color buffer is selected for drawing, then blending or logical operations
-%% are computed and applied independently for each color buffer and can produce different
-%% results in each buffer.
-%%
-%% Monoscopic contexts include only `left' buffers, and stereoscopic contexts include
-%% both `left' and `right' buffers. Likewise, single-buffered contexts include
-%% only `front' buffers, and double-buffered contexts include both `front' and `back'
-%% buffers. The context is selected at GL initialization.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawBuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawBuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawBuffer(Mode) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum().
drawBuffer(Mode) ->
cast(5058, <<Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -904,15 +605,7 @@ drawBuffer(Mode) ->
%% the `i'th color attachment where `i' ranges from zero to the value of `?GL_MAX_COLOR_ATTACHMENTS'
%% minus one.
%%
-%% Nonstereo double-buffered configurations have only a front left and a back left buffer.
-%% Single-buffered configurations have a front left and a front right buffer if stereo, and
-%% only a front left buffer if nonstereo. It is an error to specify a nonexistent buffer to ``gl:readBuffer''
-%% .
-%%
-%% `Mode' is initially `?GL_FRONT' in single-buffered configurations and `?GL_BACK'
-%% in double-buffered configurations.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glReadBuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glReadBuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec readBuffer(Mode) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum().
readBuffer(Mode) ->
cast(5059, <<Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -925,104 +618,7 @@ readBuffer(Mode) ->
%% is `?GL_FALSE'. The initial value for `?GL_DITHER' and `?GL_MULTISAMPLE'
%% is `?GL_TRUE'.
%%
-%% Both ``gl:enable'' and {@link gl:enable/1} take a single argument, `Cap' , which
-%% can assume one of the following values:
-%%
-%% Some of the GL's capabilities are indexed. ``gl:enablei'' and ``gl:disablei'' enable
-%% and disable indexed capabilities.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLEND': If enabled, blend the computed fragment color values with the values
-%% in the color buffers. See {@link gl:blendFunc/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_CLIP_DISTANCE'`i': If enabled, clip geometry against user-defined half
-%% space `i'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR_LOGIC_OP': If enabled, apply the currently selected logical operation
-%% to the computed fragment color and color buffer values. See {@link gl:logicOp/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_CULL_FACE': If enabled, cull polygons based on their winding in window coordinates.
-%% See {@link gl:cullFace/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_CLAMP': If enabled, the -w c&amp;le; z c&amp;le; w c plane equation is
-%% ignored by view volume clipping (effectively, there is no near or far plane clipping).
-%% See {@link gl:depthRange/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_TEST': If enabled, do depth comparisons and update the depth buffer.
-%% Note that even if the depth buffer exists and the depth mask is non-zero, the depth buffer
-%% is not updated if the depth test is disabled. See {@link gl:depthFunc/1} and {@link gl:depthRange/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_DITHER': If enabled, dither color components or indices before they are written
-%% to the color buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB': If enabled and the value of `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_COLOR_ENCODING'
-%% for the framebuffer attachment corresponding to the destination buffer is `?GL_SRGB',
-%% the R, G, and B destination color values (after conversion from fixed-point to floating-point)
-%% are considered to be encoded for the sRGB color space and hence are linearized prior to
-%% their use in blending.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINE_SMOOTH': If enabled, draw lines with correct filtering. Otherwise, draw
-%% aliased lines. See {@link gl:lineWidth/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MULTISAMPLE': If enabled, use multiple fragment samples in computing the final
-%% color of a pixel. See {@link gl:sampleCoverage/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_FILL': If enabled, and if the polygon is rendered in `?GL_FILL'
-%% mode, an offset is added to depth values of a polygon's fragments before the depth comparison
-%% is performed. See {@link gl:polygonOffset/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_LINE': If enabled, and if the polygon is rendered in `?GL_LINE'
-%% mode, an offset is added to depth values of a polygon's fragments before the depth comparison
-%% is performed. See {@link gl:polygonOffset/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_POINT': If enabled, an offset is added to depth values of a
-%% polygon's fragments before the depth comparison is performed, if the polygon is rendered
-%% in `?GL_POINT' mode. See {@link gl:polygonOffset/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_SMOOTH': If enabled, draw polygons with proper filtering. Otherwise,
-%% draw aliased polygons. For correct antialiased polygons, an alpha buffer is needed and
-%% the polygons must be sorted front to back.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART': Enables primitive restarting. If enabled, any one of the
-%% draw commands which transfers a set of generic attribute array elements to the GL will
-%% restart the primitive when the index of the vertex is equal to the primitive restart
-%% index. See {@link gl:primitiveRestartIndex/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE': If enabled, compute a temporary coverage value where
-%% each bit is determined by the alpha value at the corresponding sample location. The temporary
-%% coverage value is then ANDed with the fragment coverage value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_ONE': If enabled, each sample alpha value is replaced by the
-%% maximum representable alpha value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE': If enabled, the fragment's coverage is ANDed with the temporary
-%% coverage value. If `?GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_INVERT' is set to `?GL_TRUE', invert
-%% the coverage value. See {@link gl:sampleCoverage/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SAMPLE_SHADING': If enabled, the active fragment shader is run once for each
-%% covered sample, or at fraction of this rate as determined by the current value of `?GL_MIN_SAMPLE_SHADING_VALUE'
-%% . See {@link gl:minSampleShading/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SAMPLE_MASK': If enabled, the sample coverage mask generated for a fragment
-%% during rasterization will be ANDed with the value of `?GL_SAMPLE_MASK_VALUE' before
-%% shading occurs. See {@link gl:sampleMaski/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SCISSOR_TEST': If enabled, discard fragments that are outside the scissor rectangle.
-%% See {@link gl:scissor/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_TEST': If enabled, do stencil testing and update the stencil buffer.
-%% See {@link gl:stencilFunc/3} and {@link gl:stencilOp/3} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_SEAMLESS': If enabled, cubemap textures are sampled such that
-%% when linearly sampling from the border between two adjacent faces, texels from both faces
-%% are used to generate the final sample value. When disabled, texels from only a single
-%% face are used to construct the final sample value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PROGRAM_POINT_SIZE': If enabled and a vertex or geometry shader is active,
-%% then the derived point size is taken from the (potentially clipped) shader builtin `?gl_PointSize'
-%% and clamped to the implementation-dependent point size range.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glEnable.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glEnable.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec enable(Cap) -> 'ok' when Cap :: enum().
enable(Cap) ->
cast(5060, <<Cap:?GLenum>>).
@@ -1042,31 +638,7 @@ disable(Cap) ->
%% all capabilities except `?GL_DITHER' are disabled; `?GL_DITHER' is initially
%% enabled.
%%
-%% The following capabilities are accepted for `Cap' : <table><tbody><tr><td>` Constant '
-%% </td><td>` See '</td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_BLEND'</td><td> {@link gl:blendFunc/2}
-%% , {@link gl:logicOp/1} </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_CLIP_DISTANCE'`i'</td><td> {@link gl:enable/1}
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_COLOR_LOGIC_OP'</td><td> {@link gl:logicOp/1} </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_CULL_FACE'
-%% </td><td> {@link gl:cullFace/1} </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DEPTH_CLAMP'</td><td> {@link gl:enable/1}
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DEPTH_TEST'</td><td> {@link gl:depthFunc/1} , {@link gl:depthRange/2}
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DITHER'</td><td> {@link gl:enable/1} </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB'
-%% </td><td> {@link gl:enable/1} </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LINE_SMOOTH'</td><td> {@link gl:lineWidth/1}
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_MULTISAMPLE'</td><td> {@link gl:sampleCoverage/2} </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_SMOOTH'</td><td> {@link gl:polygonMode/2} </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_FILL'
-%% </td><td> {@link gl:polygonOffset/2} </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_LINE'</td><td>
-%% {@link gl:polygonOffset/2} </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_POINT'</td><td> {@link gl:polygonOffset/2}
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PROGRAM_POINT_SIZE'</td><td> {@link gl:enable/1} </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART'</td><td> {@link gl:enable/1} , {@link gl:primitiveRestartIndex/1} </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE'</td><td> {@link gl:sampleCoverage/2} </td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_ONE'</td><td> {@link gl:sampleCoverage/2} </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE'</td><td> {@link gl:sampleCoverage/2} </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLE_MASK'
-%% </td><td> {@link gl:enable/1} </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SCISSOR_TEST'</td><td> {@link gl:scissor/4}
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_STENCIL_TEST'</td><td> {@link gl:stencilFunc/3} , {@link gl:stencilOp/3}
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_TEXTURE_CUBEMAP_SEAMLESS'</td><td> {@link gl:enable/1} </td></tr>
-%% </tbody></table>
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsEnabled.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsEnabled.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isEnabled(Cap) -> 0|1 when Cap :: enum().
isEnabled(Cap) ->
call(5062, <<Cap:?GLenum>>).
@@ -1078,47 +650,7 @@ isEnabled(Cap) ->
%% and {@link gl:enableClientState/1} take a single argument, `Cap' , which can assume
%% one of the following values:
%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR_ARRAY': If enabled, the color array is enabled for writing and used during
-%% rendering when {@link gl:arrayElement/1} , {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4} ,
-%% {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , or see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% is called. See {@link gl:colorPointer/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_EDGE_FLAG_ARRAY': If enabled, the edge flag array is enabled for writing and
-%% used during rendering when {@link gl:arrayElement/1} , {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4}
-%% , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , or see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% is called. See {@link gl:edgeFlagPointer/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_FOG_COORD_ARRAY': If enabled, the fog coordinate array is enabled for writing
-%% and used during rendering when {@link gl:arrayElement/1} , {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4}
-%% , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , or see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% is called. See {@link gl:fogCoordPointer/3} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_INDEX_ARRAY': If enabled, the index array is enabled for writing and used during
-%% rendering when {@link gl:arrayElement/1} , {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4} ,
-%% {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , or see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% is called. See {@link gl:indexPointer/3} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_NORMAL_ARRAY': If enabled, the normal array is enabled for writing and used
-%% during rendering when {@link gl:arrayElement/1} , {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4}
-%% , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , or see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% is called. See {@link gl:normalPointer/3} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SECONDARY_COLOR_ARRAY': If enabled, the secondary color array is enabled for
-%% writing and used during rendering when {@link gl:arrayElement/1} , {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4}
-%% , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , or see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% is called. See {@link gl:colorPointer/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY': If enabled, the texture coordinate array is enabled for
-%% writing and used during rendering when {@link gl:arrayElement/1} , {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4}
-%% , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , or see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% is called. See {@link gl:texCoordPointer/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_ARRAY': If enabled, the vertex array is enabled for writing and used
-%% during rendering when {@link gl:arrayElement/1} , {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4}
-%% , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , or see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% is called. See {@link gl:vertexPointer/4} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glEnableClientState.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glEnableClientState.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec enableClientState(Cap) -> 'ok' when Cap :: enum().
enableClientState(Cap) ->
cast(5063, <<Cap:?GLenum>>).
@@ -1135,809 +667,7 @@ disableClientState(Cap) ->
%% symbolic constant indicating the state variable to be returned, and `Params' is a
%% pointer to an array of the indicated type in which to place the returned data.
%%
-%% Type conversion is performed if `Params' has a different type than the state variable
-%% value being requested. If ``gl:getBooleanv'' is called, a floating-point (or integer)
-%% value is converted to `?GL_FALSE' if and only if it is 0.0 (or 0). Otherwise, it
-%% is converted to `?GL_TRUE'. If ``gl:getIntegerv'' is called, boolean values are
-%% returned as `?GL_TRUE' or `?GL_FALSE', and most floating-point values are rounded
-%% to the nearest integer value. Floating-point colors and normals, however, are returned
-%% with a linear mapping that maps 1.0 to the most positive representable integer value and
-%% -1.0 to the most negative representable integer value. If ``gl:getFloatv'' or ``gl:getDoublev''
-%% is called, boolean values are returned as `?GL_TRUE' or `?GL_FALSE', and integer
-%% values are converted to floating-point values.
-%%
-%% The following symbolic constants are accepted by `Pname' :
-%%
-%% `?GL_ACTIVE_TEXTURE': `Params' returns a single value indicating the active
-%% multitexture unit. The initial value is `?GL_TEXTURE0'. See {@link gl:activeTexture/1} .
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_ALIASED_LINE_WIDTH_RANGE': `Params' returns a pair of values indicating
-%% the range of widths supported for aliased lines. See {@link gl:lineWidth/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING': `Params' returns a single value, the name of the
-%% buffer object currently bound to the target `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER'. If no buffer object
-%% is bound to this target, 0 is returned. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} .
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLEND': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether blending
-%% is enabled. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:blendFunc/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLEND_COLOR': `Params' returns four values, the red, green, blue, and alpha
-%% values which are the components of the blend color. See {@link gl:blendColor/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLEND_DST_ALPHA': `Params' returns one value, the symbolic constant identifying
-%% the alpha destination blend function. The initial value is `?GL_ZERO'. See {@link gl:blendFunc/2}
-%% and {@link gl:blendFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLEND_DST_RGB': `Params' returns one value, the symbolic constant identifying
-%% the RGB destination blend function. The initial value is `?GL_ZERO'. See {@link gl:blendFunc/2}
-%% and {@link gl:blendFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLEND_EQUATION_RGB': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% whether the RGB blend equation is `?GL_FUNC_ADD', `?GL_FUNC_SUBTRACT', `?GL_FUNC_REVERSE_SUBTRACT'
-%% , `?GL_MIN' or `?GL_MAX'. See {@link gl:blendEquationSeparate/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLEND_EQUATION_ALPHA': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant
-%% indicating whether the Alpha blend equation is `?GL_FUNC_ADD', `?GL_FUNC_SUBTRACT'
-%% , `?GL_FUNC_REVERSE_SUBTRACT', `?GL_MIN' or `?GL_MAX'. See {@link gl:blendEquationSeparate/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLEND_SRC_ALPHA': `Params' returns one value, the symbolic constant identifying
-%% the alpha source blend function. The initial value is `?GL_ONE'. See {@link gl:blendFunc/2}
-%% and {@link gl:blendFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLEND_SRC_RGB': `Params' returns one value, the symbolic constant identifying
-%% the RGB source blend function. The initial value is `?GL_ONE'. See {@link gl:blendFunc/2}
-%% and {@link gl:blendFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR_CLEAR_VALUE': `Params' returns four values: the red, green, blue,
-%% and alpha values used to clear the color buffers. Integer values, if requested, are linearly
-%% mapped from the internal floating-point representation such that 1.0 returns the most
-%% positive representable integer value, and -1.0 returns the most negative representable
-%% integer value. The initial value is (0, 0, 0, 0). See {@link gl:clearColor/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR_LOGIC_OP': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% a fragment's RGBA color values are merged into the framebuffer using a logical operation.
-%% The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:logicOp/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR_WRITEMASK': `Params' returns four boolean values: the red, green,
-%% blue, and alpha write enables for the color buffers. The initial value is (`?GL_TRUE',
-%% `?GL_TRUE', `?GL_TRUE', `?GL_TRUE'). See {@link gl:colorMask/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_COMPRESSED_TEXTURE_FORMATS': `Params' returns a list of symbolic constants
-%% of length `?GL_NUM_COMPRESSED_TEXTURE_FORMATS' indicating which compressed texture
-%% formats are available. See {@link gl:compressedTexImage2D/8} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONTEXT_FLAGS': `Params' returns one value, the flags with which the context
-%% was created (such as debugging functionality).
-%%
-%% `?GL_CULL_FACE': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% polygon culling is enabled. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:cullFace/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_CURRENT_PROGRAM': `Params' returns one value, the name of the program object
-%% that is currently active, or 0 if no program object is active. See {@link gl:useProgram/1} .
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_CLEAR_VALUE': `Params' returns one value, the value that is used
-%% to clear the depth buffer. Integer values, if requested, are linearly mapped from the
-%% internal floating-point representation such that 1.0 returns the most positive representable
-%% integer value, and -1.0 returns the most negative representable integer value. The initial
-%% value is 1. See {@link gl:clearDepth/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_FUNC': `Params' returns one value, the symbolic constant that indicates
-%% the depth comparison function. The initial value is `?GL_LESS'. See {@link gl:depthFunc/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_RANGE': `Params' returns two values: the near and far mapping limits
-%% for the depth buffer. Integer values, if requested, are linearly mapped from the internal
-%% floating-point representation such that 1.0 returns the most positive representable integer
-%% value, and -1.0 returns the most negative representable integer value. The initial value
-%% is (0, 1). See {@link gl:depthRange/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_TEST': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% depth testing of fragments is enabled. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:depthFunc/1}
-%% and {@link gl:depthRange/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_WRITEMASK': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating if
-%% the depth buffer is enabled for writing. The initial value is `?GL_TRUE'. See {@link gl:depthMask/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_DITHER': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether dithering
-%% of fragment colors and indices is enabled. The initial value is `?GL_TRUE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DOUBLEBUFFER': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% double buffering is supported.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DRAW_BUFFER': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% which buffers are being drawn to. See {@link gl:drawBuffer/1} . The initial value is `?GL_BACK'
-%% if there are back buffers, otherwise it is `?GL_FRONT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DRAW_BUFFER'`i': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% which buffers are being drawn to by the corresponding output color. See {@link gl:drawBuffers/1}
-%% . The initial value of `?GL_DRAW_BUFFER0' is `?GL_BACK' if there are back buffers,
-%% otherwise it is `?GL_FRONT'. The initial values of draw buffers for all other output
-%% colors is `?GL_NONE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DRAW_FRAMEBUFFER_BINDING': `Params' returns one value, the name of the
-%% framebuffer object currently bound to the `?GL_DRAW_FRAMEBUFFER' target. If the default
-%% framebuffer is bound, this value will be zero. The initial value is zero. See {@link gl:bindFramebuffer/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_READ_FRAMEBUFFER_BINDING': `Params' returns one value, the name of the
-%% framebuffer object currently bound to the `?GL_READ_FRAMEBUFFER' target. If the default
-%% framebuffer is bound, this value will be zero. The initial value is zero. See {@link gl:bindFramebuffer/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING': `Params' returns a single value, the name
-%% of the buffer object currently bound to the target `?GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER'. If
-%% no buffer object is bound to this target, 0 is returned. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER_DERIVATIVE_HINT': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic
-%% constant indicating the mode of the derivative accuracy hint for fragment shaders. The
-%% initial value is `?GL_DONT_CARE'. See {@link gl:hint/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_IMPLEMENTATION_COLOR_READ_FORMAT': `Params' returns a single GLenum value
-%% indicating the implementation's preferred pixel data format. See {@link gl:readPixels/7} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_IMPLEMENTATION_COLOR_READ_TYPE': `Params' returns a single GLenum value
-%% indicating the implementation's preferred pixel data type. See {@link gl:readPixels/7} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINE_SMOOTH': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% antialiasing of lines is enabled. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:lineWidth/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINE_SMOOTH_HINT': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% the mode of the line antialiasing hint. The initial value is `?GL_DONT_CARE'. See {@link gl:hint/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINE_WIDTH': `Params' returns one value, the line width as specified with {@link gl:lineWidth/1}
-%% . The initial value is 1.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LAYER_PROVOKING_VERTEX': `Params' returns one value, the implementation
-%% dependent specifc vertex of a primitive that is used to select the rendering layer. If
-%% the value returned is equivalent to `?GL_PROVOKING_VERTEX', then the vertex selection
-%% follows the convention specified by {@link gl:provokingVertex/1} . If the value returned
-%% is equivalent to `?GL_FIRST_VERTEX_CONVENTION', then the selection is always taken
-%% from the first vertex in the primitive. If the value returned is equivalent to `?GL_LAST_VERTEX_CONVENTION'
-%% , then the selection is always taken from the last vertex in the primitive. If the value
-%% returned is equivalent to `?GL_UNDEFINED_VERTEX', then the selection is not guaranteed
-%% to be taken from any specific vertex in the primitive.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINE_WIDTH_GRANULARITY': `Params' returns one value, the width difference
-%% between adjacent supported widths for antialiased lines. See {@link gl:lineWidth/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINE_WIDTH_RANGE': `Params' returns two values: the smallest and largest
-%% supported widths for antialiased lines. See {@link gl:lineWidth/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_LOGIC_OP_MODE': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% the selected logic operation mode. The initial value is `?GL_COPY'. See {@link gl:logicOp/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAJOR_VERSION': `Params' returns one value, the major version number of
-%% the OpenGL API supported by the current context.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_3D_TEXTURE_SIZE': `Params' returns one value, a rough estimate of the
-%% largest 3D texture that the GL can handle. The value must be at least 64. Use `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_3D'
-%% to determine if a texture is too large. See {@link gl:texImage3D/10} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_ARRAY_TEXTURE_LAYERS': `Params' returns one value. The value indicates
-%% the maximum number of layers allowed in an array texture, and must be at least 256. See {@link gl:texImage2D/9}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_CLIP_DISTANCES': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number of
-%% application-defined clipping distances. The value must be at least 8.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_COLOR_TEXTURE_SAMPLES': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number
-%% of samples in a color multisample texture.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_COMBINED_ATOMIC_COUNTERS': `Params' returns a single value, the maximum
-%% number of atomic counters available to all active shaders.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_COMBINED_FRAGMENT_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value,
-%% the number of words for fragment shader uniform variables in all uniform blocks (including
-%% default). The value must be at least 1. See {@link gl:uniform1f/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_COMBINED_GEOMETRY_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value,
-%% the number of words for geometry shader uniform variables in all uniform blocks (including
-%% default). The value must be at least 1. See {@link gl:uniform1f/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_COMBINED_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% supported texture image units that can be used to access texture maps from the vertex
-%% shader and the fragment processor combined. If both the vertex shader and the fragment
-%% processing stage access the same texture image unit, then that counts as using two texture
-%% image units against this limit. The value must be at least 48. See {@link gl:activeTexture/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_COMBINED_UNIFORM_BLOCKS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number
-%% of uniform blocks per program. The value must be at least 36. See {@link gl:uniformBlockBinding/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_COMBINED_VERTEX_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value, the
-%% number of words for vertex shader uniform variables in all uniform blocks (including default).
-%% The value must be at least 1. See {@link gl:uniform1f/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_CUBE_MAP_TEXTURE_SIZE': `Params' returns one value. The value gives
-%% a rough estimate of the largest cube-map texture that the GL can handle. The value must
-%% be at least 1024. Use `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP' to determine if a texture is too
-%% large. See {@link gl:texImage2D/9} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_DEPTH_TEXTURE_SAMPLES': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number
-%% of samples in a multisample depth or depth-stencil texture.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_DRAW_BUFFERS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number of simultaneous
-%% outputs that may be written in a fragment shader. The value must be at least 8. See {@link gl:drawBuffers/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_DUALSOURCE_DRAW_BUFFERS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number
-%% of active draw buffers when using dual-source blending. The value must be at least 1.
-%% See {@link gl:blendFunc/2} and {@link gl:blendFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_ELEMENTS_INDICES': `Params' returns one value, the recommended maximum
-%% number of vertex array indices. See {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_ELEMENTS_VERTICES': `Params' returns one value, the recommended maximum
-%% number of vertex array vertices. See {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_FRAGMENT_ATOMIC_COUNTERS': `Params' returns a single value, the maximum
-%% number of atomic counters available to fragment shaders.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_FRAGMENT_INPUT_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% number of components of the inputs read by the fragment shader, which must be at least
-%% 128.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_FRAGMENT_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% number of individual floating-point, integer, or boolean values that can be held in uniform
-%% variable storage for a fragment shader. The value must be at least 1024. See {@link gl:uniform1f/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_FRAGMENT_UNIFORM_VECTORS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% number of individual 4-vectors of floating-point, integer, or boolean values that can
-%% be held in uniform variable storage for a fragment shader. The value is equal to the value
-%% of `?GL_MAX_FRAGMENT_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS' divided by 4 and must be at least 256. See {@link gl:uniform1f/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_FRAGMENT_UNIFORM_BLOCKS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number
-%% of uniform blocks per fragment shader. The value must be at least 12. See {@link gl:uniformBlockBinding/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_ATOMIC_COUNTERS': `Params' returns a single value, the maximum
-%% number of atomic counters available to geometry shaders.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_INPUT_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% number of components of inputs read by a geometry shader, which must be at least 64.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_OUTPUT_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% number of components of outputs written by a geometry shader, which must be at least 128.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% supported texture image units that can be used to access texture maps from the geometry
-%% shader. The value must be at least 16. See {@link gl:activeTexture/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_UNIFORM_BLOCKS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number
-%% of uniform blocks per geometry shader. The value must be at least 12. See {@link gl:uniformBlockBinding/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% number of individual floating-point, integer, or boolean values that can be held in uniform
-%% variable storage for a geometry shader. The value must be at least 1024. See {@link gl:uniform1f/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_INTEGER_SAMPLES': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number of
-%% samples supported in integer format multisample buffers.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MIN_MAP_BUFFER_ALIGNMENT': `Params' returns one value, the minimum alignment
-%% in basic machine units of pointers returned fromsee `glMapBuffer' and see `glMapBufferRange'
-%% . This value must be a power of two and must be at least 64.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_PROGRAM_TEXEL_OFFSET': `Params' returns one value, the maximum texel
-%% offset allowed in a texture lookup, which must be at least 7.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MIN_PROGRAM_TEXEL_OFFSET': `Params' returns one value, the minimum texel
-%% offset allowed in a texture lookup, which must be at most -8.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_RECTANGLE_TEXTURE_SIZE': `Params' returns one value. The value gives
-%% a rough estimate of the largest rectangular texture that the GL can handle. The value
-%% must be at least 1024. Use `?GL_PROXY_RECTANGLE_TEXTURE' to determine if a texture
-%% is too large. See {@link gl:texImage2D/9} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_RENDERBUFFER_SIZE': `Params' returns one value. The value indicates
-%% the maximum supported size for renderbuffers. See {@link gl:framebufferRenderbuffer/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_SAMPLE_MASK_WORDS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number
-%% of sample mask words.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_SERVER_WAIT_TIMEOUT': `Params' returns one value, the maximum {@link gl:waitSync/3}
-%% timeout interval.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_TESS_CONTROL_ATOMIC_COUNTERS': `Params' returns a single value, the
-%% maximum number of atomic counters available to tessellation control shaders.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_TESS_EVALUATION_ATOMIC_COUNTERS': `Params' returns a single value,
-%% the maximum number of atomic counters available to tessellation evaluation shaders.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_TEXTURE_BUFFER_SIZE': `Params' returns one value. The value gives the
-%% maximum number of texels allowed in the texel array of a texture buffer object. Value
-%% must be at least 65536.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum supported
-%% texture image units that can be used to access texture maps from the fragment shader.
-%% The value must be at least 16. See {@link gl:activeTexture/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_TEXTURE_LOD_BIAS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum, absolute
-%% value of the texture level-of-detail bias. The value must be at least 2.0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE': `Params' returns one value. The value gives a rough
-%% estimate of the largest texture that the GL can handle. The value must be at least 1024.
-%% Use a proxy texture target such as `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_1D' or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_2D'
-%% to determine if a texture is too large. See {@link gl:texImage1D/8} and {@link gl:texImage2D/9}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_UNIFORM_BUFFER_BINDINGS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number
-%% of uniform buffer binding points on the context, which must be at least 36.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_UNIFORM_BLOCK_SIZE': `Params' returns one value, the maximum size in
-%% basic machine units of a uniform block, which must be at least 16384.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VARYING_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value, the number components
-%% for varying variables, which must be at least 60.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VARYING_VECTORS': `Params' returns one value, the number 4-vectors
-%% for varying variables, which is equal to the value of `?GL_MAX_VARYING_COMPONENTS'
-%% and must be at least 15.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VARYING_FLOATS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number of
-%% interpolators available for processing varying variables used by vertex and fragment shaders.
-%% This value represents the number of individual floating-point values that can be interpolated;
-%% varying variables declared as vectors, matrices, and arrays will all consume multiple
-%% interpolators. The value must be at least 32.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_ATOMIC_COUNTERS': `Params' returns a single value, the maximum
-%% number of atomic counters available to vertex shaders.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_ATTRIBS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number of
-%% 4-component generic vertex attributes accessible to a vertex shader. The value must be
-%% at least 16. See {@link gl:vertexAttrib1d/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% supported texture image units that can be used to access texture maps from the vertex
-%% shader. The value may be at least 16. See {@link gl:activeTexture/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% number of individual floating-point, integer, or boolean values that can be held in uniform
-%% variable storage for a vertex shader. The value must be at least 1024. See {@link gl:uniform1f/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_UNIFORM_VECTORS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number
-%% of 4-vectors that may be held in uniform variable storage for the vertex shader. The value
-%% of `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_UNIFORM_VECTORS' is equal to the value of `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS'
-%% and must be at least 256.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_OUTPUT_COMPONENTS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum
-%% number of components of output written by a vertex shader, which must be at least 64.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_UNIFORM_BLOCKS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number
-%% of uniform blocks per vertex shader. The value must be at least 12. See {@link gl:uniformBlockBinding/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VIEWPORT_DIMS': `Params' returns two values: the maximum supported
-%% width and height of the viewport. These must be at least as large as the visible dimensions
-%% of the display being rendered to. See {@link gl:viewport/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_VIEWPORTS': `Params' returns one value, the maximum number of simultaneous
-%% viewports that are supported. The value must be at least 16. See {@link gl:viewportIndexedf/5}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_MINOR_VERSION': `Params' returns one value, the minor version number of
-%% the OpenGL API supported by the current context.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NUM_COMPRESSED_TEXTURE_FORMATS': `Params' returns a single integer value
-%% indicating the number of available compressed texture formats. The minimum value is 4.
-%% See {@link gl:compressedTexImage2D/8} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_NUM_EXTENSIONS': `Params' returns one value, the number of extensions supported
-%% by the GL implementation for the current context. See {@link gl:getString/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_NUM_PROGRAM_BINARY_FORMATS': `Params' returns one value, the number of
-%% program binary formats supported by the implementation.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NUM_SHADER_BINARY_FORMATS': `Params' returns one value, the number of binary
-%% shader formats supported by the implementation. If this value is greater than zero, then
-%% the implementation supports loading binary shaders. If it is zero, then the loading of
-%% binary shaders by the implementation is not supported.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_ALIGNMENT': `Params' returns one value, the byte alignment used for
-%% writing pixel data to memory. The initial value is 4. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT': `Params' returns one value, the image height used for
-%% writing pixel data to memory. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_LSB_FIRST': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% single-bit pixels being written to memory are written first to the least significant bit
-%% of each unsigned byte. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_ROW_LENGTH': `Params' returns one value, the row length used for writing
-%% pixel data to memory. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_SKIP_IMAGES': `Params' returns one value, the number of pixel images
-%% skipped before the first pixel is written into memory. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_SKIP_PIXELS': `Params' returns one value, the number of pixel locations
-%% skipped before the first pixel is written into memory. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_SKIP_ROWS': `Params' returns one value, the number of rows of pixel
-%% locations skipped before the first pixel is written into memory. The initial value is
-%% 0. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_SWAP_BYTES': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% the bytes of two-byte and four-byte pixel indices and components are swapped before being
-%% written to memory. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER_BINDING': `Params' returns a single value, the name of
-%% the buffer object currently bound to the target `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER'. If no buffer
-%% object is bound to this target, 0 is returned. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER_BINDING': `Params' returns a single value, the name
-%% of the buffer object currently bound to the target `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER'. If
-%% no buffer object is bound to this target, 0 is returned. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POINT_FADE_THRESHOLD_SIZE': `Params' returns one value, the point size
-%% threshold for determining the point size. See {@link gl:pointParameterf/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART_INDEX': `Params' returns one value, the current primitive
-%% restart index. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:primitiveRestartIndex/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PROGRAM_BINARY_FORMATS': `Params' an array of `?GL_NUM_PROGRAM_BINARY_FORMATS'
-%% values, indicating the proram binary formats supported by the implementation.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PROGRAM_PIPELINE_BINDING': `Params' a single value, the name of the currently
-%% bound program pipeline object, or zero if no program pipeline object is bound. See {@link gl:bindProgramPipeline/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_PROVOKING_VERTEX': `Params' returns one value, the currently selected provoking
-%% vertex convention. The initial value is `?GL_LAST_VERTEX_CONVENTION'. See {@link gl:provokingVertex/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POINT_SIZE': `Params' returns one value, the point size as specified by {@link gl:pointSize/1}
-%% . The initial value is 1.
-%%
-%% `?GL_POINT_SIZE_GRANULARITY': `Params' returns one value, the size difference
-%% between adjacent supported sizes for antialiased points. See {@link gl:pointSize/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POINT_SIZE_RANGE': `Params' returns two values: the smallest and largest
-%% supported sizes for antialiased points. The smallest size must be at most 1, and the largest
-%% size must be at least 1. See {@link gl:pointSize/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_FACTOR': `Params' returns one value, the scaling factor
-%% used to determine the variable offset that is added to the depth value of each fragment
-%% generated when a polygon is rasterized. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:polygonOffset/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_UNITS': `Params' returns one value. This value is multiplied
-%% by an implementation-specific value and then added to the depth value of each fragment
-%% generated when a polygon is rasterized. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:polygonOffset/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_FILL': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating
-%% whether polygon offset is enabled for polygons in fill mode. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'
-%% . See {@link gl:polygonOffset/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_LINE': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating
-%% whether polygon offset is enabled for polygons in line mode. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'
-%% . See {@link gl:polygonOffset/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_POINT': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating
-%% whether polygon offset is enabled for polygons in point mode. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'
-%% . See {@link gl:polygonOffset/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_SMOOTH': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% antialiasing of polygons is enabled. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:polygonMode/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_SMOOTH_HINT': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% the mode of the polygon antialiasing hint. The initial value is `?GL_DONT_CARE'.
-%% See {@link gl:hint/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_READ_BUFFER': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% which color buffer is selected for reading. The initial value is `?GL_BACK' if there
-%% is a back buffer, otherwise it is `?GL_FRONT'. See {@link gl:readPixels/7} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_BINDING': `Params' returns a single value, the name of the
-%% renderbuffer object currently bound to the target `?GL_RENDERBUFFER'. If no renderbuffer
-%% object is bound to this target, 0 is returned. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindRenderbuffer/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SAMPLE_BUFFERS': `Params' returns a single integer value indicating the
-%% number of sample buffers associated with the framebuffer. See {@link gl:sampleCoverage/2} .
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_VALUE': `Params' returns a single positive floating-point
-%% value indicating the current sample coverage value. See {@link gl:sampleCoverage/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_INVERT': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating
-%% if the temporary coverage value should be inverted. See {@link gl:sampleCoverage/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SAMPLER_BINDING': `Params' returns a single value, the name of the sampler
-%% object currently bound to the active texture unit. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindSampler/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SAMPLES': `Params' returns a single integer value indicating the coverage
-%% mask size. See {@link gl:sampleCoverage/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SCISSOR_BOX': `Params' returns four values: the x and y window coordinates
-%% of the scissor box, followed by its width and height. Initially the x and y window
-%% coordinates are both 0 and the width and height are set to the size of the window. See {@link gl:scissor/4}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SCISSOR_TEST': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% scissoring is enabled. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:scissor/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SHADER_COMPILER': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% an online shader compiler is present in the implementation. All desktop OpenGL implementations
-%% must support online shader compilations, and therefore the value of `?GL_SHADER_COMPILER'
-%% will always be `?GL_TRUE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SMOOTH_LINE_WIDTH_RANGE': `Params' returns a pair of values indicating
-%% the range of widths supported for smooth (antialiased) lines. See {@link gl:lineWidth/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_SMOOTH_LINE_WIDTH_GRANULARITY': `Params' returns a single value indicating
-%% the level of quantization applied to smooth line width parameters.
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_BACK_FAIL': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% what action is taken for back-facing polygons when the stencil test fails. The initial
-%% value is `?GL_KEEP'. See {@link gl:stencilOpSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_BACK_FUNC': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% what function is used for back-facing polygons to compare the stencil reference value
-%% with the stencil buffer value. The initial value is `?GL_ALWAYS'. See {@link gl:stencilFuncSeparate/4}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_BACK_PASS_DEPTH_FAIL': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant
-%% indicating what action is taken for back-facing polygons when the stencil test passes,
-%% but the depth test fails. The initial value is `?GL_KEEP'. See {@link gl:stencilOpSeparate/4}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_BACK_PASS_DEPTH_PASS': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant
-%% indicating what action is taken for back-facing polygons when the stencil test passes
-%% and the depth test passes. The initial value is `?GL_KEEP'. See {@link gl:stencilOpSeparate/4}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_BACK_REF': `Params' returns one value, the reference value that
-%% is compared with the contents of the stencil buffer for back-facing polygons. The initial
-%% value is 0. See {@link gl:stencilFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_BACK_VALUE_MASK': `Params' returns one value, the mask that is
-%% used for back-facing polygons to mask both the stencil reference value and the stencil
-%% buffer value before they are compared. The initial value is all 1's. See {@link gl:stencilFuncSeparate/4}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_BACK_WRITEMASK': `Params' returns one value, the mask that controls
-%% writing of the stencil bitplanes for back-facing polygons. The initial value is all 1's.
-%% See {@link gl:stencilMaskSeparate/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_CLEAR_VALUE': `Params' returns one value, the index to which the
-%% stencil bitplanes are cleared. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:clearStencil/1} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_FAIL': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% what action is taken when the stencil test fails. The initial value is `?GL_KEEP'.
-%% See {@link gl:stencilOp/3} . This stencil state only affects non-polygons and front-facing
-%% polygons. Back-facing polygons use separate stencil state. See {@link gl:stencilOpSeparate/4}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_FUNC': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant indicating
-%% what function is used to compare the stencil reference value with the stencil buffer value.
-%% The initial value is `?GL_ALWAYS'. See {@link gl:stencilFunc/3} . This stencil state
-%% only affects non-polygons and front-facing polygons. Back-facing polygons use separate
-%% stencil state. See {@link gl:stencilFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_PASS_DEPTH_FAIL': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant
-%% indicating what action is taken when the stencil test passes, but the depth test fails.
-%% The initial value is `?GL_KEEP'. See {@link gl:stencilOp/3} . This stencil state only
-%% affects non-polygons and front-facing polygons. Back-facing polygons use separate stencil
-%% state. See {@link gl:stencilOpSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_PASS_DEPTH_PASS': `Params' returns one value, a symbolic constant
-%% indicating what action is taken when the stencil test passes and the depth test passes.
-%% The initial value is `?GL_KEEP'. See {@link gl:stencilOp/3} . This stencil state only
-%% affects non-polygons and front-facing polygons. Back-facing polygons use separate stencil
-%% state. See {@link gl:stencilOpSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_REF': `Params' returns one value, the reference value that is compared
-%% with the contents of the stencil buffer. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:stencilFunc/3}
-%% . This stencil state only affects non-polygons and front-facing polygons. Back-facing
-%% polygons use separate stencil state. See {@link gl:stencilFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_TEST': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% stencil testing of fragments is enabled. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:stencilFunc/3}
-%% and {@link gl:stencilOp/3} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_VALUE_MASK': `Params' returns one value, the mask that is used
-%% to mask both the stencil reference value and the stencil buffer value before they are
-%% compared. The initial value is all 1's. See {@link gl:stencilFunc/3} . This stencil state
-%% only affects non-polygons and front-facing polygons. Back-facing polygons use separate
-%% stencil state. See {@link gl:stencilFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_WRITEMASK': `Params' returns one value, the mask that controls
-%% writing of the stencil bitplanes. The initial value is all 1's. See {@link gl:stencilMask/1}
-%% . This stencil state only affects non-polygons and front-facing polygons. Back-facing
-%% polygons use separate stencil state. See {@link gl:stencilMaskSeparate/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_STEREO': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether stereo
-%% buffers (left and right) are supported.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SUBPIXEL_BITS': `Params' returns one value, an estimate of the number of
-%% bits of subpixel resolution that are used to position rasterized geometry in window coordinates.
-%% The value must be at least 4.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_1D': `Params' returns a single value, the name of the texture
-%% currently bound to the target `?GL_TEXTURE_1D'. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindTexture/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_1D_ARRAY': `Params' returns a single value, the name of
-%% the texture currently bound to the target `?GL_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY'. The initial value
-%% is 0. See {@link gl:bindTexture/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_2D': `Params' returns a single value, the name of the texture
-%% currently bound to the target `?GL_TEXTURE_2D'. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindTexture/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_2D_ARRAY': `Params' returns a single value, the name of
-%% the texture currently bound to the target `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY'. The initial value
-%% is 0. See {@link gl:bindTexture/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_2D_MULTISAMPLE': `Params' returns a single value, the name
-%% of the texture currently bound to the target `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE'. The initial
-%% value is 0. See {@link gl:bindTexture/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY': `Params' returns a single value,
-%% the name of the texture currently bound to the target `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY'
-%% . The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindTexture/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_3D': `Params' returns a single value, the name of the texture
-%% currently bound to the target `?GL_TEXTURE_3D'. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindTexture/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_BUFFER': `Params' returns a single value, the name of the
-%% texture currently bound to the target `?GL_TEXTURE_BUFFER'. The initial value is
-%% 0. See {@link gl:bindTexture/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_CUBE_MAP': `Params' returns a single value, the name of
-%% the texture currently bound to the target `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP'. The initial value
-%% is 0. See {@link gl:bindTexture/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_RECTANGLE': `Params' returns a single value, the name of
-%% the texture currently bound to the target `?GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE'. The initial value
-%% is 0. See {@link gl:bindTexture/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPRESSION_HINT': `Params' returns a single value indicating the
-%% mode of the texture compression hint. The initial value is `?GL_DONT_CARE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BUFFER_BINDING': `Params' returns a single value, the name of the
-%% texture buffer object currently bound. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} .
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TIMESTAMP': `Params' returns a single value, the 64-bit value of the current
-%% GL time. See {@link gl:queryCounter/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BUFFER_BINDING': When used with non-indexed variants of ``gl:get''
-%% (such as ``gl:getIntegerv''), `Params' returns a single value, the name of the
-%% buffer object currently bound to the target `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BUFFER'. If no
-%% buffer object is bound to this target, 0 is returned. When used with indexed variants of ``gl:get''
-%% (such as ``gl:getIntegeri_v''), `Params' returns a single value, the name of the
-%% buffer object bound to the indexed transform feedback attribute stream. The initial value
-%% is 0 for all targets. See {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} , {@link gl:bindBufferBase/3} , and {@link gl:bindBufferRange/5}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BUFFER_START': When used with indexed variants of ``gl:get''
-%% (such as ``gl:getInteger64i_v''), `Params' returns a single value, the start offset
-%% of the binding range for each transform feedback attribute stream. The initial value is
-%% 0 for all streams. See {@link gl:bindBufferRange/5} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BUFFER_SIZE': When used with indexed variants of ``gl:get''
-%% (such as ``gl:getInteger64i_v''), `Params' returns a single value, the size of
-%% the binding range for each transform feedback attribute stream. The initial value is 0
-%% for all streams. See {@link gl:bindBufferRange/5} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNIFORM_BUFFER_BINDING': When used with non-indexed variants of ``gl:get''
-%% (such as ``gl:getIntegerv''), `Params' returns a single value, the name of the
-%% buffer object currently bound to the target `?GL_UNIFORM_BUFFER'. If no buffer object
-%% is bound to this target, 0 is returned. When used with indexed variants of ``gl:get''
-%% (such as ``gl:getIntegeri_v''), `Params' returns a single value, the name of the
-%% buffer object bound to the indexed uniform buffer binding point. The initial value is
-%% 0 for all targets. See {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} , {@link gl:bindBufferBase/3} , and {@link gl:bindBufferRange/5}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNIFORM_BUFFER_OFFSET_ALIGNMENT': `Params' returns a single value, the
-%% minimum required alignment for uniform buffer sizes and offset. The initial value is 1.
-%% See {@link gl:uniformBlockBinding/3} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNIFORM_BUFFER_SIZE': When used with indexed variants of ``gl:get'' (such
-%% as ``gl:getInteger64i_v''), `Params' returns a single value, the size of the binding
-%% range for each indexed uniform buffer binding. The initial value is 0 for all bindings.
-%% See {@link gl:bindBufferRange/5} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNIFORM_BUFFER_START': When used with indexed variants of ``gl:get'' (such
-%% as ``gl:getInteger64i_v''), `Params' returns a single value, the start offset of
-%% the binding range for each indexed uniform buffer binding. The initial value is 0 for
-%% all bindings. See {@link gl:bindBufferRange/5} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_ALIGNMENT': `Params' returns one value, the byte alignment used
-%% for reading pixel data from memory. The initial value is 4. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT': `Params' returns one value, the image height used
-%% for reading pixel data from memory. The initial is 0. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_LSB_FIRST': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating whether
-%% single-bit pixels being read from memory are read first from the least significant bit
-%% of each unsigned byte. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH': `Params' returns one value, the row length used for
-%% reading pixel data from memory. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_IMAGES': `Params' returns one value, the number of pixel images
-%% skipped before the first pixel is read from memory. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS': `Params' returns one value, the number of pixel locations
-%% skipped before the first pixel is read from memory. The initial value is 0. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS': `Params' returns one value, the number of rows of pixel
-%% locations skipped before the first pixel is read from memory. The initial value is 0.
-%% See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_SWAP_BYTES': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating
-%% whether the bytes of two-byte and four-byte pixel indices and components are swapped after
-%% being read from memory. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} .
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_PROGRAM_POINT_SIZE': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating
-%% whether vertex program point size mode is enabled. If enabled, and a vertex shader is
-%% active, then the point size is taken from the shader built-in gl_PointSize. If disabled,
-%% and a vertex shader is active, then the point size is taken from the point state as specified
-%% by {@link gl:pointSize/1} . The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_VIEWPORT': When used with non-indexed variants of ``gl:get'' (such as ``gl:getIntegerv''
-%% ), `Params' returns four values: the x and y window coordinates of the viewport,
-%% followed by its width and height. Initially the x and y window coordinates are both
-%% set to 0, and the width and height are set to the width and height of the window into
-%% which the GL will do its rendering. See {@link gl:viewport/4} . When used with indexed
-%% variants of ``gl:get'' (such as ``gl:getIntegeri_v''), `Params' returns four
-%% values: the x and y window coordinates of the indexed viewport, followed by its width
-%% and height. Initially the x and y window coordinates are both set to 0, and the width
-%% and height are set to the width and height of the window into which the GL will do its
-%% rendering. See {@link gl:viewportIndexedf/5} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_VIEWPORT_BOUNDS_RANGE': `Params' returns two values, the minimum and maximum
-%% viewport bounds range. The minimum range should be at least [-32768, 32767].
-%%
-%% `?GL_VIEWPORT_INDEX_PROVOKING_VERTEX': `Params' returns one value, the implementation
-%% dependent specifc vertex of a primitive that is used to select the viewport index. If
-%% the value returned is equivalent to `?GL_PROVOKING_VERTEX', then the vertex selection
-%% follows the convention specified by {@link gl:provokingVertex/1} . If the value returned
-%% is equivalent to `?GL_FIRST_VERTEX_CONVENTION', then the selection is always taken
-%% from the first vertex in the primitive. If the value returned is equivalent to `?GL_LAST_VERTEX_CONVENTION'
-%% , then the selection is always taken from the last vertex in the primitive. If the value
-%% returned is equivalent to `?GL_UNDEFINED_VERTEX', then the selection is not guaranteed
-%% to be taken from any specific vertex in the primitive.
-%%
-%% `?GL_VIEWPORT_SUBPIXEL_BITS': `Params' returns a single value, the number of
-%% bits of sub-pixel precision which the GL uses to interpret the floating point viewport
-%% bounds. The minimum value is 0.
-%%
-%% Many of the boolean parameters can also be queried more easily using {@link gl:isEnabled/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGet.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGet.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getBooleanv(Pname) -> [0|1] when Pname :: enum().
getBooleanv(Pname) ->
call(5065, <<Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -1968,131 +698,7 @@ getIntegerv(Pname) ->
%% together. The special mask `?GL_ALL_ATTRIB_BITS' can be used to save all stackable
%% states.
%%
-%% The symbolic mask constants and their associated GL state are as follows (the second
-%% column lists which attributes are saved):
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ACCUM_BUFFER_BIT'</td><td> Accumulation buffer clear value
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_ALPHA_TEST' enable bit </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td> Alpha test function and reference value </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% `?GL_BLEND' enable bit </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Blending source and destination
-%% functions </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Constant blend color </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% Blending equation </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_DITHER' enable bit </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% </td><td>`?GL_DRAW_BUFFER' setting </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_COLOR_LOGIC_OP'
-%% enable bit </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_INDEX_LOGIC_OP' enable bit </td></tr><tr>
-%% <td></td><td> Logic op function </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Color mode and index mode
-%% clear values </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Color mode and index mode writemasks </td></tr><tr>
-%% <td>`?GL_CURRENT_BIT'</td><td> Current RGBA color </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Current
-%% color index </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Current normal vector </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% Current texture coordinates </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Current raster position </td></tr>
-%% <tr><td></td><td>`?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_POSITION_VALID' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% RGBA color associated with current raster position </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Color
-%% index associated with current raster position </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Texture coordinates
-%% associated with current raster position </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_EDGE_FLAG'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_DEPTH_TEST' enable
-%% bit </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Depth buffer test function </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% Depth buffer clear value </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_DEPTH_WRITEMASK' enable
-%% bit </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ENABLE_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_ALPHA_TEST' flag </td></tr><tr>
-%% <td></td><td>`?GL_AUTO_NORMAL' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_BLEND' flag
-%% </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Enable bits for the user-definable clipping planes </td></tr><tr>
-%% <td></td><td>`?GL_COLOR_MATERIAL'</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_CULL_FACE'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_DEPTH_TEST' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_DITHER'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_FOG' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_LIGHT'
-%% `i' where `?0' &lt;= `i' &lt; `?GL_MAX_LIGHTS'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td></td><td>`?GL_LIGHTING' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_LINE_SMOOTH'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_LINE_STIPPLE' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_COLOR_LOGIC_OP'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_INDEX_LOGIC_OP' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% `?GL_MAP1_'`x' where `x' is a map type </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_MAP2_'
-%% `x' where `x' is a map type </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_MULTISAMPLE'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_NORMALIZE' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POINT_SMOOTH'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_LINE' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td>
-%% <td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_FILL' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_POINT'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POLYGON_SMOOTH' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_STIPPLE' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_ONE' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td>
-%% <td>`?GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SCISSOR_TEST'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_STENCIL_TEST' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_TEXTURE_1D'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_TEXTURE_2D' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_TEXTURE_3D'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Flags `?GL_TEXTURE_GEN_'`x' where `x'
-%% is S, T, R, or Q </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_EVAL_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_MAP1_'`x'
-%% enable bits, where `x' is a map type </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_MAP2_'`x'
-%% enable bits, where `x' is a map type </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> 1D grid endpoints
-%% and divisions </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> 2D grid endpoints and divisions </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% </td><td>`?GL_AUTO_NORMAL' enable bit </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FOG_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_FOG'
-%% enable bit </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Fog color </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Fog density
-%% </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Linear fog start </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Linear fog end </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td> Fog index </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_FOG_MODE' value </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_HINT_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_PERSPECTIVE_CORRECTION_HINT' setting </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POINT_SMOOTH_HINT' setting </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_LINE_SMOOTH_HINT'
-%% setting </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POLYGON_SMOOTH_HINT' setting </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% </td><td>`?GL_FOG_HINT' setting </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_GENERATE_MIPMAP_HINT'
-%% setting </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_TEXTURE_COMPRESSION_HINT' setting </td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_LIGHTING_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_COLOR_MATERIAL' enable bit </td></tr><tr>
-%% <td></td><td>`?GL_COLOR_MATERIAL_FACE' value </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Color material
-%% parameters that are tracking the current color </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Ambient scene
-%% color </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_LIGHT_MODEL_LOCAL_VIEWER' value </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% </td><td>`?GL_LIGHT_MODEL_TWO_SIDE' setting </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_LIGHTING'
-%% enable bit </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Enable bit for each light </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% Ambient, diffuse, and specular intensity for each light </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Direction,
-%% position, exponent, and cutoff angle for each light </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Constant,
-%% linear, and quadratic attenuation factors for each light </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Ambient,
-%% diffuse, specular, and emissive color for each material </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Ambient,
-%% diffuse, and specular color indices for each material </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Specular
-%% exponent for each material </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SHADE_MODEL' setting </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_LINE_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_LINE_SMOOTH' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td>
-%% <td>`?GL_LINE_STIPPLE' enable bit </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Line stipple pattern
-%% and repeat counter </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Line width </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LIST_BIT'
-%% </td><td>`?GL_LIST_BASE' setting </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_MULTISAMPLE_BIT'</td><td>
-%% `?GL_MULTISAMPLE' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_ONE' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td>
-%% <td>`?GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_VALUE'
-%% value </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_INVERT' value </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MODE_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_RED_BIAS' and `?GL_RED_SCALE' settings </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_GREEN_BIAS' and `?GL_GREEN_SCALE' values </td></tr><tr>
-%% <td></td><td>`?GL_BLUE_BIAS' and `?GL_BLUE_SCALE'</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ALPHA_BIAS'
-%% and `?GL_ALPHA_SCALE'</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_DEPTH_BIAS' and `?GL_DEPTH_SCALE'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_INDEX_OFFSET' and `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' values </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_MAP_COLOR' and `?GL_MAP_STENCIL' flags </td></tr><tr>
-%% <td></td><td>`?GL_ZOOM_X' and `?GL_ZOOM_Y' factors </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_READ_BUFFER'
-%% setting </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POINT_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_POINT_SMOOTH' flag </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td> Point size </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POLYGON_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_CULL_FACE'
-%% enable bit </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_CULL_FACE_MODE' value </td></tr><tr><td></td>
-%% <td>`?GL_FRONT_FACE' indicator </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POLYGON_MODE'
-%% setting </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POLYGON_SMOOTH' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_STIPPLE' enable bit </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_FILL'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_LINE' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td>
-%% <td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_POINT' flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_FACTOR'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_UNITS'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POLYGON_STIPPLE_BIT'
-%% </td><td> Polygon stipple image </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SCISSOR_BIT'</td><td>`?GL_SCISSOR_TEST'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Scissor box </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_STENCIL_BUFFER_BIT'
-%% </td><td>`?GL_STENCIL_TEST' enable bit </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Stencil function
-%% and reference value </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Stencil value mask </td></tr><tr><td></td>
-%% <td> Stencil fail, pass, and depth buffer pass actions </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Stencil
-%% buffer clear value </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Stencil buffer writemask </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BIT'</td><td> Enable bits for the four texture coordinates </td></tr><tr>
-%% <td></td><td> Border color for each texture image </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Minification
-%% function for each texture image </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Magnification function for
-%% each texture image </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Texture coordinates and wrap mode for each
-%% texture image </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Color and mode for each texture environment </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td> Enable bits `?GL_TEXTURE_GEN_'`x', `x' is S, T,
-%% R, and Q </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_TEXTURE_GEN_MODE' setting for S, T, R, and
-%% Q </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> {@link gl:texGend/3} plane equations for S, T, R, and Q </td></tr>
-%% <tr><td></td><td> Current texture bindings (for example, `?GL_TEXTURE_BINDING_2D') </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_TRANSFORM_BIT'</td><td> Coefficients of the six clipping planes </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td> Enable bits for the user-definable clipping planes </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% </td><td>`?GL_MATRIX_MODE' value </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_NORMALIZE'
-%% flag </td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_RESCALE_NORMAL' flag </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_VIEWPORT_BIT'
-%% </td><td> Depth range (near and far) </td></tr><tr><td></td><td> Viewport origin and extent
-%% </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% {@link gl:pushAttrib/1} restores the values of the state variables saved with the last ``gl:pushAttrib''
-%% command. Those not saved are left unchanged.
-%%
-%% It is an error to push attributes onto a full stack or to pop attributes off an empty
-%% stack. In either case, the error flag is set and no other change is made to GL state.
-%%
-%% Initially, the attribute stack is empty.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPushAttrib.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glPushAttrib.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pushAttrib(Mask) -> 'ok' when Mask :: integer().
pushAttrib(Mask) ->
cast(5069, <<Mask:?GLbitfield>>).
@@ -2111,22 +717,7 @@ popAttrib() ->
%% of these constants together. The special mask `?GL_CLIENT_ALL_ATTRIB_BITS' can
%% be used to save all stackable client state.
%%
-%% The symbolic mask constants and their associated GL client state are as follows (the
-%% second column lists which attributes are saved):
-%%
-%% `?GL_CLIENT_PIXEL_STORE_BIT' Pixel storage modes `?GL_CLIENT_VERTEX_ARRAY_BIT'
-%% Vertex arrays (and enables)
-%%
-%% {@link gl:pushClientAttrib/1} restores the values of the client-state variables saved with
-%% the last ``gl:pushClientAttrib''. Those not saved are left unchanged.
-%%
-%% It is an error to push attributes onto a full client attribute stack or to pop attributes
-%% off an empty stack. In either case, the error flag is set, and no other change is made
-%% to GL state.
-%%
-%% Initially, the client attribute stack is empty.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPushClientAttrib.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glPushClientAttrib.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pushClientAttrib(Mask) -> 'ok' when Mask :: integer().
pushClientAttrib(Mask) ->
cast(5071, <<Mask:?GLbitfield>>).
@@ -2142,37 +733,7 @@ popClientAttrib() ->
%% ``gl:renderMode'' sets the rasterization mode. It takes one argument, `Mode' , which
%% can assume one of three predefined values:
%%
-%% `?GL_RENDER': Render mode. Primitives are rasterized, producing pixel fragments,
-%% which are written into the frame buffer. This is the normal mode and also the default
-%% mode.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SELECT': Selection mode. No pixel fragments are produced, and no change to
-%% the frame buffer contents is made. Instead, a record of the names of primitives that would
-%% have been drawn if the render mode had been `?GL_RENDER' is returned in a select
-%% buffer, which must be created (see {@link gl:selectBuffer/2} ) before selection mode is
-%% entered.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FEEDBACK': Feedback mode. No pixel fragments are produced, and no change to
-%% the frame buffer contents is made. Instead, the coordinates and attributes of vertices
-%% that would have been drawn if the render mode had been `?GL_RENDER' is returned in
-%% a feedback buffer, which must be created (see {@link gl:feedbackBuffer/3} ) before feedback
-%% mode is entered.
-%%
-%% The return value of ``gl:renderMode'' is determined by the render mode at the time ``gl:renderMode''
-%% is called, rather than by `Mode' . The values returned for the three render modes
-%% are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_RENDER': 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SELECT': The number of hit records transferred to the select buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FEEDBACK': The number of values (not vertices) transferred to the feedback
-%% buffer.
-%%
-%% See the {@link gl:selectBuffer/2} and {@link gl:feedbackBuffer/3} reference pages for more
-%% details concerning selection and feedback operation.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glRenderMode.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glRenderMode.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec renderMode(Mode) -> integer() when Mode :: enum().
renderMode(Mode) ->
call(5073, <<Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -2186,44 +747,7 @@ renderMode(Mode) ->
%% returns `?GL_NO_ERROR', there has been no detectable error since the last call to ``gl:getError''
%% , or since the GL was initialized.
%%
-%% To allow for distributed implementations, there may be several error flags. If any single
-%% error flag has recorded an error, the value of that flag is returned and that flag is
-%% reset to `?GL_NO_ERROR' when ``gl:getError'' is called. If more than one flag has
-%% recorded an error, ``gl:getError'' returns and clears an arbitrary error flag value.
-%% Thus, ``gl:getError'' should always be called in a loop, until it returns `?GL_NO_ERROR'
-%% , if all error flags are to be reset.
-%%
-%% Initially, all error flags are set to `?GL_NO_ERROR'.
-%%
-%% The following errors are currently defined:
-%%
-%% `?GL_NO_ERROR': No error has been recorded. The value of this symbolic constant
-%% is guaranteed to be 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_INVALID_ENUM': An unacceptable value is specified for an enumerated argument.
-%% The offending command is ignored and has no other side effect than to set the error flag.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_INVALID_VALUE': A numeric argument is out of range. The offending command is
-%% ignored and has no other side effect than to set the error flag.
-%%
-%% `?GL_INVALID_OPERATION': The specified operation is not allowed in the current state.
-%% The offending command is ignored and has no other side effect than to set the error flag.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_INVALID_FRAMEBUFFER_OPERATION': The framebuffer object is not complete. The
-%% offending command is ignored and has no other side effect than to set the error flag.
-%%
-%% `?GL_OUT_OF_MEMORY': There is not enough memory left to execute the command. The
-%% state of the GL is undefined, except for the state of the error flags, after this error
-%% is recorded.
-%%
-%% When an error flag is set, results of a GL operation are undefined only if `?GL_OUT_OF_MEMORY'
-%% has occurred. In all other cases, the command generating the error is ignored and has
-%% no effect on the GL state or frame buffer contents. If the generating command returns
-%% a value, it returns 0. If ``gl:getError'' itself generates an error, it returns 0.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetError.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetError.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getError() -> enum().
getError() ->
call(5074, <<>>).
@@ -2233,40 +757,7 @@ getError() ->
%% ``gl:getString'' returns a pointer to a static string describing some aspect of the
%% current GL connection. `Name' can be one of the following:
%%
-%% `?GL_VENDOR': Returns the company responsible for this GL implementation. This name
-%% does not change from release to release.
-%%
-%% `?GL_RENDERER': Returns the name of the renderer. This name is typically specific
-%% to a particular configuration of a hardware platform. It does not change from release
-%% to release.
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERSION': Returns a version or release number.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SHADING_LANGUAGE_VERSION': Returns a version or release number for the shading
-%% language.
-%%
-%% ``gl:getStringi'' returns a pointer to a static string indexed by `Index' . `Name'
-%% can be one of the following:
-%%
-%% `?GL_EXTENSIONS': For ``gl:getStringi'' only, returns the extension string supported
-%% by the implementation at `Index' .
-%%
-%% Strings `?GL_VENDOR' and `?GL_RENDERER' together uniquely specify a platform.
-%% They do not change from release to release and should be used by platform-recognition
-%% algorithms.
-%%
-%% The `?GL_VERSION' and `?GL_SHADING_LANGUAGE_VERSION' strings begin with a version
-%% number. The version number uses one of these forms:
-%%
-%% `major_number.minor_number'`major_number.minor_number.release_number'
-%%
-%% Vendor-specific information may follow the version number. Its format depends on the
-%% implementation, but a space always separates the version number and the vendor-specific
-%% information.
-%%
-%% All strings are null-terminated.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetString.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetString.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getString(Name) -> string() when Name :: enum().
getString(Name) ->
call(5075, <<Name:?GLenum>>).
@@ -2277,7 +768,7 @@ getString(Name) ->
%% are complete. Such effects include all changes to GL state, all changes to connection
%% state, and all changes to the frame buffer contents.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFinish.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glFinish.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec finish() -> 'ok'.
finish() ->
cast(5076, <<>>).
@@ -2290,12 +781,7 @@ finish() ->
%% the actual rendering engine. Though this execution may not be completed in any particular
%% time period, it does complete in finite time.
%%
-%% Because any GL program might be executed over a network, or on an accelerator that buffers
-%% commands, all programs should call ``gl:flush'' whenever they count on having all of
-%% their previously issued commands completed. For example, call ``gl:flush'' before waiting
-%% for user input that depends on the generated image.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFlush.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glFlush.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec flush() -> 'ok'.
flush() ->
cast(5077, <<>>).
@@ -2308,36 +794,7 @@ flush() ->
%% indicating the desired behavior. The initial value for each `Target' is `?GL_DONT_CARE'
%% . `Mode' can be one of the following:
%%
-%% `?GL_FASTEST': The most efficient option should be chosen.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NICEST': The most correct, or highest quality, option should be chosen.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DONT_CARE': No preference.
-%%
-%% Though the implementation aspects that can be hinted are well defined, the interpretation
-%% of the hints depends on the implementation. The hint aspects that can be specified with `Target'
-%% , along with suggested semantics, are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER_DERIVATIVE_HINT': Indicates the accuracy of the derivative
-%% calculation for the GL shading language fragment processing built-in functions: `?dFdx'
-%% , `?dFdy', and `?fwidth'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINE_SMOOTH_HINT': Indicates the sampling quality of antialiased lines. If
-%% a larger filter function is applied, hinting `?GL_NICEST' can result in more pixel
-%% fragments being generated during rasterization.
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON_SMOOTH_HINT': Indicates the sampling quality of antialiased polygons.
-%% Hinting `?GL_NICEST' can result in more pixel fragments being generated during rasterization,
-%% if a larger filter function is applied.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPRESSION_HINT': Indicates the quality and performance of the compressing
-%% texture images. Hinting `?GL_FASTEST' indicates that texture images should be compressed
-%% as quickly as possible, while `?GL_NICEST' indicates that texture images should be
-%% compressed with as little image quality loss as possible. `?GL_NICEST' should be
-%% selected if the texture is to be retrieved by {@link gl:getCompressedTexImage/3} for reuse.
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glHint.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glHint.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec hint(Target, Mode) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Mode :: enum().
hint(Target,Mode) ->
cast(5078, <<Target:?GLenum,Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -2347,7 +804,7 @@ hint(Target,Mode) ->
%% ``gl:clearDepth'' specifies the depth value used by {@link gl:clear/1} to clear the depth
%% buffer. Values specified by ``gl:clearDepth'' are clamped to the range [0 1].
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClearDepth.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glClearDepth.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clearDepth(Depth) -> 'ok' when Depth :: clamp().
clearDepth(Depth) ->
cast(5079, <<Depth:?GLclampd>>).
@@ -2359,36 +816,7 @@ clearDepth(Depth) ->
%% depth testing is enabled. (See {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1} of `?GL_DEPTH_TEST'
%% .)
%%
-%% `Func' specifies the conditions under which the pixel will be drawn. The comparison
-%% functions are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEVER': Never passes.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LESS': Passes if the incoming depth value is less than the stored depth value.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_EQUAL': Passes if the incoming depth value is equal to the stored depth value.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_LEQUAL': Passes if the incoming depth value is less than or equal to the stored
-%% depth value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_GREATER': Passes if the incoming depth value is greater than the stored depth
-%% value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NOTEQUAL': Passes if the incoming depth value is not equal to the stored depth
-%% value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_GEQUAL': Passes if the incoming depth value is greater than or equal to the
-%% stored depth value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ALWAYS': Always passes.
-%%
-%% The initial value of `Func' is `?GL_LESS'. Initially, depth testing is disabled.
-%% If depth testing is disabled or if no depth buffer exists, it is as if the depth test
-%% always passes.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDepthFunc.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDepthFunc.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec depthFunc(Func) -> 'ok' when Func :: enum().
depthFunc(Func) ->
cast(5080, <<Func:?GLenum>>).
@@ -2399,7 +827,7 @@ depthFunc(Func) ->
%% is `?GL_FALSE', depth buffer writing is disabled. Otherwise, it is enabled. Initially,
%% depth buffer writing is enabled.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDepthMask.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDepthMask.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec depthMask(Flag) -> 'ok' when Flag :: 0|1.
depthMask(Flag) ->
cast(5081, <<Flag:?GLboolean>>).
@@ -2413,10 +841,7 @@ depthMask(Flag) ->
%% as though they range from 0 through 1 (like color components). Thus, the values accepted
%% by ``gl:depthRange'' are both clamped to this range before they are accepted.
%%
-%% The setting of (0,1) maps the near plane to 0 and the far plane to 1. With this mapping,
-%% the depth buffer range is fully utilized.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDepthRange.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDepthRange.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec depthRange(Near_val, Far_val) -> 'ok' when Near_val :: clamp(),Far_val :: clamp().
depthRange(Near_val,Far_val) ->
cast(5082, <<Near_val:?GLclampd,Far_val:?GLclampd>>).
@@ -2426,9 +851,7 @@ depthRange(Near_val,Far_val) ->
%% ``gl:clearAccum'' specifies the red, green, blue, and alpha values used by {@link gl:clear/1}
%% to clear the accumulation buffer.
%%
-%% Values specified by ``gl:clearAccum'' are clamped to the range [-1 1].
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClearAccum.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glClearAccum.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clearAccum(Red, Green, Blue, Alpha) -> 'ok' when Red :: float(),Green :: float(),Blue :: float(),Alpha :: float().
clearAccum(Red,Green,Blue,Alpha) ->
cast(5083, <<Red:?GLfloat,Green:?GLfloat,Blue:?GLfloat,Alpha:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -2441,53 +864,7 @@ clearAccum(Red,Green,Blue,Alpha) ->
%% and polygons), motion blur, and depth of field can be created by accumulating images generated
%% with different transformation matrices.
%%
-%% Each pixel in the accumulation buffer consists of red, green, blue, and alpha values.
-%% The number of bits per component in the accumulation buffer depends on the implementation.
-%% You can examine this number by calling {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} four times, with arguments
-%% `?GL_ACCUM_RED_BITS', `?GL_ACCUM_GREEN_BITS', `?GL_ACCUM_BLUE_BITS', and `?GL_ACCUM_ALPHA_BITS'
-%% . Regardless of the number of bits per component, the range of values stored by each component
-%% is [-1 1]. The accumulation buffer pixels are mapped one-to-one with frame buffer pixels.
-%%
-%% ``gl:accum'' operates on the accumulation buffer. The first argument, `Op' , is
-%% a symbolic constant that selects an accumulation buffer operation. The second argument, `Value'
-%% , is a floating-point value to be used in that operation. Five operations are specified: `?GL_ACCUM'
-%% , `?GL_LOAD', `?GL_ADD', `?GL_MULT', and `?GL_RETURN'.
-%%
-%% All accumulation buffer operations are limited to the area of the current scissor box
-%% and applied identically to the red, green, blue, and alpha components of each pixel. If
-%% a ``gl:accum'' operation results in a value outside the range [-1 1], the contents of an
-%% accumulation buffer pixel component are undefined.
-%%
-%% The operations are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_ACCUM': Obtains R, G, B, and A values from the buffer currently selected for
-%% reading (see {@link gl:readBuffer/1} ). Each component value is divided by 2 n-1, where
-%% n is the number of bits allocated to each color component in the currently selected buffer.
-%% The result is a floating-point value in the range [0 1], which is multiplied by `Value'
-%% and added to the corresponding pixel component in the accumulation buffer, thereby updating
-%% the accumulation buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LOAD': Similar to `?GL_ACCUM', except that the current value in the accumulation
-%% buffer is not used in the calculation of the new value. That is, the R, G, B, and A values
-%% from the currently selected buffer are divided by 2 n-1, multiplied by `Value' ,
-%% and then stored in the corresponding accumulation buffer cell, overwriting the current
-%% value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ADD': Adds `Value' to each R, G, B, and A in the accumulation buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MULT': Multiplies each R, G, B, and A in the accumulation buffer by `Value'
-%% and returns the scaled component to its corresponding accumulation buffer location.
-%%
-%% `?GL_RETURN': Transfers accumulation buffer values to the color buffer or buffers
-%% currently selected for writing. Each R, G, B, and A component is multiplied by `Value'
-%% , then multiplied by 2 n-1, clamped to the range [0 2 n-1], and stored in the corresponding
-%% display buffer cell. The only fragment operations that are applied to this transfer are
-%% pixel ownership, scissor, dithering, and color writemasks.
-%%
-%% To clear the accumulation buffer, call {@link gl:clearAccum/4} with R, G, B, and A values
-%% to set it to, then call {@link gl:clear/1} with the accumulation buffer enabled.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glAccum.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glAccum.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec accum(Op, Value) -> 'ok' when Op :: enum(),Value :: float().
accum(Op,Value) ->
cast(5084, <<Op:?GLenum,Value:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -2497,20 +874,7 @@ accum(Op,Value) ->
%% ``gl:matrixMode'' sets the current matrix mode. `Mode' can assume one of four values:
%%
%%
-%% `?GL_MODELVIEW': Applies subsequent matrix operations to the modelview matrix stack.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_PROJECTION': Applies subsequent matrix operations to the projection matrix
-%% stack.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE': Applies subsequent matrix operations to the texture matrix stack.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR': Applies subsequent matrix operations to the color matrix stack.
-%%
-%% To find out which matrix stack is currently the target of all matrix operations, call {@link gl:getBooleanv/1}
-%% with argument `?GL_MATRIX_MODE'. The initial value is `?GL_MODELVIEW'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMatrixMode.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glMatrixMode.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec matrixMode(Mode) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum().
matrixMode(Mode) ->
cast(5085, <<Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -2522,20 +886,7 @@ matrixMode(Mode) ->
%% the current matrix, as if {@link gl:multMatrixd/1} were called with the following matrix
%% as its argument:
%%
-%% ((2/(right-left)) 0 0(t x) 0(2/(top-bottom)) 0(t y) 0 0(-2/(farVal-nearVal))(t z) 0 0 0 1)
-%%
-%% where t x=-((right+left)/(right-left)) t y=-((top+bottom)/(top-bottom)) t z=-((farVal+nearVal)/(farVal-nearVal))
-%%
-%% Typically, the matrix mode is `?GL_PROJECTION', and (left bottom-nearVal) and (right top-nearVal) specify the points on
-%% the near clipping plane that are mapped to the lower left and upper right corners of the
-%% window, respectively, assuming that the eye is located at (0, 0, 0). -farVal specifies
-%% the location of the far clipping plane. Both `NearVal' and `FarVal' can be either
-%% positive or negative.
-%%
-%% Use {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} and {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} to save and restore the current
-%% matrix stack.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glOrtho.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glOrtho.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec ortho(Left, Right, Bottom, Top, Near_val, Far_val) -> 'ok' when Left :: float(),Right :: float(),Bottom :: float(),Top :: float(),Near_val :: float(),Far_val :: float().
ortho(Left,Right,Bottom,Top,Near_val,Far_val) ->
cast(5086, <<Left:?GLdouble,Right:?GLdouble,Bottom:?GLdouble,Top:?GLdouble,Near_val:?GLdouble,Far_val:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -2547,25 +898,7 @@ ortho(Left,Right,Bottom,Top,Near_val,Far_val) ->
%% replaces the current matrix, as if {@link gl:multMatrixd/1} were called with the following
%% matrix as its argument:
%%
-%% [((2 nearVal)/(right-left)) 0 A 0 0((2 nearVal)/(top-bottom)) B 0 0 0 C D 0 0 -1 0]
-%%
-%% A=(right+left)/(right-left)
-%%
-%% B=(top+bottom)/(top-bottom)
-%%
-%% C=-((farVal+nearVal)/(farVal-nearVal))
-%%
-%% D=-((2 farVal nearVal)/(farVal-nearVal))
-%%
-%% Typically, the matrix mode is `?GL_PROJECTION', and (left bottom-nearVal) and (right top-nearVal) specify the points on
-%% the near clipping plane that are mapped to the lower left and upper right corners of the
-%% window, assuming that the eye is located at (0, 0, 0). -farVal specifies the location
-%% of the far clipping plane. Both `NearVal' and `FarVal' must be positive.
-%%
-%% Use {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} and {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} to save and restore the current
-%% matrix stack.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFrustum.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glFrustum.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec frustum(Left, Right, Bottom, Top, Near_val, Far_val) -> 'ok' when Left :: float(),Right :: float(),Bottom :: float(),Top :: float(),Near_val :: float(),Far_val :: float().
frustum(Left,Right,Bottom,Top,Near_val,Far_val) ->
cast(5087, <<Left:?GLdouble,Right:?GLdouble,Bottom:?GLdouble,Top:?GLdouble,Near_val:?GLdouble,Far_val:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -2576,14 +909,7 @@ frustum(Left,Right,Bottom,Top,Near_val,Far_val) ->
%% coordinates to window coordinates. Let (x nd y nd) be normalized device coordinates. Then the window
%% coordinates (x w y w) are computed as follows:
%%
-%% x w=(x nd+1) (width/2)+x
-%%
-%% y w=(y nd+1) (height/2)+y
-%%
-%% Viewport width and height are silently clamped to a range that depends on the implementation.
-%% To query this range, call {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with argument `?GL_MAX_VIEWPORT_DIMS'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glViewport.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glViewport.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec viewport(X, Y, Width, Height) -> 'ok' when X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer().
viewport(X,Y,Width,Height) ->
cast(5088, <<X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -2595,20 +921,7 @@ viewport(X,Y,Width,Height) ->
%% , and `?GL_TEXTURE', the depth is at least 2. The current matrix in any mode is the
%% matrix on the top of the stack for that mode.
%%
-%% ``gl:pushMatrix'' pushes the current matrix stack down by one, duplicating the current
-%% matrix. That is, after a ``gl:pushMatrix'' call, the matrix on top of the stack is identical
-%% to the one below it.
-%%
-%% {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} pops the current matrix stack, replacing the current matrix with
-%% the one below it on the stack.
-%%
-%% Initially, each of the stacks contains one matrix, an identity matrix.
-%%
-%% It is an error to push a full matrix stack or to pop a matrix stack that contains only
-%% a single matrix. In either case, the error flag is set and no other change is made to
-%% GL state.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPushMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glPushMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pushMatrix() -> 'ok'.
pushMatrix() ->
cast(5089, <<>>).
@@ -2624,11 +937,7 @@ popMatrix() ->
%% ``gl:loadIdentity'' replaces the current matrix with the identity matrix. It is semantically
%% equivalent to calling {@link gl:loadMatrixd/1} with the identity matrix
%%
-%% ((1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1))
-%%
-%% but in some cases it is more efficient.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLoadIdentity.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glLoadIdentity.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec loadIdentity() -> 'ok'.
loadIdentity() ->
cast(5091, <<>>).
@@ -2639,16 +948,7 @@ loadIdentity() ->
%% by `M' . The current matrix is the projection matrix, modelview matrix, or texture
%% matrix, depending on the current matrix mode (see {@link gl:matrixMode/1} ).
%%
-%% The current matrix, M, defines a transformation of coordinates. For instance, assume
-%% M refers to the modelview matrix. If v=(v[0] v[1] v[2] v[3]) is the set of object coordinates of a vertex,
-%% and `M' points to an array of 16 single- or double-precision floating-point values
-%% m={m[0] m[1] ... m[15]}, then the modelview transformation M(v) does the following:
-%%
-%% M(v)=(m[0] m[4] m[8] m[12] m[1] m[5] m[9] m[13] m[2] m[6] m[10] m[14] m[3] m[7] m[11] m[15])×(v[0] v[1] v[2] v[3])
-%%
-%% Projection and texture transformations are similarly defined.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLoadMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glLoadMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec loadMatrixd(M) -> 'ok' when M :: matrix().
loadMatrixd({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12,M13,M14,M15,M16}) ->
cast(5092, <<M1:?GLdouble,M2:?GLdouble,M3:?GLdouble,M4:?GLdouble,M5:?GLdouble,M6:?GLdouble,M7:?GLdouble,M8:?GLdouble,M9:?GLdouble,M10:?GLdouble,M11:?GLdouble,M12:?GLdouble,M13:?GLdouble,M14:?GLdouble,M15:?GLdouble,M16:?GLdouble>>);
@@ -2668,10 +968,7 @@ loadMatrixf({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12}) ->
%% ``gl:multMatrix'' multiplies the current matrix with the one specified using `M' ,
%% and replaces the current matrix with the product.
%%
-%% The current matrix is determined by the current matrix mode (see {@link gl:matrixMode/1} ).
-%% It is either the projection matrix, modelview matrix, or the texture matrix.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMultMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glMultMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec multMatrixd(M) -> 'ok' when M :: matrix().
multMatrixd({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12,M13,M14,M15,M16}) ->
cast(5094, <<M1:?GLdouble,M2:?GLdouble,M3:?GLdouble,M4:?GLdouble,M5:?GLdouble,M6:?GLdouble,M7:?GLdouble,M8:?GLdouble,M9:?GLdouble,M10:?GLdouble,M11:?GLdouble,M12:?GLdouble,M13:?GLdouble,M14:?GLdouble,M15:?GLdouble,M16:?GLdouble>>);
@@ -2693,16 +990,7 @@ multMatrixf({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12}) ->
%% replacing the current matrix, as if {@link gl:multMatrixd/1} were called with the following
%% matrix as its argument:
%%
-%% (x 2(1-c)+c x y(1-c)-z s x z(1-c)+y s 0 y x(1-c)+z s y 2(1-c)+c y z(1-c)-x s 0 x z(1-c)-y s y z(1-c)+x s z 2(1-c)+c 0 0 0 0
-%% 1)
-%%
-%% Where c=cos(angle), s=sin(angle), and ||(x y z)||=1 (if not, the GL will normalize this vector).
-%%
-%% If the matrix mode is either `?GL_MODELVIEW' or `?GL_PROJECTION', all objects
-%% drawn after ``gl:rotate'' is called are rotated. Use {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} and {@link gl:pushMatrix/0}
-%% to save and restore the unrotated coordinate system.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glRotate.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glRotate.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec rotated(Angle, X, Y, Z) -> 'ok' when Angle :: float(),X :: float(),Y :: float(),Z :: float().
rotated(Angle,X,Y,Z) ->
cast(5096, <<Angle:?GLdouble,X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble,Z:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -2719,19 +1007,7 @@ rotatef(Angle,X,Y,Z) ->
%% axes. The three parameters indicate the desired scale factor along each of the three axes.
%%
%%
-%% The current matrix (see {@link gl:matrixMode/1} ) is multiplied by this scale matrix, and
-%% the product replaces the current matrix as if {@link gl:multMatrixd/1} were called with
-%% the following matrix as its argument:
-%%
-%% (x 0 0 0 0 y 0 0 0 0 z 0 0 0 0 1)
-%%
-%% If the matrix mode is either `?GL_MODELVIEW' or `?GL_PROJECTION', all objects
-%% drawn after ``gl:scale'' is called are scaled.
-%%
-%% Use {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} and {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} to save and restore the unscaled
-%% coordinate system.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glScale.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glScale.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec scaled(X, Y, Z) -> 'ok' when X :: float(),Y :: float(),Z :: float().
scaled(X,Y,Z) ->
cast(5098, <<X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble,Z:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -2748,15 +1024,7 @@ scalef(X,Y,Z) ->
%% ) is multiplied by this translation matrix, with the product replacing the current matrix,
%% as if {@link gl:multMatrixd/1} were called with the following matrix for its argument:
%%
-%% (1 0 0 x 0 1 0 y 0 0 1 z 0 0 0 1)
-%%
-%% If the matrix mode is either `?GL_MODELVIEW' or `?GL_PROJECTION', all objects
-%% drawn after a call to ``gl:translate'' are translated.
-%%
-%% Use {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} and {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} to save and restore the untranslated
-%% coordinate system.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTranslate.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glTranslate.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec translated(X, Y, Z) -> 'ok' when X :: float(),Y :: float(),Z :: float().
translated(X,Y,Z) ->
cast(5100, <<X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble,Z:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -2772,10 +1040,7 @@ translatef(X,Y,Z) ->
%% ``gl:isList'' returns `?GL_TRUE' if `List' is the name of a display list and
%% returns `?GL_FALSE' if it is not, or if an error occurs.
%%
-%% A name returned by {@link gl:genLists/1} , but not yet associated with a display list by
-%% calling {@link gl:newList/2} , is not the name of a display list.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsList.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glIsList.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isList(List) -> 0|1 when List :: integer().
isList(List) ->
call(5102, <<List:?GLuint>>).
@@ -2787,11 +1052,7 @@ isList(List) ->
%% display lists to delete. All display lists d with list&lt;= d&lt;= list+range-1 are
%% deleted.
%%
-%% All storage locations allocated to the specified display lists are freed, and the names
-%% are available for reuse at a later time. Names within the range that do not have an associated
-%% display list are ignored. If `Range' is 0, nothing happens.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteLists.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glDeleteLists.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteLists(List, Range) -> 'ok' when List :: integer(),Range :: integer().
deleteLists(List,Range) ->
cast(5103, <<List:?GLuint,Range:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -2804,7 +1065,7 @@ deleteLists(List,Range) ->
%% available, or if any error is generated, no display lists are generated, and 0 is returned.
%%
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenLists.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGenLists.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec genLists(Range) -> integer() when Range :: integer().
genLists(Range) ->
call(5104, <<Range:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -2815,53 +1076,14 @@ genLists(Range) ->
%% Display lists are created with ``gl:newList''. All subsequent commands are placed in
%% the display list, in the order issued, until {@link gl:endList/0} is called.
%%
-%% ``gl:newList'' has two arguments. The first argument, `List' , is a positive integer
-%% that becomes the unique name for the display list. Names can be created and reserved with
-%% {@link gl:genLists/1} and tested for uniqueness with {@link gl:isList/1} . The second argument,
-%% `Mode' , is a symbolic constant that can assume one of two values:
-%%
-%% `?GL_COMPILE': Commands are merely compiled.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COMPILE_AND_EXECUTE': Commands are executed as they are compiled into the display
-%% list.
-%%
-%% Certain commands are not compiled into the display list but are executed immediately,
-%% regardless of the display-list mode. These commands are {@link gl:areTexturesResident/1} , {@link gl:colorPointer/4}
-%% , {@link gl:deleteLists/2} , {@link gl:deleteTextures/1} , {@link gl:enableClientState/1} , {@link gl:edgeFlagPointer/2}
-%% , {@link gl:enableClientState/1} , {@link gl:feedbackBuffer/3} , {@link gl:finish/0} , {@link gl:flush/0}
-%% , {@link gl:genLists/1} , {@link gl:genTextures/1} , {@link gl:indexPointer/3} , {@link gl:interleavedArrays/3}
-%% , {@link gl:isEnabled/1} , {@link gl:isList/1} , {@link gl:isTexture/1} , {@link gl:normalPointer/3}
-%% , {@link gl:pushClientAttrib/1} , {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} , {@link gl:pushClientAttrib/1} , {@link gl:readPixels/7}
-%% , {@link gl:renderMode/1} , {@link gl:selectBuffer/2} , {@link gl:texCoordPointer/4} , {@link gl:vertexPointer/4}
-%% , and all of the {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} commands.
-%%
-%% Similarly, {@link gl:texImage1D/8} , {@link gl:texImage2D/9} , and {@link gl:texImage3D/10}
-%% are executed immediately and not compiled into the display list when their first argument
-%% is `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_1D', `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_1D', or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_3D'
-%% , respectively.
-%%
-%% When the ARB_imaging extension is supported, {@link gl:histogram/4} executes immediately
-%% when its argument is `?GL_PROXY_HISTOGRAM'. Similarly, {@link gl:colorTable/6} executes
-%% immediately when its first argument is `?GL_PROXY_COLOR_TABLE', `?GL_PROXY_POST_CONVOLUTION_COLOR_TABLE'
-%% , or `?GL_PROXY_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_COLOR_TABLE'.
-%%
-%% For OpenGL versions 1.3 and greater, or when the ARB_multitexture extension is supported,
-%% {@link gl:clientActiveTexture/1} is not compiled into display lists, but executed immediately.
-%%
-%%
-%% When {@link gl:endList/0} is encountered, the display-list definition is completed by
-%% associating the list with the unique name `List' (specified in the ``gl:newList''
-%% command). If a display list with name `List' already exists, it is replaced only
-%% when {@link gl:endList/0} is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glNewList.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glNewList.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec newList(List, Mode) -> 'ok' when List :: integer(),Mode :: enum().
newList(List,Mode) ->
cast(5105, <<List:?GLuint,Mode:?GLenum>>).
%% @doc glBeginList
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBeginList.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec endList() -> 'ok'.
endList() ->
cast(5106, <<>>).
@@ -2873,17 +1095,7 @@ endList() ->
%% list. If `List' has not been defined as a display list, ``gl:callList'' is ignored.
%%
%%
-%% ``gl:callList'' can appear inside a display list. To avoid the possibility of infinite
-%% recursion resulting from display lists calling one another, a limit is placed on the nesting
-%% level of display lists during display-list execution. This limit is at least 64, and it
-%% depends on the implementation.
-%%
-%% GL state is not saved and restored across a call to ``gl:callList''. Thus, changes
-%% made to GL state during the execution of a display list remain after execution of the
-%% display list is completed. Use {@link gl:pushAttrib/1} , {@link gl:pushAttrib/1} , {@link gl:pushMatrix/0}
-%% , and {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} to preserve GL state across ``gl:callList'' calls.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCallList.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glCallList.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec callList(List) -> 'ok' when List :: integer().
callList(List) ->
cast(5107, <<List:?GLuint>>).
@@ -2895,62 +1107,7 @@ callList(List) ->
%% just as if they were called without using a display list. Names of display lists that
%% have not been defined are ignored.
%%
-%% ``gl:callLists'' provides an efficient means for executing more than one display list. `Type'
-%% allows lists with various name formats to be accepted. The formats are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_BYTE': `Lists' is treated as an array of signed bytes, each in the range
-%% -128 through 127.
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE': `Lists' is treated as an array of unsigned bytes, each
-%% in the range 0 through 255.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SHORT': `Lists' is treated as an array of signed two-byte integers, each
-%% in the range -32768 through 32767.
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT': `Lists' is treated as an array of unsigned two-byte integers,
-%% each in the range 0 through 65535.
