aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--lib/hipe/doc/src/hipe_app.xml62
1 files changed, 52 insertions, 10 deletions
diff --git a/lib/hipe/doc/src/hipe_app.xml b/lib/hipe/doc/src/hipe_app.xml
index fc42ecd97d..4d40db086c 100644
--- a/lib/hipe/doc/src/hipe_app.xml
+++ b/lib/hipe/doc/src/hipe_app.xml
@@ -35,6 +35,14 @@
<app>HiPE</app>
<appsummary>The HiPE Application</appsummary>
<description>
+ <note>
+ <p>
+ HiPE and execution of HiPE compiled code only have limited support by
+ the OTP team at Ericsson. The OTP team only does limited maintenance
+ of HiPE and does not actively develop HiPE. HiPE is mainly supported
+ by the HiPE team at Uppsala University.
+ </p>
+ </note>
<p>
The normal way to native-compile an Erlang module using HiPE is to include the atom native
in the Erlang compiler options, as in:</p>
@@ -108,7 +116,7 @@
queue when the reference was created will be bypassed, as they
cannot possibly contain the reference. HiPE currently has an
optimization similar this, but it is not guaranteed to
- bypass all messages. In the worst case scenario it, cannot
+ bypass all messages. In the worst case scenario, it cannot
bypass any messages at all.
</p>
<p>
@@ -117,21 +125,55 @@
</p>
</item>
+ <tag>Garbage collection after BIFs</tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The condition for determining whether a garbage collection
+ is needed or not has changed in later releases. HiPE has not
+ been updated regarding this which may cause premature garbage
+ collections after BIF calls.
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
</taglist>
</section>
<section>
<title>Stability Issues</title>
<taglist>
- <tag>Not yielding in <c>receive</c> statements</tag>
+ <tag>Not checking reduction count on function returns</tag>
<item>
- <p>HiPE will not yield in <c>receive</c> statements where
- appropriate. If a process have lots of signals in its signal
- queue and execute a HiPE compiled <c>receive</c> statement,
- the scheduler thread performing the execution may be stuck
- in the <c>receive</c> statement for a very long time. This
- can in turn cause various severe issues such as for example
- prevent the runtime system from being able to release
- memory.
+ <p>
+ BEAM checks the reduction count and schedules out the executing
+ process if needed both when calling a function and when returning
+ from a function call that was not called using a tail call.
+ HiPE only checks the reduction count when calling a function.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The runtime system might need to schedule out a process
+ in order to reclaim memory. If the process isn't scheduled
+ out soon after the process has entered this state, memory
+ consumption will quickly grow. Maintaining this state is also
+ quite expensive performance wise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Processes executing code that performs large recursions and
+ produce data after returning from recursive calls may have to
+ be scheduled out when returning from a function call. Since
+ HiPE does not check reductions on returns, processes executing
+ such HiPE compiled code may cause huge peeks in memory
+ consumption as well as severe performance degradation.
+ </p>
+ </item>
+
+ <tag>Not bumping appropriate amount of reductions in <c>receive</c> statements</tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The process signaling improvements made in ERTS version
+ 10.0 moved potentially significant amounts of work into the
+ receive statement from other places. In order to account for
+ this work, the reduction count should be bumped on the
+ executing process. Reductions are not bumped when entering
+ the <c>receive</c> statement from HiPE compiled code.
</p>
</item>
</taglist>