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diff --git a/erts/doc/src/erl.xml b/erts/doc/src/erl.xml
index 37387f2c59..5559aec30e 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/erl.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/erl.xml
@@ -30,86 +30,92 @@
<file>erl.xml</file>
</header>
<com>erl</com>
- <comsummary>The Erlang Emulator</comsummary>
+ <comsummary>The Erlang emulator.</comsummary>
<description>
<p>The <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> program starts an Erlang runtime system.
- The exact details (for example, whether <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> is a script or
- a program and which other programs it calls) are system-dependent.</p>
- <p>Windows users probably wants to use the <c><![CDATA[werl]]></c> program
+ The exact details (for example, whether <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> is a
+ script or a program and which other programs it calls) are
+ system-dependent.</p>
+
+ <p>Windows users probably want to use the <c><![CDATA[werl]]></c> program
instead, which runs in its own window with scrollbars and supports
- command-line editing. The <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> program on Windows provides
- no line editing in its shell, and on Windows 95 there is no way
- to scroll back to text which has scrolled off the screen.
- The <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> program must be used, however, in pipelines or if
+ command-line editing. The <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> program on Windows
+ provides no line editing in its shell, and on Windows 95 there is no way
+ to scroll back to text that has scrolled off the screen. The
+ <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> program must be used, however, in pipelines or if
you want to redirect standard input or output.</p>
- <note><p>As of ERTS version 5.9 (OTP-R15B) the runtime system will by
- default <em>not</em> bind schedulers to logical processors.
- For more information see documentation of the
- <seealso marker="#+sbt">+sbt</seealso> system flag.
- </p>
- </note>
+
+ <note>
+ <p>As from <c>ERTS</c> 5.9 (Erlang/OTP R15B) the runtime system does by
+ default <em>not</em> bind schedulers to logical processors.
+ For more information, see system flag
+ <seealso marker="#+sbt"><c>+sbt</c></seealso>.</p>
+ </note>
</description>
+
<funcs>
<func>
<name>erl &lt;arguments></name>
- <fsummary>Start an Erlang runtime system</fsummary>
+ <fsummary>Start an Erlang runtime system.</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>Starts an Erlang runtime system.</p>
- <p>The arguments can be divided into <em>emulator flags</em>,
- <em>flags</em> and <em>plain arguments</em>:</p>
- <list type="bulleted">
- <item>
- <p>Any argument starting with the character <c><![CDATA[+]]></c> is
- interpreted as an <seealso marker="#emu_flags">emulator flag</seealso>.</p>
- <p>As indicated by the name, emulator flags controls
- the behavior of the emulator.</p>
- </item>
- <item>
- <p>Any argument starting with the character <c><![CDATA[-]]></c>
- (hyphen) is interpreted as a
- <seealso marker="#init_flags">flag</seealso> which should
- be passed to the Erlang part of the runtime system, more
- specifically to the <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> system process, see
- <seealso marker="init">init(3)</seealso>.</p>
- <p>The <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> process itself interprets some of these
- flags, the <em>init flags</em>. It also stores any
- remaining flags, the <em>user flags</em>. The latter can
- be retrieved by calling <c><![CDATA[init:get_argument/1]]></c>.</p>
- <p>It can be noted that there are a small number of "-"
- flags which now actually are emulator flags, see
- the description below.</p>
- </item>
- <item>
- <p>Plain arguments are not interpreted in any way. They are
- also stored by the <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> process and can be
- retrieved by calling <c><![CDATA[init:get_plain_arguments/0]]></c>.
- Plain arguments can occur before the first flag, or after
- a <c><![CDATA[--]]></c> flag. Additionally, the flag <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c>
- causes everything that follows to become plain arguments.</p>
- </item>
- </list>
- <p>Example:</p>
- <pre>
+ <p>Starts an Erlang runtime system.</p>
+ <p>The arguments can be divided into <em>emulator flags</em>,
+ <em>flags</em>, and <em>plain arguments</em>:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>
+ <p>Any argument starting with character <c><![CDATA[+]]></c> is
+ interpreted as an
+ <seealso marker="#emu_flags">emulator flag</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>As indicated by the name, emulator flags control
+ the behavior of the emulator.</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>Any argument starting with character <c><![CDATA[-]]></c>
+ (hyphen) is interpreted as a
+ <seealso marker="#init_flags">flag</seealso>, which is to
+ be passed to the Erlang part of the runtime system, more
+ specifically to the <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> system process, see
+ <seealso marker="init"><c>init(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ <p>The <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> process itself interprets some of
+ these flags, the <em>init flags</em>. It also stores any
+ remaining flags, the <em>user flags</em>. The latter can be
+ retrieved by calling <c><![CDATA[init:get_argument/1]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>A small number of "-" flags exist, which now actually are
+ emulator flags, see the description below.</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>Plain arguments are not interpreted in any way. They are also
+ stored by the <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> process and can be retrieved
+ by calling <c><![CDATA[init:get_plain_arguments/0]]></c>.
+ Plain arguments can occur before the first flag, or after a
+ <c><![CDATA[--]]></c> flag. Also, the <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c>
+ flag causes everything that follows to become plain arguments.</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ <p><em>Examples:</em></p>
+ <pre>
% <input>erl +W w -sname arnie +R 9 -s my_init -extra +bertie</input>
(arnie@host)1> <input>init:get_argument(sname).</input>
{ok,[["arnie"]]}
(arnie@host)2> <input>init:get_plain_arguments().</input>
["+bertie"]</pre>
- <p>Here <c><![CDATA[+W w]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[+R 9]]></c> are emulator flags.
- <c><![CDATA[-s my_init]]></c> is an init flag, interpreted by <c><![CDATA[init]]></c>.
- <c><![CDATA[-sname arnie]]></c> is a user flag, stored by <c><![CDATA[init]]></c>.
- It is read by Kernel and will cause the Erlang runtime system
- to become distributed. Finally, everything after <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c>
- (that is, <c><![CDATA[+bertie]]></c>) is considered as plain arguments.</p>
- <pre>
+ <p>Here <c><![CDATA[+W w]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[+R 9]]></c> are
+ emulator flags. <c><![CDATA[-s my_init]]></c> is an init flag,
+ interpreted by <c><![CDATA[init]]></c>.
+ <c><![CDATA[-sname arnie]]></c> is a user flag, stored by
+ <c><![CDATA[init]]></c>. It is read by <c>Kernel</c> and causes the
+ Erlang runtime system to become distributed. Finally, everything after
+ <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> (that is, <c><![CDATA[+bertie]]></c>) is
+ considered as plain arguments.</p>
+ <pre>
% <input>erl -myflag 1</input>
1> <input>init:get_argument(myflag).</input>
{ok,[["1"]]}
2> <input>init:get_plain_arguments().</input>
[]</pre>
- <p>Here the user flag <c><![CDATA[-myflag 1]]></c> is passed to and stored
- by the <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> process. It is a user defined flag,
- presumably used by some user defined application.</p>
+ <p>Here the user flag <c><![CDATA[-myflag 1]]></c> is passed to and
+ stored by the <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> process. It is a user-defined
+ flag, presumably used by some user-defined application.</p>
</desc>
</func>
</funcs>
@@ -117,50 +123,54 @@
<section>
<marker id="init_flags"></marker>
<title>Flags</title>
- <p>In the following list, init flags are marked (init flag).
+ <p>In the following list, init flags are marked "(init flag)".
Unless otherwise specified, all other flags are user flags, for
which the values can be retrieved by calling
- <c><![CDATA[init:get_argument/1]]></c>. Note that the list of user flags is
- not exhaustive, there may be additional, application specific
- flags which instead are documented in the corresponding
+ <c><![CDATA[init:get_argument/1]]></c>. Notice that the list of user
+ flags is not exhaustive, there can be more application-specific
+ flags that instead are doscribed in the corresponding
application documentation.</p>
<taglist>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[--]]></c>(init flag)</tag>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[--]]></c> (init flag)</tag>
<item>
<p>Everything following <c><![CDATA[--]]></c> up to the next flag
- (<c><![CDATA[-flag]]></c> or <c><![CDATA[+flag]]></c>) is considered plain arguments
- and can be retrieved using <c><![CDATA[init:get_plain_arguments/0]]></c>.</p>
+ (<c><![CDATA[-flag]]></c> or <c><![CDATA[+flag]]></c>) is considered
+ plain arguments and can be retrieved using
+ <c><![CDATA[init:get_plain_arguments/0]]></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-Application Par Val]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the application configuration parameter <c><![CDATA[Par]]></c> to
- the value <c><![CDATA[Val]]></c> for the application <c><![CDATA[Application]]></c>,
- see <seealso marker="kernel:app">app(4)</seealso> and
- <seealso marker="kernel:application">application(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Sets the application configuration parameter <c><![CDATA[Par]]></c>
+ to the value <c><![CDATA[Val]]></c> for the application
+ <c><![CDATA[Application]]></c>; see
+ <seealso marker="kernel:app"><c>kernel:app(4)</c></seealso> and
+ <seealso marker="kernel:application">
+ <c>kernel:application(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="args_file"/><c><![CDATA[-args_file FileName]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Command line arguments are read from the file <c><![CDATA[FileName]]></c>.
- The arguments read from the file replace the
- '<c><![CDATA[-args_file FileName]]></c>' flag on the resulting command line.</p>
- <p>The file <c><![CDATA[FileName]]></c> should be a plain text file and may
- contain comments and command line arguments. A comment begins
- with a # character and continues until next end of line character.