-%%
-%% `?GL_INT': `Lists' is treated as an array of signed four-byte integers.
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT': `Lists' is treated as an array of unsigned four-byte integers.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_FLOAT': `Lists' is treated as an array of four-byte floating-point values.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_2_BYTES': `Lists' is treated as an array of unsigned bytes. Each pair of
-%% bytes specifies a single display-list name. The value of the pair is computed as 256 times
-%% the unsigned value of the first byte plus the unsigned value of the second byte.
-%%
-%% `?GL_3_BYTES': `Lists' is treated as an array of unsigned bytes. Each triplet
-%% of bytes specifies a single display-list name. The value of the triplet is computed as
-%% 65536 times the unsigned value of the first byte, plus 256 times the unsigned value of
-%% the second byte, plus the unsigned value of the third byte.
-%%
-%% `?GL_4_BYTES': `Lists' is treated as an array of unsigned bytes. Each quadruplet
-%% of bytes specifies a single display-list name. The value of the quadruplet is computed
-%% as 16777216 times the unsigned value of the first byte, plus 65536 times the unsigned
-%% value of the second byte, plus 256 times the unsigned value of the third byte, plus the
-%% unsigned value of the fourth byte.
-%%
-%% The list of display-list names is not null-terminated. Rather, `N' specifies how
-%% many names are to be taken from `Lists' .
-%%
-%% An additional level of indirection is made available with the {@link gl:listBase/1} command,
-%% which specifies an unsigned offset that is added to each display-list name specified in `Lists'
-%% before that display list is executed.
-%%
-%% ``gl:callLists'' can appear inside a display list. To avoid the possibility of infinite
-%% recursion resulting from display lists calling one another, a limit is placed on the nesting
-%% level of display lists during display-list execution. This limit must be at least 64,
-%% and it depends on the implementation.
-%%
-%% GL state is not saved and restored across a call to ``gl:callLists''. Thus, changes
-%% made to GL state during the execution of the display lists remain after execution is completed.
-%% Use {@link gl:pushAttrib/1} , {@link gl:pushAttrib/1} , {@link gl:pushMatrix/0} , and {@link gl:pushMatrix/0}
-%% to preserve GL state across ``gl:callLists'' calls.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCallLists.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glCallLists.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec callLists(Lists) -> 'ok' when Lists :: [integer()].
callLists(Lists) ->
ListsLen = length(Lists),
@@ -2965,7 +1122,7 @@ callLists(Lists) ->
%% by adding `Base' to each offset. Names that reference valid display lists are executed;
%% the others are ignored.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glListBase.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glListBase.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec listBase(Base) -> 'ok' when Base :: integer().
listBase(Base) ->
cast(5109, <<Base:?GLuint>>).
@@ -2977,66 +1134,7 @@ listBase(Base) ->
%% ten ways the vertices are interpreted. Taking n as an integer count starting at one,
%% and N as the total number of vertices specified, the interpretations are as follows:
%%
-%% `?GL_POINTS': Treats each vertex as a single point. Vertex n defines point n.
-%% N points are drawn.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINES': Treats each pair of vertices as an independent line segment. Vertices
-%% 2 n-1 and 2 n define line n. N/2 lines are drawn.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINE_STRIP': Draws a connected group of line segments from the first vertex
-%% to the last. Vertices n and n+1 define line n. N-1 lines are drawn.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINE_LOOP': Draws a connected group of line segments from the first vertex
-%% to the last, then back to the first. Vertices n and n+1 define line n. The last
-%% line, however, is defined by vertices N and 1. N lines are drawn.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TRIANGLES': Treats each triplet of vertices as an independent triangle. Vertices
-%% 3 n-2, 3 n-1, and 3 n define triangle n. N/3 triangles are drawn.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP': Draws a connected group of triangles. One triangle is defined
-%% for each vertex presented after the first two vertices. For odd n, vertices n, n+1,
-%% and n+2 define triangle n. For even n, vertices n+1, n, and n+2 define triangle
-%% n. N-2 triangles are drawn.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TRIANGLE_FAN': Draws a connected group of triangles. One triangle is defined
-%% for each vertex presented after the first two vertices. Vertices 1, n+1, and n+2
-%% define triangle n. N-2 triangles are drawn.
-%%
-%% `?GL_QUADS': Treats each group of four vertices as an independent quadrilateral.
-%% Vertices 4 n-3, 4 n-2, 4 n-1, and 4 n define quadrilateral n. N/4 quadrilaterals
-%% are drawn.
-%%
-%% `?GL_QUAD_STRIP': Draws a connected group of quadrilaterals. One quadrilateral is
-%% defined for each pair of vertices presented after the first pair. Vertices 2 n-1, 2
-%% n, 2 n+2, and 2 n+1 define quadrilateral n. N/2-1 quadrilaterals are drawn. Note
-%% that the order in which vertices are used to construct a quadrilateral from strip data
-%% is different from that used with independent data.
-%%
-%% `?GL_POLYGON': Draws a single, convex polygon. Vertices 1 through N define this
-%% polygon.
-%%
-%% Only a subset of GL commands can be used between ``gl:'begin''' and {@link gl:'begin'/1} .
-%% The commands are {@link gl:vertex2d/2} , {@link gl:color3b/3} , {@link gl:secondaryColor3b/3} , {@link gl:indexd/1}
-%% , {@link gl:normal3b/3} , {@link gl:fogCoordf/1} , {@link gl:texCoord1d/1} , {@link gl:multiTexCoord1d/2}
-%% , {@link gl:vertexAttrib1d/2} , {@link gl:evalCoord1d/1} , {@link gl:evalPoint1/1} , {@link gl:arrayElement/1}
-%% , {@link gl:materialf/3} , and {@link gl:edgeFlag/1} . Also, it is acceptable to use {@link gl:callList/1}
-%% or {@link gl:callLists/1} to execute display lists that include only the preceding commands.
-%% If any other GL command is executed between ``gl:'begin''' and {@link gl:'begin'/1} , the error
-%% flag is set and the command is ignored.
-%%
-%% Regardless of the value chosen for `Mode' , there is no limit to the number of vertices
-%% that can be defined between ``gl:'begin''' and {@link gl:'begin'/1} . Lines, triangles, quadrilaterals,
-%% and polygons that are incompletely specified are not drawn. Incomplete specification results
-%% when either too few vertices are provided to specify even a single primitive or when an
-%% incorrect multiple of vertices is specified. The incomplete primitive is ignored; the
-%% rest are drawn.
-%%
-%% The minimum specification of vertices for each primitive is as follows: 1 for a point,
-%% 2 for a line, 3 for a triangle, 4 for a quadrilateral, and 3 for a polygon. Modes that
-%% require a certain multiple of vertices are `?GL_LINES' (2), `?GL_TRIANGLES'
-%% (3), `?GL_QUADS' (4), and `?GL_QUAD_STRIP' (2).
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBegin.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glBegin.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec 'begin'(Mode) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum().
'begin'(Mode) ->
cast(5110, <<Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -3053,10 +1151,7 @@ listBase(Base) ->
%% point, line, and polygon vertices. The current color, normal, texture coordinates, and
%% fog coordinate are associated with the vertex when ``gl:vertex'' is called.
%%
-%% When only x and y are specified, z defaults to 0 and w defaults to 1. When x,
-%% y, and z are specified, w defaults to 1.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glVertex.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertex2d(X, Y) -> 'ok' when X :: float(),Y :: float().
vertex2d(X,Y) ->
cast(5112, <<X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -3182,16 +1277,7 @@ vertex4sv({X,Y,Z,W}) -> vertex4s(X,Y,Z,W).
%% mapping that maps the most positive representable integer value to 1.0 and the most negative
%% representable integer value to -1.0.
%%
-%% Normals specified with ``gl:normal'' need not have unit length. If `?GL_NORMALIZE'
-%% is enabled, then normals of any length specified with ``gl:normal'' are normalized after
-%% transformation. If `?GL_RESCALE_NORMAL' is enabled, normals are scaled by a scaling
-%% factor derived from the modelview matrix. `?GL_RESCALE_NORMAL' requires that the
-%% originally specified normals were of unit length, and that the modelview matrix contain
-%% only uniform scales for proper results. To enable and disable normalization, call {@link gl:enable/1}
-%% and {@link gl:enable/1} with either `?GL_NORMALIZE' or `?GL_RESCALE_NORMAL'.
-%% Normalization is initially disabled.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glNormal.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glNormal.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec normal3b(Nx, Ny, Nz) -> 'ok' when Nx :: integer(),Ny :: integer(),Nz :: integer().
normal3b(Nx,Ny,Nz) ->
cast(5124, <<Nx:?GLbyte,Ny:?GLbyte,Nz:?GLbyte>>).
@@ -3245,15 +1331,7 @@ normal3sv({Nx,Ny,Nz}) -> normal3s(Nx,Ny,Nz).
%% ``gl:index'' updates the current (single-valued) color index. It takes one argument,
%% the new value for the current color index.
%%
-%% The current index is stored as a floating-point value. Integer values are converted directly
-%% to floating-point values, with no special mapping. The initial value is 1.
-%%
-%% Index values outside the representable range of the color index buffer are not clamped.
-%% However, before an index is dithered (if enabled) and written to the frame buffer, it
-%% is converted to fixed-point format. Any bits in the integer portion of the resulting fixed-point
-%% value that do not correspond to bits in the frame buffer are masked out.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIndex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glIndex.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec indexd(C) -> 'ok' when C :: float().
indexd(C) ->
cast(5129, <<C:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -3310,24 +1388,7 @@ indexubv({C}) -> indexub(C).
%% green, and blue values explicitly and set the current alpha value to 1.0 (full intensity)
%% implicitly. ``gl:color4'' variants specify all four color components explicitly.
%%
-%% ``gl:color3b'', ``gl:color4b'', ``gl:color3s'', ``gl:color4s'', ``gl:color3i'',
-%% and ``gl:color4i'' take three or four signed byte, short, or long integers as arguments.
-%% When `v' is appended to the name, the color commands can take a pointer to an array
-%% of such values.
-%%
-%% Current color values are stored in floating-point format, with unspecified mantissa and
-%% exponent sizes. Unsigned integer color components, when specified, are linearly mapped
-%% to floating-point values such that the largest representable value maps to 1.0 (full intensity),
-%% and 0 maps to 0.0 (zero intensity). Signed integer color components, when specified, are
-%% linearly mapped to floating-point values such that the most positive representable value
-%% maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable value maps to -1.0. (Note that this
-%% mapping does not convert 0 precisely to 0.0.) Floating-point values are mapped directly.
-%%
-%% Neither floating-point nor signed integer values are clamped to the range [0 1] before the
-%% current color is updated. However, color components are clamped to this range before they
-%% are interpolated or written into a color buffer.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glColor.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glColor.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec color3b(Red, Green, Blue) -> 'ok' when Red :: integer(),Green :: integer(),Blue :: integer().
color3b(Red,Green,Blue) ->
cast(5134, <<Red:?GLbyte,Green:?GLbyte,Blue:?GLbyte>>).
@@ -3494,13 +1555,7 @@ color4usv({Red,Green,Blue,Alpha}) -> color4us(Red,Green,Blue,Alpha).
%% Similarly, ``gl:texCoord3'' specifies the texture coordinates as (s t r 1), and ``gl:texCoord4''
%% defines all four components explicitly as (s t r q).
%%
-%% The current texture coordinates are part of the data that is associated with each vertex
-%% and with the current raster position. Initially, the values for `s', `t', `r'
-%% , and `q' are (0, 0, 0, 1).
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexCoord.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glTexCoord.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texCoord1d(S) -> 'ok' when S :: float().
texCoord1d(S) ->
cast(5150, <<S:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -3666,41 +1721,7 @@ texCoord4sv({S,T,R,Q}) -> texCoord4s(S,T,R,Q).
%% subpixel accuracy. See {@link gl:bitmap/7} , {@link gl:drawPixels/5} , and {@link gl:copyPixels/5}
%% .
%%
-%% The current raster position consists of three window coordinates ( x, y, z), a clip
-%% coordinate value ( w), an eye coordinate distance, a valid bit, and associated color
-%% data and texture coordinates. The w coordinate is a clip coordinate, because w is
-%% not projected to window coordinates. ``gl:rasterPos4'' specifies object coordinates x,
-%% y, z, and w explicitly. ``gl:rasterPos3'' specifies object coordinate x, y, and
-%% z explicitly, while w is implicitly set to 1. ``gl:rasterPos2'' uses the argument
-%% values for x and y while implicitly setting z and w to 0 and 1.
-%%
-%% The object coordinates presented by ``gl:rasterPos'' are treated just like those of a {@link gl:vertex2d/2}
-%% command: They are transformed by the current modelview and projection matrices and passed
-%% to the clipping stage. If the vertex is not culled, then it is projected and scaled to
-%% window coordinates, which become the new current raster position, and the `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_POSITION_VALID'
-%% flag is set. If the vertex `is' culled, then the valid bit is cleared and the current
-%% raster position and associated color and texture coordinates are undefined.
-%%
-%% The current raster position also includes some associated color data and texture coordinates.
-%% If lighting is enabled, then `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_COLOR' (in RGBA mode) or `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_INDEX'
-%% (in color index mode) is set to the color produced by the lighting calculation (see {@link gl:lightf/3}
-%% , {@link gl:lightModelf/2} , and {@link gl:shadeModel/1} ). If lighting is disabled, current
-%% color (in RGBA mode, state variable `?GL_CURRENT_COLOR') or color index (in color
-%% index mode, state variable `?GL_CURRENT_INDEX') is used to update the current raster
-%% color. `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_SECONDARY_COLOR' (in RGBA mode) is likewise updated.
-%%
-%% Likewise, `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_TEXTURE_COORDS' is updated as a function of `?GL_CURRENT_TEXTURE_COORDS'
-%% , based on the texture matrix and the texture generation functions (see {@link gl:texGend/3} ).
-%% Finally, the distance from the origin of the eye coordinate system to the vertex as transformed
-%% by only the modelview matrix replaces `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_DISTANCE'.
-%%
-%% Initially, the current raster position is (0, 0, 0, 1), the current raster distance is
-%% 0, the valid bit is set, the associated RGBA color is (1, 1, 1, 1), the associated color
-%% index is 1, and the associated texture coordinates are (0, 0, 0, 1). In RGBA mode, `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_INDEX'
-%% is always 1; in color index mode, the current raster RGBA color always maintains its
-%% initial value.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glRasterPos.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glRasterPos.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec rasterPos2d(X, Y) -> 'ok' when X :: float(),Y :: float().
rasterPos2d(X,Y) ->
cast(5166, <<X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -3826,13 +1847,7 @@ rasterPos4sv({X,Y,Z,W}) -> rasterPos4s(X,Y,Z,W).
%% coordinates or as two pointers to arrays, each containing an (x y) pair. The resulting rectangle
%% is defined in the z=0 plane.
%%
-%% ``gl:rect''( `X1' , `Y1' , `X2' , `Y2' ) is exactly equivalent to the
-%% following sequence: glBegin(`?GL_POLYGON'); glVertex2( `X1' , `Y1' ); glVertex2(
-%% `X2' , `Y1' ); glVertex2( `X2' , `Y2' ); glVertex2( `X1' , `Y2' );
-%% glEnd(); Note that if the second vertex is above and to the right of the first vertex,
-%% the rectangle is constructed with a counterclockwise winding.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glRect.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glRect.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec rectd(X1, Y1, X2, Y2) -> 'ok' when X1 :: float(),Y1 :: float(),X2 :: float(),Y2 :: float().
rectd(X1,Y1,X2,Y2) ->
cast(5178, <<X1:?GLdouble,Y1:?GLdouble,X2:?GLdouble,Y2:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -3888,21 +1903,7 @@ rectsv({V1,V2},{V1,V2}) ->
%% to be packed into a single array or stored in separate arrays. (Single-array storage may
%% be more efficient on some implementations; see {@link gl:interleavedArrays/3} .)
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER' target (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% ) while a vertex array is specified, `Pointer' is treated as a byte offset into the
-%% buffer object's data store. Also, the buffer object binding (`?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ) is saved as vertex array client-side state (`?GL_VERTEX_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING').
-%%
-%% When a vertex array is specified, `Size' , `Type' , `Stride' , and `Pointer'
-%% are saved as client-side state, in addition to the current vertex array buffer object
-%% binding.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable the vertex array, call {@link gl:enableClientState/1} and {@link gl:enableClientState/1}
-%% with the argument `?GL_VERTEX_ARRAY'. If enabled, the vertex array is used when {@link gl:arrayElement/1}
-%% , {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4} , see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% , or {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glVertexPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexPointer(Size, Type, Stride, Ptr) -> 'ok' when Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Stride :: integer(),Ptr :: offset()|mem().
vertexPointer(Size,Type,Stride,Ptr) when is_integer(Ptr) ->
cast(5186, <<Size:?GLint,Type:?GLenum,Stride:?GLsizei,Ptr:?GLuint>>);
@@ -3918,22 +1919,7 @@ vertexPointer(Size,Type,Stride,Ptr) ->
%% to be packed into a single array or stored in separate arrays. (Single-array storage may
%% be more efficient on some implementations; see {@link gl:interleavedArrays/3} .)
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER' target (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% ) while a normal array is specified, `Pointer' is treated as a byte offset into the
-%% buffer object's data store. Also, the buffer object binding (`?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ) is saved as normal vertex array client-side state (`?GL_NORMAL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ).
-%%
-%% When a normal array is specified, `Type' , `Stride' , and `Pointer' are
-%% saved as client-side state, in addition to the current vertex array buffer object binding.
-%%
-%%
-%% To enable and disable the normal array, call {@link gl:enableClientState/1} and {@link gl:enableClientState/1}
-%% with the argument `?GL_NORMAL_ARRAY'. If enabled, the normal array is used when {@link gl:drawArrays/3}
-%% , {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4} , see `glMultiDrawElements', {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6}
-%% , or {@link gl:arrayElement/1} is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glNormalPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glNormalPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec normalPointer(Type, Stride, Ptr) -> 'ok' when Type :: enum(),Stride :: integer(),Ptr :: offset()|mem().
normalPointer(Type,Stride,Ptr) when is_integer(Ptr) ->
cast(5188, <<Type:?GLenum,Stride:?GLsizei,Ptr:?GLuint>>);
@@ -3950,22 +1936,7 @@ normalPointer(Type,Stride,Ptr) ->
%% to be packed into a single array or stored in separate arrays. (Single-array storage may
%% be more efficient on some implementations; see {@link gl:interleavedArrays/3} .)
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER' target (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% ) while a color array is specified, `Pointer' is treated as a byte offset into the
-%% buffer object's data store. Also, the buffer object binding (`?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ) is saved as color vertex array client-side state (`?GL_COLOR_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING').
-%%
-%%
-%% When a color array is specified, `Size' , `Type' , `Stride' , and `Pointer'
-%% are saved as client-side state, in addition to the current vertex array buffer object
-%% binding.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable the color array, call {@link gl:enableClientState/1} and {@link gl:enableClientState/1}
-%% with the argument `?GL_COLOR_ARRAY'. If enabled, the color array is used when {@link gl:drawArrays/3}
-%% , {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4} , see `glMultiDrawElements', {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6}
-%% , or {@link gl:arrayElement/1} is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glColorPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glColorPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec colorPointer(Size, Type, Stride, Ptr) -> 'ok' when Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Stride :: integer(),Ptr :: offset()|mem().
colorPointer(Size,Type,Stride,Ptr) when is_integer(Ptr) ->
cast(5190, <<Size:?GLint,Type:?GLenum,Stride:?GLsizei,Ptr:?GLuint>>);
@@ -3980,22 +1951,7 @@ colorPointer(Size,Type,Stride,Ptr) ->
%% specifies the byte stride from one color index to the next, allowing vertices and attributes
%% to be packed into a single array or stored in separate arrays.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER' target (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% ) while a color index array is specified, `Pointer' is treated as a byte offset into
-%% the buffer object's data store. Also, the buffer object binding (`?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ) is saved as color index vertex array client-side state (`?GL_INDEX_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ).
-%%
-%% When a color index array is specified, `Type' , `Stride' , and `Pointer'
-%% are saved as client-side state, in addition to the current vertex array buffer object
-%% binding.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable the color index array, call {@link gl:enableClientState/1} and {@link gl:enableClientState/1}
-%% with the argument `?GL_INDEX_ARRAY'. If enabled, the color index array is used when
-%% {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4} , see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} , or {@link gl:arrayElement/1} is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIndexPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glIndexPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec indexPointer(Type, Stride, Ptr) -> 'ok' when Type :: enum(),Stride :: integer(),Ptr :: offset()|mem().
indexPointer(Type,Stride,Ptr) when is_integer(Ptr) ->
cast(5192, <<Type:?GLenum,Stride:?GLsizei,Ptr:?GLuint>>);
@@ -4013,23 +1969,7 @@ indexPointer(Type,Stride,Ptr) ->
%% array or stored in separate arrays. (Single-array storage may be more efficient on some
%% implementations; see {@link gl:interleavedArrays/3} .)
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER' target (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% ) while a texture coordinate array is specified, `Pointer' is treated as a byte offset
-%% into the buffer object's data store. Also, the buffer object binding (`?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ) is saved as texture coordinate vertex array client-side state (`?GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ).
-%%
-%% When a texture coordinate array is specified, `Size' , `Type' , `Stride' ,
-%% and `Pointer' are saved as client-side state, in addition to the current vertex array
-%% buffer object binding.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable a texture coordinate array, call {@link gl:enableClientState/1}
-%% and {@link gl:enableClientState/1} with the argument `?GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY'. If
-%% enabled, the texture coordinate array is used when {@link gl:arrayElement/1} , {@link gl:drawArrays/3}
-%% , {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4} , see `glMultiDrawElements',
-%% or {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexCoordPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glTexCoordPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texCoordPointer(Size, Type, Stride, Ptr) -> 'ok' when Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Stride :: integer(),Ptr :: offset()|mem().
texCoordPointer(Size,Type,Stride,Ptr) when is_integer(Ptr) ->
cast(5194, <<Size:?GLint,Type:?GLenum,Stride:?GLsizei,Ptr:?GLuint>>);
@@ -4044,21 +1984,7 @@ texCoordPointer(Size,Type,Stride,Ptr) ->
%% flag to the next, allowing vertices and attributes to be packed into a single array or
%% stored in separate arrays.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER' target (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% ) while an edge flag array is specified, `Pointer' is treated as a byte offset into
-%% the buffer object's data store. Also, the buffer object binding (`?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ) is saved as edge flag vertex array client-side state (`?GL_EDGE_FLAG_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ).
-%%
-%% When an edge flag array is specified, `Stride' and `Pointer' are saved as client-side
-%% state, in addition to the current vertex array buffer object binding.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable the edge flag array, call {@link gl:enableClientState/1} and {@link gl:enableClientState/1}
-%% with the argument `?GL_EDGE_FLAG_ARRAY'. If enabled, the edge flag array is used
-%% when {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4} , see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} , or {@link gl:arrayElement/1} is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glEdgeFlagPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glEdgeFlagPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec edgeFlagPointer(Stride, Ptr) -> 'ok' when Stride :: integer(),Ptr :: offset()|mem().
edgeFlagPointer(Stride,Ptr) when is_integer(Ptr) ->
cast(5196, <<Stride:?GLsizei,Ptr:?GLuint>>);
@@ -4075,18 +2001,7 @@ edgeFlagPointer(Stride,Ptr) ->
%% is not enabled, no drawing occurs but the attributes corresponding to the enabled arrays
%% are modified.
%%
-%% Use ``gl:arrayElement'' to construct primitives by indexing vertex data, rather than
-%% by streaming through arrays of data in first-to-last order. Because each call specifies
-%% only a single vertex, it is possible to explicitly specify per-primitive attributes such
-%% as a single normal for each triangle.
-%%
-%% Changes made to array data between the execution of {@link gl:'begin'/1} and the corresponding
-%% execution of {@link gl:'begin'/1} may affect calls to ``gl:arrayElement'' that are made within
-%% the same {@link gl:'begin'/1} / {@link gl:'begin'/1} period in nonsequential ways. That is, a call
-%% to ``gl:arrayElement'' that precedes a change to array data may access the changed data,
-%% and a call that follows a change to array data may access original data.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glArrayElement.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glArrayElement.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec arrayElement(I) -> 'ok' when I :: integer().
arrayElement(I) ->
cast(5198, <<I:?GLint>>).
@@ -4099,15 +2014,7 @@ arrayElement(I) ->
%% and use them to construct a sequence of primitives with a single call to ``gl:drawArrays''
%% .
%%
-%% When ``gl:drawArrays'' is called, it uses `Count' sequential elements from each
-%% enabled array to construct a sequence of geometric primitives, beginning with element `First'
-%% . `Mode' specifies what kind of primitives are constructed and how the array elements
-%% construct those primitives.
-%%
-%% Vertex attributes that are modified by ``gl:drawArrays'' have an unspecified value
-%% after ``gl:drawArrays'' returns. Attributes that aren't modified remain well defined.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawArrays.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawArrays.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawArrays(Mode, First, Count) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),First :: integer(),Count :: integer().
drawArrays(Mode,First,Count) ->
cast(5199, <<Mode:?GLenum,First:?GLint,Count:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -4120,16 +2027,7 @@ drawArrays(Mode,First,Count) ->
%% and so on, and use them to construct a sequence of primitives with a single call to ``gl:drawElements''
%% .
%%
-%% When ``gl:drawElements'' is called, it uses `Count' sequential elements from an
-%% enabled array, starting at `Indices' to construct a sequence of geometric primitives.
-%% `Mode' specifies what kind of primitives are constructed and how the array elements
-%% construct these primitives. If more than one array is enabled, each is used.
-%%
-%% Vertex attributes that are modified by ``gl:drawElements'' have an unspecified value
-%% after ``gl:drawElements'' returns. Attributes that aren't modified maintain their previous
-%% values.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawElements.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawElements.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawElements(Mode, Count, Type, Indices) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Count :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Indices :: offset()|mem().
drawElements(Mode,Count,Type,Indices) when is_integer(Indices) ->
cast(5200, <<Mode:?GLenum,Count:?GLsizei,Type:?GLenum,Indices:?GLuint>>);
@@ -4143,21 +2041,7 @@ drawElements(Mode,Count,Type,Indices) ->
%% and vertex arrays whose elements are part of a larger aggregate array element. For some
%% implementations, this is more efficient than specifying the arrays separately.
%%
-%% If `Stride' is 0, the aggregate elements are stored consecutively. Otherwise, `Stride'
-%% bytes occur between the beginning of one aggregate array element and the beginning of
-%% the next aggregate array element.
-%%
-%% `Format' serves as a ``key'' describing the extraction of individual arrays from
-%% the aggregate array. If `Format' contains a T, then texture coordinates are extracted
-%% from the interleaved array. If C is present, color values are extracted. If N is present,
-%% normal coordinates are extracted. Vertex coordinates are always extracted.
-%%
-%% The digits 2, 3, and 4 denote how many values are extracted. F indicates that values
-%% are extracted as floating-point values. Colors may also be extracted as 4 unsigned bytes
-%% if 4UB follows the C. If a color is extracted as 4 unsigned bytes, the vertex array element
-%% which follows is located at the first possible floating-point aligned address.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glInterleavedArrays.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glInterleavedArrays.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec interleavedArrays(Format, Stride, Pointer) -> 'ok' when Format :: enum(),Stride :: integer(),Pointer :: offset()|mem().
interleavedArrays(Format,Stride,Pointer) when is_integer(Pointer) ->
cast(5202, <<Format:?GLenum,Stride:?GLsizei,Pointer:?GLuint>>);
@@ -4175,23 +2059,7 @@ interleavedArrays(Format,Stride,Pointer) ->
%% result of lighting if lighting is enabled, or it is the current color at the time the
%% vertex was specified if lighting is disabled.
%%
-%% Flat and smooth shading are indistinguishable for points. Starting when {@link gl:'begin'/1}
-%% is issued and counting vertices and primitives from 1, the GL gives each flat-shaded line
-%% segment i the computed color of vertex i+1, its second vertex. Counting similarly
-%% from 1, the GL gives each flat-shaded polygon the computed color of the vertex listed
-%% in the following table. This is the last vertex to specify the polygon in all cases except
-%% single polygons, where the first vertex specifies the flat-shaded color.
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Primitive Type of Polygon ' i</td><td>` Vertex '</td></tr>
-%% </tbody><tbody><tr><td> Single polygon ( i== 1) </td><td> 1 </td></tr><tr><td> Triangle
-%% strip </td><td> i+2</td></tr><tr><td> Triangle fan </td><td> i+2</td></tr><tr><td> Independent
-%% triangle </td><td> 3 i</td></tr><tr><td> Quad strip </td><td> 2 i+2</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% Independent quad </td><td> 4 i</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% Flat and smooth shading are specified by ``gl:shadeModel'' with `Mode' set to `?GL_FLAT'
-%% and `?GL_SMOOTH', respectively.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glShadeModel.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glShadeModel.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec shadeModel(Mode) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum().
shadeModel(Mode) ->
cast(5204, <<Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -4204,88 +2072,7 @@ shadeModel(Mode) ->
%% parameters, again by symbolic name. `Params' is either a single value or a pointer
%% to an array that contains the new values.
%%
-%% To enable and disable lighting calculation, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1}
-%% with argument `?GL_LIGHTING'. Lighting is initially disabled. When it is enabled,
-%% light sources that are enabled contribute to the lighting calculation. Light source i
-%% is enabled and disabled using {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_LIGHT'
-%% i.
-%%
-%% The ten light parameters are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_AMBIENT': `Params' contains four integer or floating-point values that
-%% specify the ambient RGBA intensity of the light. Integer values are mapped linearly such
-%% that the most positive representable value maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable
-%% value maps to -1.0. Floating-point values are mapped directly. Neither integer nor floating-point
-%% values are clamped. The initial ambient light intensity is (0, 0, 0, 1).
-%%
-%% `?GL_DIFFUSE': `Params' contains four integer or floating-point values that
-%% specify the diffuse RGBA intensity of the light. Integer values are mapped linearly such
-%% that the most positive representable value maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable
-%% value maps to -1.0. Floating-point values are mapped directly. Neither integer nor floating-point
-%% values are clamped. The initial value for `?GL_LIGHT0' is (1, 1, 1, 1); for other
-%% lights, the initial value is (0, 0, 0, 1).
-%%
-%% `?GL_SPECULAR': `Params' contains four integer or floating-point values that
-%% specify the specular RGBA intensity of the light. Integer values are mapped linearly such
-%% that the most positive representable value maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable
-%% value maps to -1.0. Floating-point values are mapped directly. Neither integer nor floating-point
-%% values are clamped. The initial value for `?GL_LIGHT0' is (1, 1, 1, 1); for other
-%% lights, the initial value is (0, 0, 0, 1).
-%%
-%% `?GL_POSITION': `Params' contains four integer or floating-point values that
-%% specify the position of the light in homogeneous object coordinates. Both integer and
-%% floating-point values are mapped directly. Neither integer nor floating-point values are
-%% clamped.
-%%
-%% The position is transformed by the modelview matrix when ``gl:light'' is called (just
-%% as if it were a point), and it is stored in eye coordinates. If the w component of the
-%% position is 0, the light is treated as a directional source. Diffuse and specular lighting
-%% calculations take the light's direction, but not its actual position, into account, and
-%% attenuation is disabled. Otherwise, diffuse and specular lighting calculations are based
-%% on the actual location of the light in eye coordinates, and attenuation is enabled. The
-%% initial position is (0, 0, 1, 0); thus, the initial light source is directional, parallel
-%% to, and in the direction of the -z axis.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SPOT_DIRECTION': `Params' contains three integer or floating-point values
-%% that specify the direction of the light in homogeneous object coordinates. Both integer
-%% and floating-point values are mapped directly. Neither integer nor floating-point values
-%% are clamped.
-%%
-%% The spot direction is transformed by the upper 3x3 of the modelview matrix when ``gl:light''
-%% is called, and it is stored in eye coordinates. It is significant only when `?GL_SPOT_CUTOFF'
-%% is not 180, which it is initially. The initial direction is (0 0 -1).
-%%
-%% `?GL_SPOT_EXPONENT': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point value that
-%% specifies the intensity distribution of the light. Integer and floating-point values are
-%% mapped directly. Only values in the range [0 128] are accepted.
-%%
-%% Effective light intensity is attenuated by the cosine of the angle between the direction
-%% of the light and the direction from the light to the vertex being lighted, raised to the
-%% power of the spot exponent. Thus, higher spot exponents result in a more focused light
-%% source, regardless of the spot cutoff angle (see `?GL_SPOT_CUTOFF', next paragraph).
-%% The initial spot exponent is 0, resulting in uniform light distribution.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SPOT_CUTOFF': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point value that
-%% specifies the maximum spread angle of a light source. Integer and floating-point values
-%% are mapped directly. Only values in the range [0 90] and the special value 180 are accepted.
-%% If the angle between the direction of the light and the direction from the light to the
-%% vertex being lighted is greater than the spot cutoff angle, the light is completely masked.
-%% Otherwise, its intensity is controlled by the spot exponent and the attenuation factors.
-%% The initial spot cutoff is 180, resulting in uniform light distribution.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONSTANT_ATTENUATION'
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINEAR_ATTENUATION'
-%%
-%% `?GL_QUADRATIC_ATTENUATION': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point
-%% value that specifies one of the three light attenuation factors. Integer and floating-point
-%% values are mapped directly. Only nonnegative values are accepted. If the light is positional,
-%% rather than directional, its intensity is attenuated by the reciprocal of the sum of the
-%% constant factor, the linear factor times the distance between the light and the vertex
-%% being lighted, and the quadratic factor times the square of the same distance. The initial
-%% attenuation factors are (1, 0, 0), resulting in no attenuation.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLight.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glLight.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec lightf(Light, Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Light :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),Param :: float().
lightf(Light,Pname,Param) ->
cast(5205, <<Light:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -4318,73 +2105,7 @@ lightiv(Light,Pname,Params) ->
%% implementation dependent constant that is greater than or equal to eight. `Pname'
%% specifies one of ten light source parameters, again by symbolic name.
%%
-%% The following parameters are defined:
-%%
-%% `?GL_AMBIENT': `Params' returns four integer or floating-point values representing
-%% the ambient intensity of the light source. Integer values, when requested, are linearly
-%% mapped from the internal floating-point representation such that 1.0 maps to the most
-%% positive representable integer value, and -1.0 maps to the most negative representable
-%% integer value. If the internal value is outside the range [-1 1], the corresponding integer
-%% return value is undefined. The initial value is (0, 0, 0, 1).
-%%
-%% `?GL_DIFFUSE': `Params' returns four integer or floating-point values representing
-%% the diffuse intensity of the light source. Integer values, when requested, are linearly
-%% mapped from the internal floating-point representation such that 1.0 maps to the most
-%% positive representable integer value, and -1.0 maps to the most negative representable
-%% integer value. If the internal value is outside the range [-1 1], the corresponding integer
-%% return value is undefined. The initial value for `?GL_LIGHT0' is (1, 1, 1, 1); for
-%% other lights, the initial value is (0, 0, 0, 0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_SPECULAR': `Params' returns four integer or floating-point values representing
-%% the specular intensity of the light source. Integer values, when requested, are linearly
-%% mapped from the internal floating-point representation such that 1.0 maps to the most
-%% positive representable integer value, and -1.0 maps to the most negative representable
-%% integer value. If the internal value is outside the range [-1 1], the corresponding integer
-%% return value is undefined. The initial value for `?GL_LIGHT0' is (1, 1, 1, 1); for
-%% other lights, the initial value is (0, 0, 0, 0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_POSITION': `Params' returns four integer or floating-point values representing
-%% the position of the light source. Integer values, when requested, are computed by rounding
-%% the internal floating-point values to the nearest integer value. The returned values are
-%% those maintained in eye coordinates. They will not be equal to the values specified using
-%% {@link gl:lightf/3} , unless the modelview matrix was identity at the time {@link gl:lightf/3}
-%% was called. The initial value is (0, 0, 1, 0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_SPOT_DIRECTION': `Params' returns three integer or floating-point values
-%% representing the direction of the light source. Integer values, when requested, are computed
-%% by rounding the internal floating-point values to the nearest integer value. The returned
-%% values are those maintained in eye coordinates. They will not be equal to the values specified
-%% using {@link gl:lightf/3} , unless the modelview matrix was identity at the time {@link gl:lightf/3}
-%% was called. Although spot direction is normalized before being used in the lighting equation,
-%% the returned values are the transformed versions of the specified values prior to normalization.
-%% The initial value is (0 0 -1).
-%%
-%% `?GL_SPOT_EXPONENT': `Params' returns a single integer or floating-point value
-%% representing the spot exponent of the light. An integer value, when requested, is computed
-%% by rounding the internal floating-point representation to the nearest integer. The initial
-%% value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SPOT_CUTOFF': `Params' returns a single integer or floating-point value
-%% representing the spot cutoff angle of the light. An integer value, when requested, is
-%% computed by rounding the internal floating-point representation to the nearest integer.
-%% The initial value is 180.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONSTANT_ATTENUATION': `Params' returns a single integer or floating-point
-%% value representing the constant (not distance-related) attenuation of the light. An integer
-%% value, when requested, is computed by rounding the internal floating-point representation
-%% to the nearest integer. The initial value is 1.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINEAR_ATTENUATION': `Params' returns a single integer or floating-point
-%% value representing the linear attenuation of the light. An integer value, when requested,
-%% is computed by rounding the internal floating-point representation to the nearest integer.
-%% The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_QUADRATIC_ATTENUATION': `Params' returns a single integer or floating-point
-%% value representing the quadratic attenuation of the light. An integer value, when requested,
-%% is computed by rounding the internal floating-point representation to the nearest integer.
-%% The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetLight.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetLight.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getLightfv(Light, Pname) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Light :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getLightfv(Light,Pname) ->
call(5209, <<Light:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -4400,63 +2121,7 @@ getLightiv(Light,Pname) ->
%% ``gl:lightModel'' sets the lighting model parameter. `Pname' names a parameter
%% and `Params' gives the new value. There are three lighting model parameters:
%%
-%% `?GL_LIGHT_MODEL_AMBIENT': `Params' contains four integer or floating-point
-%% values that specify the ambient RGBA intensity of the entire scene. Integer values are
-%% mapped linearly such that the most positive representable value maps to 1.0, and the most
-%% negative representable value maps to -1.0. Floating-point values are mapped directly.
-%% Neither integer nor floating-point values are clamped. The initial ambient scene intensity
-%% is (0.2, 0.2, 0.2, 1.0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_LIGHT_MODEL_COLOR_CONTROL': `Params' must be either `?GL_SEPARATE_SPECULAR_COLOR'
-%% or `?GL_SINGLE_COLOR'. `?GL_SINGLE_COLOR' specifies that a single color is
-%% generated from the lighting computation for a vertex. `?GL_SEPARATE_SPECULAR_COLOR'
-%% specifies that the specular color computation of lighting be stored separately from the
-%% remainder of the lighting computation. The specular color is summed into the generated
-%% fragment's color after the application of texture mapping (if enabled). The initial value
-%% is `?GL_SINGLE_COLOR'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LIGHT_MODEL_LOCAL_VIEWER': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point
-%% value that specifies how specular reflection angles are computed. If `Params' is
-%% 0 (or 0.0), specular reflection angles take the view direction to be parallel to and in
-%% the direction of the -`z' axis, regardless of the location of the vertex in eye coordinates.
-%% Otherwise, specular reflections are computed from the origin of the eye coordinate system.
-%% The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LIGHT_MODEL_TWO_SIDE': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point value
-%% that specifies whether one- or two-sided lighting calculations are done for polygons.
-%% It has no effect on the lighting calculations for points, lines, or bitmaps. If `Params'
-%% is 0 (or 0.0), one-sided lighting is specified, and only the `front' material parameters
-%% are used in the lighting equation. Otherwise, two-sided lighting is specified. In this
-%% case, vertices of back-facing polygons are lighted using the `back' material parameters
-%% and have their normals reversed before the lighting equation is evaluated. Vertices of
-%% front-facing polygons are always lighted using the `front' material parameters, with
-%% no change to their normals. The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% In RGBA mode, the lighted color of a vertex is the sum of the material emission intensity,
-%% the product of the material ambient reflectance and the lighting model full-scene ambient
-%% intensity, and the contribution of each enabled light source. Each light source contributes
-%% the sum of three terms: ambient, diffuse, and specular. The ambient light source contribution
-%% is the product of the material ambient reflectance and the light's ambient intensity.
-%% The diffuse light source contribution is the product of the material diffuse reflectance,
-%% the light's diffuse intensity, and the dot product of the vertex's normal with the normalized
-%% vector from the vertex to the light source. The specular light source contribution is
-%% the product of the material specular reflectance, the light's specular intensity, and
-%% the dot product of the normalized vertex-to-eye and vertex-to-light vectors, raised to
-%% the power of the shininess of the material. All three light source contributions are attenuated
-%% equally based on the distance from the vertex to the light source and on light source
-%% direction, spread exponent, and spread cutoff angle. All dot products are replaced with
-%% 0 if they evaluate to a negative value.
-%%
-%% The alpha component of the resulting lighted color is set to the alpha value of the material
-%% diffuse reflectance.
-%%
-%% In color index mode, the value of the lighted index of a vertex ranges from the ambient
-%% to the specular values passed to {@link gl:materialf/3} using `?GL_COLOR_INDEXES'.
-%% Diffuse and specular coefficients, computed with a (.30, .59, .11) weighting of the lights'
-%% colors, the shininess of the material, and the same reflection and attenuation equations
-%% as in the RGBA case, determine how much above ambient the resulting index is.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLightModel.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glLightModel.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec lightModelf(Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Pname :: enum(),Param :: float().
lightModelf(Pname,Param) ->
cast(5211, <<Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -4490,60 +2155,7 @@ lightModeliv(Pname,Params) ->
%% to shade back-facing polygons only when two-sided lighting is enabled. Refer to the {@link gl:lightModelf/2}
%% reference page for details concerning one- and two-sided lighting calculations.
%%
-%% ``gl:material'' takes three arguments. The first, `Face' , specifies whether the `?GL_FRONT'
-%% materials, the `?GL_BACK' materials, or both `?GL_FRONT_AND_BACK' materials
-%% will be modified. The second, `Pname' , specifies which of several parameters in one
-%% or both sets will be modified. The third, `Params' , specifies what value or values
-%% will be assigned to the specified parameter.
-%%
-%% Material parameters are used in the lighting equation that is optionally applied to each
-%% vertex. The equation is discussed in the {@link gl:lightModelf/2} reference page. The parameters
-%% that can be specified using ``gl:material'', and their interpretations by the lighting
-%% equation, are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_AMBIENT': `Params' contains four integer or floating-point values that
-%% specify the ambient RGBA reflectance of the material. Integer values are mapped linearly
-%% such that the most positive representable value maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable
-%% value maps to -1.0. Floating-point values are mapped directly. Neither integer nor floating-point
-%% values are clamped. The initial ambient reflectance for both front- and back-facing materials
-%% is (0.2, 0.2, 0.2, 1.0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_DIFFUSE': `Params' contains four integer or floating-point values that
-%% specify the diffuse RGBA reflectance of the material. Integer values are mapped linearly
-%% such that the most positive representable value maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable
-%% value maps to -1.0. Floating-point values are mapped directly. Neither integer nor floating-point
-%% values are clamped. The initial diffuse reflectance for both front- and back-facing materials
-%% is (0.8, 0.8, 0.8, 1.0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_SPECULAR': `Params' contains four integer or floating-point values that
-%% specify the specular RGBA reflectance of the material. Integer values are mapped linearly
-%% such that the most positive representable value maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable
-%% value maps to -1.0. Floating-point values are mapped directly. Neither integer nor floating-point
-%% values are clamped. The initial specular reflectance for both front- and back-facing materials
-%% is (0, 0, 0, 1).
-%%
-%% `?GL_EMISSION': `Params' contains four integer or floating-point values that
-%% specify the RGBA emitted light intensity of the material. Integer values are mapped linearly
-%% such that the most positive representable value maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable
-%% value maps to -1.0. Floating-point values are mapped directly. Neither integer nor floating-point
-%% values are clamped. The initial emission intensity for both front- and back-facing materials
-%% is (0, 0, 0, 1).
-%%
-%% `?GL_SHININESS': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point value that specifies
-%% the RGBA specular exponent of the material. Integer and floating-point values are mapped
-%% directly. Only values in the range [0 128] are accepted. The initial specular exponent for both
-%% front- and back-facing materials is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_AMBIENT_AND_DIFFUSE': Equivalent to calling ``gl:material'' twice with the
-%% same parameter values, once with `?GL_AMBIENT' and once with `?GL_DIFFUSE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR_INDEXES': `Params' contains three integer or floating-point values
-%% specifying the color indices for ambient, diffuse, and specular lighting. These three
-%% values, and `?GL_SHININESS', are the only material values used by the color index
-%% mode lighting equation. Refer to the {@link gl:lightModelf/2} reference page for a discussion
-%% of color index lighting.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMaterial.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glMaterial.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec materialf(Face, Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Face :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),Param :: float().
materialf(Face,Pname,Param) ->
cast(5215, <<Face:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -4573,46 +2185,7 @@ materialiv(Face,Pname,Params) ->
%% ``gl:getMaterial'' returns in `Params' the value or values of parameter `Pname'
%% of material `Face' . Six parameters are defined:
%%
-%% `?GL_AMBIENT': `Params' returns four integer or floating-point values representing
-%% the ambient reflectance of the material. Integer values, when requested, are linearly
-%% mapped from the internal floating-point representation such that 1.0 maps to the most
-%% positive representable integer value, and -1.0 maps to the most negative representable
-%% integer value. If the internal value is outside the range [-1 1], the corresponding integer
-%% return value is undefined. The initial value is (0.2, 0.2, 0.2, 1.0)
-%%
-%% `?GL_DIFFUSE': `Params' returns four integer or floating-point values representing
-%% the diffuse reflectance of the material. Integer values, when requested, are linearly
-%% mapped from the internal floating-point representation such that 1.0 maps to the most
-%% positive representable integer value, and -1.0 maps to the most negative representable
-%% integer value. If the internal value is outside the range [-1 1], the corresponding integer
-%% return value is undefined. The initial value is (0.8, 0.8, 0.8, 1.0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_SPECULAR': `Params' returns four integer or floating-point values representing
-%% the specular reflectance of the material. Integer values, when requested, are linearly
-%% mapped from the internal floating-point representation such that 1.0 maps to the most
-%% positive representable integer value, and -1.0 maps to the most negative representable
-%% integer value. If the internal value is outside the range [-1 1], the corresponding integer
-%% return value is undefined. The initial value is (0, 0, 0, 1).
-%%
-%% `?GL_EMISSION': `Params' returns four integer or floating-point values representing
-%% the emitted light intensity of the material. Integer values, when requested, are linearly
-%% mapped from the internal floating-point representation such that 1.0 maps to the most
-%% positive representable integer value, and -1.0 maps to the most negative representable
-%% integer value. If the internal value is outside the range [-1 1], the corresponding integer
-%% return value is undefined. The initial value is (0, 0, 0, 1).
-%%
-%% `?GL_SHININESS': `Params' returns one integer or floating-point value representing
-%% the specular exponent of the material. Integer values, when requested, are computed by
-%% rounding the internal floating-point value to the nearest integer value. The initial value
-%% is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR_INDEXES': `Params' returns three integer or floating-point values
-%% representing the ambient, diffuse, and specular indices of the material. These indices
-%% are used only for color index lighting. (All the other parameters are used only for RGBA
-%% lighting.) Integer values, when requested, are computed by rounding the internal floating-point
-%% values to the nearest integer values.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetMaterial.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetMaterial.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getMaterialfv(Face, Pname) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Face :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getMaterialfv(Face,Pname) ->
call(5219, <<Face:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -4629,11 +2202,7 @@ getMaterialiv(Face,Pname) ->
%% is enabled, the material parameter or parameters specified by `Mode' , of the material
%% or materials specified by `Face' , track the current color at all times.
%%
-%% To enable and disable `?GL_COLOR_MATERIAL', call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1}
-%% with argument `?GL_COLOR_MATERIAL'. `?GL_COLOR_MATERIAL' is initially disabled.
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glColorMaterial.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glColorMaterial.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec colorMaterial(Face, Mode) -> 'ok' when Face :: enum(),Mode :: enum().
colorMaterial(Face,Mode) ->
cast(5221, <<Face:?GLenum,Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -4645,17 +2214,7 @@ colorMaterial(Face,Mode) ->
%% position, and a given element is in the mth row and nth column of the pixel rectangle,
%% then pixels whose centers are in the rectangle with corners at
%%
-%% ( xr+n. xfactor, yr+m. yfactor)
-%%
-%% ( xr+(n+1). xfactor, yr+(m+1). yfactor)
-%%
-%% are candidates for replacement. Any pixel whose center lies on the bottom or left edge
-%% of this rectangular region is also modified.
-%%
-%% Pixel zoom factors are not limited to positive values. Negative zoom factors reflect
-%% the resulting image about the current raster position.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPixelZoom.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glPixelZoom.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pixelZoom(Xfactor, Yfactor) -> 'ok' when Xfactor :: float(),Yfactor :: float().
pixelZoom(Xfactor,Yfactor) ->
cast(5222, <<Xfactor:?GLfloat,Yfactor:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -4669,181 +2228,7 @@ pixelZoom(Xfactor,Yfactor) ->
%% , {@link gl:compressedTexSubImage1D/7} , {@link gl:compressedTexSubImage2D/9} or {@link gl:compressedTexSubImage1D/7}
%% .
%%
-%% `Pname' is a symbolic constant indicating the parameter to be set, and `Param'
-%% is the new value. Six of the twelve storage parameters affect how pixel data is returned
-%% to client memory. They are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_SWAP_BYTES': If true, byte ordering for multibyte color components, depth
-%% components, or stencil indices is reversed. That is, if a four-byte component consists
-%% of bytes b 0, b 1, b 2, b 3, it is stored in memory as b 3, b 2, b 1, b 0 if `?GL_PACK_SWAP_BYTES'
-%% is true. `?GL_PACK_SWAP_BYTES' has no effect on the memory order of components within
-%% a pixel, only on the order of bytes within components or indices. For example, the three
-%% components of a `?GL_RGB' format pixel are always stored with red first, green second,
-%% and blue third, regardless of the value of `?GL_PACK_SWAP_BYTES'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_LSB_FIRST': If true, bits are ordered within a byte from least significant
-%% to most significant; otherwise, the first bit in each byte is the most significant one.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_ROW_LENGTH': If greater than 0, `?GL_PACK_ROW_LENGTH' defines the
-%% number of pixels in a row. If the first pixel of a row is placed at location p in memory,
-%% then the location of the first pixel of the next row is obtained by skipping
-%%
-%% k={n l(a/s) |(s n l)/a| s&gt;= a s&lt; a)
-%%
-%% components or indices, where n is the number of components or indices in a pixel, l
-%% is the number of pixels in a row (`?GL_PACK_ROW_LENGTH' if it is greater than 0,
-%% the width argument to the pixel routine otherwise), a is the value of `?GL_PACK_ALIGNMENT'
-%% , and s is the size, in bytes, of a single component (if a&lt; s, then it is as if a=
-%% s). In the case of 1-bit values, the location of the next row is obtained by skipping
-%%
-%% k=8 a |(n l)/(8 a)|
-%%
-%% components or indices.
-%%
-%% The word `component' in this description refers to the nonindex values red, green,
-%% blue, alpha, and depth. Storage format `?GL_RGB', for example, has three components
-%% per pixel: first red, then green, and finally blue.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT': If greater than 0, `?GL_PACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT' defines
-%% the number of pixels in an image three-dimensional texture volume, where ``image'' is
-%% defined by all pixels sharing the same third dimension index. If the first pixel of a
-%% row is placed at location p in memory, then the location of the first pixel of the next
-%% row is obtained by skipping
-%%
-%% k={n l h(a/s) |(s n l h)/a| s&gt;= a s&lt; a)
-%%
-%% components or indices, where n is the number of components or indices in a pixel, l
-%% is the number of pixels in a row (`?GL_PACK_ROW_LENGTH' if it is greater than 0,
-%% the width argument to {@link gl:texImage3D/10} otherwise), h is the number of rows in
-%% a pixel image (`?GL_PACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT' if it is greater than 0, the height argument
-%% to the {@link gl:texImage3D/10} routine otherwise), a is the value of `?GL_PACK_ALIGNMENT'
-%% , and s is the size, in bytes, of a single component (if a&lt; s, then it is as if
-%% a=s).
-%%
-%% The word `component' in this description refers to the nonindex values red, green,
-%% blue, alpha, and depth. Storage format `?GL_RGB', for example, has three components
-%% per pixel: first red, then green, and finally blue.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_SKIP_PIXELS', `?GL_PACK_SKIP_ROWS', and `?GL_PACK_SKIP_IMAGES'
-%%
-%% These values are provided as a convenience to the programmer; they provide no functionality
-%% that cannot be duplicated simply by incrementing the pointer passed to {@link gl:readPixels/7}
-%% . Setting `?GL_PACK_SKIP_PIXELS' to i is equivalent to incrementing the pointer
-%% by i n components or indices, where n is the number of components or indices in each
-%% pixel. Setting `?GL_PACK_SKIP_ROWS' to j is equivalent to incrementing the pointer
-%% by j m components or indices, where m is the number of components or indices per
-%% row, as just computed in the `?GL_PACK_ROW_LENGTH' section. Setting `?GL_PACK_SKIP_IMAGES'
-%% to k is equivalent to incrementing the pointer by k p, where p is the number of
-%% components or indices per image, as computed in the `?GL_PACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT' section.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_PACK_ALIGNMENT': Specifies the alignment requirements for the start of each
-%% pixel row in memory. The allowable values are 1 (byte-alignment), 2 (rows aligned to even-numbered
-%% bytes), 4 (word-alignment), and 8 (rows start on double-word boundaries).
-%%
-%% The other six of the twelve storage parameters affect how pixel data is read from client
-%% memory. These values are significant for {@link gl:texImage1D/8} , {@link gl:texImage2D/9} , {@link gl:texImage3D/10}
-%% , {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7} , {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7} , and {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7}
-%%
-%% They are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_SWAP_BYTES': If true, byte ordering for multibyte color components,
-%% depth components, or stencil indices is reversed. That is, if a four-byte component consists
-%% of bytes b 0, b 1, b 2, b 3, it is taken from memory as b 3, b 2, b 1, b 0 if `?GL_UNPACK_SWAP_BYTES'
-%% is true. `?GL_UNPACK_SWAP_BYTES' has no effect on the memory order of components
-%% within a pixel, only on the order of bytes within components or indices. For example,
-%% the three components of a `?GL_RGB' format pixel are always stored with red first,
-%% green second, and blue third, regardless of the value of `?GL_UNPACK_SWAP_BYTES'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_LSB_FIRST': If true, bits are ordered within a byte from least significant
-%% to most significant; otherwise, the first bit in each byte is the most significant one.
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH': If greater than 0, `?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH' defines
-%% the number of pixels in a row. If the first pixel of a row is placed at location p in
-%% memory, then the location of the first pixel of the next row is obtained by skipping
-%%
-%% k={n l(a/s) |(s n l)/a| s&gt;= a s&lt; a)
-%%
-%% components or indices, where n is the number of components or indices in a pixel, l
-%% is the number of pixels in a row (`?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH' if it is greater than 0,
-%% the width argument to the pixel routine otherwise), a is the value of `?GL_UNPACK_ALIGNMENT'
-%% , and s is the size, in bytes, of a single component (if a&lt; s, then it is as if a=
-%% s). In the case of 1-bit values, the location of the next row is obtained by skipping
-%%
-%% k=8 a |(n l)/(8 a)|
-%%
-%% components or indices.
-%%
-%% The word `component' in this description refers to the nonindex values red, green,
-%% blue, alpha, and depth. Storage format `?GL_RGB', for example, has three components
-%% per pixel: first red, then green, and finally blue.
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT': If greater than 0, `?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT' defines
-%% the number of pixels in an image of a three-dimensional texture volume. Where ``image''
-%% is defined by all pixel sharing the same third dimension index. If the first pixel of
-%% a row is placed at location p in memory, then the location of the first pixel of the
-%% next row is obtained by skipping
-%%
-%% k={n l h(a/s) |(s n l h)/a| s&gt;= a s&lt; a)
-%%
-%% components or indices, where n is the number of components or indices in a pixel, l
-%% is the number of pixels in a row (`?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH' if it is greater than 0,
-%% the width argument to {@link gl:texImage3D/10} otherwise), h is the number of rows in
-%% an image (`?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT' if it is greater than 0, the height argument
-%% to {@link gl:texImage3D/10} otherwise), a is the value of `?GL_UNPACK_ALIGNMENT',
-%% and s is the size, in bytes, of a single component (if a&lt; s, then it is as if a=s).
-%%
-%%
-%% The word `component' in this description refers to the nonindex values red, green,
-%% blue, alpha, and depth. Storage format `?GL_RGB', for example, has three components
-%% per pixel: first red, then green, and finally blue.
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS' and `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS'
-%%
-%% These values are provided as a convenience to the programmer; they provide no functionality
-%% that cannot be duplicated by incrementing the pointer passed to {@link gl:texImage1D/8} , {@link gl:texImage2D/9}
-%% , {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7} or {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7} . Setting `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS'
-%% to i is equivalent to incrementing the pointer by i n components or indices, where
-%% n is the number of components or indices in each pixel. Setting `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS'
-%% to j is equivalent to incrementing the pointer by j k components or indices, where
-%% k is the number of components or indices per row, as just computed in the `?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH'
-%% section.
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNPACK_ALIGNMENT': Specifies the alignment requirements for the start of each
-%% pixel row in memory. The allowable values are 1 (byte-alignment), 2 (rows aligned to even-numbered
-%% bytes), 4 (word-alignment), and 8 (rows start on double-word boundaries).
-%%
-%% The following table gives the type, initial value, and range of valid values for each
-%% storage parameter that can be set with ``gl:pixelStore''.
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td> `Pname' </td><td>` Type '</td><td>` Initial Value '</td>
-%% <td>` Valid Range '</td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_PACK_SWAP_BYTES'</td><td>
-%% boolean </td><td> false </td><td> true or false </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PACK_LSB_FIRST'
-%% </td><td> boolean </td><td> false </td><td> true or false </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PACK_ROW_LENGTH'
-%% </td><td> integer </td><td> 0 </td><td>[0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT'</td>
-%% <td> integer </td><td> 0 </td><td>[0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PACK_SKIP_ROWS'</td><td>
-%% integer </td><td> 0 </td><td>[0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PACK_SKIP_PIXELS'</td><td> integer
-%% </td><td> 0 </td><td>[0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PACK_SKIP_IMAGES'</td><td> integer </td><td>
-%% 0 </td><td>[0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PACK_ALIGNMENT'</td><td> integer </td><td> 4 </td>
-%% <td> 1, 2, 4, or 8 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNPACK_SWAP_BYTES'</td><td> boolean </td><td>
-%% false </td><td> true or false </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNPACK_LSB_FIRST'</td><td>
-%% boolean </td><td> false </td><td> true or false </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH'
-%% </td><td> integer </td><td> 0 </td><td>[0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT'</td>
-%% <td> integer </td><td> 0 </td><td>[0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS'</td><td>
-%% integer </td><td> 0 </td><td>[0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS'</td><td>
-%% integer </td><td> 0 </td><td>[0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_IMAGES'</td><td>
-%% integer </td><td> 0 </td><td>[0)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNPACK_ALIGNMENT'</td><td> integer
-%% </td><td> 4 </td><td> 1, 2, 4, or 8 </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% ``gl:pixelStoref'' can be used to set any pixel store parameter. If the parameter type
-%% is boolean, then if `Param' is 0, the parameter is false; otherwise it is set to
-%% true. If `Pname' is a integer type parameter, `Param' is rounded to the nearest
-%% integer.
-%%
-%% Likewise, ``gl:pixelStorei'' can also be used to set any of the pixel store parameters.
-%% Boolean parameters are set to false if `Param' is 0 and true otherwise.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPixelStore.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glPixelStore.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pixelStoref(Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Pname :: enum(),Param :: float().
pixelStoref(Pname,Param) ->
cast(5223, <<Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -4874,134 +2259,7 @@ pixelStorei(Pname,Param) ->
%% ) control the unpacking of pixels being read from client memory and the packing of pixels
%% being written back into client memory.
%%
-%% Pixel transfer operations handle four fundamental pixel types: `color', `color index'
-%% , `depth', and `stencil'. `Color' pixels consist of four floating-point
-%% values with unspecified mantissa and exponent sizes, scaled such that 0 represents zero
-%% intensity and 1 represents full intensity. `Color indices' comprise a single fixed-point
-%% value, with unspecified precision to the right of the binary point. `Depth' pixels
-%% comprise a single floating-point value, with unspecified mantissa and exponent sizes,
-%% scaled such that 0.0 represents the minimum depth buffer value, and 1.0 represents the
-%% maximum depth buffer value. Finally, `stencil' pixels comprise a single fixed-point
-%% value, with unspecified precision to the right of the binary point.
-%%
-%% The pixel transfer operations performed on the four basic pixel types are as follows:
-%%
-%% `Color': Each of the four color components is multiplied by a scale factor, then
-%% added to a bias factor. That is, the red component is multiplied by `?GL_RED_SCALE',
-%% then added to `?GL_RED_BIAS'; the green component is multiplied by `?GL_GREEN_SCALE'
-%% , then added to `?GL_GREEN_BIAS'; the blue component is multiplied by `?GL_BLUE_SCALE'
-%% , then added to `?GL_BLUE_BIAS'; and the alpha component is multiplied by `?GL_ALPHA_SCALE'
-%% , then added to `?GL_ALPHA_BIAS'. After all four color components are scaled and
-%% biased, each is clamped to the range [0 1]. All color, scale, and bias values are specified
-%% with ``gl:pixelTransfer''.
-%%
-%% If `?GL_MAP_COLOR' is true, each color component is scaled by the size of the corresponding
-%% color-to-color map, then replaced by the contents of that map indexed by the scaled component.
-%% That is, the red component is scaled by `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_R_TO_R_SIZE', then replaced
-%% by the contents of `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_R_TO_R' indexed by itself. The green component
-%% is scaled by `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_G_TO_G_SIZE', then replaced by the contents of `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_G_TO_G'
-%% indexed by itself. The blue component is scaled by `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_B_TO_B_SIZE',
-%% then replaced by the contents of `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_B_TO_B' indexed by itself. And the
-%% alpha component is scaled by `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_A_TO_A_SIZE', then replaced by the contents
-%% of `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_A_TO_A' indexed by itself. All components taken from the maps are
-%% then clamped to the range [0 1]. `?GL_MAP_COLOR' is specified with ``gl:pixelTransfer''.
-%% The contents of the various maps are specified with {@link gl:pixelMapfv/3} .
-%%
-%% If the ARB_imaging extension is supported, each of the four color components may be scaled
-%% and biased after transformation by the color matrix. That is, the red component is multiplied
-%% by `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_RED_SCALE', then added to `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_RED_BIAS'
-%% ; the green component is multiplied by `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_GREEN_SCALE', then
-%% added to `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_GREEN_BIAS'; the blue component is multiplied by `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_BLUE_SCALE'
-%% , then added to `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_BLUE_BIAS'; and the alpha component is multiplied
-%% by `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_ALPHA_SCALE', then added to `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_ALPHA_BIAS'
-%% . After all four color components are scaled and biased, each is clamped to the range [0
-%% 1].
-%%
-%% Similarly, if the ARB_imaging extension is supported, each of the four color components
-%% may be scaled and biased after processing by the enabled convolution filter. That is,
-%% the red component is multiplied by `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_RED_SCALE', then added to `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_RED_BIAS'
-%% ; the green component is multiplied by `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_GREEN_SCALE', then added
-%% to `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_GREEN_BIAS'; the blue component is multiplied by `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_BLUE_SCALE'
-%% , then added to `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_BLUE_BIAS'; and the alpha component is multiplied
-%% by `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_ALPHA_SCALE', then added to `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_ALPHA_BIAS'
-%% . After all four color components are scaled and biased, each is clamped to the range [0
-%% 1].
-%%
-%% `Color index': Each color index is shifted left by `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' bits;
-%% any bits beyond the number of fraction bits carried by the fixed-point index are filled
-%% with zeros. If `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' is negative, the shift is to the right, again zero
-%% filled. Then `?GL_INDEX_OFFSET' is added to the index. `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' and `?GL_INDEX_OFFSET'
-%% are specified with ``gl:pixelTransfer''.
-%%
-%% From this point, operation diverges depending on the required format of the resulting
-%% pixels. If the resulting pixels are to be written to a color index buffer, or if they
-%% are being read back to client memory in `?GL_COLOR_INDEX' format, the pixels continue
-%% to be treated as indices. If `?GL_MAP_COLOR' is true, each index is masked by 2 n-1
-%% , where n is `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_I_SIZE', then replaced by the contents of `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_I'
-%% indexed by the masked value. `?GL_MAP_COLOR' is specified with ``gl:pixelTransfer''
-%% . The contents of the index map is specified with {@link gl:pixelMapfv/3} .
-%%
-%% If the resulting pixels are to be written to an RGBA color buffer, or if they are read
-%% back to client memory in a format other than `?GL_COLOR_INDEX', the pixels are converted
-%% from indices to colors by referencing the four maps `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_R', `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_G'
-%% , `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_B', and `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_A'. Before being dereferenced,
-%% the index is masked by 2 n-1, where n is `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_R_SIZE' for the
-%% red map, `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_G_SIZE' for the green map, `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_B_SIZE'
-%% for the blue map, and `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_A_SIZE' for the alpha map. All components
-%% taken from the maps are then clamped to the range [0 1]. The contents of the four maps is
-%% specified with {@link gl:pixelMapfv/3} .
-%%
-%% `Depth': Each depth value is multiplied by `?GL_DEPTH_SCALE', added to `?GL_DEPTH_BIAS'
-%% , then clamped to the range [0 1].
-%%
-%% `Stencil': Each index is shifted `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' bits just as a color index
-%% is, then added to `?GL_INDEX_OFFSET'. If `?GL_MAP_STENCIL' is true, each index
-%% is masked by 2 n-1, where n is `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_S_TO_S_SIZE', then replaced by
-%% the contents of `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_S_TO_S' indexed by the masked value.
-%%
-%% The following table gives the type, initial value, and range of valid values for each
-%% of the pixel transfer parameters that are set with ``gl:pixelTransfer''.
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td> `Pname' </td><td>` Type '</td><td>` Initial Value '</td>
-%% <td>` Valid Range '</td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_MAP_COLOR'</td><td>
-%% boolean </td><td> false </td><td> true/false </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_MAP_STENCIL'</td>
-%% <td> boolean </td><td> false </td><td> true/false </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INDEX_SHIFT'</td>
-%% <td> integer </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INDEX_OFFSET'</td><td> integer
-%% </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RED_SCALE'</td><td> float </td><td> 1 </td>
-%% <td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_GREEN_SCALE'</td><td> float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_BLUE_SCALE'</td><td> float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ALPHA_SCALE'
-%% </td><td> float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DEPTH_SCALE'</td><td>
-%% float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RED_BIAS'</td><td> float </td><td>
-%% 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_GREEN_BIAS'</td><td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_BLUE_BIAS'</td><td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ALPHA_BIAS'
-%% </td><td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DEPTH_BIAS'</td><td>
-%% float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_RED_SCALE'</td><td>
-%% float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_GREEN_SCALE'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_BLUE_SCALE'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_ALPHA_SCALE'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_RED_BIAS'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_GREEN_BIAS'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_BLUE_BIAS'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_ALPHA_BIAS'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_RED_SCALE'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_GREEN_SCALE'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_BLUE_SCALE'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_ALPHA_SCALE'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 1 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_RED_BIAS'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_GREEN_BIAS'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_BLUE_BIAS'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_ALPHA_BIAS'</td>
-%% <td> float </td><td> 0 </td><td>(-)</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% ``gl:pixelTransferf'' can be used to set any pixel transfer parameter. If the parameter
-%% type is boolean, 0 implies false and any other value implies true. If `Pname' is
-%% an integer parameter, `Param' is rounded to the nearest integer.
-%%
-%% Likewise, ``gl:pixelTransferi'' can be used to set any of the pixel transfer parameters.
-%% Boolean parameters are set to false if `Param' is 0 and to true otherwise. `Param'
-%% is converted to floating point before being assigned to real-valued parameters.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPixelTransfer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glPixelTransfer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pixelTransferf(Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Pname :: enum(),Param :: float().
pixelTransferf(Pname,Param) ->
cast(5225, <<Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -5025,72 +2283,7 @@ pixelTransferi(Pname,Param) ->
%% page, and partly in the reference pages for the pixel and texture image commands. Only
%% the specification of the maps is described in this reference page.
%%
-%% `Map' is a symbolic map name, indicating one of ten maps to set. `Mapsize' specifies
-%% the number of entries in the map, and `Values' is a pointer to an array of `Mapsize'
-%% map values.
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a pixel transfer map is specified, `Values' is
-%% treated as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% The ten maps are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_I': Maps color indices to color indices.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_S_TO_S': Maps stencil indices to stencil indices.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_R': Maps color indices to red components.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_G': Maps color indices to green components.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_B': Maps color indices to blue components.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_A': Maps color indices to alpha components.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_R_TO_R': Maps red components to red components.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_G_TO_G': Maps green components to green components.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_B_TO_B': Maps blue components to blue components.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_A_TO_A': Maps alpha components to alpha components.
-%%
-%% The entries in a map can be specified as single-precision floating-point numbers, unsigned
-%% short integers, or unsigned int integers. Maps that store color component values (all
-%% but `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_I' and `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_S_TO_S') retain their values in
-%% floating-point format, with unspecified mantissa and exponent sizes. Floating-point values
-%% specified by ``gl:pixelMapfv'' are converted directly to the internal floating-point
-%% format of these maps, then clamped to the range [0,1]. Unsigned integer values specified
-%% by ``gl:pixelMapusv'' and ``gl:pixelMapuiv'' are converted linearly such that the
-%% largest representable integer maps to 1.0, and 0 maps to 0.0.
-%%
-%% Maps that store indices, `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_I' and `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_S_TO_S',
-%% retain their values in fixed-point format, with an unspecified number of bits to the right
-%% of the binary point. Floating-point values specified by ``gl:pixelMapfv'' are converted
-%% directly to the internal fixed-point format of these maps. Unsigned integer values specified
-%% by ``gl:pixelMapusv'' and ``gl:pixelMapuiv'' specify integer values, with all 0's
-%% to the right of the binary point.
-%%
-%% The following table shows the initial sizes and values for each of the maps. Maps that
-%% are indexed by either color or stencil indices must have `Mapsize' = 2 n for some
-%% n or the results are undefined. The maximum allowable size for each map depends on the
-%% implementation and can be determined by calling {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with argument `?GL_MAX_PIXEL_MAP_TABLE'
-%% . The single maximum applies to all maps; it is at least 32. <table><tbody><tr><td> `Map'
-%% </td><td>` Lookup Index '</td><td>` Lookup Value '</td><td>` Initial Size '</td>
-%% <td>` Initial Value '</td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_I'</td>
-%% <td> color index </td><td> color index </td><td> 1 </td><td> 0 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PIXEL_MAP_S_TO_S'
-%% </td><td> stencil index </td><td> stencil index </td><td> 1 </td><td> 0 </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_R'</td><td> color index </td><td> R </td><td> 1 </td><td> 0 </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_G'</td><td> color index </td><td> G </td><td> 1 </td>
-%% <td> 0 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_B'</td><td> color index </td><td> B </td>
-%% <td> 1 </td><td> 0 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_A'</td><td> color index </td>
-%% <td> A </td><td> 1 </td><td> 0 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PIXEL_MAP_R_TO_R'</td><td> R </td>
-%% <td> R </td><td> 1 </td><td> 0 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PIXEL_MAP_G_TO_G'</td><td> G </td>
-%% <td> G </td><td> 1 </td><td> 0 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PIXEL_MAP_B_TO_B'</td><td> B </td>
-%% <td> B </td><td> 1 </td><td> 0 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PIXEL_MAP_A_TO_A'</td><td> A </td>
-%% <td> A </td><td> 1 </td><td> 0 </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPixelMap.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glPixelMap.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pixelMapfv(Map, Mapsize, Values) -> 'ok' when Map :: enum(),Mapsize :: integer(),Values :: binary().
pixelMapfv(Map,Mapsize,Values) ->
send_bin(Values),
@@ -5121,19 +2314,7 @@ pixelMapusv(Map,Mapsize,Values) ->
%% , and {@link gl:copyTexSubImage3D/9} . to map color indices, stencil indices, color components,
%% and depth components to other values.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a pixel map is requested, `Data' is treated as
-%% a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% Unsigned integer values, if requested, are linearly mapped from the internal fixed or
-%% floating-point representation such that 1.0 maps to the largest representable integer
-%% value, and 0.0 maps to 0. Return unsigned integer values are undefined if the map value
-%% was not in the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% To determine the required size of `Map' , call {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with the appropriate
-%% symbolic constant.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetPixelMap.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetPixelMap.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getPixelMapfv(Map, Values) -> 'ok' when Map :: enum(),Values :: mem().
getPixelMapfv(Map,Values) ->
send_bin(Values),
@@ -5160,42 +2341,7 @@ getPixelMapusv(Map,Values) ->
%% using the current raster color or index. Frame buffer pixels corresponding to 0's in the
%% bitmap are not modified.
%%
-%% ``gl:bitmap'' takes seven arguments. The first pair specifies the width and height of
-%% the bitmap image. The second pair specifies the location of the bitmap origin relative
-%% to the lower left corner of the bitmap image. The third pair of arguments specifies `x'
-%% and `y' offsets to be added to the current raster position after the bitmap has
-%% been drawn. The final argument is a pointer to the bitmap image itself.
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a bitmap image is specified, `Bitmap' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% The bitmap image is interpreted like image data for the {@link gl:drawPixels/5} command,
-%% with `Width' and `Height' corresponding to the width and height arguments of
-%% that command, and with `type' set to `?GL_BITMAP' and `format' set to `?GL_COLOR_INDEX'
-%% . Modes specified using {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} affect the interpretation of bitmap image
-%% data; modes specified using {@link gl:pixelTransferf/2} do not.
-%%
-%% If the current raster position is invalid, ``gl:bitmap'' is ignored. Otherwise, the
-%% lower left corner of the bitmap image is positioned at the window coordinates
-%%
-%% x w=|x r-x o|
-%%
-%% y w=|y r-y o|
-%%
-%% where (x r y r) is the raster position and (x o y o) is the bitmap origin. Fragments are then generated
-%% for each pixel corresponding to a 1 (one) in the bitmap image. These fragments are generated
-%% using the current raster `z' coordinate, color or color index, and current raster
-%% texture coordinates. They are then treated just as if they had been generated by a point,
-%% line, or polygon, including texture mapping, fogging, and all per-fragment operations
-%% such as alpha and depth testing.
-%%
-%% After the bitmap has been drawn, the `x' and `y' coordinates of the current
-%% raster position are offset by `Xmove' and `Ymove' . No change is made to the `z'
-%% coordinate of the current raster position, or to the current raster color, texture coordinates,
-%% or index.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBitmap.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glBitmap.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bitmap(Width, Height, Xorig, Yorig, Xmove, Ymove, Bitmap) -> 'ok' when Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Xorig :: float(),Yorig :: float(),Xmove :: float(),Ymove :: float(),Bitmap :: offset()|mem().
bitmap(Width,Height,Xorig,Yorig,Xmove,Ymove,Bitmap) when is_integer(Bitmap) ->
cast(5233, <<Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Xorig:?GLfloat,Yorig:?GLfloat,Xmove:?GLfloat,Ymove:?GLfloat,Bitmap:?GLuint>>);
@@ -5212,91 +2358,7 @@ bitmap(Width,Height,Xorig,Yorig,Xmove,Ymove,Bitmap) ->
%% This reference page describes the effects on ``gl:readPixels'' of most, but not all
%% of the parameters specified by these three commands.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a block of pixels is requested, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store rather than a pointer to client memory.
-%%
-%%
-%% ``gl:readPixels'' returns values from each pixel with lower left corner at (x+i y+j) for 0&lt;=
-%% i&lt; width and 0&lt;= j&lt; height. This pixel is said to be the ith pixel in the
-%% jth row. Pixels are returned in row order from the lowest to the highest row, left to
-%% right in each row.
-%%
-%% `Format' specifies the format for the returned pixel values; accepted values are:
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_INDEX': Stencil values are read from the stencil buffer. Each index
-%% is converted to fixed point, shifted left or right depending on the value and sign of `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT'
-%% , and added to `?GL_INDEX_OFFSET'. If `?GL_MAP_STENCIL' is `?GL_TRUE',
-%% indices are replaced by their mappings in the table `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_S_TO_S'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT': Depth values are read from the depth buffer. Each component
-%% is converted to floating point such that the minimum depth value maps to 0 and the maximum
-%% value maps to 1. Each component is then multiplied by `?GL_DEPTH_SCALE', added to `?GL_DEPTH_BIAS'
-%% , and finally clamped to the range [0 1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_STENCIL': Values are taken from both the depth and stencil buffers. The `Type'
-%% parameter must be `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_24_8' or `?GL_FLOAT_32_UNSIGNED_INT_24_8_REV'
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_RED'
-%%
-%% `?GL_GREEN'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLUE'
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGB'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BGR'
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGBA'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BGRA': Finally, the indices or components are converted to the proper format,
-%% as specified by `Type' . If `Format' is `?GL_STENCIL_INDEX' and `Type'
-%% is not `?GL_FLOAT', each index is masked with the mask value given in the following
-%% table. If `Type' is `?GL_FLOAT', then each integer index is converted to single-precision
-%% floating-point format.
-%%
-%% If `Format' is `?GL_RED', `?GL_GREEN', `?GL_BLUE', `?GL_RGB', `?GL_BGR'
-%% , `?GL_RGBA', or `?GL_BGRA' and `Type' is not `?GL_FLOAT', each component
-%% is multiplied by the multiplier shown in the following table. If type is `?GL_FLOAT',
-%% then each component is passed as is (or converted to the client's single-precision floating-point
-%% format if it is different from the one used by the GL).
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td> `Type' </td><td>` Index Mask '</td><td>` Component Conversion '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE'</td><td> 2 8-1</td><td>(2 8-1) c</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_BYTE'</td><td> 2 7-1</td><td>((2 8-1) c-1)/2</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT'
-%% </td><td> 2 16-1</td><td>(2 16-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SHORT'</td><td> 2 15-1</td><td>((2
-%% 16-1)
-%% c-1)/2</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT'</td><td> 2 32-1</td><td>(2 32-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT'
-%% </td><td> 2 31-1</td><td>((2 32-1) c-1)/2</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_HALF_FLOAT'</td><td> none </td><td>
-%% c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT'</td><td> none </td><td> c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE_3_3_2'
-%% </td><td> 2 N-1</td><td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE_2_3_3_REV'</td><td>
-%% 2 N-1</td><td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_5_6_5'</td><td> 2 N-1</td><td>
-%% (2 N-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_5_6_5_REV'</td><td> 2 N-1</td><td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_4_4_4_4'</td><td> 2 N-1</td><td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_4_4_4_4_REV'
-%% </td><td> 2 N-1</td><td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_5_5_5_1'</td><td> 2
-%% N-1</td><td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_1_5_5_5_REV'</td><td> 2 N-1</td>
-%% <td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_8_8_8_8'</td><td> 2 N-1</td><td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_8_8_8_8_REV'</td><td> 2 N-1</td><td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_10_10_10_2'
-%% </td><td> 2 N-1</td><td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_2_10_10_10_REV'</td><td>
-%% 2 N-1</td><td>(2 N-1) c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_24_8'</td><td> 2 N-1</td><td>(2
-%% N-1)
-%% c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_10F_11F_11F_REV'</td><td> -- </td><td> Special </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_5_9_9_9_REV'</td><td> -- </td><td> Special </td></tr><tr>
-%% <td>`?GL_FLOAT_32_UNSIGNED_INT_24_8_REV'</td><td> none </td><td> c (Depth Only) </td>
-%% </tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% Return values are placed in memory as follows. If `Format' is `?GL_STENCIL_INDEX'
-%% , `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT', `?GL_RED', `?GL_GREEN', or `?GL_BLUE', a
-%% single value is returned and the data for the ith pixel in the jth row is placed in
-%% location (j) width+i. `?GL_RGB' and `?GL_BGR' return three values, `?GL_RGBA'
-%% and `?GL_BGRA' return four values for each pixel, with all values corresponding
-%% to a single pixel occupying contiguous space in `Data' . Storage parameters set by {@link gl:pixelStoref/2}
-%% , such as `?GL_PACK_LSB_FIRST' and `?GL_PACK_SWAP_BYTES', affect the way that
-%% data is written into memory. See {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} for a description.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glReadPixels.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glReadPixels.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec readPixels(X, Y, Width, Height, Format, Type, Pixels) -> 'ok' when X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Pixels :: mem().
readPixels(X,Y,Width,Height,Format,Type,Pixels) ->
send_bin(Pixels),
@@ -5311,237 +2373,7 @@ readPixels(X,Y,Width,Height,Format,Type,Pixels) ->
%% position is valid, and {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with argument `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_POSITION'
%% to query the raster position.
%%
-%% Several parameters define the encoding of pixel data in memory and control the processing
-%% of the pixel data before it is placed in the frame buffer. These parameters are set with
-%% four commands: {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} , {@link gl:pixelTransferf/2} , {@link gl:pixelMapfv/3} ,
-%% and {@link gl:pixelZoom/2} . This reference page describes the effects on ``gl:drawPixels''
-%% of many, but not all, of the parameters specified by these four commands.
-%%
-%% Data is read from `Data' as a sequence of signed or unsigned bytes, signed or unsigned
-%% shorts, signed or unsigned integers, or single-precision floating-point values, depending
-%% on `Type' . When `Type' is one of `?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE', `?GL_BYTE', `?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT'
-%% , `?GL_SHORT', `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT', `?GL_INT', or `?GL_FLOAT' each
-%% of these bytes, shorts, integers, or floating-point values is interpreted as one color
-%% or depth component, or one index, depending on `Format' . When `Type' is one of `?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE_3_3_2'
-%% , `?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_5_6_5', `?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_4_4_4_4', `?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_5_5_5_1'
-%% , `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_8_8_8_8', or `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_10_10_10_2', each unsigned
-%% value is interpreted as containing all the components for a single pixel, with the color
-%% components arranged according to `Format' . When `Type' is one of `?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE_2_3_3_REV'
-%% , `?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_5_6_5_REV', `?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_4_4_4_4_REV', `?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_1_5_5_5_REV'
-%% , `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_8_8_8_8_REV', or `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_2_10_10_10_REV', each
-%% unsigned value is interpreted as containing all color components, specified by `Format'
-%% , for a single pixel in a reversed order. Indices are always treated individually. Color
-%% components are treated as groups of one, two, three, or four values, again based on `Format'
-%% . Both individual indices and groups of components are referred to as pixels. If `Type'
-%% is `?GL_BITMAP', the data must be unsigned bytes, and `Format' must be either `?GL_COLOR_INDEX'
-%% or `?GL_STENCIL_INDEX'. Each unsigned byte is treated as eight 1-bit pixels, with
-%% bit ordering determined by `?GL_UNPACK_LSB_FIRST' (see {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} ).
-%%
-%% width×height pixels are read from memory, starting at location `Data' . By default,
-%% these pixels are taken from adjacent memory locations, except that after all `Width'
-%% pixels are read, the read pointer is advanced to the next four-byte boundary. The four-byte
-%% row alignment is specified by {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} with argument `?GL_UNPACK_ALIGNMENT'
-%% , and it can be set to one, two, four, or eight bytes. Other pixel store parameters specify
-%% different read pointer advancements, both before the first pixel is read and after all `Width'
-%% pixels are read. See the {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} reference page for details on these options.
-%%
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a block of pixels is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% The width×height pixels that are read from memory are each operated on in the same
-%% way, based on the values of several parameters specified by {@link gl:pixelTransferf/2}
-%% and {@link gl:pixelMapfv/3} . The details of these operations, as well as the target buffer
-%% into which the pixels are drawn, are specific to the format of the pixels, as specified
-%% by `Format' . `Format' can assume one of 13 symbolic values:
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR_INDEX': Each pixel is a single value, a color index. It is converted
-%% to fixed-point format, with an unspecified number of bits to the right of the binary point,
-%% regardless of the memory data type. Floating-point values convert to true fixed-point
-%% values. Signed and unsigned integer data is converted with all fraction bits set to 0.
-%% Bitmap data convert to either 0 or 1.
-%%
-%% Each fixed-point index is then shifted left by `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' bits and added to `?GL_INDEX_OFFSET'
-%% . If `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' is negative, the shift is to the right. In either case, zero
-%% bits fill otherwise unspecified bit locations in the result.
-%%
-%% If the GL is in RGBA mode, the resulting index is converted to an RGBA pixel with the
-%% help of the `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_R', `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_G', `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_B'
-%% , and `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_A' tables. If the GL is in color index mode, and if `?GL_MAP_COLOR'
-%% is true, the index is replaced with the value that it references in lookup table `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_I'
-%% . Whether the lookup replacement of the index is done or not, the integer part of the
-%% index is then ANDed with 2 b-1, where b is the number of bits in a color index buffer.
-%%
-%%
-%% The GL then converts the resulting indices or RGBA colors to fragments by attaching the
-%% current raster position `z' coordinate and texture coordinates to each pixel, then
-%% assigning x and y window coordinates to the nth fragment such that x n=x r+n% width
-%%
-%%
-%% y n=y r+|n/width|
-%%
-%% where (x r y r) is the current raster position. These pixel fragments are then treated just like
-%% the fragments generated by rasterizing points, lines, or polygons. Texture mapping, fog,
-%% and all the fragment operations are applied before the fragments are written to the frame
-%% buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL_INDEX': Each pixel is a single value, a stencil index. It is converted
-%% to fixed-point format, with an unspecified number of bits to the right of the binary point,
-%% regardless of the memory data type. Floating-point values convert to true fixed-point
-%% values. Signed and unsigned integer data is converted with all fraction bits set to 0.
-%% Bitmap data convert to either 0 or 1.
-%%
-%% Each fixed-point index is then shifted left by `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' bits, and added
-%% to `?GL_INDEX_OFFSET'. If `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' is negative, the shift is to the
-%% right. In either case, zero bits fill otherwise unspecified bit locations in the result.
-%% If `?GL_MAP_STENCIL' is true, the index is replaced with the value that it references
-%% in lookup table `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_S_TO_S'. Whether the lookup replacement of the index
-%% is done or not, the integer part of the index is then ANDed with 2 b-1, where b is
-%% the number of bits in the stencil buffer. The resulting stencil indices are then written
-%% to the stencil buffer such that the nth index is written to location
-%%
-%% x n=x r+n% width
-%%
-%% y n=y r+|n/width|
-%%
-%% where (x r y r) is the current raster position. Only the pixel ownership test, the scissor test,
-%% and the stencil writemask affect these write operations.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT': Each pixel is a single-depth component. Floating-point data
-%% is converted directly to an internal floating-point format with unspecified precision.
-%% Signed integer data is mapped linearly to the internal floating-point format such that
-%% the most positive representable integer value maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable
-%% value maps to -1.0. Unsigned integer data is mapped similarly: the largest integer value
-%% maps to 1.0, and 0 maps to 0.0. The resulting floating-point depth value is then multiplied
-%% by `?GL_DEPTH_SCALE' and added to `?GL_DEPTH_BIAS'. The result is clamped to
-%% the range [0 1].
-%%
-%% The GL then converts the resulting depth components to fragments by attaching the current
-%% raster position color or color index and texture coordinates to each pixel, then assigning
-%% x and y window coordinates to the nth fragment such that
-%%
-%% x n=x r+n% width
-%%
-%% y n=y r+|n/width|
-%%
-%% where (x r y r) is the current raster position. These pixel fragments are then treated just like
-%% the fragments generated by rasterizing points, lines, or polygons. Texture mapping, fog,
-%% and all the fragment operations are applied before the fragments are written to the frame
-%% buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGBA'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BGRA': Each pixel is a four-component group: For `?GL_RGBA', the red component
-%% is first, followed by green, followed by blue, followed by alpha; for `?GL_BGRA'
-%% the order is blue, green, red and then alpha. Floating-point values are converted directly
-%% to an internal floating-point format with unspecified precision. Signed integer values
-%% are mapped linearly to the internal floating-point format such that the most positive
-%% representable integer value maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable value maps
-%% to -1.0. (Note that this mapping does not convert 0 precisely to 0.0.) Unsigned integer
-%% data is mapped similarly: The largest integer value maps to 1.0, and 0 maps to 0.0. The
-%% resulting floating-point color values are then multiplied by `?GL_c_SCALE' and added
-%% to `?GL_c_BIAS', where `c' is RED, GREEN, BLUE, and ALPHA for the respective
-%% color components. The results are clamped to the range [0 1].