- Backslash (\\) is used as quoting character. All command line
- arguments accepted by <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> are allowed, also the
- <c><![CDATA[-args_file FileName]]></c> flag. Be careful not to cause circular
- dependencies between files containing the <c><![CDATA[-args_file]]></c> flag,
- though.</p>
- <p>The <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag is treated specially. Its scope ends
- at the end of the file. Arguments following an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c>
- flag are moved on the command line into the <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> section,
- i.e. the end of the command line following after an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c>
- flag.</p>
+ <p>Command-line arguments are read from the file
+ <c><![CDATA[FileName]]></c>. The arguments read from the file replace
+ flag '<c><![CDATA[-args_file FileName]]></c>' on the resulting
+ command line.</p>
+ <p>The file <c><![CDATA[FileName]]></c> is to be a plain text file and
+ can contain comments and command-line arguments. A comment begins
+ with a <c>#</c> character and continues until the next end of line
+ character. Backslash (\\) is used as quoting character. All
+ command-line arguments accepted by <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> are allowed,
+ also flag <c><![CDATA[-args_file FileName]]></c>. Be careful not to
+ cause circular dependencies between files containing flag
+ <c><![CDATA[-args_file]]></c>, though.</p>
+ <p>The flag <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> is treated in special way. Its
+ scope ends at the end of the file. Arguments following an
+ <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag are moved on the command line into the
+ <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> section, that is, the end of the command
+ line following after an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-async_shell_start]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>The initial Erlang shell does not read user input until
- the system boot procedure has been completed (Erlang 5.4 and
+ the system boot procedure has been completed (Erlang/OTP 5.4 and
later). This flag disables the start synchronization feature
and lets the shell start in parallel with the rest of
the system.</p>
@@ -168,52 +178,56 @@
<tag><c><![CDATA[-boot File]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Specifies the name of the boot file, <c><![CDATA[File.boot]]></c>,
- which is used to start the system. See
- <seealso marker="init">init(3)</seealso>. Unless
+ which is used to start the system; see
+ <seealso marker="init"><c>init(3)</c></seealso>. Unless
<c><![CDATA[File]]></c> contains an absolute path, the system searches
- for <c><![CDATA[File.boot]]></c> in the current and <c><![CDATA[$ROOT/bin]]></c>
- directories.</p>
+ for <c><![CDATA[File.boot]]></c> in the current and
+ <c><![CDATA[$ROOT/bin]]></c> directories.</p>
<p>Defaults to <c><![CDATA[$ROOT/bin/start.boot]]></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-boot_var Var Dir]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>If the boot script contains a path variable <c><![CDATA[Var]]></c> other
- than <c><![CDATA[$ROOT]]></c>, this variable is expanded to <c><![CDATA[Dir]]></c>.
- Used when applications are installed in another directory
- than <c><![CDATA[$ROOT/lib]]></c>, see
- <seealso marker="sasl:systools#make_script/1">systools:make_script/1,2</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>If the boot script contains a path variable <c><![CDATA[Var]]></c>
+ other than <c><![CDATA[$ROOT]]></c>, this variable is expanded to
+ <c><![CDATA[Dir]]></c>. Used when applications are installed in
+ another directory than <c><![CDATA[$ROOT/lib]]></c>; see
+ <seealso marker="sasl:systools#make_script/1">
+ <c>systools:make_script/1,2</c></seealso> in <c>SASL</c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-code_path_cache]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Enables the code path cache of the code server, see
- <seealso marker="kernel:code">code(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Enables the code path cache of the code server; see
+ <seealso marker="kernel:code"><c>kernel:code(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-compile Mod1 Mod2 ...]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Compiles the specified modules and then terminates (with
non-zero exit code if the compilation of some file did not
- succeed). Implies <c><![CDATA[-noinput]]></c>. Not recommended - use
- <seealso marker="erlc">erlc</seealso> instead.</p>
+ succeed). Implies <c><![CDATA[-noinput]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>Not recommended; use <seealso marker="erlc"><c>erlc</c></seealso>
+ instead.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-config Config]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Specifies the name of a configuration file,
<c><![CDATA[Config.config]]></c>, which is used to configure
- applications. See
- <seealso marker="kernel:app">app(4)</seealso> and
- <seealso marker="kernel:application">application(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ applications; see
+ <seealso marker="kernel:app"><c>kernel:app(4)</c></seealso> and
+ <seealso marker="kernel:application">
+ <c>kernel:application(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="connect_all"/><c><![CDATA[-connect_all false]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>If this flag is present, <c><![CDATA[global]]></c> will not maintain a
- fully connected network of distributed Erlang nodes, and then
- global name registration cannot be used. See
- <seealso marker="kernel:global">global(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>If this flag is present, <c><![CDATA[global]]></c> does not maintain
+ a fully connected network of distributed Erlang nodes, and then
+ global name registration cannot be used; see
+ <seealso marker="kernel:global"><c>kernel:global(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-cookie Cookie]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Obsolete flag without any effect and common misspelling for
- <c><![CDATA[-setcookie]]></c>. Use <c><![CDATA[-setcookie]]></c> instead.</p>
+ <c><![CDATA[-setcookie]]></c>. Use <c><![CDATA[-setcookie]]></c>
+ instead.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-detached]]></c></tag>
<item>
@@ -223,8 +237,7 @@
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-emu_args]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Useful for debugging. Prints out the actual arguments
- sent to the emulator.</p>
+ <p>Useful for debugging. Prints the arguments sent to the emulator.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-env Variable Value]]></c></tag>
<item>
@@ -234,14 +247,16 @@
<pre>
% <input>erl -env DISPLAY gin:0</input></pre>
<p>In this example, an Erlang runtime system is started with
- the <c><![CDATA[DISPLAY]]></c> environment variable set to <c><![CDATA[gin:0]]></c>.</p>
+ environment variable <c><![CDATA[DISPLAY]]></c> set to
+ <c><![CDATA[gin:0]]></c>.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[-eval Expr]]></c>(init flag)</tag>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[-eval Expr]]></c> (init flag)</tag>
<item>
- <p>Makes <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> evaluate the expression <c><![CDATA[Expr]]></c>, see
- <seealso marker="init">init(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Makes <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> evaluate the expression
+ <c><![CDATA[Expr]]></c>; see
+ <seealso marker="init"><c>init(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c>(init flag)</tag>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> (init flag)</tag>
<item>
<p>Everything following <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> is considered plain
arguments and can be retrieved using
@@ -249,8 +264,9 @@
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-heart]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Starts heart beat monitoring of the Erlang runtime system.
- See <seealso marker="kernel:heart">heart(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Starts heartbeat monitoring of the Erlang runtime system;
+ see <seealso marker="kernel:heart">
+ <c>kernel:heart(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-hidden]]></c></tag>
<item>
@@ -258,91 +274,99 @@
run as a distributed node. Hidden nodes always establish
hidden connections to all other nodes except for nodes in the
same global group. Hidden connections are not published on
- either of the connected nodes, i.e. neither of the connected
- nodes are part of the result from <c><![CDATA[nodes/0]]></c> on the other
- node. See also hidden global groups,
- <seealso marker="kernel:global_group">global_group(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ any of the connected nodes, that is, none of the connected
+ nodes are part of the result from <c><![CDATA[nodes/0]]></c> on the
+ other node. See also hidden global groups;
+ <seealso marker="kernel:global_group">
+ <c>kernel:global_group(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-hosts Hosts]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Specifies the IP addresses for the hosts on which Erlang
- boot servers are running, see
- <seealso marker="kernel:erl_boot_server">erl_boot_server(3)</seealso>.
- This flag is mandatory if the <c><![CDATA[-loader inet]]></c> flag is
- present.</p>
- <p>The IP addresses must be given in the standard form (four
- decimal numbers separated by periods, for example
- <c><![CDATA["150.236.20.74"]]></c>. Hosts names are not acceptable, but
- a broadcast address (preferably limited to the local network)
+ <p>Specifies the IP addresses for the hosts on which Erlang boot servers
+ are running, see <seealso marker="kernel:erl_boot_server">
+ <c>kernel:erl_boot_server(3)</c></seealso>. This flag
+ is mandatory if flag <c><![CDATA[-loader inet]]></c> is present.</p>
+ <p>The IP addresses must be specified in the standard form (four
+ decimal numbers separated by periods, for example,
+ <c><![CDATA["150.236.20.74"]]></c>. Hosts names are not acceptable,
+ but a broadcast address (preferably limited to the local network)
is.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-id Id]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Specifies the identity of the Erlang runtime system. If it is
run as a distributed node, <c><![CDATA[Id]]></c> must be identical to
- the name supplied together with the <c><![CDATA[-sname]]></c> or
- <c><![CDATA[-name]]></c> flag.</p>
+ the name supplied together with flag <c><![CDATA[-sname]]></c> or
+ <c><![CDATA[-name]]></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-init_debug]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Makes <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> write some debug information while
interpreting the boot script.</p>
</item>
- <tag><marker id="instr"/><c><![CDATA[-instr]]></c>(emulator flag)</tag>
+ <tag><marker id="instr"/><c><![CDATA[-instr]]></c> (emulator flag)</tag>
<item>
<p>Selects an instrumented Erlang runtime system (virtual
machine) to run, instead of the ordinary one. When running an
instrumented runtime system, some resource usage data can be
- obtained and analysed using the module <c><![CDATA[instrument]]></c>.
+ obtained and analyzed using the <c><![CDATA[instrument]]></c> module.
Functionally, it behaves exactly like an ordinary Erlang
runtime system.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-loader Loader]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Specifies the method used by <c><![CDATA[erl_prim_loader]]></c> to load
- Erlang modules into the system. See
- <seealso marker="erl_prim_loader">erl_prim_loader(3)</seealso>.
- Two <c><![CDATA[Loader]]></c> methods are supported, <c><![CDATA[efile]]></c> and
- <c><![CDATA[inet]]></c>. <c><![CDATA[efile]]></c> means use the local file system,
- this is the default. <c><![CDATA[inet]]></c> means use a boot server on
- another machine, and the <c><![CDATA[-id]]></c>, <c><![CDATA[-hosts]]></c> and
- <c><![CDATA[-setcookie]]></c> flags must be specified as well. If
- <c><![CDATA[Loader]]></c> is something else, the user supplied
+ <p>Specifies the method used by <c><![CDATA[erl_prim_loader]]></c> to
+ load Erlang modules into the system; see
+ <seealso marker="erl_prim_loader"><c>erl_prim_loader(3)</c></seealso>.
+ Two <c><![CDATA[Loader]]></c> methods are supported:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>
+ <p><c><![CDATA[efile]]></c>, which means use the local file system,
+ this is the default.</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p><c><![CDATA[inet]]></c>, which means use a boot server on
+ another machine. The flags <c><![CDATA[-id]]></c>,
+ <c><![CDATA[-hosts]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[-setcookie]]></c> must
+ also be specified.</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ <p>If <c><![CDATA[Loader]]></c> is something else, the user-supplied
<c><![CDATA[Loader]]></c> port program is started.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-make]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Makes the Erlang runtime system invoke <c><![CDATA[make:all()]]></c> in
- the current working directory and then terminate. See
- <seealso marker="tools:make">make(3)</seealso>. Implies
+ <p>Makes the Erlang runtime system invoke <c><![CDATA[make:all()]]></c>
+ in the current working directory and then terminate; see
+ <seealso marker="tools:make"><c>tools:make(3)</c></seealso>. Implies
<c><![CDATA[-noinput]]></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-man Module]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Displays the manual page for the Erlang module <c><![CDATA[Module]]></c>.
- Only supported on Unix.</p>
+ <p>Displays the manual page for the Erlang module
+ <c><![CDATA[Module]]></c>. Only supported on Unix.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-mode interactive | embedded]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Indicates if the system should load code dynamically
- (<c><![CDATA[interactive]]></c>), or if all code should be loaded
- during system initialization (<c><![CDATA[embedded]]></c>), see
- <seealso marker="kernel:code">code(3)</seealso>. Defaults to
- <c><![CDATA[interactive]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>Indicates if the system is to load code dynamically
+ (<c><![CDATA[interactive]]></c>), or if all code is to be loaded
+ during system initialization (<c><![CDATA[embedded]]></c>); see
+ <seealso marker="kernel:code"><c>kernel:code(3)</c></seealso>.
+ Defaults to <c><![CDATA[interactive]]></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-name Name]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Makes the Erlang runtime system into a distributed node.
This flag invokes all network servers necessary for a node to
- become distributed. See
- <seealso marker="kernel:net_kernel">net_kernel(3)</seealso>.
- It is also ensured that <c><![CDATA[epmd]]></c> runs on the current host
- before Erlang is started. See
- <seealso marker="epmd">epmd(1)</seealso> and the
+ become distributed; see <seealso marker="kernel:net_kernel">
+ <c>kernel:net_kernel(3)</c></seealso>. It is also ensured that
+ <c><![CDATA[epmd]]></c> runs on the current host before Erlang is
+ started; see <seealso marker="epmd"><c>epmd(1)</c></seealso>.and the
<seealso marker="#start_epmd"><c>-start_epmd</c></seealso> option.</p>
- <p>The name of the node will be <c><![CDATA[Name@Host]]></c>, where
- <c><![CDATA[Host]]></c> is the fully qualified host name of the current
- host. For short names, use the <c><![CDATA[-sname]]></c> flag instead.</p>
+ <p>The node name will be <c><![CDATA[Name@Host]]></c>, where
+ <c><![CDATA[Host]]></c> is the fully qualified host name of the
+ current host. For short names, use flag <c><![CDATA[-sname]]></c>
+ instead.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-noinput]]></c></tag>
<item>
@@ -353,115 +377,111 @@
<item>
<p>Starts an Erlang runtime system with no shell. This flag
makes it possible to have the Erlang runtime system as a
- component in a series of UNIX pipes.</p>
+ component in a series of Unix pipes.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-nostick]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Disables the sticky directory facility of the Erlang code
- server, see
- <seealso marker="kernel:code">code(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ server; see
+ <seealso marker="kernel:code"><c>kernel:code(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-oldshell]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Invokes the old Erlang shell from Erlang 3.3. The old shell
+ <p>Invokes the old Erlang shell from Erlang/OTP 3.3. The old shell
can still be used.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-pa Dir1 Dir2 ...]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Adds the specified directories to the beginning of the code
- path, similar to <c><![CDATA[code:add_pathsa/1]]></c>. See
- <seealso marker="kernel:code">code(3)</seealso>.
+ path, similar to <c><![CDATA[code:add_pathsa/1]]></c>; see
+ <seealso marker="kernel:code"><c>kernel:code(3)</c></seealso>.
As an alternative to <c>-pa</c>, if several directories are
to be prepended to the code path and the directories have a
- common parent directory, that parent directory could be
- specified in the <c>ERL_LIBS</c> environment variable.
- See <seealso marker="kernel:code">code(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ common parent directory, that parent directory can be
+ specified in environment variable <c>ERL_LIBS</c>; see
+ <seealso marker="kernel:code"><c>kernel:code(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-pz Dir1 Dir2 ...]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Adds the specified directories to the end of the code path,
- similar to <c><![CDATA[code:add_pathsz/1]]></c>. See
- <seealso marker="kernel:code">code(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ similar to <c><![CDATA[code:add_pathsz/1]]></c>; see
+ <seealso marker="kernel:code"><c>kernel:code(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-path Dir1 Dir2 ...]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Replaces the path specified in the boot script. See
- <seealso marker="sasl:script">script(4)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Replaces the path specified in the boot script; see
+ <seealso marker="sasl:script"><c>sasl:script(4)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-proto_dist Proto]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Specify a protocol for Erlang distribution.</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c>inet_tcp</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>TCP over IPv4 (the default)</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>inet_tls</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>distribution over TLS/SSL</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>inet6_tcp</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>TCP over IPv6</p>
- </item>
+ <p>Specifies a protocol for Erlang distribution:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>inet_tcp</c></tag>
+ <item>TCP over IPv4 (the default)</item>
+ <tag><c>inet_tls</c></tag>
+ <item>Distribution over TLS/SSL</item>
+ <tag><c>inet6_tcp</c></tag>
+ <item>TCP over IPv6</item>
</taglist>
<p>For example, to start up IPv6 distributed nodes:</p>
<pre>
-% <input>erl -name [email protected] -proto_dist inet6_tcp</input>
-</pre>
+% <input>erl -name [email protected] -proto_dist inet6_tcp</input></pre>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-remsh Node]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Starts Erlang with a remote shell connected to <c><![CDATA[Node]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>Starts Erlang with a remote shell connected to
+ <c><![CDATA[Node]]></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-rsh Program]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Specifies an alternative to <c><![CDATA[rsh]]></c> for starting a slave
- node on a remote host. See
- <seealso marker="stdlib:slave">slave(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Specifies an alternative to <c><![CDATA[rsh]]></c> for starting a
+ slave node on a remote host; see
+ <seealso marker="stdlib:slave"><c>stdlib:slave(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[-run Mod [Func [Arg1, Arg2, ...]]]]></c>(init flag)</tag>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[-run Mod [Func [Arg1, Arg2, ...]]]]></c> (init
+ flag)</tag>
<item>
- <p>Makes <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> call the specified function. <c><![CDATA[Func]]></c>
- defaults to <c><![CDATA[start]]></c>. If no arguments are provided,
- the function is assumed to be of arity 0. Otherwise it is
- assumed to be of arity 1, taking the list
- <c><![CDATA[[Arg1,Arg2,...]]]></c> as argument. All arguments are passed
- as strings. See
- <seealso marker="init">init(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Makes <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> call the specified function.
+ <c><![CDATA[Func]]></c> defaults to <c><![CDATA[start]]></c>.
+ If no arguments are provided, the function is assumed to be of
+ arity 0. Otherwise it is assumed to be of arity 1, taking the list
+ <c><![CDATA[[Arg1,Arg2,...]]]></c> as argument. All arguments are
+ passed as strings. See <seealso marker="init">
+ <c>init(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[-s Mod [Func [Arg1, Arg2, ...]]]]></c>(init flag)</tag>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[-s Mod [Func [Arg1, Arg2, ...]]]]></c> (init flag)</tag>
<item>
- <p>Makes <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> call the specified function. <c><![CDATA[Func]]></c>
- defaults to <c><![CDATA[start]]></c>. If no arguments are provided,
- the function is assumed to be of arity 0. Otherwise it is
- assumed to be of arity 1, taking the list
- <c><![CDATA[[Arg1,Arg2,...]]]></c> as argument. All arguments are passed
- as atoms. See
- <seealso marker="init">init(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Makes <c><![CDATA[init]]></c> call the specified function.
+ <c><![CDATA[Func]]></c> defaults to <c><![CDATA[start]]></c>.
+ If no arguments are provided, the function is assumed to be of
+ arity 0. Otherwise it is assumed to be of arity 1, taking the list
+ <c><![CDATA[[Arg1,Arg2,...]]]></c> as argument. All arguments are
+ passed as atoms. See <seealso marker="init">
+ <c>init(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-setcookie Cookie]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the magic cookie of the node to <c><![CDATA[Cookie]]></c>, see
- <seealso marker="erlang#set_cookie/2">erlang:set_cookie/2</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Sets the magic cookie of the node to <c><![CDATA[Cookie]]></c>; see
+ <seealso marker="erlang#set_cookie/2">
+ <c>erlang:set_cookie/2</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-shutdown_time Time]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Specifies how long time (in milliseconds) the <c><![CDATA[init]]></c>
process is allowed to spend shutting down the system. If
- <c><![CDATA[Time]]></c> ms have elapsed, all processes still existing are
- killed. Defaults to <c><![CDATA[infinity]]></c>.</p>
+ <c><![CDATA[Time]]></c> milliseconds have elapsed, all processes still
+ existing are killed. Defaults to <c><![CDATA[infinity]]></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[-sname Name]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Makes the Erlang runtime system into a distributed node,
- similar to <c><![CDATA[-name]]></c>, but the host name portion of the node
+ <p>Makes the Erlang runtime system into a distributed node, similar to
+ <c><![CDATA[-name]]></c>, but the host name portion of the node
name <c><![CDATA[Name@Host]]></c> will be the short name, not fully
qualified.</p>
<p>This is sometimes the only way to run distributed Erlang if
- the DNS (Domain Name System) is not running. There can be no
- communication between nodes running with the <c><![CDATA[-sname]]></c>
- flag and those running with the <c><![CDATA[-name]]></c> flag, as node
+ the Domain Name System (DNS) is not running. No communication can
+ exist between nodes running with flag <c><![CDATA[-sname]]></c>
+ and those running with flag <c><![CDATA[-name]]></c>, as node
names must be unique in distributed Erlang systems.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="start_epmd"/><c>-start_epmd true | false</c></tag>
@@ -481,19 +501,21 @@
</item>
<tag><marker id="smp"/><c><![CDATA[-smp [enable|auto|disable]]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>-smp enable</c> and <c>-smp</c> starts the Erlang runtime
- system with SMP support enabled. This may fail if no runtime
+ <p><c>-smp enable</c> and <c>-smp</c> start the Erlang runtime
+ system with SMP support enabled. This can fail if no runtime
system with SMP support is available. <c>-smp auto</c> starts
the Erlang runtime system with SMP support enabled if it is
- available and more than one logical processor are detected.