-%%
-%% If `?GL_MAP_COLOR' is true, each color component is scaled by the size of lookup
-%% table `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_c_TO_c', then replaced by the value that it references in that
-%% table. `c' is R, G, B, or A respectively.
-%%
-%% The GL then converts the resulting RGBA colors to fragments by attaching the current
-%% raster position `z' coordinate and texture coordinates to each pixel, then assigning
-%% x and y window coordinates to the nth fragment such that
-%%
-%% x n=x r+n% width
-%%
-%% y n=y r+|n/width|
-%%
-%% where (x r y r) is the current raster position. These pixel fragments are then treated just like
-%% the fragments generated by rasterizing points, lines, or polygons. Texture mapping, fog,
-%% and all the fragment operations are applied before the fragments are written to the frame
-%% buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_RED': Each pixel is a single red component. This component is converted to
-%% the internal floating-point format in the same way the red component of an RGBA pixel
-%% is. It is then converted to an RGBA pixel with green and blue set to 0, and alpha set
-%% to 1. After this conversion, the pixel is treated as if it had been read as an RGBA pixel.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_GREEN': Each pixel is a single green component. This component is converted
-%% to the internal floating-point format in the same way the green component of an RGBA pixel
-%% is. It is then converted to an RGBA pixel with red and blue set to 0, and alpha set to
-%% 1. After this conversion, the pixel is treated as if it had been read as an RGBA pixel.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BLUE': Each pixel is a single blue component. This component is converted to
-%% the internal floating-point format in the same way the blue component of an RGBA pixel
-%% is. It is then converted to an RGBA pixel with red and green set to 0, and alpha set to
-%% 1. After this conversion, the pixel is treated as if it had been read as an RGBA pixel.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ALPHA': Each pixel is a single alpha component. This component is converted
-%% to the internal floating-point format in the same way the alpha component of an RGBA pixel
-%% is. It is then converted to an RGBA pixel with red, green, and blue set to 0. After this
-%% conversion, the pixel is treated as if it had been read as an RGBA pixel.
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGB'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BGR': Each pixel is a three-component group: red first, followed by green,
-%% followed by blue; for `?GL_BGR', the first component is blue, followed by green and
-%% then red. Each component is converted to the internal floating-point format in the same
-%% way the red, green, and blue components of an RGBA pixel are. The color triple is converted
-%% to an RGBA pixel with alpha set to 1. After this conversion, the pixel is treated as if
-%% it had been read as an RGBA pixel.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LUMINANCE': Each pixel is a single luminance component. This component is converted
-%% to the internal floating-point format in the same way the red component of an RGBA pixel
-%% is. It is then converted to an RGBA pixel with red, green, and blue set to the converted
-%% luminance value, and alpha set to 1. After this conversion, the pixel is treated as if
-%% it had been read as an RGBA pixel.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA': Each pixel is a two-component group: luminance first, followed
-%% by alpha. The two components are converted to the internal floating-point format in the
-%% same way the red component of an RGBA pixel is. They are then converted to an RGBA pixel
-%% with red, green, and blue set to the converted luminance value, and alpha set to the converted
-%% alpha value. After this conversion, the pixel is treated as if it had been read as an
-%% RGBA pixel.
-%%
-%% The following table summarizes the meaning of the valid constants for the `type'
-%% parameter:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Type '</td><td>` Corresponding Type '</td></tr></tbody><tbody>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE'</td><td> unsigned 8-bit integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_BYTE'
-%% </td><td> signed 8-bit integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_BITMAP'</td><td> single bits
-%% in unsigned 8-bit integers </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT'</td><td> unsigned
-%% 16-bit integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SHORT'</td><td> signed 16-bit integer </td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT'</td><td> unsigned 32-bit integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT'
-%% </td><td> 32-bit integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT'</td><td> single-precision
-%% floating-point </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE_3_3_2'</td><td> unsigned 8-bit
-%% integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE_2_3_3_REV'</td><td> unsigned 8-bit
-%% integer with reversed component ordering </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_5_6_5'</td>
-%% <td> unsigned 16-bit integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_5_6_5_REV'</td><td>
-%% unsigned 16-bit integer with reversed component ordering </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_4_4_4_4'
-%% </td><td> unsigned 16-bit integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_4_4_4_4_REV'</td>
-%% <td> unsigned 16-bit integer with reversed component ordering </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_5_5_5_1'
-%% </td><td> unsigned 16-bit integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT_1_5_5_5_REV'</td>
-%% <td> unsigned 16-bit integer with reversed component ordering </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_8_8_8_8'
-%% </td><td> unsigned 32-bit integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_8_8_8_8_REV'</td>
-%% <td> unsigned 32-bit integer with reversed component ordering </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_10_10_10_2'
-%% </td><td> unsigned 32-bit integer </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_2_10_10_10_REV'</td>
-%% <td> unsigned 32-bit integer with reversed component ordering </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% The rasterization described so far assumes pixel zoom factors of 1. If {@link gl:pixelZoom/2}
-%% is used to change the x and y pixel zoom factors, pixels are converted to fragments
-%% as follows. If (x r y r) is the current raster position, and a given pixel is in the nth column
-%% and mth row of the pixel rectangle, then fragments are generated for pixels whose centers
-%% are in the rectangle with corners at
-%%
-%% (x r+(zoom x) n y r+(zoom y) m)
-%%
-%% (x r+(zoom x)(n+1) y r+(zoom y)(m+1))
-%%
-%% where zoom x is the value of `?GL_ZOOM_X' and zoom y is the value of `?GL_ZOOM_Y'
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawPixels.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glDrawPixels.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawPixels(Width, Height, Format, Type, Pixels) -> 'ok' when Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Pixels :: offset()|mem().
drawPixels(Width,Height,Format,Type,Pixels) when is_integer(Pixels) ->
cast(5236, <<Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Pixels:?GLuint>>);
@@ -5557,98 +2389,7 @@ drawPixels(Width,Height,Format,Type,Pixels) ->
%% window. Results of copies from outside the window, or from regions of the window that
%% are not exposed, are hardware dependent and undefined.
%%
-%% `X' and `Y' specify the window coordinates of the lower left corner of the rectangular
-%% region to be copied. `Width' and `Height' specify the dimensions of the rectangular
-%% region to be copied. Both `Width' and `Height' must not be negative.
-%%
-%% Several parameters control the processing of the pixel data while it is being copied.
-%% These parameters are set with three commands: {@link gl:pixelTransferf/2} , {@link gl:pixelMapfv/3}
-%% , and {@link gl:pixelZoom/2} . This reference page describes the effects on ``gl:copyPixels''
-%% of most, but not all, of the parameters specified by these three commands.
-%%
-%% ``gl:copyPixels'' copies values from each pixel with the lower left-hand corner at (x+i
-%% y+j)
-%% for 0&lt;= i&lt; width and 0&lt;= j&lt; height. This pixel is said to be the ith
-%% pixel in the jth row. Pixels are copied in row order from the lowest to the highest
-%% row, left to right in each row.
-%%
-%% `Type' specifies whether color, depth, or stencil data is to be copied. The details
-%% of the transfer for each data type are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR': Indices or RGBA colors are read from the buffer currently specified
-%% as the read source buffer (see {@link gl:readBuffer/1} ). If the GL is in color index mode,
-%% each index that is read from this buffer is converted to a fixed-point format with an
-%% unspecified number of bits to the right of the binary point. Each index is then shifted
-%% left by `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' bits, and added to `?GL_INDEX_OFFSET'. If `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT'
-%% is negative, the shift is to the right. In either case, zero bits fill otherwise unspecified
-%% bit locations in the result. If `?GL_MAP_COLOR' is true, the index is replaced with
-%% the value that it references in lookup table `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_I_TO_I'. Whether the
-%% lookup replacement of the index is done or not, the integer part of the index is then
-%% ANDed with 2 b-1, where b is the number of bits in a color index buffer.
-%%
-%% If the GL is in RGBA mode, the red, green, blue, and alpha components of each pixel that
-%% is read are converted to an internal floating-point format with unspecified precision.
-%% The conversion maps the largest representable component value to 1.0, and component value
-%% 0 to 0.0. The resulting floating-point color values are then multiplied by `?GL_c_SCALE'
-%% and added to `?GL_c_BIAS', where `c' is RED, GREEN, BLUE, and ALPHA for the
-%% respective color components. The results are clamped to the range [0,1]. If `?GL_MAP_COLOR'
-%% is true, each color component is scaled by the size of lookup table `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_c_TO_c'
-%% , then replaced by the value that it references in that table. `c' is R, G, B, or
-%% A.
-%%
-%% If the ARB_imaging extension is supported, the color values may be additionally processed
-%% by color-table lookups, color-matrix transformations, and convolution filters.
-%%
-%% The GL then converts the resulting indices or RGBA colors to fragments by attaching the
-%% current raster position `z' coordinate and texture coordinates to each pixel, then
-%% assigning window coordinates (x r+i y r+j), where (x r y r) is the current raster position, and the pixel was
-%% the ith pixel in the jth row. These pixel fragments are then treated just like the
-%% fragments generated by rasterizing points, lines, or polygons. Texture mapping, fog, and
-%% all the fragment operations are applied before the fragments are written to the frame
-%% buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH': Depth values are read from the depth buffer and converted directly
-%% to an internal floating-point format with unspecified precision. The resulting floating-point
-%% depth value is then multiplied by `?GL_DEPTH_SCALE' and added to `?GL_DEPTH_BIAS'
-%% . The result is clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% The GL then converts the resulting depth components to fragments by attaching the current
-%% raster position color or color index and texture coordinates to each pixel, then assigning
-%% window coordinates (x r+i y r+j), where (x r y r) is the current raster position, and the pixel was the ith
-%% pixel in the jth row. These pixel fragments are then treated just like the fragments
-%% generated by rasterizing points, lines, or polygons. Texture mapping, fog, and all the
-%% fragment operations are applied before the fragments are written to the frame buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_STENCIL': Stencil indices are read from the stencil buffer and converted to
-%% an internal fixed-point format with an unspecified number of bits to the right of the
-%% binary point. Each fixed-point index is then shifted left by `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' bits,
-%% and added to `?GL_INDEX_OFFSET'. If `?GL_INDEX_SHIFT' is negative, the shift
-%% is to the right. In either case, zero bits fill otherwise unspecified bit locations in
-%% the result. If `?GL_MAP_STENCIL' is true, the index is replaced with the value that
-%% it references in lookup table `?GL_PIXEL_MAP_S_TO_S'. Whether the lookup replacement
-%% of the index is done or not, the integer part of the index is then ANDed with 2 b-1,
-%% where b is the number of bits in the stencil buffer. The resulting stencil indices are
-%% then written to the stencil buffer such that the index read from the ith location of
-%% the jth row is written to location (x r+i y r+j), where (x r y r) is the current raster position. Only the
-%% pixel ownership test, the scissor test, and the stencil writemask affect these write operations.
-%%
-%%
-%% The rasterization described thus far assumes pixel zoom factors of 1.0. If {@link gl:pixelZoom/2}
-%% is used to change the x and y pixel zoom factors, pixels are converted to fragments
-%% as follows. If (x r y r) is the current raster position, and a given pixel is in the ith location
-%% in the jth row of the source pixel rectangle, then fragments are generated for pixels
-%% whose centers are in the rectangle with corners at
-%%
-%% (x r+(zoom x) i y r+(zoom y) j)
-%%
-%% and
-%%
-%% (x r+(zoom x)(i+1) y r+(zoom y)(j+1))
-%%
-%% where zoom x is the value of `?GL_ZOOM_X' and zoom y is the value of `?GL_ZOOM_Y'
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyPixels.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glCopyPixels.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyPixels(X, Y, Width, Height, Type) -> 'ok' when X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Type :: enum().
copyPixels(X,Y,Width,Height,Type) ->
cast(5238, <<X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Type:?GLenum>>).
@@ -5661,57 +2402,7 @@ copyPixels(X,Y,Width,Height,Type) ->
%% typically used in multipass rendering algorithms to achieve special effects, such as decals,
%% outlining, and constructive solid geometry rendering.
%%
-%% The stencil test conditionally eliminates a pixel based on the outcome of a comparison
-%% between the reference value and the value in the stencil buffer. To enable and disable
-%% the test, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_STENCIL_TEST'
-%% . To specify actions based on the outcome of the stencil test, call {@link gl:stencilOp/3}
-%% or {@link gl:stencilOpSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% There can be two separate sets of `Func' , `Ref' , and `Mask' parameters;
-%% one affects back-facing polygons, and the other affects front-facing polygons as well
-%% as other non-polygon primitives. {@link gl:stencilFunc/3} sets both front and back stencil
-%% state to the same values. Use {@link gl:stencilFuncSeparate/4} to set front and back stencil
-%% state to different values.
-%%
-%% `Func' is a symbolic constant that determines the stencil comparison function. It
-%% accepts one of eight values, shown in the following list. `Ref' is an integer reference
-%% value that is used in the stencil comparison. It is clamped to the range [0 2 n-1], where n
-%% is the number of bitplanes in the stencil buffer. `Mask' is bitwise ANDed with both
-%% the reference value and the stored stencil value, with the ANDed values participating
-%% in the comparison.
-%%
-%% If `stencil' represents the value stored in the corresponding stencil buffer location,
-%% the following list shows the effect of each comparison function that can be specified by `Func'
-%% . Only if the comparison succeeds is the pixel passed through to the next stage in the
-%% rasterization process (see {@link gl:stencilOp/3} ). All tests treat `stencil' values
-%% as unsigned integers in the range [0 2 n-1], where n is the number of bitplanes in the stencil
-%% buffer.
-%%
-%% The following values are accepted by `Func' :
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEVER': Always fails.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LESS': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) &lt; ( `stencil' &amp; `Mask'
-%% ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_LEQUAL': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) &lt;= ( `stencil'
-%% &amp; `Mask' ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_GREATER': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) &gt; ( `stencil'
-%% &amp; `Mask' ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_GEQUAL': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) &gt;= ( `stencil'
-%% &amp; `Mask' ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_EQUAL': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) = ( `stencil' &amp; `Mask'
-%% ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_NOTEQUAL': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) != ( `stencil' &amp;
-%% `Mask' ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_ALWAYS': Always passes.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glStencilFunc.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glStencilFunc.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec stencilFunc(Func, Ref, Mask) -> 'ok' when Func :: enum(),Ref :: integer(),Mask :: integer().
stencilFunc(Func,Ref,Mask) ->
cast(5239, <<Func:?GLenum,Ref:?GLint,Mask:?GLuint>>).
@@ -5724,12 +2415,7 @@ stencilFunc(Func,Ref,Mask) ->
%% bit in the stencil buffer. Where a 0 appears, the corresponding bit is write-protected.
%% Initially, all bits are enabled for writing.
%%
-%% There can be two separate `Mask' writemasks; one affects back-facing polygons, and
-%% the other affects front-facing polygons as well as other non-polygon primitives. {@link gl:stencilMask/1}
-%% sets both front and back stencil writemasks to the same values. Use {@link gl:stencilMaskSeparate/2}
-%% to set front and back stencil writemasks to different values.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glStencilMask.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glStencilMask.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec stencilMask(Mask) -> 'ok' when Mask :: integer().
stencilMask(Mask) ->
cast(5240, <<Mask:?GLuint>>).
@@ -5742,55 +2428,7 @@ stencilMask(Mask) ->
%% used in multipass rendering algorithms to achieve special effects, such as decals, outlining,
%% and constructive solid geometry rendering.
%%
-%% The stencil test conditionally eliminates a pixel based on the outcome of a comparison
-%% between the value in the stencil buffer and a reference value. To enable and disable the
-%% test, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_STENCIL_TEST'
-%% ; to control it, call {@link gl:stencilFunc/3} or {@link gl:stencilFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% There can be two separate sets of `Sfail' , `Dpfail' , and `Dppass' parameters;
-%% one affects back-facing polygons, and the other affects front-facing polygons as well
-%% as other non-polygon primitives. {@link gl:stencilOp/3} sets both front and back stencil
-%% state to the same values. Use {@link gl:stencilOpSeparate/4} to set front and back stencil
-%% state to different values.
-%%
-%% ``gl:stencilOp'' takes three arguments that indicate what happens to the stored stencil
-%% value while stenciling is enabled. If the stencil test fails, no change is made to the
-%% pixel's color or depth buffers, and `Sfail' specifies what happens to the stencil
-%% buffer contents. The following eight actions are possible.
-%%
-%% `?GL_KEEP': Keeps the current value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ZERO': Sets the stencil buffer value to 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_REPLACE': Sets the stencil buffer value to `ref', as specified by {@link gl:stencilFunc/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_INCR': Increments the current stencil buffer value. Clamps to the maximum representable
-%% unsigned value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_INCR_WRAP': Increments the current stencil buffer value. Wraps stencil buffer
-%% value to zero when incrementing the maximum representable unsigned value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DECR': Decrements the current stencil buffer value. Clamps to 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DECR_WRAP': Decrements the current stencil buffer value. Wraps stencil buffer
-%% value to the maximum representable unsigned value when decrementing a stencil buffer value
-%% of zero.
-%%
-%% `?GL_INVERT': Bitwise inverts the current stencil buffer value.
-%%
-%% Stencil buffer values are treated as unsigned integers. When incremented and decremented,
-%% values are clamped to 0 and 2 n-1, where n is the value returned by querying `?GL_STENCIL_BITS'
-%% .
-%%
-%% The other two arguments to ``gl:stencilOp'' specify stencil buffer actions that depend
-%% on whether subsequent depth buffer tests succeed ( `Dppass' ) or fail ( `Dpfail' )
-%% (see {@link gl:depthFunc/1} ). The actions are specified using the same eight symbolic constants
-%% as `Sfail' . Note that `Dpfail' is ignored when there is no depth buffer, or
-%% when the depth buffer is not enabled. In these cases, `Sfail' and `Dppass' specify
-%% stencil action when the stencil test fails and passes, respectively.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glStencilOp.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glStencilOp.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec stencilOp(Fail, Zfail, Zpass) -> 'ok' when Fail :: enum(),Zfail :: enum(),Zpass :: enum().
stencilOp(Fail,Zfail,Zpass) ->
cast(5241, <<Fail:?GLenum,Zfail:?GLenum,Zpass:?GLenum>>).
@@ -5801,7 +2439,7 @@ stencilOp(Fail,Zfail,Zpass) ->
%% buffer. `S' is masked with 2 m-1, where m is the number of bits in the stencil
%% buffer.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClearStencil.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glClearStencil.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clearStencil(S) -> 'ok' when S :: integer().
clearStencil(S) ->
cast(5242, <<S:?GLint>>).
@@ -5818,69 +2456,7 @@ clearStencil(S) ->
%% is either `?GL_OBJECT_PLANE' or `?GL_EYE_PLANE', `Params' contains coefficients
%% for the corresponding texture generation function.
%%
-%% If the texture generation function is `?GL_OBJECT_LINEAR', the function
-%%
-%% g=p 1×x o+p 2×y o+p 3×z o+p 4×w o
-%%
-%% is used, where g is the value computed for the coordinate named in `Coord' , p 1,
-%% p 2, p 3, and p 4 are the four values supplied in `Params' , and x o, y o, z o,
-%% and w o are the object coordinates of the vertex. This function can be used, for example,
-%% to texture-map terrain using sea level as a reference plane (defined by p 1, p 2, p
-%% 3, and p 4). The altitude of a terrain vertex is computed by the `?GL_OBJECT_LINEAR'
-%% coordinate generation function as its distance from sea level; that altitude can then
-%% be used to index the texture image to map white snow onto peaks and green grass onto foothills.
-%%
-%%
-%% If the texture generation function is `?GL_EYE_LINEAR', the function
-%%
-%% g=(p 1)"×x e+(p 2)"×y e+(p 3)"×z e+(p 4)"×w e
-%%
-%% is used, where
-%%
-%% ((p 1)" (p 2)" (p 3)" (p 4)")=(p 1 p 2 p 3 p 4) M -1
-%%
-%% and x e, y e, z e, and w e are the eye coordinates of the vertex, p 1, p 2, p 3,
-%% and p 4 are the values supplied in `Params' , and M is the modelview matrix when ``gl:texGen''
-%% is invoked. If M is poorly conditioned or singular, texture coordinates generated by
-%% the resulting function may be inaccurate or undefined.
-%%
-%% Note that the values in `Params' define a reference plane in eye coordinates. The
-%% modelview matrix that is applied to them may not be the same one in effect when the polygon
-%% vertices are transformed. This function establishes a field of texture coordinates that
-%% can produce dynamic contour lines on moving objects.
-%%
-%% If the texture generation function is `?GL_SPHERE_MAP' and `Coord' is either `?GL_S'
-%% or `?GL_T', s and t texture coordinates are generated as follows. Let `u'
-%% be the unit vector pointing from the origin to the polygon vertex (in eye coordinates).
-%% Let `n' sup prime be the current normal, after transformation to eye coordinates.
-%% Let
-%%
-%% f=(f x f y f z) T be the reflection vector such that
-%%
-%% f=u-2 n" (n") T u
-%%
-%% Finally, let m=2 ((f x) 2+(f y) 2+(f z+1) 2). Then the values assigned to the s and t texture coordinates
-%% are
-%%
-%% s=f x/m+1/2
-%%
-%% t=f y/m+1/2
-%%
-%% To enable or disable a texture-coordinate generation function, call {@link gl:enable/1}
-%% or {@link gl:enable/1} with one of the symbolic texture-coordinate names (`?GL_TEXTURE_GEN_S'
-%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_GEN_T', `?GL_TEXTURE_GEN_R', or `?GL_TEXTURE_GEN_Q') as
-%% the argument. When enabled, the specified texture coordinate is computed according to
-%% the generating function associated with that coordinate. When disabled, subsequent vertices
-%% take the specified texture coordinate from the current set of texture coordinates. Initially,
-%% all texture generation functions are set to `?GL_EYE_LINEAR' and are disabled. Both
-%% s plane equations are (1, 0, 0, 0), both t plane equations are (0, 1, 0, 0), and all
-%% r and q plane equations are (0, 0, 0, 0).
-%%
-%% When the ARB_multitexture extension is supported, ``gl:texGen'' sets the texture generation
-%% parameters for the currently active texture unit, selected with {@link gl:activeTexture/1} .
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexGen.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glTexGen.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texGend(Coord, Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Coord :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),Param :: float().
texGend(Coord,Pname,Param) ->
cast(5243, <<Coord:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -5925,22 +2501,7 @@ texGeniv(Coord,Pname,Params) ->
%% of the (`s', `t', `r', `q') texture coordinates, using the symbolic
%% constant `?GL_S', `?GL_T', `?GL_R', or `?GL_Q'.
%%
-%% `Pname' specifies one of three symbolic names:
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_GEN_MODE': `Params' returns the single-valued texture generation
-%% function, a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_EYE_LINEAR'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_OBJECT_PLANE': `Params' returns the four plane equation coefficients that
-%% specify object linear-coordinate generation. Integer values, when requested, are mapped
-%% directly from the internal floating-point representation.
-%%
-%% `?GL_EYE_PLANE': `Params' returns the four plane equation coefficients that
-%% specify eye linear-coordinate generation. Integer values, when requested, are mapped directly
-%% from the internal floating-point representation. The returned values are those maintained
-%% in eye coordinates. They are not equal to the values specified using {@link gl:texGend/3} ,
-%% unless the modelview matrix was identity when {@link gl:texGend/3} was called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetTexGen.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetTexGen.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getTexGendv(Coord, Pname) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Coord :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getTexGendv(Coord,Pname) ->
call(5249, <<Coord:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -5959,14 +2520,14 @@ getTexGeniv(Coord,Pname) ->
%% @doc glTexEnvf
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexEnvf.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec texEnvf(Target, Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),Param :: float().
texEnvf(Target,Pname,Param) ->
cast(5252, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLfloat>>).
%% @doc glTexEnvi
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexEnvi.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec texEnvi(Target, Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),Param :: integer().
texEnvi(Target,Pname,Param) ->
cast(5253, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLint>>).
@@ -5980,158 +2541,7 @@ texEnvi(Target,Pname,Param) ->
%% , `?GL_ALPHA_SCALE', `?GL_SRC0_RGB', `?GL_SRC1_RGB', `?GL_SRC2_RGB', `?GL_SRC0_ALPHA'
%% , `?GL_SRC1_ALPHA', or `?GL_SRC2_ALPHA'.
%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_TEXTURE_ENV_MODE', then `Params' is (or points to)
-%% the symbolic name of a texture function. Six texture functions may be specified: `?GL_ADD'
-%% , `?GL_MODULATE', `?GL_DECAL', `?GL_BLEND', `?GL_REPLACE', or `?GL_COMBINE'
-%% .
-%%
-%% The following table shows the correspondence of filtered texture values R t, G t, B t,
-%% A t, L t, I t to texture source components. C s and A s are used by the texture functions
-%% described below.
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td> Texture Base Internal Format </td><td> C s</td><td> A s</td></tr></tbody>
-%% <tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ALPHA'</td><td> (0, 0, 0) </td><td> A t</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE'
-%% </td><td> ( L t, L t, L t ) </td><td> 1 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA'</td>
-%% <td> ( L t, L t, L t ) </td><td> A t</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTENSITY'</td><td> (
-%% I t, I t, I t ) </td><td> I t</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB'</td><td> ( R t, G t, B
-%% t ) </td><td> 1 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA'</td><td> ( R t, G t, B t ) </td><td>
-%% A t</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% A texture function acts on the fragment to be textured using the texture image value
-%% that applies to the fragment (see {@link gl:texParameterf/3} ) and produces an RGBA color
-%% for that fragment. The following table shows how the RGBA color is produced for each of
-%% the first five texture functions that can be chosen. C is a triple of color values (RGB)
-%% and A is the associated alpha value. RGBA values extracted from a texture image are in
-%% the range [0,1]. The subscript p refers to the color computed from the previous texture
-%% stage (or the incoming fragment if processing texture stage 0), the subscript s to the
-%% texture source color, the subscript c to the texture environment color, and the subscript
-%% v indicates a value produced by the texture function.
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td> Texture Base Internal Format </td><td>`?Value'</td><td>`?GL_REPLACE'
-%% Function </td><td>`?GL_MODULATE' Function </td><td>`?GL_DECAL' Function </td><td>
-%% `?GL_BLEND' Function </td><td>`?GL_ADD' Function </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_ALPHA'</td><td> C v=</td><td> C p</td><td> C p</td><td> undefined </td><td> C p</td>
-%% <td> C p</td></tr><tr><td></td><td> A v=</td><td> A s</td><td> A p A s</td><td></td><td>
-%% A v=A p A s</td><td> A p A s</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE'</td><td> C v=</td><td>
-%% C s</td><td> C p C s</td><td> undefined </td><td> C p (1-C s)+C c C s</td><td> C p+C s</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td> (or 1) </td><td> A v=</td><td> A p</td><td> A p</td><td></td><td> A p</td><td> A
-%% p</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA'</td><td> C v=</td><td> C s</td><td> C p C
-%% s</td><td> undefined </td><td> C p (1-C s)+C c C s</td><td> C p+C s</td></tr><tr><td> (or 2) </td>
-%% <td> A v=</td><td> A s</td><td> A p A s</td><td></td><td> A p A s</td><td> A p A s</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTENSITY'</td><td> C v=</td><td> C s</td><td> C p C s</td><td>
-%% undefined </td><td> C p (1-C s)+C c C s</td><td> C p+C s</td></tr><tr><td></td><td> A v=</td><td>
-%% A s</td><td> A p A s</td><td></td><td> A p (1-A s)+A c A s</td><td> A p+A s</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB'
-%% </td><td> C v=</td><td> C s</td><td> C p C s</td><td> C s</td><td> C p (1-C s)+C c C s</td><td>
-%% C p+C s</td></tr><tr><td> (or 3) </td><td> A v=</td><td> A p</td><td> A p</td><td> A p</td>
-%% <td> A p</td><td> A p</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA'</td><td> C v=</td><td> C s</td><td>
-%% C p C s</td><td> C p (1-A s)+C s A s</td><td> C p (1-C s)+C c C s</td><td> C p+C s</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% (or 4) </td><td> A v=</td><td> A s</td><td> A p A s</td><td> A p</td><td> A p A s</td><td>
-%% A p A s</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_TEXTURE_ENV_MODE', and `Params' is `?GL_COMBINE',
-%% the form of the texture function depends on the values of `?GL_COMBINE_RGB' and `?GL_COMBINE_ALPHA'
-%% .
-%%
-%% The following describes how the texture sources, as specified by `?GL_SRC0_RGB', `?GL_SRC1_RGB'
-%% , `?GL_SRC2_RGB', `?GL_SRC0_ALPHA', `?GL_SRC1_ALPHA', and `?GL_SRC2_ALPHA'
-%% , are combined to produce a final texture color. In the following tables, `?GL_SRC0_c'
-%% is represented by Arg0, `?GL_SRC1_c' is represented by Arg1, and `?GL_SRC2_c'
-%% is represented by Arg2.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COMBINE_RGB' accepts any of `?GL_REPLACE', `?GL_MODULATE', `?GL_ADD'
-%% , `?GL_ADD_SIGNED', `?GL_INTERPOLATE', `?GL_SUBTRACT', `?GL_DOT3_RGB',
-%% or `?GL_DOT3_RGBA'.
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_COMBINE_RGB'</td><td>` Texture Function '</td></tr></tbody>
-%% <tbody><tr><td>`?GL_REPLACE'</td><td> Arg0</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_MODULATE'</td><td>
-%% Arg0×Arg1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ADD'</td><td> Arg0+Arg1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ADD_SIGNED'
-%% </td><td> Arg0+Arg1-0.5</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTERPOLATE'</td><td> Arg0×Arg2+Arg1×(1-
-%% Arg2)</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_SUBTRACT'</td><td> Arg0-Arg1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOT3_RGB'
-%% or `?GL_DOT3_RGBA'</td><td> 4×((((Arg0 r)-0.5)×((Arg1 r)-0.5))+(((Arg0 g)-0.5)×((Arg1 g)-0.5))+(((Arg0 b)-0.5)×((Arg1 b)-0.5)))</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% The scalar results for `?GL_DOT3_RGB' and `?GL_DOT3_RGBA' are placed into each
-%% of the 3 (RGB) or 4 (RGBA) components on output.
-%%
-%% Likewise, `?GL_COMBINE_ALPHA' accepts any of `?GL_REPLACE', `?GL_MODULATE',
-%% `?GL_ADD', `?GL_ADD_SIGNED', `?GL_INTERPOLATE', or `?GL_SUBTRACT'.
-%% The following table describes how alpha values are combined:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_COMBINE_ALPHA'</td><td>` Texture Function '</td></tr>
-%% </tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_REPLACE'</td><td> Arg0</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_MODULATE'
-%% </td><td> Arg0×Arg1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ADD'</td><td> Arg0+Arg1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ADD_SIGNED'
-%% </td><td> Arg0+Arg1-0.5</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTERPOLATE'</td><td> Arg0×Arg2+Arg1×(1-
-%% Arg2)</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_SUBTRACT'</td><td> Arg0-Arg1</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% In the following tables, the value C s represents the color sampled from the currently
-%% bound texture, C c represents the constant texture-environment color, C f represents
-%% the primary color of the incoming fragment, and C p represents the color computed from
-%% the previous texture stage or C f if processing texture stage 0. Likewise, A s, A c,
-%% A f, and A p represent the respective alpha values.
-%%
-%% The following table describes the values assigned to Arg0, Arg1, and Arg2 based upon
-%% the RGB sources and operands:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_SRCn_RGB'</td><td>`?GL_OPERANDn_RGB'</td><td>` Argument Value '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_TEXTURE'</td><td>`?GL_SRC_COLOR'</td><td>(C
-%% s)</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR'</td><td> 1-(C s)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% `?GL_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(A s)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'</td>
-%% <td> 1-(A s)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_TEXTUREn'</td><td>`?GL_SRC_COLOR'</td><td>(C s)</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR'</td><td> 1-(C s)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'
-%% </td><td>(A s)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td> 1-(A s)</td></tr><tr>
-%% <td>`?GL_CONSTANT'</td><td>`?GL_SRC_COLOR'</td><td>(C c)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR'
-%% </td><td> 1-(C c)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(A c)</td></tr><tr><td></td>
-%% <td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td> 1-(A c)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PRIMARY_COLOR'</td>
-%% <td>`?GL_SRC_COLOR'</td><td>(C f)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR'</td>
-%% <td> 1-(C f)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(A f)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>
-%% `?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td> 1-(A f)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PREVIOUS'</td><td>`?GL_SRC_COLOR'
-%% </td><td>(C p)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR'</td><td> 1-(C p)</td></tr><tr>
-%% <td></td><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(A p)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'
-%% </td><td> 1-(A p)</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% For `?GL_TEXTUREn' sources, C s and A s represent the color and alpha, respectively,
-%% produced from texture stage n.
-%%
-%% The follow table describes the values assigned to Arg0, Arg1, and Arg2 based upon
-%% the alpha sources and operands:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_SRCn_ALPHA'</td><td>`?GL_OPERANDn_ALPHA'</td><td>` Argument Value '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_TEXTURE'</td><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(A
-%% s)</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td> 1-(A s)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_TEXTUREn'
-%% </td><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(A s)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'
-%% </td><td> 1-(A s)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_CONSTANT'</td><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(A
-%% c)</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td> 1-(A c)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PRIMARY_COLOR'
-%% </td><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(A f)</td></tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'
-%% </td><td> 1-(A f)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_PREVIOUS'</td><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(A
-%% p)</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td></td><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td> 1-(A p)</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%%
-%% The RGB and alpha results of the texture function are multipled by the values of `?GL_RGB_SCALE'
-%% and `?GL_ALPHA_SCALE', respectively, and clamped to the range [0 1].
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_TEXTURE_ENV_COLOR', `Params' is a pointer to an array
-%% that holds an RGBA color consisting of four values. Integer color components are interpreted
-%% linearly such that the most positive integer maps to 1.0, and the most negative integer
-%% maps to -1.0. The values are clamped to the range [0,1] when they are specified. C c
-%% takes these four values.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_TEXTURE_LOD_BIAS', the value specified is added to the texture
-%% level-of-detail parameter, that selects which mipmap, or mipmaps depending upon the selected
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER', will be sampled.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_ENV_MODE' defaults to `?GL_MODULATE' and `?GL_TEXTURE_ENV_COLOR'
-%% defaults to (0, 0, 0, 0).
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_POINT_SPRITE' and `Pname' is `?GL_COORD_REPLACE',
-%% the boolean value specified is used to either enable or disable point sprite texture coordinate
-%% replacement. The default value is `?GL_FALSE'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexEnv.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glTexEnv.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texEnvfv(Target, Pname, Params) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),Params :: tuple().
texEnvfv(Target,Pname,Params) ->
cast(5254, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,(size(Params)):?GLuint,
@@ -6149,80 +2559,7 @@ texEnviv(Target,Pname,Params) ->
%% ``gl:getTexEnv'' returns in `Params' selected values of a texture environment that
%% was specified with {@link gl:texEnvfv/3} . `Target' specifies a texture environment.
%%
-%% When `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_FILTER_CONTROL', `Pname' must be `?GL_TEXTURE_LOD_BIAS'
-%% . When `Target' is `?GL_POINT_SPRITE', `Pname' must be `?GL_COORD_REPLACE'
-%% . When `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_ENV', `Pname' can be `?GL_TEXTURE_ENV_MODE'
-%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_ENV_COLOR', `?GL_COMBINE_RGB', `?GL_COMBINE_ALPHA', `?GL_RGB_SCALE'
-%% , `?GL_ALPHA_SCALE', `?GL_SRC0_RGB', `?GL_SRC1_RGB', `?GL_SRC2_RGB',
-%% `?GL_SRC0_ALPHA', `?GL_SRC1_ALPHA', or `?GL_SRC2_ALPHA'.
-%%
-%% `Pname' names a specific texture environment parameter, as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_ENV_MODE': `Params' returns the single-valued texture environment
-%% mode, a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_MODULATE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_ENV_COLOR': `Params' returns four integer or floating-point values
-%% that are the texture environment color. Integer values, when requested, are linearly mapped
-%% from the internal floating-point representation such that 1.0 maps to the most positive
-%% representable integer, and -1.0 maps to the most negative representable integer. The
-%% initial value is (0, 0, 0, 0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_LOD_BIAS': `Params' returns a single floating-point value that
-%% is the texture level-of-detail bias. The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COMBINE_RGB': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the current RGB combine mode. The initial value is `?GL_MODULATE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COMBINE_ALPHA': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the current alpha combine mode. The initial value is `?GL_MODULATE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SRC0_RGB': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner zero's RGB source. The initial value is `?GL_TEXTURE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SRC1_RGB': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner one's RGB source. The initial value is `?GL_PREVIOUS'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SRC2_RGB': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner two's RGB source. The initial value is `?GL_CONSTANT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SRC0_ALPHA': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner zero's alpha source. The initial value is `?GL_TEXTURE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SRC1_ALPHA': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner one's alpha source. The initial value is `?GL_PREVIOUS'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SRC2_ALPHA': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner two's alpha source. The initial value is `?GL_CONSTANT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_OPERAND0_RGB': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner zero's RGB operand. The initial value is `?GL_SRC_COLOR'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_OPERAND1_RGB': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner one's RGB operand. The initial value is `?GL_SRC_COLOR'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_OPERAND2_RGB': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner two's RGB operand. The initial value is `?GL_SRC_ALPHA'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_OPERAND0_ALPHA': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner zero's alpha operand. The initial value is `?GL_SRC_ALPHA'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_OPERAND1_ALPHA': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner one's alpha operand. The initial value is `?GL_SRC_ALPHA'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_OPERAND2_ALPHA': `Params' returns a single symbolic constant value representing
-%% the texture combiner two's alpha operand. The initial value is `?GL_SRC_ALPHA'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGB_SCALE': `Params' returns a single floating-point value representing
-%% the current RGB texture combiner scaling factor. The initial value is 1.0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ALPHA_SCALE': `Params' returns a single floating-point value representing
-%% the current alpha texture combiner scaling factor. The initial value is 1.0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COORD_REPLACE': `Params' returns a single boolean value representing the
-%% current point sprite texture coordinate replacement enable state. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetTexEnv.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetTexEnv.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getTexEnvfv(Target, Pname) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getTexEnvfv(Target,Pname) ->
call(5256, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -6240,218 +2577,7 @@ getTexEnviv(Target,Pname) ->
%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_2D', `?GL_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY', `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY', `?GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE'
%% , or `?GL_TEXTURE_3D'. The following symbols are accepted in `Pname' :
%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BASE_LEVEL': Specifies the index of the lowest defined mipmap level.
-%% This is an integer value. The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR': The data in `Params' specifies four values that
-%% define the border values that should be used for border texels. If a texel is sampled
-%% from the border of the texture, the values of `?GL_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR' are interpreted
-%% as an RGBA color to match the texture's internal format and substituted for the non-existent
-%% texel data. If the texture contains depth components, the first component of `?GL_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR'
-%% is interpreted as a depth value. The initial value is ( 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0 ).
-%%
-%% If the values for `?GL_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR' are specified with ``gl:texParameterIiv''
-%% or ``gl:texParameterIuiv'', the values are stored unmodified with an internal data
-%% type of integer. If specified with ``gl:texParameteriv'', they are converted to floating
-%% point with the following equation: f=2 c+1 2 b-/1. If specified with ``gl:texParameterfv''
-%% , they are stored unmodified as floating-point values.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_FUNC': Specifies the comparison operator used when `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_MODE'
-%% is set to `?GL_COMPARE_REF_TO_TEXTURE'. Permissible values are: <table><tbody><tr><td>
-%% ` Texture Comparison Function '</td><td>` Computed result '</td></tr></tbody><tbody>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_LEQUAL'</td><td> result={1.0 0.0 r&lt;=(D t) r&gt;(D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_GEQUAL'</td><td>
-%% result={1.0 0.0 r&gt;=(D t) r&lt;(D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LESS'</td><td> result={1.0 0.0 r&lt;(D t) r&gt;=(D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_GREATER'
-%% </td><td> result={1.0 0.0 r&gt;(D t) r&lt;=(D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_EQUAL'</td><td> result={1.0 0.0 r=(D t) r&amp;ne;
-%% (D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_NOTEQUAL'
-%% </td><td> result={1.0 0.0 r&amp;ne;(D t) r=(D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ALWAYS'</td><td> result=1.0</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_NEVER'</td><td> result=0.0</td></tr></tbody></table> where r is the current
-%% interpolated texture coordinate, and D t is the depth texture value sampled from the
-%% currently bound depth texture. result is assigned to the the red channel.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_MODE': Specifies the texture comparison mode for currently
-%% bound depth textures. That is, a texture whose internal format is `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT_*'
-%% ; see {@link gl:texImage2D/9} ) Permissible values are:
-%%
-%% `?GL_COMPARE_REF_TO_TEXTURE': Specifies that the interpolated and clamped r texture
-%% coordinate should be compared to the value in the currently bound depth texture. See the
-%% discussion of `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_FUNC' for details of how the comparison is evaluated.
-%% The result of the comparison is assigned to the red channel.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NONE': Specifies that the red channel should be assigned the appropriate value
-%% from the currently bound depth texture.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_LOD_BIAS': `Params' specifies a fixed bias value that is to be
-%% added to the level-of-detail parameter for the texture before texture sampling. The specified
-%% value is added to the shader-supplied bias value (if any) and subsequently clamped into
-%% the implementation-defined range [( - bias max)(bias max)], where bias max is the value of the implementation
-%% defined constant `?GL_MAX_TEXTURE_LOD_BIAS'. The initial value is 0.0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER': The texture minifying function is used whenever the level-of-detail
-%% function used when sampling from the texture determines that the texture should be minified.
-%% There are six defined minifying functions. Two of them use either the nearest texture
-%% elements or a weighted average of multiple texture elements to compute the texture value.
-%% The other four use mipmaps.
-%%
-%% A mipmap is an ordered set of arrays representing the same image at progressively lower
-%% resolutions. If the texture has dimensions 2 n×2 m, there are max(n m)+1 mipmaps. The first
-%% mipmap is the original texture, with dimensions 2 n×2 m. Each subsequent mipmap has
-%% dimensions 2(k-1)×2(l-1), where 2 k×2 l are the dimensions of the previous mipmap, until either
-%% k=0 or l=0. At that point, subsequent mipmaps have dimension 1×2(l-1) or 2(k-1)×1 until
-%% the final mipmap, which has dimension 1×1. To define the mipmaps, call {@link gl:texImage1D/8}
-%% , {@link gl:texImage2D/9} , {@link gl:texImage3D/10} , {@link gl:copyTexImage1D/7} , or {@link gl:copyTexImage2D/8}
-%% with the `level' argument indicating the order of the mipmaps. Level 0 is the original
-%% texture; level max(n m) is the final 1×1 mipmap.
-%%
-%% `Params' supplies a function for minifying the texture as one of the following:
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEAREST': Returns the value of the texture element that is nearest (in Manhattan
-%% distance) to the specified texture coordinates.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINEAR': Returns the weighted average of the four texture elements that are
-%% closest to the specified texture coordinates. These can include items wrapped or repeated
-%% from other parts of a texture, depending on the values of `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S' and `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T'
-%% , and on the exact mapping.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEAREST_MIPMAP_NEAREST': Chooses the mipmap that most closely matches the size
-%% of the pixel being textured and uses the `?GL_NEAREST' criterion (the texture element
-%% closest to the specified texture coordinates) to produce a texture value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINEAR_MIPMAP_NEAREST': Chooses the mipmap that most closely matches the size
-%% of the pixel being textured and uses the `?GL_LINEAR' criterion (a weighted average
-%% of the four texture elements that are closest to the specified texture coordinates) to
-%% produce a texture value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEAREST_MIPMAP_LINEAR': Chooses the two mipmaps that most closely match the
-%% size of the pixel being textured and uses the `?GL_NEAREST' criterion (the texture
-%% element closest to the specified texture coordinates ) to produce a texture value from
-%% each mipmap. The final texture value is a weighted average of those two values.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINEAR_MIPMAP_LINEAR': Chooses the two mipmaps that most closely match the
-%% size of the pixel being textured and uses the `?GL_LINEAR' criterion (a weighted
-%% average of the texture elements that are closest to the specified texture coordinates)
-%% to produce a texture value from each mipmap. The final texture value is a weighted average
-%% of those two values.
-%%
-%% As more texture elements are sampled in the minification process, fewer aliasing artifacts
-%% will be apparent. While the `?GL_NEAREST' and `?GL_LINEAR' minification functions
-%% can be faster than the other four, they sample only one or multiple texture elements to
-%% determine the texture value of the pixel being rendered and can produce moire patterns
-%% or ragged transitions. The initial value of `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER' is `?GL_NEAREST_MIPMAP_LINEAR'
-%% .
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MAG_FILTER': The texture magnification function is used whenever the
-%% level-of-detail function used when sampling from the texture determines that the texture
-%% should be magified. It sets the texture magnification function to either `?GL_NEAREST'
-%% or `?GL_LINEAR' (see below). `?GL_NEAREST' is generally faster than `?GL_LINEAR'
-%% , but it can produce textured images with sharper edges because the transition between
-%% texture elements is not as smooth. The initial value of `?GL_TEXTURE_MAG_FILTER' is `?GL_LINEAR'
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEAREST': Returns the value of the texture element that is nearest (in Manhattan
-%% distance) to the specified texture coordinates.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINEAR': Returns the weighted average of the texture elements that are closest
-%% to the specified texture coordinates. These can include items wrapped or repeated from
-%% other parts of a texture, depending on the values of `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S' and `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T'
-%% , and on the exact mapping.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_LOD': Sets the minimum level-of-detail parameter. This floating-point
-%% value limits the selection of highest resolution mipmap (lowest mipmap level). The initial
-%% value is -1000.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MAX_LOD': Sets the maximum level-of-detail parameter. This floating-point
-%% value limits the selection of the lowest resolution mipmap (highest mipmap level). The
-%% initial value is 1000.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MAX_LEVEL': Sets the index of the highest defined mipmap level. This
-%% is an integer value. The initial value is 1000.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R': Sets the swizzle that will be applied to the r component
-%% of a texel before it is returned to the shader. Valid values for `Param' are `?GL_RED'
-%% , `?GL_GREEN', `?GL_BLUE', `?GL_ALPHA', `?GL_ZERO' and `?GL_ONE'.
-%% If `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R' is `?GL_RED', the value for r will be taken from
-%% the first channel of the fetched texel. If `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R' is `?GL_GREEN'
-%% , the value for r will be taken from the second channel of the fetched texel. If `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R'
-%% is `?GL_BLUE', the value for r will be taken from the third channel of the fetched
-%% texel. If `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R' is `?GL_ALPHA', the value for r will be taken
-%% from the fourth channel of the fetched texel. If `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R' is `?GL_ZERO'
-%% , the value for r will be subtituted with 0.0. If `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R' is `?GL_ONE'
-%% , the value for r will be subtituted with 1.0. The initial value is `?GL_RED'.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_G': Sets the swizzle that will be applied to the g component
-%% of a texel before it is returned to the shader. Valid values for `Param' and their
-%% effects are similar to those of `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R'. The initial value is `?GL_GREEN'
-%% .
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_B': Sets the swizzle that will be applied to the b component
-%% of a texel before it is returned to the shader. Valid values for `Param' and their
-%% effects are similar to those of `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R'. The initial value is `?GL_BLUE'
-%% .
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_A': Sets the swizzle that will be applied to the a component
-%% of a texel before it is returned to the shader. Valid values for `Param' and their
-%% effects are similar to those of `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R'. The initial value is `?GL_ALPHA'
-%% .
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_RGBA': Sets the swizzles that will be applied to the r, g,
-%% b, and a components of a texel before they are returned to the shader. Valid values for `Params'
-%% and their effects are similar to those of `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R', except that all
-%% channels are specified simultaneously. Setting the value of `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_RGBA'
-%% is equivalent (assuming no errors are generated) to setting the parameters of each of `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R'
-%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_G', `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_B', and `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_A'
-%% successively.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S': Sets the wrap parameter for texture coordinate s to either `?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE'
-%% , `?GL_CLAMP_TO_BORDER', `?GL_MIRRORED_REPEAT', or `?GL_REPEAT'. `?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE'
-%% causes s coordinates to be clamped to the range [(1 2/N) 1-(1 2/N)], where N is the size of the texture
-%% in the direction of clamping. `?GL_CLAMP_TO_BORDER' evaluates s coordinates in a
-%% similar manner to `?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE'. However, in cases where clamping would have
-%% occurred in `?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE' mode, the fetched texel data is substituted with
-%% the values specified by `?GL_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR'. `?GL_REPEAT' causes the
-%% integer part of the s coordinate to be ignored; the GL uses only the fractional part,
-%% thereby creating a repeating pattern. `?GL_MIRRORED_REPEAT' causes the s coordinate
-%% to be set to the fractional part of the texture coordinate if the integer part of s
-%% is even; if the integer part of s is odd, then the s texture coordinate is set to 1-
-%% frac(s), where frac(s) represents the fractional part of s. Initially, `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S'
-%% is set to `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T': Sets the wrap parameter for texture coordinate t to either `?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE'
-%% , `?GL_CLAMP_TO_BORDER', `?GL_MIRRORED_REPEAT', or `?GL_REPEAT'. See the
-%% discussion under `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S'. Initially, `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T' is set
-%% to `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_R': Sets the wrap parameter for texture coordinate r to either `?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE'
-%% , `?GL_CLAMP_TO_BORDER', `?GL_MIRRORED_REPEAT', or `?GL_REPEAT'. See the
-%% discussion under `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S'. Initially, `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_R' is set
-%% to `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTexParameter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texParameterf(Target, Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),Param :: float().
texParameterf(Target,Pname,Param) ->
cast(5258, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -6486,70 +2612,7 @@ texParameteriv(Target,Pname,Params) ->
%% rectangle, cube-mapped or cube-mapped array texturing, respectively. `Pname' accepts
%% the same symbols as {@link gl:texParameterf/3} , with the same interpretations:
%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MAG_FILTER': Returns the single-valued texture magnification filter,
-%% a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_LINEAR'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER': Returns the single-valued texture minification filter,
-%% a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_NEAREST_MIPMAP_LINEAR'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_LOD': Returns the single-valued texture minimum level-of-detail
-%% value. The initial value is -1000.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MAX_LOD': Returns the single-valued texture maximum level-of-detail
-%% value. The initial value is 1000.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BASE_LEVEL': Returns the single-valued base texture mipmap level. The
-%% initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MAX_LEVEL': Returns the single-valued maximum texture mipmap array
-%% level. The initial value is 1000.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_R': Returns the red component swizzle. The initial value is `?GL_RED'
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_G': Returns the green component swizzle. The initial value is `?GL_GREEN'
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_B': Returns the blue component swizzle. The initial value is `?GL_BLUE'
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_A': Returns the alpha component swizzle. The initial value is `?GL_ALPHA'
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_RGBA': Returns the component swizzle for all channels in a
-%% single query.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S': Returns the single-valued wrapping function for texture coordinate
-%% s, a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T': Returns the single-valued wrapping function for texture coordinate
-%% t, a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_R': Returns the single-valued wrapping function for texture coordinate
-%% r, a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR': Returns four integer or floating-point numbers that
-%% comprise the RGBA color of the texture border. Floating-point values are returned in the
-%% range [0 1]. Integer values are returned as a linear mapping of the internal floating-point
-%% representation such that 1.0 maps to the most positive representable integer and -1.0
-%% maps to the most negative representable integer. The initial value is (0, 0, 0, 0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_MODE': Returns a single-valued texture comparison mode, a symbolic
-%% constant. The initial value is `?GL_NONE'. See {@link gl:texParameterf/3} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_FUNC': Returns a single-valued texture comparison function,
-%% a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_LEQUAL'. See {@link gl:texParameterf/3} .
-%%
-%%
-%% In addition to the parameters that may be set with {@link gl:texParameterf/3} , ``gl:getTexParameter''
-%% accepts the following read-only parameters:
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT': Returns non-zero if the texture has an immutable
-%% format. Textures become immutable if their storage is specified with {@link gl:texStorage1D/4}
-%% , {@link gl:texStorage2D/5} or {@link gl:texStorage3D/6} . The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetTexParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetTexParameter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getTexParameterfv(Target, Pname) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getTexParameterfv(Target,Pname) ->
call(5262, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -6570,67 +2633,7 @@ getTexParameteriv(Target,Pname) ->
%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Z', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Z', or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP'
%% .
%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE', and `?GL_MAX_3D_TEXTURE_SIZE' are not really descriptive
-%% enough. It has to report the largest square texture image that can be accommodated with
-%% mipmaps and borders, but a long skinny texture, or a texture without mipmaps and borders,
-%% may easily fit in texture memory. The proxy targets allow the user to more accurately
-%% query whether the GL can accommodate a texture of a given configuration. If the texture
-%% cannot be accommodated, the texture state variables, which may be queried with ``gl:getTexLevelParameter''
-%% , are set to 0. If the texture can be accommodated, the texture state values will be set
-%% as they would be set for a non-proxy target.
-%%
-%% `Pname' specifies the texture parameter whose value or values will be returned.
-%%
-%% The accepted parameter names are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WIDTH': `Params' returns a single value, the width of the texture
-%% image. This value includes the border of the texture image. The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_HEIGHT': `Params' returns a single value, the height of the texture
-%% image. This value includes the border of the texture image. The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_DEPTH': `Params' returns a single value, the depth of the texture
-%% image. This value includes the border of the texture image. The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_INTERNAL_FORMAT': `Params' returns a single value, the internal
-%% format of the texture image.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_RED_TYPE',
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_GREEN_TYPE',
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BLUE_TYPE',
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_ALPHA_TYPE',
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_DEPTH_TYPE': The data type used to store the component. The types `?GL_NONE'
-%% , `?GL_SIGNED_NORMALIZED', `?GL_UNSIGNED_NORMALIZED', `?GL_FLOAT', `?GL_INT'
-%% , and `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT' may be returned to indicate signed normalized fixed-point,
-%% unsigned normalized fixed-point, floating-point, integer unnormalized, and unsigned integer
-%% unnormalized components, respectively.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_RED_SIZE',
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_GREEN_SIZE',
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BLUE_SIZE',
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_ALPHA_SIZE',
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_DEPTH_SIZE': The internal storage resolution of an individual component.
-%% The resolution chosen by the GL will be a close match for the resolution requested by
-%% the user with the component argument of {@link gl:texImage1D/8} , {@link gl:texImage2D/9} , {@link gl:texImage3D/10}
-%% , {@link gl:copyTexImage1D/7} , and {@link gl:copyTexImage2D/8} . The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPRESSED': `Params' returns a single boolean value indicating
-%% if the texture image is stored in a compressed internal format. The initiali value is `?GL_FALSE'
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPRESSED_IMAGE_SIZE': `Params' returns a single integer value,
-%% the number of unsigned bytes of the compressed texture image that would be returned from {@link gl:getCompressedTexImage/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetTexLevelParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetTexLevelParameter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getTexLevelParameterfv(Target, Level, Pname) -> {float()} when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getTexLevelParameterfv(Target,Level,Pname) ->
call(5264, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -6647,107 +2650,7 @@ getTexLevelParameteriv(Target,Level,Pname) ->
%% which texturing is enabled. To enable and disable one-dimensional texturing, call {@link gl:enable/1}
%% and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_TEXTURE_1D'.
%%
-%% Texture images are defined with ``gl:texImage1D''. The arguments describe the parameters
-%% of the texture image, such as width, width of the border, level-of-detail number (see {@link gl:texParameterf/3}
-%% ), and the internal resolution and format used to store the image. The last three arguments
-%% describe how the image is represented in memory.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_1D', no data is read from `Data' , but
-%% all of the texture image state is recalculated, checked for consistency, and checked against
-%% the implementation's capabilities. If the implementation cannot handle a texture of the
-%% requested texture size, it sets all of the image state to 0, but does not generate an
-%% error (see {@link gl:getError/0} ). To query for an entire mipmap array, use an image array
-%% level greater than or equal to 1.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_1D', data is read from `Data' as a sequence
-%% of signed or unsigned bytes, shorts, or longs, or single-precision floating-point values,
-%% depending on `Type' . These values are grouped into sets of one, two, three, or four
-%% values, depending on `Format' , to form elements. Each data byte is treated as eight
-%% 1-bit elements, with bit ordering determined by `?GL_UNPACK_LSB_FIRST' (see {@link gl:pixelStoref/2}
-%% ).
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% The first element corresponds to the left end of the texture array. Subsequent elements
-%% progress left-to-right through the remaining texels in the texture array. The final element
-%% corresponds to the right end of the texture array.
-%%
-%% `Format' determines the composition of each element in `Data' . It can assume
-%% one of these symbolic values:
-%%
-%% `?GL_RED': Each element is a single red component. The GL converts it to floating
-%% point and assembles it into an RGBA element by attaching 0 for green and blue, and 1 for
-%% alpha. Each component is then multiplied by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE',
-%% added to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS', and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_RG': Each element is a single red/green double The GL converts it to floating
-%% point and assembles it into an RGBA element by attaching 0 for blue, and 1 for alpha.
-%% Each component is then multiplied by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE', added
-%% to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS', and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGB'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BGR': Each element is an RGB triple. The GL converts it to floating point and
-%% assembles it into an RGBA element by attaching 1 for alpha. Each component is then multiplied
-%% by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE', added to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS',
-%% and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGBA'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BGRA': Each element contains all four components. Each component is multiplied
-%% by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE', added to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS',
-%% and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT': Each element is a single depth value. The GL converts it
-%% to floating point, multiplies by the signed scale factor `?GL_DEPTH_SCALE', adds
-%% the signed bias `?GL_DEPTH_BIAS', and clamps to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% If an application wants to store the texture at a certain resolution or in a certain
-%% format, it can request the resolution and format with `InternalFormat' . The GL will
-%% choose an internal representation that closely approximates that requested by `InternalFormat'
-%% , but it may not match exactly. (The representations specified by `?GL_RED', `?GL_RG'
-%% , `?GL_RGB' and `?GL_RGBA' must match exactly.)
-%%
-%% `InternalFormat' may be one of the base internal formats shown in Table 1, below
-%%
-%% `InternalFormat' may also be one of the sized internal formats shown in Table 2,
-%% below
-%%
-%% Finally, `InternalFormat' may also be one of the generic or compressed compressed
-%% texture formats shown in Table 3 below
-%%
-%% If the `InternalFormat' parameter is one of the generic compressed formats, `?GL_COMPRESSED_RED'
-%% , `?GL_COMPRESSED_RG', `?GL_COMPRESSED_RGB', or `?GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA',
-%% the GL will replace the internal format with the symbolic constant for a specific internal
-%% format and compress the texture before storage. If no corresponding internal format is
-%% available, or the GL can not compress that image for any reason, the internal format is
-%% instead replaced with a corresponding base internal format.
-%%
-%% If the `InternalFormat' parameter is `?GL_SRGB', `?GL_SRGB8', `?GL_SRGB_ALPHA'
-%% or `?GL_SRGB8_ALPHA8', the texture is treated as if the red, green, or blue components
-%% are encoded in the sRGB color space. Any alpha component is left unchanged. The conversion
-%% from the sRGB encoded component c s to a linear component c l is:
-%%
-%% c l={ c s/12.92if c s&amp;le; 0.04045( c s+0.055/1.055) 2.4if c s&gt; 0.04045
-%%
-%% Assume c s is the sRGB component in the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% Use the `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_1D' target to try out a resolution and format. The implementation
-%% will update and recompute its best match for the requested storage resolution and format.
-%% To then query this state, call {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3} . If the texture cannot
-%% be accommodated, texture state is set to 0.
-%%
-%% A one-component texture image uses only the red component of the RGBA color from `Data'
-%% . A two-component image uses the R and A values. A three-component image uses the R, G,
-%% and B values. A four-component image uses all of the RGBA components.
-%%
-%% Image-based shadowing can be enabled by comparing texture r coordinates to depth texture
-%% values to generate a boolean result. See {@link gl:texParameterf/3} for details on texture
-%% comparison.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexImage1D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTexImage1D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texImage1D(Target, Level, InternalFormat, Width, Border, Format, Type, Pixels) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),InternalFormat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Border :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Pixels :: offset()|mem().
texImage1D(Target,Level,InternalFormat,Width,Border,Format,Type,Pixels) when is_integer(Pixels) ->
cast(5266, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,InternalFormat:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Border:?GLint,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Pixels:?GLuint>>);
@@ -6759,117 +2662,7 @@ texImage1D(Target,Level,InternalFormat,Width,Border,Format,Type,Pixels) ->
%%
%% Texturing allows elements of an image array to be read by shaders.
%%
-%% To define texture images, call ``gl:texImage2D''. The arguments describe the parameters
-%% of the texture image, such as height, width, width of the border, level-of-detail number
-%% (see {@link gl:texParameterf/3} ), and number of color components provided. The last three
-%% arguments describe how the image is represented in memory.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_2D', `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY', `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP'
-%% , or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE', no data is read from `Data' , but all of
-%% the texture image state is recalculated, checked for consistency, and checked against
-%% the implementation's capabilities. If the implementation cannot handle a texture of the
-%% requested texture size, it sets all of the image state to 0, but does not generate an
-%% error (see {@link gl:getError/0} ). To query for an entire mipmap array, use an image array
-%% level greater than or equal to 1.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_2D', `?GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE' or one of the `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP'
-%% targets, data is read from `Data' as a sequence of signed or unsigned bytes, shorts,
-%% or longs, or single-precision floating-point values, depending on `Type' . These values
-%% are grouped into sets of one, two, three, or four values, depending on `Format' ,
-%% to form elements. Each data byte is treated as eight 1-bit elements, with bit ordering
-%% determined by `?GL_UNPACK_LSB_FIRST' (see {@link gl:pixelStoref/2} ).
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY', data is interpreted as an array of one-dimensional
-%% images.
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% The first element corresponds to the lower left corner of the texture image. Subsequent
-%% elements progress left-to-right through the remaining texels in the lowest row of the
-%% texture image, and then in successively higher rows of the texture image. The final element
-%% corresponds to the upper right corner of the texture image.
-%%
-%% `Format' determines the composition of each element in `Data' . It can assume
-%% one of these symbolic values:
-%%
-%% `?GL_RED': Each element is a single red component. The GL converts it to floating
-%% point and assembles it into an RGBA element by attaching 0 for green and blue, and 1 for
-%% alpha. Each component is then multiplied by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE',
-%% added to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS', and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_RG': Each element is a red/green double. The GL converts it to floating point
-%% and assembles it into an RGBA element by attaching 0 for blue, and 1 for alpha. Each component
-%% is then multiplied by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE', added to the signed
-%% bias `?GL_c_BIAS', and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGB'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BGR': Each element is an RGB triple. The GL converts it to floating point and
-%% assembles it into an RGBA element by attaching 1 for alpha. Each component is then multiplied
-%% by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE', added to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS',
-%% and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGBA'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BGRA': Each element contains all four components. Each component is multiplied
-%% by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE', added to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS',
-%% and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT': Each element is a single depth value. The GL converts it
-%% to floating point, multiplies by the signed scale factor `?GL_DEPTH_SCALE', adds
-%% the signed bias `?GL_DEPTH_BIAS', and clamps to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_DEPTH_STENCIL': Each element is a pair of depth and stencil values. The depth
-%% component of the pair is interpreted as in `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT'. The stencil component
-%% is interpreted based on specified the depth + stencil internal format.
-%%
-%% If an application wants to store the texture at a certain resolution or in a certain
-%% format, it can request the resolution and format with `InternalFormat' . The GL will
-%% choose an internal representation that closely approximates that requested by `InternalFormat'
-%% , but it may not match exactly. (The representations specified by `?GL_RED', `?GL_RG'
-%% , `?GL_RGB', and `?GL_RGBA' must match exactly.)
-%%
-%% `InternalFormat' may be one of the base internal formats shown in Table 1, below
-%%
-%% `InternalFormat' may also be one of the sized internal formats shown in Table 2,
-%% below
-%%
-%% Finally, `InternalFormat' may also be one of the generic or compressed compressed
-%% texture formats shown in Table 3 below
-%%
-%% If the `InternalFormat' parameter is one of the generic compressed formats, `?GL_COMPRESSED_RED'
-%% , `?GL_COMPRESSED_RG', `?GL_COMPRESSED_RGB', or `?GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA',
-%% the GL will replace the internal format with the symbolic constant for a specific internal
-%% format and compress the texture before storage. If no corresponding internal format is
-%% available, or the GL can not compress that image for any reason, the internal format is
-%% instead replaced with a corresponding base internal format.
-%%
-%% If the `InternalFormat' parameter is `?GL_SRGB', `?GL_SRGB8', `?GL_SRGB_ALPHA'
-%% , or `?GL_SRGB8_ALPHA8', the texture is treated as if the red, green, or blue components
-%% are encoded in the sRGB color space. Any alpha component is left unchanged. The conversion
-%% from the sRGB encoded component c s to a linear component c l is:
-%%
-%% c l={ c s/12.92if c s&amp;le; 0.04045( c s+0.055/1.055) 2.4if c s&gt; 0.04045
-%%
-%% Assume c s is the sRGB component in the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% Use the `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_2D', `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY', `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE'
-%% , or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP' target to try out a resolution and format. The
-%% implementation will update and recompute its best match for the requested storage resolution
-%% and format. To then query this state, call {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3} . If the texture
-%% cannot be accommodated, texture state is set to 0.
-%%
-%% A one-component texture image uses only the red component of the RGBA color extracted
-%% from `Data' . A two-component image uses the R and G values. A three-component image
-%% uses the R, G, and B values. A four-component image uses all of the RGBA components.
-%%
-%% Image-based shadowing can be enabled by comparing texture r coordinates to depth texture
-%% values to generate a boolean result. See {@link gl:texParameterf/3} for details on texture
-%% comparison.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexImage2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTexImage2D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texImage2D(Target, Level, InternalFormat, Width, Height, Border, Format, Type, Pixels) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),InternalFormat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Border :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Pixels :: offset()|mem().
texImage2D(Target,Level,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Border,Format,Type,Pixels) when is_integer(Pixels) ->
cast(5268, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,InternalFormat:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Border:?GLint,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Pixels:?GLuint>>);
@@ -6888,33 +2681,7 @@ texImage2D(Target,Level,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Border,Format,Type,Pixels) -
%% array. See the reference page for {@link gl:texImage1D/8} for a description of the acceptable
%% values for the `Format' and `Type' parameters, respectively.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is requested, `Img' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% To understand the operation of ``gl:getTexImage'', consider the selected internal four-component
-%% texture image to be an RGBA color buffer the size of the image. The semantics of ``gl:getTexImage''
-%% are then identical to those of {@link gl:readPixels/7} , with the exception that no pixel
-%% transfer operations are performed, when called with the same `Format' and `Type' ,
-%% with `x' and `y' set to 0, `width' set to the width of the texture image
-%% and `height' set to 1 for 1D images, or to the height of the texture image for 2D
-%% images.
-%%
-%% If the selected texture image does not contain four components, the following mappings
-%% are applied. Single-component textures are treated as RGBA buffers with red set to the
-%% single-component value, green set to 0, blue set to 0, and alpha set to 1. Two-component
-%% textures are treated as RGBA buffers with red set to the value of component zero, alpha
-%% set to the value of component one, and green and blue set to 0. Finally, three-component
-%% textures are treated as RGBA buffers with red set to component zero, green set to component
-%% one, blue set to component two, and alpha set to 1.
-%%
-%% To determine the required size of `Img' , use {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3} to
-%% determine the dimensions of the internal texture image, then scale the required number
-%% of pixels by the storage required for each pixel, based on `Format' and `Type' .
-%% Be sure to take the pixel storage parameters into account, especially `?GL_PACK_ALIGNMENT'
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetTexImage.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetTexImage.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getTexImage(Target, Level, Format, Type, Pixels) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Pixels :: mem().
getTexImage(Target,Level,Format,Type,Pixels) ->
send_bin(Pixels),
@@ -6926,13 +2693,7 @@ getTexImage(Target,Level,Format,Type,Pixels) ->
%% that the names form a contiguous set of integers; however, it is guaranteed that none
%% of the returned names was in use immediately before the call to ``gl:genTextures''.
%%
-%% The generated textures have no dimensionality; they assume the dimensionality of the
-%% texture target to which they are first bound (see {@link gl:bindTexture/2} ).
-%%
-%% Texture names returned by a call to ``gl:genTextures'' are not returned by subsequent
-%% calls, unless they are first deleted with {@link gl:deleteTextures/1} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenTextures.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGenTextures.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec genTextures(N) -> [integer()] when N :: integer().
genTextures(N) ->
call(5271, <<N:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -6944,10 +2705,7 @@ genTextures(N) ->
%% for reuse (for example by {@link gl:genTextures/1} ). If a texture that is currently bound
%% is deleted, the binding reverts to 0 (the default texture).
%%
-%% ``gl:deleteTextures'' silently ignores 0's and names that do not correspond to existing
-%% textures.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteTextures.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteTextures.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteTextures(Textures) -> 'ok' when Textures :: [integer()].
deleteTextures(Textures) ->
TexturesLen = length(Textures),
@@ -6964,43 +2722,7 @@ deleteTextures(Textures) ->
%% When a texture is bound to a target, the previous binding for that target is automatically
%% broken.
%%
-%% Texture names are unsigned integers. The value zero is reserved to represent the default
-%% texture for each texture target. Texture names and the corresponding texture contents
-%% are local to the shared object space of the current GL rendering context; two rendering
-%% contexts share texture names only if they explicitly enable sharing between contexts through
-%% the appropriate GL windows interfaces functions.
-%%
-%% You must use {@link gl:genTextures/1} to generate a set of new texture names.
-%%
-%% When a texture is first bound, it assumes the specified target: A texture first bound
-%% to `?GL_TEXTURE_1D' becomes one-dimensional texture, a texture first bound to `?GL_TEXTURE_2D'
-%% becomes two-dimensional texture, a texture first bound to `?GL_TEXTURE_3D' becomes
-%% three-dimensional texture, a texture first bound to `?GL_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY' becomes
-%% one-dimensional array texture, a texture first bound to `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY' becomes
-%% two-dimensional arary texture, a texture first bound to `?GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE' becomes
-%% rectangle texture, a, texture first bound to `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP' becomes a cube-mapped
-%% texture, a texture first bound to `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE' becomes a two-dimensional
-%% multisampled texture, and a texture first bound to `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY'
-%% becomes a two-dimensional multisampled array texture. The state of a one-dimensional texture
-%% immediately after it is first bound is equivalent to the state of the default `?GL_TEXTURE_1D'
-%% at GL initialization, and similarly for the other texture types.
-%%
-%% While a texture is bound, GL operations on the target to which it is bound affect the
-%% bound texture, and queries of the target to which it is bound return state from the bound
-%% texture. In effect, the texture targets become aliases for the textures currently bound
-%% to them, and the texture name zero refers to the default textures that were bound to them
-%% at initialization.
-%%
-%% A texture binding created with ``gl:bindTexture'' remains active until a different
-%% texture is bound to the same target, or until the bound texture is deleted with {@link gl:deleteTextures/1}
-%% .
-%%
-%% Once created, a named texture may be re-bound to its same original target as often as
-%% needed. It is usually much faster to use ``gl:bindTexture'' to bind an existing named
-%% texture to one of the texture targets than it is to reload the texture image using {@link gl:texImage1D/8}
-%% , {@link gl:texImage2D/9} , {@link gl:texImage3D/10} or another similar function.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindTexture.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindTexture.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindTexture(Target, Texture) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Texture :: integer().
bindTexture(Target,Texture) ->
cast(5273, <<Target:?GLenum,Texture:?GLuint>>).
@@ -7010,26 +2732,7 @@ bindTexture(Target,Texture) ->
%% ``gl:prioritizeTextures'' assigns the `N' texture priorities given in `Priorities'
%% to the `N' textures named in `Textures' .
%%
-%% The GL establishes a ``working set'' of textures that are resident in texture memory.
-%% These textures may be bound to a texture target much more efficiently than textures that
-%% are not resident. By specifying a priority for each texture, ``gl:prioritizeTextures''
-%% allows applications to guide the GL implementation in determining which textures should
-%% be resident.
-%%
-%% The priorities given in `Priorities' are clamped to the range [0 1] before they are
-%% assigned. 0 indicates the lowest priority; textures with priority 0 are least likely to
-%% be resident. 1 indicates the highest priority; textures with priority 1 are most likely
-%% to be resident. However, textures are not guaranteed to be resident until they are used.
-%%
-%% ``gl:prioritizeTextures'' silently ignores attempts to prioritize texture 0 or any texture
-%% name that does not correspond to an existing texture.
-%%
-%% ``gl:prioritizeTextures'' does not require that any of the textures named by `Textures'
-%% be bound to a texture target. {@link gl:texParameterf/3} may also be used to set a texture's
-%% priority, but only if the texture is currently bound. This is the only way to set the
-%% priority of a default texture.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPrioritizeTextures.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glPrioritizeTextures.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec prioritizeTextures(Textures, Priorities) -> 'ok' when Textures :: [integer()],Priorities :: [clamp()].
prioritizeTextures(Textures,Priorities) ->
TexturesLen = length(Textures),
@@ -7044,20 +2747,7 @@ prioritizeTextures(Textures,Priorities) ->
%% textures can be bound to a texture target much more efficiently than textures that are
%% not resident.
%%
-%% ``gl:areTexturesResident'' queries the texture residence status of the `N' textures
-%% named by the elements of `Textures' . If all the named textures are resident, ``gl:areTexturesResident''
-%% returns `?GL_TRUE', and the contents of `Residences' are undisturbed. If not
-%% all the named textures are resident, ``gl:areTexturesResident'' returns `?GL_FALSE',
-%% and detailed status is returned in the `N' elements of `Residences' . If an element
-%% of `Residences' is `?GL_TRUE', then the texture named by the corresponding element
-%% of `Textures' is resident.
-%%
-%% The residence status of a single bound texture may also be queried by calling {@link gl:getTexParameterfv/2}
-%% with the `target' argument set to the target to which the texture is bound, and
-%% the `pname' argument set to `?GL_TEXTURE_RESIDENT'. This is the only way that
-%% the residence status of a default texture can be queried.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glAreTexturesResident.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glAreTexturesResident.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec areTexturesResident(Textures) -> {0|1,Residences :: [0|1]} when Textures :: [integer()].
areTexturesResident(Textures) ->
TexturesLen = length(Textures),
@@ -7070,17 +2760,14 @@ areTexturesResident(Textures) ->
%% a texture. If `Texture' is zero, or is a non-zero value that is not currently the
%% name of a texture, or if an error occurs, ``gl:isTexture'' returns `?GL_FALSE'.
%%
-%% A name returned by {@link gl:genTextures/1} , but not yet associated with a texture by
-%% calling {@link gl:bindTexture/2} , is not the name of a texture.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsTexture.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsTexture.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isTexture(Texture) -> 0|1 when Texture :: integer().
isTexture(Texture) ->
call(5276, <<Texture:?GLuint>>).
%% @doc glTexSubImage
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexSubImage.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec texSubImage1D(Target, Level, Xoffset, Width, Format, Type, Pixels) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Xoffset :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Pixels :: offset()|mem().
texSubImage1D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Width,Format,Type,Pixels) when is_integer(Pixels) ->
cast(5277, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Xoffset:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Pixels:?GLuint>>);
@@ -7090,7 +2777,7 @@ texSubImage1D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Width,Format,Type,Pixels) ->
%% @doc glTexSubImage
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexSubImage.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec texSubImage2D(Target, Level, Xoffset, Yoffset, Width, Height, Format, Type, Pixels) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Xoffset :: integer(),Yoffset :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Pixels :: offset()|mem().
texSubImage2D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,Width,Height,Format,Type,Pixels) when is_integer(Pixels) ->
cast(5279, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Xoffset:?GLint,Yoffset:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Pixels:?GLuint>>);
@@ -7103,30 +2790,7 @@ texSubImage2D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,Width,Height,Format,Type,Pixels) ->
%% ``gl:copyTexImage1D'' defines a one-dimensional texture image with pixels from the current
%% `?GL_READ_BUFFER'.
%%
-%% The screen-aligned pixel row with left corner at (x y) and with a length of width+2(border) defines
-%% the texture array at the mipmap level specified by `Level' . `Internalformat'
-%% specifies the internal format of the texture array.
-%%
-%% The pixels in the row are processed exactly as if {@link gl:readPixels/7} had been called,
-%% but the process stops just before final conversion. At this point all pixel component
-%% values are clamped to the range [0 1] and then converted to the texture's internal format
-%% for storage in the texel array.
-%%
-%% Pixel ordering is such that lower x screen coordinates correspond to lower texture
-%% coordinates.
-%%
-%% If any of the pixels within the specified row of the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER' are
-%% outside the window associated with the current rendering context, then the values obtained
-%% for those pixels are undefined.
-%%
-%% ``gl:copyTexImage1D'' defines a one-dimensional texture image with pixels from the current
-%% `?GL_READ_BUFFER'.
-%%
-%% When `Internalformat' is one of the sRGB types, the GL does not automatically convert
-%% the source pixels to the sRGB color space. In this case, the ``gl:pixelMap'' function
-%% can be used to accomplish the conversion.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyTexImage1D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCopyTexImage1D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyTexImage1D(Target, Level, Internalformat, X, Y, Width, Border) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Internalformat :: enum(),X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Border :: integer().
copyTexImage1D(Target,Level,Internalformat,X,Y,Width,Border) ->
cast(5281, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Internalformat:?GLenum,X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Border:?GLint>>).
@@ -7136,28 +2800,7 @@ copyTexImage1D(Target,Level,Internalformat,X,Y,Width,Border) ->
%% ``gl:copyTexImage2D'' defines a two-dimensional texture image, or cube-map texture image
%% with pixels from the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER'.
%%
-%% The screen-aligned pixel rectangle with lower left corner at ( `X' , `Y' ) and
-%% with a width of width+2(border) and a height of height+2(border) defines the texture array at the mipmap
-%% level specified by `Level' . `Internalformat' specifies the internal format of
-%% the texture array.
-%%
-%% The pixels in the rectangle are processed exactly as if {@link gl:readPixels/7} had been
-%% called, but the process stops just before final conversion. At this point all pixel component
-%% values are clamped to the range [0 1] and then converted to the texture's internal format
-%% for storage in the texel array.
-%%
-%% Pixel ordering is such that lower x and y screen coordinates correspond to lower s
-%% and t texture coordinates.
-%%
-%% If any of the pixels within the specified rectangle of the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER'
-%% are outside the window associated with the current rendering context, then the values
-%% obtained for those pixels are undefined.
-%%
-%% When `Internalformat' is one of the sRGB types, the GL does not automatically convert
-%% the source pixels to the sRGB color space. In this case, the ``gl:pixelMap'' function
-%% can be used to accomplish the conversion.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyTexImage2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCopyTexImage2D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyTexImage2D(Target, Level, Internalformat, X, Y, Width, Height, Border) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Internalformat :: enum(),X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Border :: integer().
copyTexImage2D(Target,Level,Internalformat,X,Y,Width,Height,Border) ->
cast(5282, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Internalformat:?GLenum,X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Border:?GLint>>).
@@ -7168,25 +2811,7 @@ copyTexImage2D(Target,Level,Internalformat,X,Y,Width,Height,Border) ->
%% pixels from the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER' (rather than from main memory, as is the
%% case for {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7} ).
%%
-%% The screen-aligned pixel row with left corner at ( `X' , `Y' ), and with length `Width'
-%% replaces the portion of the texture array with x indices `Xoffset' through xoffset
-%% +width-1, inclusive. The destination in the texture array may not include any texels outside
-%% the texture array as it was originally specified.
-%%
-%% The pixels in the row are processed exactly as if {@link gl:readPixels/7} had been called,
-%% but the process stops just before final conversion. At this point, all pixel component
-%% values are clamped to the range [0 1] and then converted to the texture's internal format
-%% for storage in the texel array.
-%%
-%% It is not an error to specify a subtexture with zero width, but such a specification
-%% has no effect. If any of the pixels within the specified row of the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER'
-%% are outside the read window associated with the current rendering context, then the values
-%% obtained for those pixels are undefined.
-%%
-%% No change is made to the `internalformat', `width', or `border' parameters
-%% of the specified texture array or to texel values outside the specified subregion.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyTexSubImage1D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCopyTexSubImage1D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyTexSubImage1D(Target, Level, Xoffset, X, Y, Width) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Xoffset :: integer(),X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer().
copyTexSubImage1D(Target,Level,Xoffset,X,Y,Width) ->
cast(5283, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Xoffset:?GLint,X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -7197,36 +2822,14 @@ copyTexSubImage1D(Target,Level,Xoffset,X,Y,Width) ->
%% image or cube-map texture image with pixels from the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER' (rather
%% than from main memory, as is the case for {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7} ).
%%
-%% The screen-aligned pixel rectangle with lower left corner at (x y) and with width `Width'
-%% and height `Height' replaces the portion of the texture array with x indices `Xoffset'
-%% through xoffset+width-1, inclusive, and y indices `Yoffset' through yoffset+height
-%% -1, inclusive, at the mipmap level specified by `Level' .
-%%
-%% The pixels in the rectangle are processed exactly as if {@link gl:readPixels/7} had been
-%% called, but the process stops just before final conversion. At this point, all pixel component
-%% values are clamped to the range [0 1] and then converted to the texture's internal format
-%% for storage in the texel array.
-%%
-%% The destination rectangle in the texture array may not include any texels outside the
-%% texture array as it was originally specified. It is not an error to specify a subtexture
-%% with zero width or height, but such a specification has no effect.
-%%
-%% If any of the pixels within the specified rectangle of the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER'
-%% are outside the read window associated with the current rendering context, then the values
-%% obtained for those pixels are undefined.
-%%
-%% No change is made to the `internalformat', `width', `height', or `border'
-%% parameters of the specified texture array or to texel values outside the specified subregion.
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyTexSubImage2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCopyTexSubImage2D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyTexSubImage2D(Target, Level, Xoffset, Yoffset, X, Y, Width, Height) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Xoffset :: integer(),Yoffset :: integer(),X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer().
copyTexSubImage2D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,X,Y,Width,Height) ->
cast(5284, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Xoffset:?GLint,Yoffset:?GLint,X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glMap
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMap.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec map1d(Target, U1, U2, Stride, Order, Points) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),U1 :: float(),U2 :: float(),Stride :: integer(),Order :: integer(),Points :: binary().
map1d(Target,U1,U2,Stride,Order,Points) ->
send_bin(Points),
@@ -7234,7 +2837,7 @@ map1d(Target,U1,U2,Stride,Order,Points) ->
%% @doc glMap
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMap.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec map1f(Target, U1, U2, Stride, Order, Points) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),U1 :: float(),U2 :: float(),Stride :: integer(),Order :: integer(),Points :: binary().
map1f(Target,U1,U2,Stride,Order,Points) ->
send_bin(Points),
@@ -7242,7 +2845,7 @@ map1f(Target,U1,U2,Stride,Order,Points) ->
%% @doc glMap
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMap.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec map2d(Target, U1, U2, Ustride, Uorder, V1, V2, Vstride, Vorder, Points) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),U1 :: float(),U2 :: float(),Ustride :: integer(),Uorder :: integer(),V1 :: float(),V2 :: float(),Vstride :: integer(),Vorder :: integer(),Points :: binary().
map2d(Target,U1,U2,Ustride,Uorder,V1,V2,Vstride,Vorder,Points) ->
send_bin(Points),
@@ -7250,7 +2853,7 @@ map2d(Target,U1,U2,Ustride,Uorder,V1,V2,Vstride,Vorder,Points) ->
%% @doc glMap
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMap.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec map2f(Target, U1, U2, Ustride, Uorder, V1, V2, Vstride, Vorder, Points) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),U1 :: float(),U2 :: float(),Ustride :: integer(),Uorder :: integer(),V1 :: float(),V2 :: float(),Vstride :: integer(),Vorder :: integer(),Points :: binary().
map2f(Target,U1,U2,Ustride,Uorder,V1,V2,Vstride,Vorder,Points) ->
send_bin(Points),
@@ -7262,31 +2865,7 @@ map2f(Target,U1,U2,Ustride,Uorder,V1,V2,Vstride,Vorder,Points) ->
%% parameters. `Target' chooses a map, `Query' selects a specific parameter, and `V'
%% points to storage where the values will be returned.
%%
-%% The acceptable values for the `Target' parameter are described in the {@link gl:map1d/6}
-%% and {@link gl:map1d/6} reference pages.
-%%
-%% `Query' can assume the following values:
-%%
-%% `?GL_COEFF': `V' returns the control points for the evaluator function. One-dimensional
-%% evaluators return order control points, and two-dimensional evaluators return uorder×vorder
-%% control points. Each control point consists of one, two, three, or four integer, single-precision
-%% floating-point, or double-precision floating-point values, depending on the type of the
-%% evaluator. The GL returns two-dimensional control points in row-major order, incrementing
-%% the uorder index quickly and the vorder index after each row. Integer values, when
-%% requested, are computed by rounding the internal floating-point values to the nearest
-%% integer values.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ORDER': `V' returns the order of the evaluator function. One-dimensional
-%% evaluators return a single value, order. The initial value is 1. Two-dimensional evaluators
-%% return two values, uorder and vorder. The initial value is 1,1.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DOMAIN': `V' returns the linear u and v mapping parameters. One-dimensional
-%% evaluators return two values, u1 and u2, as specified by {@link gl:map1d/6} . Two-dimensional
-%% evaluators return four values ( u1, u2, v1, and v2) as specified by {@link gl:map1d/6} .
-%% Integer values, when requested, are computed by rounding the internal floating-point values
-%% to the nearest integer values.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetMap.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetMap.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getMapdv(Target, Query, V) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Query :: enum(),V :: mem().
getMapdv(Target,Query,V) ->
send_bin(V),
@@ -7313,45 +2892,7 @@ getMapiv(Target,Query,V) ->
%% To define a map, call {@link gl:map1d/6} and {@link gl:map1d/6} ; to enable and disable it,
%% call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1} .
%%
-%% When one of the ``gl:evalCoord'' commands is issued, all currently enabled maps of
-%% the indicated dimension are evaluated. Then, for each enabled map, it is as if the corresponding
-%% GL command had been issued with the computed value. That is, if `?GL_MAP1_INDEX' or `?GL_MAP2_INDEX'
-%% is enabled, a {@link gl:indexd/1} command is simulated. If `?GL_MAP1_COLOR_4' or `?GL_MAP2_COLOR_4'
-%% is enabled, a {@link gl:color3b/3} command is simulated. If `?GL_MAP1_NORMAL' or `?GL_MAP2_NORMAL'
-%% is enabled, a normal vector is produced, and if any of `?GL_MAP1_TEXTURE_COORD_1', `?GL_MAP1_TEXTURE_COORD_2'
-%% , `?GL_MAP1_TEXTURE_COORD_3', `?GL_MAP1_TEXTURE_COORD_4', `?GL_MAP2_TEXTURE_COORD_1'
-%% , `?GL_MAP2_TEXTURE_COORD_2', `?GL_MAP2_TEXTURE_COORD_3', or `?GL_MAP2_TEXTURE_COORD_4'
-%% is enabled, then an appropriate {@link gl:texCoord1d/1} command is simulated.
-%%
-%% For color, color index, normal, and texture coordinates the GL uses evaluated values
-%% instead of current values for those evaluations that are enabled, and current values otherwise,
-%% However, the evaluated values do not update the current values. Thus, if {@link gl:vertex2d/2}
-%% commands are interspersed with ``gl:evalCoord'' commands, the color, normal, and texture
-%% coordinates associated with the {@link gl:vertex2d/2} commands are not affected by the values
-%% generated by the ``gl:evalCoord'' commands, but only by the most recent {@link gl:color3b/3}
-%% , {@link gl:indexd/1} , {@link gl:normal3b/3} , and {@link gl:texCoord1d/1} commands.
-%%
-%% No commands are issued for maps that are not enabled. If more than one texture evaluation
-%% is enabled for a particular dimension (for example, `?GL_MAP2_TEXTURE_COORD_1' and `?GL_MAP2_TEXTURE_COORD_2'
-%% ), then only the evaluation of the map that produces the larger number of coordinates
-%% (in this case, `?GL_MAP2_TEXTURE_COORD_2') is carried out. `?GL_MAP1_VERTEX_4'
-%% overrides `?GL_MAP1_VERTEX_3', and `?GL_MAP2_VERTEX_4' overrides `?GL_MAP2_VERTEX_3'
-%% , in the same manner. If neither a three- nor a four-component vertex map is enabled for
-%% the specified dimension, the ``gl:evalCoord'' command is ignored.