+ available and more than one logical processor is detected.
<c>-smp disable</c> starts a runtime system without SMP support.</p>
- <p><em>NOTE</em>: The runtime system with SMP support will not
- be available on all supported platforms. See also the
- <seealso marker="#+S">+S</seealso> flag.</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>The runtime system with SMP support is not available on all
+ supported platforms. See also flag
+ <seealso marker="#+S"><c>+S</c></seealso>.</p>
+ </note>
</item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[-version]]></c>(emulator flag)</tag>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[-version]]></c> (emulator flag)</tag>
<item>
- <p>Makes the emulator print out its version number. The same
+ <p>Makes the emulator print its version number. The same
as <c><![CDATA[erl +V]]></c>.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
@@ -505,133 +527,169 @@
<p><c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> invokes the code for the Erlang emulator (virtual
machine), which supports the following flags:</p>
<taglist>
- <tag><marker id="async_thread_stack_size"/><c><![CDATA[+a size]]></c></tag>
+ <tag><marker id="async_thread_stack_size"/>
+ <c><![CDATA[+a size]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Suggested stack size, in kilowords, for threads in the
- async-thread pool. Valid range is 16-8192 kilowords. The
- default suggested stack size is 16 kilowords, i.e, 64
+ async thread pool. Valid range is 16-8192 kilowords. The
+ default suggested stack size is 16 kilowords, that is, 64
kilobyte on 32-bit architectures. This small default size
- has been chosen since the amount of async-threads might
- be quite large. The default size is enough for drivers
- delivered with Erlang/OTP, but might not be sufficiently
- large for other dynamically linked in drivers that use the
- <seealso marker="erl_driver#driver_async">driver_async()</seealso>
- functionality. Note that the value passed is only a
- suggestion, and it might even be ignored on some
- platforms.</p>
+ has been chosen because the number of async threads can
+ be large. The default size is enough for drivers
+ delivered with Erlang/OTP, but might not be large
+ enough for other dynamically linked-in drivers that use the
+ <seealso marker="erl_driver#driver_async">
+ <c>driver_async()</c></seealso> functionality.
+ Notice that the value passed is only a suggestion,
+ and it can even be ignored on some platforms.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="async_thread_pool_size"/><c><![CDATA[+A size]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the number of threads in async thread pool, valid range
- is 0-1024. If thread support is available, the default is 10.</p>
+ <p>Sets the number of threads in async thread pool. Valid range
+ is 0-1024. Defaults to 10 if thread support is available.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+B [c | d | i]]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>The <c><![CDATA[c]]></c> option makes <c><![CDATA[Ctrl-C]]></c> interrupt the current
- shell instead of invoking the emulator break handler.
- The <c><![CDATA[d]]></c> option (same as specifying <c><![CDATA[+B]]></c> without an
- extra option) disables the break handler. The <c><![CDATA[i]]></c> option
- makes the emulator ignore any break signal.</p>
- <p>If the <c><![CDATA[c]]></c> option is used with <c><![CDATA[oldshell]]></c> on Unix,
- <c><![CDATA[Ctrl-C]]></c> will restart the shell process rather than
- interrupt it.</p>
- <p>Note that on Windows, this flag is only applicable for
- <c><![CDATA[werl]]></c>, not <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c> (<c><![CDATA[oldshell]]></c>). Note also that
- <c><![CDATA[Ctrl-Break]]></c> is used instead of <c><![CDATA[Ctrl-C]]></c> on Windows.</p>
+ <p>Option <c><![CDATA[c]]></c> makes <c><![CDATA[Ctrl-C]]></c>
+ interrupt the current shell instead of invoking the emulator break
+ handler. Option <c><![CDATA[d]]></c> (same as specifying
+ <c><![CDATA[+B]]></c> without an extra option) disables the break
+ handler. Option <c><![CDATA[i]]></c> makes the emulator ignore any
+ break signal.</p>
+ <p>If option <c><![CDATA[c]]></c> is used with
+ <c><![CDATA[oldshell]]></c> on Unix, <c><![CDATA[Ctrl-C]]></c> will
+ restart the shell process rather than interrupt it.</p>
+ <p>Notice that on Windows, this flag is only applicable for
+ <c><![CDATA[werl]]></c>, not <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c>
+ (<c><![CDATA[oldshell]]></c>). Notice also that
+ <c><![CDATA[Ctrl-Break]]></c> is used instead of
+ <c><![CDATA[Ctrl-C]]></c> on Windows.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+c"/><c><![CDATA[+c true | false]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Enable or disable
- <seealso marker="time_correction#Time_Correction">time correction</seealso>:</p>
+ <p>Enables or disables
+ <seealso marker="time_correction#Time_Correction">time
+ correction</seealso>:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>true</c></tag>
- <item><p>Enable time correction. This is the default if
- time correction is supported on the specific platform.</p></item>
-
- <tag><c>false</c></tag>
- <item><p>Disable time correction.</p></item>
- </taglist>
- <p>For backwards compatibility, the boolean value can be omitted.
- This is interpreted as <c>+c false</c>.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+C_"/><c><![CDATA[+C no_time_warp | single_time_warp | multi_time_warp]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Set
- <seealso marker="time_correction#Time_Warp_Modes">time warp mode</seealso>:
- </p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c>no_time_warp</c></tag>
- <item><p><seealso marker="time_correction#No_Time_Warp_Mode">No Time Warp Mode</seealso> (the default)</p></item>
- <tag><c>single_time_warp</c></tag>
- <item><p><seealso marker="time_correction#Single_Time_Warp_Mode">Single Time Warp Mode</seealso></p></item>
- <tag><c>multi_time_warp</c></tag>
- <item><p><seealso marker="time_correction#Multi_Time_Warp_Mode">Multi Time Warp Mode</seealso></p></item>
- </taglist>
+ <item>Enables time correction. This is the default if
+ time correction is supported on the specific platform.</item>
+ <tag><c>false</c></tag>
+ <item>Disables time correction.</item>
+ </taglist>
+ <p>For backward compatibility, the boolean value can be omitted.
+ This is interpreted as <c>+c false</c>.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="+C_"/><c><![CDATA[+C no_t<seealso marker="erlang:now/0">erlang:now()</seealso>ime_warp | single_time_warp |
+ multi_time_warp]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets <seealso marker="time_correction#Time_Warp_Modes">time warp
+ mode</seealso>:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>no_time_warp</c></tag>
+ <item><seealso marker="time_correction#No_Time_Warp_Mode">
+ No time warp mode</seealso> (the default)</item>
+ <tag><c>single_time_warp</c></tag>
+ <item><seealso marker="time_correction#Single_Time_Warp_Mode">
+ Single time warp mode</seealso></item>
+ <tag><c>multi_time_warp</c></tag>
+ <item><seealso marker="time_correction#Multi_Time_Warp_Mode">
+ Multi-time warp mode</seealso></item>
+ </taglist>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+d]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>If the emulator detects an internal error (or runs out of memory),
- it will by default generate both a crash dump and a core dump.
- The core dump will, however, not be very useful since the content
- of process heaps is destroyed by the crash dump generation.</p>
-
- <p>The <c>+d</c> option instructs the emulator to only produce a
- core dump and no crash dump if an internal error is detected.</p>
-
- <p>Calling <c>erlang:halt/1</c> with a string argument will still
- produce a crash dump. On Unix systems, sending an emulator process
- a SIGUSR1 signal will also force a crash dump.</p>
+ it, by default, generates both a crash dump and a core dump.
+ The core dump is, however, not very useful as the content
+ of process heaps is destroyed by the crash dump generation.</p>
+ <p>Option <c>+d</c> instructs the emulator to produce only a
+ core dump and no crash dump if an internal error is detected.</p>
+ <p>Calling <seealso marker="erlang:halt/1">
+ <c>erlang:halt/1</c></seealso> with a string argument still
+ produces a crash dump. On Unix systems, sending an emulator process
+ a <c>SIGUSR1</c> signal also forces a crash dump.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+e"/><c><![CDATA[+e Number]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Set max number of ETS tables.</p>
+ <p>Sets the maximum number of <c>ets</c> tables.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+ec]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Force the <c>compressed</c> option on all ETS tables.
- Only intended for test and evaluation.</p>
+ <p>Forces option <c>compressed</c> on all <c>ets</c> tables.
+ Only intended for test and evaluation.</p>
</item>
- <tag><marker id="file_name_encoding"></marker><c><![CDATA[+fnl]]></c></tag>
+ <tag><marker id="file_name_encoding"></marker>
+ <c><![CDATA[+fnl]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>The VM works with file names as if they are encoded using the ISO-latin-1 encoding, disallowing Unicode characters with codepoints beyond 255.</p>
- <p>See <seealso marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_file_names">STDLIB User's Guide</seealso> for more infomation about unicode file names. Note that this value also applies to command-line parameters and environment variables (see <seealso marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_in_environment_and_parameters">STDLIB User's Guide</seealso>).</p>
+ <p>The virtual machine works with filenames as if they are encoded
+ using the ISO Latin-1 encoding, disallowing Unicode characters with
+ code points &gt; 255.</p>
+ <p>For more information about Unicode filenames, see section
+ <seealso marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_file_names">Unicode
+ Filenames</seealso> in the <c>STDLIB</c> User's Guide. Notice that
+ this value also applies to command-line parameters and environment
+ variables (see section <seealso
+ marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_in_environment_and_parameters">
+ Unicode in Enviroment and Parameters</seealso> in the <c>STDLIB</c>
+ User's Guide).</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+fnu[{w|i|e}]]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>The VM works with file names as if they are encoded using
- UTF-8 (or some other system specific Unicode encoding). This
- is the default on operating systems that enforce Unicode
- encoding, i.e. Windows and MacOS X.</p>
- <p>The <c>+fnu</c> switch can be followed by <c>w</c>,
- <c>i</c>, or <c>e</c> to control the way wrongly encoded file
- names are to be reported. <c>w</c> means that a warning is
- sent to the <c>error_logger</c> whenever a wrongly encoded
- file name is "skipped" in directory listings, <c>i</c> means
- that those wrongly encoded file names are silently ignored and
- <c>e</c> means that the API function will return an error
- whenever a wrongly encoded file (or directory) name is
- encountered. <c>w</c> is the default. Note that
- <c>file:read_link/1</c> will always return an error if the
- link points to an invalid file name.</p>
- <p>See <seealso marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_file_names">STDLIB User's Guide</seealso> for more infomation about unicode file names. Note that this value also applies to command-line parameters and environment variables (see <seealso marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_in_environment_and_parameters">STDLIB User's Guide</seealso>).</p>
+ <p>The virtual machine works with filenames as if they are encoded
+ using UTF-8 (or some other system-specific Unicode encoding). This is
+ the default on operating systems that enforce Unicode encoding, that
+ is, Windows and MacOS X.</p>
+ <p>The <c>+fnu</c> switch can be followed by <c>w</c>, <c>i</c>, or
+ <c>e</c> to control how wrongly encoded filenames are to be
+ reported:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>
+ <p><c>w</c> means that a warning is sent to the <c>error_logger</c>
+ whenever a wrongly encoded filename is "skipped" in directory
+ listings. This is the default.</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p><c>i</c> means that those wrongly encoded filenames are silently
+ ignored.</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p><c>e</c> means that the API function returns an error whenever a
+ wrongly encoded filename (or directory name) is encountered.</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ <p>Notice that <seealso marker="kernel:file#read_link/1">
+ <c>file:read_link/1</c></seealso> always returns an error if the link
+ points to an invalid filename.</p>
+ <p>For more information about Unicode filenames, see section
+ <seealso marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_file_names">Unicode
+ Filenames</seealso> in the <c>STDLIB</c> User's Guide. Notice that
+ this value also applies to command-line parameters and environment
+ variables (see section <seealso
+ marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_in_environment_and_parameters">
+ Unicode in Enviroment and Parameters</seealso> in the <c>STDLIB</c>
+ User's Guide).</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+fna[{w|i|e}]]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Selection between <c>+fnl</c> and <c>+fnu</c> is done based
- on the current locale settings in the OS, meaning that if you
- have set your terminal for UTF-8 encoding, the filesystem is
- expected to use the same encoding for file names. This is
- default on all operating systems except MacOS X and
- Windows.</p>
- <p>The <c>+fna</c> switch can be followed by <c>w</c>,
- <c>i</c>, or <c>e</c>. This will have effect if the locale
- settings cause the behavior of <c>+fnu</c> to be selected.
- See the description of <c>+fnu</c> above. If the locale
- settings cause the behavior of <c>+fnl</c> to be selected,
- then <c>w</c>, <c>i</c>, or <c>e</c> will not have any
- effect.</p>
- <p>See <seealso marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_file_names">STDLIB User's Guide</seealso> for more infomation about unicode file names. Note that this value also applies to command-line parameters and environment variables (see <seealso marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_in_environment_and_parameters">STDLIB User's Guide</seealso>).</p>
+ on the current locale settings in the OS. This means that if you
+ have set your terminal for UTF-8 encoding, the filesystem is
+ expected to use the same encoding for filenames. This is
+ default on all operating systems, except MacOS X and Windows.</p>
+ <p>The <c>+fna</c> switch can be followed by <c>w</c>, <c>i</c>, or
+ <c>e</c>. This has effect if the locale settings cause the behavior
+ of <c>+fnu</c> to be selected; see the description of <c>+fnu</c>
+ above. If the locale settings cause the behavior of <c>+fnl</c> to be
+ selected, then <c>w</c>, <c>i</c>, or <c>e</c> have no effect.</p>
+ <p>For more information about Unicode filenames, see section
+ <seealso marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_file_names">Unicode
+ Filenames</seealso> in the <c>STDLIB</c> User's Guide. Notice that
+ this value also applies to command-line parameters and environment
+ variables (see section <seealso
+ marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_in_environment_and_parameters">
+ Unicode in Enviroment and Parameters</seealso> in the <c>STDLIB</c>
+ User's Guide).</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+hms Size]]></c></tag>
<item>
@@ -646,26 +704,24 @@
<tag><marker id="+hmax"/><c><![CDATA[+hmax Size]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Sets the default maximum heap size of processes to the size
- <c><![CDATA[Size]]></c>. If <c>+hmax</c> is not given, the default is <c>0</c>
- which means that no maximum heap size is used.
- For more information, see the documentation of
+ <c><![CDATA[Size]]></c>. Defaults to <c>0</c>, which means that no
+ maximum heap size is used. For more information, see
<seealso marker="erlang#process_flag_max_heap_size">
- <c>process_flag(max_heap_size, MaxHeapSize)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ <c>process_flag(max_heap_size, MaxHeapSize)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+hmaxel"/><c><![CDATA[+hmaxel true|false]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets whether to send an error logger message for processes that reach
- the maximum heap size or not. If <c>+hmaxel</c> is not given, the default is <c>true</c>.
- For more information, see the documentation of
- <seealso marker="erlang#process_flag_max_heap_size">
+ <p>Sets whether to send an error logger message or not for processes
+ reaching the maximum heap size. Defaults to <c>true</c>.
+ For more information, see
+ <seealso marker="erlang#process_flag_max_heap_size">
<c>process_flag(max_heap_size, MaxHeapSize)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+hmaxk"/><c><![CDATA[+hmaxk true|false]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets whether to kill processes that reach the maximum heap size or not. If
- <c>+hmaxk</c> is not given, the default is <c>true</c>. For more information,
- see the documentation of
- <seealso marker="erlang#process_flag_max_heap_size">
+ <p>Sets whether to kill processes reaching the maximum heap size or not.
+ Default to <c>true</c>. For more information, see
+ <seealso marker="erlang#process_flag_max_heap_size">
<c>process_flag(max_heap_size, MaxHeapSize)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+hpds Size]]></c></tag>
@@ -674,304 +730,231 @@
<c><![CDATA[Size]]></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+hmqd"/><c>+hmqd off_heap|on_heap</c></tag>
- <item><p>
- Sets the default value for the process flag
- <c>message_queue_data</c>. If <c>+hmqd</c> is not
- passed, <c>on_heap</c> will be the default. For more information,
- see the documentation of
- <seealso marker="erlang#process_flag_message_queue_data"><c>process_flag(message_queue_data,
- MQD)</c></seealso>.
- </p></item>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets the default value for process flag <c>message_queue_data</c>.
+ Defaults to <c>on_heap</c>. If <c>+hmqd</c> is not
+ passed, <c>on_heap</c> will be the default. For more information, see
+ <seealso marker="erlang#process_flag_message_queue_data">
+ <c>process_flag(message_queue_data, MQD)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ </item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+K true | false]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Enables or disables the kernel poll functionality if
- the emulator supports it. Default is <c><![CDATA[false]]></c> (disabled).
- If the emulator does not support kernel poll, and
- the <c><![CDATA[+K]]></c> flag is passed to the emulator, a warning is
+ <p>Enables or disables the kernel poll functionality if supported by
+ the emulator. Defaults to <c><![CDATA[false]]></c> (disabled).
+ If the emulator does not support kernel poll, and flag
+ <c><![CDATA[+K]]></c> is passed to the emulator, a warning is
issued at startup.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+l]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Enables auto load tracing, displaying info while loading
+ <p>Enables autoload tracing, displaying information while loading
code.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+L]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Don't load information about source file names and line numbers.
- This will save some memory, but exceptions will not contain
- information about the file names and line numbers.
- </p>
+ <p>Prevents loading information about source filenames and line
+ numbers. This saves some memory, but exceptions do not contain
+ information about the filenames and line numbers.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="erts_alloc"/><c><![CDATA[+MFlag Value]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Memory allocator specific flags, see
- <seealso marker="erts_alloc">erts_alloc(3)</seealso> for
- further information.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+n"/><c><![CDATA[+n Behavior]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Control behavior of signals to ports.</p>
- <p>As of OTP-R16 signals to ports are truly asynchronously
- delivered. Note that signals always have been documented as
- asynchronous. The underlying implementation has, however,
- previously delivered these signals synchronously. Correctly
- written Erlang programs should be able to handle this without
- any issues. Bugs in existing Erlang programs that make false
- assumptions about signals to ports may, however, be tricky to
- find. This switch has been introduced in order to at least
- make it easier to compare behaviors during a transition period.
- Note that <em>this flag is deprecated</em> as of its
- introduction, and is scheduled for removal in OTP-R17.