-%%
-%% If you have enabled automatic normal generation, by calling {@link gl:enable/1} with argument
-%% `?GL_AUTO_NORMAL', ``gl:evalCoord2'' generates surface normals analytically, regardless
-%% of the contents or enabling of the `?GL_MAP2_NORMAL' map. Let
-%%
-%% m=((&amp;PartialD; p)/(&amp;PartialD; u))×((&amp;PartialD; p)/(&amp;PartialD; v))
-%%
-%% Then the generated normal n is n=m/(||m||)
-%%
-%% If automatic normal generation is disabled, the corresponding normal map `?GL_MAP2_NORMAL'
-%% , if enabled, is used to produce a normal. If neither automatic normal generation nor
-%% a normal map is enabled, no normal is generated for ``gl:evalCoord2'' commands.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glEvalCoord.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glEvalCoord.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec evalCoord1d(U) -> 'ok' when U :: float().
evalCoord1d(U) ->
cast(5292, <<U:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -7397,31 +2938,7 @@ evalCoord2fv({U,V}) -> evalCoord2f(U,V).
%% the integer domain of a one- or two-dimensional grid, whose range is the domain of the
%% evaluation maps specified by {@link gl:map1d/6} and {@link gl:map1d/6} .
%%
-%% ``gl:mapGrid1'' and ``gl:mapGrid2'' specify the linear grid mappings between the i
-%% (or i and j) integer grid coordinates, to the u (or u and v) floating-point
-%% evaluation map coordinates. See {@link gl:map1d/6} and {@link gl:map1d/6} for details of how
-%% u and v coordinates are evaluated.
-%%
-%% ``gl:mapGrid1'' specifies a single linear mapping such that integer grid coordinate
-%% 0 maps exactly to `U1' , and integer grid coordinate `Un' maps exactly to `U2'
-%% . All other integer grid coordinates i are mapped so that
-%%
-%% u=i(u2-u1)/un+u1
-%%
-%% ``gl:mapGrid2'' specifies two such linear mappings. One maps integer grid coordinate
-%% i=0 exactly to `U1' , and integer grid coordinate i=un exactly to `U2' . The
-%% other maps integer grid coordinate j=0 exactly to `V1' , and integer grid coordinate
-%% j=vn exactly to `V2' . Other integer grid coordinates i and j are mapped such
-%% that
-%%
-%% u=i(u2-u1)/un+u1
-%%
-%% v=j(v2-v1)/vn+v1
-%%
-%% The mappings specified by ``gl:mapGrid'' are used identically by {@link gl:evalMesh1/3}
-%% and {@link gl:evalPoint1/1} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMapGrid.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glMapGrid.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec mapGrid1d(Un, U1, U2) -> 'ok' when Un :: integer(),U1 :: float(),U2 :: float().
mapGrid1d(Un,U1,U2) ->
cast(5296, <<Un:?GLint,0:32,U1:?GLdouble,U2:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -7452,23 +2969,7 @@ mapGrid2f(Un,U1,U2,Vn,V1,V2) ->
%% . Calling ``gl:evalPoint1'' is equivalent to calling glEvalCoord1( i.&amp;Delta; u+u
%% 1 ); where &amp;Delta; u=(u 2-u 1)/n
%%
-%% and n, u 1, and u 2 are the arguments to the most recent {@link gl:mapGrid1d/3} command.
-%% The one absolute numeric requirement is that if i=n, then the value computed from i.&amp;Delta;
-%% u+u 1 is exactly u 2.
-%%
-%% In the two-dimensional case, ``gl:evalPoint2'', let
-%%
-%% &amp;Delta; u=(u 2-u 1)/n
-%%
-%% &amp;Delta; v=(v 2-v 1)/m
-%%
-%% where n, u 1, u 2, m, v 1, and v 2 are the arguments to the most recent {@link gl:mapGrid1d/3}
-%% command. Then the ``gl:evalPoint2'' command is equivalent to calling glEvalCoord2( i.
-%% &amp;Delta; u+u 1, j.&amp;Delta; v+v 1 ); The only absolute numeric requirements are
-%% that if i=n, then the value computed from i.&amp;Delta; u+u 1 is exactly u 2, and
-%% if j=m, then the value computed from j.&amp;Delta; v+v 1 is exactly v 2.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glEvalPoint.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glEvalPoint.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec evalPoint1(I) -> 'ok' when I :: integer().
evalPoint1(I) ->
cast(5300, <<I:?GLint>>).
@@ -7487,53 +2988,7 @@ evalPoint2(I,J) ->
%% evaluation maps specified by {@link gl:map1d/6} and {@link gl:map1d/6} . `Mode' determines
%% whether the resulting vertices are connected as points, lines, or filled polygons.
%%
-%% In the one-dimensional case, ``gl:evalMesh1'', the mesh is generated as if the following
-%% code fragment were executed:
-%%
-%% glBegin( `Type' ); for ( i = `I1' ; i &lt;= `I2' ; i += 1 ) glEvalCoord1(
-%% i.&amp;Delta; u+u 1 ); glEnd(); where
-%%
-%% &amp;Delta; u=(u 2-u 1)/n
-%%
-%% and n, u 1, and u 2 are the arguments to the most recent {@link gl:mapGrid1d/3} command.
-%% `type' is `?GL_POINTS' if `Mode' is `?GL_POINT', or `?GL_LINES'
-%% if `Mode' is `?GL_LINE'.
-%%
-%% The one absolute numeric requirement is that if i=n, then the value computed from i.&amp;Delta;
-%% u+u 1 is exactly u 2.
-%%
-%% In the two-dimensional case, ``gl:evalMesh2'', let .cp &amp;Delta; u=(u 2-u 1)/n
-%%
-%% &amp;Delta; v=(v 2-v 1)/m
-%%
-%% where n, u 1, u 2, m, v 1, and v 2 are the arguments to the most recent {@link gl:mapGrid1d/3}
-%% command. Then, if `Mode' is `?GL_FILL', the ``gl:evalMesh2'' command is equivalent
-%% to:
-%%
-%% for ( j = `J1' ; j &lt; `J2' ; j += 1 ) { glBegin( GL_QUAD_STRIP ); for ( i = `I1'
-%% ; i &lt;= `I2' ; i += 1 ) { glEvalCoord2( i.&amp;Delta; u+u 1, j.&amp;Delta; v+v 1
-%% ); glEvalCoord2( i.&amp;Delta; u+u 1,(j+1).&amp;Delta; v+v 1 ); } glEnd(); }
-%%
-%% If `Mode' is `?GL_LINE', then a call to ``gl:evalMesh2'' is equivalent to:
-%%
-%% for ( j = `J1' ; j &lt;= `J2' ; j += 1 ) { glBegin( GL_LINE_STRIP ); for ( i = `I1'
-%% ; i &lt;= `I2' ; i += 1 ) glEvalCoord2( i.&amp;Delta; u+u 1, j.&amp;Delta; v+v 1
-%% ); glEnd(); } for ( i = `I1' ; i &lt;= `I2' ; i += 1 ) { glBegin( GL_LINE_STRIP
-%% ); for ( j = `J1' ; j &lt;= `J1' ; j += 1 ) glEvalCoord2( i.&amp;Delta; u+u 1, j.
-%% &amp;Delta; v+v 1 ); glEnd(); }
-%%
-%% And finally, if `Mode' is `?GL_POINT', then a call to ``gl:evalMesh2'' is
-%% equivalent to:
-%%
-%% glBegin( GL_POINTS ); for ( j = `J1' ; j &lt;= `J2' ; j += 1 ) for ( i = `I1'
-%% ; i &lt;= `I2' ; i += 1 ) glEvalCoord2( i.&amp;Delta; u+u 1, j.&amp;Delta; v+v 1
-%% ); glEnd();
-%%
-%% In all three cases, the only absolute numeric requirements are that if i=n, then the
-%% value computed from i.&amp;Delta; u+u 1 is exactly u 2, and if j=m, then the value
-%% computed from j.&amp;Delta; v+v 1 is exactly v 2.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glEvalMesh.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glEvalMesh.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec evalMesh1(Mode, I1, I2) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),I1 :: integer(),I2 :: integer().
evalMesh1(Mode,I1,I2) ->
cast(5302, <<Mode:?GLenum,I1:?GLint,I2:?GLint>>).
@@ -7550,66 +3005,7 @@ evalMesh2(Mode,I1,I2,J1,J2) ->
%% pixel blocks, but not buffer clear operations. To enable and disable fog, call {@link gl:enable/1}
%% and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_FOG'.
%%
-%% ``gl:fog'' assigns the value or values in `Params' to the fog parameter specified
-%% by `Pname' . The following values are accepted for `Pname' :
-%%
-%% `?GL_FOG_MODE': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point value that specifies
-%% the equation to be used to compute the fog blend factor, f. Three symbolic constants
-%% are accepted: `?GL_LINEAR', `?GL_EXP', and `?GL_EXP2'. The equations corresponding
-%% to these symbolic constants are defined below. The initial fog mode is `?GL_EXP'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FOG_DENSITY': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point value that
-%% specifies density, the fog density used in both exponential fog equations. Only nonnegative
-%% densities are accepted. The initial fog density is 1.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FOG_START': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point value that specifies
-%% start, the near distance used in the linear fog equation. The initial near distance
-%% is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FOG_END': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point value that specifies
-%% end, the far distance used in the linear fog equation. The initial far distance is 1.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FOG_INDEX': `Params' is a single integer or floating-point value that specifies
-%% i f, the fog color index. The initial fog index is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FOG_COLOR': `Params' contains four integer or floating-point values that
-%% specify C f, the fog color. Integer values are mapped linearly such that the most positive
-%% representable value maps to 1.0, and the most negative representable value maps to -1.0.
-%% Floating-point values are mapped directly. After conversion, all color components are
-%% clamped to the range [0 1]. The initial fog color is (0, 0, 0, 0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_FOG_COORD_SRC': `Params' contains either of the following symbolic constants:
-%% `?GL_FOG_COORD' or `?GL_FRAGMENT_DEPTH'. `?GL_FOG_COORD' specifies that
-%% the current fog coordinate should be used as distance value in the fog color computation.
-%% `?GL_FRAGMENT_DEPTH' specifies that the current fragment depth should be used as
-%% distance value in the fog computation.
-%%
-%% Fog blends a fog color with each rasterized pixel fragment's post-texturing color using
-%% a blending factor f. Factor f is computed in one of three ways, depending on the fog
-%% mode. Let c be either the distance in eye coordinate from the origin (in the case that
-%% the `?GL_FOG_COORD_SRC' is `?GL_FRAGMENT_DEPTH') or the current fog coordinate
-%% (in the case that `?GL_FOG_COORD_SRC' is `?GL_FOG_COORD'). The equation for `?GL_LINEAR'
-%% fog is f=(end-c)/(end-start)
-%%
-%% The equation for `?GL_EXP' fog is f=e(-(density. c))
-%%
-%% The equation for `?GL_EXP2' fog is f=e(-(density. c)) 2
-%%
-%% Regardless of the fog mode, f is clamped to the range [0 1] after it is computed. Then,
-%% if the GL is in RGBA color mode, the fragment's red, green, and blue colors, represented
-%% by C r, are replaced by
-%%
-%% (C r)"=f×C r+(1-f)×C f
-%%
-%% Fog does not affect a fragment's alpha component.
-%%
-%% In color index mode, the fragment's color index i r is replaced by
-%%
-%% (i r)"=i r+(1-f)×i f
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFog.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glFog.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec fogf(Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Pname :: enum(),Param :: float().
fogf(Pname,Param) ->
cast(5304, <<Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -7642,106 +3038,7 @@ fogiv(Pname,Params) ->
%% about primitives that would have been rasterized is fed back to the application using
%% the GL.
%%
-%% ``gl:feedbackBuffer'' has three arguments: `Buffer' is a pointer to an array of
-%% floating-point values into which feedback information is placed. `Size' indicates
-%% the size of the array. `Type' is a symbolic constant describing the information that
-%% is fed back for each vertex. ``gl:feedbackBuffer'' must be issued before feedback mode
-%% is enabled (by calling {@link gl:renderMode/1} with argument `?GL_FEEDBACK'). Setting
-%% `?GL_FEEDBACK' without establishing the feedback buffer, or calling ``gl:feedbackBuffer''
-%% while the GL is in feedback mode, is an error.
-%%
-%% When {@link gl:renderMode/1} is called while in feedback mode, it returns the number of
-%% entries placed in the feedback array and resets the feedback array pointer to the base
-%% of the feedback buffer. The returned value never exceeds `Size' . If the feedback
-%% data required more room than was available in `Buffer' , {@link gl:renderMode/1} returns
-%% a negative value. To take the GL out of feedback mode, call {@link gl:renderMode/1} with
-%% a parameter value other than `?GL_FEEDBACK'.
-%%
-%% While in feedback mode, each primitive, bitmap, or pixel rectangle that would be rasterized
-%% generates a block of values that are copied into the feedback array. If doing so would
-%% cause the number of entries to exceed the maximum, the block is partially written so as
-%% to fill the array (if there is any room left at all), and an overflow flag is set. Each
-%% block begins with a code indicating the primitive type, followed by values that describe
-%% the primitive's vertices and associated data. Entries are also written for bitmaps and
-%% pixel rectangles. Feedback occurs after polygon culling and {@link gl:polygonMode/2} interpretation
-%% of polygons has taken place, so polygons that are culled are not returned in the feedback
-%% buffer. It can also occur after polygons with more than three edges are broken up into
-%% triangles, if the GL implementation renders polygons by performing this decomposition.
-%%
-%% The {@link gl:passThrough/1} command can be used to insert a marker into the feedback
-%% buffer. See {@link gl:passThrough/1} .
-%%
-%% Following is the grammar for the blocks of values written into the feedback buffer. Each
-%% primitive is indicated with a unique identifying value followed by some number of vertices.
-%% Polygon entries include an integer value indicating how many vertices follow. A vertex
-%% is fed back as some number of floating-point values, as determined by `Type' . Colors
-%% are fed back as four values in RGBA mode and one value in color index mode.
-%%
-%% feedbackList ← feedbackItem feedbackList | feedbackItem
-%%
-%% feedbackItem ← point | lineSegment | polygon | bitmap | pixelRectangle | passThru
-%%
-%% point ←`?GL_POINT_TOKEN' vertex
-%%
-%% lineSegment ←`?GL_LINE_TOKEN' vertex vertex | `?GL_LINE_RESET_TOKEN' vertex
-%% vertex
-%%
-%% polygon ←`?GL_POLYGON_TOKEN' n polySpec
-%%
-%% polySpec ← polySpec vertex | vertex vertex vertex
-%%
-%% bitmap ←`?GL_BITMAP_TOKEN' vertex
-%%
-%% pixelRectangle ←`?GL_DRAW_PIXEL_TOKEN' vertex | `?GL_COPY_PIXEL_TOKEN' vertex
-%%
-%%
-%% passThru ←`?GL_PASS_THROUGH_TOKEN' value
-%%
-%% vertex ← 2d | 3d | 3dColor | 3dColorTexture | 4dColorTexture
-%%
-%% 2d ← value value
-%%
-%% 3d ← value value value
-%%
-%% 3dColor ← value value value color
-%%
-%% 3dColorTexture ← value value value color tex
-%%
-%% 4dColorTexture ← value value value value color tex
-%%
-%% color ← rgba | index
-%%
-%% rgba ← value value value value
-%%
-%% index ← value
-%%
-%% tex ← value value value value
-%%
-%% `value' is a floating-point number, and `n' is a floating-point integer giving
-%% the number of vertices in the polygon. `?GL_POINT_TOKEN', `?GL_LINE_TOKEN', `?GL_LINE_RESET_TOKEN'
-%% , `?GL_POLYGON_TOKEN', `?GL_BITMAP_TOKEN', `?GL_DRAW_PIXEL_TOKEN', `?GL_COPY_PIXEL_TOKEN'
-%% and `?GL_PASS_THROUGH_TOKEN' are symbolic floating-point constants. `?GL_LINE_RESET_TOKEN'
-%% is returned whenever the line stipple pattern is reset. The data returned as a vertex
-%% depends on the feedback `Type' .
-%%
-%% The following table gives the correspondence between `Type' and the number of values
-%% per vertex. `k' is 1 in color index mode and 4 in RGBA mode.
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Type '</td><td>` Coordinates '</td><td>` Color '</td>
-%% <td>` Texture '</td><td>` Total Number of Values '</td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_2D'</td><td>`x', `y'</td><td></td><td></td><td> 2 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_3D'
-%% </td><td>`x', `y', `z'</td><td></td><td></td><td> 3 </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_3D_COLOR'
-%% </td><td>`x', `y', `z'</td><td> k</td><td></td><td> 3+k</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_3D_COLOR_TEXTURE'
-%% </td><td>`x', `y', `z'</td><td> k</td><td> 4 </td><td> 7+k</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_4D_COLOR_TEXTURE'</td><td>`x', `y', `z', `w'</td><td> k</td>
-%% <td> 4 </td><td> 8+k</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% Feedback vertex coordinates are in window coordinates, except `w', which is in clip
-%% coordinates. Feedback colors are lighted, if lighting is enabled. Feedback texture coordinates
-%% are generated, if texture coordinate generation is enabled. They are always transformed
-%% by the texture matrix.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFeedbackBuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glFeedbackBuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec feedbackBuffer(Size, Type, Buffer) -> 'ok' when Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Buffer :: mem().
feedbackBuffer(Size,Type,Buffer) ->
send_bin(Buffer),
@@ -7749,18 +3046,9 @@ feedbackBuffer(Size,Type,Buffer) ->
%% @doc Place a marker in the feedback buffer
%%
-%% Feedback is a GL render mode. The mode is selected by calling {@link gl:renderMode/1}
-%% with `?GL_FEEDBACK'. When the GL is in feedback mode, no pixels are produced by rasterization.
-%% Instead, information about primitives that would have been rasterized is fed back to the
-%% application using the GL. See the {@link gl:feedbackBuffer/3} reference page for a description
-%% of the feedback buffer and the values in it.
-%%
-%% ``gl:passThrough'' inserts a user-defined marker in the feedback buffer when it is executed
-%% in feedback mode. `Token' is returned as if it were a primitive; it is indicated
-%% with its own unique identifying value: `?GL_PASS_THROUGH_TOKEN'. The order of ``gl:passThrough''
-%% commands with respect to the specification of graphics primitives is maintained.
+%%
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPassThrough.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glPassThrough.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec passThrough(Token) -> 'ok' when Token :: float().
passThrough(Token) ->
cast(5309, <<Token:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -7774,38 +3062,7 @@ passThrough(Token) ->
%% must be issued before selection mode is enabled, and it must not be issued while the
%% rendering mode is `?GL_SELECT'.
%%
-%% A programmer can use selection to determine which primitives are drawn into some region
-%% of a window. The region is defined by the current modelview and perspective matrices.
-%%
-%% In selection mode, no pixel fragments are produced from rasterization. Instead, if a
-%% primitive or a raster position intersects the clipping volume defined by the viewing frustum
-%% and the user-defined clipping planes, this primitive causes a selection hit. (With polygons,
-%% no hit occurs if the polygon is culled.) When a change is made to the name stack, or when
-%% {@link gl:renderMode/1} is called, a hit record is copied to `Buffer' if any hits
-%% have occurred since the last such event (name stack change or {@link gl:renderMode/1} call).
-%% The hit record consists of the number of names in the name stack at the time of the event,
-%% followed by the minimum and maximum depth values of all vertices that hit since the previous
-%% event, followed by the name stack contents, bottom name first.
-%%
-%% Depth values (which are in the range [0,1]) are multiplied by 2 32-1, before being
-%% placed in the hit record.
-%%
-%% An internal index into `Buffer' is reset to 0 whenever selection mode is entered.
-%% Each time a hit record is copied into `Buffer' , the index is incremented to point
-%% to the cell just past the end of the block of names(emthat is, to the next available cell
-%% If the hit record is larger than the number of remaining locations in `Buffer' , as
-%% much data as can fit is copied, and the overflow flag is set. If the name stack is empty
-%% when a hit record is copied, that record consists of 0 followed by the minimum and maximum
-%% depth values.
-%%
-%% To exit selection mode, call {@link gl:renderMode/1} with an argument other than `?GL_SELECT'
-%% . Whenever {@link gl:renderMode/1} is called while the render mode is `?GL_SELECT',
-%% it returns the number of hit records copied to `Buffer' , resets the overflow flag
-%% and the selection buffer pointer, and initializes the name stack to be empty. If the overflow
-%% bit was set when {@link gl:renderMode/1} was called, a negative hit record count is returned.
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glSelectBuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glSelectBuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec selectBuffer(Size, Buffer) -> 'ok' when Size :: integer(),Buffer :: mem().
selectBuffer(Size,Buffer) ->
send_bin(Buffer),
@@ -7817,10 +3074,7 @@ selectBuffer(Size,Buffer) ->
%% uniquely identified. It consists of an ordered set of unsigned integers. ``gl:initNames''
%% causes the name stack to be initialized to its default empty state.
%%
-%% The name stack is always empty while the render mode is not `?GL_SELECT'. Calls to ``gl:initNames''
-%% while the render mode is not `?GL_SELECT' are ignored.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glInitNames.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glInitNames.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec initNames() -> 'ok'.
initNames() ->
cast(5311, <<>>).
@@ -7831,12 +3085,7 @@ initNames() ->
%% uniquely identified. It consists of an ordered set of unsigned integers and is initially
%% empty.
%%
-%% ``gl:loadName'' causes `Name' to replace the value on the top of the name stack.
-%%
-%% The name stack is always empty while the render mode is not `?GL_SELECT'. Calls to ``gl:loadName''
-%% while the render mode is not `?GL_SELECT' are ignored.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLoadName.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glLoadName.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec loadName(Name) -> 'ok' when Name :: integer().
loadName(Name) ->
cast(5312, <<Name:?GLuint>>).
@@ -7847,20 +3096,7 @@ loadName(Name) ->
%% uniquely identified. It consists of an ordered set of unsigned integers and is initially
%% empty.
%%
-%% ``gl:pushName'' causes `Name' to be pushed onto the name stack. {@link gl:pushName/1}
-%% pops one name off the top of the stack.
-%%
-%% The maximum name stack depth is implementation-dependent; call `?GL_MAX_NAME_STACK_DEPTH'
-%% to find out the value for a particular implementation. It is an error to push a name
-%% onto a full stack or to pop a name off an empty stack. It is also an error to manipulate
-%% the name stack between the execution of {@link gl:'begin'/1} and the corresponding execution
-%% of {@link gl:'begin'/1} . In any of these cases, the error flag is set and no other change is
-%% made to GL state.
-%%
-%% The name stack is always empty while the render mode is not `?GL_SELECT'. Calls to ``gl:pushName''
-%% or {@link gl:pushName/1} while the render mode is not `?GL_SELECT' are ignored.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPushName.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glPushName.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pushName(Name) -> 'ok' when Name :: integer().
pushName(Name) ->
cast(5313, <<Name:?GLuint>>).
@@ -7878,7 +3114,7 @@ popName() ->
%% for a complete description of the blending operations. Initially the `?GL_BLEND_COLOR'
%% is set to (0, 0, 0, 0).
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBlendColor.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBlendColor.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec blendColor(Red, Green, Blue, Alpha) -> 'ok' when Red :: clamp(),Green :: clamp(),Blue :: clamp(),Alpha :: clamp().
blendColor(Red,Green,Blue,Alpha) ->
cast(5315, <<Red:?GLclampf,Green:?GLclampf,Blue:?GLclampf,Alpha:?GLclampf>>).
@@ -7891,35 +3127,7 @@ blendColor(Red,Green,Blue,Alpha) ->
%% specifies the blend equation for a single draw buffer whereas ``gl:blendEquation''
%% sets the blend equation for all draw buffers.
%%
-%% These equations use the source and destination blend factors specified by either {@link gl:blendFunc/2}
-%% or {@link gl:blendFuncSeparate/4} . See {@link gl:blendFunc/2} or {@link gl:blendFuncSeparate/4}
-%% for a description of the various blend factors.
-%%
-%% In the equations that follow, source and destination color components are referred to
-%% as (R s G s B s A s) and (R d G d B d A d), respectively. The result color is referred to as (R r G r B r A r). The source and destination
-%% blend factors are denoted (s R s G s B s A) and (d R d G d B d A), respectively. For these equations all color components
-%% are understood to have values in the range [0 1]. <table><tbody><tr><td>` Mode '</td><td>
-%% ` RGB Components '</td><td>` Alpha Component '</td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_FUNC_ADD'
-%% </td><td> Rr=R s s R+R d d R Gr=G s s G+G d d G Br=B s s B+B d d B</td><td> Ar=A s
-%% s A+A d d A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FUNC_SUBTRACT'</td><td> Rr=R s s R-R d d R Gr=G
-%% s s G-G d d G Br=B s s B-B d d B</td><td> Ar=A s s A-A d d A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FUNC_REVERSE_SUBTRACT'
-%% </td><td> Rr=R d d R-R s s R Gr=G d d G-G s s G Br=B d d B-B s s B</td><td> Ar=A d
-%% d A-A s s A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_MIN'</td><td> Rr=min(R s R d) Gr=min(G s G d) Br=min(B s B d)</td><td> Ar=min
-%% (A s A d)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_MAX'</td><td> Rr=max(R s R d) Gr=max(G s G d) Br=max(B s B d)</td><td> Ar=max(A s A d)</td></tr></tbody>
-%% </table>
-%%
-%% The results of these equations are clamped to the range [0 1].
-%%
-%% The `?GL_MIN' and `?GL_MAX' equations are useful for applications that analyze
-%% image data (image thresholding against a constant color, for example). The `?GL_FUNC_ADD'
-%% equation is useful for antialiasing and transparency, among other things.
-%%
-%% Initially, both the RGB blend equation and the alpha blend equation are set to `?GL_FUNC_ADD'
-%% .
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBlendEquation.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBlendEquation.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec blendEquation(Mode) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum().
blendEquation(Mode) ->
cast(5316, <<Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -7931,24 +3139,7 @@ blendEquation(Mode) ->
%% , with the additional constraint that all values in the arrays `Count' must lie between
%% `Start' and `End' , inclusive.
%%
-%% Implementations denote recommended maximum amounts of vertex and index data, which may
-%% be queried by calling {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with argument `?GL_MAX_ELEMENTS_VERTICES' and `?GL_MAX_ELEMENTS_INDICES'
-%% . If end-start+1 is greater than the value of `?GL_MAX_ELEMENTS_VERTICES', or if `Count'
-%% is greater than the value of `?GL_MAX_ELEMENTS_INDICES', then the call may operate
-%% at reduced performance. There is no requirement that all vertices in the range [start end] be referenced.
-%% However, the implementation may partially process unused vertices, reducing performance
-%% from what could be achieved with an optimal index set.
-%%
-%% When ``gl:drawRangeElements'' is called, it uses `Count' sequential elements from
-%% an enabled array, starting at `Start' to construct a sequence of geometric primitives.
-%% `Mode' specifies what kind of primitives are constructed, and how the array elements
-%% construct these primitives. If more than one array is enabled, each is used.
-%%
-%% Vertex attributes that are modified by ``gl:drawRangeElements'' have an unspecified
-%% value after ``gl:drawRangeElements'' returns. Attributes that aren't modified maintain
-%% their previous values.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawRangeElements.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawRangeElements.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawRangeElements(Mode, Start, End, Count, Type, Indices) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Start :: integer(),End :: integer(),Count :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Indices :: offset()|mem().
drawRangeElements(Mode,Start,End,Count,Type,Indices) when is_integer(Indices) ->
cast(5317, <<Mode:?GLenum,Start:?GLuint,End:?GLuint,Count:?GLsizei,Type:?GLenum,Indices:?GLuint>>);
@@ -7962,101 +3153,7 @@ drawRangeElements(Mode,Start,End,Count,Type,Indices) ->
%% which texturing is enabled. To enable and disable three-dimensional texturing, call {@link gl:enable/1}
%% and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_TEXTURE_3D'.
%%
-%% To define texture images, call ``gl:texImage3D''. The arguments describe the parameters
-%% of the texture image, such as height, width, depth, width of the border, level-of-detail
-%% number (see {@link gl:texParameterf/3} ), and number of color components provided. The last
-%% three arguments describe how the image is represented in memory.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_3D', no data is read from `Data' , but
-%% all of the texture image state is recalculated, checked for consistency, and checked against
-%% the implementation's capabilities. If the implementation cannot handle a texture of the
-%% requested texture size, it sets all of the image state to 0, but does not generate an
-%% error (see {@link gl:getError/0} ). To query for an entire mipmap array, use an image array
-%% level greater than or equal to 1.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_3D', data is read from `Data' as a sequence
-%% of signed or unsigned bytes, shorts, or longs, or single-precision floating-point values,
-%% depending on `Type' . These values are grouped into sets of one, two, three, or four
-%% values, depending on `Format' , to form elements. Each data byte is treated as eight
-%% 1-bit elements, with bit ordering determined by `?GL_UNPACK_LSB_FIRST' (see {@link gl:pixelStoref/2}
-%% ).
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% The first element corresponds to the lower left corner of the texture image. Subsequent
-%% elements progress left-to-right through the remaining texels in the lowest row of the
-%% texture image, and then in successively higher rows of the texture image. The final element
-%% corresponds to the upper right corner of the texture image.
-%%
-%% `Format' determines the composition of each element in `Data' . It can assume
-%% one of these symbolic values:
-%%
-%% `?GL_RED': Each element is a single red component. The GL converts it to floating
-%% point and assembles it into an RGBA element by attaching 0 for green and blue, and 1 for
-%% alpha. Each component is then multiplied by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE',
-%% added to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS', and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_RG': Each element is a red and green pair. The GL converts each to floating
-%% point and assembles it into an RGBA element by attaching 0 for blue, and 1 for alpha.
-%% Each component is then multiplied by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE', added
-%% to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS', and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGB'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BGR': Each element is an RGB triple. The GL converts it to floating point and
-%% assembles it into an RGBA element by attaching 1 for alpha. Each component is then multiplied
-%% by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE', added to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS',
-%% and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% `?GL_RGBA'
-%%
-%% `?GL_BGRA': Each element contains all four components. Each component is multiplied
-%% by the signed scale factor `?GL_c_SCALE', added to the signed bias `?GL_c_BIAS',
-%% and clamped to the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% If an application wants to store the texture at a certain resolution or in a certain
-%% format, it can request the resolution and format with `InternalFormat' . The GL will
-%% choose an internal representation that closely approximates that requested by `InternalFormat'
-%% , but it may not match exactly. (The representations specified by `?GL_RED', `?GL_RG'
-%% , `?GL_RGB', and `?GL_RGBA' must match exactly.)
-%%
-%% `InternalFormat' may be one of the base internal formats shown in Table 1, below
-%%
-%% `InternalFormat' may also be one of the sized internal formats shown in Table 2,
-%% below
-%%
-%% Finally, `InternalFormat' may also be one of the generic or compressed compressed
-%% texture formats shown in Table 3 below
-%%
-%% If the `InternalFormat' parameter is one of the generic compressed formats, `?GL_COMPRESSED_RED'
-%% , `?GL_COMPRESSED_RG', `?GL_COMPRESSED_RGB', or `?GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA',
-%% the GL will replace the internal format with the symbolic constant for a specific internal
-%% format and compress the texture before storage. If no corresponding internal format is
-%% available, or the GL can not compress that image for any reason, the internal format is
-%% instead replaced with a corresponding base internal format.
-%%
-%% If the `InternalFormat' parameter is `?GL_SRGB', `?GL_SRGB8', `?GL_SRGB_ALPHA'
-%% , or `?GL_SRGB8_ALPHA8', the texture is treated as if the red, green, blue, or
-%% luminance components are encoded in the sRGB color space. Any alpha component is left
-%% unchanged. The conversion from the sRGB encoded component c s to a linear component
-%% c l is:
-%%
-%% c l={ c s/12.92if c s&amp;le; 0.04045( c s+0.055/1.055) 2.4if c s&gt; 0.04045
-%%
-%% Assume c s is the sRGB component in the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% Use the `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_3D' target to try out a resolution and format. The implementation
-%% will update and recompute its best match for the requested storage resolution and format.
-%% To then query this state, call {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3} . If the texture cannot
-%% be accommodated, texture state is set to 0.
-%%
-%% A one-component texture image uses only the red component of the RGBA color extracted
-%% from `Data' . A two-component image uses the R and A values. A three-component image
-%% uses the R, G, and B values. A four-component image uses all of the RGBA components.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexImage3D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTexImage3D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texImage3D(Target, Level, InternalFormat, Width, Height, Depth, Border, Format, Type, Pixels) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),InternalFormat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Depth :: integer(),Border :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Pixels :: offset()|mem().
texImage3D(Target,Level,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Depth,Border,Format,Type,Pixels) when is_integer(Pixels) ->
cast(5319, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,InternalFormat:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Depth:?GLsizei,Border:?GLint,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Pixels:?GLuint>>);
@@ -8066,7 +3163,7 @@ texImage3D(Target,Level,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Depth,Border,Format,Type,Pix
%% @doc glTexSubImage
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexSubImage.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec texSubImage3D(Target, Level, Xoffset, Yoffset, Zoffset, Width, Height, Depth, Format, Type, Pixels) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Xoffset :: integer(),Yoffset :: integer(),Zoffset :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Depth :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Pixels :: offset()|mem().
texSubImage3D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,Zoffset,Width,Height,Depth,Format,Type,Pixels) when is_integer(Pixels) ->
cast(5321, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Xoffset:?GLint,Yoffset:?GLint,Zoffset:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Depth:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Pixels:?GLuint>>);
@@ -8080,30 +3177,7 @@ texSubImage3D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,Zoffset,Width,Height,Depth,Format,Typ
%% image with pixels from the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER' (rather than from main memory,
%% as is the case for {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7} ).
%%
-%% The screen-aligned pixel rectangle with lower left corner at ( `X' , `Y' ) and
-%% with width `Width' and height `Height' replaces the portion of the texture array
-%% with x indices `Xoffset' through xoffset+width-1, inclusive, and y indices `Yoffset'
-%% through yoffset+height-1, inclusive, at z index `Zoffset' and at the mipmap level
-%% specified by `Level' .
-%%
-%% The pixels in the rectangle are processed exactly as if {@link gl:readPixels/7} had been
-%% called, but the process stops just before final conversion. At this point, all pixel component
-%% values are clamped to the range [0 1] and then converted to the texture's internal format
-%% for storage in the texel array.
-%%
-%% The destination rectangle in the texture array may not include any texels outside the
-%% texture array as it was originally specified. It is not an error to specify a subtexture
-%% with zero width or height, but such a specification has no effect.
-%%
-%% If any of the pixels within the specified rectangle of the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER'
-%% are outside the read window associated with the current rendering context, then the values
-%% obtained for those pixels are undefined.
-%%
-%% No change is made to the `internalformat', `width', `height', `depth',
-%% or `border' parameters of the specified texture array or to texel values outside
-%% the specified subregion.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyTexSubImage3D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCopyTexSubImage3D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyTexSubImage3D(Target, Level, Xoffset, Yoffset, Zoffset, X, Y, Width, Height) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Xoffset :: integer(),Yoffset :: integer(),Zoffset :: integer(),X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer().
copyTexSubImage3D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,Zoffset,X,Y,Width,Height) ->
cast(5323, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Xoffset:?GLint,Yoffset:?GLint,Zoffset:?GLint,X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -8115,95 +3189,7 @@ copyTexSubImage3D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,Zoffset,X,Y,Width,Height) ->
%% lookup table. Use the targets `?GL_PROXY_*' for the first case and the other targets
%% for the second case.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a color table is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_COLOR_TABLE', `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_COLOR_TABLE', or `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_COLOR_TABLE'
-%% , ``gl:colorTable'' builds a color lookup table from an array of pixels. The pixel array
-%% specified by `Width' , `Format' , `Type' , and `Data' is extracted from
-%% memory and processed just as if {@link gl:drawPixels/5} were called, but processing stops
-%% after the final expansion to RGBA is completed.
-%%
-%% The four scale parameters and the four bias parameters that are defined for the table
-%% are then used to scale and bias the R, G, B, and A components of each pixel. (Use ``gl:colorTableParameter''
-%% to set these scale and bias parameters.)
-%%
-%% Next, the R, G, B, and A values are clamped to the range [0 1]. Each pixel is then converted
-%% to the internal format specified by `Internalformat' . This conversion simply maps
-%% the component values of the pixel (R, G, B, and A) to the values included in the internal
-%% format (red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and intensity). The mapping is as follows:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Internal Format '</td><td>` Red '</td><td>` Green '</td>
-%% <td>` Blue '</td><td>` Alpha '</td><td>` Luminance '</td><td>` Intensity '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td> A </td>
-%% <td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> A </td><td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTENSITY'</td><td></td><td></td><td>
-%% </td><td></td><td></td><td> R </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB'</td><td> R </td><td> G </td>
-%% <td> B </td><td></td><td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA'</td><td> R </td><td>
-%% G </td><td> B </td><td> A </td><td></td><td></td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% Finally, the red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and/or intensity components of the resulting
-%% pixels are stored in the color table. They form a one-dimensional table with indices in
-%% the range [0 width-1].
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_PROXY_*', ``gl:colorTable'' recomputes and stores the
-%% values of the proxy color table's state variables `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_FORMAT', `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_WIDTH'
-%% , `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_RED_SIZE', `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_GREEN_SIZE', `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_BLUE_SIZE'
-%% , `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_ALPHA_SIZE', `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_LUMINANCE_SIZE', and `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_INTENSITY_SIZE'
-%% . There is no effect on the image or state of any actual color table. If the specified
-%% color table is too large to be supported, then all the proxy state variables listed above
-%% are set to zero. Otherwise, the color table could be supported by ``gl:colorTable''
-%% using the corresponding non-proxy target, and the proxy state variables are set as if
-%% that target were being defined.
-%%
-%% The proxy state variables can be retrieved by calling {@link gl:getColorTableParameterfv/2}
-%% with a target of `?GL_PROXY_*'. This allows the application to decide if a particular
-%% ``gl:colorTable'' command would succeed, and to determine what the resulting color table
-%% attributes would be.
-%%
-%% If a color table is enabled, and its width is non-zero, then its contents are used to
-%% replace a subset of the components of each RGBA pixel group, based on the internal format
-%% of the table.
-%%
-%% Each pixel group has color components (R, G, B, A) that are in the range [0.0 1.0]. The color
-%% components are rescaled to the size of the color lookup table to form an index. Then a
-%% subset of the components based on the internal format of the table are replaced by the
-%% table entry selected by that index. If the color components and contents of the table
-%% are represented as follows:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Representation '</td><td>` Meaning '</td></tr></tbody><tbody>
-%% <tr><td>r</td><td> Table index computed from R</td></tr><tr><td>g</td><td> Table index
-%% computed from G</td></tr><tr><td>b</td><td> Table index computed from B</td></tr><tr><td>a
-%% </td><td> Table index computed from A</td></tr><tr><td>L[i]</td><td> Luminance value at
-%% table index i</td></tr><tr><td>I[i]</td><td> Intensity value at table index i</td></tr><tr>
-%% <td>R[i]</td><td> Red value at table index i</td></tr><tr><td>G[i]</td><td> Green value
-%% at table index i</td></tr><tr><td>B[i]</td><td> Blue value at table index i</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% A[i]</td><td> Alpha value at table index i</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% then the result of color table lookup is as follows:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td></td><td>` Resulting Texture Components '</td></tr><tr><td>` Table Internal Format '
-%% </td><td>` R '</td><td>` G '</td><td>` B '</td><td>` A '</td></tr></tbody>
-%% <tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ALPHA'</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>A[a]</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_LUMINANCE'</td><td>L[r]</td><td>L[g]</td><td>L[b]</td><td>At</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA'
-%% </td><td>L[r]</td><td>L[g]</td><td>L[b]</td><td>A[a]</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTENSITY'</td>
-%% <td>I[r]</td><td>I[g]</td><td>I[b]</td><td>I[a]</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB'</td><td>R[r]
-%% </td><td>G[g]</td><td>B[b]</td><td>A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA'</td><td>R[r]</td><td>
-%% G[g]</td><td>B[b]</td><td>A[a]</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% When `?GL_COLOR_TABLE' is enabled, the colors resulting from the pixel map operation
-%% (if it is enabled) are mapped by the color lookup table before being passed to the convolution
-%% operation. The colors resulting from the convolution operation are modified by the post
-%% convolution color lookup table when `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_COLOR_TABLE' is enabled.
-%% These modified colors are then sent to the color matrix operation. Finally, if `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_COLOR_TABLE'
-%% is enabled, the colors resulting from the color matrix operation are mapped by the post
-%% color matrix color lookup table before being used by the histogram operation.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glColorTable.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glColorTable.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec colorTable(Target, Internalformat, Width, Format, Type, Table) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Table :: offset()|mem().
colorTable(Target,Internalformat,Width,Format,Type,Table) when is_integer(Table) ->
cast(5324, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Table:?GLuint>>);
@@ -8218,17 +3204,7 @@ colorTable(Target,Internalformat,Width,Format,Type,Table) ->
%% color table the scale and bias terms apply to; it must be set to `?GL_COLOR_TABLE', `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_COLOR_TABLE'
%% , or `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_COLOR_TABLE'.
%%
-%% `Pname' must be `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_SCALE' to set the scale factors. In this case,
-%% `Params' points to an array of four values, which are the scale factors for red,
-%% green, blue, and alpha, in that order.
-%%
-%% `Pname' must be `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_BIAS' to set the bias terms. In this case, `Params'
-%% points to an array of four values, which are the bias terms for red, green, blue, and
-%% alpha, in that order.
-%%
-%% The color tables themselves are specified by calling {@link gl:colorTable/6} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glColorTableParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glColorTableParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec colorTableParameterfv(Target, Pname, Params) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),Params :: {float(),float(),float(),float()}.
colorTableParameterfv(Target,Pname,{P1,P2,P3,P4}) ->
cast(5326, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,P1:?GLfloat,P2:?GLfloat,P3:?GLfloat,P4:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -8244,41 +3220,7 @@ colorTableParameteriv(Target,Pname,{P1,P2,P3,P4}) ->
%% ``gl:copyColorTable'' loads a color table with pixels from the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER'
%% (rather than from main memory, as is the case for {@link gl:colorTable/6} ).
%%
-%% The screen-aligned pixel rectangle with lower-left corner at ( `X' , `Y' ) having
-%% width `Width' and height 1 is loaded into the color table. If any pixels within this
-%% region are outside the window that is associated with the GL context, the values obtained
-%% for those pixels are undefined.
-%%
-%% The pixels in the rectangle are processed just as if {@link gl:readPixels/7} were called,
-%% with `Internalformat' set to RGBA, but processing stops after the final conversion
-%% to RGBA.
-%%
-%% The four scale parameters and the four bias parameters that are defined for the table
-%% are then used to scale and bias the R, G, B, and A components of each pixel. The scale
-%% and bias parameters are set by calling {@link gl:colorTableParameterfv/3} .
-%%
-%% Next, the R, G, B, and A values are clamped to the range [0 1]. Each pixel is then converted
-%% to the internal format specified by `Internalformat' . This conversion simply maps
-%% the component values of the pixel (R, G, B, and A) to the values included in the internal
-%% format (red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and intensity). The mapping is as follows:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Internal Format '</td><td>` Red '</td><td>` Green '</td>
-%% <td>` Blue '</td><td>` Alpha '</td><td>` Luminance '</td><td>` Intensity '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td> A </td>
-%% <td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> A </td><td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTENSITY'</td><td></td><td></td><td>
-%% </td><td></td><td></td><td> R </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB'</td><td> R </td><td> G </td>
-%% <td> B </td><td></td><td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA'</td><td> R </td><td>
-%% G </td><td> B </td><td> A </td><td></td><td></td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% Finally, the red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and/or intensity components of the resulting
-%% pixels are stored in the color table. They form a one-dimensional table with indices in
-%% the range [0 width-1].
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyColorTable.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glCopyColorTable.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyColorTable(Target, Internalformat, X, Y, Width) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer().
copyColorTable(Target,Internalformat,X,Y,Width) ->
cast(5328, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -8289,21 +3231,7 @@ copyColorTable(Target,Internalformat,X,Y,Width) ->
%% by `Target' . No pixel transfer operations are performed, but pixel storage modes
%% that are applicable to {@link gl:readPixels/7} are performed.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a histogram table is requested, `Table' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% Color components that are requested in the specified `Format' , but which are not
-%% included in the internal format of the color lookup table, are returned as zero. The assignments
-%% of internal color components to the components requested by `Format' are <table><tbody>
-%% <tr><td>` Internal Component '</td><td>` Resulting Component '</td></tr></tbody>
-%% <tbody><tr><td> Red </td><td> Red </td></tr><tr><td> Green </td><td> Green </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% Blue </td><td> Blue </td></tr><tr><td> Alpha </td><td> Alpha </td></tr><tr><td> Luminance
-%% </td><td> Red </td></tr><tr><td> Intensity </td><td> Red </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetColorTable.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetColorTable.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getColorTable(Target, Format, Type, Table) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Table :: mem().
getColorTable(Target,Format,Type,Table) ->
send_bin(Table),
@@ -8313,36 +3241,7 @@ getColorTable(Target,Format,Type,Table) ->
%%
%% Returns parameters specific to color table `Target' .
%%
-%% When `Pname' is set to `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_SCALE' or `?GL_COLOR_TABLE_BIAS',
-%% ``gl:getColorTableParameter'' returns the color table scale or bias parameters for the
-%% table specified by `Target' . For these queries, `Target' must be set to `?GL_COLOR_TABLE'
-%% , `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_COLOR_TABLE', or `?GL_POST_COLOR_MATRIX_COLOR_TABLE'
-%% and `Params' points to an array of four elements, which receive the scale or bias
-%% factors for red, green, blue, and alpha, in that order.
-%%
-%% ``gl:getColorTableParameter'' can also be used to retrieve the format and size parameters
-%% for a color table. For these queries, set `Target' to either the color table target
-%% or the proxy color table target. The format and size parameters are set by {@link gl:colorTable/6}
-%% .
-%%
-%% The following table lists the format and size parameters that may be queried. For each
-%% symbolic constant listed below for `Pname' , `Params' must point to an array
-%% of the given length and receive the values indicated.
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Parameter '</td><td>` N '</td><td>` Meaning '</td></tr>
-%% </tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_COLOR_TABLE_FORMAT'</td><td> 1 </td><td> Internal format
-%% (e.g., `?GL_RGBA') </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_COLOR_TABLE_WIDTH'</td><td> 1 </td><td>
-%% Number of elements in table </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_COLOR_TABLE_RED_SIZE'</td><td>
-%% 1 </td><td> Size of red component, in bits </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_COLOR_TABLE_GREEN_SIZE'
-%% </td><td> 1 </td><td> Size of green component </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_COLOR_TABLE_BLUE_SIZE'
-%% </td><td> 1 </td><td> Size of blue component </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_COLOR_TABLE_ALPHA_SIZE'
-%% </td><td> 1 </td><td> Size of alpha component </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_COLOR_TABLE_LUMINANCE_SIZE'
-%% </td><td> 1 </td><td> Size of luminance component </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_COLOR_TABLE_INTENSITY_SIZE'
-%% </td><td> 1 </td><td> Size of intensity component </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetColorTableParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetColorTableParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getColorTableParameterfv(Target, Pname) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getColorTableParameterfv(Target,Pname) ->
call(5330, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -8362,11 +3261,7 @@ getColorTableParameteriv(Target,Pname) ->
%% originally specified. It is not an error to specify a subtexture with width of 0, but
%% such a specification has no effect.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a portion of a color table is respecified, `Data'
-%% is treated as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glColorSubTable.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glColorSubTable.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec colorSubTable(Target, Start, Count, Format, Type, Data) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Start :: integer(),Count :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Data :: offset()|mem().
colorSubTable(Target,Start,Count,Format,Type,Data) when is_integer(Data) ->
cast(5332, <<Target:?GLenum,Start:?GLsizei,Count:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Data:?GLuint>>);
@@ -8383,7 +3278,7 @@ colorSubTable(Target,Start,Count,Format,Type,Data) ->
%% specified. It is not an error to specify a subtexture with width of 0, but such a specification
%% has no effect.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyColorSubTable.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glCopyColorSubTable.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyColorSubTable(Target, Start, X, Y, Width) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Start :: integer(),X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer().
copyColorSubTable(Target,Start,X,Y,Width) ->
cast(5334, <<Target:?GLenum,Start:?GLsizei,X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -8393,50 +3288,7 @@ copyColorSubTable(Target,Start,X,Y,Width) ->
%% ``gl:convolutionFilter1D'' builds a one-dimensional convolution filter kernel from an
%% array of pixels.
%%
-%% The pixel array specified by `Width' , `Format' , `Type' , and `Data'
-%% is extracted from memory and processed just as if {@link gl:drawPixels/5} were called,
-%% but processing stops after the final expansion to RGBA is completed.
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a convolution filter is specified, `Data' is
-%% treated as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% The R, G, B, and A components of each pixel are next scaled by the four 1D `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE'
-%% parameters and biased by the four 1D `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS' parameters. (The
-%% scale and bias parameters are set by {@link gl:convolutionParameterf/3} using the `?GL_CONVOLUTION_1D'
-%% target and the names `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE' and `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS'
-%% . The parameters themselves are vectors of four values that are applied to red, green,
-%% blue, and alpha, in that order.) The R, G, B, and A values are not clamped to [0,1] at
-%% any time during this process.
-%%
-%% Each pixel is then converted to the internal format specified by `Internalformat' .
-%% This conversion simply maps the component values of the pixel (R, G, B, and A) to the
-%% values included in the internal format (red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and intensity).
-%% The mapping is as follows:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Internal Format '</td><td>` Red '</td><td>` Green '</td>
-%% <td>` Blue '</td><td>` Alpha '</td><td>` Luminance '</td><td>` Intensity '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td> A </td>
-%% <td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> A </td><td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTENSITY'</td><td></td><td></td><td>
-%% </td><td></td><td></td><td> R </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB'</td><td> R </td><td> G </td>
-%% <td> B </td><td></td><td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA'</td><td> R </td><td>
-%% G </td><td> B </td><td> A </td><td></td><td></td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% The red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and/or intensity components of the resulting
-%% pixels are stored in floating-point rather than integer format. They form a one-dimensional
-%% filter kernel image indexed with coordinate `i' such that `i' starts at 0 and
-%% increases from left to right. Kernel location `i' is derived from the `i'th
-%% pixel, counting from 0.
-%%
-%% Note that after a convolution is performed, the resulting color components are also scaled
-%% by their corresponding `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_c_SCALE' parameters and biased by their
-%% corresponding `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_c_BIAS' parameters (where `c' takes on the
-%% values `RED', `GREEN', `BLUE', and `ALPHA'). These parameters are
-%% set by {@link gl:pixelTransferf/2} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glConvolutionFilter1D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glConvolutionFilter1D.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec convolutionFilter1D(Target, Internalformat, Width, Format, Type, Image) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Image :: offset()|mem().
convolutionFilter1D(Target,Internalformat,Width,Format,Type,Image) when is_integer(Image) ->
cast(5335, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Image:?GLuint>>);
@@ -8449,51 +3301,7 @@ convolutionFilter1D(Target,Internalformat,Width,Format,Type,Image) ->
%% ``gl:convolutionFilter2D'' builds a two-dimensional convolution filter kernel from an
%% array of pixels.
%%
-%% The pixel array specified by `Width' , `Height' , `Format' , `Type' ,
-%% and `Data' is extracted from memory and processed just as if {@link gl:drawPixels/5}
-%% were called, but processing stops after the final expansion to RGBA is completed.
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a convolution filter is specified, `Data' is
-%% treated as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% The R, G, B, and A components of each pixel are next scaled by the four 2D `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE'
-%% parameters and biased by the four 2D `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS' parameters. (The
-%% scale and bias parameters are set by {@link gl:convolutionParameterf/3} using the `?GL_CONVOLUTION_2D'
-%% target and the names `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE' and `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS'
-%% . The parameters themselves are vectors of four values that are applied to red, green,
-%% blue, and alpha, in that order.) The R, G, B, and A values are not clamped to [0,1] at
-%% any time during this process.
-%%
-%% Each pixel is then converted to the internal format specified by `Internalformat' .
-%% This conversion simply maps the component values of the pixel (R, G, B, and A) to the
-%% values included in the internal format (red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and intensity).
-%% The mapping is as follows:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Internal Format '</td><td>` Red '</td><td>` Green '</td>
-%% <td>` Blue '</td><td>` Alpha '</td><td>` Luminance '</td><td>` Intensity '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td> A </td>
-%% <td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> A </td><td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTENSITY'</td><td></td><td></td><td>
-%% </td><td></td><td></td><td> R </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB'</td><td> R </td><td> G </td>
-%% <td> B </td><td></td><td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA'</td><td> R </td><td>
-%% G </td><td> B </td><td> A </td><td></td><td></td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% The red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and/or intensity components of the resulting
-%% pixels are stored in floating-point rather than integer format. They form a two-dimensional
-%% filter kernel image indexed with coordinates `i' and `j' such that `i'
-%% starts at zero and increases from left to right, and `j' starts at zero and increases
-%% from bottom to top. Kernel location `i,j' is derived from the `N'th pixel, where
-%% `N' is `i'+`j'* `Width' .
-%%
-%% Note that after a convolution is performed, the resulting color components are also scaled
-%% by their corresponding `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_c_SCALE' parameters and biased by their
-%% corresponding `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_c_BIAS' parameters (where `c' takes on the
-%% values `RED', `GREEN', `BLUE', and `ALPHA'). These parameters are
-%% set by {@link gl:pixelTransferf/2} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glConvolutionFilter2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glConvolutionFilter2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec convolutionFilter2D(Target, Internalformat, Width, Height, Format, Type, Image) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Image :: offset()|mem().
convolutionFilter2D(Target,Internalformat,Width,Height,Format,Type,Image) when is_integer(Image) ->
cast(5337, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Image:?GLuint>>);
@@ -8505,36 +3313,7 @@ convolutionFilter2D(Target,Internalformat,Width,Height,Format,Type,Image) ->
%%
%% ``gl:convolutionParameter'' sets the value of a convolution parameter.
%%
-%% `Target' selects the convolution filter to be affected: `?GL_CONVOLUTION_1D', `?GL_CONVOLUTION_2D'
-%% , or `?GL_SEPARABLE_2D' for the 1D, 2D, or separable 2D filter, respectively.
-%%
-%% `Pname' selects the parameter to be changed. `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE'
-%% and `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS' affect the definition of the convolution filter
-%% kernel; see {@link gl:convolutionFilter1D/6} , {@link gl:convolutionFilter2D/7} , and {@link gl:separableFilter2D/8}
-%% for details. In these cases, `Params' v is an array of four values to be applied
-%% to red, green, blue, and alpha values, respectively. The initial value for `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE'
-%% is (1, 1, 1, 1), and the initial value for `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS' is (0,
-%% 0, 0, 0).
-%%
-%% A `Pname' value of `?GL_CONVOLUTION_BORDER_MODE' controls the convolution border
-%% mode. The accepted modes are:
-%%
-%% `?GL_REDUCE': The image resulting from convolution is smaller than the source image.
-%% If the filter width is Wf and height is Hf, and the source image width is Ws and
-%% height is Hs, then the convolved image width will be Ws-Wf+1 and height will be Hs-Hf
-%% +1. (If this reduction would generate an image with zero or negative width and/or height,
-%% the output is simply null, with no error generated.) The coordinates of the image resulting
-%% from convolution are zero through Ws-Wf in width and zero through Hs-Hf in height.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONSTANT_BORDER': The image resulting from convolution is the same size as
-%% the source image, and processed as if the source image were surrounded by pixels with
-%% their color specified by the `?GL_CONVOLUTION_BORDER_COLOR'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_REPLICATE_BORDER': The image resulting from convolution is the same size as
-%% the source image, and processed as if the outermost pixel on the border of the source
-%% image were replicated.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glConvolutionParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glConvolutionParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec convolutionParameterf(Target, Pname, Params) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),Params :: tuple().
convolutionParameterf(Target,Pname,Params) ->
cast(5339, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,(size(Params)):?GLuint,
@@ -8561,49 +3340,7 @@ convolutionParameteriv(Target,Pname,{Params}) -> convolutionParameteri(Target,P
%% pixels from the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER' (rather than from main memory, as is the
%% case for {@link gl:convolutionFilter1D/6} ).
%%
-%% The screen-aligned pixel rectangle with lower-left corner at ( `X' , `Y' ), width
-%% `Width' and height 1 is used to define the convolution filter. If any pixels within
-%% this region are outside the window that is associated with the GL context, the values
-%% obtained for those pixels are undefined.
-%%
-%% The pixels in the rectangle are processed exactly as if {@link gl:readPixels/7} had been
-%% called with `format' set to RGBA, but the process stops just before final conversion.
-%% The R, G, B, and A components of each pixel are next scaled by the four 1D `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE'
-%% parameters and biased by the four 1D `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS' parameters. (The
-%% scale and bias parameters are set by {@link gl:convolutionParameterf/3} using the `?GL_CONVOLUTION_1D'
-%% target and the names `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE' and `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS'
-%% . The parameters themselves are vectors of four values that are applied to red, green,
-%% blue, and alpha, in that order.) The R, G, B, and A values are not clamped to [0,1] at
-%% any time during this process.
-%%
-%% Each pixel is then converted to the internal format specified by `Internalformat' .
-%% This conversion simply maps the component values of the pixel (R, G, B, and A) to the
-%% values included in the internal format (red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and intensity).
-%% The mapping is as follows:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Internal Format '</td><td>` Red '</td><td>` Green '</td>
-%% <td>` Blue '</td><td>` Alpha '</td><td>` Luminance '</td><td>` Intensity '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td> A </td>
-%% <td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> A </td><td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTENSITY'</td><td></td><td></td><td>
-%% </td><td></td><td></td><td> R </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB'</td><td> R </td><td> G </td>
-%% <td> B </td><td></td><td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA'</td><td> R </td><td>
-%% G </td><td> B </td><td> A </td><td></td><td></td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% The red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and/or intensity components of the resulting
-%% pixels are stored in floating-point rather than integer format.
-%%
-%% Pixel ordering is such that lower x screen coordinates correspond to lower `i' filter
-%% image coordinates.
-%%
-%% Note that after a convolution is performed, the resulting color components are also scaled
-%% by their corresponding `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_c_SCALE' parameters and biased by their
-%% corresponding `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_c_BIAS' parameters (where `c' takes on the
-%% values `RED', `GREEN', `BLUE', and `ALPHA'). These parameters are
-%% set by {@link gl:pixelTransferf/2} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyConvolutionFilter1D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glCopyConvolutionFilter1D.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyConvolutionFilter1D(Target, Internalformat, X, Y, Width) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer().
copyConvolutionFilter1D(Target,Internalformat,X,Y,Width) ->
cast(5341, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -8614,50 +3351,7 @@ copyConvolutionFilter1D(Target,Internalformat,X,Y,Width) ->
%% pixels from the current `?GL_READ_BUFFER' (rather than from main memory, as is the
%% case for {@link gl:convolutionFilter2D/7} ).
%%
-%% The screen-aligned pixel rectangle with lower-left corner at ( `X' , `Y' ), width
-%% `Width' and height `Height' is used to define the convolution filter. If any
-%% pixels within this region are outside the window that is associated with the GL context,
-%% the values obtained for those pixels are undefined.
-%%
-%% The pixels in the rectangle are processed exactly as if {@link gl:readPixels/7} had been
-%% called with `format' set to RGBA, but the process stops just before final conversion.
-%% The R, G, B, and A components of each pixel are next scaled by the four 2D `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE'
-%% parameters and biased by the four 2D `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS' parameters. (The
-%% scale and bias parameters are set by {@link gl:convolutionParameterf/3} using the `?GL_CONVOLUTION_2D'
-%% target and the names `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE' and `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS'
-%% . The parameters themselves are vectors of four values that are applied to red, green,
-%% blue, and alpha, in that order.) The R, G, B, and A values are not clamped to [0,1] at
-%% any time during this process.
-%%
-%% Each pixel is then converted to the internal format specified by `Internalformat' .
-%% This conversion simply maps the component values of the pixel (R, G, B, and A) to the
-%% values included in the internal format (red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and intensity).
-%% The mapping is as follows:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Internal Format '</td><td>` Red '</td><td>` Green '</td>
-%% <td>` Blue '</td><td>` Alpha '</td><td>` Luminance '</td><td>` Intensity '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td> A </td>
-%% <td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA'</td><td></td><td></td><td></td>
-%% <td> A </td><td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTENSITY'</td><td></td><td></td><td>
-%% </td><td></td><td></td><td> R </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB'</td><td> R </td><td> G </td>
-%% <td> B </td><td></td><td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA'</td><td> R </td><td>
-%% G </td><td> B </td><td> A </td><td></td><td></td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% The red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and/or intensity components of the resulting
-%% pixels are stored in floating-point rather than integer format.
-%%
-%% Pixel ordering is such that lower x screen coordinates correspond to lower `i' filter
-%% image coordinates, and lower y screen coordinates correspond to lower `j' filter
-%% image coordinates.
-%%
-%% Note that after a convolution is performed, the resulting color components are also scaled
-%% by their corresponding `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_c_SCALE' parameters and biased by their
-%% corresponding `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_c_BIAS' parameters (where `c' takes on the
-%% values `RED', `GREEN', `BLUE', and `ALPHA'). These parameters are
-%% set by {@link gl:pixelTransferf/2} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyConvolutionFilter2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glCopyConvolutionFilter2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyConvolutionFilter2D(Target, Internalformat, X, Y, Width, Height) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),X :: integer(),Y :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer().
copyConvolutionFilter2D(Target,Internalformat,X,Y,Width,Height) ->
cast(5342, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,X:?GLint,Y:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -8669,21 +3363,7 @@ copyConvolutionFilter2D(Target,Internalformat,X,Y,Width,Height) ->
%% specifications in `Format' and `Type' . No pixel transfer operations are performed
%% on this image, but the relevant pixel storage modes are applied.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a convolution filter is requested, `Image' is
-%% treated as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% Color components that are present in `Format' but not included in the internal format
-%% of the filter are returned as zero. The assignments of internal color components to the
-%% components of `Format' are as follows. <table><tbody><tr><td>` Internal Component '
-%% </td><td>` Resulting Component '</td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td> Red </td><td> Red </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td> Green </td><td> Green </td></tr><tr><td> Blue </td><td> Blue </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% Alpha </td><td> Alpha </td></tr><tr><td> Luminance </td><td> Red </td></tr><tr><td> Intensity
-%% </td><td> Red </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetConvolutionFilter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetConvolutionFilter.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getConvolutionFilter(Target, Format, Type, Image) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Image :: mem().
getConvolutionFilter(Target,Format,Type,Image) ->
send_bin(Image),
@@ -8695,34 +3375,7 @@ getConvolutionFilter(Target,Format,Type,Image) ->
%% which convolution filter is queried. `Pname' determines which parameter is returned:
%%
%%
-%% `?GL_CONVOLUTION_BORDER_MODE': The convolution border mode. See {@link gl:convolutionParameterf/3}
-%% for a list of border modes.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONVOLUTION_BORDER_COLOR': The current convolution border color. `Params'
-%% must be a pointer to an array of four elements, which will receive the red, green, blue,
-%% and alpha border colors.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE': The current filter scale factors. `Params'
-%% must be a pointer to an array of four elements, which will receive the red, green, blue,
-%% and alpha filter scale factors in that order.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS': The current filter bias factors. `Params' must
-%% be a pointer to an array of four elements, which will receive the red, green, blue, and
-%% alpha filter bias terms in that order.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FORMAT': The current internal format. See {@link gl:convolutionFilter1D/6}
-%% , {@link gl:convolutionFilter2D/7} , and {@link gl:separableFilter2D/8} for lists of allowable
-%% formats.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONVOLUTION_WIDTH': The current filter image width.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONVOLUTION_HEIGHT': The current filter image height.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_CONVOLUTION_WIDTH': The maximum acceptable filter image width.
-%%
-%% `?GL_MAX_CONVOLUTION_HEIGHT': The maximum acceptable filter image height.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetConvolutionParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetConvolutionParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getConvolutionParameterfv(Target, Pname) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getConvolutionParameterfv(Target,Pname) ->
call(5344, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -8738,52 +3391,7 @@ getConvolutionParameteriv(Target,Pname) ->
%% ``gl:separableFilter2D'' builds a two-dimensional separable convolution filter kernel
%% from two arrays of pixels.
%%
-%% The pixel arrays specified by ( `Width' , `Format' , `Type' , `Row' )
-%% and ( `Height' , `Format' , `Type' , `Column' ) are processed just as if
-%% they had been passed to {@link gl:drawPixels/5} , but processing stops after the final expansion
-%% to RGBA is completed.
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a convolution filter is specified, `Row' and `Column'
-%% are treated as byte offsets into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% Next, the R, G, B, and A components of all pixels in both arrays are scaled by the four
-%% separable 2D `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE' parameters and biased by the four separable
-%% 2D `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS' parameters. (The scale and bias parameters are set
-%% by {@link gl:convolutionParameterf/3} using the `?GL_SEPARABLE_2D' target and the names
-%% `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_SCALE' and `?GL_CONVOLUTION_FILTER_BIAS'. The parameters
-%% themselves are vectors of four values that are applied to red, green, blue, and alpha,
-%% in that order.) The R, G, B, and A values are not clamped to [0,1] at any time during
-%% this process.
-%%
-%% Each pixel is then converted to the internal format specified by `Internalformat' .
-%% This conversion simply maps the component values of the pixel (R, G, B, and A) to the
-%% values included in the internal format (red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and intensity).
-%% The mapping is as follows: <table><tbody><tr><td>` Internal Format '</td><td>` Red '
-%% </td><td>` Green '</td><td>` Blue '</td><td>` Alpha '</td><td>` Luminance '
-%% </td><td>` Intensity '</td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE'</td><td></td>
-%% <td></td><td></td><td></td><td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA'</td>
-%% <td></td><td></td><td></td><td> A </td><td> R </td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INTENSITY'
-%% </td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td> R </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB'</td>
-%% <td> R </td><td> G </td><td> B </td><td></td><td></td><td></td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA'
-%% </td><td> R </td><td> G </td><td> B </td><td> A </td><td></td><td></td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%%
-%% The red, green, blue, alpha, luminance, and/or intensity components of the resulting
-%% pixels are stored in floating-point rather than integer format. They form two one-dimensional
-%% filter kernel images. The row image is indexed by coordinate `i' starting at zero
-%% and increasing from left to right. Each location in the row image is derived from element
-%% `i' of `Row' . The column image is indexed by coordinate `j' starting at
-%% zero and increasing from bottom to top. Each location in the column image is derived from
-%% element `j' of `Column' .
-%%
-%% Note that after a convolution is performed, the resulting color components are also scaled
-%% by their corresponding `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_c_SCALE' parameters and biased by their
-%% corresponding `?GL_POST_CONVOLUTION_c_BIAS' parameters (where `c' takes on the
-%% values `RED', `GREEN', `BLUE', and `ALPHA'). These parameters are
-%% set by {@link gl:pixelTransferf/2} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glSeparableFilter2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glSeparableFilter2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec separableFilter2D(Target, Internalformat, Width, Height, Format, Type, Row, Column) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Row :: offset()|mem(),Column :: offset()|mem().
separableFilter2D(Target,Internalformat,Width,Height,Format,Type,Row,Column) when is_integer(Row), is_integer(Column) ->
cast(5346, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Row:?GLuint,Column:?GLuint>>);
@@ -8798,21 +3406,7 @@ separableFilter2D(Target,Internalformat,Width,Height,Format,Type,Row,Column) ->
%% the same width as the histogram. No pixel transfer operations are performed on this image,
%% but pixel storage modes that are applicable to 1D images are honored.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a histogram table is requested, `Values' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% Color components that are requested in the specified `Format' , but which are not
-%% included in the internal format of the histogram, are returned as zero. The assignments
-%% of internal color components to the components requested by `Format' are: <table><tbody>
-%% <tr><td>` Internal Component '</td><td>` Resulting Component '</td></tr></tbody>
-%% <tbody><tr><td> Red </td><td> Red </td></tr><tr><td> Green </td><td> Green </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% Blue </td><td> Blue </td></tr><tr><td> Alpha </td><td> Alpha </td></tr><tr><td> Luminance
-%% </td><td> Red </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetHistogram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetHistogram.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getHistogram(Target, Reset, Format, Type, Values) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Reset :: 0|1,Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Values :: mem().
getHistogram(Target,Reset,Format,Type,Values) ->
send_bin(Values),
@@ -8826,19 +3420,7 @@ getHistogram(Target,Reset,Format,Type,Values) ->
%% table) or `?GL_PROXY_HISTOGRAM' (to obtain information from the most recent proxy
%% request) and one of the following values for the `Pname' argument:
%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Parameter '</td><td>` Description '</td></tr></tbody><tbody>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_HISTOGRAM_WIDTH'</td><td> Histogram table width </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_HISTOGRAM_FORMAT'
-%% </td><td> Internal format </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_HISTOGRAM_RED_SIZE'</td><td> Red
-%% component counter size, in bits </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_HISTOGRAM_GREEN_SIZE'</td><td>
-%% Green component counter size, in bits </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_HISTOGRAM_BLUE_SIZE'</td>
-%% <td> Blue component counter size, in bits </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_HISTOGRAM_ALPHA_SIZE'
-%% </td><td> Alpha component counter size, in bits </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_HISTOGRAM_LUMINANCE_SIZE'
-%% </td><td> Luminance component counter size, in bits </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_HISTOGRAM_SINK'
-%% </td><td> Value of the `sink' parameter </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetHistogramParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetHistogramParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getHistogramParameterfv(Target, Pname) -> {float()} when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getHistogramParameterfv(Target,Pname) ->
call(5349, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -8857,26 +3439,7 @@ getHistogramParameteriv(Target,Pname) ->
%% of the return values is determined by `Format' , and their type is determined by `Types'
%% .
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while minimum and maximum pixel values are requested, `Values'
-%% is treated as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% No pixel transfer operations are performed on the return values, but pixel storage modes
-%% that are applicable to one-dimensional images are performed. Color components that are
-%% requested in the specified `Format' , but that are not included in the internal format
-%% of the minmax table, are returned as zero. The assignment of internal color components
-%% to the components requested by `Format' are as follows:
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Internal Component '</td><td>` Resulting Component '</td>
-%% </tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td> Red </td><td> Red </td></tr><tr><td> Green </td><td> Green </td>
-%% </tr><tr><td> Blue </td><td> Blue </td></tr><tr><td> Alpha </td><td> Alpha </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% Luminance </td><td> Red </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% If `Reset' is `?GL_TRUE', the minmax table entries corresponding to the return
-%% values are reset to their initial values. Minimum and maximum values that are not returned
-%% are not modified, even if `Reset' is `?GL_TRUE'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetMinmax.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetMinmax.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getMinmax(Target, Reset, Format, Types, Values) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Reset :: 0|1,Format :: enum(),Types :: enum(),Values :: mem().
getMinmax(Target,Reset,Format,Types,Values) ->
send_bin(Values),
@@ -8887,14 +3450,7 @@ getMinmax(Target,Reset,Format,Types,Values) ->
%% ``gl:getMinmaxParameter'' retrieves parameters for the current minmax table by setting `Pname'
%% to one of the following values:
%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Parameter '</td><td>` Description '</td></tr></tbody><tbody>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_MINMAX_FORMAT'</td><td> Internal format of minmax table </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_MINMAX_SINK'</td><td> Value of the `sink' parameter </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetMinmaxParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetMinmaxParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getMinmaxParameterfv(Target, Pname) -> {float()} when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getMinmaxParameterfv(Target,Pname) ->
call(5352, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -8915,26 +3471,7 @@ getMinmaxParameteriv(Target,Pname) ->
%% to be incremented.) If a histogram table entry is incremented beyond its maximum value,
%% then its value becomes undefined. (This is not an error.)
%%
-%% Histogramming is performed only for RGBA pixels (though these may be specified originally
-%% as color indices and converted to RGBA by index table lookup). Histogramming is enabled
-%% with {@link gl:enable/1} and disabled with {@link gl:enable/1} .
-%%
-%% When `Target' is `?GL_HISTOGRAM', ``gl:histogram'' redefines the current
-%% histogram table to have `Width' entries of the format specified by `Internalformat'
-%% . The entries are indexed 0 through width-1, and all entries are initialized to zero.
-%% The values in the previous histogram table, if any, are lost. If `Sink' is `?GL_TRUE'
-%% , then pixels are discarded after histogramming; no further processing of the pixels takes
-%% place, and no drawing, texture loading, or pixel readback will result.
-%%
-%% When `Target' is `?GL_PROXY_HISTOGRAM', ``gl:histogram'' computes all state
-%% information as if the histogram table were to be redefined, but does not actually define
-%% the new table. If the requested histogram table is too large to be supported, then the
-%% state information will be set to zero. This provides a way to determine if a histogram
-%% table with the given parameters can be supported.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glHistogram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glHistogram.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec histogram(Target, Width, Internalformat, Sink) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Internalformat :: enum(),Sink :: 0|1.
histogram(Target,Width,Internalformat,Sink) ->
cast(5354, <<Target:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Internalformat:?GLenum,Sink:?GLboolean>>).
@@ -8954,16 +3491,7 @@ histogram(Target,Width,Internalformat,Sink) ->
%% calling {@link gl:enable/1} or {@link gl:enable/1} , respectively, with an argument of `?GL_MINMAX'
%% .
%%
-%% ``gl:minmax'' redefines the current minmax table to have entries of the format specified
-%% by `Internalformat' . The maximum element is initialized with the smallest possible
-%% component values, and the minimum element is initialized with the largest possible component
-%% values. The values in the previous minmax table, if any, are lost. If `Sink' is `?GL_TRUE'
-%% , then pixels are discarded after minmax; no further processing of the pixels takes place,
-%% and no drawing, texture loading, or pixel readback will result.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMinmax.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glMinmax.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec minmax(Target, Internalformat, Sink) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),Sink :: 0|1.
minmax(Target,Internalformat,Sink) ->
cast(5355, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,Sink:?GLboolean>>).
@@ -8972,7 +3500,7 @@ minmax(Target,Internalformat,Sink) ->
%%
%% ``gl:resetHistogram'' resets all the elements of the current histogram table to zero.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glResetHistogram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glResetHistogram.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec resetHistogram(Target) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum().
resetHistogram(Target) ->
cast(5356, <<Target:?GLenum>>).
@@ -8983,7 +3511,7 @@ resetHistogram(Target) ->
%% values: the ``maximum'' element receives the minimum possible component values, and the
%% ``minimum'' element receives the maximum possible component values.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glResetMinmax.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glResetMinmax.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec resetMinmax(Target) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum().
resetMinmax(Target) ->
cast(5357, <<Target:?GLenum>>).
@@ -8994,7 +3522,7 @@ resetMinmax(Target) ->
%% affect. The number of texture units an implementation supports is implementation dependent,
%% but must be at least 80.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glActiveTexture.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glActiveTexture.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec activeTexture(Texture) -> 'ok' when Texture :: enum().
activeTexture(Texture) ->
cast(5358, <<Texture:?GLenum>>).
@@ -9005,22 +3533,7 @@ activeTexture(Texture) ->
%% locations to generate antialiasing effects. Multisampling transparently antialiases points,
%% lines, polygons, and images if it is enabled.
%%
-%% `Value' is used in constructing a temporary mask used in determining which samples
-%% will be used in resolving the final fragment color. This mask is bitwise-anded with the
-%% coverage mask generated from the multisampling computation. If the `Invert' flag
-%% is set, the temporary mask is inverted (all bits flipped) and then the bitwise-and is
-%% computed.
-%%
-%% If an implementation does not have any multisample buffers available, or multisampling
-%% is disabled, rasterization occurs with only a single sample computing a pixel's final
-%% RGB color.
-%%
-%% Provided an implementation supports multisample buffers, and multisampling is enabled,
-%% then a pixel's final color is generated by combining several samples per pixel. Each sample
-%% contains color, depth, and stencil information, allowing those operations to be performed
-%% on each sample.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glSampleCoverage.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glSampleCoverage.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec sampleCoverage(Value, Invert) -> 'ok' when Value :: clamp(),Invert :: 0|1.
sampleCoverage(Value,Invert) ->
cast(5359, <<Value:?GLclampf,Invert:?GLboolean>>).
@@ -9029,56 +3542,7 @@ sampleCoverage(Value,Invert) ->
%%
%% Texturing allows elements of an image array to be read by shaders.
%%
-%% ``gl:compressedTexImage3D'' loads a previously defined, and retrieved, compressed three-dimensional
-%% texture image if `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_3D' (see {@link gl:texImage3D/10} ).
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY', `Data' is treated as an array of
-%% compressed 2D textures.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_3D' or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY',
-%% no data is read from `Data' , but all of the texture image state is recalculated,
-%% checked for consistency, and checked against the implementation's capabilities. If the
-%% implementation cannot handle a texture of the requested texture size, it sets all of the
-%% image state to 0, but does not generate an error (see {@link gl:getError/0} ). To query
-%% for an entire mipmap array, use an image array level greater than or equal to 1.
-%%
-%% `Internalformat' must be a known compressed image format (such as `?GL_RGTC')
-%% or an extension-specified compressed-texture format. When a texture is loaded with {@link gl:texImage2D/9}
-%% using a generic compressed texture format (e.g., `?GL_COMPRESSED_RGB'), the GL selects
-%% from one of its extensions supporting compressed textures. In order to load the compressed
-%% texture image using ``gl:compressedTexImage3D'', query the compressed texture image's
-%% size and format using {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3} .
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% If the compressed data are arranged into fixed-size blocks of texels, the pixel storage
-%% modes can be used to select a sub-rectangle from a larger containing rectangle. These
-%% pixel storage modes operate in the same way as they do for {@link gl:texImage1D/8} . In
-%% the following description, denote by b s, b w, b h, and b d, the values of pixel storage
-%% modes `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_SIZE', `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_WIDTH', `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_HEIGHT'
-%% , and `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_DEPTH', respectively. b s is the compressed block
-%% size in bytes; b w, b h, and b d are the compressed block width, height, and depth
-%% in pixels.
-%%
-%% By default the pixel storage modes `?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH', `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS'
-%% , `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS', `?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT' and `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_IMAGES'
-%% are ignored for compressed images. To enable `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS' and `?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH'
-%% , b s and b w must both be non-zero. To also enable `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS' and `?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT'
-%% , b h must be non-zero. To also enable `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_IMAGES', b d must be non-zero.
-%% All parameters must be consistent with the compressed format to produce the desired results.
-%%
-%%
-%% When selecting a sub-rectangle from a compressed image: the value of `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS'
-%% must be a multiple of b w;the value of `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS' must be a multiple
-%% of b w;the value of `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_IMAGES' must be a multiple of b w.
-%%
-%% `ImageSize' must be equal to:
-%%
-%% b s×|width b/w|×|height b/h|×|depth b/d|
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCompressedTexImage3D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCompressedTexImage3D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec compressedTexImage3D(Target, Level, Internalformat, Width, Height, Depth, Border, ImageSize, Data) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Depth :: integer(),Border :: integer(),ImageSize :: integer(),Data :: offset()|mem().
compressedTexImage3D(Target,Level,Internalformat,Width,Height,Depth,Border,ImageSize,Data) when is_integer(Data) ->
cast(5360, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Depth:?GLsizei,Border:?GLint,ImageSize:?GLsizei,Data:?GLuint>>);
@@ -9090,57 +3554,7 @@ compressedTexImage3D(Target,Level,Internalformat,Width,Height,Depth,Border,Image
%%
%% Texturing allows elements of an image array to be read by shaders.
%%
-%% ``gl:compressedTexImage2D'' loads a previously defined, and retrieved, compressed two-dimensional
-%% texture image if `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_2D', or one of the cube map faces
-%% such as `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_X'. (see {@link gl:texImage2D/9} ).
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY', `Data' is treated as an array of
-%% compressed 1D textures.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_2D', `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY' or `?GL_PROXY_CUBE_MAP'
-%% , no data is read from `Data' , but all of the texture image state is recalculated,
-%% checked for consistency, and checked against the implementation's capabilities. If the
-%% implementation cannot handle a texture of the requested texture size, it sets all of the
-%% image state to 0, but does not generate an error (see {@link gl:getError/0} ). To query
-%% for an entire mipmap array, use an image array level greater than or equal to 1.
-%%
-%% `Internalformat' must be a known compressed image format (such as `?GL_RGTC')
-%% or an extension-specified compressed-texture format. When a texture is loaded with {@link gl:texImage2D/9}
-%% using a generic compressed texture format (e.g., `?GL_COMPRESSED_RGB'), the GL selects
-%% from one of its extensions supporting compressed textures. In order to load the compressed
-%% texture image using ``gl:compressedTexImage2D'', query the compressed texture image's
-%% size and format using {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3} .
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% If the compressed data are arranged into fixed-size blocks of texels, the pixel storage
-%% modes can be used to select a sub-rectangle from a larger containing rectangle. These
-%% pixel storage modes operate in the same way as they do for {@link gl:texImage2D/9} . In
-%% the following description, denote by b s, b w, b h, and b d, the values of pixel storage
-%% modes `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_SIZE', `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_WIDTH', `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_HEIGHT'
-%% , and `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_DEPTH', respectively. b s is the compressed block
-%% size in bytes; b w, b h, and b d are the compressed block width, height, and depth
-%% in pixels.
-%%
-%% By default the pixel storage modes `?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH', `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS'
-%% , `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS', `?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT' and `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_IMAGES'
-%% are ignored for compressed images. To enable `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS' and `?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH'
-%% , b s and b w must both be non-zero. To also enable `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS' and `?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT'
-%% , b h must be non-zero. To also enable `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_IMAGES', b d must be non-zero.
-%% All parameters must be consistent with the compressed format to produce the desired results.
-%%
-%%
-%% When selecting a sub-rectangle from a compressed image: the value of `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS'
-%% must be a multiple of b w;the value of `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS' must be a multiple
-%% of b w.
-%%
-%% `ImageSize' must be equal to:
-%%
-%% b s×|width b/w|×|height b/h|
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCompressedTexImage2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCompressedTexImage2D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec compressedTexImage2D(Target, Level, Internalformat, Width, Height, Border, ImageSize, Data) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Border :: integer(),ImageSize :: integer(),Data :: offset()|mem().
compressedTexImage2D(Target,Level,Internalformat,Width,Height,Border,ImageSize,Data) when is_integer(Data) ->
cast(5362, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Border:?GLint,ImageSize:?GLsizei,Data:?GLuint>>);
@@ -9152,52 +3566,7 @@ compressedTexImage2D(Target,Level,Internalformat,Width,Height,Border,ImageSize,D
%%
%% Texturing allows elements of an image array to be read by shaders.
%%
-%% ``gl:compressedTexImage1D'' loads a previously defined, and retrieved, compressed one-dimensional
-%% texture image if `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_1D' (see {@link gl:texImage1D/8} ).
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_1D', no data is read from `Data' , but
-%% all of the texture image state is recalculated, checked for consistency, and checked against
-%% the implementation's capabilities. If the implementation cannot handle a texture of the
-%% requested texture size, it sets all of the image state to 0, but does not generate an
-%% error (see {@link gl:getError/0} ). To query for an entire mipmap array, use an image array
-%% level greater than or equal to 1.
-%%
-%% `Internalformat' must be an extension-specified compressed-texture format. When a
-%% texture is loaded with {@link gl:texImage1D/8} using a generic compressed texture format
-%% (e.g., `?GL_COMPRESSED_RGB') the GL selects from one of its extensions supporting
-%% compressed textures. In order to load the compressed texture image using ``gl:compressedTexImage1D''
-%% , query the compressed texture image's size and format using {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% If the compressed data are arranged into fixed-size blocks of texels, the pixel storage
-%% modes can be used to select a sub-rectangle from a larger containing rectangle. These
-%% pixel storage modes operate in the same way as they do for {@link gl:texImage1D/8} . In
-%% the following description, denote by b s, b w, b h, and b d, the values of pixel storage
-%% modes `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_SIZE', `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_WIDTH', `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_HEIGHT'
-%% , and `?GL_UNPACK_COMPRESSED_BLOCK_DEPTH', respectively. b s is the compressed block
-%% size in bytes; b w, b h, and b d are the compressed block width, height, and depth
-%% in pixels.
-%%
-%% By default the pixel storage modes `?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH', `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS'
-%% , `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS', `?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT' and `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_IMAGES'
-%% are ignored for compressed images. To enable `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS' and `?GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH'
-%% , b s and b w must both be non-zero. To also enable `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS' and `?GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT'
-%% , b h must be non-zero. To also enable `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_IMAGES', b d must be non-zero.
-%% All parameters must be consistent with the compressed format to produce the desired results.
-%%
-%%
-%% When selecting a sub-rectangle from a compressed image: the value of `?GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS'
-%% must be a multiple of b w;
-%%
-%% `ImageSize' must be equal to:
-%%
-%% b s×|width b/w|
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCompressedTexImage1D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCompressedTexImage1D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec compressedTexImage1D(Target, Level, Internalformat, Width, Border, ImageSize, Data) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Border :: integer(),ImageSize :: integer(),Data :: offset()|mem().
compressedTexImage1D(Target,Level,Internalformat,Width,Border,ImageSize,Data) when is_integer(Data) ->
cast(5364, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Border:?GLint,ImageSize:?GLsizei,Data:?GLuint>>);
@@ -9209,25 +3578,7 @@ compressedTexImage1D(Target,Level,Internalformat,Width,Border,ImageSize,Data) ->
%%
%% Texturing allows elements of an image array to be read by shaders.
%%
-%% ``gl:compressedTexSubImage3D'' redefines a contiguous subregion of an existing three-dimensional
-%% texture image. The texels referenced by `Data' replace the portion of the existing
-%% texture array with x indices `Xoffset' and xoffset+width-1, and the y indices `Yoffset'
-%% and yoffset+height-1, and the z indices `Zoffset' and zoffset+depth-1, inclusive.
-%% This region may not include any texels outside the range of the texture array as it was
-%% originally specified. It is not an error to specify a subtexture with width of 0, but
-%% such a specification has no effect.
-%%
-%% `Internalformat' must be a known compressed image format (such as `?GL_RGTC')
-%% or an extension-specified compressed-texture format. The `Format' of the compressed
-%% texture image is selected by the GL implementation that compressed it (see {@link gl:texImage3D/10}
-%% ) and should be queried at the time the texture was compressed with {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCompressedTexSubImage3D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCompressedTexSubImage3D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec compressedTexSubImage3D(Target, Level, Xoffset, Yoffset, Zoffset, Width, Height, Depth, Format, ImageSize, Data) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Xoffset :: integer(),Yoffset :: integer(),Zoffset :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Depth :: integer(),Format :: enum(),ImageSize :: integer(),Data :: offset()|mem().
compressedTexSubImage3D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,Zoffset,Width,Height,Depth,Format,ImageSize,Data) when is_integer(Data) ->
cast(5366, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Xoffset:?GLint,Yoffset:?GLint,Zoffset:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Depth:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,ImageSize:?GLsizei,Data:?GLuint>>);
@@ -9239,24 +3590,7 @@ compressedTexSubImage3D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,Zoffset,Width,Height,Depth,
%%
%% Texturing allows elements of an image array to be read by shaders.
%%
-%% ``gl:compressedTexSubImage2D'' redefines a contiguous subregion of an existing two-dimensional
-%% texture image. The texels referenced by `Data' replace the portion of the existing
-%% texture array with x indices `Xoffset' and xoffset+width-1, and the y indices `Yoffset'
-%% and yoffset+height-1, inclusive. This region may not include any texels outside the
-%% range of the texture array as it was originally specified. It is not an error to specify
-%% a subtexture with width of 0, but such a specification has no effect.
-%%
-%% `Internalformat' must be a known compressed image format (such as `?GL_RGTC')
-%% or an extension-specified compressed-texture format. The `Format' of the compressed
-%% texture image is selected by the GL implementation that compressed it (see {@link gl:texImage2D/9}
-%% ) and should be queried at the time the texture was compressed with {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCompressedTexSubImage2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCompressedTexSubImage2D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec compressedTexSubImage2D(Target, Level, Xoffset, Yoffset, Width, Height, Format, ImageSize, Data) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Xoffset :: integer(),Yoffset :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Format :: enum(),ImageSize :: integer(),Data :: offset()|mem().
compressedTexSubImage2D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,Width,Height,Format,ImageSize,Data) when is_integer(Data) ->
cast(5368, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Xoffset:?GLint,Yoffset:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,ImageSize:?GLsizei,Data:?GLuint>>);
@@ -9268,24 +3602,7 @@ compressedTexSubImage2D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Yoffset,Width,Height,Format,ImageSi
%%
%% Texturing allows elements of an image array to be read by shaders.
%%
-%% ``gl:compressedTexSubImage1D'' redefines a contiguous subregion of an existing one-dimensional
-%% texture image. The texels referenced by `Data' replace the portion of the existing
-%% texture array with x indices `Xoffset' and xoffset+width-1, inclusive. This region
-%% may not include any texels outside the range of the texture array as it was originally
-%% specified. It is not an error to specify a subtexture with width of 0, but such a specification
-%% has no effect.
-%%
-%% `Internalformat' must be a known compressed image format (such as `?GL_RGTC')
-%% or an extension-specified compressed-texture format. The `Format' of the compressed
-%% texture image is selected by the GL implementation that compressed it (see {@link gl:texImage1D/8}
-%% ), and should be queried at the time the texture was compressed with {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is specified, `Data' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCompressedTexSubImage1D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCompressedTexSubImage1D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec compressedTexSubImage1D(Target, Level, Xoffset, Width, Format, ImageSize, Data) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Xoffset :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Format :: enum(),ImageSize :: integer(),Data :: offset()|mem().
compressedTexSubImage1D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Width,Format,ImageSize,Data) when is_integer(Data) ->
cast(5370, <<Target:?GLenum,Level:?GLint,Xoffset:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Format:?GLenum,ImageSize:?GLsizei,Data:?GLuint>>);
@@ -9302,20 +3619,7 @@ compressedTexSubImage1D(Target,Level,Xoffset,Width,Format,ImageSize,Data) ->
%% ), or {@link gl:texImage3D/10} (`?GL_TEXTURE_3D'). `Lod' specifies the level-of-detail
%% number of the desired image.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER' target
-%% (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ) while a texture image is requested, `Img' is treated
-%% as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store.
-%%
-%% To minimize errors, first verify that the texture is compressed by calling {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3}
-%% with argument `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPRESSED'. If the texture is compressed, then determine
-%% the amount of memory required to store the compressed texture by calling {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3}
-%% with argument `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPRESSED_IMAGE_SIZE'. Finally, retrieve the internal
-%% format of the texture by calling {@link gl:getTexLevelParameterfv/3} with argument `?GL_TEXTURE_INTERNAL_FORMAT'
-%% . To store the texture for later use, associate the internal format and size with the
-%% retrieved texture image. These data can be used by the respective texture or subtexture
-%% loading routine used for loading `Target' textures.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetCompressedTexImage.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetCompressedTexImage.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getCompressedTexImage(Target, Lod, Img) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Lod :: integer(),Img :: mem().
getCompressedTexImage(Target,Lod,Img) ->
send_bin(Img),
@@ -9328,7 +3632,7 @@ getCompressedTexImage(Target,Lod,Img) ->
%% or {@link gl:enableClientState/1} , respectively, when called with a parameter of `?GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY'
%% .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClientActiveTexture.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glClientActiveTexture.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clientActiveTexture(Texture) -> 'ok' when Texture :: enum().
clientActiveTexture(Texture) ->
cast(5373, <<Texture:?GLenum>>).
@@ -9341,12 +3645,7 @@ clientActiveTexture(Texture) ->
%% t r 1),
%% and ``gl:multiTexCoord4'' defines all four components explicitly as (s t r q).
%%
-%% The current texture coordinates are part of the data that is associated with each vertex
-%% and with the current raster position. Initially, the values for (s t r q) are (0 0 0 1).
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMultiTexCoord.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glMultiTexCoord.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec multiTexCoord1d(Target, S) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),S :: float().
multiTexCoord1d(Target,S) ->
cast(5374, <<Target:?GLenum,0:32,S:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -9511,19 +3810,7 @@ multiTexCoord4sv(Target,{S,T,R,Q}) -> multiTexCoord4s(Target,S,T,R,Q).
%% specified by `M' . The current matrix is the projection matrix, modelview matrix,
%% or texture matrix, depending on the current matrix mode (see {@link gl:matrixMode/1} ).
%%
-%% The current matrix, M, defines a transformation of coordinates. For instance, assume
-%% M refers to the modelview matrix. If v=(v[0] v[1] v[2] v[3]) is the set of object coordinates of a vertex,
-%% and `M' points to an array of 16 single- or double-precision floating-point values
-%% m={m[0] m[1] ... m[15]}, then the modelview transformation M(v) does the following:
-%%
-%% M(v)=(m[0] m[1] m[2] m[3] m[4] m[5] m[6] m[7] m[8] m[9] m[10] m[11] m[12] m[13] m[14] m[15])×(v[0] v[1] v[2] v[3])
-%%
-%% Projection and texture transformations are similarly defined.
-%%
-%% Calling ``gl:loadTransposeMatrix'' with matrix M is identical in operation to {@link gl:loadMatrixd/1}
-%% with M T, where T represents the transpose.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLoadTransposeMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glLoadTransposeMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec loadTransposeMatrixf(M) -> 'ok' when M :: matrix().
loadTransposeMatrixf({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12,M13,M14,M15,M16}) ->
cast(5390, <<M1:?GLfloat,M2:?GLfloat,M3:?GLfloat,M4:?GLfloat,M5:?GLfloat,M6:?GLfloat,M7:?GLfloat,M8:?GLfloat,M9:?GLfloat,M10:?GLfloat,M11:?GLfloat,M12:?GLfloat,M13:?GLfloat,M14:?GLfloat,M15:?GLfloat,M16:?GLfloat>>);
@@ -9543,10 +3830,7 @@ loadTransposeMatrixd({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12}) ->
%% ``gl:multTransposeMatrix'' multiplies the current matrix with the one specified using `M'
%% , and replaces the current matrix with the product.
%%
-%% The current matrix is determined by the current matrix mode (see {@link gl:matrixMode/1} ).
-%% It is either the projection matrix, modelview matrix, or the texture matrix.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMultTransposeMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glMultTransposeMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec multTransposeMatrixf(M) -> 'ok' when M :: matrix().
multTransposeMatrixf({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12,M13,M14,M15,M16}) ->
cast(5392, <<M1:?GLfloat,M2:?GLfloat,M3:?GLfloat,M4:?GLfloat,M5:?GLfloat,M6:?GLfloat,M7:?GLfloat,M8:?GLfloat,M9:?GLfloat,M10:?GLfloat,M11:?GLfloat,M12:?GLfloat,M13:?GLfloat,M14:?GLfloat,M15:?GLfloat,M16:?GLfloat>>);
@@ -9568,72 +3852,7 @@ multTransposeMatrixd({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12}) ->
%% is initially disabled. Use {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_BLEND'
%% to enable and disable blending.
%%
-%% ``gl:blendFuncSeparate'' defines the operation of blending for all draw buffers when
-%% it is enabled. ``gl:blendFuncSeparatei'' defines the operation of blending for a single
-%% draw buffer specified by `Buf' when enabled for that draw buffer. `SrcRGB' specifies
-%% which method is used to scale the source RGB-color components. `DstRGB' specifies
-%% which method is used to scale the destination RGB-color components. Likewise, `SrcAlpha'
-%% specifies which method is used to scale the source alpha color component, and `DstAlpha'
-%% specifies which method is used to scale the destination alpha component. The possible
-%% methods are described in the following table. Each method defines four scale factors,
-%% one each for red, green, blue, and alpha.
-%%
-%% In the table and in subsequent equations, first source, second source and destination
-%% color components are referred to as (R s0 G s0 B s0 A s0), (R s1 G s1 B s1 A s1), and (R d G d B d A d), respectively. The color specified by {@link gl:blendColor/4}
-%% is referred to as (R c G c B c A c). They are understood to have integer values between 0 and (k R k G k B
-%% k A), where
-%%
-%% k c=2(m c)-1
-%%
-%% and (m R m G m B m A) is the number of red, green, blue, and alpha bitplanes.
-%%
-%% Source and destination scale factors are referred to as (s R s G s B s A) and (d R d G d B d A). All scale factors have
-%% range [0 1].
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Parameter '</td><td>` RGB Factor '</td><td>` Alpha Factor '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_ZERO'</td><td>(0 0 0)</td><td> 0</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE'
-%% </td><td>(1 1 1)</td><td> 1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SRC_COLOR'</td><td>(R s0 k/R G s0 k/G B s0
-%% k/B)</td><td> A s0 k/A</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR'</td><td>(1 1 1 1)-(R s0 k/R G s0 k/G B s0 k/B)</td><td> 1-A s0 k/A</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_DST_COLOR'</td><td>(R d k/R G d k/G B d k/B)</td><td> A d k/A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_DST_COLOR'
-%% </td><td>(1 1 1)-(R d k/R G d k/G B d k/B)</td><td> 1-A d k/A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(A s0 k/A A s0
-%% k/A A s0 k/A)</td><td> A
-%% s0 k/A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(1 1 1)-(A s0 k/A A s0 k/A A s0 k/A
-%% )</td><td> 1-A s0 k/A</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_DST_ALPHA'</td><td>(A d k/A A d k/A A d k/A)</td><td> A d k/A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_DST_ALPHA'
-%% </td><td>(1 1 1)-(A d k/A A d k/A A d k/A)</td><td> 1-A d k/A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_CONSTANT_COLOR'</td><td>(R c G c
-%% B c)</td><td>
-%% A c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_COLOR'</td><td>(1 1 1)-(R c G c B c)</td><td> 1-A c</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_CONSTANT_ALPHA'</td><td>(A c A c A c)</td><td> A c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_ALPHA'
-%% </td><td>(1 1 1)-(A c A c A c)</td><td> 1-A c</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SRC_ALPHA_SATURATE'</td><td>(i i i)</td><td>
-%% 1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SRC1_COLOR'</td><td>(R s1 k/R G s1 k/G B s1 k/B)</td><td> A s1 k/A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR'
-%% </td><td>(1 1 1 1)-(R s1 k/R G s1 k/G B s1 k/B)</td><td> 1-A s1 k/A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SRC1_ALPHA'</td><td>(A s1 k/A A
-%% s1 k/A A s1 k/A)</td><td> A
-%% s1 k/A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA'</td><td>(1 1 1)-(A s1 k/A A s1 k/A A s1 k/A
-%% )</td><td> 1-A s1 k/A</td></tr>
-%% </tbody></table>
-%%
-%% In the table,
-%%
-%% i=min(A s 1-(A d))
-%%
-%% To determine the blended RGBA values of a pixel, the system uses the following equations:
-%%
-%%
-%% R d=min(k R R s s R+R d d R) G d=min(k G G s s G+G d d G) B d=min(k B B s s B+B d d B) A d=min(k A A s s A+A d d A)
-%%
-%% Despite the apparent precision of the above equations, blending arithmetic is not exactly
-%% specified, because blending operates with imprecise integer color values. However, a blend
-%% factor that should be equal to 1 is guaranteed not to modify its multiplicand, and a blend
-%% factor equal to 0 reduces its multiplicand to 0. For example, when `SrcRGB' is `?GL_SRC_ALPHA'
-%% , `DstRGB' is `?GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA', and A s is equal to k A, the equations
-%% reduce to simple replacement:
-%%
-%% R d=R s G d=G s B d=B s A d=A s
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBlendFuncSeparate.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBlendFuncSeparate.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec blendFuncSeparate(SfactorRGB, DfactorRGB, SfactorAlpha, DfactorAlpha) -> 'ok' when SfactorRGB :: enum(),DfactorRGB :: enum(),SfactorAlpha :: enum(),DfactorAlpha :: enum().
blendFuncSeparate(SfactorRGB,DfactorRGB,SfactorAlpha,DfactorAlpha) ->
cast(5394, <<SfactorRGB:?GLenum,DfactorRGB:?GLenum,SfactorAlpha:?GLenum,DfactorAlpha:?GLenum>>).
@@ -9646,19 +3865,7 @@ blendFuncSeparate(SfactorRGB,DfactorRGB,SfactorAlpha,DfactorAlpha) ->
%% normals, and colors and use them to construct a sequence of primitives with a single call
%% to ``gl:multiDrawArrays''.
%%
-%% ``gl:multiDrawArrays'' behaves identically to {@link gl:drawArrays/3} except that `Primcount'
-%% separate ranges of elements are specified instead.
-%%
-%% When ``gl:multiDrawArrays'' is called, it uses `Count' sequential elements from
-%% each enabled array to construct a sequence of geometric primitives, beginning with element
-%% `First' . `Mode' specifies what kind of primitives are constructed, and how the
-%% array elements construct those primitives.
-%%
-%% Vertex attributes that are modified by ``gl:multiDrawArrays'' have an unspecified value
-%% after ``gl:multiDrawArrays'' returns. Attributes that aren't modified remain well defined.
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMultiDrawArrays.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glMultiDrawArrays.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec multiDrawArrays(Mode, First, Count) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),First :: [integer()]|mem(),Count :: [integer()]|mem().
multiDrawArrays(Mode,First,Count) when is_list(First), is_list(Count) ->
FirstLen = length(First),
@@ -9677,15 +3884,7 @@ multiDrawArrays(Mode,First,Count) ->
%%
%% The following values are accepted for `Pname' :
%%
-%% `?GL_POINT_FADE_THRESHOLD_SIZE': `Params' is a single floating-point value that
-%% specifies the threshold value to which point sizes are clamped if they exceed the specified
-%% value. The default value is 1.0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_POINT_SPRITE_COORD_ORIGIN': `Params' is a single enum specifying the point
-%% sprite texture coordinate origin, either `?GL_LOWER_LEFT' or `?GL_UPPER_LEFT'.
-%% The default value is `?GL_UPPER_LEFT'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPointParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glPointParameter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pointParameterf(Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Pname :: enum(),Param :: float().
pointParameterf(Pname,Param) ->
cast(5397, <<Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -9716,7 +3915,7 @@ pointParameteriv(Pname,Params) ->
%% the current raster position. The value specified is interpolated and used in computing
%% the fog color (see {@link gl:fogf/2} ).
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFogCoord.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glFogCoord.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec fogCoordf(Coord) -> 'ok' when Coord :: float().
fogCoordf(Coord) ->
cast(5401, <<Coord:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -9742,22 +3941,7 @@ fogCoorddv({Coord}) -> fogCoordd(Coord).
%% specifies the byte stride from one fog coordinate to the next, allowing vertices and
%% attributes to be packed into a single array or stored in separate arrays.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER' target (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% ) while a fog coordinate array is specified, `Pointer' is treated as a byte offset
-%% into the buffer object's data store. Also, the buffer object binding (`?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ) is saved as fog coordinate vertex array client-side state (`?GL_FOG_COORD_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ).
-%%
-%% When a fog coordinate array is specified, `Type' , `Stride' , and `Pointer'
-%% are saved as client-side state, in addition to the current vertex array buffer object
-%% binding.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable the fog coordinate array, call {@link gl:enableClientState/1} and {@link gl:enableClientState/1}
-%% with the argument `?GL_FOG_COORD_ARRAY'. If enabled, the fog coordinate array is
-%% used when {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4} , see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} , or {@link gl:arrayElement/1} is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFogCoordPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glFogCoordPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec fogCoordPointer(Type, Stride, Pointer) -> 'ok' when Type :: enum(),Stride :: integer(),Pointer :: offset()|mem().
fogCoordPointer(Type,Stride,Pointer) when is_integer(Pointer) ->
cast(5403, <<Type:?GLenum,Stride:?GLsizei,Pointer:?GLuint>>);
@@ -9770,31 +3954,7 @@ fogCoordPointer(Type,Stride,Pointer) ->
%% The GL stores both a primary four-valued RGBA color and a secondary four-valued RGBA
%% color (where alpha is always set to 0.0) that is associated with every vertex.
%%
-%% The secondary color is interpolated and applied to each fragment during rasterization
-%% when `?GL_COLOR_SUM' is enabled. When lighting is enabled, and `?GL_SEPARATE_SPECULAR_COLOR'
-%% is specified, the value of the secondary color is assigned the value computed from the
-%% specular term of the lighting computation. Both the primary and secondary current colors
-%% are applied to each fragment, regardless of the state of `?GL_COLOR_SUM', under such
-%% conditions. When `?GL_SEPARATE_SPECULAR_COLOR' is specified, the value returned from
-%% querying the current secondary color is undefined.
-%%
-%% ``gl:secondaryColor3b'', ``gl:secondaryColor3s'', and ``gl:secondaryColor3i'' take
-%% three signed byte, short, or long integers as arguments. When `v' is appended to
-%% the name, the color commands can take a pointer to an array of such values.
-%%
-%% Color values are stored in floating-point format, with unspecified mantissa and exponent
-%% sizes. Unsigned integer color components, when specified, are linearly mapped to floating-point
-%% values such that the largest representable value maps to 1.0 (full intensity), and 0 maps
-%% to 0.0 (zero intensity). Signed integer color components, when specified, are linearly
-%% mapped to floating-point values such that the most positive representable value maps to
-%% 1.0, and the most negative representable value maps to -1.0. (Note that this mapping
-%% does not convert 0 precisely to 0.0). Floating-point values are mapped directly.
-%%
-%% Neither floating-point nor signed integer values are clamped to the range [0 1] before the
-%% current color is updated. However, color components are clamped to this range before they
-%% are interpolated or written into a color buffer.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glSecondaryColor.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glSecondaryColor.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec secondaryColor3b(Red, Green, Blue) -> 'ok' when Red :: integer(),Green :: integer(),Blue :: integer().
secondaryColor3b(Red,Green,Blue) ->
cast(5405, <<Red:?GLbyte,Green:?GLbyte,Blue:?GLbyte>>).
@@ -9881,23 +4041,7 @@ secondaryColor3usv({Red,Green,Blue}) -> secondaryColor3us(Red,Green,Blue).
%% specifies the byte stride from one color to the next, allowing vertices and attributes
%% to be packed into a single array or stored in separate arrays.
%%
-%% If a non-zero named buffer object is bound to the `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER' target (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2}
-%% ) while a secondary color array is specified, `Pointer' is treated as a byte offset
-%% into the buffer object's data store. Also, the buffer object binding (`?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ) is saved as secondary color vertex array client-side state (`?GL_SECONDARY_COLOR_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ).
-%%
-%% When a secondary color array is specified, `Size' , `Type' , `Stride' , and `Pointer'
-%% are saved as client-side state, in addition to the current vertex array buffer object
-%% binding.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable the secondary color array, call {@link gl:enableClientState/1} and {@link gl:enableClientState/1}
-%% with the argument `?GL_SECONDARY_COLOR_ARRAY'. If enabled, the secondary color array
-%% is used when {@link gl:arrayElement/1} , {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} ,
-%% {@link gl:drawElements/4} , see `glMultiDrawElements', or {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6}
-%% is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glSecondaryColorPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glSecondaryColorPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec secondaryColorPointer(Size, Type, Stride, Pointer) -> 'ok' when Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Stride :: integer(),Pointer :: offset()|mem().
secondaryColorPointer(Size,Type,Stride,Pointer) when is_integer(Pointer) ->
cast(5413, <<Size:?GLint,Type:?GLenum,Stride:?GLsizei,Pointer:?GLuint>>);
@@ -9912,38 +4056,7 @@ secondaryColorPointer(Size,Type,Stride,Pointer) ->
%% subpixel accuracy. See {@link gl:bitmap/7} , {@link gl:drawPixels/5} , and {@link gl:copyPixels/5}
%% .
%%
-%% ``gl:windowPos2'' specifies the x and y coordinates, while z is implicitly set
-%% to 0. ``gl:windowPos3'' specifies all three coordinates. The w coordinate of the current
-%% raster position is always set to 1.0.
-%%
-%% ``gl:windowPos'' directly updates the x and y coordinates of the current raster
-%% position with the values specified. That is, the values are neither transformed by the
-%% current modelview and projection matrices, nor by the viewport-to-window transform. The
-%% z coordinate of the current raster position is updated in the following manner:
-%%
-%% z={n f(n+z×(f-n)) if z&lt;= 0 if z&gt;= 1(otherwise))
-%%
-%% where n is `?GL_DEPTH_RANGE''s near value, and f is `?GL_DEPTH_RANGE''s
-%% far value. See {@link gl:depthRange/2} .
-%%
-%% The specified coordinates are not clip-tested, causing the raster position to always
-%% be valid.
-%%
-%% The current raster position also includes some associated color data and texture coordinates.
-%% If lighting is enabled, then `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_COLOR' (in RGBA mode) or `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_INDEX'
-%% (in color index mode) is set to the color produced by the lighting calculation (see {@link gl:lightf/3}
-%% , {@link gl:lightModelf/2} , and {@link gl:shadeModel/1} ). If lighting is disabled, current
-%% color (in RGBA mode, state variable `?GL_CURRENT_COLOR') or color index (in color
-%% index mode, state variable `?GL_CURRENT_INDEX') is used to update the current raster
-%% color. `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_SECONDARY_COLOR' (in RGBA mode) is likewise updated.
-%%
-%% Likewise, `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_TEXTURE_COORDS' is updated as a function of `?GL_CURRENT_TEXTURE_COORDS'
-%% , based on the texture matrix and the texture generation functions (see {@link gl:texGend/3} ).
-%% The `?GL_CURRENT_RASTER_DISTANCE' is set to the `?GL_CURRENT_FOG_COORD'.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glWindowPos.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glWindowPos.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec windowPos2d(X, Y) -> 'ok' when X :: float(),Y :: float().
windowPos2d(X,Y) ->
cast(5415, <<X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -10028,13 +4141,7 @@ windowPos3sv({X,Y,Z}) -> windowPos3s(X,Y,Z).
%% that the names form a contiguous set of integers; however, it is guaranteed that none
%% of the returned names was in use immediately before the call to ``gl:genQueries''.
%%
-%% Query object names returned by a call to ``gl:genQueries'' are not returned by subsequent
-%% calls, unless they are first deleted with {@link gl:deleteQueries/1} .
-%%
-%% No query objects are associated with the returned query object names until they are first
-%% used by calling {@link gl:beginQuery/2} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenQueries.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGenQueries.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec genQueries(N) -> [integer()] when N :: integer().
genQueries(N) ->
call(5423, <<N:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -10045,10 +4152,7 @@ genQueries(N) ->
%% . After a query object is deleted, it has no contents, and its name is free for reuse
%% (for example by {@link gl:genQueries/1} ).
%%
-%% ``gl:deleteQueries'' silently ignores 0's and names that do not correspond to existing
-%% query objects.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteQueries.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteQueries.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteQueries(Ids) -> 'ok' when Ids :: [integer()].
deleteQueries(Ids) ->
IdsLen = length(Ids),
@@ -10061,10 +4165,7 @@ deleteQueries(Ids) ->
%% object. If `Id' is zero, or is a non-zero value that is not currently the name of
%% a query object, or if an error occurs, ``gl:isQuery'' returns `?GL_FALSE'.
%%
-%% A name returned by {@link gl:genQueries/1} , but not yet associated with a query object
-%% by calling {@link gl:beginQuery/2} , is not the name of a query object.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsQuery.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsQuery.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isQuery(Id) -> 0|1 when Id :: integer().
isQuery(Id) ->
call(5425, <<Id:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10078,60 +4179,7 @@ isQuery(Id) ->
%% , `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_PRIMITIVES_WRITTEN', or `?GL_TIME_ELAPSED'. The behavior
%% of the query object depends on its type and is as follows.
%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_SAMPLES_PASSED', `Id' must be an unused name, or the
-%% name of an existing occlusion query object. When ``gl:beginQuery'' is executed, the
-%% query object's samples-passed counter is reset to 0. Subsequent rendering will increment
-%% the counter for every sample that passes the depth test. If the value of `?GL_SAMPLE_BUFFERS'
-%% is 0, then the samples-passed count is incremented by 1 for each fragment. If the value
-%% of `?GL_SAMPLE_BUFFERS' is 1, then the samples-passed count is incremented by the
-%% number of samples whose coverage bit is set. However, implementations, at their discression
-%% may instead increase the samples-passed count by the value of `?GL_SAMPLES' if any
-%% sample in the fragment is covered. When ``gl:endQuery'' is executed, the samples-passed
-%% counter is assigned to the query object's result value. This value can be queried by calling
-%% {@link gl:getQueryObjectiv/2} with `Pname' `?GL_QUERY_RESULT'.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_ANY_SAMPLES_PASSED', `Id' must be an unused name,
-%% or the name of an existing boolean occlusion query object. When ``gl:beginQuery'' is
-%% executed, the query object's samples-passed flag is reset to `?GL_FALSE'. Subsequent
-%% rendering causes the flag to be set to `?GL_TRUE' if any sample passes the depth
-%% test. When ``gl:endQuery'' is executed, the samples-passed flag is assigned to the query
-%% object's result value. This value can be queried by calling {@link gl:getQueryObjectiv/2}
-%% with `Pname' `?GL_QUERY_RESULT'.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED', `Id' must be an unused name,
-%% or the name of an existing primitive query object previously bound to the `?GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED'
-%% query binding. When ``gl:beginQuery'' is executed, the query object's primitives-generated
-%% counter is reset to 0. Subsequent rendering will increment the counter once for every
-%% vertex that is emitted from the geometry shader, or from the vertex shader if no geometry
-%% shader is present. When ``gl:endQuery'' is executed, the primitives-generated counter
-%% is assigned to the query object's result value. This value can be queried by calling {@link gl:getQueryObjectiv/2}
-%% with `Pname' `?GL_QUERY_RESULT'.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_PRIMITIVES_WRITTEN', `Id' must
-%% be an unused name, or the name of an existing primitive query object previously bound
-%% to the `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_PRIMITIVES_WRITTEN' query binding. When ``gl:beginQuery''
-%% is executed, the query object's primitives-written counter is reset to 0. Subsequent
-%% rendering will increment the counter once for every vertex that is written into the bound
-%% transform feedback buffer(s). If transform feedback mode is not activated between the
-%% call to ``gl:beginQuery'' and ``gl:endQuery'', the counter will not be incremented.
-%% When ``gl:endQuery'' is executed, the primitives-written counter is assigned to the
-%% query object's result value. This value can be queried by calling {@link gl:getQueryObjectiv/2}
-%% with `Pname' `?GL_QUERY_RESULT'.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_TIME_ELAPSED', `Id' must be an unused name, or the
-%% name of an existing timer query object previously bound to the `?GL_TIME_ELAPSED'
-%% query binding. When ``gl:beginQuery'' is executed, the query object's time counter is
-%% reset to 0. When ``gl:endQuery'' is executed, the elapsed server time that has passed
-%% since the call to ``gl:beginQuery'' is written into the query object's time counter.
-%% This value can be queried by calling {@link gl:getQueryObjectiv/2} with `Pname' `?GL_QUERY_RESULT'
-%% .
-%%
-%% Querying the `?GL_QUERY_RESULT' implicitly flushes the GL pipeline until the rendering
-%% delimited by the query object has completed and the result is available. `?GL_QUERY_RESULT_AVAILABLE'
-%% can be queried to determine if the result is immediately available or if the rendering
-%% is not yet complete.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBeginQuery.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBeginQuery.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec beginQuery(Target, Id) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Id :: integer().
beginQuery(Target,Id) ->
cast(5426, <<Target:?GLenum,Id:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10144,7 +4192,7 @@ endQuery(Target) ->
%% @doc glGetQuery
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetQuery.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getQueryiv(Target, Pname) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getQueryiv(Target,Pname) ->
call(5428, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -10154,17 +4202,7 @@ getQueryiv(Target,Pname) ->
%% ``gl:getQueryObject'' returns in `Params' a selected parameter of the query object
%% specified by `Id' .
%%
-%% `Pname' names a specific query object parameter. `Pname' can be as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_QUERY_RESULT': `Params' returns the value of the query object's passed
-%% samples counter. The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_QUERY_RESULT_AVAILABLE': `Params' returns whether the passed samples counter
-%% is immediately available. If a delay would occur waiting for the query result, `?GL_FALSE'
-%% is returned. Otherwise, `?GL_TRUE' is returned, which also indicates that the results
-%% of all previous queries are available as well.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetQueryObject.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetQueryObject.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getQueryObjectiv(Id, Pname) -> integer() when Id :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getQueryObjectiv(Id,Pname) ->
call(5429, <<Id:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -10183,77 +4221,7 @@ getQueryObjectuiv(Id,Pname) ->
%% object with name `Buffer' exists, one is created with that name. When a buffer object
%% is bound to a target, the previous binding for that target is automatically broken.
%%
-%% Buffer object names are unsigned integers. The value zero is reserved, but there is no
-%% default buffer object for each buffer object target. Instead, `Buffer' set to zero
-%% effectively unbinds any buffer object previously bound, and restores client memory usage
-%% for that buffer object target (if supported for that target). Buffer object names and
-%% the corresponding buffer object contents are local to the shared object space of the current
-%% GL rendering context; two rendering contexts share buffer object names only if they explicitly
-%% enable sharing between contexts through the appropriate GL windows interfaces functions.
-%%
-%% {@link gl:genBuffers/1} must be used to generate a set of unused buffer object names.
-%%
-%% The state of a buffer object immediately after it is first bound is an unmapped zero-sized
-%% memory buffer with `?GL_READ_WRITE' access and `?GL_STATIC_DRAW' usage.
-%%
-%% While a non-zero buffer object name is bound, GL operations on the target to which it
-%% is bound affect the bound buffer object, and queries of the target to which it is bound
-%% return state from the bound buffer object. While buffer object name zero is bound, as
-%% in the initial state, attempts to modify or query state on the target to which it is bound
-%% generates an `?GL_INVALID_OPERATION' error.
-%%
-%% When a non-zero buffer object is bound to the `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER' target, the vertex
-%% array pointer parameter is interpreted as an offset within the buffer object measured
-%% in basic machine units.
-%%
-%% When a non-zero buffer object is bound to the `?GL_DRAW_INDIRECT_BUFFER' target,
-%% parameters for draws issued through {@link gl:drawArraysIndirect/2} and {@link gl:drawElementsIndirect/3}
-%% are sourced from that buffer object.
-%%
-%% While a non-zero buffer object is bound to the `?GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER' target,
-%% the indices parameter of {@link gl:drawElements/4} , {@link gl:drawElementsInstanced/5} , {@link gl:drawElementsBaseVertex/5}
-%% , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} , {@link gl:drawRangeElementsBaseVertex/7} , see `glMultiDrawElements'
-%% , or see `glMultiDrawElementsBaseVertex' is interpreted as an offset within the
-%% buffer object measured in basic machine units.
-%%
-%% While a non-zero buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER' target,
-%% the following commands are affected: {@link gl:getCompressedTexImage/3} , {@link gl:getTexImage/5}
-%% , and {@link gl:readPixels/7} . The pointer parameter is interpreted as an offset within
-%% the buffer object measured in basic machine units.
-%%
-%% While a non-zero buffer object is bound to the `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' target,
-%% the following commands are affected: {@link gl:compressedTexImage1D/7} , {@link gl:compressedTexImage2D/8}
-%% , {@link gl:compressedTexImage3D/9} , {@link gl:compressedTexSubImage1D/7} , {@link gl:compressedTexSubImage2D/9}
-%% , {@link gl:compressedTexSubImage3D/11} , {@link gl:texImage1D/8} , {@link gl:texImage2D/9} , {@link gl:texImage3D/10}
-%% , {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7} , {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7} , and {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7} .
-%% The pointer parameter is interpreted as an offset within the buffer object measured in
-%% basic machine units.
-%%
-%% The buffer targets `?GL_COPY_READ_BUFFER' and `?GL_COPY_WRITE_BUFFER' are provided
-%% to allow {@link gl:copyBufferSubData/5} to be used without disturbing the state of other
-%% bindings. However, {@link gl:copyBufferSubData/5} may be used with any pair of buffer binding
-%% points.
-%%
-%% The `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BUFFER' buffer binding point may be passed to ``gl:bindBuffer''
-%% , but will not directly affect transform feedback state. Instead, the indexed `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BUFFER'
-%% bindings must be used through a call to {@link gl:bindBufferBase/3} or {@link gl:bindBufferRange/5}
-%% . This will affect the generic `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDABCK_BUFFER' binding.
-%%
-%% Likewise, the `?GL_UNIFORM_BUFFER' and `?GL_ATOMIC_COUNTER_BUFFER' buffer binding
-%% points may be used, but do not directly affect uniform buffer or atomic counter buffer
-%% state, respectively. {@link gl:bindBufferBase/3} or {@link gl:bindBufferRange/5} must be
-%% used to bind a buffer to an indexed uniform buffer or atomic counter buffer binding point.
-%%
-%%
-%% A buffer object binding created with ``gl:bindBuffer'' remains active until a different
-%% buffer object name is bound to the same target, or until the bound buffer object is deleted
-%% with {@link gl:deleteBuffers/1} .
-%%
-%% Once created, a named buffer object may be re-bound to any target as often as needed.
-%% However, the GL implementation may make choices about how to optimize the storage of a
-%% buffer object based on its initial binding target.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindBuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindBuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindBuffer(Target, Buffer) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Buffer :: integer().
bindBuffer(Target,Buffer) ->
cast(5431, <<Target:?GLenum,Buffer:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10265,10 +4233,7 @@ bindBuffer(Target,Buffer) ->
%% free for reuse (for example by {@link gl:genBuffers/1} ). If a buffer object that is currently
%% bound is deleted, the binding reverts to 0 (the absence of any buffer object).
%%
-%% ``gl:deleteBuffers'' silently ignores 0's and names that do not correspond to existing
-%% buffer objects.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteBuffers.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteBuffers.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteBuffers(Buffers) -> 'ok' when Buffers :: [integer()].
deleteBuffers(Buffers) ->
BuffersLen = length(Buffers),
@@ -10282,13 +4247,7 @@ deleteBuffers(Buffers) ->
%% that none of the returned names was in use immediately before the call to ``gl:genBuffers''
%% .
%%
-%% Buffer object names returned by a call to ``gl:genBuffers'' are not returned by subsequent
-%% calls, unless they are first deleted with {@link gl:deleteBuffers/1} .
-%%
-%% No buffer objects are associated with the returned buffer object names until they are
-%% first bound by calling {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenBuffers.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGenBuffers.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec genBuffers(N) -> [integer()] when N :: integer().
genBuffers(N) ->
call(5433, <<N:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -10300,10 +4259,7 @@ genBuffers(N) ->
%% the name of a buffer object, or if an error occurs, ``gl:isBuffer'' returns `?GL_FALSE'
%% .
%%
-%% A name returned by {@link gl:genBuffers/1} , but not yet associated with a buffer object
-%% by calling {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} , is not the name of a buffer object.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsBuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsBuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isBuffer(Buffer) -> 0|1 when Buffer :: integer().
isBuffer(Buffer) ->
call(5434, <<Buffer:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10317,31 +4273,7 @@ isBuffer(Buffer) ->
%% is not mapped, it has a `?NULL' mapped pointer, and its mapped access is `?GL_READ_WRITE'
%% .
%%
-%% `Usage' is a hint to the GL implementation as to how a buffer object's data store
-%% will be accessed. This enables the GL implementation to make more intelligent decisions
-%% that may significantly impact buffer object performance. It does not, however, constrain
-%% the actual usage of the data store. `Usage' can be broken down into two parts: first,
-%% the frequency of access (modification and usage), and second, the nature of that access.
-%% The frequency of access may be one of these:
-%%
-%% STREAM: The data store contents will be modified once and used at most a few times.
-%%
-%% STATIC: The data store contents will be modified once and used many times.
-%%
-%% DYNAMIC: The data store contents will be modified repeatedly and used many times.
-%%
-%% The nature of access may be one of these:
-%%
-%% DRAW: The data store contents are modified by the application, and used as the source
-%% for GL drawing and image specification commands.
-%%
-%% READ: The data store contents are modified by reading data from the GL, and used to return
-%% that data when queried by the application.
-%%
-%% COPY: The data store contents are modified by reading data from the GL, and used as the
-%% source for GL drawing and image specification commands.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBufferData.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBufferData.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bufferData(Target, Size, Data, Usage) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Size :: integer(),Data :: offset()|mem(),Usage :: enum().
bufferData(Target,Size,Data,Usage) when is_integer(Data) ->
cast(5435, <<Target:?GLenum,0:32,Size:?GLsizeiptr,Data:?GLuint,Usage:?GLenum>>);
@@ -10357,7 +4289,7 @@ bufferData(Target,Size,Data,Usage) ->
%% is thrown if `Offset' and `Size' together define a range beyond the bounds of
%% the buffer object's data store.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBufferSubData.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBufferSubData.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bufferSubData(Target, Offset, Size, Data) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Offset :: integer(),Size :: integer(),Data :: offset()|mem().
bufferSubData(Target,Offset,Size,Data) when is_integer(Data) ->
cast(5437, <<Target:?GLenum,0:32,Offset:?GLintptr,Size:?GLsizeiptr,Data:?GLuint>>);
@@ -10373,7 +4305,7 @@ bufferSubData(Target,Offset,Size,Data) ->
%% is thrown if the buffer object is currently mapped, or if `Offset' and `Size'
%% together define a range beyond the bounds of the buffer object's data store.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetBufferSubData.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetBufferSubData.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getBufferSubData(Target, Offset, Size, Data) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Offset :: integer(),Size :: integer(),Data :: mem().
getBufferSubData(Target,Offset,Size,Data) ->
send_bin(Data),
@@ -10384,21 +4316,7 @@ getBufferSubData(Target,Offset,Size,Data) ->
%% ``gl:getBufferParameteriv'' returns in `Data' a selected parameter of the buffer
%% object specified by `Target' .
%%
-%% `Value' names a specific buffer object parameter, as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_BUFFER_ACCESS': `Params' returns the access policy set while mapping the
-%% buffer object. The initial value is `?GL_READ_WRITE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BUFFER_MAPPED': `Params' returns a flag indicating whether the buffer object
-%% is currently mapped. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BUFFER_SIZE': `Params' returns the size of the buffer object, measured
-%% in bytes. The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BUFFER_USAGE': `Params' returns the buffer object's usage pattern. The
-%% initial value is `?GL_STATIC_DRAW'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetBufferParameteriv.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/glGetBufferParameteriv.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getBufferParameteriv(Target, Pname) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getBufferParameteriv(Target,Pname) ->
call(5440, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -10412,35 +4330,7 @@ getBufferParameteriv(Target,Pname) ->
%% draw buffer whereas ``gl:blendEquationSeparate'' sets the blend equations for all draw
%% buffers.
%%
-%% The blend equations use the source and destination blend factors specified by either {@link gl:blendFunc/2}
-%% or {@link gl:blendFuncSeparate/4} . See {@link gl:blendFunc/2} or {@link gl:blendFuncSeparate/4}
-%% for a description of the various blend factors.
-%%
-%% In the equations that follow, source and destination color components are referred to
-%% as (R s G s B s A s) and (R d G d B d A d), respectively. The result color is referred to as (R r G r B r A r). The source and destination
-%% blend factors are denoted (s R s G s B s A) and (d R d G d B d A), respectively. For these equations all color components
-%% are understood to have values in the range [0 1]. <table><tbody><tr><td>` Mode '</td><td>
-%% ` RGB Components '</td><td>` Alpha Component '</td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_FUNC_ADD'
-%% </td><td> Rr=R s s R+R d d R Gr=G s s G+G d d G Br=B s s B+B d d B</td><td> Ar=A s
-%% s A+A d d A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FUNC_SUBTRACT'</td><td> Rr=R s s R-R d d R Gr=G
-%% s s G-G d d G Br=B s s B-B d d B</td><td> Ar=A s s A-A d d A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FUNC_REVERSE_SUBTRACT'
-%% </td><td> Rr=R d d R-R s s R Gr=G d d G-G s s G Br=B d d B-B s s B</td><td> Ar=A d
-%% d A-A s s A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_MIN'</td><td> Rr=min(R s R d) Gr=min(G s G d) Br=min(B s B d)</td><td> Ar=min
-%% (A s A d)</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_MAX'</td><td> Rr=max(R s R d) Gr=max(G s G d) Br=max(B s B d)</td><td> Ar=max(A s A d)</td></tr></tbody>
-%% </table>
-%%
-%% The results of these equations are clamped to the range [0 1].
-%%
-%% The `?GL_MIN' and `?GL_MAX' equations are useful for applications that analyze
-%% image data (image thresholding against a constant color, for example). The `?GL_FUNC_ADD'
-%% equation is useful for antialiasing and transparency, among other things.
-%%
-%% Initially, both the RGB blend equation and the alpha blend equation are set to `?GL_FUNC_ADD'
-%% .
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBlendEquationSeparate.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBlendEquationSeparate.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec blendEquationSeparate(ModeRGB, ModeAlpha) -> 'ok' when ModeRGB :: enum(),ModeAlpha :: enum().
blendEquationSeparate(ModeRGB,ModeAlpha) ->
cast(5441, <<ModeRGB:?GLenum,ModeAlpha:?GLenum>>).
@@ -10455,32 +4345,7 @@ blendEquationSeparate(ModeRGB,ModeAlpha) ->
%% or equal to `N' is implicitly set to `?GL_NONE' and any data written to such
%% an output is discarded.
%%
-%% The symbolic constants contained in `Bufs' may be any of the following:
-%%
-%% `?GL_NONE': The fragment shader output value is not written into any color buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRONT_LEFT': The fragment shader output value is written into the front left
-%% color buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRONT_RIGHT': The fragment shader output value is written into the front right
-%% color buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BACK_LEFT': The fragment shader output value is written into the back left color
-%% buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BACK_RIGHT': The fragment shader output value is written into the back right
-%% color buffer.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENT'`n': The fragment shader output value is written into
-%% the `n'th color attachment of the current framebuffer. `n' may range from 0
-%% to the value of `?GL_MAX_COLOR_ATTACHMENTS'.
-%%
-%% Except for `?GL_NONE', the preceding symbolic constants may not appear more than
-%% once in `Bufs' . The maximum number of draw buffers supported is implementation dependent
-%% and can be queried by calling {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with the argument `?GL_MAX_DRAW_BUFFERS'
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawBuffers.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawBuffers.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawBuffers(Bufs) -> 'ok' when Bufs :: [enum()].
drawBuffers(Bufs) ->
BufsLen = length(Bufs),
@@ -10495,55 +4360,7 @@ drawBuffers(Bufs) ->
%% used in multipass rendering algorithms to achieve special effects, such as decals, outlining,
%% and constructive solid geometry rendering.
%%
-%% The stencil test conditionally eliminates a pixel based on the outcome of a comparison
-%% between the value in the stencil buffer and a reference value. To enable and disable the
-%% test, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_STENCIL_TEST'
-%% ; to control it, call {@link gl:stencilFunc/3} or {@link gl:stencilFuncSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% There can be two separate sets of `Sfail' , `Dpfail' , and `Dppass' parameters;
-%% one affects back-facing polygons, and the other affects front-facing polygons as well
-%% as other non-polygon primitives. {@link gl:stencilOp/3} sets both front and back stencil
-%% state to the same values, as if {@link gl:stencilOpSeparate/4} were called with `Face'
-%% set to `?GL_FRONT_AND_BACK'.
-%%
-%% ``gl:stencilOpSeparate'' takes three arguments that indicate what happens to the stored
-%% stencil value while stenciling is enabled. If the stencil test fails, no change is made
-%% to the pixel's color or depth buffers, and `Sfail' specifies what happens to the
-%% stencil buffer contents. The following eight actions are possible.
-%%
-%% `?GL_KEEP': Keeps the current value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ZERO': Sets the stencil buffer value to 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_REPLACE': Sets the stencil buffer value to `ref', as specified by {@link gl:stencilFunc/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_INCR': Increments the current stencil buffer value. Clamps to the maximum representable
-%% unsigned value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_INCR_WRAP': Increments the current stencil buffer value. Wraps stencil buffer
-%% value to zero when incrementing the maximum representable unsigned value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DECR': Decrements the current stencil buffer value. Clamps to 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DECR_WRAP': Decrements the current stencil buffer value. Wraps stencil buffer
-%% value to the maximum representable unsigned value when decrementing a stencil buffer value
-%% of zero.
-%%
-%% `?GL_INVERT': Bitwise inverts the current stencil buffer value.
-%%
-%% Stencil buffer values are treated as unsigned integers. When incremented and decremented,
-%% values are clamped to 0 and 2 n-1, where n is the value returned by querying `?GL_STENCIL_BITS'
-%% .
-%%
-%% The other two arguments to ``gl:stencilOpSeparate'' specify stencil buffer actions
-%% that depend on whether subsequent depth buffer tests succeed ( `Dppass' ) or fail ( `Dpfail'
-%% ) (see {@link gl:depthFunc/1} ). The actions are specified using the same eight symbolic
-%% constants as `Sfail' . Note that `Dpfail' is ignored when there is no depth buffer,
-%% or when the depth buffer is not enabled. In these cases, `Sfail' and `Dppass'
-%% specify stencil action when the stencil test fails and passes, respectively.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glStencilOpSeparate.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glStencilOpSeparate.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec stencilOpSeparate(Face, Sfail, Dpfail, Dppass) -> 'ok' when Face :: enum(),Sfail :: enum(),Dpfail :: enum(),Dppass :: enum().
stencilOpSeparate(Face,Sfail,Dpfail,Dppass) ->
cast(5443, <<Face:?GLenum,Sfail:?GLenum,Dpfail:?GLenum,Dppass:?GLenum>>).
@@ -10556,57 +4373,7 @@ stencilOpSeparate(Face,Sfail,Dpfail,Dppass) ->
%% used in multipass rendering algorithms to achieve special effects, such as decals, outlining,
%% and constructive solid geometry rendering.
%%
-%% The stencil test conditionally eliminates a pixel based on the outcome of a comparison
-%% between the reference value and the value in the stencil buffer. To enable and disable
-%% the test, call {@link gl:enable/1} and {@link gl:enable/1} with argument `?GL_STENCIL_TEST'
-%% . To specify actions based on the outcome of the stencil test, call {@link gl:stencilOp/3}
-%% or {@link gl:stencilOpSeparate/4} .
-%%
-%% There can be two separate sets of `Func' , `Ref' , and `Mask' parameters;
-%% one affects back-facing polygons, and the other affects front-facing polygons as well
-%% as other non-polygon primitives. {@link gl:stencilFunc/3} sets both front and back stencil
-%% state to the same values, as if {@link gl:stencilFuncSeparate/4} were called with `Face'
-%% set to `?GL_FRONT_AND_BACK'.
-%%
-%% `Func' is a symbolic constant that determines the stencil comparison function. It
-%% accepts one of eight values, shown in the following list. `Ref' is an integer reference
-%% value that is used in the stencil comparison. It is clamped to the range [0 2 n-1], where n
-%% is the number of bitplanes in the stencil buffer. `Mask' is bitwise ANDed with both
-%% the reference value and the stored stencil value, with the ANDed values participating
-%% in the comparison.
-%%
-%% If `stencil' represents the value stored in the corresponding stencil buffer location,
-%% the following list shows the effect of each comparison function that can be specified by `Func'
-%% . Only if the comparison succeeds is the pixel passed through to the next stage in the
-%% rasterization process (see {@link gl:stencilOp/3} ). All tests treat `stencil' values
-%% as unsigned integers in the range [0 2 n-1], where n is the number of bitplanes in the stencil
-%% buffer.
-%%
-%% The following values are accepted by `Func' :
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEVER': Always fails.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LESS': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) &lt; ( `stencil' &amp; `Mask'
-%% ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_LEQUAL': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) &lt;= ( `stencil'
-%% &amp; `Mask' ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_GREATER': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) &gt; ( `stencil'
-%% &amp; `Mask' ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_GEQUAL': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) &gt;= ( `stencil'
-%% &amp; `Mask' ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_EQUAL': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) = ( `stencil' &amp; `Mask'
-%% ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_NOTEQUAL': Passes if ( `Ref' &amp; `Mask' ) != ( `stencil' &amp;
-%% `Mask' ).
-%%
-%% `?GL_ALWAYS': Always passes.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glStencilFuncSeparate.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glStencilFuncSeparate.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec stencilFuncSeparate(Face, Func, Ref, Mask) -> 'ok' when Face :: enum(),Func :: enum(),Ref :: integer(),Mask :: integer().
stencilFuncSeparate(Face,Func,Ref,Mask) ->
cast(5444, <<Face:?GLenum,Func:?GLenum,Ref:?GLint,Mask:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10619,12 +4386,7 @@ stencilFuncSeparate(Face,Func,Ref,Mask) ->
%% to the corresponding bit in the stencil buffer. Where a 0 appears, the corresponding bit
%% is write-protected. Initially, all bits are enabled for writing.
%%
-%% There can be two separate `Mask' writemasks; one affects back-facing polygons, and
-%% the other affects front-facing polygons as well as other non-polygon primitives. {@link gl:stencilMask/1}
-%% sets both front and back stencil writemasks to the same values, as if {@link gl:stencilMaskSeparate/2}
-%% were called with `Face' set to `?GL_FRONT_AND_BACK'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glStencilMaskSeparate.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glStencilMaskSeparate.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec stencilMaskSeparate(Face, Mask) -> 'ok' when Face :: enum(),Mask :: integer().
stencilMaskSeparate(Face,Mask) ->
cast(5445, <<Face:?GLenum,Mask:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10638,17 +4400,7 @@ stencilMaskSeparate(Face,Mask) ->
%% the program object specified by `Program' . This indicates that `Shader' will
%% be included in link operations that will be performed on `Program' .
%%
-%% All operations that can be performed on a shader object are valid whether or not the
-%% shader object is attached to a program object. It is permissible to attach a shader object
-%% to a program object before source code has been loaded into the shader object or before
-%% the shader object has been compiled. It is permissible to attach multiple shader objects
-%% of the same type because each may contain a portion of the complete shader. It is also
-%% permissible to attach a shader object to more than one program object. If a shader object
-%% is deleted while it is attached to a program object, it will be flagged for deletion,
-%% and deletion will not occur until {@link gl:detachShader/2} is called to detach it from
-%% all program objects to which it is attached.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glAttachShader.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glAttachShader.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec attachShader(Program, Shader) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),Shader :: integer().
attachShader(Program,Shader) ->
cast(5446, <<Program:?GLuint,Shader:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10663,29 +4415,7 @@ attachShader(Program,Shader) ->
%% attribute `Index' will modify the value of the user-defined attribute variable specified
%% by `Name' .
%%
-%% If `Name' refers to a matrix attribute variable, `Index' refers to the first
-%% column of the matrix. Other matrix columns are then automatically bound to locations `Index+1'
-%% for a matrix of type `mat2'; `Index+1' and `Index+2' for a matrix of type
-%% `mat3'; and `Index+1' , `Index+2' , and `Index+3' for a matrix of type `mat4'
-%% .
-%%
-%% This command makes it possible for vertex shaders to use descriptive names for attribute
-%% variables rather than generic variables that are numbered from 0 to `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_ATTRIBS'
-%% -1. The values sent to each generic attribute index are part of current state. If a different
-%% program object is made current by calling {@link gl:useProgram/1} , the generic vertex attributes
-%% are tracked in such a way that the same values will be observed by attributes in the new
-%% program object that are also bound to `Index' .
-%%
-%% Attribute variable name-to-generic attribute index bindings for a program object can be
-%% explicitly assigned at any time by calling ``gl:bindAttribLocation''. Attribute bindings
-%% do not go into effect until {@link gl:linkProgram/1} is called. After a program object
-%% has been linked successfully, the index values for generic attributes remain fixed (and
-%% their values can be queried) until the next link command occurs.
-%%
-%% Any attribute binding that occurs after the program object has been linked will not take
-%% effect until the next time the program object is linked.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindAttribLocation.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindAttribLocation.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindAttribLocation(Program, Index, Name) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),Index :: integer(),Name :: string().
bindAttribLocation(Program,Index,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -10696,17 +4426,7 @@ bindAttribLocation(Program,Index,Name) ->
%% ``gl:compileShader'' compiles the source code strings that have been stored in the shader
%% object specified by `Shader' .
%%
-%% The compilation status will be stored as part of the shader object's state. This value
-%% will be set to `?GL_TRUE' if the shader was compiled without errors and is ready
-%% for use, and `?GL_FALSE' otherwise. It can be queried by calling {@link gl:getShaderiv/2}
-%% with arguments `Shader' and `?GL_COMPILE_STATUS'.
-%%
-%% Compilation of a shader can fail for a number of reasons as specified by the OpenGL Shading
-%% Language Specification. Whether or not the compilation was successful, information about
-%% the compilation can be obtained from the shader object's information log by calling {@link gl:getShaderInfoLog/2}
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCompileShader.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCompileShader.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec compileShader(Shader) -> 'ok' when Shader :: integer().
compileShader(Shader) ->
cast(5448, <<Shader:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10721,15 +4441,7 @@ compileShader(Shader) ->
%% between a vertex shader and a fragment shader). When no longer needed as part of a program
%% object, shader objects can be detached.
%%
-%% One or more executables are created in a program object by successfully attaching shader
-%% objects to it with {@link gl:attachShader/2} , successfully compiling the shader objects
-%% with {@link gl:compileShader/1} , and successfully linking the program object with {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% . These executables are made part of current state when {@link gl:useProgram/1} is called.
-%% Program objects can be deleted by calling {@link gl:deleteProgram/1} . The memory associated
-%% with the program object will be deleted when it is no longer part of current rendering
-%% state for any context.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCreateProgram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCreateProgram.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec createProgram() -> integer().
createProgram() ->
call(5449, <<>>).
@@ -10748,11 +4460,7 @@ createProgram() ->
%% programmable geometry processor. A shader of type `?GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER' is a shader
%% that is intended to run on the programmable fragment processor.
%%
-%% When created, a shader object's `?GL_SHADER_TYPE' parameter is set to either `?GL_VERTEX_SHADER'
-%% , `?GL_TESS_CONTROL_SHADER', `?GL_TESS_EVALUATION_SHADER', `?GL_GEOMETRY_SHADER'
-%% or `?GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER', depending on the value of `ShaderType' .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCreateShader.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCreateShader.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec createShader(Type) -> integer() when Type :: enum().
createShader(Type) ->
call(5450, <<Type:?GLenum>>).
@@ -10763,17 +4471,7 @@ createShader(Type) ->
%% object specified by `Program.' This command effectively undoes the effects of a call
%% to {@link gl:createProgram/0} .
%%
-%% If a program object is in use as part of current rendering state, it will be flagged for
-%% deletion, but it will not be deleted until it is no longer part of current state for any
-%% rendering context. If a program object to be deleted has shader objects attached to it,
-%% those shader objects will be automatically detached but not deleted unless they have already
-%% been flagged for deletion by a previous call to {@link gl:deleteShader/1} . A value of 0
-%% for `Program' will be silently ignored.
-%%
-%% To determine whether a program object has been flagged for deletion, call {@link gl:getProgramiv/2}
-%% with arguments `Program' and `?GL_DELETE_STATUS'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteProgram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteProgram.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteProgram(Program) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer().
deleteProgram(Program) ->
cast(5451, <<Program:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10784,15 +4482,7 @@ deleteProgram(Program) ->
%% object specified by `Shader' . This command effectively undoes the effects of a call
%% to {@link gl:createShader/1} .
%%
-%% If a shader object to be deleted is attached to a program object, it will be flagged for
-%% deletion, but it will not be deleted until it is no longer attached to any program object,
-%% for any rendering context (i.e., it must be detached from wherever it was attached before
-%% it will be deleted). A value of 0 for `Shader' will be silently ignored.
-%%
-%% To determine whether an object has been flagged for deletion, call {@link gl:getShaderiv/2}
-%% with arguments `Shader' and `?GL_DELETE_STATUS'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteShader.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteShader.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteShader(Shader) -> 'ok' when Shader :: integer().
deleteShader(Shader) ->
cast(5452, <<Shader:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10803,11 +4493,7 @@ deleteShader(Shader) ->
%% object specified by `Program' . This command can be used to undo the effect of the
%% command {@link gl:attachShader/2} .
%%
-%% If `Shader' has already been flagged for deletion by a call to {@link gl:deleteShader/1}
-%% and it is not attached to any other program object, it will be deleted after it has been
-%% detached.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDetachShader.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDetachShader.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec detachShader(Program, Shader) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),Shader :: integer().
detachShader(Program,Shader) ->
cast(5453, <<Program:?GLuint,Shader:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10822,7 +4508,7 @@ detachShader(Program,Shader) ->
%% such as {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4} , {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} , see `glMultiDrawElements'
%% , or {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glEnableVertexAttribArray.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glEnableVertexAttribArray.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec disableVertexAttribArray(Index) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer().
disableVertexAttribArray(Index) ->
cast(5454, <<Index:?GLuint>>).
@@ -10841,52 +4527,7 @@ enableVertexAttribArray(Index) ->
%% of 0 for `Index' selects the first active attribute variable. Permissible values
%% for `Index' range from 0 to the number of active attribute variables minus 1.
%%
-%% A vertex shader may use either built-in attribute variables, user-defined attribute variables,
-%% or both. Built-in attribute variables have a prefix of "gl_" and reference conventional
-%% OpenGL vertex attribtes (e.g., `Gl_Vertex' , `Gl_Normal' , etc., see the OpenGL
-%% Shading Language specification for a complete list.) User-defined attribute variables
-%% have arbitrary names and obtain their values through numbered generic vertex attributes.
-%% An attribute variable (either built-in or user-defined) is considered active if it is
-%% determined during the link operation that it may be accessed during program execution.
-%% Therefore, `Program' should have previously been the target of a call to {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% , but it is not necessary for it to have been linked successfully.
-%%
-%% The size of the character buffer required to store the longest attribute variable name
-%% in `Program' can be obtained by calling {@link gl:getProgramiv/2} with the value `?GL_ACTIVE_ATTRIBUTE_MAX_LENGTH'
-%% . This value should be used to allocate a buffer of sufficient size to store the returned
-%% attribute name. The size of this character buffer is passed in `BufSize' , and a pointer
-%% to this character buffer is passed in `Name' .
-%%
-%% ``gl:getActiveAttrib'' returns the name of the attribute variable indicated by `Index'
-%% , storing it in the character buffer specified by `Name' . The string returned will
-%% be null terminated. The actual number of characters written into this buffer is returned
-%% in `Length' , and this count does not include the null termination character. If the
-%% length of the returned string is not required, a value of `?NULL' can be passed in
-%% the `Length' argument.
-%%
-%% The `Type' argument specifies a pointer to a variable into which the attribute variable's
-%% data type will be written. The symbolic constants `?GL_FLOAT', `?GL_FLOAT_VEC2',
-%% `?GL_FLOAT_VEC3', `?GL_FLOAT_VEC4', `?GL_FLOAT_MAT2', `?GL_FLOAT_MAT3',
-%% `?GL_FLOAT_MAT4', `?GL_FLOAT_MAT2x3', `?GL_FLOAT_MAT2x4', `?GL_FLOAT_MAT3x2'
-%% , `?GL_FLOAT_MAT3x4', `?GL_FLOAT_MAT4x2', `?GL_FLOAT_MAT4x3', `?GL_INT'
-%% , `?GL_INT_VEC2', `?GL_INT_VEC3', `?GL_INT_VEC4', `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_VEC'
-%% , `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_VEC2', `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_VEC3', `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_VEC4',
-%% `?DOUBLE', `?DOUBLE_VEC2', `?DOUBLE_VEC3', `?DOUBLE_VEC4', `?DOUBLE_MAT2'
-%% , `?DOUBLE_MAT3', `?DOUBLE_MAT4', `?DOUBLE_MAT2x3', `?DOUBLE_MAT2x4',
-%% `?DOUBLE_MAT3x2', `?DOUBLE_MAT3x4', `?DOUBLE_MAT4x2', or `?DOUBLE_MAT4x3'
-%% may be returned. The `Size' argument will return the size of the attribute, in units
-%% of the type returned in `Type' .
-%%
-%% The list of active attribute variables may include both built-in attribute variables (which
-%% begin with the prefix "gl_") as well as user-defined attribute variable names.
-%%
-%% This function will return as much information as it can about the specified active attribute
-%% variable. If no information is available, `Length' will be 0, and `Name' will
-%% be an empty string. This situation could occur if this function is called after a link
-%% operation that failed. If an error occurs, the return values `Length' , `Size' , `Type'
-%% , and `Name' will be unmodified.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetActiveAttrib.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetActiveAttrib.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getActiveAttrib(Program, Index, BufSize) -> {Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Name :: string()} when Program :: integer(),Index :: integer(),BufSize :: integer().
getActiveAttrib(Program,Index,BufSize) ->
call(5456, <<Program:?GLuint,Index:?GLuint,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -10899,141 +4540,7 @@ getActiveAttrib(Program,Index,BufSize) ->
%% A value of 0 for `Index' selects the first active uniform variable. Permissible values
%% for `Index' range from 0 to the number of active uniform variables minus 1.
%%
-%% Shaders may use either built-in uniform variables, user-defined uniform variables, or
-%% both. Built-in uniform variables have a prefix of "gl_" and reference existing OpenGL
-%% state or values derived from such state (e.g., `Gl_DepthRangeParameters' , see the
-%% OpenGL Shading Language specification for a complete list.) User-defined uniform variables
-%% have arbitrary names and obtain their values from the application through calls to {@link gl:uniform1f/2}
-%% . A uniform variable (either built-in or user-defined) is considered active if it is determined
-%% during the link operation that it may be accessed during program execution. Therefore, `Program'
-%% should have previously been the target of a call to {@link gl:linkProgram/1} , but it is
-%% not necessary for it to have been linked successfully.
-%%
-%% The size of the character buffer required to store the longest uniform variable name in `Program'
-%% can be obtained by calling {@link gl:getProgramiv/2} with the value `?GL_ACTIVE_UNIFORM_MAX_LENGTH'
-%% . This value should be used to allocate a buffer of sufficient size to store the returned
-%% uniform variable name. The size of this character buffer is passed in `BufSize' ,
-%% and a pointer to this character buffer is passed in `Name.'
-%%
-%% ``gl:getActiveUniform'' returns the name of the uniform variable indicated by `Index'
-%% , storing it in the character buffer specified by `Name' . The string returned will
-%% be null terminated. The actual number of characters written into this buffer is returned
-%% in `Length' , and this count does not include the null termination character. If the
-%% length of the returned string is not required, a value of `?NULL' can be passed in
-%% the `Length' argument.
-%%
-%% The `Type' argument will return a pointer to the uniform variable's data type. The
-%% symbolic constants returned for uniform types are shown in the table below. <table><tbody>
-%% <tr><td>` Returned Symbolic Contant '</td><td>` Shader Uniform Type '</td></tr></tbody>
-%% <tbody><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT'</td><td>`?float'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT_VEC2'
-%% </td><td>`?vec2'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT_VEC3'</td><td>`?vec3'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT_VEC4'</td><td>`?vec4'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE'</td>
-%% <td>`?double'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_VEC2'</td><td>`?dvec2'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_VEC3'</td><td>`?dvec3'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_VEC4'
-%% </td><td>`?dvec4'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT'</td><td>`?int'</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_INT_VEC2'</td><td>`?ivec2'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_VEC3'</td><td>`?ivec3'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_VEC4'</td><td>`?ivec4'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT'
-%% </td><td>`?unsigned int'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_VEC2'</td><td>`?uvec2'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_VEC3'</td><td>`?uvec3'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_VEC4'
-%% </td><td>`?uvec4'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_BOOL'</td><td>`?bool'</td></tr><tr>
-%% <td>`?GL_BOOL_VEC2'</td><td>`?bvec2'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_BOOL_VEC3'</td><td>
-%% `?bvec3'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_BOOL_VEC4'</td><td>`?bvec4'</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_FLOAT_MAT2'</td><td>`?mat2'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT_MAT3'</td><td>
-%% `?mat3'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT_MAT4'</td><td>`?mat4'</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_FLOAT_MAT2x3'</td><td>`?mat2x3'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT_MAT2x4'</td>
-%% <td>`?mat2x4'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT_MAT3x2'</td><td>`?mat3x2'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT_MAT3x4'</td><td>`?mat3x4'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT_MAT4x2'
-%% </td><td>`?mat4x2'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_FLOAT_MAT4x3'</td><td>`?mat4x3'</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_MAT2'</td><td>`?dmat2'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_MAT3'
-%% </td><td>`?dmat3'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_MAT4'</td><td>`?dmat4'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_MAT2x3'</td><td>`?dmat2x3'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_MAT2x4'
-%% </td><td>`?dmat2x4'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_MAT3x2'</td><td>`?dmat3x2'</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_MAT3x4'</td><td>`?dmat3x4'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_MAT4x2'
-%% </td><td>`?dmat4x2'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_DOUBLE_MAT4x3'</td><td>`?dmat4x3'</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_1D'</td><td>`?sampler1D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_2D'
-%% </td><td>`?sampler2D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_3D'</td><td>`?sampler3D'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_CUBE'</td><td>`?samplerCube'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_1D_SHADOW'
-%% </td><td>`?sampler1DShadow'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_2D_SHADOW'</td><td>`?sampler2DShadow'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_1D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?sampler1DArray'</td></tr><tr>
-%% <td>`?GL_SAMPLER_2D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?sampler2DArray'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_1D_ARRAY_SHADOW'
-%% </td><td>`?sampler1DArrayShadow'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_2D_ARRAY_SHADOW'</td>
-%% <td>`?sampler2DArrayShadow'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_2D_MULTISAMPLE'</td><td>
-%% `?sampler2DMS'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY'</td><td>`?sampler2DMSArray'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_CUBE_SHADOW'</td><td>`?samplerCubeShadow'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_BUFFER'</td><td>`?samplerBuffer'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_2D_RECT'
-%% </td><td>`?sampler2DRect'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_SAMPLER_2D_RECT_SHADOW'</td><td>
-%% `?sampler2DRectShadow'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_SAMPLER_1D'</td><td>`?isampler1D'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_SAMPLER_2D'</td><td>`?isampler2D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_SAMPLER_3D'
-%% </td><td>`?isampler3D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_SAMPLER_CUBE'</td><td>`?isamplerCube'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_SAMPLER_1D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?isampler1DArray'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_INT_SAMPLER_2D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?isampler2DArray'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_SAMPLER_2D_MULTISAMPLE'
-%% </td><td>`?isampler2DMS'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_SAMPLER_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY'</td>
-%% <td>`?isampler2DMSArray'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_SAMPLER_BUFFER'</td><td>`?isamplerBuffer'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_SAMPLER_2D_RECT'</td><td>`?isampler2DRect'</td></tr><tr>
-%% <td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_SAMPLER_1D'</td><td>`?usampler1D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_SAMPLER_2D'
-%% </td><td>`?usampler2D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_SAMPLER_3D'</td><td>`?usampler3D'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_SAMPLER_CUBE'</td><td>`?usamplerCube'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_SAMPLER_1D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?usampler2DArray'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_SAMPLER_2D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?usampler2DArray'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_SAMPLER_2D_MULTISAMPLE'</td><td>`?usampler2DMS'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_SAMPLER_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY'</td><td>`?usampler2DMSArray'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_SAMPLER_BUFFER'</td><td>`?usamplerBuffer'</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_SAMPLER_2D_RECT'</td><td>`?usampler2DRect'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_IMAGE_1D'</td><td>`?image1D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_IMAGE_2D'</td>
-%% <td>`?image2D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_IMAGE_3D'</td><td>`?image3D'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_IMAGE_2D_RECT'</td><td>`?image2DRect'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_IMAGE_CUBE'
-%% </td><td>`?imageCube'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_IMAGE_BUFFER'</td><td>`?imageBuffer'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_IMAGE_1D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?image1DArray'</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_IMAGE_2D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?image2DArray'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_IMAGE_2D_MULTISAMPLE'
-%% </td><td>`?image2DMS'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_IMAGE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY'</td><td>
-%% `?image2DMSArray'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_IMAGE_1D'</td><td>`?iimage1D'</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_IMAGE_2D'</td><td>`?iimage2D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_IMAGE_3D'
-%% </td><td>`?iimage3D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_IMAGE_2D_RECT'</td><td>`?iimage2DRect'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_IMAGE_CUBE'</td><td>`?iimageCube'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_IMAGE_BUFFER'
-%% </td><td>`?iimageBuffer'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_IMAGE_1D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?iimage1DArray'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_IMAGE_2D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?iimage2DArray'</td></tr><tr>
-%% <td>`?GL_INT_IMAGE_2D_MULTISAMPLE'</td><td>`?iimage2DMS'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_INT_IMAGE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY'
-%% </td><td>`?iimage2DMSArray'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_IMAGE_1D'</td><td>
-%% `?uimage1D'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_IMAGE_2D'</td><td>`?uimage2D'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_IMAGE_3D'</td><td>`?uimage3D'</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_IMAGE_2D_RECT'</td><td>`?uimage2DRect'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_IMAGE_CUBE'
-%% </td><td>`?uimageCube'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_IMAGE_BUFFER'</td><td>
-%% `?uimageBuffer'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_IMAGE_1D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?uimage1DArray'
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_IMAGE_2D_ARRAY'</td><td>`?uimage2DArray'</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_IMAGE_2D_MULTISAMPLE'</td><td>`?uimage2DMS'</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_IMAGE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY'</td><td>`?uimage2DMSArray'</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_UNSIGNED_INT_ATOMIC_COUNTER'</td><td>`?atomic_uint'</td></tr></tbody>
-%% </table>
-%%
-%% If one or more elements of an array are active, the name of the array is returned in `Name'
-%% , the type is returned in `Type' , and the `Size' parameter returns the highest
-%% array element index used, plus one, as determined by the compiler and/or linker. Only
-%% one active uniform variable will be reported for a uniform array.
-%%
-%% Uniform variables that are declared as structures or arrays of structures will not be
-%% returned directly by this function. Instead, each of these uniform variables will be reduced
-%% to its fundamental components containing the "." and "[]" operators such that each of
-%% the names is valid as an argument to {@link gl:getUniformLocation/2} . Each of these reduced
-%% uniform variables is counted as one active uniform variable and is assigned an index.
-%% A valid name cannot be a structure, an array of structures, or a subcomponent of a vector
-%% or matrix.
-%%
-%% The size of the uniform variable will be returned in `Size' . Uniform variables other
-%% than arrays will have a size of 1. Structures and arrays of structures will be reduced
-%% as described earlier, such that each of the names returned will be a data type in the
-%% earlier list. If this reduction results in an array, the size returned will be as described
-%% for uniform arrays; otherwise, the size returned will be 1.
-%%
-%% The list of active uniform variables may include both built-in uniform variables (which
-%% begin with the prefix "gl_") as well as user-defined uniform variable names.
-%%
-%% This function will return as much information as it can about the specified active uniform
-%% variable. If no information is available, `Length' will be 0, and `Name' will
-%% be an empty string. This situation could occur if this function is called after a link
-%% operation that failed. If an error occurs, the return values `Length' , `Size' , `Type'
-%% , and `Name' will be unmodified.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetActiveUniform.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetActiveUniform.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getActiveUniform(Program, Index, BufSize) -> {Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Name :: string()} when Program :: integer(),Index :: integer(),BufSize :: integer().
getActiveUniform(Program,Index,BufSize) ->
call(5457, <<Program:?GLuint,Index:?GLuint,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -11047,13 +4554,7 @@ getActiveUniform(Program,Index,BufSize) ->
%% number of shader names that may be returned in `Shaders' is specified by `MaxCount'
%% .
%%
-%% If the number of names actually returned is not required (for instance, if it has just
-%% been obtained by calling {@link gl:getProgramiv/2} ), a value of `?NULL' may be passed
-%% for count. If no shader objects are attached to `Program' , a value of 0 will be returned
-%% in `Count' . The actual number of attached shaders can be obtained by calling {@link gl:getProgramiv/2}
-%% with the value `?GL_ATTACHED_SHADERS'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetAttachedShaders.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetAttachedShaders.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getAttachedShaders(Program, MaxCount) -> [integer()] when Program :: integer(),MaxCount :: integer().
getAttachedShaders(Program,MaxCount) ->
call(5458, <<Program:?GLuint,MaxCount:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -11067,17 +4568,7 @@ getAttachedShaders(Program,MaxCount) ->
%% attribute variable is not an active attribute in the specified program object or if `Name'
%% starts with the reserved prefix "gl_", a value of -1 is returned.
%%
-%% The association between an attribute variable name and a generic attribute index can be
-%% specified at any time by calling {@link gl:bindAttribLocation/3} . Attribute bindings do
-%% not go into effect until {@link gl:linkProgram/1} is called. After a program object has
-%% been linked successfully, the index values for attribute variables remain fixed until
-%% the next link command occurs. The attribute values can only be queried after a link if
-%% the link was successful. ``gl:getAttribLocation'' returns the binding that actually
-%% went into effect the last time {@link gl:linkProgram/1} was called for the specified program
-%% object. Attribute bindings that have been specified since the last link operation are
-%% not returned by ``gl:getAttribLocation''.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetAttribLocation.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetAttribLocation.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getAttribLocation(Program, Name) -> integer() when Program :: integer(),Name :: string().
getAttribLocation(Program,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -11088,68 +4579,7 @@ getAttribLocation(Program,Name) ->
%% ``gl:getProgram'' returns in `Params' the value of a parameter for a specific program
%% object. The following parameters are defined:
%%
-%% `?GL_DELETE_STATUS': `Params' returns `?GL_TRUE' if `Program' is currently
-%% flagged for deletion, and `?GL_FALSE' otherwise.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINK_STATUS': `Params' returns `?GL_TRUE' if the last link operation
-%% on `Program' was successful, and `?GL_FALSE' otherwise.
-%%
-%% `?GL_VALIDATE_STATUS': `Params' returns `?GL_TRUE' or if the last validation
-%% operation on `Program' was successful, and `?GL_FALSE' otherwise.
-%%
-%% `?GL_INFO_LOG_LENGTH': `Params' returns the number of characters in the information
-%% log for `Program' including the null termination character (i.e., the size of the
-%% character buffer required to store the information log). If `Program' has no information
-%% log, a value of 0 is returned.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ATTACHED_SHADERS': `Params' returns the number of shader objects attached
-%% to `Program' .
-%%
-%% `?GL_ACTIVE_ATOMIC_COUNTER_BUFFERS': `Params' returns the number of active attribute
-%% atomic counter buffers used by `Program' .
-%%
-%% `?GL_ACTIVE_ATTRIBUTES': `Params' returns the number of active attribute variables
-%% for `Program' .
-%%
-%% `?GL_ACTIVE_ATTRIBUTE_MAX_LENGTH': `Params' returns the length of the longest
-%% active attribute name for `Program' , including the null termination character (i.e.,
-%% the size of the character buffer required to store the longest attribute name). If no
-%% active attributes exist, 0 is returned.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ACTIVE_UNIFORMS': `Params' returns the number of active uniform variables
-%% for `Program' .
-%%
-%% `?GL_ACTIVE_UNIFORM_MAX_LENGTH': `Params' returns the length of the longest
-%% active uniform variable name for `Program' , including the null termination character
-%% (i.e., the size of the character buffer required to store the longest uniform variable
-%% name). If no active uniform variables exist, 0 is returned.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PROGRAM_BINARY_LENGTH': `Params' returns the length of the program binary,
-%% in bytes that will be returned by a call to {@link gl:getProgramBinary/2} . When a progam's
-%% `?GL_LINK_STATUS' is `?GL_FALSE', its program binary length is zero.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BUFFER_MODE': `Params' returns a symbolic constant indicating
-%% the buffer mode used when transform feedback is active. This may be `?GL_SEPARATE_ATTRIBS'
-%% or `?GL_INTERLEAVED_ATTRIBS'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_VARYINGS': `Params' returns the number of varying variables
-%% to capture in transform feedback mode for the program.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_VARYING_MAX_LENGTH': `Params' returns the length of
-%% the longest variable name to be used for transform feedback, including the null-terminator.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_GEOMETRY_VERTICES_OUT': `Params' returns the maximum number of vertices
-%% that the geometry shader in `Program' will output.
-%%
-%% `?GL_GEOMETRY_INPUT_TYPE': `Params' returns a symbolic constant indicating the
-%% primitive type accepted as input to the geometry shader contained in `Program' .
-%%
-%% `?GL_GEOMETRY_OUTPUT_TYPE': `Params' returns a symbolic constant indicating
-%% the primitive type that will be output by the geometry shader contained in `Program' .
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetProgram.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramiv(Program, Pname) -> integer() when Program :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getProgramiv(Program,Pname) ->
call(5460, <<Program:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -11160,21 +4590,7 @@ getProgramiv(Program,Pname) ->
%% The information log for a program object is modified when the program object is linked
%% or validated. The string that is returned will be null terminated.
%%
-%% ``gl:getProgramInfoLog'' returns in `InfoLog' as much of the information log as
-%% it can, up to a maximum of `MaxLength' characters. The number of characters actually
-%% returned, excluding the null termination character, is specified by `Length' . If
-%% the length of the returned string is not required, a value of `?NULL' can be passed
-%% in the `Length' argument. The size of the buffer required to store the returned
-%% information log can be obtained by calling {@link gl:getProgramiv/2} with the value `?GL_INFO_LOG_LENGTH'
-%% .
-%%
-%% The information log for a program object is either an empty string, or a string containing
-%% information about the last link operation, or a string containing information about the
-%% last validation operation. It may contain diagnostic messages, warning messages, and
-%% other information. When a program object is created, its information log will be a string
-%% of length 0.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgramInfoLog.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetProgramInfoLog.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramInfoLog(Program, BufSize) -> string() when Program :: integer(),BufSize :: integer().
getProgramInfoLog(Program,BufSize) ->
call(5461, <<Program:?GLuint,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -11184,28 +4600,7 @@ getProgramInfoLog(Program,BufSize) ->
%% ``gl:getShader'' returns in `Params' the value of a parameter for a specific
%% shader object. The following parameters are defined:
%%
-%% `?GL_SHADER_TYPE': `Params' returns `?GL_VERTEX_SHADER' if `Shader'
-%% is a vertex shader object, `?GL_GEOMETRY_SHADER' if `Shader' is a geometry
-%% shader object, and `?GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER' if `Shader' is a fragment shader
-%% object.
-%%
-%% `?GL_DELETE_STATUS': `Params' returns `?GL_TRUE' if `Shader' is
-%% currently flagged for deletion, and `?GL_FALSE' otherwise.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COMPILE_STATUS': `Params' returns `?GL_TRUE' if the last compile
-%% operation on `Shader' was successful, and `?GL_FALSE' otherwise.
-%%
-%% `?GL_INFO_LOG_LENGTH': `Params' returns the number of characters in the information
-%% log for `Shader' including the null termination character (i.e., the size of
-%% the character buffer required to store the information log). If `Shader' has
-%% no information log, a value of 0 is returned.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SHADER_SOURCE_LENGTH': `Params' returns the length of the concatenation
-%% of the source strings that make up the shader source for the `Shader' , including
-%% the null termination character. (i.e., the size of the character buffer required to
-%% store the shader source). If no source code exists, 0 is returned.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetShader.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetShader.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getShaderiv(Shader, Pname) -> integer() when Shader :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getShaderiv(Shader,Pname) ->
call(5462, <<Shader:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -11216,19 +4611,7 @@ getShaderiv(Shader,Pname) ->
%% The information log for a shader object is modified when the shader is compiled. The
%% string that is returned will be null terminated.
%%
-%% ``gl:getShaderInfoLog'' returns in `InfoLog' as much of the information log as
-%% it can, up to a maximum of `MaxLength' characters. The number of characters actually
-%% returned, excluding the null termination character, is specified by `Length' . If
-%% the length of the returned string is not required, a value of `?NULL' can be passed
-%% in the `Length' argument. The size of the buffer required to store the returned
-%% information log can be obtained by calling {@link gl:getShaderiv/2} with the value `?GL_INFO_LOG_LENGTH'
-%% .
-%%
-%% The information log for a shader object is a string that may contain diagnostic messages,
-%% warning messages, and other information about the last compile operation. When a shader
-%% object is created, its information log will be a string of length 0.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetShaderInfoLog.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetShaderInfoLog.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getShaderInfoLog(Shader, BufSize) -> string() when Shader :: integer(),BufSize :: integer().
getShaderInfoLog(Shader,BufSize) ->
call(5463, <<Shader:?GLuint,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -11240,15 +4623,7 @@ getShaderInfoLog(Shader,BufSize) ->
%% are the result of a previous call to {@link gl:shaderSource/2} . The string returned by
%% the function will be null terminated.
%%
-%% ``gl:getShaderSource'' returns in `Source' as much of the source code string as
-%% it can, up to a maximum of `BufSize' characters. The number of characters actually
-%% returned, excluding the null termination character, is specified by `Length' . If
-%% the length of the returned string is not required, a value of `?NULL' can be passed
-%% in the `Length' argument. The size of the buffer required to store the returned source
-%% code string can be obtained by calling {@link gl:getShaderiv/2} with the value `?GL_SHADER_SOURCE_LENGTH'
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetShaderSource.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetShaderSource.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getShaderSource(Shader, BufSize) -> string() when Shader :: integer(),BufSize :: integer().
getShaderSource(Shader,BufSize) ->
call(5464, <<Shader:?GLuint,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -11263,25 +4638,7 @@ getShaderSource(Shader,BufSize) ->
%% in `Program' , if `Name' starts with the reserved prefix "gl_", or if `Name'
%% is associated with an atomic counter or a named uniform block.
%%
-%% Uniform variables that are structures or arrays of structures may be queried by calling ``gl:getUniformLocation''
-%% for each field within the structure. The array element operator "[]" and the structure
-%% field operator "." may be used in `Name' in order to select elements within an array
-%% or fields within a structure. The result of using these operators is not allowed to be
-%% another structure, an array of structures, or a subcomponent of a vector or a matrix.
-%% Except if the last part of `Name' indicates a uniform variable array, the location
-%% of the first element of an array can be retrieved by using the name of the array, or by
-%% using the name appended by "[0]".
-%%
-%% The actual locations assigned to uniform variables are not known until the program object
-%% is linked successfully. After linking has occurred, the command ``gl:getUniformLocation''
-%% can be used to obtain the location of a uniform variable. This location value can then
-%% be passed to {@link gl:uniform1f/2} to set the value of the uniform variable or to {@link gl:getUniformfv/2}
-%% in order to query the current value of the uniform variable. After a program object has
-%% been linked successfully, the index values for uniform variables remain fixed until the
-%% next link command occurs. Uniform variable locations and values can only be queried after
-%% a link if the link was successful.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetUniformLocation.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetUniformLocation.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getUniformLocation(Program, Name) -> integer() when Program :: integer(),Name :: string().
getUniformLocation(Program,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -11300,15 +4657,7 @@ getUniformLocation(Program,Name) ->
%% The values for uniform variables declared as a matrix will be returned in column major
%% order.
%%
-%% The locations assigned to uniform variables are not known until the program object is
-%% linked. After linking has occurred, the command {@link gl:getUniformLocation/2} can be
-%% used to obtain the location of a uniform variable. This location value can then be passed
-%% to ``gl:getUniform'' in order to query the current value of the uniform variable. After
-%% a program object has been linked successfully, the index values for uniform variables
-%% remain fixed until the next link command occurs. The uniform variable values can only
-%% be queried after a link if the link was successful.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetUniform.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetUniform.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getUniformfv(Program, Location) -> matrix() when Program :: integer(),Location :: integer().
getUniformfv(Program,Location) ->
call(5466, <<Program:?GLuint,Location:?GLint>>).
@@ -11325,63 +4674,7 @@ getUniformiv(Program,Location) ->
%% parameter. The generic vertex attribute to be queried is specified by `Index' , and
%% the parameter to be queried is specified by `Pname' .
%%
-%% The accepted parameter names are as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING': `Params' returns a single value, the
-%% name of the buffer object currently bound to the binding point corresponding to generic
-%% vertex attribute array `Index' . If no buffer object is bound, 0 is returned. The
-%% initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_ENABLED': `Params' returns a single value that is non-zero
-%% (true) if the vertex attribute array for `Index' is enabled and 0 (false) if it is
-%% disabled. The initial value is `?GL_FALSE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_SIZE': `Params' returns a single value, the size of
-%% the vertex attribute array for `Index' . The size is the number of values for each
-%% element of the vertex attribute array, and it will be 1, 2, 3, or 4. The initial value
-%% is 4.
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_STRIDE': `Params' returns a single value, the array
-%% stride for (number of bytes between successive elements in) the vertex attribute array
-%% for `Index' . A value of 0 indicates that the array elements are stored sequentially
-%% in memory. The initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_TYPE': `Params' returns a single value, a symbolic
-%% constant indicating the array type for the vertex attribute array for `Index' . Possible
-%% values are `?GL_BYTE', `?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE', `?GL_SHORT', `?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT'
-%% , `?GL_INT', `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT', `?GL_FLOAT', and `?GL_DOUBLE'. The
-%% initial value is `?GL_FLOAT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_NORMALIZED': `Params' returns a single value that is
-%% non-zero (true) if fixed-point data types for the vertex attribute array indicated by `Index'
-%% are normalized when they are converted to floating point, and 0 (false) otherwise. The
-%% initial value is `?GL_FALSE'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_INTEGER': `Params' returns a single value that is non-zero
-%% (true) if fixed-point data types for the vertex attribute array indicated by `Index'
-%% have integer data types, and 0 (false) otherwise. The initial value is 0 (`?GL_FALSE').
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_DIVISOR': `Params' returns a single value that is the
-%% frequency divisor used for instanced rendering. See {@link gl:vertexAttribDivisor/2} . The
-%% initial value is 0.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CURRENT_VERTEX_ATTRIB': `Params' returns four values that represent the
-%% current value for the generic vertex attribute specified by index. Generic vertex attribute
-%% 0 is unique in that it has no current state, so an error will be generated if `Index'
-%% is 0. The initial value for all other generic vertex attributes is (0,0,0,1).
-%%
-%% ``gl:getVertexAttribdv'' and ``gl:getVertexAttribfv'' return the current attribute
-%% values as four single-precision floating-point values; ``gl:getVertexAttribiv'' reads
-%% them as floating-point values and converts them to four integer values; ``gl:getVertexAttribIiv''
-%% and ``gl:getVertexAttribIuiv'' read and return them as signed or unsigned integer values,
-%% respectively; ``gl:getVertexAttribLdv'' reads and returns them as four double-precision
-%% floating-point values.
-%%
-%% All of the parameters except `?GL_CURRENT_VERTEX_ATTRIB' represent state stored in
-%% the currently bound vertex array object.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetVertexAttrib.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetVertexAttrib.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getVertexAttribdv(Index, Pname) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Index :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getVertexAttribdv(Index,Pname) ->
call(5468, <<Index:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -11405,7 +4698,7 @@ getVertexAttribiv(Index,Pname) ->
%% . If `Program' is zero or a non-zero value that is not the name of a program object,
%% or if an error occurs, ``gl:isProgram'' returns `?GL_FALSE'.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsProgram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsProgram.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isProgram(Program) -> 0|1 when Program :: integer().
isProgram(Program) ->
call(5471, <<Program:?GLuint>>).
@@ -11417,7 +4710,7 @@ isProgram(Program) ->
%% . If `Shader' is zero or a non-zero value that is not the name of a shader object,
%% or if an error occurs, ``gl:isShader '' returns `?GL_FALSE'.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsShader.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsShader.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isShader(Shader) -> 0|1 when Shader :: integer().
isShader(Shader) ->
call(5472, <<Shader:?GLuint>>).
@@ -11433,111 +4726,7 @@ isShader(Shader) ->
%% they will be used to create an executable that will run on the programmable fragment processor.
%%
%%
-%% The status of the link operation will be stored as part of the program object's state.
-%% This value will be set to `?GL_TRUE' if the program object was linked without errors
-%% and is ready for use, and `?GL_FALSE' otherwise. It can be queried by calling {@link gl:getProgramiv/2}
-%% with arguments `Program' and `?GL_LINK_STATUS'.
-%%
-%% As a result of a successful link operation, all active user-defined uniform variables
-%% belonging to `Program' will be initialized to 0, and each of the program object's
-%% active uniform variables will be assigned a location that can be queried by calling {@link gl:getUniformLocation/2}
-%% . Also, any active user-defined attribute variables that have not been bound to a generic
-%% vertex attribute index will be bound to one at this time.
-%%
-%% Linking of a program object can fail for a number of reasons as specified in the `OpenGL Shading Language Specification'
-%% . The following lists some of the conditions that will cause a link error.
-%%
-%% The number of active attribute variables supported by the implementation has been exceeded.
-%%
-%%
-%% The storage limit for uniform variables has been exceeded.
-%%
-%% The number of active uniform variables supported by the implementation has been exceeded.
-%%
-%% The `main' function is missing for the vertex, geometry or fragment shader.
-%%
-%% A varying variable actually used in the fragment shader is not declared in the same way
-%% (or is not declared at all) in the vertex shader, or geometry shader shader if present.
-%%
-%% A reference to a function or variable name is unresolved.
-%%
-%% A shared global is declared with two different types or two different initial values.
-%%
-%% One or more of the attached shader objects has not been successfully compiled.
-%%
-%% Binding a generic attribute matrix caused some rows of the matrix to fall outside the
-%% allowed maximum of `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_ATTRIBS'.
-%%
-%% Not enough contiguous vertex attribute slots could be found to bind attribute matrices.
-%%
-%% The program object contains objects to form a fragment shader but does not contain objects
-%% to form a vertex shader.
-%%
-%% The program object contains objects to form a geometry shader but does not contain objects
-%% to form a vertex shader.
-%%
-%% The program object contains objects to form a geometry shader and the input primitive
-%% type, output primitive type, or maximum output vertex count is not specified in any compiled
-%% geometry shader object.
-%%
-%% The program object contains objects to form a geometry shader and the input primitive
-%% type, output primitive type, or maximum output vertex count is specified differently in
-%% multiple geometry shader objects.