- <c>Behavior</c> should be one of the following characters:</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c>d</c></tag>
- <item>The default. Asynchronous signals. A process that sends
- a signal to a port may continue execution before the signal
- has been delivered to the port.</item>
- <tag><c>s</c></tag>
- <item>Synchronous signals. A processes that sends a signal
- to a port will not continue execution until the signal has
- been delivered. Should <em>only</em> be used for testing and
- debugging.</item>
- <tag><c>a</c></tag>
- <item>Asynchronous signals. As the default, but a processes
- that sends a signal will even more frequently continue
- execution before the signal has been delivered to the
- port. Should <em>only</em> be used for testing and
- debugging.</item>
- </taglist>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+pc"/><marker id="printable_character_range"/><c><![CDATA[+pc Range]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Sets the range of characters that the system will consider printable in heuristic detection of strings. This typically affects the shell, debugger and io:format functions (when ~tp is used in the format string).</p>
- <p>Currently two values for the <c>Range</c> are supported:</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c>latin1</c></tag> <item>The default. Only characters
- in the ISO-latin-1 range can be considered printable, which means
- that a character with a code point &gt; 255 will never be
- considered printable and that lists containing such
- characters will be displayed as lists of integers rather
- than text strings by tools.</item>
- <tag><c>unicode</c></tag>
- <item>All printable Unicode characters are considered when
- determining if a list of integers is to be displayed in
- string syntax. This may give unexpected results if for
- example your font does not cover all Unicode
- characters.</item>
- </taglist>
- <p>Se also <seealso marker="stdlib:io#printable_range/0">
- io:printable_range/0</seealso>.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+P"/><marker id="max_processes"/><c><![CDATA[+P Number|legacy]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Sets the maximum number of simultaneously existing processes for this
- system if a <c>Number</c> is passed as value. Valid range for
- <c>Number</c> is <c>[1024-134217727]</c></p>
- <p><em>NOTE</em>: The actual maximum chosen may be much larger than
- the <c>Number</c> passed. Currently the runtime system often,
- but not always, chooses a value that is a power of 2. This might,
- however, be changed in the future. The actual value chosen can be
- checked by calling
- <seealso marker="erlang#system_info_process_limit">erlang:system_info(process_limit)</seealso>.</p>
- <p>The default value is <c>262144</c></p>
- <p>If <c>legacy</c> is passed as value, the legacy algorithm for
- allocation of process identifiers will be used. Using the legacy
- algorithm, identifiers will be allocated in a strictly increasing
- fashion until largest possible identifier has been reached. Note that
- this algorithm suffers from performance issues and can under certain
- circumstances be extremely expensive. The legacy algoritm is deprecated,
- and the <c>legacy</c> option is scheduled for removal in OTP-R18.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+Q"/><marker id="max_ports"/><c><![CDATA[+Q Number|legacy]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Sets the maximum number of simultaneously existing ports for this
- system if a Number is passed as value. Valid range for <c>Number</c>
- is <c>[1024-134217727]</c></p>
- <p><em>NOTE</em>: The actual maximum chosen may be much larger than
- the actual <c>Number</c> passed. Currently the runtime system often,
- but not always, chooses a value that is a power of 2. This might,
- however, be changed in the future. The actual value chosen can be
- checked by calling
- <seealso marker="erlang#system_info_port_limit">erlang:system_info(port_limit)</seealso>.</p>
- <p>The default value used is normally <c>65536</c>. However, if
- the runtime system is able to determine maximum amount of file
- descriptors that it is allowed to open and this value is larger
- than <c>65536</c>, the chosen value will increased to a value
- larger or equal to the maximum amount of file descriptors that
- can be opened.</p>
- <p>On Windows the default value is set to <c>8196</c> because the
- normal OS limitations are set higher than most machines can handle.</p>
- <p>Previously the environment variable <c>ERL_MAX_PORTS</c> was used
- for setting the maximum number of simultaneously existing ports. This
- environment variable is deprecated, and scheduled for removal in
- OTP-R17, but can still be used.</p>
- <p>If <c>legacy</c> is passed as value, the legacy algorithm for
- allocation of port identifiers will be used. Using the legacy
- algorithm, identifiers will be allocated in a strictly increasing
- fashion until largest possible identifier has been reached. Note that
- this algorithm suffers from performance issues and can under certain
- circumstances be extremely expensive. The legacy algoritm is deprecated,
- and the <c>legacy</c> option is scheduled for removal in OTP-R18.</p>
+ <p>Memory allocator-specific flags. For more information, see
+ <seealso marker="erts_alloc"><c>erts_alloc(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="+pc"/><marker id="printable_character_range"/>
+ <c><![CDATA[+pc Range]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets the range of characters that the system considers printable in
+ heuristic detection of strings. This typically affects the shell,
+ debugger, and <c>io:format</c> functions (when <c>~tp</c> is used in
+ the format string).</p>
+ <p>Two values are supported for <c>Range</c>:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>latin1</c></tag>
+ <item>The default. Only characters in the ISO Latin-1 range can be
+ considered printable. This means that a character with a code point
+ &gt; 255 is never considered printable and that lists containing
+ such characters are displayed as lists of integers rather than text
+ strings by tools.</item>
+ <tag><c>unicode</c></tag>
+ <item>All printable Unicode characters are considered when
+ determining if a list of integers is to be displayed in
+ string syntax. This can give unexpected results if, for
+ example, your font does not cover all Unicode characters.</item>
+ </taglist>
+ <p>See also <seealso marker="stdlib:io#printable_range/0">
+ <c>io:printable_range/0</c></seealso> in <c>STDLIB</c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="compat_rel"/><c><![CDATA[+R ReleaseNumber]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Sets the compatibility mode.</p>
- <p>The distribution mechanism is not backwards compatible by
- default. This flags sets the emulator in compatibility mode
+ <p>The distribution mechanism is not backward compatible by
+ default. This flag sets the emulator in compatibility mode
with an earlier Erlang/OTP release <c><![CDATA[ReleaseNumber]]></c>.
The release number must be in the range
<c><![CDATA[<current release>-2..<current release>]]></c>. This
- limits the emulator, making it possible for it to communicate
- with Erlang nodes (as well as C- and Java nodes) running that
- earlier release.</p>
- <p>Note: Make sure all nodes (Erlang-, C-, and Java nodes) of
- a distributed Erlang system is of the same Erlang/OTP release,
- or from two different Erlang/OTP releases X and Y, where
- <em>all</em> Y nodes have compatibility mode X.</p>
+ limits the emulator, making it possible for it to communicate
+ with Erlang nodes (as well as C- and Java nodes) running that
+ earlier release.</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>Ensure that all nodes (Erlang-, C-, and Java nodes) of
+ a distributed Erlang system is of the same Erlang/OTP release,
+ or from two different Erlang/OTP releases X and Y, where
+ <em>all</em> Y nodes have compatibility mode X.</p>
+ </note>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+r]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Force ets memory block to be moved on realloc.</p>
+ <p>Forces <c>ets</c> memory block to be moved on realloc.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+rg"/><c><![CDATA[+rg ReaderGroupsLimit]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Limits the amount of reader groups used by read/write locks
- optimized for read operations in the Erlang runtime system. By
- default the reader groups limit equals 64.</p>
- <p>When the amount of schedulers is less than or equal to the reader
- groups limit, each scheduler has its own reader group. When the
- amount of schedulers is larger than the reader groups limit,
- schedulers share reader groups. Shared reader groups degrades
- read lock and read unlock performance while a large amount of
- reader groups degrades write lock performance, so the limit is a
- tradeoff between performance for read operations and performance
- for write operations. Each reader group currently consumes 64 byte
- in each read/write lock. Also note that a runtime system using
- shared reader groups benefits from <seealso marker="#+sbt">binding
- schedulers to logical processors</seealso>, since the reader groups
- are distributed better between schedulers.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+S"/><c><![CDATA[+S Schedulers:SchedulerOnline]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Sets the number of scheduler threads to create and scheduler
- threads to set online when SMP support has been enabled. The maximum for
- both values is 1024. If the Erlang runtime system is able to determine the
- amount of logical processors configured and logical processors available,
- <c>Schedulers</c> will default to logical processors configured, and
- <c>SchedulersOnline</c> will default to logical processors available;
- otherwise, the default values will be 1. <c>Schedulers</c> may be omitted
- if <c>:SchedulerOnline</c> is not and vice versa. The number of schedulers
- online can be changed at run time via
- <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_schedulers_online">erlang:system_flag(schedulers_online, SchedulersOnline)</seealso>.
- </p>
- <p>If <c>Schedulers</c> or <c>SchedulersOnline</c> is specified as a
- negative number, the value is subtracted from the default number of
- logical processors configured or logical processors available, respectively.
- </p>
- <p>Specifying the value 0 for <c>Schedulers</c> or <c>SchedulersOnline</c>
- resets the number of scheduler threads or scheduler threads online respectively
- to its default value.
- </p>
- <p>This option is ignored if the emulator doesn't have
- SMP support enabled (see the <seealso marker="#smp">-smp</seealso>
- flag).</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+SP"/><c><![CDATA[+SP SchedulersPercentage:SchedulersOnlinePercentage]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Similar to <seealso marker="#+S">+S</seealso> but uses percentages to set the
- number of scheduler threads to create, based on logical processors configured,
- and scheduler threads to set online, based on logical processors available, when
- SMP support has been enabled. Specified values must be greater than 0. For example,
- <c>+SP 50:25</c> sets the number of scheduler threads to 50% of the logical processors
- configured and the number of scheduler threads online to 25% of the logical processors available.
- <c>SchedulersPercentage</c> may be omitted if <c>:SchedulersOnlinePercentage</c> is
- not and vice versa. The number of schedulers online can be changed at run time via
- <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_schedulers_online">erlang:system_flag(schedulers_online, SchedulersOnline)</seealso>.
- </p>
- <p>This option interacts with <seealso marker="#+S">+S</seealso> settings.
- For example, on a system with 8 logical cores configured and 8 logical cores
- available, the combination of the options <c>+S 4:4 +SP 50:25</c> (in either order)
- results in 2 scheduler threads (50% of 4) and 1 scheduler thread online (25% of 4).
- </p>
- <p>This option is ignored if the emulator doesn't have
- SMP support enabled (see the <seealso marker="#smp">-smp</seealso>
- flag).</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+SDcpu"/><c><![CDATA[+SDcpu DirtyCPUSchedulers:DirtyCPUSchedulersOnline]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Sets the number of dirty CPU scheduler threads to create and dirty
- CPU scheduler threads to set online when threading support has been
- enabled. The maximum for both values is 1024, and each value is further
- limited by the settings for normal schedulers: the number of dirty CPU
- scheduler threads created cannot exceed the number of normal scheduler
- threads created, and the number of dirty CPU scheduler threads online
- cannot exceed the number of normal scheduler threads online (see the
- <seealso marker="#+S">+S</seealso> and <seealso marker="#+SP">+SP</seealso>
- flags for more details). By default, the number of dirty CPU scheduler
- threads created equals the number of normal scheduler threads created,
- and the number of dirty CPU scheduler threads online equals the number
- of normal scheduler threads online. <c>DirtyCPUSchedulers</c> may be
- omitted if <c>:DirtyCPUSchedulersOnline</c> is not and vice versa. The
- number of dirty CPU schedulers online can be changed at run time via
- <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_dirty_cpu_schedulers_online">erlang:system_flag(dirty_cpu_schedulers_online, DirtyCPUSchedulersOnline)</seealso>.
- </p>
- <p>
- The amount of dirty CPU schedulers is limited by the amount of
- normal schedulers in order to limit the effect on processes
- executing on ordinary schedulers. If the amount of dirty CPU
- schedulers was allowed to be unlimited, dirty CPU bound jobs would
- potentially starve normal jobs.
- </p>
- <p>This option is ignored if the emulator doesn't have threading support
- enabled. Currently, <em>this option is experimental</em> and is supported only
- if the emulator was configured and built with support for dirty schedulers
- enabled (it's disabled by default).