-%%
-%% The number of active outputs in the fragment shader is greater than the value of `?GL_MAX_DRAW_BUFFERS'
-%% .
-%%
-%% The program has an active output assigned to a location greater than or equal to the value
-%% of `?GL_MAX_DUAL_SOURCE_DRAW_BUFFERS' and has an active output assigned an index
-%% greater than or equal to one.
-%%
-%% More than one varying out variable is bound to the same number and index.
-%%
-%% The explicit binding assigments do not leave enough space for the linker to automatically
-%% assign a location for a varying out array, which requires multiple contiguous locations.
-%%
-%% The `Count' specified by {@link gl:transformFeedbackVaryings/3} is non-zero, but the
-%% program object has no vertex or geometry shader.
-%%
-%% Any variable name specified to {@link gl:transformFeedbackVaryings/3} in the `Varyings'
-%% array is not declared as an output in the vertex shader (or the geometry shader, if active).
-%%
-%%
-%% Any two entries in the `Varyings' array given {@link gl:transformFeedbackVaryings/3}
-%% specify the same varying variable.
-%%
-%% The total number of components to capture in any transform feedback varying variable is
-%% greater than the constant `?GL_MAX_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_SEPARATE_COMPONENTS' and the
-%% buffer mode is `?SEPARATE_ATTRIBS'.
-%%
-%% When a program object has been successfully linked, the program object can be made part
-%% of current state by calling {@link gl:useProgram/1} . Whether or not the link operation
-%% was successful, the program object's information log will be overwritten. The information
-%% log can be retrieved by calling {@link gl:getProgramInfoLog/2} .
-%%
-%% ``gl:linkProgram'' will also install the generated executables as part of the current
-%% rendering state if the link operation was successful and the specified program object
-%% is already currently in use as a result of a previous call to {@link gl:useProgram/1} .
-%% If the program object currently in use is relinked unsuccessfully, its link status will
-%% be set to `?GL_FALSE' , but the executables and associated state will remain part
-%% of the current state until a subsequent call to ``gl:useProgram'' removes it from use.
-%% After it is removed from use, it cannot be made part of current state until it has been
-%% successfully relinked.
-%%
-%% If `Program' contains shader objects of type `?GL_VERTEX_SHADER', and optionally
-%% of type `?GL_GEOMETRY_SHADER', but does not contain shader objects of type `?GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER'
-%% , the vertex shader executable will be installed on the programmable vertex processor,
-%% the geometry shader executable, if present, will be installed on the programmable geometry
-%% processor, but no executable will be installed on the fragment processor. The results
-%% of rasterizing primitives with such a program will be undefined.
-%%
-%% The program object's information log is updated and the program is generated at the time
-%% of the link operation. After the link operation, applications are free to modify attached
-%% shader objects, compile attached shader objects, detach shader objects, delete shader
-%% objects, and attach additional shader objects. None of these operations affects the information
-%% log or the program that is part of the program object.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLinkProgram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glLinkProgram.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec linkProgram(Program) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer().
linkProgram(Program) ->
cast(5473, <<Program:?GLuint>>).
@@ -11555,7 +4744,7 @@ linkProgram(Program) ->
%% than 0 to indicate that the string is null terminated. The source code strings are not
%% scanned or parsed at this time; they are simply copied into the specified shader object.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glShaderSource.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glShaderSource.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec shaderSource(Shader, String) -> 'ok' when Shader :: integer(),String :: iolist().
shaderSource(Shader,String) ->
StringTemp = list_to_binary([[Str|[0]] || Str <- String ]),
@@ -11570,35 +4759,7 @@ shaderSource(Shader,String) ->
%% compiling the shader objects with {@link gl:compileShader/1} , and successfully linking
%% the program object with {@link gl:linkProgram/1} .
%%
-%% A program object will contain an executable that will run on the vertex processor if
-%% it contains one or more shader objects of type `?GL_VERTEX_SHADER' that have been
-%% successfully compiled and linked. A program object will contain an executable that will
-%% run on the geometry processor if it contains one or more shader objects of type `?GL_GEOMETRY_SHADER'
-%% that have been successfully compiled and linked. Similarly, a program object will contain
-%% an executable that will run on the fragment processor if it contains one or more shader
-%% objects of type `?GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER' that have been successfully compiled and
-%% linked.
-%%
-%% While a program object is in use, applications are free to modify attached shader objects,
-%% compile attached shader objects, attach additional shader objects, and detach or delete
-%% shader objects. None of these operations will affect the executables that are part of
-%% the current state. However, relinking the program object that is currently in use will
-%% install the program object as part of the current rendering state if the link operation
-%% was successful (see {@link gl:linkProgram/1} ). If the program object currently in use
-%% is relinked unsuccessfully, its link status will be set to `?GL_FALSE', but the
-%% executables and associated state will remain part of the current state until a subsequent
-%% call to ``gl:useProgram'' removes it from use. After it is removed from use, it cannot
-%% be made part of current state until it has been successfully relinked.
-%%
-%% If `Program' is zero, then the current rendering state refers to an `invalid'
-%% program object and the results of shader execution are undefined. However, this is not
-%% an error.
-%%
-%% If `Program' does not contain shader objects of type `?GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER',
-%% an executable will be installed on the vertex, and possibly geometry processors, but
-%% the results of fragment shader execution will be undefined.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glUseProgram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glUseProgram.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec useProgram(Program) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer().
useProgram(Program) ->
cast(5475, <<Program:?GLuint>>).
@@ -11611,62 +4772,7 @@ useProgram(Program) ->
%% on the program object that was made part of current state by calling {@link gl:useProgram/1}
%% .
%%
-%% The commands ``gl:uniform{1|2|3|4}{f|i|ui}'' are used to change the value of the uniform
-%% variable specified by `Location' using the values passed as arguments. The number
-%% specified in the command should match the number of components in the data type of the
-%% specified uniform variable (e.g., `1' for float, int, unsigned int, bool; `2'
-%% for vec2, ivec2, uvec2, bvec2, etc.). The suffix `f' indicates that floating-point
-%% values are being passed; the suffix `i' indicates that integer values are being passed;
-%% the suffix `ui' indicates that unsigned integer values are being passed, and this
-%% type should also match the data type of the specified uniform variable. The `i' variants
-%% of this function should be used to provide values for uniform variables defined as int, ivec2
-%% , ivec3, ivec4, or arrays of these. The `ui' variants of this function should be
-%% used to provide values for uniform variables defined as unsigned int, uvec2, uvec3, uvec4,
-%% or arrays of these. The `f' variants should be used to provide values for uniform
-%% variables of type float, vec2, vec3, vec4, or arrays of these. Either the `i', `ui'
-%% or `f' variants may be used to provide values for uniform variables of type bool, bvec2
-%% , bvec3, bvec4, or arrays of these. The uniform variable will be set to false if the input
-%% value is 0 or 0.0f, and it will be set to true otherwise.
-%%
-%% All active uniform variables defined in a program object are initialized to 0 when the
-%% program object is linked successfully. They retain the values assigned to them by a call
-%% to ``gl:uniform '' until the next successful link operation occurs on the program object,
-%% when they are once again initialized to 0.
-%%
-%% The commands ``gl:uniform{1|2|3|4}{f|i|ui}v'' can be used to modify a single uniform
-%% variable or a uniform variable array. These commands pass a count and a pointer to the
-%% values to be loaded into a uniform variable or a uniform variable array. A count of 1
-%% should be used if modifying the value of a single uniform variable, and a count of 1 or
-%% greater can be used to modify an entire array or part of an array. When loading `n'
-%% elements starting at an arbitrary position `m' in a uniform variable array, elements
-%% `m' + `n' - 1 in the array will be replaced with the new values. If `M' + `N'
-%% - 1 is larger than the size of the uniform variable array, values for all array elements
-%% beyond the end of the array will be ignored. The number specified in the name of the command
-%% indicates the number of components for each element in `Value' , and it should match
-%% the number of components in the data type of the specified uniform variable (e.g., `1'
-%% for float, int, bool; `2' for vec2, ivec2, bvec2, etc.). The data type specified
-%% in the name of the command must match the data type for the specified uniform variable
-%% as described previously for ``gl:uniform{1|2|3|4}{f|i|ui}''.
-%%
-%% For uniform variable arrays, each element of the array is considered to be of the type
-%% indicated in the name of the command (e.g., ``gl:uniform3f'' or ``gl:uniform3fv''
-%% can be used to load a uniform variable array of type vec3). The number of elements of
-%% the uniform variable array to be modified is specified by `Count'
-%%
-%% The commands ``gl:uniformMatrix{2|3|4|2x3|3x2|2x4|4x2|3x4|4x3}fv'' are used to modify
-%% a matrix or an array of matrices. The numbers in the command name are interpreted as the
-%% dimensionality of the matrix. The number `2' indicates a 2 × 2 matrix (i.e., 4 values),
-%% the number `3' indicates a 3 × 3 matrix (i.e., 9 values), and the number `4'
-%% indicates a 4 × 4 matrix (i.e., 16 values). Non-square matrix dimensionality is explicit,
-%% with the first number representing the number of columns and the second number representing
-%% the number of rows. For example, `2x4' indicates a 2 × 4 matrix with 2 columns and
-%% 4 rows (i.e., 8 values). If `Transpose' is `?GL_FALSE', each matrix is assumed
-%% to be supplied in column major order. If `Transpose' is `?GL_TRUE', each matrix
-%% is assumed to be supplied in row major order. The `Count' argument indicates the
-%% number of matrices to be passed. A count of 1 should be used if modifying the value of
-%% a single matrix, and a count greater than 1 can be used to modify an array of matrices.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glUniform.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glUniform.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec uniform1f(Location, V0) -> 'ok' when Location :: integer(),V0 :: float().
uniform1f(Location,V0) ->
cast(5476, <<Location:?GLint,V0:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -11811,19 +4917,7 @@ uniformMatrix4fv(Location,Transpose,Value) ->
%% a way for OpenGL implementers to convey more information about why the current program
%% is inefficient, suboptimal, failing to execute, and so on.
%%
-%% The status of the validation operation will be stored as part of the program object's
-%% state. This value will be set to `?GL_TRUE' if the validation succeeded, and `?GL_FALSE'
-%% otherwise. It can be queried by calling {@link gl:getProgramiv/2} with arguments `Program'
-%% and `?GL_VALIDATE_STATUS'. If validation is successful, `Program' is guaranteed
-%% to execute given the current state. Otherwise, `Program' is guaranteed to not execute.
-%%
-%%
-%% This function is typically useful only during application development. The informational
-%% string stored in the information log is completely implementation dependent; therefore,
-%% an application should not expect different OpenGL implementations to produce identical
-%% information strings.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glValidateProgram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glValidateProgram.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec validateProgram(Program) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer().
validateProgram(Program) ->
cast(5495, <<Program:?GLuint>>).
@@ -11833,72 +4927,7 @@ validateProgram(Program) ->
%% The ``gl:vertexAttrib'' family of entry points allows an application to pass generic
%% vertex attributes in numbered locations.
%%
-%% Generic attributes are defined as four-component values that are organized into an array.
-%% The first entry of this array is numbered 0, and the size of the array is specified by
-%% the implementation-dependent constant `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_ATTRIBS'. Individual elements
-%% of this array can be modified with a ``gl:vertexAttrib'' call that specifies the index
-%% of the element to be modified and a value for that element.
-%%
-%% These commands can be used to specify one, two, three, or all four components of the generic
-%% vertex attribute specified by `Index' . A `1' in the name of the command indicates
-%% that only one value is passed, and it will be used to modify the first component of the
-%% generic vertex attribute. The second and third components will be set to 0, and the fourth
-%% component will be set to 1. Similarly, a `2' in the name of the command indicates
-%% that values are provided for the first two components, the third component will be set
-%% to 0, and the fourth component will be set to 1. A `3' in the name of the command
-%% indicates that values are provided for the first three components and the fourth component
-%% will be set to 1, whereas a `4' in the name indicates that values are provided for
-%% all four components.
-%%
-%% The letters `s', `f', `i', `d', `ub', `us', and `ui'
-%% indicate whether the arguments are of type short, float, int, double, unsigned byte, unsigned
-%% short, or unsigned int. When `v' is appended to the name, the commands can take a
-%% pointer to an array of such values.
-%%
-%% Additional capitalized letters can indicate further alterations to the default behavior
-%% of the glVertexAttrib function:
-%%
-%% The commands containing `N' indicate that the arguments will be passed as fixed-point
-%% values that are scaled to a normalized range according to the component conversion rules
-%% defined by the OpenGL specification. Signed values are understood to represent fixed-point
-%% values in the range [-1,1], and unsigned values are understood to represent fixed-point
-%% values in the range [0,1].
-%%
-%% The commands containing `I' indicate that the arguments are extended to full signed
-%% or unsigned integers.
-%%
-%% The commands containing `P' indicate that the arguments are stored as packed components
-%% within a larger natural type.
-%%
-%% The commands containing `L' indicate that the arguments are full 64-bit quantities
-%% and should be passed directly to shader inputs declared as 64-bit double precision types.
-%%
-%%
-%% OpenGL Shading Language attribute variables are allowed to be of type mat2, mat3, or mat4.
-%% Attributes of these types may be loaded using the ``gl:vertexAttrib'' entry points.
-%% Matrices must be loaded into successive generic attribute slots in column major order,
-%% with one column of the matrix in each generic attribute slot.
-%%
-%% A user-defined attribute variable declared in a vertex shader can be bound to a generic
-%% attribute index by calling {@link gl:bindAttribLocation/3} . This allows an application
-%% to use more descriptive variable names in a vertex shader. A subsequent change to the
-%% specified generic vertex attribute will be immediately reflected as a change to the corresponding
-%% attribute variable in the vertex shader.
-%%
-%% The binding between a generic vertex attribute index and a user-defined attribute variable
-%% in a vertex shader is part of the state of a program object, but the current value of
-%% the generic vertex attribute is not. The value of each generic vertex attribute is part
-%% of current state, just like standard vertex attributes, and it is maintained even if a
-%% different program object is used.
-%%
-%% An application may freely modify generic vertex attributes that are not bound to a named
-%% vertex shader attribute variable. These values are simply maintained as part of current
-%% state and will not be accessed by the vertex shader. If a generic vertex attribute bound
-%% to an attribute variable in a vertex shader is not updated while the vertex shader is
-%% executing, the vertex shader will repeatedly use the current value for the generic vertex
-%% attribute.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexAttrib.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glVertexAttrib.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexAttrib1d(Index, X) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),X :: float().
vertexAttrib1d(Index,X) ->
cast(5496, <<Index:?GLuint,0:32,X:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -12096,37 +5125,7 @@ vertexAttrib4usv(Index,{V1,V2,V3,V4}) ->
%% and `Stride' specifies the byte stride from one attribute to the next, allowing vertices
%% and attributes to be packed into a single array or stored in separate arrays.
%%
-%% For ``gl:vertexAttribPointer'', if `Normalized' is set to `?GL_TRUE', it
-%% indicates that values stored in an integer format are to be mapped to the range [-1,1]
-%% (for signed values) or [0,1] (for unsigned values) when they are accessed and converted
-%% to floating point. Otherwise, values will be converted to floats directly without normalization.
-%%
-%%
-%% For ``gl:vertexAttribIPointer'', only the integer types `?GL_BYTE', `?GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE'
-%% , `?GL_SHORT', `?GL_UNSIGNED_SHORT', `?GL_INT', `?GL_UNSIGNED_INT'
-%% are accepted. Values are always left as integer values.
-%%
-%% ``gl:vertexAttribLPointer'' specifies state for a generic vertex attribute array associated
-%% with a shader attribute variable declared with 64-bit double precision components. `Type'
-%% must be `?GL_DOUBLE'. `Index' , `Size' , and `Stride' behave as described
-%% for ``gl:vertexAttribPointer'' and ``gl:vertexAttribIPointer''.
-%%
-%% If `Pointer' is not NULL, a non-zero named buffer object must be bound to the `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER'
-%% target (see {@link gl:bindBuffer/2} ), otherwise an error is generated. `Pointer'
-%% is treated as a byte offset into the buffer object's data store. The buffer object binding
-%% (`?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING') is saved as generic vertex attribute array state (`?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_BUFFER_BINDING'
-%% ) for index `Index' .
-%%
-%% When a generic vertex attribute array is specified, `Size' , `Type' , `Normalized'
-%% , `Stride' , and `Pointer' are saved as vertex array state, in addition to the
-%% current vertex array buffer object binding.
-%%
-%% To enable and disable a generic vertex attribute array, call {@link gl:disableVertexAttribArray/1}
-%% and {@link gl:disableVertexAttribArray/1} with `Index' . If enabled, the generic vertex
-%% attribute array is used when {@link gl:drawArrays/3} , {@link gl:multiDrawArrays/3} , {@link gl:drawElements/4}
-%% , see `glMultiDrawElements', or {@link gl:drawRangeElements/6} is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexAttribPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glVertexAttribPointer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexAttribPointer(Index, Size, Type, Normalized, Stride, Pointer) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Normalized :: 0|1,Stride :: integer(),Pointer :: offset()|mem().
vertexAttribPointer(Index,Size,Type,Normalized,Stride,Pointer) when is_integer(Pointer) ->
cast(5519, <<Index:?GLuint,Size:?GLint,Type:?GLenum,Normalized:?GLboolean,0:24,Stride:?GLsizei,Pointer:?GLuint>>);
@@ -12184,7 +5183,7 @@ uniformMatrix4x3fv(Location,Transpose,Value) ->
%% @doc glColorMaski
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glColorMaski.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec colorMaski(Index, R, G, B, A) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),R :: 0|1,G :: 0|1,B :: 0|1,A :: 0|1.
colorMaski(Index,R,G,B,A) ->
cast(5527, <<Index:?GLuint,R:?GLboolean,G:?GLboolean,B:?GLboolean,A:?GLboolean>>).
@@ -12209,14 +5208,14 @@ enablei(Target,Index) ->
%% @doc glEnablei
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glEnablei.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec disablei(Target, Index) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer().
disablei(Target,Index) ->
cast(5531, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint>>).
%% @doc glIsEnabledi
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsEnabledi.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec isEnabledi(Target, Index) -> 0|1 when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer().
isEnabledi(Target,Index) ->
call(5532, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint>>).
@@ -12228,23 +5227,7 @@ isEnabledi(Target,Index) ->
%% a call to ``gl:beginTransformFeedback'' until a subsequent call to {@link gl:beginTransformFeedback/1}
%% . Transform feedback commands must be paired.
%%
-%% If no geometry shader is present, while transform feedback is active the `Mode'
-%% parameter to {@link gl:drawArrays/3} must match those specified in the following table: <table>
-%% <tbody><tr><td>` Transform Feedback ' `PrimitiveMode' </td><td>` Allowed Render Primitive '
-%% `Modes' </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_POINTS'</td><td>`?GL_POINTS'</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_LINES'</td><td>`?GL_LINES', `?GL_LINE_LOOP', `?GL_LINE_STRIP'
-%% , `?GL_LINES_ADJACENCY', `?GL_LINE_STRIP_ADJACENCY'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_TRIANGLES'
-%% </td><td>`?GL_TRIANGLES', `?GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP', `?GL_TRIANGLE_FAN', `?GL_TRIANGLES_ADJACENCY'
-%% , `?GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP_ADJACENCY'</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% If a geometry shader is present, the output primitive type from the geometry shader must
-%% match those provided in the following table: <table><tbody><tr><td>` Transform Feedback '
-%% `PrimitiveMode' </td><td>` Allowed Geometry Shader Output Primitive Type '</td></tr>
-%% </tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_POINTS'</td><td>`?points'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LINES'
-%% </td><td>`?line_strip'</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_TRIANGLES'</td><td>`?triangle_strip'
-%% </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBeginTransformFeedback.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBeginTransformFeedback.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec beginTransformFeedback(PrimitiveMode) -> 'ok' when PrimitiveMode :: enum().
beginTransformFeedback(PrimitiveMode) ->
cast(5533, <<PrimitiveMode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -12265,11 +5248,7 @@ endTransformFeedback() ->
%% a range of `Buffer' to the indexed buffer binding target, ``gl:bindBufferBase''
%% also binds the range to the generic buffer binding point specified by `Target' .
%%
-%% `Offset' specifies the offset in basic machine units into the buffer object `Buffer'
-%% and `Size' specifies the amount of data that can be read from the buffer object
-%% while used as an indexed target.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindBufferRange.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindBufferRange.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindBufferRange(Target, Index, Buffer, Offset, Size) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),Buffer :: integer(),Offset :: integer(),Size :: integer().
bindBufferRange(Target,Index,Buffer,Offset,Size) ->
cast(5535, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,Buffer:?GLuint,0:32,Offset:?GLintptr,Size:?GLsizeiptr>>).
@@ -12284,7 +5263,7 @@ bindBufferRange(Target,Index,Buffer,Offset,Size) ->
%% binding target, ``gl:bindBufferBase'' also binds `Buffer' to the generic buffer
%% binding point specified by `Target' .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindBufferBase.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindBufferBase.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindBufferBase(Target, Index, Buffer) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),Buffer :: integer().
bindBufferBase(Target,Index,Buffer) ->
cast(5536, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,Buffer:?GLuint>>).
@@ -12297,32 +5276,7 @@ bindBufferBase(Target,Index,Buffer) ->
%% from the emitted vertices. Otherwise, the values of the selected vertex shader outputs
%% are recorded.
%%
-%% The state set by ``gl:tranformFeedbackVaryings'' is stored and takes effect next time {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% is called on `Program' . When {@link gl:linkProgram/1} is called, `Program' is
-%% linked so that the values of the specified varying variables for the vertices of each
-%% primitive generated by the GL are written to a single buffer object if `BufferMode'
-%% is `?GL_INTERLEAVED_ATTRIBS' or multiple buffer objects if `BufferMode' is `?GL_SEPARATE_ATTRIBS'
-%% .
-%%
-%% In addition to the errors generated by ``gl:transformFeedbackVaryings'', the program `Program'
-%% will fail to link if:
-%%
-%% The count specified by ``gl:transformFeedbackVaryings'' is non-zero, but the program
-%% object has no vertex or geometry shader.
-%%
-%% Any variable name specified in the `Varyings' array is not declared as an output
-%% in the vertex shader (or the geometry shader, if active).
-%%
-%% Any two entries in the `Varyings' array specify the same varying variable.
-%%
-%% The total number of components to capture in any varying variable in `Varyings'
-%% is greater than the constant `?GL_MAX_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_SEPARATE_COMPONENTS' and
-%% the buffer mode is `?GL_SEPARATE_ATTRIBS'.
-%%
-%% The total number of components to capture is greater than the constant `?GL_MAX_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_INTERLEAVED_COMPONENTS'
-%% and the buffer mode is `?GL_INTERLEAVED_ATTRIBS'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTransformFeedbackVaryings.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTransformFeedbackVaryings.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec transformFeedbackVaryings(Program, Varyings, BufferMode) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),Varyings :: iolist(),BufferMode :: enum().
transformFeedbackVaryings(Program,Varyings,BufferMode) ->
VaryingsTemp = list_to_binary([[Str|[0]] || Str <- Varyings ]),
@@ -12338,26 +5292,7 @@ transformFeedbackVaryings(Program,Varyings,BufferMode) ->
%% the `Varyings' array passed to {@link gl:transformFeedbackVaryings/3} , and an `Index'
%% of `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_VARYINGS-1' selects the last such variable.
%%
-%% The name of the selected varying is returned as a null-terminated string in `Name' .
-%% The actual number of characters written into `Name' , excluding the null terminator,
-%% is returned in `Length' . If `Length' is NULL, no length is returned. The maximum
-%% number of characters that may be written into `Name' , including the null terminator,
-%% is specified by `BufSize' .
-%%
-%% The length of the longest varying name in program is given by `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_VARYING_MAX_LENGTH'
-%% , which can be queried with {@link gl:getProgramiv/2} .
-%%
-%% For the selected varying variable, its type is returned into `Type' . The size of
-%% the varying is returned into `Size' . The value in `Size' is in units of the
-%% type returned in `Type' . The type returned can be any of the scalar, vector, or matrix
-%% attribute types returned by {@link gl:getActiveAttrib/3} . If an error occurred, the return
-%% parameters `Length' , `Size' , `Type' and `Name' will be unmodified.
-%% This command will return as much information about the varying variables as possible.
-%% If no information is available, `Length' will be set to zero and `Name' will
-%% be an empty string. This situation could arise if ``gl:getTransformFeedbackVarying''
-%% is called after a failed link.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetTransformFeedbackVarying.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetTransformFeedbackVarying.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getTransformFeedbackVarying(Program, Index, BufSize) -> {Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Name :: string()} when Program :: integer(),Index :: integer(),BufSize :: integer().
getTransformFeedbackVarying(Program,Index,BufSize) ->
call(5538, <<Program:?GLuint,Index:?GLuint,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -12372,7 +5307,7 @@ getTransformFeedbackVarying(Program,Index,BufSize) ->
%% is disabled. If `Clamp' is `?GL_FIXED_ONLY', read color clamping is enabled
%% only if the selected read buffer has fixed point components and disabled otherwise.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClampColor.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glClampColor.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clampColor(Target, Clamp) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Clamp :: enum().
clampColor(Target,Clamp) ->
cast(5539, <<Target:?GLenum,Clamp:?GLenum>>).
@@ -12393,18 +5328,7 @@ clampColor(Target,Clamp) ->
%% is `?GL_QUERY_NO_WAIT', the GL may choose to unconditionally execute the subsequent
%% rendering commands without waiting for the query to complete.
%%
-%% If `Mode' is `?GL_QUERY_BY_REGION_WAIT', the GL will also wait for occlusion
-%% query results and discard rendering commands if the result of the occlusion query is zero.
-%% If the query result is non-zero, subsequent rendering commands are executed, but the GL
-%% may discard the results of the commands for any region of the framebuffer that did not
-%% contribute to the sample count in the specified occlusion query. Any such discarding is
-%% done in an implementation-dependent manner, but the rendering command results may not
-%% be discarded for any samples that contributed to the occlusion query sample count. If `Mode'
-%% is `?GL_QUERY_BY_REGION_NO_WAIT', the GL operates as in `?GL_QUERY_BY_REGION_WAIT'
-%% , but may choose to unconditionally execute the subsequent rendering commands without
-%% waiting for the query to complete.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBeginConditionalRender.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBeginConditionalRender.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec beginConditionalRender(Id, Mode) -> 'ok' when Id :: integer(),Mode :: enum().
beginConditionalRender(Id,Mode) ->
cast(5540, <<Id:?GLuint,Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -12417,7 +5341,7 @@ endConditionalRender() ->
%% @doc glVertexAttribIPointer
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexAttribIPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexAttribIPointer(Index, Size, Type, Stride, Pointer) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Stride :: integer(),Pointer :: offset()|mem().
vertexAttribIPointer(Index,Size,Type,Stride,Pointer) when is_integer(Pointer) ->
cast(5542, <<Index:?GLuint,Size:?GLint,Type:?GLenum,Stride:?GLsizei,Pointer:?GLuint>>);
@@ -12433,7 +5357,7 @@ getVertexAttribIiv(Index,Pname) ->
%% @doc glGetVertexAttribI
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetVertexAttribI.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getVertexAttribIuiv(Index, Pname) -> {integer(),integer(),integer(),integer()} when Index :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getVertexAttribIuiv(Index,Pname) ->
call(5545, <<Index:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -12556,21 +5480,7 @@ getUniformuiv(Program,Location) ->
%% . `Name' must be a null-terminated string. `ColorNumber' must be less than `?GL_MAX_DRAW_BUFFERS'
%% .
%%
-%% The bindings specified by ``gl:bindFragDataLocation'' have no effect until `Program'
-%% is next linked. Bindings may be specified at any time after `Program' has been created.
-%% Specifically, they may be specified before shader objects are attached to the program.
-%% Therefore, any name may be specified in `Name' , including a name that is never used
-%% as a varying out variable in any fragment shader object. Names beginning with `?gl_'
-%% are reserved by the GL.
-%%
-%% In addition to the errors generated by ``gl:bindFragDataLocation'', the program `Program'
-%% will fail to link if:
-%%
-%% The number of active outputs is greater than the value `?GL_MAX_DRAW_BUFFERS'.
-%%
-%% More than one varying out variable is bound to the same color number.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindFragDataLocation.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindFragDataLocation.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindFragDataLocation(Program, Color, Name) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),Color :: integer(),Name :: string().
bindFragDataLocation(Program,Color,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -12584,7 +5494,7 @@ bindFragDataLocation(Program,Color,Name) ->
%% not the name of an active user-defined varying out fragment shader variable within `Program'
%% , -1 will be returned.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetFragDataLocation.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetFragDataLocation.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getFragDataLocation(Program, Name) -> integer() when Program :: integer(),Name :: string().
getFragDataLocation(Program,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -12655,7 +5565,7 @@ texParameterIiv(Target,Pname,Params) ->
%% @doc glTexParameterI
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexParameterI.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec texParameterIuiv(Target, Pname, Params) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),Params :: tuple().
texParameterIuiv(Target,Pname,Params) ->
cast(5570, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,(size(Params)):?GLuint,
@@ -12669,7 +5579,7 @@ getTexParameterIiv(Target,Pname) ->
%% @doc glGetTexParameterI
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetTexParameterI.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getTexParameterIuiv(Target, Pname) -> {integer(),integer(),integer(),integer()} when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getTexParameterIuiv(Target,Pname) ->
call(5572, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -12685,24 +5595,7 @@ getTexParameterIuiv(Target,Pname) ->
%% and conversion for fixed-point color buffers are performed in the same fashion as {@link gl:clearColor/4}
%% .
%%
-%% If `Buffer' is `?GL_DEPTH', `DrawBuffer' must be zero, and `Value'
-%% points to a single value to clear the depth buffer to. Only ``gl:clearBufferfv'' should
-%% be used to clear depth buffers. Clamping and conversion for fixed-point depth buffers
-%% are performed in the same fashion as {@link gl:clearDepth/1} .
-%%
-%% If `Buffer' is `?GL_STENCIL', `DrawBuffer' must be zero, and `Value'
-%% points to a single value to clear the stencil buffer to. Only ``gl:clearBufferiv'' should
-%% be used to clear stencil buffers. Masing and type conversion are performed in the same
-%% fashion as {@link gl:clearStencil/1} .
-%%
-%% ``gl:clearBufferfi'' may be used to clear the depth and stencil buffers. `Buffer'
-%% must be `?GL_DEPTH_STENCIL' and `DrawBuffer' must be zero. `Depth' and `Stencil'
-%% are the depth and stencil values, respectively.
-%%
-%% The result of ``gl:clearBuffer'' is undefined if no conversion between the type of `Value'
-%% and the buffer being cleared is defined. However, this is not an error.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClearBuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glClearBuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clearBufferiv(Buffer, Drawbuffer, Value) -> 'ok' when Buffer :: enum(),Drawbuffer :: integer(),Value :: tuple().
clearBufferiv(Buffer,Drawbuffer,Value) ->
cast(5573, <<Buffer:?GLenum,Drawbuffer:?GLint,(size(Value)):?GLuint,
@@ -12724,7 +5617,7 @@ clearBufferfv(Buffer,Drawbuffer,Value) ->
%% @doc glClearBufferfi
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClearBufferfi.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec clearBufferfi(Buffer, Drawbuffer, Depth, Stencil) -> 'ok' when Buffer :: enum(),Drawbuffer :: integer(),Depth :: float(),Stencil :: integer().
clearBufferfi(Buffer,Drawbuffer,Depth,Stencil) ->
cast(5576, <<Buffer:?GLenum,Drawbuffer:?GLint,Depth:?GLfloat,Stencil:?GLint>>).
@@ -12737,14 +5630,14 @@ getStringi(Name,Index) ->
%% @doc glDrawArraysInstance
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawArraysInstance.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawArraysInstanced(Mode, First, Count, Primcount) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),First :: integer(),Count :: integer(),Primcount :: integer().
drawArraysInstanced(Mode,First,Count,Primcount) ->
cast(5578, <<Mode:?GLenum,First:?GLint,Count:?GLsizei,Primcount:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glDrawElementsInstance
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawElementsInstance.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawElementsInstanced(Mode, Count, Type, Indices, Primcount) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Count :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Indices :: offset()|mem(),Primcount :: integer().
drawElementsInstanced(Mode,Count,Type,Indices,Primcount) when is_integer(Indices) ->
cast(5579, <<Mode:?GLenum,Count:?GLsizei,Type:?GLenum,Indices:?GLuint,Primcount:?GLsizei>>);
@@ -12760,62 +5653,9 @@ drawElementsInstanced(Mode,Count,Type,Indices,Primcount) ->
%% buffer texture is detached and no new buffer object is attached. If `Buffer' is non-zero,
%% it must be the name of an existing buffer object. `Target' must be `?GL_TEXTURE_BUFFER'
%% . `Internalformat' specifies the storage format, and must be one of the following
-%% sized internal formats: <table><tbody><tr><td></td><td></td><td></td><td></td><td>` Component '
-%% </td></tr></tbody><tbody><tr><td>`Sized Internal Format'</td><td>`Base Type'</td>
-%% <td>`Components'</td><td>`Norm'</td><td>0</td><td>1</td><td>2</td><td>3</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_R8'</td><td>ubyte</td><td>1</td><td>YES</td><td>R</td><td>0</td><td>0</td>
-%% <td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R16'</td><td>ushort</td><td>1</td><td>YES</td><td>R</td><td>
-%% 0</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R16F'</td><td>half</td><td>1</td><td>NO</td>
-%% <td>R</td><td>0</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R32F'</td><td>float</td><td>
-%% 1</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>0</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R8I'</td><td>
-%% byte</td><td>1</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>0</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R16I'
-%% </td><td>short</td><td>1</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>0</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_R32I'</td><td>int</td><td>1</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>0</td><td>0</td><td>1</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td>`?GL_R8UI'</td><td>ubyte</td><td>1</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>0</td><td>
-%% 0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R16UI'</td><td>ushort</td><td>1</td><td>NO</td><td>
-%% R</td><td>0</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R32UI'</td><td>uint</td><td>1</td>
-%% <td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>0</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG8'</td><td>ubyte
-%% </td><td>2</td><td>YES</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG16'
-%% </td><td>ushort</td><td>2</td><td>YES</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr>
-%% <td>`?GL_RG16F'</td><td>half</td><td>2</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>0</td><td>
-%% 1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG32F'</td><td>float</td><td>2</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G
-%% </td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG8I'</td><td>byte</td><td>2</td><td>NO</td>
-%% <td>R</td><td>G</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG16I'</td><td>short</td><td>
-%% 2</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG32I'</td>
-%% <td>int</td><td>2</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG8UI'
-%% </td><td>ubyte</td><td>2</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_RG16UI'</td><td>ushort</td><td>2</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>0</td><td>
-%% 1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG32UI'</td><td>uint</td><td>2</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G
-%% </td><td>0</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB32F'</td><td>float</td><td>3</td><td>NO
-%% </td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB32I'</td><td>int</td>
-%% <td>3</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB32UI'
-%% </td><td>uint</td><td>3</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>1</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_RGBA8'</td><td>uint</td><td>4</td><td>YES</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>
-%% A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA16'</td><td>short</td><td>4</td><td>YES</td><td>R</td><td>
-%% G</td><td>B</td><td>A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA16F'</td><td>half</td><td>4</td><td>NO
-%% </td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA32F'</td><td>float
-%% </td><td>4</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA8I'
-%% </td><td>byte</td><td>4</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>A</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_RGBA16I'</td><td>short</td><td>4</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>
-%% A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA32I'</td><td>int</td><td>4</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G
-%% </td><td>B</td><td>A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA8UI'</td><td>ubyte</td><td>4</td><td>NO
-%% </td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA16UI'</td><td>ushort
-%% </td><td>4</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>A</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA32UI'
-%% </td><td>uint</td><td>4</td><td>NO</td><td>R</td><td>G</td><td>B</td><td>A</td></tr></tbody>
-%% </table>
-%%
-%% When a buffer object is attached to a buffer texture, the buffer object's data store
-%% is taken as the texture's texel array. The number of texels in the buffer texture's texel
-%% array is given by buffer_size components×sizeof( base_type/)
-%%
-%% where `buffer_size' is the size of the buffer object, in basic machine units and
-%% components and base type are the element count and base data type for elements, as specified
-%% in the table above. The number of texels in the texel array is then clamped to the implementation-dependent
-%% limit `?GL_MAX_TEXTURE_BUFFER_SIZE'. When a buffer texture is accessed in a shader,
-%% the results of a texel fetch are undefined if the specified texel coordinate is negative,
-%% or greater than or equal to the clamped number of texels in the texel array.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexBuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% sized internal formats:
+%%
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTexBuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texBuffer(Target, Internalformat, Buffer) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),Buffer :: integer().
texBuffer(Target,Internalformat,Buffer) ->
cast(5581, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,Buffer:?GLuint>>).
@@ -12825,19 +5665,7 @@ texBuffer(Target,Internalformat,Buffer) ->
%% ``gl:primitiveRestartIndex'' specifies a vertex array element that is treated specially
%% when primitive restarting is enabled. This is known as the primitive restart index.
%%
-%% When one of the `Draw*' commands transfers a set of generic attribute array elements
-%% to the GL, if the index within the vertex arrays corresponding to that set is equal to
-%% the primitive restart index, then the GL does not process those elements as a vertex.
-%% Instead, it is as if the drawing command ended with the immediately preceding transfer,
-%% and another drawing command is immediately started with the same parameters, but only
-%% transferring the immediately following element through the end of the originally specified
-%% elements.
-%%
-%% When either {@link gl:drawElementsBaseVertex/5} , {@link gl:drawElementsInstancedBaseVertex/6}
-%% or see `glMultiDrawElementsBaseVertex' is used, the primitive restart comparison
-%% occurs before the basevertex offset is added to the array index.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPrimitiveRestartIndex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glPrimitiveRestartIndex.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec primitiveRestartIndex(Index) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer().
primitiveRestartIndex(Index) ->
cast(5582, <<Index:?GLuint>>).
@@ -12850,7 +5678,7 @@ getInteger64i_v(Target,Index) ->
%% @doc glGetBufferParameteri64v
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetBufferParameteri64v.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getBufferParameteri64v(Target, Pname) -> [integer()] when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getBufferParameteri64v(Target,Pname) ->
call(5584, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -12863,51 +5691,7 @@ getBufferParameteri64v(Target,Pname) ->
%% `Target' must be `?GL_DRAW_FRAMEBUFFER', `?GL_READ_FRAMEBUFFER', or `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER'
%% . `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER' is equivalent to `?GL_DRAW_FRAMEBUFFER'.
%%
-%% `Attachment' specifies the logical attachment of the framebuffer and must be `?GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENT'
-%% `i', `?GL_DEPTH_ATTACHMENT', `?GL_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT' or `?GL_DEPTH_STENCIL_ATTACHMMENT'
-%% . `i' in `?GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENT'`i' may range from zero to the value of `?GL_MAX_COLOR_ATTACHMENTS'
-%% - 1. Attaching a level of a texture to `?GL_DEPTH_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT' is equivalent
-%% to attaching that level to both the `?GL_DEPTH_ATTACHMENT'`and' the `?GL_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT'
-%% attachment points simultaneously.
-%%
-%% `Textarget' specifies what type of texture is named by `Texture' , and for cube
-%% map textures, specifies the face that is to be attached. If `Texture' is not zero,
-%% it must be the name of an existing texture with type `Textarget' , unless it is a
-%% cube map texture, in which case `Textarget' must be `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_X'
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_X', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Y', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Y'
-%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Z', or `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Z'.
-%%
-%% If `Texture' is non-zero, the specified `Level' of the texture object named `Texture'
-%% is attached to the framebfufer attachment point named by `Attachment' . For ``gl:framebufferTexture1D''
-%% , ``gl:framebufferTexture2D'', and ``gl:framebufferTexture3D'', `Texture' must
-%% be zero or the name of an existing texture with a target of `Textarget' , or `Texture'
-%% must be the name of an existing cube-map texture and `Textarget' must be one of `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_X'
-%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Y', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Z', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_X'
-%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Y', or `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Z'.
-%%
-%% If `Textarget' is `?GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE', `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE',
-%% or `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY', then `Level' must be zero. If `Textarget'
-%% is `?GL_TEXTURE_3D', then level must be greater than or equal to zero and less than
-%% or equal to log2 of the value of `?GL_MAX_3D_TEXTURE_SIZE'. If `Textarget' is
-%% one of `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_X', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Y', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Z'
-%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_X', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Y', or `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Z'
-%% , then `Level' must be greater than or equal to zero and less than or equal to log2
-%% of the value of `?GL_MAX_CUBE_MAP_TEXTURE_SIZE'. For all other values of `Textarget'
-%% , `Level' must be greater than or equal to zero and no larger than log2 of the value
-%% of `?GL_MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE'.
-%%
-%% `Layer' specifies the layer of a 2-dimensional image within a 3-dimensional texture.
-%%
-%%
-%% For ``gl:framebufferTexture1D'', if `Texture' is not zero, then `Textarget'
-%% must be `?GL_TEXTURE_1D'. For ``gl:framebufferTexture2D'', if `Texture' is
-%% not zero, `Textarget' must be one of `?GL_TEXTURE_2D', `?GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE'
-%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_X', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Y', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Z'
-%% , `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_X', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Y', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Z'
-%% , or `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE'. For ``gl:framebufferTexture3D'', if `Texture'
-%% is not zero, then `Textarget' must be `?GL_TEXTURE_3D'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFramebufferTexture.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glFramebufferTexture.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec framebufferTexture(Target, Attachment, Texture, Level) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Attachment :: enum(),Texture :: integer(),Level :: integer().
framebufferTexture(Target,Attachment,Texture,Level) ->
cast(5585, <<Target:?GLenum,Attachment:?GLenum,Texture:?GLuint,Level:?GLint>>).
@@ -12921,9 +5705,7 @@ framebufferTexture(Target,Attachment,Texture,Level) ->
%% vertices being rendered. An attribute is referred to as instanced if its `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_DIVISOR'
%% value is non-zero.
%%
-%% `Index' must be less than the value of `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_ATTRIBUTES'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexAttribDivisor.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glVertexAttribDivisor.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexAttribDivisor(Index, Divisor) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),Divisor :: integer().
vertexAttribDivisor(Index,Divisor) ->
cast(5586, <<Index:?GLuint,Divisor:?GLuint>>).
@@ -12938,13 +5720,7 @@ vertexAttribDivisor(Index,Divisor) ->
%% is the value of `?GL_SAMPLES' for the current framebuffer. At least 1 sample for
%% each covered fragment is generated.
%%
-%% A `Value' of 1.0 indicates that each sample in the framebuffer should be indpendently
-%% shaded. A `Value' of 0.0 effectively allows the GL to ignore sample rate shading.
-%% Any value between 0.0 and 1.0 allows the GL to shade only a subset of the total samples
-%% within each covered fragment. Which samples are shaded and the algorithm used to select
-%% that subset of the fragment's samples is implementation dependent.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMinSampleShading.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glMinSampleShading.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec minSampleShading(Value) -> 'ok' when Value :: clamp().
minSampleShading(Value) ->
cast(5587, <<Value:?GLclampf>>).
@@ -12963,7 +5739,7 @@ blendEquationSeparatei(Buf,ModeRGB,ModeAlpha) ->
%% @doc glBlendFunci
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBlendFunci.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec blendFunci(Buf, Src, Dst) -> 'ok' when Buf :: integer(),Src :: enum(),Dst :: enum().
blendFunci(Buf,Src,Dst) ->
cast(5590, <<Buf:?GLuint,Src:?GLenum,Dst:?GLenum>>).
@@ -12976,7 +5752,7 @@ blendFuncSeparatei(Buf,SrcRGB,DstRGB,SrcAlpha,DstAlpha) ->
%% @doc glLoadTransposeMatrixARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLoadTransposeMatrixARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec loadTransposeMatrixfARB(M) -> 'ok' when M :: matrix().
loadTransposeMatrixfARB({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12,M13,M14,M15,M16}) ->
cast(5592, <<M1:?GLfloat,M2:?GLfloat,M3:?GLfloat,M4:?GLfloat,M5:?GLfloat,M6:?GLfloat,M7:?GLfloat,M8:?GLfloat,M9:?GLfloat,M10:?GLfloat,M11:?GLfloat,M12:?GLfloat,M13:?GLfloat,M14:?GLfloat,M15:?GLfloat,M16:?GLfloat>>);
@@ -12985,7 +5761,7 @@ loadTransposeMatrixfARB({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12}) ->
%% @doc glLoadTransposeMatrixARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLoadTransposeMatrixARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec loadTransposeMatrixdARB(M) -> 'ok' when M :: matrix().
loadTransposeMatrixdARB({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12,M13,M14,M15,M16}) ->
cast(5593, <<M1:?GLdouble,M2:?GLdouble,M3:?GLdouble,M4:?GLdouble,M5:?GLdouble,M6:?GLdouble,M7:?GLdouble,M8:?GLdouble,M9:?GLdouble,M10:?GLdouble,M11:?GLdouble,M12:?GLdouble,M13:?GLdouble,M14:?GLdouble,M15:?GLdouble,M16:?GLdouble>>);
@@ -12994,7 +5770,7 @@ loadTransposeMatrixdARB({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12}) ->
%% @doc glMultTransposeMatrixARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMultTransposeMatrixARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec multTransposeMatrixfARB(M) -> 'ok' when M :: matrix().
multTransposeMatrixfARB({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12,M13,M14,M15,M16}) ->
cast(5594, <<M1:?GLfloat,M2:?GLfloat,M3:?GLfloat,M4:?GLfloat,M5:?GLfloat,M6:?GLfloat,M7:?GLfloat,M8:?GLfloat,M9:?GLfloat,M10:?GLfloat,M11:?GLfloat,M12:?GLfloat,M13:?GLfloat,M14:?GLfloat,M15:?GLfloat,M16:?GLfloat>>);
@@ -13003,7 +5779,7 @@ multTransposeMatrixfARB({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12}) ->
%% @doc glMultTransposeMatrixARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMultTransposeMatrixARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec multTransposeMatrixdARB(M) -> 'ok' when M :: matrix().
multTransposeMatrixdARB({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12,M13,M14,M15,M16}) ->
cast(5595, <<M1:?GLdouble,M2:?GLdouble,M3:?GLdouble,M4:?GLdouble,M5:?GLdouble,M6:?GLdouble,M7:?GLdouble,M8:?GLdouble,M9:?GLdouble,M10:?GLdouble,M11:?GLdouble,M12:?GLdouble,M13:?GLdouble,M14:?GLdouble,M15:?GLdouble,M16:?GLdouble>>);
@@ -13012,7 +5788,7 @@ multTransposeMatrixdARB({M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12}) ->
%% @doc glWeightARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glWeightARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec weightbvARB(Weights) -> 'ok' when Weights :: [integer()].
weightbvARB(Weights) ->
WeightsLen = length(Weights),
@@ -13021,7 +5797,7 @@ weightbvARB(Weights) ->
%% @doc glWeightARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glWeightARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec weightsvARB(Weights) -> 'ok' when Weights :: [integer()].
weightsvARB(Weights) ->
WeightsLen = length(Weights),
@@ -13030,7 +5806,7 @@ weightsvARB(Weights) ->
%% @doc glWeightARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glWeightARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec weightivARB(Weights) -> 'ok' when Weights :: [integer()].
weightivARB(Weights) ->
WeightsLen = length(Weights),
@@ -13039,7 +5815,7 @@ weightivARB(Weights) ->
%% @doc glWeightARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glWeightARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec weightfvARB(Weights) -> 'ok' when Weights :: [float()].
weightfvARB(Weights) ->
WeightsLen = length(Weights),
@@ -13048,7 +5824,7 @@ weightfvARB(Weights) ->
%% @doc glWeightARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glWeightARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec weightdvARB(Weights) -> 'ok' when Weights :: [float()].
weightdvARB(Weights) ->
WeightsLen = length(Weights),
@@ -13057,7 +5833,7 @@ weightdvARB(Weights) ->
%% @doc glWeightARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glWeightARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec weightubvARB(Weights) -> 'ok' when Weights :: [integer()].
weightubvARB(Weights) ->
WeightsLen = length(Weights),
@@ -13066,7 +5842,7 @@ weightubvARB(Weights) ->
%% @doc glWeightARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glWeightARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec weightusvARB(Weights) -> 'ok' when Weights :: [integer()].
weightusvARB(Weights) ->
WeightsLen = length(Weights),
@@ -13075,7 +5851,7 @@ weightusvARB(Weights) ->
%% @doc glWeightARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glWeightARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec weightuivARB(Weights) -> 'ok' when Weights :: [integer()].
weightuivARB(Weights) ->
WeightsLen = length(Weights),
@@ -13084,21 +5860,21 @@ weightuivARB(Weights) ->
%% @doc glVertexBlenARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexBlenARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexBlendARB(Count) -> 'ok' when Count :: integer().
vertexBlendARB(Count) ->
cast(5604, <<Count:?GLint>>).
%% @doc glCurrentPaletteMatrixARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCurrentPaletteMatrixARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec currentPaletteMatrixARB(Index) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer().
currentPaletteMatrixARB(Index) ->
cast(5605, <<Index:?GLint>>).
%% @doc glMatrixIndexARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMatrixIndexARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec matrixIndexubvARB(Indices) -> 'ok' when Indices :: [integer()].
matrixIndexubvARB(Indices) ->
IndicesLen = length(Indices),
@@ -13107,7 +5883,7 @@ matrixIndexubvARB(Indices) ->
%% @doc glMatrixIndexARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMatrixIndexARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec matrixIndexusvARB(Indices) -> 'ok' when Indices :: [integer()].
matrixIndexusvARB(Indices) ->
IndicesLen = length(Indices),
@@ -13116,7 +5892,7 @@ matrixIndexusvARB(Indices) ->
%% @doc glMatrixIndexARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMatrixIndexARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec matrixIndexuivARB(Indices) -> 'ok' when Indices :: [integer()].
matrixIndexuivARB(Indices) ->
IndicesLen = length(Indices),
@@ -13125,7 +5901,7 @@ matrixIndexuivARB(Indices) ->
%% @doc glProgramStringARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramStringARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec programStringARB(Target, Format, String) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Format :: enum(),String :: string().
programStringARB(Target,Format,String) ->
StringLen = length(String),
@@ -13133,14 +5909,14 @@ programStringARB(Target,Format,String) ->
%% @doc glBindProgramARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindProgramARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindProgramARB(Target, Program) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Program :: integer().
bindProgramARB(Target,Program) ->
cast(5610, <<Target:?GLenum,Program:?GLuint>>).
%% @doc glDeleteProgramsARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteProgramsARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteProgramsARB(Programs) -> 'ok' when Programs :: [integer()].
deleteProgramsARB(Programs) ->
ProgramsLen = length(Programs),
@@ -13149,98 +5925,98 @@ deleteProgramsARB(Programs) ->
%% @doc glGenProgramsARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenProgramsARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec genProgramsARB(N) -> [integer()] when N :: integer().
genProgramsARB(N) ->
call(5612, <<N:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glProgramEnvParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramEnvParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec programEnvParameter4dARB(Target, Index, X, Y, Z, W) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),X :: float(),Y :: float(),Z :: float(),W :: float().
programEnvParameter4dARB(Target,Index,X,Y,Z,W) ->
cast(5613, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble,Z:?GLdouble,W:?GLdouble>>).
%% @doc glProgramEnvParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramEnvParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec programEnvParameter4dvARB(Target, Index, Params) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),Params :: {float(),float(),float(),float()}.
programEnvParameter4dvARB(Target,Index,{P1,P2,P3,P4}) ->
cast(5614, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,P1:?GLdouble,P2:?GLdouble,P3:?GLdouble,P4:?GLdouble>>).
%% @doc glProgramEnvParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramEnvParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec programEnvParameter4fARB(Target, Index, X, Y, Z, W) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),X :: float(),Y :: float(),Z :: float(),W :: float().
programEnvParameter4fARB(Target,Index,X,Y,Z,W) ->
cast(5615, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,X:?GLfloat,Y:?GLfloat,Z:?GLfloat,W:?GLfloat>>).
%% @doc glProgramEnvParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramEnvParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec programEnvParameter4fvARB(Target, Index, Params) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),Params :: {float(),float(),float(),float()}.
programEnvParameter4fvARB(Target,Index,{P1,P2,P3,P4}) ->
cast(5616, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,P1:?GLfloat,P2:?GLfloat,P3:?GLfloat,P4:?GLfloat>>).
%% @doc glProgramLocalParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramLocalParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec programLocalParameter4dARB(Target, Index, X, Y, Z, W) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),X :: float(),Y :: float(),Z :: float(),W :: float().
programLocalParameter4dARB(Target,Index,X,Y,Z,W) ->
cast(5617, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble,Z:?GLdouble,W:?GLdouble>>).
%% @doc glProgramLocalParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramLocalParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec programLocalParameter4dvARB(Target, Index, Params) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),Params :: {float(),float(),float(),float()}.
programLocalParameter4dvARB(Target,Index,{P1,P2,P3,P4}) ->
cast(5618, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,P1:?GLdouble,P2:?GLdouble,P3:?GLdouble,P4:?GLdouble>>).
%% @doc glProgramLocalParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramLocalParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec programLocalParameter4fARB(Target, Index, X, Y, Z, W) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),X :: float(),Y :: float(),Z :: float(),W :: float().
programLocalParameter4fARB(Target,Index,X,Y,Z,W) ->
cast(5619, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,X:?GLfloat,Y:?GLfloat,Z:?GLfloat,W:?GLfloat>>).
%% @doc glProgramLocalParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramLocalParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec programLocalParameter4fvARB(Target, Index, Params) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),Params :: {float(),float(),float(),float()}.
programLocalParameter4fvARB(Target,Index,{P1,P2,P3,P4}) ->
cast(5620, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,P1:?GLfloat,P2:?GLfloat,P3:?GLfloat,P4:?GLfloat>>).
%% @doc glGetProgramEnvParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgramEnvParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramEnvParameterdvARB(Target, Index) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer().
getProgramEnvParameterdvARB(Target,Index) ->
call(5621, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint>>).
%% @doc glGetProgramEnvParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgramEnvParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramEnvParameterfvARB(Target, Index) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer().
getProgramEnvParameterfvARB(Target,Index) ->
call(5622, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint>>).
%% @doc glGetProgramLocalParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgramLocalParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramLocalParameterdvARB(Target, Index) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer().
getProgramLocalParameterdvARB(Target,Index) ->
call(5623, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint>>).
%% @doc glGetProgramLocalParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgramLocalParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramLocalParameterfvARB(Target, Index) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer().
getProgramLocalParameterfvARB(Target,Index) ->
call(5624, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint>>).
%% @doc glGetProgramStringARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgramStringARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramStringARB(Target, Pname, String) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),String :: mem().
getProgramStringARB(Target,Pname,String) ->
send_bin(String),
@@ -13248,42 +6024,42 @@ getProgramStringARB(Target,Pname,String) ->
%% @doc glGetBufferParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetBufferParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getBufferParameterivARB(Target, Pname) -> [integer()] when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getBufferParameterivARB(Target,Pname) ->
call(5626, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
%% @doc glDeleteObjectARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteObjectARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteObjectARB(Obj) -> 'ok' when Obj :: integer().
deleteObjectARB(Obj) ->
cast(5627, <<Obj:?GLhandleARB>>).
%% @doc glGetHandleARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetHandleARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getHandleARB(Pname) -> integer() when Pname :: enum().
getHandleARB(Pname) ->
call(5628, <<Pname:?GLenum>>).
%% @doc glDetachObjectARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDetachObjectARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec detachObjectARB(ContainerObj, AttachedObj) -> 'ok' when ContainerObj :: integer(),AttachedObj :: integer().
detachObjectARB(ContainerObj,AttachedObj) ->
cast(5629, <<ContainerObj:?GLhandleARB,AttachedObj:?GLhandleARB>>).
%% @doc glCreateShaderObjectARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCreateShaderObjectARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec createShaderObjectARB(ShaderType) -> integer() when ShaderType :: enum().
createShaderObjectARB(ShaderType) ->
call(5630, <<ShaderType:?GLenum>>).
%% @doc glShaderSourceARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glShaderSourceARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec shaderSourceARB(ShaderObj, String) -> 'ok' when ShaderObj :: integer(),String :: iolist().
shaderSourceARB(ShaderObj,String) ->
StringTemp = list_to_binary([[Str|[0]] || Str <- String ]),
@@ -13292,77 +6068,77 @@ shaderSourceARB(ShaderObj,String) ->
%% @doc glCompileShaderARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCompileShaderARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec compileShaderARB(ShaderObj) -> 'ok' when ShaderObj :: integer().
compileShaderARB(ShaderObj) ->
cast(5632, <<ShaderObj:?GLhandleARB>>).
%% @doc glCreateProgramObjectARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCreateProgramObjectARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec createProgramObjectARB() -> integer().
createProgramObjectARB() ->
call(5633, <<>>).
%% @doc glAttachObjectARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glAttachObjectARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec attachObjectARB(ContainerObj, Obj) -> 'ok' when ContainerObj :: integer(),Obj :: integer().
attachObjectARB(ContainerObj,Obj) ->
cast(5634, <<ContainerObj:?GLhandleARB,Obj:?GLhandleARB>>).
%% @doc glLinkProgramARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glLinkProgramARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec linkProgramARB(ProgramObj) -> 'ok' when ProgramObj :: integer().
linkProgramARB(ProgramObj) ->
cast(5635, <<ProgramObj:?GLhandleARB>>).
%% @doc glUseProgramObjectARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glUseProgramObjectARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec useProgramObjectARB(ProgramObj) -> 'ok' when ProgramObj :: integer().
useProgramObjectARB(ProgramObj) ->
cast(5636, <<ProgramObj:?GLhandleARB>>).
%% @doc glValidateProgramARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glValidateProgramARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec validateProgramARB(ProgramObj) -> 'ok' when ProgramObj :: integer().
validateProgramARB(ProgramObj) ->
cast(5637, <<ProgramObj:?GLhandleARB>>).
%% @doc glGetObjectParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetObjectParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getObjectParameterfvARB(Obj, Pname) -> float() when Obj :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getObjectParameterfvARB(Obj,Pname) ->
call(5638, <<Obj:?GLhandleARB,Pname:?GLenum>>).
%% @doc glGetObjectParameterARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetObjectParameterARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getObjectParameterivARB(Obj, Pname) -> integer() when Obj :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getObjectParameterivARB(Obj,Pname) ->
call(5639, <<Obj:?GLhandleARB,Pname:?GLenum>>).
%% @doc glGetInfoLogARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetInfoLogARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getInfoLogARB(Obj, MaxLength) -> string() when Obj :: integer(),MaxLength :: integer().
getInfoLogARB(Obj,MaxLength) ->
call(5640, <<Obj:?GLhandleARB,MaxLength:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glGetAttachedObjectsARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetAttachedObjectsARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getAttachedObjectsARB(ContainerObj, MaxCount) -> [integer()] when ContainerObj :: integer(),MaxCount :: integer().
getAttachedObjectsARB(ContainerObj,MaxCount) ->
call(5641, <<ContainerObj:?GLhandleARB,MaxCount:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glGetUniformLocationARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetUniformLocationARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getUniformLocationARB(ProgramObj, Name) -> integer() when ProgramObj :: integer(),Name :: string().
getUniformLocationARB(ProgramObj,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -13370,35 +6146,35 @@ getUniformLocationARB(ProgramObj,Name) ->
%% @doc glGetActiveUniformARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetActiveUniformARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getActiveUniformARB(ProgramObj, Index, MaxLength) -> {Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Name :: string()} when ProgramObj :: integer(),Index :: integer(),MaxLength :: integer().
getActiveUniformARB(ProgramObj,Index,MaxLength) ->
call(5643, <<ProgramObj:?GLhandleARB,Index:?GLuint,MaxLength:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glGetUniformARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetUniformARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getUniformfvARB(ProgramObj, Location) -> matrix() when ProgramObj :: integer(),Location :: integer().
getUniformfvARB(ProgramObj,Location) ->
call(5644, <<ProgramObj:?GLhandleARB,Location:?GLint>>).
%% @doc glGetUniformARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetUniformARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getUniformivARB(ProgramObj, Location) -> {integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer()} when ProgramObj :: integer(),Location :: integer().
getUniformivARB(ProgramObj,Location) ->
call(5645, <<ProgramObj:?GLhandleARB,Location:?GLint>>).
%% @doc glGetShaderSourceARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetShaderSourceARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getShaderSourceARB(Obj, MaxLength) -> string() when Obj :: integer(),MaxLength :: integer().
getShaderSourceARB(Obj,MaxLength) ->
call(5646, <<Obj:?GLhandleARB,MaxLength:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glBindAttribLocationARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindAttribLocationARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindAttribLocationARB(ProgramObj, Index, Name) -> 'ok' when ProgramObj :: integer(),Index :: integer(),Name :: string().
bindAttribLocationARB(ProgramObj,Index,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -13406,14 +6182,14 @@ bindAttribLocationARB(ProgramObj,Index,Name) ->
%% @doc glGetActiveAttribARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetActiveAttribARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getActiveAttribARB(ProgramObj, Index, MaxLength) -> {Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Name :: string()} when ProgramObj :: integer(),Index :: integer(),MaxLength :: integer().
getActiveAttribARB(ProgramObj,Index,MaxLength) ->
call(5648, <<ProgramObj:?GLhandleARB,Index:?GLuint,MaxLength:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glGetAttribLocationARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetAttribLocationARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getAttribLocationARB(ProgramObj, Name) -> integer() when ProgramObj :: integer(),Name :: string().
getAttribLocationARB(ProgramObj,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -13429,7 +6205,7 @@ getAttribLocationARB(ProgramObj,Name) ->
%% , then the name is not a renderbuffer object and ``gl:isRenderbuffer'' returns `?GL_FALSE'
%% .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsRenderbuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsRenderbuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isRenderbuffer(Renderbuffer) -> 0|1 when Renderbuffer :: integer().
isRenderbuffer(Renderbuffer) ->
call(5650, <<Renderbuffer:?GLuint>>).
@@ -13442,7 +6218,7 @@ isRenderbuffer(Renderbuffer) ->
%% call to {@link gl:genRenderbuffers/1} , or zero to break the existing binding of a renderbuffer
%% object to `Target' .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindRenderbuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindRenderbuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindRenderbuffer(Target, Renderbuffer) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Renderbuffer :: integer().
bindRenderbuffer(Target,Renderbuffer) ->
cast(5651, <<Target:?GLenum,Renderbuffer:?GLuint>>).
@@ -13457,14 +6233,7 @@ bindRenderbuffer(Target,Renderbuffer) ->
%% it is as though {@link gl:bindRenderbuffer/2} had been executed with a `Target' of `?GL_RENDERBUFFER'
%% and a `Name' of zero.
%%
-%% If a renderbuffer object is attached to one or more attachment points in the currently
-%% bound framebuffer, then it as if {@link gl:framebufferRenderbuffer/4} had been called,
-%% with a `Renderbuffer' of zero for each attachment point to which this image was attached
-%% in the currently bound framebuffer. In other words, this renderbuffer object is first
-%% detached from all attachment ponits in the currently bound framebuffer. Note that the
-%% renderbuffer image is specifically `not' detached from any non-bound framebuffers.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteRenderbuffers.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteRenderbuffers.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteRenderbuffers(Renderbuffers) -> 'ok' when Renderbuffers :: [integer()].
deleteRenderbuffers(Renderbuffers) ->
RenderbuffersLen = length(Renderbuffers),
@@ -13478,13 +6247,7 @@ deleteRenderbuffers(Renderbuffers) ->
%% is guaranteed that none of the returned names was in use immediately before the call to ``gl:genRenderbuffers''
%% .
%%
-%% Renderbuffer object names returned by a call to ``gl:genRenderbuffers'' are not returned
-%% by subsequent calls, unless they are first deleted with {@link gl:deleteRenderbuffers/1} .
-%%
-%% The names returned in `Renderbuffers' are marked as used, for the purposes of ``gl:genRenderbuffers''
-%% only, but they acquire state and type only when they are first bound.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenRenderbuffers.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGenRenderbuffers.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec genRenderbuffers(N) -> [integer()] when N :: integer().
genRenderbuffers(N) ->
call(5653, <<N:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -13494,18 +6257,7 @@ genRenderbuffers(N) ->
%% ``gl:renderbufferStorage'' is equivalent to calling {@link gl:renderbufferStorageMultisample/5}
%% with the `Samples' set to zero.
%%
-%% The target of the operation, specified by `Target' must be `?GL_RENDERBUFFER'.
-%% `Internalformat' specifies the internal format to be used for the renderbuffer object's
-%% storage and must be a color-renderable, depth-renderable, or stencil-renderable format. `Width'
-%% and `Height' are the dimensions, in pixels, of the renderbuffer. Both `Width'
-%% and `Height' must be less than or equal to the value of `?GL_MAX_RENDERBUFFER_SIZE'
-%% .
-%%
-%% Upon success, ``gl:renderbufferStorage'' deletes any existing data store for the renderbuffer
-%% image and the contents of the data store after calling ``gl:renderbufferStorage'' are
-%% undefined.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glRenderbufferStorage.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glRenderbufferStorage.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec renderbufferStorage(Target, Internalformat, Width, Height) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer().
renderbufferStorage(Target,Internalformat,Width,Height) ->
cast(5654, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -13520,20 +6272,7 @@ renderbufferStorage(Target,Internalformat,Width,Height) ->
%% , `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_DEPTH_SIZE', `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_DEPTH_SIZE', `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_STENCIL_SIZE'
%% , or `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_SAMPLES'.
%%
-%% Upon a successful return from ``gl:getRenderbufferParameteriv'', if `Pname' is `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_WIDTH'
-%% , `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_HEIGHT', `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_INTERNAL_FORMAT', or `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_SAMPLES'
-%% , then `Params' will contain the width in pixels, the height in pixels, the internal
-%% format, or the number of samples, respectively, of the image of the renderbuffer currently
-%% bound to `Target' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_RED_SIZE', `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_GREEN_SIZE',
-%% `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_BLUE_SIZE', `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_ALPHA_SIZE', `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_DEPTH_SIZE'
-%% , or `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_STENCIL_SIZE', then `Params' will contain the actual
-%% resolutions (not the resolutions specified when the image array was defined) for the red,
-%% green, blue, alpha depth, or stencil components, respectively, of the image of the renderbuffer
-%% currently bound to `Target' .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetRenderbufferParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetRenderbufferParameter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getRenderbufferParameteriv(Target, Pname) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getRenderbufferParameteriv(Target,Pname) ->
call(5655, <<Target:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -13547,7 +6286,7 @@ getRenderbufferParameteriv(Target,Pname) ->
%% , by that has not yet been bound through a call to {@link gl:bindFramebuffer/2} , then the
%% name is not a framebuffer object and ``gl:isFramebuffer'' returns `?GL_FALSE'.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsFramebuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsFramebuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isFramebuffer(Framebuffer) -> 0|1 when Framebuffer :: integer().
isFramebuffer(Framebuffer) ->
call(5656, <<Framebuffer:?GLuint>>).
@@ -13565,7 +6304,7 @@ isFramebuffer(Framebuffer) ->
%% a call to {@link gl:genFramebuffers/1} , or zero to break the existing binding of a framebuffer
%% object to `Target' .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindFramebuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindFramebuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindFramebuffer(Target, Framebuffer) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Framebuffer :: integer().
bindFramebuffer(Target,Framebuffer) ->
cast(5657, <<Target:?GLenum,Framebuffer:?GLuint>>).
@@ -13580,7 +6319,7 @@ bindFramebuffer(Target,Framebuffer) ->
%% or `?GL_READ_FRAMEBUFFER' is deleted, it is as though {@link gl:bindFramebuffer/2}
%% had been executed with the corresponding `Target' and `Framebuffer' zero.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteFramebuffers.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteFramebuffers.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteFramebuffers(Framebuffers) -> 'ok' when Framebuffers :: [integer()].
deleteFramebuffers(Framebuffers) ->
FramebuffersLen = length(Framebuffers),
@@ -13594,13 +6333,7 @@ deleteFramebuffers(Framebuffers) ->
%% that none of the returned names was in use immediately before the call to ``gl:genFramebuffers''
%% .
%%
-%% Framebuffer object names returned by a call to ``gl:genFramebuffers'' are not returned
-%% by subsequent calls, unless they are first deleted with {@link gl:deleteFramebuffers/1} .
-%%
-%% The names returned in `Ids' are marked as used, for the purposes of ``gl:genFramebuffers''
-%% only, but they acquire state and type only when they are first bound.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenFramebuffers.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGenFramebuffers.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec genFramebuffers(N) -> [integer()] when N :: integer().
genFramebuffers(N) ->
call(5659, <<N:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -13612,46 +6345,7 @@ genFramebuffers(N) ->
%% or `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER'. `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER' is equivalent to `?GL_DRAW_FRAMEBUFFER'
%% .
%%
-%% The return value is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_COMPLETE' if the framebuffer bound to `Target'
-%% is complete. Otherwise, the return value is determined as follows:
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_UNDEFINED' is returned if `Target' is the default framebuffer,
-%% but the default framebuffer does not exist.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_INCOMPLETE_ATTACHMENT' is returned if any of the framebuffer attachment
-%% points are framebuffer incomplete.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_INCOMPLETE_MISSING_ATTACHMENT' is returned if the framebuffer does
-%% not have at least one image attached to it.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_INCOMPLETE_DRAW_BUFFER' is returned if the value of `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_TYPE'
-%% is `?GL_NONE' for any color attachment point(s) named by `?GL_DRAWBUFFERi'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_INCOMPLETE_READ_BUFFER' is returned if `?GL_READ_BUFFER' is
-%% not `?GL_NONE' and the value of `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_TYPE' is `?GL_NONE'
-%% for the color attachment point named by `?GL_READ_BUFFER'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_UNSUPPORTED' is returned if the combination of internal formats
-%% of the attached images violates an implementation-dependent set of restrictions.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_INCOMPLETE_MULTISAMPLE' is returned if the value of `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_SAMPLES'
-%% is not the same for all attached renderbuffers; if the value of `?GL_TEXTURE_SAMPLES'
-%% is the not same for all attached textures; or, if the attached images are a mix of renderbuffers
-%% and textures, the value of `?GL_RENDERBUFFER_SAMPLES' does not match the value of `?GL_TEXTURE_SAMPLES'
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_INCOMPLETE_MULTISAMPLE' is also returned if the value of `?GL_TEXTURE_FIXED_SAMPLE_LOCATIONS'
-%% is not the same for all attached textures; or, if the attached images are a mix of renderbuffers
-%% and textures, the value of `?GL_TEXTURE_FIXED_SAMPLE_LOCATIONS' is not `?GL_TRUE'
-%% for all attached textures.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_INCOMPLETE_LAYER_TARGETS' is returned if any framebuffer attachment
-%% is layered, and any populated attachment is not layered, or if all populated color attachments
-%% are not from textures of the same target.
-%%
-%% Additionally, if an error occurs, zero is returned.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCheckFramebufferStatus.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCheckFramebufferStatus.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec checkFramebufferStatus(Target) -> enum() when Target :: enum().
checkFramebufferStatus(Target) ->
call(5660, <<Target:?GLenum>>).
@@ -13684,24 +6378,7 @@ framebufferTexture3D(Target,Attachment,Textarget,Texture,Level,Zoffset) ->
%% buffer identified by `Attachment' of the framebuffer currently bound to `Target' .
%%
%%
-%% The value of `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_TYPE' for the specified attachment
-%% point is set to `?GL_RENDERBUFFER' and the value of `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_NAME'
-%% is set to `Renderbuffer' . All other state values of the attachment point specified
-%% by `Attachment' are set to their default values. No change is made to the state of
-%% the renderbuuffer object and any previous attachment to the `Attachment' logical
-%% buffer of the framebuffer `Target' is broken.
-%%
-%% Calling ``gl:framebufferRenderbuffer'' with the renderbuffer name zero will detach
-%% the image, if any, identified by `Attachment' , in the framebuffer currently bound
-%% to `Target' . All state values of the attachment point specified by attachment in
-%% the object bound to target are set to their default values.
-%%
-%% Setting `Attachment' to the value `?GL_DEPTH_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT' is a special
-%% case causing both the depth and stencil attachments of the framebuffer object to be set
-%% to `Renderbuffer' , which should have the base internal format `?GL_DEPTH_STENCIL'
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFramebufferRenderbuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glFramebufferRenderbuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec framebufferRenderbuffer(Target, Attachment, Renderbuffertarget, Renderbuffer) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Attachment :: enum(),Renderbuffertarget :: enum(),Renderbuffer :: integer().
framebufferRenderbuffer(Target,Attachment,Renderbuffertarget,Renderbuffer) ->
cast(5664, <<Target:?GLenum,Attachment:?GLenum,Renderbuffertarget:?GLenum,Renderbuffer:?GLuint>>).
@@ -13713,91 +6390,7 @@ framebufferRenderbuffer(Target,Attachment,Renderbuffertarget,Renderbuffer) ->
%% be `?GL_DRAW_FRAMEBUFFER', `?GL_READ_FRAMEBUFFER' or `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER'. `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER'
%% is equivalent to `?GL_DRAW_FRAMEBUFFER'.
%%
-%% If the default framebuffer is bound to `Target' then `Attachment' must be one
-%% of `?GL_FRONT_LEFT', `?GL_FRONT_RIGHT', `?GL_BACK_LEFT', or `?GL_BACK_RIGHT'
-%% , identifying a color buffer, `?GL_DEPTH', identifying the depth buffer, or `?GL_STENCIL'
-%% , identifying the stencil buffer.
-%%
-%% If a framebuffer object is bound, then `Attachment' must be one of `?GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENT'
-%% `i', `?GL_DEPTH_ATTACHMENT', `?GL_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT', or `?GL_DEPTH_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT'
-%% . `i' in `?GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENT'`i' must be in the range zero to the value
-%% of `?GL_MAX_COLOR_ATTACHMENTS' - 1.
-%%
-%% If `Attachment' is `?GL_DEPTH_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT' and different objects are
-%% bound to the depth and stencil attachment points of `Target' the query will fail.
-%% If the same object is bound to both attachment points, information about that object will
-%% be returned.
-%%
-%% Upon successful return from ``gl:getFramebufferAttachmentParameteriv'', if `Pname'
-%% is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_TYPE', then `Params' will contain one of `?GL_NONE'
-%% , `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_DEFAULT', `?GL_TEXTURE', or `?GL_RENDERBUFFER', identifying
-%% the type of object which contains the attached image. Other values accepted for `Pname'
-%% depend on the type of object, as described below.
-%%
-%% If the value of `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_TYPE' is `?GL_NONE', no
-%% framebuffer is bound to `Target' . In this case querying `Pname' `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_NAME'
-%% will return zero, and all other queries will generate an error.
-%%
-%% If the value of `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_TYPE' is not `?GL_NONE',
-%% these queries apply to all other framebuffer types:
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_RED_SIZE', `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_GREEN_SIZE'
-%% , `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_BLUE_SIZE', `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_ALPHA_SIZE'
-%% , `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_DEPTH_SIZE', or `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_STENCIL_SIZE'
-%% , then `Params' will contain the number of bits in the corresponding red, green,
-%% blue, alpha, depth, or stencil component of the specified attachment. Zero is returned
-%% if the requested component is not present in `Attachment' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_COMPONENT_TYPE', `Params' will
-%% contain the format of components of the specified attachment, one of `?GL_FLOAT', `GL_INT'
-%% , `GL_UNSIGNED_INT' , `GL_SIGNED_NORMALIZED' , or `GL_UNSIGNED_NORMALIZED'
-%% for floating-point, signed integer, unsigned integer, signed normalized fixed-point, or
-%% unsigned normalized fixed-point components respectively. Only color buffers may have integer
-%% components.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_COLOR_ENCODING', `Param' will
-%% contain the encoding of components of the specified attachment, one of `?GL_LINEAR'
-%% or `?GL_SRGB' for linear or sRGB-encoded components, respectively. Only color buffer
-%% components may be sRGB-encoded; such components are treated as described in sections 4.1.7
-%% and 4.1.8. For the default framebuffer, color encoding is determined by the implementation.
-%% For framebuffer objects, components are sRGB-encoded if the internal format of a color
-%% attachment is one of the color-renderable SRGB formats.
-%%
-%% If the value of `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_TYPE' is `?GL_RENDERBUFFER',
-%% then:
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_NAME', `Params' will
-%% contain the name of the renderbuffer object which contains the attached image.
-%%
-%% If the value of `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_TYPE' is `?GL_TEXTURE',
-%% then:
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_NAME', then `Params'
-%% will contain the name of the texture object which contains the attached image.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_TEXTURE_LEVEL', then `Params'
-%% will contain the mipmap level of the texture object which contains the attached image.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_FACE' and the texture
-%% object named `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_NAME' is a cube map texture, then `Params'
-%% will contain the cube map face of the cubemap texture object which contains the attached
-%% image. Otherwise `Params' will contain the value zero.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_TEXTURE_LAYER' and the texture object
-%% named `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_NAME' is a layer of a three-dimensional
-%% texture or a one-or two-dimensional array texture, then `Params' will contain the
-%% number of the texture layer which contains the attached image. Otherwise `Params'
-%% will contain the value zero.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_LAYERED', then `Params' will
-%% contain `?GL_TRUE' if an entire level of a three-dimesional texture, cube map texture,
-%% or one-or two-dimensional array texture is attached. Otherwise, `Params' will contain
-%% `?GL_FALSE'.
-%%
-%% Any combinations of framebuffer type and `Pname' not described above will generate
-%% an error.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetFramebufferAttachmentParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetFramebufferAttachmentParameter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getFramebufferAttachmentParameteriv(Target, Attachment, Pname) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),Attachment :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getFramebufferAttachmentParameteriv(Target,Attachment,Pname) ->
call(5665, <<Target:?GLenum,Attachment:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -13808,16 +6401,7 @@ getFramebufferAttachmentParameteriv(Target,Attachment,Pname) ->
%% the active texture unit. For cube map textures, a `?GL_INVALID_OPERATION' error is
%% generated if the texture attached to `Target' is not cube complete.
%%
-%% Mipmap generation replaces texel array levels level base+1 through q with arrays derived
-%% from the level base array, regardless of their previous contents. All other mimap arrays,
-%% including the level base array, are left unchanged by this computation.
-%%
-%% The internal formats of the derived mipmap arrays all match those of the level base
-%% array. The contents of the derived arrays are computed by repeated, filtered reduction
-%% of the level base array. For one- and two-dimensional texture arrays, each layer is filtered
-%% independently.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenerateMipmap.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGenerateMipmap.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec generateMipmap(Target) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum().
generateMipmap(Target) ->
cast(5666, <<Target:?GLenum>>).
@@ -13833,33 +6417,7 @@ generateMipmap(Target) ->
%% by the locations ( `DstX0' ; `DstY0' ) and ( `DstX1' ; `DstY1' ). The lower
%% bounds of the rectangle are inclusive, while the upper bounds are exclusive.
%%
-%% The actual region taken from the read framebuffer is limited to the intersection of the
-%% source buffers being transferred, which may include the color buffer selected by the read
-%% buffer, the depth buffer, and/or the stencil buffer depending on mask. The actual region
-%% written to the draw framebuffer is limited to the intersection of the destination buffers
-%% being written, which may include multiple draw buffers, the depth buffer, and/or the stencil
-%% buffer depending on mask. Whether or not the source or destination regions are altered
-%% due to these limits, the scaling and offset applied to pixels being transferred is performed
-%% as though no such limits were present.
-%%
-%% If the sizes of the source and destination rectangles are not equal, `Filter' specifies
-%% the interpolation method that will be applied to resize the source image , and must be `?GL_NEAREST'
-%% or `?GL_LINEAR'. `?GL_LINEAR' is only a valid interpolation method for the
-%% color buffer. If `Filter' is not `?GL_NEAREST' and `Mask' includes `?GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT'
-%% or `?GL_STENCIL_BUFFER_BIT', no data is transferred and a `?GL_INVALID_OPERATION'
-%% error is generated.
-%%
-%% If `Filter' is `?GL_LINEAR' and the source rectangle would require sampling
-%% outside the bounds of the source framebuffer, values are read as if the `?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE'
-%% texture wrapping mode were applied.
-%%
-%% When the color buffer is transferred, values are taken from the read buffer of the read
-%% framebuffer and written to each of the draw buffers of the draw framebuffer.
-%%
-%% If the source and destination rectangles overlap or are the same, and the read and draw
-%% buffers are the same, the result of the operation is undefined.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBlitFramebuffer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBlitFramebuffer.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec blitFramebuffer(SrcX0, SrcY0, SrcX1, SrcY1, DstX0, DstY0, DstX1, DstY1, Mask, Filter) -> 'ok' when SrcX0 :: integer(),SrcY0 :: integer(),SrcX1 :: integer(),SrcY1 :: integer(),DstX0 :: integer(),DstY0 :: integer(),DstX1 :: integer(),DstY1 :: integer(),Mask :: integer(),Filter :: enum().
blitFramebuffer(SrcX0,SrcY0,SrcX1,SrcY1,DstX0,DstY0,DstX1,DstY1,Mask,Filter) ->
cast(5667, <<SrcX0:?GLint,SrcY0:?GLint,SrcX1:?GLint,SrcY1:?GLint,DstX0:?GLint,DstY0:?GLint,DstX1:?GLint,DstY1:?GLint,Mask:?GLbitfield,Filter:?GLenum>>).
@@ -13869,21 +6427,7 @@ blitFramebuffer(SrcX0,SrcY0,SrcX1,SrcY1,DstX0,DstY0,DstX1,DstY1,Mask,Filter) ->
%% ``gl:renderbufferStorageMultisample'' establishes the data storage, format, dimensions
%% and number of samples of a renderbuffer object's image.
%%
-%% The target of the operation, specified by `Target' must be `?GL_RENDERBUFFER'.
-%% `Internalformat' specifies the internal format to be used for the renderbuffer object's
-%% storage and must be a color-renderable, depth-renderable, or stencil-renderable format. `Width'
-%% and `Height' are the dimensions, in pixels, of the renderbuffer. Both `Width'
-%% and `Height' must be less than or equal to the value of `?GL_MAX_RENDERBUFFER_SIZE'
-%% . `Samples' specifies the number of samples to be used for the renderbuffer object's
-%% image, and must be less than or equal to the value of `?GL_MAX_SAMPLES'. If `Internalformat'
-%% is a signed or unsigned integer format then `Samples' must be less than or equal
-%% to the value of `?GL_MAX_INTEGER_SAMPLES'.
-%%
-%% Upon success, ``gl:renderbufferStorageMultisample'' deletes any existing data store
-%% for the renderbuffer image and the contents of the data store after calling ``gl:renderbufferStorageMultisample''
-%% are undefined.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glRenderbufferStorageMultisample.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glRenderbufferStorageMultisample.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec renderbufferStorageMultisample(Target, Samples, Internalformat, Width, Height) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Samples :: integer(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer().
renderbufferStorageMultisample(Target,Samples,Internalformat,Width,Height) ->
cast(5668, <<Target:?GLenum,Samples:?GLsizei,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -13909,7 +6453,7 @@ framebufferTextureFaceARB(Target,Attachment,Texture,Level,Face) ->
%% mapped range of the buffer. ``gl:flushMappedBufferRange'' may be called multiple times
%% to indicate distinct subranges of the mapping which require flushing.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFlushMappedBufferRange.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glFlushMappedBufferRange.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec flushMappedBufferRange(Target, Offset, Length) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Offset :: integer(),Length :: integer().
flushMappedBufferRange(Target,Offset,Length) ->
cast(5671, <<Target:?GLenum,0:32,Offset:?GLintptr,Length:?GLsizeiptr>>).
@@ -13920,11 +6464,7 @@ flushMappedBufferRange(Target,Offset,Length) ->
%% is the name of a vertex array object previously returned from a call to {@link gl:genVertexArrays/1}
%% , or zero to break the existing vertex array object binding.
%%
-%% If no vertex array object with name `Array' exists, one is created when `Array'
-%% is first bound. If the bind is successful no change is made to the state of the vertex
-%% array object, and any previous vertex array object binding is broken.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindVertexArray.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindVertexArray.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindVertexArray(Array) -> 'ok' when Array :: integer().
bindVertexArray(Array) ->
cast(5672, <<Array:?GLuint>>).
@@ -13937,7 +6477,7 @@ bindVertexArray(Array) ->
%% is deleted, the binding for that object reverts to zero and the default vertex array becomes
%% current. Unused names in `Arrays' are silently ignored, as is the value zero.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteVertexArrays.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteVertexArrays.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteVertexArrays(Arrays) -> 'ok' when Arrays :: [integer()].
deleteVertexArrays(Arrays) ->
ArraysLen = length(Arrays),
@@ -13951,13 +6491,7 @@ deleteVertexArrays(Arrays) ->
%% guaranteed that none of the returned names was in use immediately before the call to ``gl:genVertexArrays''
%% .
%%
-%% Vertex array object names returned by a call to ``gl:genVertexArrays'' are not returned
-%% by subsequent calls, unless they are first deleted with {@link gl:deleteVertexArrays/1} .
-%%
-%% The names returned in `Arrays' are marked as used, for the purposes of ``gl:genVertexArrays''
-%% only, but they acquire state and type only when they are first bound.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenVertexArrays.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGenVertexArrays.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec genVertexArrays(N) -> [integer()] when N :: integer().
genVertexArrays(N) ->
call(5674, <<N:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -13971,7 +6505,7 @@ genVertexArrays(N) ->
%% been bound through a call to {@link gl:bindVertexArray/1} , then the name is not a vertex
%% array object and ``gl:isVertexArray'' returns `?GL_FALSE'.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsVertexArray.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsVertexArray.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isVertexArray(Array) -> 0|1 when Array :: integer().
isVertexArray(Array) ->
call(5675, <<Array:?GLuint>>).
@@ -13981,24 +6515,7 @@ isVertexArray(Array) ->
%% ``gl:getUniformIndices'' retrieves the indices of a number of uniforms within `Program'
%% .
%%
-%% `Program' must be the name of a program object for which the command {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% must have been called in the past, although it is not required that {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% must have succeeded. The link could have failed because the number of active uniforms
-%% exceeded the limit.
-%%
-%% `UniformCount' indicates both the number of elements in the array of names `UniformNames'
-%% and the number of indices that may be written to `UniformIndices' .
-%%
-%% `UniformNames' contains a list of `UniformCount' name strings identifying the
-%% uniform names to be queried for indices. For each name string in `UniformNames' ,
-%% the index assigned to the active uniform of that name will be written to the corresponding
-%% element of `UniformIndices' . If a string in `UniformNames' is not the name of
-%% an active uniform, the special value `?GL_INVALID_INDEX' will be written to the corresponding
-%% element of `UniformIndices' .
-%%
-%% If an error occurs, nothing is written to `UniformIndices' .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetUniformIndices.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetUniformIndices.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getUniformIndices(Program, UniformNames) -> [integer()] when Program :: integer(),UniformNames :: iolist().
getUniformIndices(Program,UniformNames) ->
UniformNamesTemp = list_to_binary([[Str|[0]] || Str <- UniformNames ]),
@@ -14007,7 +6524,7 @@ getUniformIndices(Program,UniformNames) ->
%% @doc glGetActiveUniforms
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetActiveUniforms.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getActiveUniformsiv(Program, UniformIndices, Pname) -> [integer()] when Program :: integer(),UniformIndices :: [integer()],Pname :: enum().
getActiveUniformsiv(Program,UniformIndices,Pname) ->
UniformIndicesLen = length(UniformIndices),
@@ -14026,19 +6543,7 @@ getActiveUniformsiv(Program,UniformIndices,Pname) ->
%% is given by the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_UNIFORM_MAX_LENGTH', which can be queried with {@link gl:getProgramiv/2}
%% .
%%
-%% If ``gl:getActiveUniformName'' is not successful, nothing is written to `Length'
-%% or `UniformName' .
-%%
-%% `Program' must be the name of a program for which the command {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% has been issued in the past. It is not necessary for `Program' to have been linked
-%% successfully. The link could have failed because the number of active uniforms exceeded
-%% the limit.
-%%
-%% `UniformIndex' must be an active uniform index of the program `Program' , in
-%% the range zero to `?GL_ACTIVE_UNIFORMS' - 1. The value of `?GL_ACTIVE_UNIFORMS'
-%% can be queried with {@link gl:getProgramiv/2} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetActiveUniformName.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetActiveUniformName.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getActiveUniformName(Program, UniformIndex, BufSize) -> string() when Program :: integer(),UniformIndex :: integer(),BufSize :: integer().
getActiveUniformName(Program,UniformIndex,BufSize) ->
call(5678, <<Program:?GLuint,UniformIndex:?GLuint,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -14048,21 +6553,7 @@ getActiveUniformName(Program,UniformIndex,BufSize) ->
%% ``gl:getUniformBlockIndex'' retrieves the index of a uniform block within `Program' .
%%
%%
-%% `Program' must be the name of a program object for which the command {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% must have been called in the past, although it is not required that {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% must have succeeded. The link could have failed because the number of active uniforms
-%% exceeded the limit.
-%%
-%% `UniformBlockName' must contain a nul-terminated string specifying the name of the
-%% uniform block.
-%%
-%% ``gl:getUniformBlockIndex'' returns the uniform block index for the uniform block named
-%% `UniformBlockName' of `Program' . If `UniformBlockName' does not identify
-%% an active uniform block of `Program' , ``gl:getUniformBlockIndex'' returns the special
-%% identifier, `?GL_INVALID_INDEX'. Indices of the active uniform blocks of a program
-%% are assigned in consecutive order, beginning with zero.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetUniformBlockIndex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetUniformBlockIndex.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getUniformBlockIndex(Program, UniformBlockName) -> integer() when Program :: integer(),UniformBlockName :: string().
getUniformBlockIndex(Program,UniformBlockName) ->
UniformBlockNameLen = length(UniformBlockName),
@@ -14073,49 +6564,7 @@ getUniformBlockIndex(Program,UniformBlockName) ->
%% ``gl:getActiveUniformBlockiv'' retrieves information about an active uniform block within
%% `Program' .
%%
-%% `Program' must be the name of a program object for which the command {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% must have been called in the past, although it is not required that {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% must have succeeded. The link could have failed because the number of active uniforms
-%% exceeded the limit.
-%%
-%% `UniformBlockIndex' is an active uniform block index of `Program' , and must
-%% be less than the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_UNIFORM_BLOCKS'.
-%%
-%% Upon success, the uniform block parameter(s) specified by `Pname' are returned in `Params'
-%% . If an error occurs, nothing will be written to `Params' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_BINDING', then the index of the uniform buffer
-%% binding point last selected by the uniform block specified by `UniformBlockIndex'
-%% for `Program' is returned. If no uniform block has been previously specified, zero
-%% is returned.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_DATA_SIZE', then the implementation-dependent
-%% minimum total buffer object size, in basic machine units, required to hold all active
-%% uniforms in the uniform block identified by `UniformBlockIndex' is returned. It is
-%% neither guaranteed nor expected that a given implementation will arrange uniform values
-%% as tightly packed in a buffer object. The exception to this is the `std140 uniform block layout'
-%% , which guarantees specific packing behavior and does not require the application to query
-%% for offsets and strides. In this case the minimum size may still be queried, even though
-%% it is determined in advance based only on the uniform block declaration.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_NAME_LENGTH', then the total length (including
-%% the nul terminator) of the name of the uniform block identified by `UniformBlockIndex'
-%% is returned.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_ACTIVE_UNIFORMS', then the number of active
-%% uniforms in the uniform block identified by `UniformBlockIndex' is returned.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_ACTIVE_UNIFORM_INDICES', then a list of the
-%% active uniform indices for the uniform block identified by `UniformBlockIndex' is
-%% returned. The number of elements that will be written to `Params' is the value of `?GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_ACTIVE_UNIFORMS'
-%% for `UniformBlockIndex' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_REFERENCED_BY_VERTEX_SHADER', `?GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_REFERENCED_BY_GEOMETRY_SHADER'
-%% , or `?GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_REFERENCED_BY_FRAGMENT_SHADER', then a boolean value indicating
-%% whether the uniform block identified by `UniformBlockIndex' is referenced by the
-%% vertex, geometry, or fragment programming stages of program, respectively, is returned.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetActiveUniformBlock.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetActiveUniformBlock.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getActiveUniformBlockiv(Program, UniformBlockIndex, Pname, Params) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),UniformBlockIndex :: integer(),Pname :: enum(),Params :: mem().
getActiveUniformBlockiv(Program,UniformBlockIndex,Pname,Params) ->
send_bin(Params),
@@ -14126,26 +6575,7 @@ getActiveUniformBlockiv(Program,UniformBlockIndex,Pname,Params) ->
%% ``gl:getActiveUniformBlockName'' retrieves the name of the active uniform block at `UniformBlockIndex'
%% within `Program' .
%%
-%% `Program' must be the name of a program object for which the command {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% must have been called in the past, although it is not required that {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
-%% must have succeeded. The link could have failed because the number of active uniforms
-%% exceeded the limit.
-%%
-%% `UniformBlockIndex' is an active uniform block index of `Program' , and must
-%% be less than the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_UNIFORM_BLOCKS'.
-%%
-%% Upon success, the name of the uniform block identified by `UnifomBlockIndex' is
-%% returned into `UniformBlockName' . The name is nul-terminated. The actual number of
-%% characters written into `UniformBlockName' , excluding the nul terminator, is returned
-%% in `Length' . If `Length' is NULL, no length is returned.
-%%
-%% `BufSize' contains the maximum number of characters (including the nul terminator)
-%% that will be written into `UniformBlockName' .
-%%
-%% If an error occurs, nothing will be written to `UniformBlockName' or `Length' .
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetActiveUniformBlockName.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetActiveUniformBlockName.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getActiveUniformBlockName(Program, UniformBlockIndex, BufSize) -> string() when Program :: integer(),UniformBlockIndex :: integer(),BufSize :: integer().
getActiveUniformBlockName(Program,UniformBlockIndex,BufSize) ->
call(5681, <<Program:?GLuint,UniformBlockIndex:?GLuint,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -14157,15 +6587,7 @@ getActiveUniformBlockName(Program,UniformBlockIndex,BufSize) ->
%% `Program' is the name of a program object for which the command {@link gl:linkProgram/1}
%% has been issued in the past.
%%
-%% If successful, ``gl:uniformBlockBinding'' specifies that `Program' will use the
-%% data store of the buffer object bound to the binding point `UniformBlockBinding'
-%% to extract the values of the uniforms in the uniform block identified by `UniformBlockIndex'
-%% .
-%%
-%% When a program object is linked or re-linked, the uniform buffer object binding point
-%% assigned to each of its active uniform blocks is reset to zero.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glUniformBlockBinding.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glUniformBlockBinding.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec uniformBlockBinding(Program, UniformBlockIndex, UniformBlockBinding) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),UniformBlockIndex :: integer(),UniformBlockBinding :: integer().
uniformBlockBinding(Program,UniformBlockIndex,UniformBlockBinding) ->
cast(5682, <<Program:?GLuint,UniformBlockIndex:?GLuint,UniformBlockBinding:?GLuint>>).
@@ -14177,21 +6599,7 @@ uniformBlockBinding(Program,UniformBlockIndex,UniformBlockBinding) ->
%% by `Size' is copied from the source, at offset `Readoffset' to the destination
%% at `Writeoffset' , also in basic machine units.
%%
-%% `Readtarget' and `Writetarget' must be `?GL_ARRAY_BUFFER', `?GL_COPY_READ_BUFFER'
-%% , `?GL_COPY_WRITE_BUFFER', `?GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER', `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER'
-%% , `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER', `?GL_TEXTURE_BUFFER', `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BUFFER'
-%% or `?GL_UNIFORM_BUFFER'. Any of these targets may be used, although the targets `?GL_COPY_READ_BUFFER'
-%% and `?GL_COPY_WRITE_BUFFER' are provided specifically to allow copies between buffers
-%% without disturbing other GL state.
-%%
-%% `Readoffset' , `Writeoffset' and `Size' must all be greater than or equal
-%% to zero. Furthermore, `Readoffset' + `Size' must not exceeed the size of the
-%% buffer object bound to `Readtarget' , and `Readoffset' + `Size' must not
-%% exceeed the size of the buffer bound to `Writetarget' . If the same buffer object
-%% is bound to both `Readtarget' and `Writetarget' , then the ranges specified by `Readoffset'
-%% , `Writeoffset' and `Size' must not overlap.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCopyBufferSubData.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glCopyBufferSubData.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec copyBufferSubData(ReadTarget, WriteTarget, ReadOffset, WriteOffset, Size) -> 'ok' when ReadTarget :: enum(),WriteTarget :: enum(),ReadOffset :: integer(),WriteOffset :: integer(),Size :: integer().
copyBufferSubData(ReadTarget,WriteTarget,ReadOffset,WriteOffset,Size) ->
cast(5683, <<ReadTarget:?GLenum,WriteTarget:?GLenum,ReadOffset:?GLintptr,WriteOffset:?GLintptr,Size:?GLsizeiptr>>).
@@ -14205,7 +6613,7 @@ copyBufferSubData(ReadTarget,WriteTarget,ReadOffset,WriteOffset,Size) ->
%% were upconverted to 32-bit unsigned integers (with wrapping on overflow conditions). The
%% operation is undefined if the sum would be negative.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawElementsBaseVertex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawElementsBaseVertex.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawElementsBaseVertex(Mode, Count, Type, Indices, Basevertex) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Count :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Indices :: offset()|mem(),Basevertex :: integer().
drawElementsBaseVertex(Mode,Count,Type,Indices,Basevertex) when is_integer(Indices) ->
cast(5684, <<Mode:?GLenum,Count:?GLsizei,Type:?GLenum,Indices:?GLuint,Basevertex:?GLint>>);
@@ -14227,7 +6635,7 @@ drawElementsBaseVertex(Mode,Count,Type,Indices,Basevertex) ->
%% to 32-bit unsigned integers (with wrapping on overflow conditions). The operation is undefined
%% if the sum would be negative.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawRangeElementsBaseVertex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawRangeElementsBaseVertex.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawRangeElementsBaseVertex(Mode, Start, End, Count, Type, Indices, Basevertex) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Start :: integer(),End :: integer(),Count :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Indices :: offset()|mem(),Basevertex :: integer().
drawRangeElementsBaseVertex(Mode,Start,End,Count,Type,Indices,Basevertex) when is_integer(Indices) ->
cast(5686, <<Mode:?GLenum,Start:?GLuint,End:?GLuint,Count:?GLsizei,Type:?GLenum,Indices:?GLuint,Basevertex:?GLint>>);
@@ -14244,7 +6652,7 @@ drawRangeElementsBaseVertex(Mode,Start,End,Count,Type,Indices,Basevertex) ->
%% if the calculation were upconverted to 32-bit unsigned integers (with wrapping on overflow
%% conditions). The operation is undefined if the sum would be negative.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawElementsInstancedBaseVertex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawElementsInstancedBaseVertex.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawElementsInstancedBaseVertex(Mode, Count, Type, Indices, Primcount, Basevertex) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Count :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Indices :: offset()|mem(),Primcount :: integer(),Basevertex :: integer().
drawElementsInstancedBaseVertex(Mode,Count,Type,Indices,Primcount,Basevertex) when is_integer(Indices) ->
cast(5688, <<Mode:?GLenum,Count:?GLsizei,Type:?GLenum,Indices:?GLuint,Primcount:?GLsizei,Basevertex:?GLint>>);
@@ -14259,29 +6667,7 @@ drawElementsInstancedBaseVertex(Mode,Count,Type,Indices,Primcount,Basevertex) ->
%% as the `provoking vertex' and ``gl:provokingVertex'' specifies which vertex is
%% to be used as the source of data for flat shaded varyings.
%%
-%% `ProvokeMode' must be either `?GL_FIRST_VERTEX_CONVENTION' or `?GL_LAST_VERTEX_CONVENTION'
-%% , and controls the selection of the vertex whose values are assigned to flatshaded varying
-%% outputs. The interpretation of these values for the supported primitive types is: <table><tbody>
-%% <tr><td>` Primitive Type of Polygon '`i'</td><td>` First Vertex Convention '
-%% </td><td>` Last Vertex Convention '</td></tr><tr><td> point </td><td>`i'</td><td>
-%% `i'</td></tr><tr><td> independent line </td><td> 2`i' - 1 </td><td> 2`i'</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td> line loop </td><td>`i'</td><td>
-%%
-%% `i' + 1, if `i' &lt; `n'
-%%
-%% 1, if `i' = `n'</td></tr><tr><td> line strip </td><td>`i'</td><td>`i'
-%% + 1 </td></tr><tr><td> independent triangle </td><td> 3`i' - 2 </td><td> 3`i'</td>
-%% </tr><tr><td> triangle strip </td><td>`i'</td><td>`i' + 2 </td></tr><tr><td>
-%% triangle fan </td><td>`i' + 1 </td><td>`i' + 2 </td></tr><tr><td> line adjacency
-%% </td><td> 4`i' - 2 </td><td> 4`i' - 1 </td></tr><tr><td> line strip adjacency </td>
-%% <td>`i' + 1 </td><td>`i' + 2 </td></tr><tr><td> triangle adjacency </td><td> 6`i'
-%% - 5 </td><td> 6`i' - 1 </td></tr><tr><td> triangle strip adjacency </td><td> 2`i'
-%% - 1 </td><td> 2`i' + 3 </td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% If a vertex or geometry shader is active, user-defined varying outputs may be flatshaded
-%% by using the flat qualifier when declaring the output.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProvokingVertex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glProvokingVertex.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec provokingVertex(Mode) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum().
provokingVertex(Mode) ->
cast(5690, <<Mode:?GLenum>>).
@@ -14292,20 +6678,7 @@ provokingVertex(Mode) ->
%% command stream and associates it with that sync object, and returns a non-zero name corresponding
%% to the sync object.
%%
-%% When the specified `Condition' of the sync object is satisfied by the fence command,
-%% the sync object is signaled by the GL, causing any {@link gl:waitSync/3} , {@link gl:clientWaitSync/3}
-%% commands blocking in `Sync' to `unblock'. No other state is affected by ``gl:fenceSync''
-%% or by the execution of the associated fence command.
-%%
-%% `Condition' must be `?GL_SYNC_GPU_COMMANDS_COMPLETE'. This condition is satisfied
-%% by completion of the fence command corresponding to the sync object and all preceding
-%% commands in the same command stream. The sync object will not be signaled until all effects
-%% from these commands on GL client and server state and the framebuffer are fully realized.
-%% Note that completion of the fence command occurs once the state of the corresponding sync
-%% object has been changed, but commands waiting on that sync object may not be unblocked
-%% until after the fence command completes.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glFenceSync.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glFenceSync.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec fenceSync(Condition, Flags) -> integer() when Condition :: enum(),Flags :: integer().
fenceSync(Condition,Flags) ->
call(5691, <<Condition:?GLenum,Flags:?GLbitfield>>).
@@ -14316,7 +6689,7 @@ fenceSync(Condition,Flags) ->
%% object. If `Sync' is not the name of a sync object, or if an error occurs, ``gl:isSync''
%% returns `?GL_FALSE'. Note that zero is not the name of a sync object.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsSync.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsSync.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isSync(Sync) -> 0|1 when Sync :: integer().
isSync(Sync) ->
call(5692, <<Sync:?GLsync>>).
@@ -14331,9 +6704,7 @@ isSync(Sync) ->
%% or {@link gl:clientWaitSync/3} command. In either case, after ``gl:deleteSync'' returns,
%% the name `Sync' is invalid and can no longer be used to refer to the sync object.
%%
-%% ``gl:deleteSync'' will silently ignore a `Sync' value of zero.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteSync.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteSync.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteSync(Sync) -> 'ok' when Sync :: integer().
deleteSync(Sync) ->
cast(5693, <<Sync:?GLsync>>).
@@ -14345,21 +6716,7 @@ deleteSync(Sync) ->
%% is called, ``gl:clientWaitSync'' returns immediately, otherwise it will block and wait
%% for up to `Timeout' nanoseconds for `Sync' to become signaled.
%%
-%% The return value is one of four status values:
-%%
-%% `?GL_ALREADY_SIGNALED' indicates that `Sync' was signaled at the time that ``gl:clientWaitSync''
-%% was called.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TIMEOUT_EXPIRED' indicates that at least `Timeout' nanoseconds passed and `Sync'
-%% did not become signaled.
-%%
-%% `?GL_CONDITION_SATISFIED' indicates that `Sync' was signaled before the timeout
-%% expired.
-%%
-%% `?GL_WAIT_FAILED' indicates that an error occurred. Additionally, an OpenGL error
-%% will be generated.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClientWaitSync.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glClientWaitSync.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec clientWaitSync(Sync, Flags, Timeout) -> enum() when Sync :: integer(),Flags :: integer(),Timeout :: integer().
clientWaitSync(Sync,Flags,Timeout) ->
call(5694, <<Sync:?GLsync,Flags:?GLbitfield,0:32,Timeout:?GLuint64>>).
@@ -14373,15 +6730,9 @@ clientWaitSync(Sync,Flags,Timeout) ->
%%
%% `Flags' and `Timeout' are placeholders for anticipated future extensions of
%% sync object capabilities. They must have these reserved values in order that existing
-%% code calling ``gl:waitSync'' operate properly in the presence of such extensions.. ``gl:waitSync''
-%% will always wait no longer than an implementation-dependent timeout. The duration of
-%% this timeout in nanoseconds may be queried by calling {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with the parameter `?GL_MAX_SERVER_WAIT_TIMEOUT'
-%% . There is currently no way to determine whether ``gl:waitSync'' unblocked because the
-%% timeout expired or because the sync object being waited on was signaled.
-%%
-%% If an error occurs, ``gl:waitSync'' does not cause the GL server to block.
+%% code calling ``gl:waitSync'' operate properly in the presence of such extensions.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glWaitSync.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glWaitSync.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec waitSync(Sync, Flags, Timeout) -> 'ok' when Sync :: integer(),Flags :: integer(),Timeout :: integer().
waitSync(Sync,Flags,Timeout) ->
cast(5695, <<Sync:?GLsync,Flags:?GLbitfield,0:32,Timeout:?GLuint64>>).
@@ -14397,32 +6748,7 @@ getInteger64v(Pname) ->
%% ``gl:getSynciv'' retrieves properties of a sync object. `Sync' specifies the name
%% of the sync object whose properties to retrieve.
%%
-%% On success, ``gl:getSynciv'' replaces up to `BufSize' integers in `Values'
-%% with the corresponding property values of the object being queried. The actual number
-%% of integers replaced is returned in the variable whose address is specified in `Length'
-%% . If `Length' is NULL, no length is returned.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_OBJECT_TYPE', a single value representing the specific type
-%% of the sync object is placed in `Values' . The only type supported is `?GL_SYNC_FENCE'
-%% .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_SYNC_STATUS', a single value representing the status of
-%% the sync object (`?GL_SIGNALED' or `?GL_UNSIGNALED') is placed in `Values' .
-%%
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_SYNC_CONDITION', a single value representing the condition
-%% of the sync object is placed in `Values' . The only condition supported is `?GL_SYNC_GPU_COMMANDS_COMPLETE'
-%% .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_SYNC_FLAGS', a single value representing the flags with
-%% which the sync object was created is placed in `Values' . No flags are currently supported
-%%
-%%
-%% `Flags' is expected to be used in future extensions to the sync objects..
-%%
-%% If an error occurs, nothing will be written to `Values' or `Length' .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetSync.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetSync.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getSynciv(Sync, Pname, BufSize) -> [integer()] when Sync :: integer(),Pname :: enum(),BufSize :: integer().
getSynciv(Sync,Pname,BufSize) ->
call(5697, <<Sync:?GLsync,Pname:?GLenum,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -14432,25 +6758,7 @@ getSynciv(Sync,Pname,BufSize) ->
%% ``gl:texImage2DMultisample'' establishes the data storage, format, dimensions and number
%% of samples of a multisample texture's image.
%%
-%% `Target' must be `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE' or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE'
-%% . `Width' and `Height' are the dimensions in texels of the texture, and must
-%% be in the range zero to `?GL_MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE' - 1. `Samples' specifies the
-%% number of samples in the image and must be in the range zero to `?GL_MAX_SAMPLES'
-%% - 1.
-%%
-%% `Internalformat' must be a color-renderable, depth-renderable, or stencil-renderable
-%% format.
-%%
-%% If `Fixedsamplelocations' is `?GL_TRUE', the image will use identical sample
-%% locations and the same number of samples for all texels in the image, and the sample locations
-%% will not depend on the internal format or size of the image.
-%%
-%% When a multisample texture is accessed in a shader, the access takes one vector of integers
-%% describing which texel to fetch and an integer corresponding to the sample numbers describing
-%% which sample within the texel to fetch. No standard sampling instructions are allowed
-%% on the multisample texture targets.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexImage2DMultisample.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTexImage2DMultisample.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texImage2DMultisample(Target, Samples, Internalformat, Width, Height, Fixedsamplelocations) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Samples :: integer(),Internalformat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Fixedsamplelocations :: 0|1.
texImage2DMultisample(Target,Samples,Internalformat,Width,Height,Fixedsamplelocations) ->
cast(5698, <<Target:?GLenum,Samples:?GLsizei,Internalformat:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Fixedsamplelocations:?GLboolean>>).
@@ -14460,25 +6768,7 @@ texImage2DMultisample(Target,Samples,Internalformat,Width,Height,Fixedsampleloca
%% ``gl:texImage3DMultisample'' establishes the data storage, format, dimensions and number
%% of samples of a multisample texture's image.
%%
-%% `Target' must be `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY' or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY'
-%% . `Width' and `Height' are the dimensions in texels of the texture, and must
-%% be in the range zero to `?GL_MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE' - 1. `Depth' is the number of
-%% array slices in the array texture's image. `Samples' specifies the number of samples
-%% in the image and must be in the range zero to `?GL_MAX_SAMPLES' - 1.
-%%
-%% `Internalformat' must be a color-renderable, depth-renderable, or stencil-renderable
-%% format.
-%%
-%% If `Fixedsamplelocations' is `?GL_TRUE', the image will use identical sample
-%% locations and the same number of samples for all texels in the image, and the sample locations
-%% will not depend on the internal format or size of the image.
-%%
-%% When a multisample texture is accessed in a shader, the access takes one vector of integers
-%% describing which texel to fetch and an integer corresponding to the sample numbers describing
-%% which sample within the texel to fetch. No standard sampling instructions are allowed
-%% on the multisample texture targets.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexImage3DMultisample.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTexImage3DMultisample.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texImage3DMultisample(Target, Samples, Internalformat, Width, Height, Depth, Fixedsamplelocations) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Samples :: integer(),Internalformat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Depth :: integer(),Fixedsamplelocations :: 0|1.
texImage3DMultisample(Target,Samples,Internalformat,Width,Height,Depth,Fixedsamplelocations) ->
cast(5699, <<Target:?GLenum,Samples:?GLsizei,Internalformat:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Depth:?GLsizei,Fixedsamplelocations:?GLboolean>>).
@@ -14493,10 +6783,7 @@ texImage3DMultisample(Target,Samples,Internalformat,Width,Height,Depth,Fixedsamp
%% space of that sample. (0.5, 0.5) this corresponds to the pixel center. `Index' must
%% be between zero and the value of `?GL_SAMPLES' - 1.
%%
-%% If the multisample mode does not have fixed sample locations, the returned values may
-%% only reflect the locations of samples within some pixels.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetMultisample.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetMultisample.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getMultisamplefv(Pname, Index) -> {float(),float()} when Pname :: enum(),Index :: integer().
getMultisamplefv(Pname,Index) ->
call(5700, <<Pname:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint>>).
@@ -14506,19 +6793,14 @@ getMultisamplefv(Pname,Index) ->
%% ``gl:sampleMaski'' sets one 32-bit sub-word of the multi-word sample mask, `?GL_SAMPLE_MASK_VALUE'
%% .
%%
-%% `MaskIndex' specifies which 32-bit sub-word of the sample mask to update, and `Mask'
-%% specifies the new value to use for that sub-word. `MaskIndex' must be less than
-%% the value of `?GL_MAX_SAMPLE_MASK_WORDS'. Bit `B' of mask word `M' corresponds
-%% to sample 32 x `M' + `B'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glSampleMaski.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glSampleMaski.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec sampleMaski(Index, Mask) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),Mask :: integer().
sampleMaski(Index,Mask) ->
cast(5701, <<Index:?GLuint,Mask:?GLbitfield>>).
%% @doc glNamedStringARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glNamedStringARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec namedStringARB(Type, Name, String) -> 'ok' when Type :: enum(),Name :: string(),String :: string().
namedStringARB(Type,Name,String) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -14527,7 +6809,7 @@ namedStringARB(Type,Name,String) ->
%% @doc glDeleteNamedStringARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteNamedStringARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteNamedStringARB(Name) -> 'ok' when Name :: string().
deleteNamedStringARB(Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -14535,7 +6817,7 @@ deleteNamedStringARB(Name) ->
%% @doc glCompileShaderIncludeARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCompileShaderIncludeARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec compileShaderIncludeARB(Shader, Path) -> 'ok' when Shader :: integer(),Path :: iolist().
compileShaderIncludeARB(Shader,Path) ->
PathTemp = list_to_binary([[Str|[0]] || Str <- Path ]),
@@ -14544,7 +6826,7 @@ compileShaderIncludeARB(Shader,Path) ->
%% @doc glIsNamedStringARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsNamedStringARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec isNamedStringARB(Name) -> 0|1 when Name :: string().
isNamedStringARB(Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -14552,7 +6834,7 @@ isNamedStringARB(Name) ->
%% @doc glGetNamedStringARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetNamedStringARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getNamedStringARB(Name, BufSize) -> string() when Name :: string(),BufSize :: integer().
getNamedStringARB(Name,BufSize) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -14560,7 +6842,7 @@ getNamedStringARB(Name,BufSize) ->
%% @doc glGetNamedStringARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetNamedStringARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getNamedStringivARB(Name, Pname) -> integer() when Name :: string(),Pname :: enum().
getNamedStringivARB(Name,Pname) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -14568,7 +6850,7 @@ getNamedStringivARB(Name,Pname) ->
%% @doc glBindFragDataLocationIndexe
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindFragDataLocationIndexe.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindFragDataLocationIndexed(Program, ColorNumber, Index, Name) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),ColorNumber :: integer(),Index :: integer(),Name :: string().
bindFragDataLocationIndexed(Program,ColorNumber,Index,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -14580,7 +6862,7 @@ bindFragDataLocationIndexed(Program,ColorNumber,Index,Name) ->
%% was bound when the program object `Program' was last linked. If `Name' is not
%% a varying out variable of `Program' , or if an error occurs, -1 will be returned.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetFragDataIndex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetFragDataIndex.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getFragDataIndex(Program, Name) -> integer() when Program :: integer(),Name :: string().
getFragDataIndex(Program,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -14593,13 +6875,7 @@ getFragDataIndex(Program,Name) ->
%% that none of the returned names was in use immediately before the call to ``gl:genSamplers''
%% .
%%
-%% Sampler object names returned by a call to ``gl:genSamplers'' are not returned by subsequent
-%% calls, unless they are first deleted with {@link gl:deleteSamplers/1} .
-%%
-%% The names returned in `Samplers' are marked as used, for the purposes of ``gl:genSamplers''
-%% only, but they acquire state and type only when they are first bound.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenSamplers.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGenSamplers.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec genSamplers(Count) -> [integer()] when Count :: integer().
genSamplers(Count) ->
call(5710, <<Count:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -14612,7 +6888,7 @@ genSamplers(Count) ->
%% is called with unit set to the unit the sampler is bound to and sampler zero. Unused
%% names in samplers are silently ignored, as is the reserved name zero.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteSamplers.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteSamplers.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteSamplers(Samplers) -> 'ok' when Samplers :: [integer()].
deleteSamplers(Samplers) ->
SamplersLen = length(Samplers),
@@ -14625,9 +6901,7 @@ deleteSamplers(Samplers) ->
%% object. If `Id' is zero, or is a non-zero value that is not currently the name of
%% a sampler object, or if an error occurs, ``gl:isSampler'' returns `?GL_FALSE'.
%%
-%% A name returned by {@link gl:genSamplers/1} , is the name of a sampler object.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsSampler.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsSampler.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isSampler(Sampler) -> 0|1 when Sampler :: integer().
isSampler(Sampler) ->
call(5712, <<Sampler:?GLuint>>).
@@ -14639,12 +6913,7 @@ isSampler(Sampler) ->
%% . `Unit' must be less than the value of `?GL_MAX_COMBINED_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS'.
%%
%%
-%% When a sampler object is bound to a texture unit, its state supersedes that of the texture
-%% object bound to that texture unit. If the sampler name zero is bound to a texture unit,
-%% the currently bound texture's sampler state becomes active. A single sampler object may
-%% be bound to multiple texture units simultaneously.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindSampler.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindSampler.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindSampler(Unit, Sampler) -> 'ok' when Unit :: integer(),Sampler :: integer().
bindSampler(Unit,Sampler) ->
cast(5713, <<Unit:?GLuint,Sampler:?GLuint>>).
@@ -14656,141 +6925,7 @@ bindSampler(Unit,Sampler) ->
%% modified, and must be the name of a sampler object previously returned from a call to {@link gl:genSamplers/1}
%% . The following symbols are accepted in `Pname' :
%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER': The texture minifying function is used whenever the pixel
-%% being textured maps to an area greater than one texture element. There are six defined
-%% minifying functions. Two of them use the nearest one or nearest four texture elements
-%% to compute the texture value. The other four use mipmaps.
-%%
-%% A mipmap is an ordered set of arrays representing the same image at progressively lower
-%% resolutions. If the texture has dimensions 2 n×2 m, there are max(n m)+1 mipmaps. The first
-%% mipmap is the original texture, with dimensions 2 n×2 m. Each subsequent mipmap has
-%% dimensions 2(k-1)×2(l-1), where 2 k×2 l are the dimensions of the previous mipmap, until either
-%% k=0 or l=0. At that point, subsequent mipmaps have dimension 1×2(l-1) or 2(k-1)×1 until
-%% the final mipmap, which has dimension 1×1. To define the mipmaps, call {@link gl:texImage1D/8}
-%% , {@link gl:texImage2D/9} , {@link gl:texImage3D/10} , {@link gl:copyTexImage1D/7} , or {@link gl:copyTexImage2D/8}
-%% with the `level' argument indicating the order of the mipmaps. Level 0 is the original
-%% texture; level max(n m) is the final 1×1 mipmap.
-%%
-%% `Params' supplies a function for minifying the texture as one of the following:
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEAREST': Returns the value of the texture element that is nearest (in Manhattan
-%% distance) to the center of the pixel being textured.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINEAR': Returns the weighted average of the four texture elements that are
-%% closest to the center of the pixel being textured. These can include border texture elements,
-%% depending on the values of `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S' and `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T', and
-%% on the exact mapping.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEAREST_MIPMAP_NEAREST': Chooses the mipmap that most closely matches the size
-%% of the pixel being textured and uses the `?GL_NEAREST' criterion (the texture element
-%% nearest to the center of the pixel) to produce a texture value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINEAR_MIPMAP_NEAREST': Chooses the mipmap that most closely matches the size
-%% of the pixel being textured and uses the `?GL_LINEAR' criterion (a weighted average
-%% of the four texture elements that are closest to the center of the pixel) to produce a
-%% texture value.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEAREST_MIPMAP_LINEAR': Chooses the two mipmaps that most closely match the
-%% size of the pixel being textured and uses the `?GL_NEAREST' criterion (the texture
-%% element nearest to the center of the pixel) to produce a texture value from each mipmap.
-%% The final texture value is a weighted average of those two values.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINEAR_MIPMAP_LINEAR': Chooses the two mipmaps that most closely match the
-%% size of the pixel being textured and uses the `?GL_LINEAR' criterion (a weighted
-%% average of the four texture elements that are closest to the center of the pixel) to produce
-%% a texture value from each mipmap. The final texture value is a weighted average of those
-%% two values.
-%%
-%% As more texture elements are sampled in the minification process, fewer aliasing artifacts
-%% will be apparent. While the `?GL_NEAREST' and `?GL_LINEAR' minification functions
-%% can be faster than the other four, they sample only one or four texture elements to determine
-%% the texture value of the pixel being rendered and can produce moire patterns or ragged
-%% transitions. The initial value of `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER' is `?GL_NEAREST_MIPMAP_LINEAR'
-%% .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MAG_FILTER': The texture magnification function is used when the pixel
-%% being textured maps to an area less than or equal to one texture element. It sets the
-%% texture magnification function to either `?GL_NEAREST' or `?GL_LINEAR' (see
-%% below). `?GL_NEAREST' is generally faster than `?GL_LINEAR', but it can produce
-%% textured images with sharper edges because the transition between texture elements is
-%% not as smooth. The initial value of `?GL_TEXTURE_MAG_FILTER' is `?GL_LINEAR'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NEAREST': Returns the value of the texture element that is nearest (in Manhattan
-%% distance) to the center of the pixel being textured.
-%%
-%% `?GL_LINEAR': Returns the weighted average of the four texture elements that are
-%% closest to the center of the pixel being textured. These can include border texture elements,
-%% depending on the values of `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S' and `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T', and
-%% on the exact mapping.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_LOD': Sets the minimum level-of-detail parameter. This floating-point
-%% value limits the selection of highest resolution mipmap (lowest mipmap level). The initial
-%% value is -1000.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MAX_LOD': Sets the maximum level-of-detail parameter. This floating-point
-%% value limits the selection of the lowest resolution mipmap (highest mipmap level). The
-%% initial value is 1000.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S': Sets the wrap parameter for texture coordinate s to either `?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE'
-%% , `?GL_MIRRORED_REPEAT', or `?GL_REPEAT'. `?GL_CLAMP_TO_BORDER' causes
-%% the s coordinate to be clamped to the range [(-1 2/N) 1+(1 2/N)], where N is the size of the texture in
-%% the direction of clamping.`?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE' causes s coordinates to be clamped
-%% to the range [(1 2/N) 1-(1 2/N)], where N is the size of the texture in the direction of clamping. `?GL_REPEAT'
-%% causes the integer part of the s coordinate to be ignored; the GL uses only the fractional
-%% part, thereby creating a repeating pattern. `?GL_MIRRORED_REPEAT' causes the s
-%% coordinate to be set to the fractional part of the texture coordinate if the integer part
-%% of s is even; if the integer part of s is odd, then the s texture coordinate is
-%% set to 1-frac(s), where frac(s) represents the fractional part of s. Initially, `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S'
-%% is set to `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T': Sets the wrap parameter for texture coordinate t to either `?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE'
-%% , `?GL_MIRRORED_REPEAT', or `?GL_REPEAT'. See the discussion under `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S'
-%% . Initially, `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T' is set to `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_R': Sets the wrap parameter for texture coordinate r to either `?GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE'
-%% , `?GL_MIRRORED_REPEAT', or `?GL_REPEAT'. See the discussion under `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S'
-%% . Initially, `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_R' is set to `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR': The data in `Params' specifies four values that
-%% define the border values that should be used for border texels. If a texel is sampled
-%% from the border of the texture, the values of `?GL_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR' are interpreted
-%% as an RGBA color to match the texture's internal format and substituted for the non-existent
-%% texel data. If the texture contains depth components, the first component of `?GL_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR'
-%% is interpreted as a depth value. The initial value is (0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_MODE': Specifies the texture comparison mode for currently
-%% bound textures. That is, a texture whose internal format is `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT_*';
-%% see {@link gl:texImage2D/9} ) Permissible values are:
-%%
-%% `?GL_COMPARE_REF_TO_TEXTURE': Specifies that the interpolated and clamped r texture
-%% coordinate should be compared to the value in the currently bound texture. See the discussion
-%% of `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_FUNC' for details of how the comparison is evaluated. The
-%% result of the comparison is assigned to the red channel.
-%%
-%% `?GL_NONE': Specifies that the red channel should be assigned the appropriate value
-%% from the currently bound texture.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_FUNC': Specifies the comparison operator used when `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_MODE'
-%% is set to `?GL_COMPARE_REF_TO_TEXTURE'. Permissible values are: <table><tbody><tr><td>
-%% ` Texture Comparison Function '</td><td>` Computed result '</td></tr></tbody><tbody>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_LEQUAL'</td><td> result={1.0 0.0 r&lt;=(D t) r&gt;(D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_GEQUAL'</td><td>
-%% result={1.0 0.0 r&gt;=(D t) r&lt;(D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_LESS'</td><td> result={1.0 0.0 r&lt;(D t) r&gt;=(D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_GREATER'
-%% </td><td> result={1.0 0.0 r&gt;(D t) r&lt;=(D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_EQUAL'</td><td> result={1.0 0.0 r=(D t) r&amp;ne;
-%% (D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_NOTEQUAL'
-%% </td><td> result={1.0 0.0 r&amp;ne;(D t) r=(D t))</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_ALWAYS'</td><td> result=1.0</td></tr><tr><td>
-%% `?GL_NEVER'</td><td> result=0.0</td></tr></tbody></table> where r is the current
-%% interpolated texture coordinate, and D t is the texture value sampled from the currently
-%% bound texture. result is assigned to R t.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glSamplerParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glSamplerParameter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec samplerParameteri(Sampler, Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Sampler :: integer(),Pname :: enum(),Param :: integer().
samplerParameteri(Sampler,Pname,Param) ->
cast(5714, <<Sampler:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum,Param:?GLint>>).
@@ -14827,7 +6962,7 @@ samplerParameterIiv(Sampler,Pname,Param) ->
%% @doc glSamplerParameterI
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glSamplerParameterI.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec samplerParameterIuiv(Sampler, Pname, Param) -> 'ok' when Sampler :: integer(),Pname :: enum(),Param :: [integer()].
samplerParameterIuiv(Sampler,Pname,Param) ->
ParamLen = length(Param),
@@ -14842,41 +6977,7 @@ samplerParameterIuiv(Sampler,Pname,Param) ->
%% . `Pname' accepts the same symbols as {@link gl:samplerParameteri/3} , with the same
%% interpretations:
%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MAG_FILTER': Returns the single-valued texture magnification filter,
-%% a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_LINEAR'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER': Returns the single-valued texture minification filter,
-%% a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_NEAREST_MIPMAP_LINEAR'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MIN_LOD': Returns the single-valued texture minimum level-of-detail
-%% value. The initial value is -1000.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_MAX_LOD': Returns the single-valued texture maximum level-of-detail
-%% value. The initial value is 1000.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S': Returns the single-valued wrapping function for texture coordinate
-%% s, a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T': Returns the single-valued wrapping function for texture coordinate
-%% t, a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_R': Returns the single-valued wrapping function for texture coordinate
-%% r, a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_REPEAT'.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR': Returns four integer or floating-point numbers that
-%% comprise the RGBA color of the texture border. Floating-point values are returned in the
-%% range [0 1]. Integer values are returned as a linear mapping of the internal floating-point
-%% representation such that 1.0 maps to the most positive representable integer and -1.0
-%% maps to the most negative representable integer. The initial value is (0, 0, 0, 0).
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_MODE': Returns a single-valued texture comparison mode, a symbolic
-%% constant. The initial value is `?GL_NONE'. See {@link gl:samplerParameteri/3} .
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_COMPARE_FUNC': Returns a single-valued texture comparison function,
-%% a symbolic constant. The initial value is `?GL_LEQUAL'. See {@link gl:samplerParameteri/3}
-%% .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetSamplerParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetSamplerParameter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getSamplerParameteriv(Sampler, Pname) -> [integer()] when Sampler :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getSamplerParameteriv(Sampler,Pname) ->
call(5720, <<Sampler:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -14895,7 +6996,7 @@ getSamplerParameterfv(Sampler,Pname) ->
%% @doc glGetSamplerParameterI
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetSamplerParameterI.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getSamplerParameterIuiv(Sampler, Pname) -> [integer()] when Sampler :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getSamplerParameterIuiv(Sampler,Pname) ->
call(5723, <<Sampler:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -14910,21 +7011,21 @@ getSamplerParameterIuiv(Sampler,Pname) ->
%% block where the target is `?GL_TIME_ELAPSED' and it does not affect the result of
%% that query object.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glQueryCounter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glQueryCounter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec queryCounter(Id, Target) -> 'ok' when Id :: integer(),Target :: enum().
queryCounter(Id,Target) ->
cast(5724, <<Id:?GLuint,Target:?GLenum>>).
%% @doc glGetQueryObjecti64v
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetQueryObjecti64v.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getQueryObjecti64v(Id, Pname) -> integer() when Id :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getQueryObjecti64v(Id,Pname) ->
call(5725, <<Id:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
%% @doc glGetQueryObjectui64v
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetQueryObjectui64v.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getQueryObjectui64v(Id, Pname) -> integer() when Id :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getQueryObjectui64v(Id,Pname) ->
call(5726, <<Id:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -14936,25 +7037,7 @@ getQueryObjectui64v(Id,Pname) ->
%% , execept that the parameters to {@link gl:drawArraysInstancedBaseInstance/5} are stored
%% in memory at the address given by `Indirect' .
%%
-%% The parameters addressed by `Indirect' are packed into a structure that takes the
-%% form (in C): typedef struct { uint count; uint primCount; uint first; uint baseInstance;
-%% } DrawArraysIndirectCommand; const DrawArraysIndirectCommand *cmd = (const DrawArraysIndirectCommand
-%% *)indirect; glDrawArraysInstancedBaseInstance(mode, cmd-&gt;first, cmd-&gt;count, cmd-&gt;primCount,
-%% cmd-&gt;baseInstance);
-%%
-%% If a buffer is bound to the `?GL_DRAW_INDIRECT_BUFFER' binding at the time of a
-%% call to ``gl:drawArraysIndirect'', `Indirect' is interpreted as an offset, in basic
-%% machine units, into that buffer and the parameter data is read from the buffer rather
-%% than from client memory.
-%%
-%% In contrast to {@link gl:drawArraysInstancedBaseInstance/5} , the first member of the parameter
-%% structure is unsigned, and out-of-range indices do not generate an error.
-%%
-%% Vertex attributes that are modified by ``gl:drawArraysIndirect'' have an unspecified
-%% value after ``gl:drawArraysIndirect'' returns. Attributes that aren't modified remain
-%% well defined.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawArraysIndirect.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawArraysIndirect.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawArraysIndirect(Mode, Indirect) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Indirect :: offset()|mem().
drawArraysIndirect(Mode,Indirect) when is_integer(Indirect) ->
cast(5727, <<Mode:?GLenum,Indirect:?GLuint>>);
@@ -14969,32 +7052,7 @@ drawArraysIndirect(Mode,Indirect) ->
%% , execpt that the parameters to {@link gl:drawElementsInstancedBaseVertexBaseInstance/7}
%% are stored in memory at the address given by `Indirect' .
%%
-%% The parameters addressed by `Indirect' are packed into a structure that takes the
-%% form (in C): typedef struct { uint count; uint primCount; uint firstIndex; uint baseVertex;
-%% uint baseInstance; } DrawElementsIndirectCommand;
-%%
-%% ``gl:drawElementsIndirect'' is equivalent to: void glDrawElementsIndirect(GLenum mode,
-%% GLenum type, const void * indirect) { const DrawElementsIndirectCommand *cmd = (const
-%% DrawElementsIndirectCommand *)indirect; glDrawElementsInstancedBaseVertexBaseInstance(mode,
-%% cmd-&gt;count, type, cmd-&gt;firstIndex + size-of-type, cmd-&gt;primCount, cmd-&gt;baseVertex,
-%% cmd-&gt;baseInstance); }
-%%
-%% If a buffer is bound to the `?GL_DRAW_INDIRECT_BUFFER' binding at the time of a
-%% call to ``gl:drawElementsIndirect'', `Indirect' is interpreted as an offset, in
-%% basic machine units, into that buffer and the parameter data is read from the buffer rather
-%% than from client memory.
-%%
-%% Note that indices stored in client memory are not supported. If no buffer is bound to
-%% the `?GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER' binding, an error will be generated.
-%%
-%% The results of the operation are undefined if the reservedMustBeZero member of the parameter
-%% structure is non-zero. However, no error is generated in this case.
-%%
-%% Vertex attributes that are modified by ``gl:drawElementsIndirect'' have an unspecified
-%% value after ``gl:drawElementsIndirect'' returns. Attributes that aren't modified remain
-%% well defined.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawElementsIndirect.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawElementsIndirect.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawElementsIndirect(Mode, Type, Indirect) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Indirect :: offset()|mem().
drawElementsIndirect(Mode,Type,Indirect) when is_integer(Indirect) ->
cast(5729, <<Mode:?GLenum,Type:?GLenum,Indirect:?GLuint>>);
@@ -15142,15 +7200,7 @@ getUniformdv(Program,Location) ->
%% `Name' in the shader stage of type `Shadertype' attached to `Program' ,
%% with behavior otherwise identical to {@link gl:getUniformLocation/2} .
%%
-%% If `Name' is not the name of a subroutine uniform in the shader stage, -1 is returned,
-%% but no error is generated. If `Name' is the name of a subroutine uniform in the shader
-%% stage, a value between zero and the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINE_LOCATIONS' minus
-%% one will be returned. Subroutine locations are assigned using consecutive integers in
-%% the range from zero to the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINE_LOCATIONS' minus one for
-%% the shader stage. For active subroutine uniforms declared as arrays, the declared array
-%% elements are assigned consecutive locations.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetSubroutineUniformLocation.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetSubroutineUniformLocation.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getSubroutineUniformLocation(Program, Shadertype, Name) -> integer() when Program :: integer(),Shadertype :: enum(),Name :: string().
getSubroutineUniformLocation(Program,Shadertype,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -15164,14 +7214,7 @@ getSubroutineUniformLocation(Program,Shadertype,Name) ->
%% shader subroutine index. `Name' contains the null-terminated name of the subroutine
%% uniform whose name to query.
%%
-%% If `Name' is not the name of a subroutine uniform in the shader stage, `?GL_INVALID_INDEX'
-%% is returned, but no error is generated. If `Name' is the name of a subroutine uniform
-%% in the shader stage, a value between zero and the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINES'
-%% minus one will be returned. Subroutine indices are assigned using consecutive integers
-%% in the range from zero to the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINES' minus one for the
-%% shader stage.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetSubroutineIndex.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetSubroutineIndex.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getSubroutineIndex(Program, Shadertype, Name) -> integer() when Program :: integer(),Shadertype :: enum(),Name :: string().
getSubroutineIndex(Program,Shadertype,Name) ->
NameLen = length(Name),
@@ -15185,15 +7228,7 @@ getSubroutineIndex(Program,Shadertype,Name) ->
%% `Index' must be between zero and the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINE_UNIFORMS'
%% minus one for the shader stage.
%%
-%% The uniform name is returned as a null-terminated string in `Name' . The actual number
-%% of characters written into `Name' , excluding the null terminator is returned in `Length'
-%% . If `Length' is `?NULL', no length is returned. The maximum number of characters
-%% that may be written into `Name' , including the null terminator, is specified by `Bufsize'
-%% . The length of the longest subroutine uniform name in `Program' and `Shadertype'
-%% is given by the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINE_UNIFORM_MAX_LENGTH', which can be
-%% queried with {@link gl:getProgramStageiv/3} .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetActiveSubroutineUniformName.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetActiveSubroutineUniformName.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getActiveSubroutineUniformName(Program, Shadertype, Index, Bufsize) -> string() when Program :: integer(),Shadertype :: enum(),Index :: integer(),Bufsize :: integer().
getActiveSubroutineUniformName(Program,Shadertype,Index,Bufsize) ->
call(5751, <<Program:?GLuint,Shadertype:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,Bufsize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -15205,13 +7240,7 @@ getActiveSubroutineUniformName(Program,Shadertype,Index,Bufsize) ->
%% shader subroutine uniform within the shader stage given by `Stage' , and must between
%% zero and the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINES' minus one for the shader stage.
%%
-%% The name of the selected subroutine is returned as a null-terminated string in `Name'
-%% . The actual number of characters written into `Name' , not including the null-terminator,
-%% is is returned in `Length' . If `Length' is `?NULL', no length is returned.
-%% The maximum number of characters that may be written into `Name' , including the null-terminator,
-%% is given in `Bufsize' .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetActiveSubroutineName.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetActiveSubroutineName.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getActiveSubroutineName(Program, Shadertype, Index, Bufsize) -> string() when Program :: integer(),Shadertype :: enum(),Index :: integer(),Bufsize :: integer().
getActiveSubroutineName(Program,Shadertype,Index,Bufsize) ->
call(5752, <<Program:?GLuint,Shadertype:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,Bufsize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -15225,7 +7254,7 @@ getActiveSubroutineName(Program,Shadertype,Index,Bufsize) ->
%% values in `Indices' must be less than the value of `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINES'
%% for the shader stage.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glUniformSubroutines.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glUniformSubroutines.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec uniformSubroutinesuiv(Shadertype, Indices) -> 'ok' when Shadertype :: enum(),Indices :: [integer()].
uniformSubroutinesuiv(Shadertype,Indices) ->
IndicesLen = length(Indices),
@@ -15240,7 +7269,7 @@ uniformSubroutinesuiv(Shadertype,Indices) ->
%% in use at shader stage `Shadertype' . The value of the subroutine uniform is returned
%% in `Values' .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetUniformSubroutine.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetUniformSubroutine.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getUniformSubroutineuiv(Shadertype, Location) -> {integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer(),integer()} when Shadertype :: enum(),Location :: integer().
getUniformSubroutineuiv(Shadertype,Location) ->
call(5754, <<Shadertype:?GLenum,Location:?GLint>>).
@@ -15253,26 +7282,7 @@ getUniformSubroutineuiv(Shadertype,Location) ->
%% should be queried. The value or values of the parameter to be queried is returned in the
%% variable whose address is given in `Values' .
%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINE_UNIFORMS', the number of active subroutine
-%% variables in the stage is returned in `Values' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINE_UNIFORM_LOCATIONS', the number of active
-%% subroutine variable locations in the stage is returned in `Values' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINES', the number of active subroutines in
-%% the stage is returned in `Values' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINE_UNIFORM_MAX_LENGTH', the length of the
-%% longest subroutine uniform for the stage is returned in `Values' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_ACTIVE_SUBROUTINE_MAX_LENGTH', the length of the longest
-%% subroutine name for the stage is returned in `Values' . The returned name length includes
-%% space for the null-terminator.
-%%
-%% If there is no shader present of type `Shadertype' , the returned value will be consistent
-%% with a shader containing no subroutines or subroutine uniforms.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgramStage.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetProgramStage.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramStageiv(Program, Shadertype, Pname) -> integer() when Program :: integer(),Shadertype :: enum(),Pname :: enum().
getProgramStageiv(Program,Shadertype,Pname) ->
call(5755, <<Program:?GLuint,Shadertype:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -15286,20 +7296,7 @@ getProgramStageiv(Program,Shadertype,Pname) ->
%% `Values' specifies the address of an array containing the new values for the parameter
%% specified by `Pname' .
%%
-%% When `Pname' is `?GL_PATCH_VERTICES', `Value' specifies the number of
-%% vertices that will be used to make up a single patch primitive. Patch primitives are consumed
-%% by the tessellation control shader (if present) and subsequently used for tessellation.
-%% When primitives are specified using {@link gl:drawArrays/3} or a similar function, each
-%% patch will be made from `Parameter' control points, each represented by a vertex
-%% taken from the enabeld vertex arrays. `Parameter' must be greater than zero, and
-%% less than or equal to the value of `?GL_MAX_PATCH_VERTICES'.
-%%
-%% When `Pname' is `?GL_PATCH_DEFAULT_OUTER_LEVEL' or `?GL_PATCH_DEFAULT_INNER_LEVEL'
-%% , `Values' contains the address of an array contiaining the default outer or inner
-%% tessellation levels, respectively, to be used when no tessellation control shader is present.
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPatchParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glPatchParameter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec patchParameteri(Pname, Value) -> 'ok' when Pname :: enum(),Value :: integer().
patchParameteri(Pname,Value) ->
cast(5756, <<Pname:?GLenum,Value:?GLint>>).
@@ -15319,18 +7316,7 @@ patchParameterfv(Pname,Values) ->
%% . If `Id' has not previously been bound, a new transform feedback object with name `Id'
%% and initialized with with the default transform state vector is created.
%%
-%% In the initial state, a default transform feedback object is bound and treated as a transform
-%% feedback object with a name of zero. If the name zero is subsequently bound, the default
-%% transform feedback object is again bound to the GL state.
-%%
-%% While a transform feedback buffer object is bound, GL operations on the target to which
-%% it is bound affect the bound transform feedback object, and queries of the target to which
-%% a transform feedback object is bound return state from the bound object. When buffer objects
-%% are bound for transform feedback, they are attached to the currently bound transform feedback
-%% object. Buffer objects are used for trans- form feedback only if they are attached to
-%% the currently bound transform feedback object.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindTransformFeedback.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindTransformFeedback.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindTransformFeedback(Target, Id) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Id :: integer().
bindTransformFeedback(Target,Id) ->
cast(5758, <<Target:?GLenum,Id:?GLuint>>).
@@ -15343,7 +7329,7 @@ bindTransformFeedback(Target,Id) ->
%% and it has no contents. If an active transform feedback object is deleted, its name immediately
%% becomes unused, but the underlying object is not deleted until it is no longer active.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteTransformFeedbacks.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteTransformFeedbacks.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteTransformFeedbacks(Ids) -> 'ok' when Ids :: [integer()].
deleteTransformFeedbacks(Ids) ->
IdsLen = length(Ids),
@@ -15356,7 +7342,7 @@ deleteTransformFeedbacks(Ids) ->
%% names in `Ids' . These names are marked as used, for the purposes of ``gl:genTransformFeedbacks''
%% only, but they acquire transform feedback state only when they are first bound.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenTransformFeedbacks.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGenTransformFeedbacks.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec genTransformFeedbacks(N) -> [integer()] when N :: integer().
genTransformFeedbacks(N) ->
call(5760, <<N:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -15371,7 +7357,7 @@ genTransformFeedbacks(N) ->
%% the name is not a transform feedback object and ``gl:isTransformFeedback'' returns `?GL_FALSE'
%% .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsTransformFeedback.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsTransformFeedback.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isTransformFeedback(Id) -> 0|1 when Id :: integer().
isTransformFeedback(Id) ->
call(5761, <<Id:?GLuint>>).
@@ -15384,7 +7370,7 @@ isTransformFeedback(Id) ->
%% to the object results in an error. However, a new transform feedback object may be bound
%% while transform feedback is paused.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glPauseTransformFeedback.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glPauseTransformFeedback.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pauseTransformFeedback() -> 'ok'.
pauseTransformFeedback() ->
cast(5762, <<>>).
@@ -15397,7 +7383,7 @@ pauseTransformFeedback() ->
%% to the object results in an error. However, a new transform feedback object may be bound
%% while transform feedback is paused.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glResumeTransformFeedback.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glResumeTransformFeedback.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec resumeTransformFeedback() -> 'ok'.
resumeTransformFeedback() ->
cast(5763, <<>>).
@@ -15411,7 +7397,7 @@ resumeTransformFeedback() ->
%% zero the last time transform feedback was active on the transform feedback object named
%% by `Id' .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawTransformFeedback.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawTransformFeedback.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawTransformFeedback(Mode, Id) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Id :: integer().
drawTransformFeedback(Mode,Id) ->
cast(5764, <<Mode:?GLenum,Id:?GLuint>>).
@@ -15426,17 +7412,14 @@ drawTransformFeedback(Mode,Id) ->
%% the last time transform feedback was active on the transform feedback object named by `Id'
%% .
%%
-%% Calling {@link gl:drawTransformFeedback/2} is equivalent to calling ``gl:drawTransformFeedbackStream''
-%% with `Stream' set to zero.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawTransformFeedbackStream.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawTransformFeedbackStream.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawTransformFeedbackStream(Mode, Id, Stream) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Id :: integer(),Stream :: integer().
drawTransformFeedbackStream(Mode,Id,Stream) ->
cast(5765, <<Mode:?GLenum,Id:?GLuint,Stream:?GLuint>>).
%% @doc glBeginQueryIndexe
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBeginQueryIndexe.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec beginQueryIndexed(Target, Index, Id) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),Id :: integer().
beginQueryIndexed(Target,Index,Id) ->
cast(5766, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,Id:?GLuint>>).
@@ -15450,70 +7433,7 @@ beginQueryIndexed(Target,Index,Id) ->
%% , `?GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED', `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_PRIMITIVES_WRITTEN', or `?GL_TIME_ELAPSED'
%% . The behavior of the query object depends on its type and is as follows.
%%
-%% `Index' specifies the index of the query target and must be between a `Target' -specific
-%% maximum.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_SAMPLES_PASSED', `Id' must be an unused name, or the
-%% name of an existing occlusion query object. When ``gl:beginQueryIndexed'' is executed,
-%% the query object's samples-passed counter is reset to 0. Subsequent rendering will increment
-%% the counter for every sample that passes the depth test. If the value of `?GL_SAMPLE_BUFFERS'
-%% is 0, then the samples-passed count is incremented by 1 for each fragment. If the value
-%% of `?GL_SAMPLE_BUFFERS' is 1, then the samples-passed count is incremented by the
-%% number of samples whose coverage bit is set. However, implementations, at their discression
-%% may instead increase the samples-passed count by the value of `?GL_SAMPLES' if any
-%% sample in the fragment is covered. When ``gl:endQueryIndexed'' is executed, the samples-passed
-%% counter is assigned to the query object's result value. This value can be queried by calling
-%% {@link gl:getQueryObjectiv/2} with `Pname' `?GL_QUERY_RESULT'. When `Target'
-%% is `?GL_SAMPLES_PASSED', `Index' must be zero.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_ANY_SAMPLES_PASSED', `Id' must be an unused name,
-%% or the name of an existing boolean occlusion query object. When ``gl:beginQueryIndexed''
-%% is executed, the query object's samples-passed flag is reset to `?GL_FALSE'. Subsequent
-%% rendering causes the flag to be set to `?GL_TRUE' if any sample passes the depth
-%% test. When ``gl:endQueryIndexed'' is executed, the samples-passed flag is assigned to
-%% the query object's result value. This value can be queried by calling {@link gl:getQueryObjectiv/2}
-%% with `Pname' `?GL_QUERY_RESULT'. When `Target' is `?GL_ANY_SAMPLES_PASSED'
-%% , `Index' must be zero.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED', `Id' must be an unused name,
-%% or the name of an existing primitive query object previously bound to the `?GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED'
-%% query binding. When ``gl:beginQueryIndexed'' is executed, the query object's primitives-generated
-%% counter is reset to 0. Subsequent rendering will increment the counter once for every
-%% vertex that is emitted from the geometry shader to the stream given by `Index' , or
-%% from the vertex shader if `Index' is zero and no geometry shader is present. When ``gl:endQueryIndexed''
-%% is executed, the primitives-generated counter for stream `Index' is assigned to
-%% the query object's result value. This value can be queried by calling {@link gl:getQueryObjectiv/2}
-%% with `Pname' `?GL_QUERY_RESULT'. When `Target' is `?GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED'
-%% , `Index' must be less than the value of `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_STREAMS'.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_PRIMITIVES_WRITTEN', `Id' must
-%% be an unused name, or the name of an existing primitive query object previously bound
-%% to the `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_PRIMITIVES_WRITTEN' query binding. When ``gl:beginQueryIndexed''
-%% is executed, the query object's primitives-written counter for the stream specified by `Index'
-%% is reset to 0. Subsequent rendering will increment the counter once for every vertex
-%% that is written into the bound transform feedback buffer(s) for stream `Index' . If
-%% transform feedback mode is not activated between the call to ``gl:beginQueryIndexed''
-%% and ``gl:endQueryIndexed'', the counter will not be incremented. When ``gl:endQueryIndexed''
-%% is executed, the primitives-written counter for stream `Index' is assigned to the
-%% query object's result value. This value can be queried by calling {@link gl:getQueryObjectiv/2}
-%% with `Pname' `?GL_QUERY_RESULT'. When `Target' is `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_PRIMITIVES_WRITTEN'
-%% , `Index' must be less than the value of `?GL_MAX_VERTEX_STREAMS'.
-%%
-%% If `Target' is `?GL_TIME_ELAPSED', `Id' must be an unused name, or the
-%% name of an existing timer query object previously bound to the `?GL_TIME_ELAPSED'
-%% query binding. When ``gl:beginQueryIndexed'' is executed, the query object's time counter
-%% is reset to 0. When ``gl:endQueryIndexed'' is executed, the elapsed server time that
-%% has passed since the call to ``gl:beginQueryIndexed'' is written into the query object's
-%% time counter. This value can be queried by calling {@link gl:getQueryObjectiv/2} with `Pname'
-%% `?GL_QUERY_RESULT'. When `Target' is `?GL_TIME_ELAPSED', `Index' must
-%% be zero.
-%%
-%% Querying the `?GL_QUERY_RESULT' implicitly flushes the GL pipeline until the rendering
-%% delimited by the query object has completed and the result is available. `?GL_QUERY_RESULT_AVAILABLE'
-%% can be queried to determine if the result is immediately available or if the rendering
-%% is not yet complete.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBeginQueryIndexed.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBeginQueryIndexed.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec endQueryIndexed(Target, Index) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer().
endQueryIndexed(Target,Index) ->
cast(5767, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint>>).
@@ -15525,13 +7445,7 @@ endQueryIndexed(Target,Index) ->
%% the index of the query object target and must be between zero and a target-specific maxiumum.
%%
%%
-%% `Pname' names a specific query object target parameter. When `Pname' is `?GL_CURRENT_QUERY'
-%% , the name of the currently active query for the specified `Index' of `Target' ,
-%% or zero if no query is active, will be placed in `Params' . If `Pname' is `?GL_QUERY_COUNTER_BITS'
-%% , the implementation-dependent number of bits used to hold the result of queries for `Target'
-%% is returned in `Params' .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetQueryIndexed.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetQueryIndexed.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getQueryIndexediv(Target, Index, Pname) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),Index :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getQueryIndexediv(Target,Index,Pname) ->
call(5768, <<Target:?GLenum,Index:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -15543,7 +7457,7 @@ getQueryIndexediv(Target,Index,Pname) ->
%% subsequently be called and the implementation may at that time reallocate resources previously
%% freed by the call to ``gl:releaseShaderCompiler''.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glReleaseShaderCompiler.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glReleaseShaderCompiler.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec releaseShaderCompiler() -> 'ok'.
releaseShaderCompiler() ->
cast(5769, <<>>).
@@ -15555,17 +7469,7 @@ releaseShaderCompiler() ->
%% bytes of binary shader code stored in client memory. `BinaryFormat' specifies the
%% format of the pre-compiled code.
%%
-%% The binary image contained in `Binary' will be decoded according to the extension
-%% specification defining the specified `BinaryFormat' token. OpenGL does not define
-%% any specific binary formats, but it does provide a mechanism to obtain token vaues for
-%% such formats provided by such extensions.
-%%
-%% Depending on the types of the shader objects in `Shaders' , ``gl:shaderBinary''
-%% will individually load binary vertex or fragment shaders, or load an executable binary
-%% that contains an optimized pair of vertex and fragment shaders stored in the same binary.
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glShaderBinary.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glShaderBinary.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec shaderBinary(Shaders, Binaryformat, Binary) -> 'ok' when Shaders :: [integer()],Binaryformat :: enum(),Binary :: binary().
shaderBinary(Shaders,Binaryformat,Binary) ->
ShadersLen = length(Shaders),
@@ -15583,17 +7487,7 @@ shaderBinary(Shaders,Binaryformat,Binary) ->
%% `?GL_HIGH_FLOAT', `?GL_LOW_INT', `?GL_MEDIUM_INT', or `?GL_HIGH_INT'.
%%
%%
-%% `Range' points to an array of two integers into which the format's numeric range
-%% will be returned. If min and max are the smallest values representable in the format,
-%% then the values returned are defined to be: `Range' [0] = floor(log2(|min|)) and `Range'
-%% [1] = floor(log2(|max|)).
-%%
-%% `Precision' specifies the address of an integer into which will be written the log2
-%% value of the number of bits of precision of the format. If the smallest representable
-%% value greater than 1 is 1 + `eps', then the integer addressed by `Precision'
-%% will contain floor(-log2(eps)).
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetShaderPrecisionFormat.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetShaderPrecisionFormat.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getShaderPrecisionFormat(Shadertype, Precisiontype) -> {Range :: {integer(),integer()},Precision :: integer()} when Shadertype :: enum(),Precisiontype :: enum().
getShaderPrecisionFormat(Shadertype,Precisiontype) ->
call(5771, <<Shadertype:?GLenum,Precisiontype:?GLenum>>).
@@ -15606,7 +7500,7 @@ depthRangef(N,F) ->
%% @doc glClearDepthf
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glClearDepthf.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec clearDepthf(D) -> 'ok' when D :: clamp().
clearDepthf(D) ->
cast(5773, <<D:?GLclampf>>).
@@ -15621,13 +7515,7 @@ clearDepthf(D) ->
%% in the variable whose address is given by `Length' . If `Length' is `?NULL',
%% then no length is returned.
%%
-%% The format of the program binary written into `Binary' is returned in the variable
-%% whose address is given by `BinaryFormat' , and may be implementation dependent. The
-%% binary produced by the GL may subsequently be returned to the GL by calling {@link gl:programBinary/3}
-%% , with `BinaryFormat' and `Length' set to the values returned by ``gl:getProgramBinary''
-%% , and passing the returned binary data in the `Binary' parameter.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgramBinary.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetProgramBinary.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramBinary(Program, BufSize) -> {BinaryFormat :: enum(),Binary :: binary()} when Program :: integer(),BufSize :: integer().
getProgramBinary(Program,BufSize) ->
call(5774, <<Program:?GLuint,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -15642,19 +7530,7 @@ getProgramBinary(Program,BufSize) ->
%% are not met, loading the program binary will fail and `Program' 's `?GL_LINK_STATUS'
%% will be set to `?GL_FALSE'.
%%
-%% A program object's program binary is replaced by calls to {@link gl:linkProgram/1} or ``gl:programBinary''
-%% . When linking success or failure is concerned, ``gl:programBinary'' can be considered
-%% to perform an implicit linking operation. {@link gl:linkProgram/1} and ``gl:programBinary''
-%% both set the program object's `?GL_LINK_STATUS' to `?GL_TRUE' or `?GL_FALSE'
-%% .
-%%
-%% A successful call to ``gl:programBinary'' will reset all uniform variables to their
-%% initial values. The initial value is either the value of the variable's initializer as
-%% specified in the original shader source, or zero if no initializer was present. Additionally,
-%% all vertex shader input and fragment shader output assignments that were in effect when
-%% the program was linked before saving are restored with ``gl:programBinary'' is called.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramBinary.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glProgramBinary.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec programBinary(Program, BinaryFormat, Binary) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),BinaryFormat :: enum(),Binary :: binary().
programBinary(Program,BinaryFormat,Binary) ->
send_bin(Binary),
@@ -15665,22 +7541,7 @@ programBinary(Program,BinaryFormat,Binary) ->
%% ``gl:programParameter'' specifies a new value for the parameter nameed by `Pname'
%% for the program object `Program' .
%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_PROGRAM_BINARY_RETRIEVABLE_HINT', `Value' should be `?GL_FALSE'
-%% or `?GL_TRUE' to indicate to the implementation the intention of the application
-%% to retrieve the program's binary representation with {@link gl:getProgramBinary/2} . The
-%% implementation may use this information to store information that may be useful for a
-%% future query of the program's binary. It is recommended to set `?GL_PROGRAM_BINARY_RETRIEVABLE_HINT'
-%% for the program to `?GL_TRUE' before calling {@link gl:linkProgram/1} , and using
-%% the program at run-time if the binary is to be retrieved later.
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_PROGRAM_SEPARABLE', `Value' must be `?GL_TRUE'
-%% or `?GL_FALSE' and indicates whether `Program' can be bound to individual pipeline
-%% stages via {@link gl:useProgramStages/3} . A program's `?GL_PROGRAM_SEPARABLE' parameter
-%% must be set to `?GL_TRUE'`before' {@link gl:linkProgram/1} is called in order
-%% for it to be usable with a program pipeline object. The initial state of `?GL_PROGRAM_SEPARABLE'
-%% is `?GL_FALSE'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramParameter.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glProgramParameter.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec programParameteri(Program, Pname, Value) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),Pname :: enum(),Value :: integer().
programParameteri(Program,Pname,Value) ->
cast(5776, <<Program:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum,Value:?GLint>>).
@@ -15697,15 +7558,7 @@ programParameteri(Program,Pname,Value) ->
%% special value `?GL_ALL_SHADER_BITS' may be specified to indicate that all executables
%% contained in `Program' should be installed in `Pipeline' .
%%
-%% If `Program' refers to a program object with a valid shader attached for an indicated
-%% shader stage, ``gl:useProgramStages'' installs the executable code for that stage in
-%% the indicated program pipeline object `Pipeline' . If `Program' is zero, or refers
-%% to a program object with no valid shader executable for a given stage, it is as if the
-%% pipeline object has no programmable stage configured for the indicated shader stages. If `Stages'
-%% contains bits other than those listed above, and is not equal to `?GL_ALL_SHADER_BITS'
-%% , an error is generated.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glUseProgramStages.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glUseProgramStages.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec useProgramStages(Pipeline, Stages, Program) -> 'ok' when Pipeline :: integer(),Stages :: integer(),Program :: integer().
useProgramStages(Pipeline,Stages,Program) ->
cast(5777, <<Pipeline:?GLuint,Stages:?GLbitfield,Program:?GLuint>>).
@@ -15717,14 +7570,14 @@ useProgramStages(Pipeline,Stages,Program) ->
%% the active program pipeline object is the target of calls to {@link gl:uniform1f/2} when
%% no program has been made current through a call to {@link gl:useProgram/1} .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glActiveShaderProgram.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glActiveShaderProgram.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec activeShaderProgram(Pipeline, Program) -> 'ok' when Pipeline :: integer(),Program :: integer().
activeShaderProgram(Pipeline,Program) ->
cast(5778, <<Pipeline:?GLuint,Program:?GLuint>>).
%% @doc glCreateShaderProgramv
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glCreateShaderProgramv.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec createShaderProgramv(Type, Strings) -> integer() when Type :: enum(),Strings :: iolist().
createShaderProgramv(Type,Strings) ->
StringsTemp = list_to_binary([[Str|[0]] || Str <- Strings ]),
@@ -15738,17 +7591,7 @@ createShaderProgramv(Type,Strings) ->
%% no program pipeline exists with name `Pipeline' then a new pipeline object is created
%% with that name and initialized to the default state vector.
%%
-%% When a program pipeline object is bound using ``gl:bindProgramPipeline'', any previous
-%% binding is broken and is replaced with a binding to the specified pipeline object. If `Pipeline'
-%% is zero, the previous binding is broken and is not replaced, leaving no pipeline object
-%% bound. If no current program object has been established by {@link gl:useProgram/1} , the
-%% program objects used for each stage and for uniform updates are taken from the bound program
-%% pipeline object, if any. If there is a current program object established by {@link gl:useProgram/1}
-%% , the bound program pipeline object has no effect on rendering or uniform updates. When
-%% a bound program pipeline object is used for rendering, individual shader executables are
-%% taken from its program objects.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindProgramPipeline.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindProgramPipeline.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindProgramPipeline(Pipeline) -> 'ok' when Pipeline :: integer().
bindProgramPipeline(Pipeline) ->
cast(5780, <<Pipeline:?GLuint>>).
@@ -15762,7 +7605,7 @@ bindProgramPipeline(Pipeline) ->
%% the binding for that object reverts to zero and no program pipeline object becomes current.
%%
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDeleteProgramPipelines.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDeleteProgramPipelines.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteProgramPipelines(Pipelines) -> 'ok' when Pipelines :: [integer()].
deleteProgramPipelines(Pipelines) ->
PipelinesLen = length(Pipelines),
@@ -15775,7 +7618,7 @@ deleteProgramPipelines(Pipelines) ->
%% names in `Pipelines' . These names are marked as used, for the purposes of ``gl:genProgramPipelines''
%% only, but they acquire program pipeline state only when they are first bound.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGenProgramPipelines.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGenProgramPipelines.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec genProgramPipelines(N) -> [integer()] when N :: integer().
genProgramPipelines(N) ->
call(5782, <<N:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -15790,7 +7633,7 @@ genProgramPipelines(N) ->
%% the name is not a program pipeline object and ``gl:isProgramPipeline'' returns `?GL_FALSE'
%% .
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glIsProgramPipeline.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glIsProgramPipeline.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec isProgramPipeline(Pipeline) -> 0|1 when Pipeline :: integer().
isProgramPipeline(Pipeline) ->
call(5783, <<Pipeline:?GLuint>>).
@@ -15802,33 +7645,7 @@ isProgramPipeline(Pipeline) ->
%% retrieve. The value of the parameter is written to the variable whose address is given
%% by `Params' .
%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_ACTIVE_PROGRAM', the name of the active program object of
-%% the program pipeline object is returned in `Params' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_VERTEX_SHADER', the name of the current program object for
-%% the vertex shader type of the program pipeline object is returned in `Params' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_TESS_CONTROL_SHADER', the name of the current program object
-%% for the tessellation control shader type of the program pipeline object is returned in `Params'
-%% .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_TESS_EVALUATION_SHADER', the name of the current program
-%% object for the tessellation evaluation shader type of the program pipeline object is returned
-%% in `Params' .
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_GEOMETRY_SHADER', the name of the current program object
-%% for the geometry shader type of the program pipeline object is returned in `Params' .
-%%
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER', the name of the current program object
-%% for the fragment shader type of the program pipeline object is returned in `Params' .
-%%
-%%
-%% If `Pname' is `?GL_INFO_LOG_LENGTH', the length of the info log, including
-%% the null terminator, is returned in `Params' . If there is no info log, zero is returned.
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgramPipeline.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetProgramPipeline.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramPipelineiv(Pipeline, Pname) -> integer() when Pipeline :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getProgramPipelineiv(Pipeline,Pname) ->
call(5784, <<Pipeline:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
@@ -15840,62 +7657,7 @@ getProgramPipelineiv(Pipeline,Pname) ->
%% which should be a value returned by {@link gl:getUniformLocation/2} . ``gl:programUniform''
%% operates on the program object specified by `Program' .
%%
-%% The commands ``gl:programUniform{1|2|3|4}{f|i|ui}'' are used to change the value of
-%% the uniform variable specified by `Location' using the values passed as arguments.
-%% The number specified in the command should match the number of components in the data
-%% type of the specified uniform variable (e.g., `1' for float, int, unsigned int, bool;
-%% `2' for vec2, ivec2, uvec2, bvec2, etc.). The suffix `f' indicates that floating-point
-%% values are being passed; the suffix `i' indicates that integer values are being passed;
-%% the suffix `ui' indicates that unsigned integer values are being passed, and this
-%% type should also match the data type of the specified uniform variable. The `i' variants
-%% of this function should be used to provide values for uniform variables defined as int, ivec2
-%% , ivec3, ivec4, or arrays of these. The `ui' variants of this function should be
-%% used to provide values for uniform variables defined as unsigned int, uvec2, uvec3, uvec4,
-%% or arrays of these. The `f' variants should be used to provide values for uniform
-%% variables of type float, vec2, vec3, vec4, or arrays of these. Either the `i', `ui'
-%% or `f' variants may be used to provide values for uniform variables of type bool, bvec2
-%% , bvec3, bvec4, or arrays of these. The uniform variable will be set to false if the input
-%% value is 0 or 0.0f, and it will be set to true otherwise.
-%%
-%% All active uniform variables defined in a program object are initialized to 0 when the
-%% program object is linked successfully. They retain the values assigned to them by a call
-%% to ``gl:programUniform'' until the next successful link operation occurs on the program
-%% object, when they are once again initialized to 0.
-%%
-%% The commands ``gl:programUniform{1|2|3|4}{f|i|ui}v'' can be used to modify a single
-%% uniform variable or a uniform variable array. These commands pass a count and a pointer
-%% to the values to be loaded into a uniform variable or a uniform variable array. A count
-%% of 1 should be used if modifying the value of a single uniform variable, and a count of
-%% 1 or greater can be used to modify an entire array or part of an array. When loading `n'
-%% elements starting at an arbitrary position `m' in a uniform variable array, elements
-%% `m' + `n' - 1 in the array will be replaced with the new values. If `M' + `N'
-%% - 1 is larger than the size of the uniform variable array, values for all array elements
-%% beyond the end of the array will be ignored. The number specified in the name of the command
-%% indicates the number of components for each element in `Value' , and it should match
-%% the number of components in the data type of the specified uniform variable (e.g., `1'
-%% for float, int, bool; `2' for vec2, ivec2, bvec2, etc.). The data type specified
-%% in the name of the command must match the data type for the specified uniform variable
-%% as described previously for ``gl:programUniform{1|2|3|4}{f|i|ui}''.
-%%
-%% For uniform variable arrays, each element of the array is considered to be of the type
-%% indicated in the name of the command (e.g., ``gl:programUniform3f'' or ``gl:programUniform3fv''
-%% can be used to load a uniform variable array of type vec3). The number of elements of
-%% the uniform variable array to be modified is specified by `Count'
-%%
-%% The commands ``gl:programUniformMatrix{2|3|4|2x3|3x2|2x4|4x2|3x4|4x3}fv'' are used
-%% to modify a matrix or an array of matrices. The numbers in the command name are interpreted
-%% as the dimensionality of the matrix. The number `2' indicates a 2 × 2 matrix (i.e.,
-%% 4 values), the number `3' indicates a 3 × 3 matrix (i.e., 9 values), and the number `4'
-%% indicates a 4 × 4 matrix (i.e., 16 values). Non-square matrix dimensionality is explicit,
-%% with the first number representing the number of columns and the second number representing
-%% the number of rows. For example, `2x4' indicates a 2 × 4 matrix with 2 columns and
-%% 4 rows (i.e., 8 values). If `Transpose' is `?GL_FALSE', each matrix is assumed
-%% to be supplied in column major order. If `Transpose' is `?GL_TRUE', each matrix
-%% is assumed to be supplied in row major order. The `Count' argument indicates the
-%% number of matrices to be passed. A count of 1 should be used if modifying the value of
-%% a single matrix, and a count greater than 1 can be used to modify an array of matrices.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glProgramUniform.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glProgramUniform.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec programUniform1i(Program, Location, V0) -> 'ok' when Program :: integer(),Location :: integer(),V0 :: integer().
programUniform1i(Program,Location,V0) ->
cast(5785, <<Program:?GLuint,Location:?GLint,V0:?GLint>>).
@@ -16269,15 +8031,7 @@ programUniformMatrix4x3dv(Program,Location,Transpose,Value) ->
%% this as an opportunity to perform any internal shader modifications that may be required
%% to ensure correct operation of the installed shaders given the current GL state.
%%
-%% After a program pipeline has been validated, its validation status is set to `?GL_TRUE'
-%% . The validation status of a program pipeline object may be queried by calling {@link gl:getProgramPipelineiv/2}
-%% with parameter `?GL_VALIDATE_STATUS'.
-%%
-%% If `Pipeline' is a name previously returned from a call to {@link gl:genProgramPipelines/1}
-%% but that has not yet been bound by a call to {@link gl:bindProgramPipeline/1} , a new program
-%% pipeline object is created with name `Pipeline' and the default state vector.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glValidateProgramPipeline.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glValidateProgramPipeline.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec validateProgramPipeline(Pipeline) -> 'ok' when Pipeline :: integer().
validateProgramPipeline(Pipeline) ->
cast(5835, <<Pipeline:?GLuint>>).
@@ -16291,38 +8045,35 @@ validateProgramPipeline(Pipeline) ->
%% of characters written into `InfoLog' is returned in the integer whose address is
%% given by `Length' . If `Length' is `?NULL', no length is returned.
%%
-%% The actual length of the info log for the program pipeline may be determined by calling {@link gl:getProgramPipelineiv/2}
-%% with `Pname' set to `?GL_INFO_LOG_LENGTH'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetProgramPipelineInfoLog.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glGetProgramPipelineInfoLog.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getProgramPipelineInfoLog(Pipeline, BufSize) -> string() when Pipeline :: integer(),BufSize :: integer().
getProgramPipelineInfoLog(Pipeline,BufSize) ->
call(5836, <<Pipeline:?GLuint,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glVertexAttribL
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexAttribL.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexAttribL1d(Index, X) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),X :: float().
vertexAttribL1d(Index,X) ->
cast(5837, <<Index:?GLuint,0:32,X:?GLdouble>>).
%% @doc glVertexAttribL
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexAttribL.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexAttribL2d(Index, X, Y) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),X :: float(),Y :: float().
vertexAttribL2d(Index,X,Y) ->
cast(5838, <<Index:?GLuint,0:32,X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble>>).
%% @doc glVertexAttribL
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexAttribL.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexAttribL3d(Index, X, Y, Z) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),X :: float(),Y :: float(),Z :: float().
vertexAttribL3d(Index,X,Y,Z) ->
cast(5839, <<Index:?GLuint,0:32,X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble,Z:?GLdouble>>).
%% @doc glVertexAttribL
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexAttribL.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexAttribL4d(Index, X, Y, Z, W) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),X :: float(),Y :: float(),Z :: float(),W :: float().
vertexAttribL4d(Index,X,Y,Z,W) ->
cast(5840, <<Index:?GLuint,0:32,X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble,Z:?GLdouble,W:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -16345,7 +8096,7 @@ vertexAttribL4dv(Index,{X,Y,Z,W}) -> vertexAttribL4d(Index,X,Y,Z,W).
%% @doc glVertexAttribLPointer
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glVertexAttribLPointer.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec vertexAttribLPointer(Index, Size, Type, Stride, Pointer) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),Size :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Stride :: integer(),Pointer :: offset()|mem().
vertexAttribLPointer(Index,Size,Type,Stride,Pointer) when is_integer(Pointer) ->
cast(5841, <<Index:?GLuint,Size:?GLint,Type:?GLenum,Stride:?GLsizei,Pointer:?GLuint>>);
@@ -16355,14 +8106,14 @@ vertexAttribLPointer(Index,Size,Type,Stride,Pointer) ->
%% @doc glGetVertexAttribL
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetVertexAttribL.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getVertexAttribLdv(Index, Pname) -> {float(),float(),float(),float()} when Index :: integer(),Pname :: enum().
getVertexAttribLdv(Index,Pname) ->
call(5843, <<Index:?GLuint,Pname:?GLenum>>).
%% @doc glViewportArrayv
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glViewportArrayv.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec viewportArrayv(First, V) -> 'ok' when First :: integer(),V :: [{float(),float(),float(),float()}].
viewportArrayv(First,V) ->
VLen = length(V),
@@ -16383,27 +8134,7 @@ viewportArrayv(First,V) ->
%% coordinates to window coordinates. Let (x nd y nd) be normalized device coordinates. Then the window
%% coordinates (x w y w) are computed as follows:
%%
-%% x w=(x nd+1) (width/2)+x
-%%
-%% y w=(y nd+1) (height/2)+y
-%%
-%% The location of the viewport's bottom left corner, given by ( x, y) is clamped to be
-%% within the implementaiton-dependent viewport bounds range. The viewport bounds range [
-%% min, max] can be determined by calling {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with argument `?GL_VIEWPORT_BOUNDS_RANGE'
-%% . Viewport width and height are silently clamped to a range that depends on the implementation.
-%% To query this range, call {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with argument `?GL_MAX_VIEWPORT_DIMS'.
-%%
-%% The precision with which the GL interprets the floating point viewport bounds is implementation-dependent
-%% and may be determined by querying the impementation-defined constant `?GL_VIEWPORT_SUBPIXEL_BITS'
-%% .
-%%
-%% Calling ``gl:viewportIndexedfv'' is equivalent to calling see `glViewportArray'
-%% with `First' set to `Index' , `Count' set to 1 and `V' passsed directly.
-%% ``gl:viewportIndexedf'' is equivalent to: void glViewportIndexedf(GLuint index, GLfloat
-%% x, GLfloat y, GLfloat w, GLfloat h) { const float v[4] = { x, y, w, h }; glViewportArrayv(index,
-%% 1, v); }
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glViewportIndexed.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glViewportIndexed.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec viewportIndexedf(Index, X, Y, W, H) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),X :: float(),Y :: float(),W :: float(),H :: float().
viewportIndexedf(Index,X,Y,W,H) ->
cast(5845, <<Index:?GLuint,X:?GLfloat,Y:?GLfloat,W:?GLfloat,H:?GLfloat>>).
@@ -16416,7 +8147,7 @@ viewportIndexedfv(Index,{V1,V2,V3,V4}) ->
%% @doc glScissorArrayv
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glScissorArrayv.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec scissorArrayv(First, V) -> 'ok' when First :: integer(),V :: [{integer(),integer(),integer(),integer()}].
scissorArrayv(First,V) ->
VLen = length(V),
@@ -16425,21 +8156,21 @@ scissorArrayv(First,V) ->
%% @doc glScissorIndexe
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glScissorIndexe.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec scissorIndexed(Index, Left, Bottom, Width, Height) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),Left :: integer(),Bottom :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer().
scissorIndexed(Index,Left,Bottom,Width,Height) ->
cast(5848, <<Index:?GLuint,Left:?GLint,Bottom:?GLint,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glScissorIndexe
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glScissorIndexe.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec scissorIndexedv(Index, V) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),V :: {integer(),integer(),integer(),integer()}.
scissorIndexedv(Index,{V1,V2,V3,V4}) ->
cast(5849, <<Index:?GLuint,V1:?GLint,V2:?GLint,V3:?GLint,V4:?GLint>>).
%% @doc glDepthRangeArrayv
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDepthRangeArrayv.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec depthRangeArrayv(First, V) -> 'ok' when First :: integer(),V :: [{clamp(),clamp()}].
depthRangeArrayv(First,V) ->
VLen = length(V),
@@ -16448,7 +8179,7 @@ depthRangeArrayv(First,V) ->
%% @doc glDepthRangeIndexe
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDepthRangeIndexe.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec depthRangeIndexed(Index, N, F) -> 'ok' when Index :: integer(),N :: clamp(),F :: clamp().
depthRangeIndexed(Index,N,F) ->
cast(5851, <<Index:?GLuint,0:32,N:?GLclampd,F:?GLclampd>>).
@@ -16467,7 +8198,7 @@ getDoublei_v(Target,Index) ->
%% @doc glDebugMessageControlARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDebugMessageControlARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec debugMessageControlARB(Source, Type, Severity, Ids, Enabled) -> 'ok' when Source :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Severity :: enum(),Ids :: [integer()],Enabled :: 0|1.
debugMessageControlARB(Source,Type,Severity,Ids,Enabled) ->
IdsLen = length(Ids),
@@ -16476,7 +8207,7 @@ debugMessageControlARB(Source,Type,Severity,Ids,Enabled) ->
%% @doc glDebugMessageInsertARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDebugMessageInsertARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec debugMessageInsertARB(Source, Type, Id, Severity, Buf) -> 'ok' when Source :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Id :: integer(),Severity :: enum(),Buf :: string().
debugMessageInsertARB(Source,Type,Id,Severity,Buf) ->
BufLen = length(Buf),
@@ -16484,14 +8215,14 @@ debugMessageInsertARB(Source,Type,Id,Severity,Buf) ->
%% @doc glGetDebugMessageLogARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetDebugMessageLogARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getDebugMessageLogARB(Count, Bufsize) -> {integer(),Sources :: [enum()],Types :: [enum()],Ids :: [integer()],Severities :: [enum()],MessageLog :: [string()]} when Count :: integer(),Bufsize :: integer().
getDebugMessageLogARB(Count,Bufsize) ->
call(5856, <<Count:?GLuint,Bufsize:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glGetGraphicsResetStatusARB
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetGraphicsResetStatusARB.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getGraphicsResetStatusARB() -> enum().
getGraphicsResetStatusARB() ->
call(5857, <<>>).
@@ -16504,17 +8235,7 @@ getGraphicsResetStatusARB() ->
%% is an internal 32-bit integer counter that may be read by a vertex shader as `?gl_InstanceID'
%% .
%%
-%% ``gl:drawArraysInstancedBaseInstance'' has the same effect as: if ( mode or count is
-%% invalid ) generate appropriate error else { for (int i = 0; i &lt; primcount ; i++) {
-%% instanceID = i; glDrawArrays(mode, first, count); } instanceID = 0; }
-%%
-%% Specific vertex attributes may be classified as `instanced' through the use of {@link gl:vertexAttribDivisor/2}
-%% . Instanced vertex attributes supply per-instance vertex data to the vertex shader. The
-%% index of the vertex fetched from the enabled instanced vertex attribute arrays is calculated
-%% as: |gl_ InstanceID/divisor|&amp;plus; baseInstance. Note that `Baseinstance' does not affect the shader-visible
-%% value of `?gl_InstanceID'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawArraysInstancedBaseInstance.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawArraysInstancedBaseInstance.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawArraysInstancedBaseInstance(Mode, First, Count, Primcount, Baseinstance) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),First :: integer(),Count :: integer(),Primcount :: integer(),Baseinstance :: integer().
drawArraysInstancedBaseInstance(Mode,First,Count,Primcount,Baseinstance) ->
cast(5858, <<Mode:?GLenum,First:?GLint,Count:?GLsizei,Primcount:?GLsizei,Baseinstance:?GLuint>>).