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+SDPcpu"/><c><![CDATA[+SDPcpu DirtyCPUSchedulersPercentage:DirtyCPUSchedulersOnlinePercentage]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Similar to <seealso marker="#+SDcpu">+SDcpu</seealso> but uses percentages to set the
- number of dirty CPU scheduler threads to create and number of dirty CPU scheduler threads
- to set online when threading support has been enabled. Specified values must be greater
- than 0. For example, <c>+SDPcpu 50:25</c> sets the number of dirty CPU scheduler threads
- to 50% of the logical processors configured and the number of dirty CPU scheduler threads
- online to 25% of the logical processors available. <c>DirtyCPUSchedulersPercentage</c> may
- be omitted if <c>:DirtyCPUSchedulersOnlinePercentage</c> is not and vice versa. The
- number of dirty CPU schedulers online can be changed at run time via
- <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_dirty_cpu_schedulers_online">erlang:system_flag(dirty_cpu_schedulers_online, DirtyCPUSchedulersOnline)</seealso>.
- </p>
- <p>This option interacts with <seealso marker="#+SDcpu">+SDcpu</seealso> settings.
- For example, on a system with 8 logical cores configured and 8 logical cores available,
- the combination of the options <c>+SDcpu 4:4 +SDPcpu 50:25</c> (in either order) results
- in 2 dirty CPU scheduler threads (50% of 4) and 1 dirty CPU scheduler thread online (25% of 4).
- </p>
- <p>This option is ignored if the emulator doesn't have threading support
- enabled. Currently, <em>this option is experimental</em> and is supported only
- if the emulator was configured and built with support for dirty schedulers
- enabled (it's disabled by default).
- </p>
+ <p>Limits the number of reader groups used by read/write locks
+ optimized for read operations in the Erlang runtime system. By
+ default the reader groups limit is 64.</p>
+ <p>When the number of schedulers is less than or equal to the reader
+ groups limit, each scheduler has its own reader group. When the
+ number of schedulers is larger than the reader groups limit,
+ schedulers share reader groups. Shared reader groups degrade
+ read lock and read unlock performance while many
+ reader groups degrade write lock performance. So, the limit is a
+ tradeoff between performance for read operations and performance
+ for write operations. Each reader group consumes 64 byte
+ in each read/write lock.</p>
+ <p>Notice that a runtime system using shared reader groups benefits from
+ <seealso marker="#+sbt">binding schedulers to logical
+ processors</seealso>, as the reader groups are distributed better
+ between schedulers.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="+S"/>
+ <c><![CDATA[+S Schedulers:SchedulerOnline]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets the number of scheduler threads to create and scheduler threads
+ to set online when SMP support has been enabled. The maximum for both
+ values is 1024. If the Erlang runtime system is able to determine the
+ number of logical processors configured and logical processors
+ available, <c>Schedulers</c> defaults to logical processors
+ configured, and <c>SchedulersOnline</c> defaults to logical processors
+ available; otherwise the default values are 1. <c>Schedulers</c> can
+ be omitted if <c>:SchedulerOnline</c> is not and conversely. The
+ number of schedulers online can be changed at runtime through
+ <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_schedulers_online">
+ <c>erlang:system_flag(schedulers_online,
+ SchedulersOnline)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ <p>If <c>Schedulers</c> or <c>SchedulersOnline</c> is specified as a
+ negative number, the value is subtracted from the default number of
+ logical processors configured or logical processors available,
+ respectively.</p>
+ <p>Specifying value <c>0</c> for <c>Schedulers</c> or
+ <c>SchedulersOnline</c> resets the number of scheduler threads or
+ scheduler threads online, respectively, to its default value.</p>
+ <p>This option is ignored if the emulator does not have SMP support
+ enabled (see flag <seealso marker="#smp"><c>-smp</c></seealso>).</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="+SP"/><c><![CDATA[+SP
+ SchedulersPercentage:SchedulersOnlinePercentage]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Similar to <seealso marker="#+S"><c>+S</c></seealso> but uses
+ percentages to set the number of scheduler threads to create, based
+ on logical processors configured, and scheduler threads to set online,
+ based on logical processors available, when SMP support has been
+ enabled. Specified values must be &gt; 0. For example,
+ <c>+SP 50:25</c> sets the number of scheduler threads to 50% of the
+ logical processors configured, and the number of scheduler threads
+ online to 25% of the logical processors available.
+ <c>SchedulersPercentage</c> can be omitted if
+ <c>:SchedulersOnlinePercentage</c> is not and conversely. The number
+ of schedulers online can be changed at runtime through
+ <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_schedulers_online">
+ <c>erlang:system_flag(schedulers_online,
+ SchedulersOnline)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ <p>This option interacts with <seealso marker="#+S"><c>+S</c></seealso>
+ settings. For example, on a system with 8 logical cores configured
+ and 8 logical cores available, the combination of the options
+ <c>+S 4:4 +SP 50:25</c> (in either order) results in 2 scheduler
+ threads (50% of 4) and 1 scheduler thread online (25% of 4).</p>
+ <p>This option is ignored if the emulator does not have SMP support
+ enabled (see flag <seealso marker="#smp"><c>-smp</c></seealso>).</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="+SDcpu"/><c><![CDATA[+SDcpu
+ DirtyCPUSchedulers:DirtyCPUSchedulersOnline]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets the number of dirty CPU scheduler threads to create and dirty
+ CPU scheduler threads to set online when threading support has been
+ enabled. The maximum for both values is 1024, and each value is
+ further limited by the settings for normal schedulers:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>The number of dirty CPU scheduler threads created cannot exceed
+ the number of normal scheduler threads created.</item>
+ <item>The number of dirty CPU scheduler threads online cannot exceed
+ the number of normal scheduler threads online.</item>
+ </list>
+ <p>For details, see the <seealso marker="#+S"><c>+S</c></seealso> and
+ <seealso marker="#+SP"><c>+SP</c></seealso>. By default, the number
+ of dirty CPU scheduler threads created equals the number of normal
+ scheduler threads created, and the number of dirty CPU scheduler
+ threads online equals the number of normal scheduler threads online.
+ <c>DirtyCPUSchedulers</c> can be omitted if
+ <c>:DirtyCPUSchedulersOnline</c> is not and conversely. The number of
+ dirty CPU schedulers online can be changed at runtime through
+ <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_dirty_cpu_schedulers_online">
+ <c>erlang:system_flag(dirty_cpu_schedulers_online,
+ DirtyCPUSchedulersOnline)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ <p>The amount of dirty CPU schedulers is limited by the amount of
+ normal schedulers in order to limit the effect on processes
+ executing on ordinary schedulers. If the amount of dirty CPU
+ schedulers was allowed to be unlimited, dirty CPU bound jobs would
+ potentially starve normal jobs.</p>
+ <p>This option is ignored if the emulator does not have threading
+ support enabled. <em>This option is experimental</em> and
+ is supported only if the emulator was configured and built with
+ support for dirty schedulers enabled (it is disabled by default).</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="+SDPcpu"/><c><![CDATA[+SDPcpu
+ DirtyCPUSchedulersPercentage:DirtyCPUSchedulersOnlinePercentage]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Similar to <seealso marker="#+SDcpu"><c>+SDcpu</c></seealso> but
+ uses percentages to set the number of dirty CPU scheduler threads to
+ create and the number of dirty CPU scheduler threads to set online
+ when threading support has been enabled. Specified values must be
+ &gt; 0. For example, <c>+SDPcpu 50:25</c> sets the number of dirty
+ CPU scheduler threads to 50% of the logical processors configured
+ and the number of dirty CPU scheduler threads online to 25% of the
+ logical processors available. <c>DirtyCPUSchedulersPercentage</c> can
+ be omitted if <c>:DirtyCPUSchedulersOnlinePercentage</c> is not and
+ conversely. The number of dirty CPU schedulers online can be changed
+ at runtime through
+ <seealso marker="erlang#system_flag_dirty_cpu_schedulers_online">
+ <c>erlang:system_flag(dirty_cpu_schedulers_online,
+ DirtyCPUSchedulersOnline)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ <p>This option interacts with <seealso
+ marker="#+SDcpu"><c>+SDcpu</c></seealso> settings. For example, on a
+ system with 8 logical cores configured and 8 logical cores available,
+ the combination of the options <c>+SDcpu 4:4 +SDPcpu 50:25</c> (in
+ either order) results in 2 dirty CPU scheduler threads (50% of 4) and
+ 1 dirty CPU scheduler thread online (25% of 4).</p>
+ <p>This option is ignored if the emulator does not have threading
+ support enabled. <em>This option is experimental</em> and
+ is supported only if the emulator was configured and built with
+ support for dirty schedulers enabled (it is disabled by default).</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+SDio"/><c><![CDATA[+SDio DirtyIOSchedulers]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the number of dirty I/O scheduler threads to create when threading
- support has been enabled. The valid range is 0-1024. By default, the number
- of dirty I/O scheduler threads created is 10, same as the default number of
- threads in the <seealso marker="#async_thread_pool_size">async thread pool
- </seealso>.
- </p>
- <p>
- The amount of dirty IO schedulers is not limited by the amount of
- normal schedulers <seealso marker="#+SDcpu">like the amount of
- dirty CPU schedulers</seealso>. This since only I/O bound work is
- expected to execute on dirty I/O schedulers. If the user should schedule CPU
- bound jobs on dirty I/O schedulers, these jobs might starve ordinary
- jobs executing on ordinary schedulers.
- </p>
- <p>This option is ignored if the emulator doesn't have threading support
- enabled. Currently, <em>this option is experimental</em> and is supported only
- if the emulator was configured and built with support for dirty schedulers
- enabled (it's disabled by default).