@@ -16527,17 +8248,7 @@ drawArraysInstancedBaseInstance(Mode,First,Count,Primcount,Baseinstance) ->
%% is an internal 32-bit integer counter that may be read by a vertex shader as `?gl_InstanceID'
%% .
%%
-%% ``gl:drawElementsInstancedBaseInstance'' has the same effect as: if (mode, count, or
-%% type is invalid ) generate appropriate error else { for (int i = 0; i &lt; primcount ;
-%% i++) { instanceID = i; glDrawElements(mode, count, type, indices); } instanceID = 0; }
-%%
-%% Specific vertex attributes may be classified as `instanced' through the use of {@link gl:vertexAttribDivisor/2}
-%% . Instanced vertex attributes supply per-instance vertex data to the vertex shader. The
-%% index of the vertex fetched from the enabled instanced vertex attribute arrays is calculated
-%% as |gl_ InstanceID/divisor|&amp;plus; baseInstance. Note that `Baseinstance' does not affect the shader-visible
-%% value of `?gl_InstanceID'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawElementsInstancedBaseInstance.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawElementsInstancedBaseInstance.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawElementsInstancedBaseInstance(Mode, Count, Type, Indices, Primcount, Baseinstance) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Count :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Indices :: offset()|mem(),Primcount :: integer(),Baseinstance :: integer().
drawElementsInstancedBaseInstance(Mode,Count,Type,Indices,Primcount,Baseinstance) when is_integer(Indices) ->
cast(5859, <<Mode:?GLenum,Count:?GLsizei,Type:?GLenum,Indices:?GLuint,Primcount:?GLsizei,Baseinstance:?GLuint>>);
@@ -16555,13 +8266,7 @@ drawElementsInstancedBaseInstance(Mode,Count,Type,Indices,Primcount,Baseinstance
%% conditions). The operation is undefined if the sum would be negative. The `Basevertex'
%% has no effect on the shader-visible value of `?gl_VertexID'.
%%
-%% Specific vertex attributes may be classified as `instanced' through the use of {@link gl:vertexAttribDivisor/2}
-%% . Instanced vertex attributes supply per-instance vertex data to the vertex shader. The
-%% index of the vertex fetched from the enabled instanced vertex attribute arrays is calculated
-%% as |gl_ InstanceID/divisor|&amp;plus; baseInstance. Note that `Baseinstance' does not affect the shader-visible
-%% value of `?gl_InstanceID'.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawElementsInstancedBaseVertexBaseInstance.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glDrawElementsInstancedBaseVertexBaseInstance.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawElementsInstancedBaseVertexBaseInstance(Mode, Count, Type, Indices, Primcount, Basevertex, Baseinstance) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Count :: integer(),Type :: enum(),Indices :: offset()|mem(),Primcount :: integer(),Basevertex :: integer(),Baseinstance :: integer().
drawElementsInstancedBaseVertexBaseInstance(Mode,Count,Type,Indices,Primcount,Basevertex,Baseinstance) when is_integer(Indices) ->
cast(5861, <<Mode:?GLenum,Count:?GLsizei,Type:?GLenum,Indices:?GLuint,Primcount:?GLsizei,Basevertex:?GLint,Baseinstance:?GLuint>>);
@@ -16571,21 +8276,21 @@ drawElementsInstancedBaseVertexBaseInstance(Mode,Count,Type,Indices,Primcount,Ba
%% @doc glDrawTransformFeedbackInstance
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawTransformFeedbackInstance.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawTransformFeedbackInstanced(Mode, Id, Primcount) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Id :: integer(),Primcount :: integer().
drawTransformFeedbackInstanced(Mode,Id,Primcount) ->
cast(5863, <<Mode:?GLenum,Id:?GLuint,Primcount:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glDrawTransformFeedbackStreamInstance
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDrawTransformFeedbackStreamInstance.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec drawTransformFeedbackStreamInstanced(Mode, Id, Stream, Primcount) -> 'ok' when Mode :: enum(),Id :: integer(),Stream :: integer(),Primcount :: integer().
drawTransformFeedbackStreamInstanced(Mode,Id,Stream,Primcount) ->
cast(5864, <<Mode:?GLenum,Id:?GLuint,Stream:?GLuint,Primcount:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glGetInternalformat
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glGetInternalformat.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec getInternalformativ(Target, Internalformat, Pname, BufSize) -> [integer()] when Target :: enum(),Internalformat :: enum(),Pname :: enum(),BufSize :: integer().
getInternalformativ(Target,Internalformat,Pname,BufSize) ->
call(5865, <<Target:?GLenum,Internalformat:?GLenum,Pname:?GLenum,BufSize:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -16599,55 +8304,7 @@ getInternalformativ(Target,Internalformat,Pname,BufSize) ->
%% any existing binding to the image unit is broken. `Level' specifies the level of
%% the texture to bind to the image unit.
%%
-%% If `Texture' is the name of a one-, two-, or three-dimensional array texture, a
-%% cube map or cube map array texture, or a two-dimensional multisample array texture, then
-%% it is possible to bind either the entire array, or only a single layer of the array to
-%% the image unit. In such cases, if `Layered' is `?GL_TRUE', the entire array
-%% is attached to the image unit and `Layer' is ignored. However, if `Layered' is `?GL_FALSE'
-%% then `Layer' specifies the layer of the array to attach to the image unit.
-%%
-%% `Access' specifies the access types to be performed by shaders and may be set to `?GL_READ_ONLY'
-%% , `?GL_WRITE_ONLY', or `?GL_READ_WRITE' to indicate read-only, write-only or
-%% read-write access, respectively. Violation of the access type specified in `Access'
-%% (for example, if a shader writes to an image bound with `Access' set to `?GL_READ_ONLY'
-%% ) will lead to undefined results, possibly including program termination.
-%%
-%% `Format' specifies the format that is to be used when performing formatted stores
-%% into the image from shaders. `Format' must be compatible with the texture's internal
-%% format and must be one of the formats listed in the following table.
-%%
-%% <table><tbody><tr><td>` Image Unit Format '</td><td>` Format Qualifier '</td></tr>
-%% </tbody><tbody><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA32F'</td><td>rgba32f</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA16F'
-%% </td><td>rgba16f</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG32F'</td><td>rg32f</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG16F'
-%% </td><td>rg16f</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R11F_G11F_B10F'</td><td>r11f_g11f_b10f</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_R32F'</td><td>r32f</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R16F'</td><td>r16f</td></tr>
-%% <tr><td>`?GL_RGBA32UI'</td><td>rgba32ui</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA16UI'</td><td>
-%% rgba16ui</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB10_A2UI'</td><td>rgb10_a2ui</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA8UI'
-%% </td><td>rgba8ui</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG32UI'</td><td>rg32ui</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG16UI'
-%% </td><td>rg16ui</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG8UI'</td><td>rg8ui</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R32UI'
-%% </td><td>r32ui</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R16UI'</td><td>r16ui</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R8UI'
-%% </td><td>r8ui</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA32I'</td><td>rgba32i</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA16I'
-%% </td><td>rgba16i</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA8I'</td><td>rgba8i</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG32I'
-%% </td><td>rg32i</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG16I'</td><td>rg16i</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG8I'
-%% </td><td>rg8i</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R32I'</td><td>r32i</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R16I'
-%% </td><td>r16i</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R8I'</td><td>r8i</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA16'
-%% </td><td>rgba16</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGB10_A2'</td><td>rgb10_a2</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA8'
-%% </td><td>rgba8</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG16'</td><td>rg16</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG8'
-%% </td><td>rg8</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R16'</td><td>r16</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R8'</td>
-%% <td>r8</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA16_SNORM'</td><td>rgba16_snorm</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RGBA8_SNORM'
-%% </td><td>rgba8_snorm</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_RG16_SNORM'</td><td>rg16_snorm</td></tr><tr>
-%% <td>`?GL_RG8_SNORM'</td><td>rg8_snorm</td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R16_SNORM'</td><td>r16_snorm
-%% </td></tr><tr><td>`?GL_R8_SNORM'</td><td>r8_snorm</td></tr></tbody></table>
-%%
-%% When a texture is bound to an image unit, the `Format' parameter for the image unit
-%% need not exactly match the texture internal format as long as the formats are considered
-%% compatible as defined in the OpenGL Specification. The matching criterion used for a given
-%% texture may be determined by calling {@link gl:getTexParameterfv/2} with `Value' set
-%% to `?GL_IMAGE_FORMAT_COMPATIBILITY_TYPE', with return values of `?GL_IMAGE_FORMAT_COMPATIBILITY_BY_SIZE'
-%% and `?GL_IMAGE_FORMAT_COMPATIBILITY_BY_CLASS', specifying matches by size and class,
-%% respectively.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glBindImageTexture.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glBindImageTexture.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec bindImageTexture(Unit, Texture, Level, Layered, Layer, Access, Format) -> 'ok' when Unit :: integer(),Texture :: integer(),Level :: integer(),Layered :: 0|1,Layer :: integer(),Access :: enum(),Format :: enum().
bindImageTexture(Unit,Texture,Level,Layered,Layer,Access,Format) ->
cast(5866, <<Unit:?GLuint,Texture:?GLuint,Level:?GLint,Layered:?GLboolean,0:24,Layer:?GLint,Access:?GLenum,Format:?GLenum>>).
@@ -16661,120 +8318,7 @@ bindImageTexture(Unit,Texture,Level,Layered,Layer,Access,Format) ->
%% the set of operations that are synchronized with shader stores; the bits used in `Barriers'
%% are as follows:
%%
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_BARRIER_BIT': If set, vertex data sourced from buffer objects
-%% after the barrier will reflect data written by shaders prior to the barrier. The set of
-%% buffer objects affected by this bit is derived from the buffer object bindings used for
-%% generic vertex attributes derived from the `?GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_BUFFER' bindings.
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BARRIER_BIT': If set, vertex array indices sourced from buffer
-%% objects after the barrier will reflect data written by shaders prior to the barrier. The
-%% buffer objects affected by this bit are derived from the `?GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER'
-%% binding.
-%%
-%% `?GL_UNIFORM_BARRIER_BIT': Shader uniforms sourced from buffer objects after the
-%% barrier will reflect data written by shaders prior to the barrier.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_FETCH_BARRIER_BIT': Texture fetches from shaders, including fetches
-%% from buffer object memory via buffer textures, after the barrier will reflect data written
-%% by shaders prior to the barrier.
-%%
-%% `?GL_SHADER_IMAGE_ACCESS_BARRIER_BIT': Memory accesses using shader image load,
-%% store, and atomic built-in functions issued after the barrier will reflect data written
-%% by shaders prior to the barrier. Additionally, image stores and atomics issued after the
-%% barrier will not execute until all memory accesses (e.g., loads, stores, texture fetches,
-%% vertex fetches) initiated prior to the barrier complete.
-%%
-%% `?GL_COMMAND_BARRIER_BIT': Command data sourced from buffer objects by Draw*Indirect
-%% commands after the barrier will reflect data written by shaders prior to the barrier.
-%% The buffer objects affected by this bit are derived from the `?GL_DRAW_INDIRECT_BUFFER'
-%% binding.
-%%
-%% `?GL_PIXEL_BUFFER_BARRIER_BIT': Reads and writes of buffer objects via the `?GL_PIXEL_PACK_BUFFER'
-%% and `?GL_PIXEL_UNPACK_BUFFER' bindings (via {@link gl:readPixels/7} , {@link gl:texSubImage1D/7}
-%% , etc.) after the barrier will reflect data written by shaders prior to the barrier. Additionally,
-%% buffer object writes issued after the barrier will wait on the completion of all shader
-%% writes initiated prior to the barrier.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TEXTURE_UPDATE_BARRIER_BIT': Writes to a texture via ``gl:tex(Sub)Image*'', ``gl:copyTex(Sub)Image*''
-%% , ``gl:compressedTex(Sub)Image*'', and reads via {@link gl:getTexImage/5} after the barrier
-%% will reflect data written by shaders prior to the barrier. Additionally, texture writes
-%% from these commands issued after the barrier will not execute until all shader writes
-%% initiated prior to the barrier complete.
-%%
-%% `?GL_BUFFER_UPDATE_BARRIER_BIT': Reads or writes via {@link gl:bufferSubData/4} , {@link gl:copyBufferSubData/5}
-%% , or {@link gl:getBufferSubData/4} , or to buffer object memory mapped by see `glMapBuffer'
-%% or see `glMapBufferRange' after the barrier will reflect data written by shaders
-%% prior to the barrier. Additionally, writes via these commands issued after the barrier
-%% will wait on the completion of any shader writes to the same memory initiated prior to
-%% the barrier.
-%%
-%% `?GL_FRAMEBUFFER_BARRIER_BIT': Reads and writes via framebuffer object attachments
-%% after the barrier will reflect data written by shaders prior to the barrier. Additionally,
-%% framebuffer writes issued after the barrier will wait on the completion of all shader
-%% writes issued prior to the barrier.
-%%
-%% `?GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BARRIER_BIT': Writes via transform feedback bindings after
-%% the barrier will reflect data written by shaders prior to the barrier. Additionally, transform
-%% feedback writes issued after the barrier will wait on the completion of all shader writes
-%% issued prior to the barrier.
-%%
-%% `?GL_ATOMIC_COUNTER_BARRIER_BIT': Accesses to atomic counters after the barrier
-%% will reflect writes prior to the barrier.
-%%
-%% If `Barriers' is `?GL_ALL_BARRIER_BITS', shader memory accesses will be synchronized
-%% relative to all the operations described above.
-%%
-%% Implementations may cache buffer object and texture image memory that could be written
-%% by shaders in multiple caches; for example, there may be separate caches for texture,
-%% vertex fetching, and one or more caches for shader memory accesses. Implementations are
-%% not required to keep these caches coherent with shader memory writes. Stores issued by
-%% one invocation may not be immediately observable by other pipeline stages or other shader
-%% invocations because the value stored may remain in a cache local to the processor executing
-%% the store, or because data overwritten by the store is still in a cache elsewhere in the
-%% system. When ``gl:memoryBarrier'' is called, the GL flushes and/or invalidates any caches
-%% relevant to the operations specified by the `Barriers' parameter to ensure consistent
-%% ordering of operations across the barrier.
-%%
-%% To allow for independent shader invocations to communicate by reads and writes to a common
-%% memory address, image variables in the OpenGL Shading Language may be declared as "coherent".
-%% Buffer object or texture image memory accessed through such variables may be cached only
-%% if caches are automatically updated due to stores issued by any other shader invocation.
-%% If the same address is accessed using both coherent and non-coherent variables, the accesses
-%% using variables declared as coherent will observe the results stored using coherent variables
-%% in other invocations. Using variables declared as "coherent" guarantees only that the
-%% results of stores will be immediately visible to shader invocations using similarly-declared
-%% variables; calling ``gl:memoryBarrier'' is required to ensure that the stores are visible
-%% to other operations.
-%%
-%% The following guidelines may be helpful in choosing when to use coherent memory accesses
-%% and when to use barriers.
-%%
-%% Data that are read-only or constant may be accessed without using coherent variables or
-%% calling MemoryBarrier(). Updates to the read-only data via API calls such as BufferSubData
-%% will invalidate shader caches implicitly as required.
-%%
-%% Data that are shared between shader invocations at a fine granularity (e.g., written by
-%% one invocation, consumed by another invocation) should use coherent variables to read
-%% and write the shared data.
-%%
-%% Data written by one shader invocation and consumed by other shader invocations launched
-%% as a result of its execution ("dependent invocations") should use coherent variables in
-%% the producing shader invocation and call memoryBarrier() after the last write. The consuming
-%% shader invocation should also use coherent variables.
-%%
-%% Data written to image variables in one rendering pass and read by the shader in a later
-%% pass need not use coherent variables or memoryBarrier(). Calling MemoryBarrier() with
-%% the SHADER_IMAGE_ACCESS_BARRIER_BIT set in `Barriers' between passes is necessary.
-%%
-%% Data written by the shader in one rendering pass and read by another mechanism (e.g.,
-%% vertex or index buffer pulling) in a later pass need not use coherent variables or memoryBarrier().
-%% Calling ``gl:memoryBarrier'' with the appropriate bits set in `Barriers' between
-%% passes is necessary.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glMemoryBarrier.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glMemoryBarrier.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec memoryBarrier(Barriers) -> 'ok' when Barriers :: integer().
memoryBarrier(Barriers) ->
cast(5867, <<Barriers:?GLbitfield>>).
@@ -16787,27 +8331,7 @@ memoryBarrier(Barriers) ->
%% the image may still be modified, however, its storage requirements may not change. Such
%% a texture is referred to as an `immutable-format' texture.
%%
-%% Calling ``gl:texStorage1D'' is equivalent, assuming no errors are generated, to executing
-%% the following pseudo-code: for (i = 0; i &lt; levels; i++) { glTexImage1D(target, i,
-%% internalformat, width, 0, format, type, NULL); width = max(1, (width / 2)); }
-%%
-%% Since no texture data is actually provided, the values used in the pseudo-code for `Format'
-%% and `Type' are irrelevant and may be considered to be any values that are legal
-%% for the chosen `Internalformat' enumerant. `Internalformat' must be one of the
-%% sized internal formats given in Table 1 below, one of the sized depth-component formats `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT32F'
-%% , `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT24', or `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT16', or one of the combined
-%% depth-stencil formats, `?GL_DEPTH32F_STENCIL8', or `?GL_DEPTH24_STENCIL8'. Upon
-%% success, the value of `?GL_TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT' becomes `?GL_TRUE'. The
-%% value of `?GL_TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT' may be discovered by calling {@link gl:getTexParameterfv/2}
-%% with `Pname' set to `?GL_TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT'. No further changes to the
-%% dimensions or format of the texture object may be made. Using any command that might alter
-%% the dimensions or format of the texture object (such as {@link gl:texImage1D/8} or another
-%% call to ``gl:texStorage1D'') will result in the generation of a `?GL_INVALID_OPERATION'
-%% error, even if it would not, in fact, alter the dimensions or format of the object.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexStorage1D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTexStorage1D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texStorage1D(Target, Levels, Internalformat, Width) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Levels :: integer(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer().
texStorage1D(Target,Levels,Internalformat,Width) ->
cast(5868, <<Target:?GLenum,Levels:?GLsizei,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -16820,39 +8344,7 @@ texStorage1D(Target,Levels,Internalformat,Width) ->
%% proxy texture. The contents of the image may still be modified, however, its storage requirements
%% may not change. Such a texture is referred to as an `immutable-format' texture.
%%
-%% The behavior of ``gl:texStorage2D'' depends on the `Target' parameter. When `Target'
-%% is `?GL_TEXTURE_2D', `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_2D', `?GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE', `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE'
-%% or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP', calling ``gl:texStorage2D'' is equivalent, assuming
-%% no errors are generated, to executing the following pseudo-code: for (i = 0; i &lt; levels;
-%% i++) { glTexImage2D(target, i, internalformat, width, height, 0, format, type, NULL);
-%% width = max(1, (width / 2)); height = max(1, (height / 2)); }
-%%
-%% When `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP', ``gl:texStorage2D'' is equivalent
-%% to: for (i = 0; i &lt; levels; i++) { for (face in (+X, -X, +Y, -Y, +Z, -Z)) { glTexImage2D(face,
-%% i, internalformat, width, height, 0, format, type, NULL); } width = max(1, (width / 2));
-%% height = max(1, (height / 2)); }
-%%
-%% When `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_1D' or `?GL_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY', ``gl:texStorage2D''
-%% is equivalent to: for (i = 0; i &lt; levels; i++) { glTexImage2D(target, i, internalformat,
-%% width, height, 0, format, type, NULL); width = max(1, (width / 2)); }
-%%
-%% Since no texture data is actually provided, the values used in the pseudo-code for `Format'
-%% and `Type' are irrelevant and may be considered to be any values that are legal
-%% for the chosen `Internalformat' enumerant. `Internalformat' must be one of the
-%% sized internal formats given in Table 1 below, one of the sized depth-component formats `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT32F'
-%% , `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT24', or `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT16', or one of the combined
-%% depth-stencil formats, `?GL_DEPTH32F_STENCIL8', or `?GL_DEPTH24_STENCIL8'. Upon
-%% success, the value of `?GL_TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT' becomes `?GL_TRUE'. The
-%% value of `?GL_TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT' may be discovered by calling {@link gl:getTexParameterfv/2}
-%% with `Pname' set to `?GL_TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT'. No further changes to the
-%% dimensions or format of the texture object may be made. Using any command that might alter
-%% the dimensions or format of the texture object (such as {@link gl:texImage2D/9} or another
-%% call to ``gl:texStorage2D'') will result in the generation of a `?GL_INVALID_OPERATION'
-%% error, even if it would not, in fact, alter the dimensions or format of the object.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexStorage2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTexStorage2D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texStorage2D(Target, Levels, Internalformat, Width, Height) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Levels :: integer(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer().
texStorage2D(Target,Levels,Internalformat,Width,Height) ->
cast(5869, <<Target:?GLenum,Levels:?GLsizei,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei>>).
@@ -16866,50 +8358,21 @@ texStorage2D(Target,Levels,Internalformat,Width,Height) ->
%% requirements may not change. Such a texture is referred to as an `immutable-format'
%% texture.
%%
-%% The behavior of ``gl:texStorage3D'' depends on the `Target' parameter. When `Target'
-%% is `?GL_TEXTURE_3D', or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_3D', calling ``gl:texStorage3D''
-%% is equivalent, assuming no errors are generated, to executing the following pseudo-code:
-%% for (i = 0; i &lt; levels; i++) { glTexImage3D(target, i, internalformat, width, height,
-%% depth, 0, format, type, NULL); width = max(1, (width / 2)); height = max(1, (height /
-%% 2)); depth = max(1, (depth / 2)); }
-%%
-%% When `Target' is `?GL_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY', `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY', `?GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_ARRAY'
-%% , or `?GL_PROXY_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_ARRAY', ``gl:texStorage3D'' is equivalent to:
-%% for (i = 0; i &lt; levels; i++) { glTexImage3D(target, i, internalformat, width, height,
-%% depth, 0, format, type, NULL); width = max(1, (width / 2)); height = max(1, (height /
-%% 2)); }
-%%
-%% Since no texture data is actually provided, the values used in the pseudo-code for `Format'
-%% and `Type' are irrelevant and may be considered to be any values that are legal
-%% for the chosen `Internalformat' enumerant. `Internalformat' must be one of the
-%% sized internal formats given in Table 1 below, one of the sized depth-component formats `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT32F'
-%% , `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT24', or `?GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT16', or one of the combined
-%% depth-stencil formats, `?GL_DEPTH32F_STENCIL8', or `?GL_DEPTH24_STENCIL8'. Upon
-%% success, the value of `?GL_TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT' becomes `?GL_TRUE'. The
-%% value of `?GL_TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT' may be discovered by calling {@link gl:getTexParameterfv/2}
-%% with `Pname' set to `?GL_TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT'. No further changes to the
-%% dimensions or format of the texture object may be made. Using any command that might alter
-%% the dimensions or format of the texture object (such as {@link gl:texImage3D/10} or another
-%% call to ``gl:texStorage3D'') will result in the generation of a `?GL_INVALID_OPERATION'
-%% error, even if it would not, in fact, alter the dimensions or format of the object.
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glTexStorage3D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl4/html/glTexStorage3D.xhtml">external</a> documentation.
-spec texStorage3D(Target, Levels, Internalformat, Width, Height, Depth) -> 'ok' when Target :: enum(),Levels :: integer(),Internalformat :: enum(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Depth :: integer().
texStorage3D(Target,Levels,Internalformat,Width,Height,Depth) ->
cast(5870, <<Target:?GLenum,Levels:?GLsizei,Internalformat:?GLenum,Width:?GLsizei,Height:?GLsizei,Depth:?GLsizei>>).
%% @doc glDepthBoundsEXT
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glDepthBoundsEXT.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec depthBoundsEXT(Zmin, Zmax) -> 'ok' when Zmin :: clamp(),Zmax :: clamp().
depthBoundsEXT(Zmin,Zmax) ->
cast(5871, <<Zmin:?GLclampd,Zmax:?GLclampd>>).
%% @doc glStencilClearTagEXT
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/glStencilClearTagEXT.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">external</a> documentation.
-spec stencilClearTagEXT(StencilTagBits, StencilClearTag) -> 'ok' when StencilTagBits :: integer(),StencilClearTag :: integer().
stencilClearTagEXT(StencilTagBits,StencilClearTag) ->
cast(5872, <<StencilTagBits:?GLsizei,StencilClearTag:?GLuint>>).
diff --git a/lib/wx/src/gen/glu.erl b/lib/wx/src/gen/glu.erl
index f641f41262..5e5f01874f 100644
--- a/lib/wx/src/gen/glu.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/src/gen/glu.erl
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
%%
%% %CopyrightBegin%
%%
-%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2008-2016. All Rights Reserved.
+%% Copyright Ericsson AB 2008-2017. All Rights Reserved.
%%
%% Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
%% you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
%% This file is generated DO NOT EDIT
%% @doc A part of the standard OpenGL Utility api.
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/">www.opengl.org</a>
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/">www.khronos.org</a>
%%
%% Booleans are represented by integers 0 and 1.
@@ -92,29 +92,7 @@ tesselate({Nx,Ny,Nz}, Vs) ->
%% of decreasing resolutions called a mipmap. This is used for the antialiasing of texture
%% mapped primitives.
%%
-%% A return value of zero indicates success, otherwise a GLU error code is returned (see {@link glu:errorString/1}
-%% ).
-%%
-%% A series of mipmap levels from `Base' to `Max' is built by decimating `Data'
-%% in half until size 1×1 is reached. At each level, each texel in the halved mipmap
-%% level is an average of the corresponding two texels in the larger mipmap level. {@link gl:texImage1D/8}
-%% is called to load these mipmap levels from `Base' to `Max' . If `Max' is
-%% larger than the highest mipmap level for the texture of the specified size, then a GLU
-%% error code is returned (see {@link glu:errorString/1} ) and nothing is loaded.
-%%
-%% For example, if `Level' is 2 and `Width' is 16, the following levels are possible:
-%% 16×1, 8×1, 4×1, 2×1, 1×1. These correspond to levels 2 through 6 respectively.
-%% If `Base' is 3 and `Max' is 5, then only mipmap levels 8×1, 4×1 and 2×1
-%% are loaded. However, if `Max' is 7, then an error is returned and nothing is loaded
-%% since `Max' is larger than the highest mipmap level which is, in this case, 6.
-%%
-%% The highest mipmap level can be derived from the formula log 2(width×2 level).
-%%
-%% See the {@link gl:texImage1D/8} reference page for a description of the acceptable values
-%% for `Type' parameter. See the {@link gl:drawPixels/5} reference page for a description
-%% of the acceptable values for `Level' parameter.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluBuild1DMipmapLevels.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluBuild1DMipmapLevels.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec build1DMipmapLevels(Target, InternalFormat, Width, Format, Type, Level, Base, Max, Data) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),InternalFormat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Base :: integer(),Max :: integer(),Data :: binary().
build1DMipmapLevels(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Format,Type,Level,Base,Max,Data) ->
send_bin(Data),
@@ -126,33 +104,7 @@ build1DMipmapLevels(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Format,Type,Level,Base,Max,Data)
%% decreasing resolutions called a mipmap. This is used for the antialiasing of texture mapped
%% primitives.
%%
-%% A return value of zero indicates success, otherwise a GLU error code is returned (see {@link glu:errorString/1}
-%% ).
-%%
-%% Initially, the `Width' of `Data' is checked to see if it is a power of 2. If
-%% not, a copy of `Data' is scaled up or down to the nearest power of 2. (If `Width'
-%% is exactly between powers of 2, then the copy of `Data' will scale upwards.) This
-%% copy will be used for subsequent mipmapping operations described below. For example, if `Width'
-%% is 57, then a copy of `Data' will scale up to 64 before mipmapping takes place.
-%%
-%% Then, proxy textures (see {@link gl:texImage1D/8} ) are used to determine if the implementation
-%% can fit the requested texture. If not, `Width' is continually halved until it fits.
-%%
-%% Next, a series of mipmap levels is built by decimating a copy of `Data' in half
-%% until size 1×1 is reached. At each level, each texel in the halved mipmap level is an
-%% average of the corresponding two texels in the larger mipmap level.
-%%
-%% {@link gl:texImage1D/8} is called to load each of these mipmap levels. Level 0 is a copy
-%% of `Data' . The highest level is (log 2)(width). For example, if `Width' is 64 and the implementation
-%% can store a texture of this size, the following mipmap levels are built: 64×1, 32×1,
-%% 16×1, 8×1, 4×1, 2×1, and 1×1. These correspond to levels 0 through 6, respectively.
-%%
-%%
-%% See the {@link gl:texImage1D/8} reference page for a description of the acceptable values
-%% for the `Type' parameter. See the {@link gl:drawPixels/5} reference page for a description
-%% of the acceptable values for the `Data' parameter.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluBuild1DMipmaps.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluBuild1DMipmaps.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec build1DMipmaps(Target, InternalFormat, Width, Format, Type, Data) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),InternalFormat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Data :: binary().
build1DMipmaps(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Format,Type,Data) ->
send_bin(Data),
@@ -164,32 +116,7 @@ build1DMipmaps(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Format,Type,Data) ->
%% of decreasing resolutions called a mipmap. This is used for the antialiasing of texture
%% mapped primitives.
%%
-%% A return value of zero indicates success, otherwise a GLU error code is returned (see {@link glu:errorString/1}
-%% ).
-%%
-%% A series of mipmap levels from `Base' to `Max' is built by decimating `Data'
-%% in half along both dimensions until size 1×1 is reached. At each level, each texel
-%% in the halved mipmap level is an average of the corresponding four texels in the larger
-%% mipmap level. (In the case of rectangular images, the decimation will ultimately reach
-%% an N×1 or 1×N configuration. Here, two texels are averaged instead.) {@link gl:texImage2D/9}
-%% is called to load these mipmap levels from `Base' to `Max' . If `Max' is
-%% larger than the highest mipmap level for the texture of the specified size, then a GLU
-%% error code is returned (see {@link glu:errorString/1} ) and nothing is loaded.
-%%
-%% For example, if `Level' is 2 and `Width' is 16 and `Height' is 8, the
-%% following levels are possible: 16×8, 8×4, 4×2, 2×1, 1×1. These correspond to
-%% levels 2 through 6 respectively. If `Base' is 3 and `Max' is 5, then only mipmap
-%% levels 8×4, 4×2, and 2×1 are loaded. However, if `Max' is 7, then an error is
-%% returned and nothing is loaded since `Max' is larger than the highest mipmap level
-%% which is, in this case, 6.
-%%
-%% The highest mipmap level can be derived from the formula log 2(max(width height)×2 level).
-%%
-%% See the {@link gl:texImage1D/8} reference page for a description of the acceptable values
-%% for `Format' parameter. See the {@link gl:drawPixels/5} reference page for a description
-%% of the acceptable values for `Type' parameter.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluBuild2DMipmapLevels.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluBuild2DMipmapLevels.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec build2DMipmapLevels(Target, InternalFormat, Width, Height, Format, Type, Level, Base, Max, Data) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),InternalFormat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Base :: integer(),Max :: integer(),Data :: binary().
build2DMipmapLevels(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Format,Type,Level,Base,Max,Data) ->
send_bin(Data),
@@ -201,40 +128,7 @@ build2DMipmapLevels(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Format,Type,Level,Base,Ma
%% decreasing resolutions called a mipmap. This is used for the antialiasing of texture-mapped
%% primitives.
%%
-%% A return value of zero indicates success, otherwise a GLU error code is returned (see {@link glu:errorString/1}
-%% ).
-%%
-%% Initially, the `Width' and `Height' of `Data' are checked to see if they
-%% are a power of 2. If not, a copy of `Data' (not `Data' ), is scaled up or down
-%% to the nearest power of 2. This copy will be used for subsequent mipmapping operations
-%% described below. (If `Width' or `Height' is exactly between powers of 2, then
-%% the copy of `Data' will scale upwards.) For example, if `Width' is 57 and `Height'
-%% is 23, then a copy of `Data' will scale up to 64 in `Width' and down to 16
-%% in depth, before mipmapping takes place.
-%%
-%% Then, proxy textures (see {@link gl:texImage2D/9} ) are used to determine if the implementation
-%% can fit the requested texture. If not, both dimensions are continually halved until it
-%% fits. (If the OpenGL version is (&lt;= 1.0, both maximum texture dimensions are clamped
-%% to the value returned by {@link gl:getBooleanv/1} with the argument `?GLU_MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE'
-%% .)
-%%
-%% Next, a series of mipmap levels is built by decimating a copy of `Data' in half
-%% along both dimensions until size 1×1 is reached. At each level, each texel in the halved
-%% mipmap level is an average of the corresponding four texels in the larger mipmap level.
-%% (In the case of rectangular images, the decimation will ultimately reach an N×1 or 1×N
-%% configuration. Here, two texels are averaged instead.)
-%%
-%% {@link gl:texImage2D/9} is called to load each of these mipmap levels. Level 0 is a copy
-%% of `Data' . The highest level is (log 2)(max(width height)). For example, if `Width' is 64 and `Height'
-%% is 16 and the implementation can store a texture of this size, the following mipmap levels
-%% are built: 64×16, 32×8, 16×4, 8×2, 4×1, 2×1, and 1×1 These correspond to
-%% levels 0 through 6, respectively.
-%%
-%% See the {@link gl:texImage1D/8} reference page for a description of the acceptable values
-%% for `Format' parameter. See the {@link gl:drawPixels/5} reference page for a description
-%% of the acceptable values for `Type' parameter.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluBuild2DMipmaps.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluBuild2DMipmaps.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec build2DMipmaps(Target, InternalFormat, Width, Height, Format, Type, Data) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),InternalFormat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Data :: binary().
build2DMipmaps(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Format,Type,Data) ->
send_bin(Data),
@@ -246,32 +140,7 @@ build2DMipmaps(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Format,Type,Data) ->
%% maps of decreasing resolutions called a mipmap. This is used for the antialiasing of texture
%% mapped primitives.
%%
-%% A return value of zero indicates success, otherwise a GLU error code is returned (see {@link glu:errorString/1}
-%% ).
-%%
-%% A series of mipmap levels from `Base' to `Max' is built by decimating `Data'
-%% in half along both dimensions until size 1×1×1 is reached. At each level, each texel
-%% in the halved mipmap level is an average of the corresponding eight texels in the larger
-%% mipmap level. (If exactly one of the dimensions is 1, four texels are averaged. If exactly
-%% two of the dimensions are 1, two texels are averaged.) {@link gl:texImage3D/10} is called
-%% to load these mipmap levels from `Base' to `Max' . If `Max' is larger than
-%% the highest mipmap level for the texture of the specified size, then a GLU error code
-%% is returned (see {@link glu:errorString/1} ) and nothing is loaded.
-%%
-%% For example, if `Level' is 2 and `Width' is 16, `Height' is 8 and `Depth'
-%% is 4, the following levels are possible: 16×8×4, 8×4×2, 4×2×1, 2×1×1, 1×1×1.
-%% These correspond to levels 2 through 6 respectively. If `Base' is 3 and `Max'
-%% is 5, then only mipmap levels 8×4×2, 4×2×1, and 2×1×1 are loaded. However, if `Max'
-%% is 7, then an error is returned and nothing is loaded, since `Max' is larger than
-%% the highest mipmap level which is, in this case, 6.
-%%
-%% The highest mipmap level can be derived from the formula log 2(max(width height depth)×2 level).
-%%
-%% See the {@link gl:texImage1D/8} reference page for a description of the acceptable values
-%% for `Format' parameter. See the {@link gl:drawPixels/5} reference page for a description
-%% of the acceptable values for `Type' parameter.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluBuild3DMipmapLevels.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluBuild3DMipmapLevels.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec build3DMipmapLevels(Target, InternalFormat, Width, Height, Depth, Format, Type, Level, Base, Max, Data) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),InternalFormat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Depth :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Level :: integer(),Base :: integer(),Max :: integer(),Data :: binary().
build3DMipmapLevels(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Depth,Format,Type,Level,Base,Max,Data) ->
send_bin(Data),
@@ -283,39 +152,7 @@ build3DMipmapLevels(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Depth,Format,Type,Level,B
%% of decreasing resolutions called a mipmap. This is used for the antialiasing of texture-mapped
%% primitives.
%%
-%% A return value of zero indicates success, otherwise a GLU error code is returned (see {@link glu:errorString/1}
-%% ).
-%%
-%% Initially, the `Width' , `Height' and `Depth' of `Data' are checked
-%% to see if they are a power of 2. If not, a copy of `Data' is made and scaled up or
-%% down to the nearest power of 2. (If `Width' , `Height' , or `Depth' is exactly
-%% between powers of 2, then the copy of `Data' will scale upwards.) This copy will
-%% be used for subsequent mipmapping operations described below. For example, if `Width'
-%% is 57, `Height' is 23, and `Depth' is 24, then a copy of `Data' will scale
-%% up to 64 in width, down to 16 in height, and up to 32 in depth before mipmapping takes
-%% place.
-%%
-%% Then, proxy textures (see {@link gl:texImage3D/10} ) are used to determine if the implementation
-%% can fit the requested texture. If not, all three dimensions are continually halved until
-%% it fits.
-%%
-%% Next, a series of mipmap levels is built by decimating a copy of `Data' in half
-%% along all three dimensions until size 1×1×1 is reached. At each level, each texel in
-%% the halved mipmap level is an average of the corresponding eight texels in the larger
-%% mipmap level. (If exactly one of the dimensions is 1, four texels are averaged. If exactly
-%% two of the dimensions are 1, two texels are averaged.)
-%%
-%% {@link gl:texImage3D/10} is called to load each of these mipmap levels. Level 0 is a copy
-%% of `Data' . The highest level is (log 2)(max(width height depth)). For example, if `Width' is 64, `Height'
-%% is 16, and `Depth' is 32, and the implementation can store a texture of this size,
-%% the following mipmap levels are built: 64×16×32, 32×8×16, 16×4×8, 8×2×4, 4×1×2,
-%% 2×1×1, and 1×1×1. These correspond to levels 0 through 6, respectively.
-%%
-%% See the {@link gl:texImage1D/8} reference page for a description of the acceptable values
-%% for `Format' parameter. See the {@link gl:drawPixels/5} reference page for a description
-%% of the acceptable values for `Type' parameter.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluBuild3DMipmaps.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluBuild3DMipmaps.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec build3DMipmaps(Target, InternalFormat, Width, Height, Depth, Format, Type, Data) -> integer() when Target :: enum(),InternalFormat :: integer(),Width :: integer(),Height :: integer(),Depth :: integer(),Format :: enum(),Type :: enum(),Data :: binary().
build3DMipmaps(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Depth,Format,Type,Data) ->
send_bin(Data),
@@ -326,12 +163,7 @@ build3DMipmaps(Target,InternalFormat,Width,Height,Depth,Format,Type,Data) ->
%% ``glu:checkExtension'' returns `?GLU_TRUE' if `ExtName' is supported otherwise
%% `?GLU_FALSE' is returned.
%%
-%% This is used to check for the presence for OpenGL, GLU, or GLX extension names by passing
-%% the extension strings returned by {@link gl:getString/1} , {@link glu:getString/1} , see `glXGetClientString'
-%% , see `glXQueryExtensionsString', or see `glXQueryServerString', respectively,
-%% as `ExtString' .
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluCheckExtension.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluCheckExtension.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec checkExtension(ExtName, ExtString) -> 0|1 when ExtName :: string(),ExtString :: string().
checkExtension(ExtName,ExtString) ->
ExtNameLen = length(ExtName),
@@ -345,19 +177,7 @@ checkExtension(ExtName,ExtString) ->
%% is subdivided around the `z' axis into slices and along the `z' axis into stacks.
%%
%%
-%% Note that if `Top' is set to 0.0, this routine generates a cone.
-%%
-%% If the orientation is set to `?GLU_OUTSIDE' (with {@link glu:quadricOrientation/2} ),
-%% then any generated normals point away from the `z' axis. Otherwise, they point toward
-%% the `z' axis.
-%%
-%% If texturing is turned on (with {@link glu:quadricTexture/2} ), then texture coordinates
-%% are generated so that `t' ranges linearly from 0.0 at `z' = 0 to 1.0 at `z'
-%% = `Height' , and `s' ranges from 0.0 at the +`y' axis, to 0.25 at the +`x'
-%% axis, to 0.5 at the -`y' axis, to 0.75 at the -`x' axis, and back to 1.0
-%% at the +`y' axis.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluCylinder.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluCylinder.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec cylinder(Quad, Base, Top, Height, Slices, Stacks) -> 'ok' when Quad :: integer(),Base :: float(),Top :: float(),Height :: float(),Slices :: integer(),Stacks :: integer().
cylinder(Quad,Base,Top,Height,Slices,Stacks) ->
cast(5017, <<Quad:?GLUquadric,Base:?GLdouble,Top:?GLdouble,Height:?GLdouble,Slices:?GLint,Stacks:?GLint>>).
@@ -368,7 +188,7 @@ cylinder(Quad,Base,Top,Height,Slices,Stacks) ->
%% and frees any memory it uses. Once ``glu:deleteQuadric'' has been called, `Quad'
%% cannot be used again.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluDeleteQuadric.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluDeleteQuadric.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec deleteQuadric(Quad) -> 'ok' when Quad :: integer().
deleteQuadric(Quad) ->
cast(5018, <<Quad:?GLUquadric>>).
@@ -381,17 +201,7 @@ deleteQuadric(Quad) ->
%% slices (like pizza slices) and also about the `z' axis into rings (as specified by `Slices'
%% and `Loops' , respectively).
%%
-%% With respect to orientation, the +`z' side of the disk is considered to be ``outside''
-%% (see {@link glu:quadricOrientation/2} ). This means that if the orientation is set to `?GLU_OUTSIDE'
-%% , then any normals generated point along the +`z' axis. Otherwise, they point along
-%% the -`z' axis.
-%%
-%% If texturing has been turned on (with {@link glu:quadricTexture/2} ), texture coordinates
-%% are generated linearly such that where r=outer, the value at (`r', 0, 0) is (1,
-%% 0.5), at (0, `r', 0) it is (0.5, 1), at (-`r', 0, 0) it is (0, 0.5), and at
-%% (0, -`r', 0) it is (0.5, 0).
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluDisk.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluDisk.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec disk(Quad, Inner, Outer, Slices, Loops) -> 'ok' when Quad :: integer(),Inner :: float(),Outer :: float(),Slices :: integer(),Loops :: integer().
disk(Quad,Inner,Outer,Slices,Loops) ->
cast(5019, <<Quad:?GLUquadric,Inner:?GLdouble,Outer:?GLdouble,Slices:?GLint,Loops:?GLint>>).
@@ -402,12 +212,7 @@ disk(Quad,Inner,Outer,Slices,Loops) ->
%% is in ISO Latin 1 format. For example, ``glu:errorString''(`?GLU_OUT_OF_MEMORY')
%% returns the string `out of memory'.
%%
-%% The standard GLU error codes are `?GLU_INVALID_ENUM', `?GLU_INVALID_VALUE',
-%% and `?GLU_OUT_OF_MEMORY'. Certain other GLU functions can return specialized error
-%% codes through callbacks. See the {@link gl:getError/0} reference page for the list of
-%% GL error codes.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluErrorString.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluErrorString.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec errorString(Error) -> string() when Error :: enum().
errorString(Error) ->
call(5020, <<Error:?GLenum>>).
@@ -417,25 +222,7 @@ errorString(Error) ->
%% ``glu:getString'' returns a pointer to a static string describing the GLU version or
%% the GLU extensions that are supported.
%%
-%% The version number is one of the following forms:
-%%
-%% `major_number.minor_number'`major_number.minor_number.release_number'.
-%%
-%% The version string is of the following form:
-%%
-%% `version number&lt;space&gt;vendor-specific information'
-%%
-%% Vendor-specific information is optional. Its format and contents depend on the implementation.
-%%
-%%
-%% The standard GLU contains a basic set of features and capabilities. If a company or group
-%% of companies wish to support other features, these may be included as extensions to the
-%% GLU. If `Name' is `?GLU_EXTENSIONS', then ``glu:getString'' returns a space-separated
-%% list of names of supported GLU extensions. (Extension names never contain spaces.)
-%%
-%% All strings are null-terminated.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluGetString.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluGetString.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec getString(Name) -> string() when Name :: enum().
getString(Name) ->
call(5021, <<Name:?GLenum>>).
@@ -445,31 +232,7 @@ getString(Name) ->
%% ``glu:lookAt'' creates a viewing matrix derived from an eye point, a reference point
%% indicating the center of the scene, and an `UP' vector.
%%
-%% The matrix maps the reference point to the negative `z' axis and the eye point to
-%% the origin. When a typical projection matrix is used, the center of the scene therefore
-%% maps to the center of the viewport. Similarly, the direction described by the `UP'
-%% vector projected onto the viewing plane is mapped to the positive `y' axis so that
-%% it points upward in the viewport. The `UP' vector must not be parallel to the line
-%% of sight from the eye point to the reference point.
-%%
-%% Let
-%%
-%% F=(centerX-eyeX centerY-eyeY centerZ-eyeZ)
-%%
-%% Let `UP' be the vector (upX upY upZ).
-%%
-%% Then normalize as follows: f=F/(||F||)
-%%
-%% UP"=UP/(||UP||)
-%%
-%% Finally, let s=f×UP", and u=s×f.
-%%
-%% M is then constructed as follows: M=(s[0] s[1] s[2] 0 u[0] u[1] u[2] 0-f[0]-f[1]-f[2] 0 0 0 0 1)
-%%
-%% and ``glu:lookAt'' is equivalent to glMultMatrixf(M); glTranslated(-eyex, -eyey,
-%% -eyez);
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluLookAt.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluLookAt.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec lookAt(EyeX, EyeY, EyeZ, CenterX, CenterY, CenterZ, UpX, UpY, UpZ) -> 'ok' when EyeX :: float(),EyeY :: float(),EyeZ :: float(),CenterX :: float(),CenterY :: float(),CenterZ :: float(),UpX :: float(),UpY :: float(),UpZ :: float().
lookAt(EyeX,EyeY,EyeZ,CenterX,CenterY,CenterZ,UpX,UpY,UpZ) ->
cast(5022, <<EyeX:?GLdouble,EyeY:?GLdouble,EyeZ:?GLdouble,CenterX:?GLdouble,CenterY:?GLdouble,CenterZ:?GLdouble,UpX:?GLdouble,UpY:?GLdouble,UpZ:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -480,7 +243,7 @@ lookAt(EyeX,EyeY,EyeZ,CenterX,CenterY,CenterZ,UpX,UpY,UpZ) ->
%% must be referred to when calling quadrics rendering and control functions. A return value
%% of 0 means that there is not enough memory to allocate the object.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluNewQuadric.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluNewQuadric.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec newQuadric() -> integer().
newQuadric() ->
call(5023, <<>>).
@@ -490,7 +253,7 @@ newQuadric() ->
%% ``glu:ortho2D'' sets up a two-dimensional orthographic viewing region. This is equivalent
%% to calling {@link gl:ortho/6} with near=-1 and far=1.
%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluOrtho2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluOrtho2D.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec ortho2D(Left, Right, Bottom, Top) -> 'ok' when Left :: float(),Right :: float(),Bottom :: float(),Top :: float().
ortho2D(Left,Right,Bottom,Top) ->
cast(5024, <<Left:?GLdouble,Right:?GLdouble,Bottom:?GLdouble,Top:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -503,23 +266,7 @@ ortho2D(Left,Right,Bottom,Top) ->
%% the +`x' axis, 180 degrees along the -`y' axis, and 270 degrees along the -`x'
%% axis).
%%
-%% The partial disk has a radius of `Outer' and contains a concentric circular hole
-%% with a radius of `Inner' . If `Inner' is 0, then no hole is generated. The partial
-%% disk is subdivided around the `z' axis into slices (like pizza slices) and also about
-%% the `z' axis into rings (as specified by `Slices' and `Loops' , respectively).
-%%
-%%
-%% With respect to orientation, the +`z' side of the partial disk is considered to
-%% be outside (see {@link glu:quadricOrientation/2} ). This means that if the orientation
-%% is set to `?GLU_OUTSIDE', then any normals generated point along the +`z' axis.
-%% Otherwise, they point along the -`z' axis.
-%%
-%% If texturing is turned on (with {@link glu:quadricTexture/2} ), texture coordinates are
-%% generated linearly such that where r=outer, the value at (`r', 0, 0) is (1.0,
-%% 0.5), at (0, `r', 0) it is (0.5, 1.0), at (-`r', 0, 0) it is (0.0, 0.5), and
-%% at (0, -`r', 0) it is (0.5, 0.0).
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluPartialDisk.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluPartialDisk.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec partialDisk(Quad, Inner, Outer, Slices, Loops, Start, Sweep) -> 'ok' when Quad :: integer(),Inner :: float(),Outer :: float(),Slices :: integer(),Loops :: integer(),Start :: float(),Sweep :: float().
partialDisk(Quad,Inner,Outer,Slices,Loops,Start,Sweep) ->
cast(5025, <<Quad:?GLUquadric,Inner:?GLdouble,Outer:?GLdouble,Slices:?GLint,Loops:?GLint,Start:?GLdouble,Sweep:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -532,18 +279,7 @@ partialDisk(Quad,Inner,Outer,Slices,Loops,Start,Sweep) ->
%% as wide in `x' as it is in `y'. If the viewport is twice as wide as it is tall,
%% it displays the image without distortion.
%%
-%% The matrix generated by ``glu:perspective'' is multipled by the current matrix, just
-%% as if {@link gl:multMatrixd/1} were called with the generated matrix. To load the perspective
-%% matrix onto the current matrix stack instead, precede the call to ``glu:perspective''
-%% with a call to {@link gl:loadIdentity/0} .
-%%
-%% Given `f' defined as follows:
-%%
-%% f=cotangent(fovy/2) The generated matrix is
-%%
-%% (f/aspect 0 0 0 0 f 0 0 0 0(zFar+zNear)/(zNear-zFar)(2×zFar×zNear)/(zNear-zFar) 0 0 -1 0)
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluPerspective.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluPerspective.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec perspective(Fovy, Aspect, ZNear, ZFar) -> 'ok' when Fovy :: float(),Aspect :: float(),ZNear :: float(),ZFar :: float().
perspective(Fovy,Aspect,ZNear,ZFar) ->
cast(5026, <<Fovy:?GLdouble,Aspect:?GLdouble,ZNear:?GLdouble,ZFar:?GLdouble>>).
@@ -557,19 +293,7 @@ perspective(Fovy,Aspect,ZNear,ZFar) ->
%% rerender the scene. All primitives that would have been drawn near the cursor are identified
%% and stored in the selection buffer.
%%
-%% The matrix created by ``glu:pickMatrix'' is multiplied by the current matrix just as
-%% if {@link gl:multMatrixd/1} is called with the generated matrix. To effectively use the
-%% generated pick matrix for picking, first call {@link gl:loadIdentity/0} to load an identity
-%% matrix onto the perspective matrix stack. Then call ``glu:pickMatrix'', and, finally,
-%% call a command (such as {@link glu:perspective/4} ) to multiply the perspective matrix by
-%% the pick matrix.
-%%
-%% When using ``glu:pickMatrix'' to pick NURBS, be careful to turn off the NURBS property
-%% `?GLU_AUTO_LOAD_MATRIX'. If `?GLU_AUTO_LOAD_MATRIX' is not turned off, then
-%% any NURBS surface rendered is subdivided differently with the pick matrix than the way
-%% it was subdivided without the pick matrix.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluPickMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluPickMatrix.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec pickMatrix(X, Y, DelX, DelY, Viewport) -> 'ok' when X :: float(),Y :: float(),DelX :: float(),DelY :: float(),Viewport :: {integer(),integer(),integer(),integer()}.
pickMatrix(X,Y,DelX,DelY,{V1,V2,V3,V4}) ->
cast(5027, <<X:?GLdouble,Y:?GLdouble,DelX:?GLdouble,DelY:?GLdouble,V1:?GLint,V2:?GLint,V3:?GLint,V4:?GLint>>).
@@ -581,25 +305,7 @@ pickMatrix(X,Y,DelX,DelY,{V1,V2,V3,V4}) ->
%% , and `WinZ' . A return value of `?GLU_TRUE' indicates success, a return value
%% of `?GLU_FALSE' indicates failure.
%%
-%% To compute the coordinates, let v=(objX objY objZ 1.0) represented as a matrix with 4 rows and 1 column.
-%% Then ``glu:project'' computes v" as follows:
-%%
-%% v"=P×M×v
-%%
-%% where P is the current projection matrix `Proj' and M is the current modelview
-%% matrix `Model' (both represented as 4×4 matrices in column-major order).
-%%
-%% The window coordinates are then computed as follows:
-%%
-%% winX=view(0)+view(2)×(v"(0)+1)/2
-%%
-%% winY=view(1)+view(3)×(v"(1)+1)/2
-%%
-%% winZ=(v"(2)+1)/2
-%%
-%%
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluProject.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluProject.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec project(ObjX, ObjY, ObjZ, Model, Proj, View) -> {integer(),WinX :: float(),WinY :: float(),WinZ :: float()} when ObjX :: float(),ObjY :: float(),ObjZ :: float(),Model :: matrix(),Proj :: matrix(),View :: {integer(),integer(),integer(),integer()}.
project(ObjX,ObjY,ObjZ,{M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12,M13,M14,M15,M16},{P1,P2,P3,P4,P5,P6,P7,P8,P9,P10,P11,P12,P13,P14,P15,P16},{V1,V2,V3,V4}) ->
call(5028, <<ObjX:?GLdouble,ObjY:?GLdouble,ObjZ:?GLdouble,M1:?GLdouble,M2:?GLdouble,M3:?GLdouble,M4:?GLdouble,M5:?GLdouble,M6:?GLdouble,M7:?GLdouble,M8:?GLdouble,M9:?GLdouble,M10:?GLdouble,M11:?GLdouble,M12:?GLdouble,M13:?GLdouble,M14:?GLdouble,M15:?GLdouble,M16:?GLdouble,P1:?GLdouble,P2:?GLdouble,P3:?GLdouble,P4:?GLdouble,P5:?GLdouble,P6:?GLdouble,P7:?GLdouble,P8:?GLdouble,P9:?GLdouble,P10:?GLdouble,P11:?GLdouble,P12:?GLdouble,P13:?GLdouble,P14:?GLdouble,P15:?GLdouble,P16:?GLdouble,V1:?GLint,V2:?GLint,V3:?GLint,V4:?GLint>>);
@@ -611,18 +317,7 @@ project(ObjX,ObjY,ObjZ,{M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12},{P1,P2,P3,P4,P5,
%% ``glu:quadricDrawStyle'' specifies the draw style for quadrics rendered with `Quad' .
%% The legal values are as follows:
%%
-%% `?GLU_FILL': Quadrics are rendered with polygon primitives. The polygons are drawn
-%% in a counterclockwise fashion with respect to their normals (as defined with {@link glu:quadricOrientation/2}
-%% ).
-%%
-%% `?GLU_LINE': Quadrics are rendered as a set of lines.
-%%
-%% `?GLU_SILHOUETTE': Quadrics are rendered as a set of lines, except that edges separating
-%% coplanar faces will not be drawn.
-%%
-%% `?GLU_POINT': Quadrics are rendered as a set of points.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluQuadricDrawStyle.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluQuadricDrawStyle.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec quadricDrawStyle(Quad, Draw) -> 'ok' when Quad :: integer(),Draw :: enum().
quadricDrawStyle(Quad,Draw) ->
cast(5029, <<Quad:?GLUquadric,Draw:?GLenum>>).
@@ -632,14 +327,7 @@ quadricDrawStyle(Quad,Draw) ->
%% ``glu:quadricNormals'' specifies what kind of normals are desired for quadrics rendered
%% with `Quad' . The legal values are as follows:
%%
-%% `?GLU_NONE': No normals are generated.
-%%
-%% `?GLU_FLAT': One normal is generated for every facet of a quadric.
-%%
-%% `?GLU_SMOOTH': One normal is generated for every vertex of a quadric. This is the
-%% initial value.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluQuadricNormals.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluQuadricNormals.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec quadricNormals(Quad, Normal) -> 'ok' when Quad :: integer(),Normal :: enum().
quadricNormals(Quad,Normal) ->
cast(5030, <<Quad:?GLUquadric,Normal:?GLenum>>).
@@ -649,15 +337,7 @@ quadricNormals(Quad,Normal) ->
%% ``glu:quadricOrientation'' specifies what kind of orientation is desired for quadrics
%% rendered with `Quad' . The `Orientation' values are as follows:
%%
-%% `?GLU_OUTSIDE': Quadrics are drawn with normals pointing outward (the initial value).
-%%
-%%
-%% `?GLU_INSIDE': Quadrics are drawn with normals pointing inward.
-%%
-%% Note that the interpretation of `outward' and `inward' depends on the quadric
-%% being drawn.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluQuadricOrientation.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluQuadricOrientation.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec quadricOrientation(Quad, Orientation) -> 'ok' when Quad :: integer(),Orientation :: enum().
quadricOrientation(Quad,Orientation) ->
cast(5031, <<Quad:?GLUquadric,Orientation:?GLenum>>).
@@ -669,10 +349,7 @@ quadricOrientation(Quad,Orientation) ->
%% coordinates are generated, and if `Texture' is `?GLU_FALSE', they are not.
%% The initial value is `?GLU_FALSE'.
%%
-%% The manner in which texture coordinates are generated depends upon the specific quadric
-%% rendered.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluQuadricTexture.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluQuadricTexture.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec quadricTexture(Quad, Texture) -> 'ok' when Quad :: integer(),Texture :: 0|1.
quadricTexture(Quad,Texture) ->
cast(5032, <<Quad:?GLUquadric,Texture:?GLboolean>>).
@@ -682,17 +359,7 @@ quadricTexture(Quad,Texture) ->
%% ``glu:scaleImage'' scales a pixel image using the appropriate pixel store modes to
%% unpack data from the source image and pack data into the destination image.
%%
-%% When shrinking an image, ``glu:scaleImage'' uses a box filter to sample the source
-%% image and create pixels for the destination image. When magnifying an image, the pixels
-%% from the source image are linearly interpolated to create the destination image.
-%%
-%% A return value of zero indicates success, otherwise a GLU error code is returned (see {@link glu:errorString/1}
-%% ).
-%%
-%% See the {@link gl:readPixels/7} reference page for a description of the acceptable values
-%% for the `Format' , `TypeIn' , and `TypeOut' parameters.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluScaleImage.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluScaleImage.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec scaleImage(Format, WIn, HIn, TypeIn, DataIn, WOut, HOut, TypeOut, DataOut) -> integer() when Format :: enum(),WIn :: integer(),HIn :: integer(),TypeIn :: enum(),DataIn :: binary(),WOut :: integer(),HOut :: integer(),TypeOut :: enum(),DataOut :: mem().
scaleImage(Format,WIn,HIn,TypeIn,DataIn,WOut,HOut,TypeOut,DataOut) ->
send_bin(DataIn),
@@ -705,17 +372,7 @@ scaleImage(Format,WIn,HIn,TypeIn,DataIn,WOut,HOut,TypeOut,DataOut) ->
%% is subdivided around the `z' axis into slices and along the `z' axis into
%% stacks (similar to lines of longitude and latitude).
%%
-%% If the orientation is set to `?GLU_OUTSIDE' (with {@link glu:quadricOrientation/2} ),
-%% then any normals generated point away from the center of the sphere. Otherwise, they
-%% point toward the center of the sphere.
-%%
-%% If texturing is turned on (with {@link glu:quadricTexture/2} ), then texture coordinates
-%% are generated so that `t' ranges from 0.0 at z=-radius to 1.0 at z=radius (`t'
-%% increases linearly along longitudinal lines), and `s' ranges from 0.0 at the +`y'
-%% axis, to 0.25 at the +`x' axis, to 0.5 at the -`y' axis, to 0.75 at the -`x'
-%% axis, and back to 1.0 at the +`y' axis.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluSphere.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluSphere.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec sphere(Quad, Radius, Slices, Stacks) -> 'ok' when Quad :: integer(),Radius :: float(),Slices :: integer(),Stacks :: integer().
sphere(Quad,Radius,Slices,Stacks) ->
cast(5034, <<Quad:?GLUquadric,Radius:?GLdouble,Slices:?GLint,Stacks:?GLint>>).
@@ -727,13 +384,7 @@ sphere(Quad,Radius,Slices,Stacks) ->
%% . A return value of `?GLU_TRUE' indicates success; a return value of `?GLU_FALSE'
%% indicates failure.
%%
-%% To compute the coordinates (objX objY objZ), ``glu:unProject'' multiplies the normalized device coordinates
-%% by the inverse of `Model' * `Proj' as follows:
-%%
-%% (objX objY objZ W)=INV(P M) ((2(winX-view[0]))/(view[2])-1(2(winY-view[1]))/(view[3])-1 2(winZ)-1 1) INV denotes matrix inversion. W is an unused variable, included for consistent
-%% matrix notation.
-%%
-%% See <a href="http://www.opengl.org/sdk/docs/man/xhtml/gluUnProject.xml">external</a> documentation.
+%% See <a href="https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenGL-Refpages/gl2.1/xhtml/gluUnProject.xml">external</a> documentation.
-spec unProject(WinX, WinY, WinZ, Model, Proj, View) -> {integer(),ObjX :: float(),ObjY :: float(),ObjZ :: float()} when WinX :: float(),WinY :: float(),WinZ :: float(),Model :: matrix(),Proj :: matrix(),View :: {integer(),integer(),integer(),integer()}.
unProject(WinX,WinY,WinZ,{M1,M2,M3,M4,M5,M6,M7,M8,M9,M10,M11,M12,M13,M14,M15,M16},{P1,P2,P3,P4,P5,P6,P7,P8,P9,P10,P11,P12,P13,P14,P15,P16},{V1,V2,V3,V4}) ->
call(5035, <<WinX:?GLdouble,WinY:?GLdouble,WinZ:?GLdouble,M1:?GLdouble,M2:?GLdouble,M3:?GLdouble,M4:?GLdouble,M5:?GLdouble,M6:?GLdouble,M7:?GLdouble,M8:?GLdouble,M9:?GLdouble,M10:?GLdouble,M11:?GLdouble,M12:?GLdouble,M13:?GLdouble,M14:?GLdouble,M15:?GLdouble,M16:?GLdouble,P1:?GLdouble,P2:?GLdouble,P3:?GLdouble,P4:?GLdouble,P5:?GLdouble,P6:?GLdouble,P7:?GLdouble,P8:?GLdouble,P9:?GLdouble,P10:?GLdouble,P11:?GLdouble,P12:?GLdouble,P13:?GLdouble,P14:?GLdouble,P15:?GLdouble,P16:?GLdouble,V1:?GLint,V2:?GLint,V3:?GLint,V4:?GLint>>);
diff --git a/lib/wx/test/wx_app_SUITE.erl b/lib/wx/test/wx_app_SUITE.erl
index 3fd5bf689d..a5202d8448 100644
--- a/lib/wx/test/wx_app_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/test/wx_app_SUITE.erl
@@ -24,7 +24,12 @@
%%----------------------------------------------------------------------
-module(wx_app_SUITE).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([all/0, suite/0,groups/0,init_per_group/2,end_per_group/2,
+ init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
+ init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2]).
+
+-export([t/0, t/1, fields/1, modules/1, exportall/1, app_depend/1,
+ undef_funcs/0, undef_funcs/1, appup/1]).
-include("wx_test_lib.hrl").
-include_lib("common_test/include/ct.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/wx/test/wx_basic_SUITE.erl b/lib/wx/test/wx_basic_SUITE.erl
index d53bd3c15a..ad03a378de 100644
--- a/lib/wx/test/wx_basic_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/test/wx_basic_SUITE.erl
@@ -28,7 +28,11 @@
init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2]).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([silent_start/1, create_window/1, several_apps/1, wx_api/1, wx_misc/1,
+ data_types/1, wx_object/1, undef_in_handle_info/1, undef_in_terminate/1,
+ undef_handle_event/1, undef_handle_call/1, undef_handle_cast/1, undef_handle_info/1,
+ undef_code_change/1, undef_terminate1/1, undef_terminate2/1
+ ]).
-include("wx_test_lib.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/wx/test/wx_class_SUITE.erl b/lib/wx/test/wx_class_SUITE.erl
index 0a3c4659bf..6d314ab8fc 100644
--- a/lib/wx/test/wx_class_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/test/wx_class_SUITE.erl
@@ -29,7 +29,10 @@
init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2]).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([calendarCtrl/1, treeCtrl/1, notebook/1, staticBoxSizer/1,
+ clipboard/1, helpFrame/1, htmlWindow/1, listCtrlSort/1, listCtrlVirtual/1,
+ radioBox/1, systemSettings/1, taskBarIcon/1, toolbar/1, popup/1, modal/1,
+ textCtrl/1, locale/1]).
-include("wx_test_lib.hrl").
@@ -51,7 +54,8 @@ suite() -> [{ct_hooks,[ts_install_cth]}, {timetrap,{minutes,2}}].
all() ->
[calendarCtrl, treeCtrl, notebook, staticBoxSizer,
clipboard, helpFrame, htmlWindow, listCtrlSort, listCtrlVirtual,
- radioBox, systemSettings, taskBarIcon, toolbar, popup, modal].
+ radioBox, systemSettings, taskBarIcon, toolbar, popup, modal,
+ textCtrl, locale].
groups() ->
[].
diff --git a/lib/wx/test/wx_event_SUITE.erl b/lib/wx/test/wx_event_SUITE.erl
index 6512cedaf2..a564f89e58 100644
--- a/lib/wx/test/wx_event_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/test/wx_event_SUITE.erl
@@ -27,7 +27,10 @@
init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2]).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([connect/1, disconnect/1, disconnect_cb/1, connect_msg_20/1, connect_cb_20/1,
+ mouse_on_grid/1, spin_event/1, connect_in_callback/1, recursive/1,
+ dialog/1, char_events/1, callback_clean/1, handler_clean/1
+ ]).
-include("wx_test_lib.hrl").
@@ -49,7 +52,7 @@ suite() -> [{ct_hooks,[ts_install_cth]}, {timetrap,{minutes,2}}].
all() ->
[connect, disconnect, disconnect_cb, connect_msg_20, connect_cb_20,
mouse_on_grid, spin_event, connect_in_callback, recursive,
- dialog, char_events, callback_clean
+ dialog, char_events, callback_clean, handler_clean
].
groups() ->
@@ -577,6 +580,7 @@ handler_clean(_Config) ->
Frame1 = wx_obj_test:start([{init, Init}]),
?mt(wxFrame, Frame1),
wxWindow:show(Frame1),
+ timer:sleep(500),
?m([_|_], lists:sort(wx_test_lib:flush())),
?m(ok, wx_obj_test:stop(Frame1)),
?m([{terminate,normal}], lists:sort(wx_test_lib:flush())),
@@ -584,6 +588,7 @@ handler_clean(_Config) ->
Terminate = fun({Frame,_}) -> wxWindow:destroy(Frame) end,
Frame2 = wx_obj_test:start([{init, Init}, {terminate, Terminate}]),
wxWindow:show(Frame2),
+ timer:sleep(500),
?m([_|_], lists:sort(wx_test_lib:flush())),
?m(ok, wx_obj_test:stop(Frame2)),
?m([{terminate,normal}], lists:sort(wx_test_lib:flush())),
diff --git a/lib/wx/test/wx_oc_object.erl b/lib/wx/test/wx_oc_object.erl
index 3924202410..bc9b7d48d0 100644
--- a/lib/wx/test/wx_oc_object.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/test/wx_oc_object.erl
@@ -20,9 +20,9 @@
-module(wx_oc_object).
-include_lib("wx/include/wx.hrl").
--behaviour(wx_object).
+%%-behaviour(wx_object). %% commented out avoid warnings
-%% gen_server callbacks
+%% wx_object callbacks
-export([init/1]).
-record(state, {}).
diff --git a/lib/wx/test/wx_opengl_SUITE.erl b/lib/wx/test/wx_opengl_SUITE.erl
index 3de9209fae..19ea731dfb 100644
--- a/lib/wx/test/wx_opengl_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/test/wx_opengl_SUITE.erl
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@
init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2]).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([canvas/1, glu_tesselation/1]).
-include("wx_test_lib.hrl").
-include_lib("wx/include/gl.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/wx/test/wx_test_lib.erl b/lib/wx/test/wx_test_lib.erl
index 9f26b8cb9d..af508ff490 100644
--- a/lib/wx/test/wx_test_lib.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/test/wx_test_lib.erl
@@ -24,7 +24,10 @@
%%% Created : 30 Oct 2008 by Dan Gudmundsson <[email protected]>
%%%-------------------------------------------------------------------
-module(wx_test_lib).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1, init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2]).
+-export([tc_info/1, log/2, log/4, verbose/4, error/4,
+ flush/0, pick_msg/0, user_available/1, wx_destroy/2, wx_close/2, wait_for_close/0,
+ run_test/2, run_test/3, test_case_evaluator/3]).
-include("wx_test_lib.hrl").
@@ -182,11 +185,15 @@ run_test([], _Config) -> [].
run_test(Module, all, Config) ->
All = [{Module, Test} || Test <- Module:all()],
run_test(All, Config);
+run_test(Module, {group, Group}, Config) ->
+ {_, _, TCs} = lists:keyfind(Group, 1, Module:groups()),
+ All = [{Module, Test} || Test <- TCs],
+ run_test(All, Config);
+
run_test(Module, TestCase, Config) ->
log("Eval test case: ~w~n", [{Module, TestCase}]),
Sec = timer:seconds(1) * 1000,
- {T, Res} =
- timer:tc(?MODULE, eval_test_case, [Module, TestCase, Config]),
+ {T, Res} = timer:tc(fun() -> eval_test_case(Module, TestCase, Config) end),
log("Tested ~w in ~w sec~n", [TestCase, T div Sec]),
{T div Sec, Res}.
diff --git a/lib/wx/test/wx_xtra_SUITE.erl b/lib/wx/test/wx_xtra_SUITE.erl
index c6268a7f46..486843ec63 100644
--- a/lib/wx/test/wx_xtra_SUITE.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/test/wx_xtra_SUITE.erl
@@ -28,7 +28,8 @@
init_per_suite/1, end_per_suite/1,
init_per_testcase/2, end_per_testcase/2]).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([destroy_app/1, multiple_add_in_sizer/1, app_dies/1,
+ menu_item_debug/1]).
-include("wx_test_lib.hrl").
diff --git a/lib/wx/test/wxt.erl b/lib/wx/test/wxt.erl
index 265cd5c981..2b380606d5 100644
--- a/lib/wx/test/wxt.erl
+++ b/lib/wx/test/wxt.erl
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
%% Description : Shortcuts for running tests with wx internal test_server
%%-------------------------------------------------------------------
-module(wxt).
--compile(export_all).
+-export([t/0, t/1, t/2, user/0, user/1,user/2]).
%% Modules or suites can be shortcuts i.e. basic expands to wx_basic_SUITE.
%%
@@ -83,36 +83,6 @@ alias(Suite) when is_atom(Suite) ->
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
-config_fname() ->
- "wx_test_case_config".
-
-%% Read default config file
-read_config() ->
- Fname = config_fname(),
- wx_test_lib:log("Consulting file ~s...~n", [Fname]),
- case file:consult(Fname) of
- {ok, Config} ->
- wx_test_lib:log("Read config ~w~n", [Config]),
- Config;
- _Error ->
- Config = wx_test_lib:default_config(),
- wx_test_lib:log("<>WARNING<> Using default config: ~w~n", [Config]),
- Config
- end.
-
-%% Write new default config file
-write_config(Config) when is_list(Config) ->
- Fname = config_fname(),
- {ok, Fd} = file:open(Fname, write),
- write_list(Fd, Config),
- file:close(Fd).
-
-write_list(Fd, [H | T]) ->
- ok = io:format(Fd, "~p.~n",[H]),
- write_list(Fd, T);
-write_list(_, []) ->
- ok.
-
test_case_fname() ->
"wx_test_case_info".
diff --git a/lib/wx/vsn.mk b/lib/wx/vsn.mk
index b9100e7c87..039fae322e 100644
--- a/lib/wx/vsn.mk
+++ b/lib/wx/vsn.mk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-WX_VSN = 1.8.1
+WX_VSN = 1.8.2
diff --git a/make/fakefop b/make/fakefop
index 7beeddf0a5..7a34c4faf1 100755
--- a/make/fakefop
+++ b/make/fakefop
@@ -22,13 +22,13 @@
# Author: Tuncer Ayaz
#
-if [ $# -lt 6 ]
+if [ $# -lt 8 ]
then
- echo "Usage: fakefop -c IGNORED -fo IGNORED -pdf OUTFILE"
+ echo "Usage: fakefop -c IGNORED -cache IGNORED -fo IGNORED -pdf OUTFILE"
exit 1
fi
-OUTFILE=$6
+OUTFILE=$8
echo -n -e '%PDF-1.4\n%\0342\0343\0317\0323\n\n' > $OUTFILE
@@ -87,12 +87,12 @@ endobj
xref
0 6
-0000000000 65536 f
-0000000016 00000 n
-0000000070 00000 n
-0000000136 00000 n
-0000000291 00000 n
-0000000410 00000 n
+0000000000 65536 f
+0000000016 00000 n
+0000000070 00000 n
+0000000136 00000 n
+0000000291 00000 n
+0000000410 00000 n
trailer
<<
diff --git a/make/otp.mk.in b/make/otp.mk.in
index 4232d37c2e..1d538fa528 100644
--- a/make/otp.mk.in
+++ b/make/otp.mk.in
@@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ endif
#
.PRECIOUS: %.erl %.fo
-## Uncomment these lines and add .idl to suffixes above to have erlc
+## Uncomment these lines and add .idl to suffixes above to have erlc
## eat IDL files
##$(EGEN)/%.erl: $(ESRC)/%.idl
## $(ERLC) $(IDL_FLAGS) $<
@@ -239,7 +239,7 @@ ifeq ($(PDFCOLOR),)
PDFCOLOR = \#960003
endif
-# HTML & GIF files that always are generated and must be delivered
+# HTML & GIF files that always are generated and must be delivered
SGML_COLL_FILES = $(SGML_APPLICATION_FILES) $(SGML_PART_FILES)
XML_COLL_FILES = $(XML_APPLICATION_FILES) $(XML_PART_FILES)
DEFAULT_HTML_FILES = \
@@ -327,5 +327,4 @@ $(MAN9DIR)/%.9: %.xml
escript $(DOCGEN)/priv/bin/codeline_preprocessing.escript $< $@
.fo.pdf:
- $(FOP) -c $(FOP_CONFIG) -fo $< -pdf $@
-
+ $(FOP) -c $(FOP_CONFIG) -cache $(ERL_TOP)/make/$(TARGET)/fop-fonts.cache -fo $< -pdf $@
diff --git a/otp_versions.table b/otp_versions.table
index b6527594da..c70a2c44d3 100644
--- a/otp_versions.table
+++ b/otp_versions.table
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
+OTP-20.1 : asn1-5.0.3 common_test-1.15.2 compiler-7.1.2 crypto-4.1 debugger-4.2.3 dialyzer-3.2.2 diameter-2.1 edoc-0.9.1 erl_docgen-0.7.1 erts-9.1 et-1.6.1 eunit-2.3.4 hipe-3.16.1 inets-6.4.2 kernel-5.4 mnesia-4.15.1 observer-2.5 os_mon-2.4.3 public_key-1.5 reltool-0.7.5 runtime_tools-1.12.2 sasl-3.1 snmp-5.2.7 ssh-4.6 ssl-8.2.1 stdlib-3.4.2 syntax_tools-2.1.3 tools-2.11 wx-1.8.2 # cosEvent-2.2.1 cosEventDomain-1.2.1 cosFileTransfer-1.2.1 cosNotification-1.2.2 cosProperty-1.2.2 cosTime-1.2.2 cosTransactions-1.3.2 eldap-1.2.2 erl_interface-3.10 ic-4.4.2 jinterface-1.8 megaco-3.18.2 odbc-2.12 orber-3.8.3 otp_mibs-1.1.1 parsetools-2.1.5 xmerl-1.3.15 :
OTP-20.0.5 : erts-9.0.5 inets-6.4.1 # asn1-5.0.2 common_test-1.15.1 compiler-7.1.1 cosEvent-2.2.1 cosEventDomain-1.2.1 cosFileTransfer-1.2.1 cosNotification-1.2.2 cosProperty-1.2.2 cosTime-1.2.2 cosTransactions-1.3.2 crypto-4.0 debugger-4.2.2 dialyzer-3.2.1 diameter-2.0 edoc-0.9 eldap-1.2.2 erl_docgen-0.7 erl_interface-3.10 et-1.6 eunit-2.3.3 hipe-3.16 ic-4.4.2 jinterface-1.8 kernel-5.3.1 megaco-3.18.2 mnesia-4.15 observer-2.4 odbc-2.12 orber-3.8.3 os_mon-2.4.2 otp_mibs-1.1.1 parsetools-2.1.5 public_key-1.4.1 reltool-0.7.4 runtime_tools-1.12.1 sasl-3.0.4 snmp-5.2.6 ssh-4.5.1 ssl-8.2 stdlib-3.4.1 syntax_tools-2.1.2 tools-2.10.1 wx-1.8.1 xmerl-1.3.15 :
OTP-20.0.4 : dialyzer-3.2.1 erts-9.0.4 # asn1-5.0.2 common_test-1.15.1 compiler-7.1.1 cosEvent-2.2.1 cosEventDomain-1.2.1 cosFileTransfer-1.2.1 cosNotification-1.2.2 cosProperty-1.2.2 cosTime-1.2.2 cosTransactions-1.3.2 crypto-4.0 debugger-4.2.2 diameter-2.0 edoc-0.9 eldap-1.2.2 erl_docgen-0.7 erl_interface-3.10 et-1.6 eunit-2.3.3 hipe-3.16 ic-4.4.2 inets-6.4 jinterface-1.8 kernel-5.3.1 megaco-3.18.2 mnesia-4.15 observer-2.4 odbc-2.12 orber-3.8.3 os_mon-2.4.2 otp_mibs-1.1.1 parsetools-2.1.5 public_key-1.4.1 reltool-0.7.4 runtime_tools-1.12.1 sasl-3.0.4 snmp-5.2.6 ssh-4.5.1 ssl-8.2 stdlib-3.4.1 syntax_tools-2.1.2 tools-2.10.1 wx-1.8.1 xmerl-1.3.15 :
OTP-20.0.3 : asn1-5.0.2 compiler-7.1.1 erts-9.0.3 ssh-4.5.1 # common_test-1.15.1 cosEvent-2.2.1 cosEventDomain-1.2.1 cosFileTransfer-1.2.1 cosNotification-1.2.2 cosProperty-1.2.2 cosTime-1.2.2 cosTransactions-1.3.2 crypto-4.0 debugger-4.2.2 dialyzer-3.2 diameter-2.0 edoc-0.9 eldap-1.2.2 erl_docgen-0.7 erl_interface-3.10 et-1.6 eunit-2.3.3 hipe-3.16 ic-4.4.2 inets-6.4 jinterface-1.8 kernel-5.3.1 megaco-3.18.2 mnesia-4.15 observer-2.4 odbc-2.12 orber-3.8.3 os_mon-2.4.2 otp_mibs-1.1.1 parsetools-2.1.5 public_key-1.4.1 reltool-0.7.4 runtime_tools-1.12.1 sasl-3.0.4 snmp-5.2.6 ssl-8.2 stdlib-3.4.1 syntax_tools-2.1.2 tools-2.10.1 wx-1.8.1 xmerl-1.3.15 :
diff --git a/scripts/pre-push b/scripts/pre-push
new file mode 100755
index 0000000000..0349378056
--- /dev/null
+++ b/scripts/pre-push
@@ -0,0 +1,202 @@
+#!/bin/sh
+
+# This is a git pre-push hook script.
+# It limits what you can push toward https://github.com/erlang/otp.git
+#
+# To activate, make a copy as .git/hooks/pre-push in your repo.
+
+# Called by "git push"
+# after it has checked the remote status, but before anything has been
+# pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed.
+#
+# This hook is called with the following parameters:
+#
+# $1 -- Name of the remote to which the push is being done
+# $2 -- URL to which the push is being done
+#
+# If pushing without using a named remote those arguments will be equal.
+#
+# Information about the commits which are being pushed is supplied as lines to
+# the standard input in the form:
+#
+# <local ref> <local sha1> <remote ref> <remote sha1>
+#
+
+RELEASES="20 19 18 17 r16 r15 r14 r13"
+
+# First commit on master, not allowed in other branches
+MASTER_ONLY=f52748254f17ba42e344798e8c787a1e3361fa33
+
+# Number of commits and files allowed in one push by this script
+NCOMMITS_MAX=100
+NFILES_MAX=100
+
+remote="$1"
+url="$2"
+
+null=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
+
+#echo "pre-push hook: remote=$remote"
+#echo "pre-push hook: url=$url"
+
+if [ "$url" = 'https://github.com/erlang/otp.git' -o "$url" = '[email protected]:erlang/otp.git' ]
+then
+ if [ $remote = "$url" ]; then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** Push to $url without using a named remote is NOT ALLOWED!!!!"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ IFS=' '
+ while read local_ref local_sha remote_ref remote_sha
+ do
+ #echo "pre-push hook: local_ref=$local_ref"
+ #echo "pre-push hook: remote_ref=$remote_ref"
+ #echo "pre-push hook: local_sha=$local_sha"
+ #echo "pre-push hook: remote_sha=$remote_sha"
+
+ if [ "$local_sha" = $null ]
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** DELETE push to '$remote' NOT ALLOWED!!!!!"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ if [ "$local_ref" != "$remote_ref" ]
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** RENAME push: $local_ref pushed as $remote_ref to '$remote' NOT ALLOWED!!!!"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ case "$remote_ref" in
+ refs/heads/master | refs/heads/maint | refs/heads/maint-[0-9][0-9] | refs/heads/maint-r[0-9][0-9])
+ branch=${remote_ref#refs/heads/}
+ if [ "$remote_sha" = $null ]
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** UNKNOWN BRANCH: '$branch' does not exist at '$remote'!!!!"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ if ! git log -1 --oneline $remote_sha > /dev/null 2>&1
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** The top of '$branch' at '$remote' ($remote_sha)"
+ echo "*** does not exist locally!!!"
+ echo "*** You probably need to refresh local '$branch' and redo merge."
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ if ! git merge-base --is-ancestor $remote_sha $local_sha
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** FORCE push branch to '$remote' NOT ALLOWED!!!"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ if [ $remote_ref != refs/heads/master -a "$MASTER_ONLY" ] && git merge-base --is-ancestor $MASTER_ONLY $local_sha
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** INVALID MERGE: Commit $MASTER_ONLY should not be reachable from '$branch'!!!!"
+ echo "*** You have probably merged master into '$branch' by mistake"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ if [ ${remote_ref#refs/heads/maint-} != $remote_ref ] && git merge-base --is-ancestor refs/remotes/$remote/maint $local_sha
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** INVALID MERGE: Branch maint should not be reachable from '$branch'!!!!"
+ echo "*** You have probably merged maint into '$branch' by mistake."
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ if [ $remote_ref = refs/heads/maint -o $remote_ref = refs/heads/master ]; then
+ for x in $RELEASES; do
+ if ! git merge-base --is-ancestor refs/remotes/$remote/maint-$x $local_sha; then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** WARNING: Branch '$remote/maint-$x' is not reachable from '$branch'!!!!"
+ echo "*** Someone needs to merge 'maint-$x' forward and push."
+ echo "***"
+ fi
+ done
+ fi
+ if [ $remote_ref = refs/heads/master ] && ! git merge-base --is-ancestor refs/remotes/$remote/maint $local_sha
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** INVALID PUSH: Branch '$remote/maint' is not reachable from master!!!!"
+ echo "*** Someone needs to merge maint forward to master and push."
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ NCOMMITS=`git rev-list --count $remote_sha..$local_sha`
+ if [ $NCOMMITS -gt $NCOMMITS_MAX ]
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** HUGE push: $NCOMMITS commits (> $NCOMMITS_MAX) to '$branch' at '$remote' NOT ALLOWED!!!!"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ NFILES=`git diff --name-only $remote_sha $local_sha | wc --lines`
+ if [ $NFILES -gt $NFILES_MAX ]
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** HUGE push: $NFILES changed files (> $NFILES_MAX) to '$branch' at '$remote' NOT ALLOWED!!!!"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ ;;
+ refs/tags/OTP-20.* | refs/tags/OTP-19.* | refs/tags/OTP-18.* | refs/tags/OTP-17.*)
+ tag=${remote_ref#refs/tags/}
+ if [ "$remote_sha" != $null ]
+ then
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** FORCE push tag to '$remote' NOT ALLOWED!!!"
+ echo "*** Tag '$tag' already exists at '$remote'."
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ fi
+ ;;
+ refs/heads/*)
+ branch=${remote_ref#refs/heads/}
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** UNKNOWN branch name: '$branch' pushed to '$remote' NOT ALLOWED!!!!"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ ;;
+ refs/tags/*)
+ tag=${remote_ref#refs/tags/}
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** UNKNOWN tag name: '$tag' pushed to '$remote' NOT ALLOWED!!!!"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ ;;
+ *)
+ echo "$0 says:"
+ echo "***"
+ echo "*** STRANGE ref: '$remote_ref' pushed to '$remote' NOT ALLOWED!!!!"
+ echo "***"
+ exit 1
+ ;;
+ esac
+ done
+else
+ echo "$0: No checks done for remote '$remote' at $url."
+fi
+
+exit 0
diff --git a/system/doc/design_principles/des_princ.xml b/system/doc/design_principles/des_princ.xml
index af5904ce78..e21f2a7f4e 100644
--- a/system/doc/design_principles/des_princ.xml
+++ b/system/doc/design_principles/des_princ.xml
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
<chapter>
<header>
<copyright>
- <year>1997</year><year>2016</year>
+ <year>1997</year><year>2017</year>
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
diff --git a/system/doc/oam/oam_intro.xml b/system/doc/oam/oam_intro.xml
index b4142b3cc5..d3867f03ca 100644
--- a/system/doc/oam/oam_intro.xml
+++ b/system/doc/oam/oam_intro.xml
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
<chapter>
<header>
<copyright>
- <year>1997</year><year>2016</year>
+ <year>1997</year><year>2017</year>
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
diff --git a/system/doc/reference_manual/typespec.xml b/system/doc/reference_manual/typespec.xml
index a0ea41cb3b..f6a19397c3 100644
--- a/system/doc/reference_manual/typespec.xml
+++ b/system/doc/reference_manual/typespec.xml
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
<chapter>
<header>
<copyright>
- <year>2003</year><year>2016</year>
+ <year>2003</year><year>2017</year>
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
@@ -133,17 +133,17 @@
Map :: map() %% denotes a map of any size
| #{} %% denotes the empty map
- | #{PairList}
+ | #{AssociationList}
Tuple :: tuple() %% denotes a tuple of any size
| {}
| {TList}
- PairList :: Pair
- | Pair, PairList
+ AssociationList :: Association
+ | Association, AssociationList
- Pair :: Type := Type %% denotes a mandatory pair
- | Type => Type %% denotes an optional pair
+ Association :: Type := Type %% denotes a mandatory association
+ | Type => Type %% denotes an optional association
TList :: Type
| Type, TList
@@ -173,14 +173,17 @@
The notation <c>[]</c> specifies the singleton type for the empty list.
</p>
<p>
- The general form of maps is <c>#{PairList}</c>. The key types in
- <c>PairList</c> are allowed to overlap, and if they do, the
- leftmost pair takes precedence. A map pair has a key in
- <c>PairList</c> if it belongs to this type. A <c>PairList</c> may contain
- both 'mandatory' and 'optional' pairs where 'mandatory' denotes that
- a key type, and its associated value type, must be present.
- In the case of an 'optional' pair it is not required for the key type to
- be present.
+ The general form of map types is <c>#{AssociationList}</c>.
+ The key types in
+ <c>AssociationList</c> are allowed to overlap, and if they do, the
+ leftmost association takes precedence. A map association has a key in
+ <c>AssociationList</c> if it belongs to this type.
+ <c>AssociationList</c> can contain both mandatory and optional
+ association types.
+ If an association type is mandatory, an association with that type
+ is to be present.
+ In the case of an optional association type it is not required for
+ the key type to be present.
</p>
<p>
Notice that the syntactic representation of <c>map()</c> is
@@ -512,8 +515,8 @@
<p>
Currently, the <c>::</c> constraint
(read as &laquo;is a subtype of&raquo;) is
- the only guard constraint that can be used in the <c>'when'</c>
- part of a <c>'-spec'</c> attribute.
+ the only guard constraint that can be used in the <c>when</c>
+ part of a <c>-spec</c> attribute.
</p>
<note>
<p>