- </p>
+ <p>Sets the number of dirty I/O scheduler threads to create when
+ threading support has been enabled. Valid range is 0-1024. By
+ default, the number of dirty I/O scheduler threads created is 10,
+ same as the default number of threads in the <seealso
+ marker="#async_thread_pool_size">async thread pool</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>The amount of dirty IO schedulers is not limited by the amount of
+ normal schedulers <seealso marker="#+SDcpu">like the amount of
+ dirty CPU schedulers</seealso>. This since only I/O bound work is
+ expected to execute on dirty I/O schedulers. If the user should schedule CPU
+ bound jobs on dirty I/O schedulers, these jobs might starve ordinary
+ jobs executing on ordinary schedulers.</p>
+ <p>This option is ignored if the emulator does not have threading
+ support enabled. <em>This option is experimental</em> and
+ is supported only if the emulator was configured and built with
+ support for dirty schedulers enabled (it is disabled by default).</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+sFlag Value]]></c></tag>
<item>
@@ -979,238 +962,237 @@
<taglist>
<tag><marker id="+sbt"/><c>+sbt BindType</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Set scheduler bind type.</p>
- <p>Schedulers can also be bound using the
- <seealso marker="#+stbt">+stbt</seealso> flag. The only difference
- between these two flags is how the following errors are handled:</p>
- <list>
- <item>Binding of schedulers is not supported on the specific
- platform.</item>
- <item>No available CPU topology. That is the runtime system
- was not able to automatically detected the CPU topology, and
- no <seealso marker="#+sct">user defined CPU topology</seealso>
- was set.</item>
- </list>
- <p>If any of these errors occur when <c>+sbt</c> has been passed,
- the runtime system will print an error message, and refuse to
- start. If any of these errors occur when <c>+stbt</c> has been
- passed, the runtime system will silently ignore the error, and
- start up using unbound schedulers.</p>
- <p>Currently valid <c>BindType</c>s:
- </p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c>u</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>unbound</c> - Schedulers will not be bound to logical
- processors, i.e., the operating system decides where the
- scheduler threads execute, and when to migrate them. This is
- the default.</p>
+ <p>Sets scheduler bind type.</p>
+ <p>Schedulers can also be bound using flag
+ <seealso marker="#+stbt"><c>+stbt</c></seealso>. The only
+ difference between these two flags is how the following errors
+ are handled:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>Binding of schedulers is not supported on the specific
+ platform.</item>
+ <item>No available CPU topology. That is, the runtime system was
+ not able to detect the CPU topology automatically, and no
+ <seealso marker="#+sct">user-defined CPU topology</seealso>
+ was set.</item>
+ </list>
+ <p>If any of these errors occur when <c>+sbt</c> has been passed,
+ the runtime system prints an error message, and refuses to
+ start. If any of these errors occur when <c>+stbt</c> has been
+ passed, the runtime system silently ignores the error, and
+ start up using unbound schedulers.</p>
+ <p>Valid <c>BindType</c>s:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>u</c></tag>
+ <item><c>unbound</c> - Schedulers are not bound to logical
+ processors, that is, the operating system decides where the
+ scheduler threads execute, and when to migrate them. This is
+ the default.
</item>
- <tag><c>ns</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>no_spread</c> - Schedulers with close scheduler
- identifiers will be bound as close as possible in hardware.</p>
+ <tag><c>ns</c></tag>
+ <item><c>no_spread</c> - Schedulers with close scheduler
+ identifiers are bound as close as possible in hardware.
</item>
- <tag><c>ts</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>thread_spread</c> - Thread refers to hardware threads
- (e.g. Intel's hyper-threads). Schedulers with low scheduler
- identifiers, will be bound to the first hardware thread of
- each core, then schedulers with higher scheduler identifiers
- will be bound to the second hardware thread of each core,
- etc.</p>
+ <tag><c>ts</c></tag>
+ <item><c>thread_spread</c> - Thread refers to hardware threads
+ (such as Intel's hyper-threads). Schedulers with low scheduler
+ identifiers, are bound to the first hardware thread of
+ each core, then schedulers with higher scheduler identifiers
+ are bound to the second hardware thread of each core,and so on.
</item>
- <tag><c>ps</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>processor_spread</c> - Schedulers will be spread like
- <c>thread_spread</c>, but also over physical processor chips.</p>
+ <tag><c>ps</c></tag>
+ <item><c>processor_spread</c> - Schedulers are spread like
+ <c>thread_spread</c>, but also over physical processor chips.
</item>
- <tag><c>s</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>spread</c> - Schedulers will be spread as much as
- possible.</p>
+ <tag><c>s</c></tag>
+ <item><c>spread</c> - Schedulers are spread as much as possible.
</item>
- <tag><c>nnts</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>no_node_thread_spread</c> - Like <c>thread_spread</c>,
- but if multiple NUMA (Non-Uniform Memory Access) nodes exists,
- schedulers will be spread over one NUMA node at a time,
- i.e., all logical processors of one NUMA node will be bound
- to schedulers in sequence.</p>
+ <tag><c>nnts</c></tag>
+ <item><c>no_node_thread_spread</c> - Like <c>thread_spread</c>,
+ but if multiple Non-Uniform Memory Access (NUMA) nodes exist,
+ schedulers are spread over one NUMA node at a time,
+ that is, all logical processors of one NUMA node are bound
+ to schedulers in sequence.
</item>
- <tag><c>nnps</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>no_node_processor_spread</c> - Like
- <c>processor_spread</c>, but if multiple NUMA nodes exists,
- schedulers will be spread over one NUMA node at a time, i.e.,
- all logical processors of one NUMA node will be bound to
- schedulers in sequence.</p>
+ <tag><c>nnps</c></tag>
+ <item><c>no_node_processor_spread</c> - Like
+ <c>processor_spread</c>, but if multiple NUMA nodes exist,
+ schedulers are spread over one NUMA node at a time, that is,
+ all logical processors of one NUMA node are bound to
+ schedulers in sequence.
</item>
- <tag><c>tnnps</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>thread_no_node_processor_spread</c> - A combination of
- <c>thread_spread</c>, and <c>no_node_processor_spread</c>.
- Schedulers will be spread over hardware threads across NUMA
- nodes, but schedulers will only be spread over processors
- internally in one NUMA node at a time.</p>
+ <tag><c>tnnps</c></tag>
+ <item><c>thread_no_node_processor_spread</c> - A combination of
+ <c>thread_spread</c>, and <c>no_node_processor_spread</c>.
+ Schedulers are spread over hardware threads across NUMA
+ nodes, but schedulers are only spread over processors
+ internally in one NUMA node at a time.
</item>
- <tag><c>db</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>default_bind</c> - Binds schedulers the default way.
- Currently the default is <c>thread_no_node_processor_spread</c>
- (which might change in the future).</p>
+ <tag><c>db</c></tag>
+ <item><c>default_bind</c> - Binds schedulers the default way.
+ Defaults to <c>thread_no_node_processor_spread</c>
+ (which can change in the future).
</item>
- </taglist>
- <p>Binding of schedulers is currently only supported on newer
- Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, and Windows systems.</p>
- <p>If no CPU topology is available when the <c>+sbt</c> flag
- is processed and <c>BindType</c> is any other type than
- <c>u</c>, the runtime system will fail to start. CPU
- topology can be defined using the
- <seealso marker="#+sct">+sct</seealso> flag. Note
- that the <c>+sct</c> flag may have to be passed before the
- <c>+sbt</c> flag on the command line (in case no CPU topology
- has been automatically detected).</p>
- <p>The runtime system will by default <em>not</em> bind schedulers
- to logical processors.
- </p>
- <p><em>NOTE:</em> If the Erlang runtime system is the only operating system
- process that binds threads to logical processors, this
- improves the performance of the runtime system. However,
- if other operating system processes (as for example
- another Erlang runtime system) also bind threads to
- logical processors, there might be a performance penalty
- instead. In some cases this performance penalty might be
- severe. If this is the case, you are advised to not
- bind the schedulers.</p>
+ </taglist>
+ <p>Binding of schedulers is only supported on newer
+ Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, and Windows systems.</p>
+ <p>If no CPU topology is available when flag <c>+sbt</c>
+ is processed and <c>BindType</c> is any other type than
+ <c>u</c>, the runtime system fails to start. CPU
+ topology can be defined using flag
+ <seealso marker="#+sct"><c>+sct</c></seealso>. Notice
+ that flag <c>+sct</c> can have to be passed before flag
+ <c>+sbt</c> on the command line (if no CPU topology
+ has been automatically detected).</p>
+ <p>The runtime system does by default <em>not</em> bind schedulers
+ to logical processors.</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>If the Erlang runtime system is the only operating system
+ process that binds threads to logical processors, this
+ improves the performance of the runtime system. However,
+ if other operating system processes (for example
+ another Erlang runtime system) also bind threads to
+ logical processors, there can be a performance penalty
+ instead. This performance penalty can sometimes be
+ severe. If so, you are advised not to
+ bind the schedulers.</p>
+ </note>
<p>How schedulers are bound matters. For example, in
- situations when there are fewer running processes than
- schedulers online, the runtime system tries to migrate
- processes to schedulers with low scheduler identifiers.
- The more the schedulers are spread over the hardware,
- the more resources will be available to the runtime
- system in such situations.
- </p>
- <p>
- <em>NOTE:</em> If a scheduler fails to bind, this
- will often be silently ignored. This since it isn't always
- possible to verify valid logical processor identifiers. If
- an error is reported, it will be reported to the
- <c>error_logger</c>. If you want to verify that the
- schedulers actually have bound as requested, call
- <seealso marker="erlang#system_info_scheduler_bindings">erlang:system_info(scheduler_bindings)</seealso>.
- </p>
+ situations when there are fewer running processes than
+ schedulers online, the runtime system tries to migrate
+ processes to schedulers with low scheduler identifiers.
+ The more the schedulers are spread over the hardware,
+ the more resources are available to the runtime
+ system in such situations.</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>If a scheduler fails to bind, this is
+ often silently ignored, as it is not always
+ possible to verify valid logical processor identifiers. If
+ an error is reported, it is reported to the
+ <c>error_logger</c>. If you want to verify that the
+ schedulers have bound as requested, call
+ <seealso marker="erlang#system_info_scheduler_bindings">
+ <c>erlang:system_info(scheduler_bindings)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ </note>
</item>
- <tag><marker id="+sbwt"/><c>+sbwt none|very_short|short|medium|long|very_long</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Set scheduler busy wait threshold. Default is <c>medium</c>.
- The threshold determines how long schedulers should busy
- wait when running out of work before going to sleep.
- </p>
- <p><em>NOTE:</em> This flag may be removed or changed at any time
- without prior notice.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+scl"/><c>+scl true|false</c></tag>
+ <tag><marker id="+sbwt"/>
+ <c>+sbwt none|very_short|short|medium|long|very_long</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets scheduler busy wait threshold. Defaults to <c>medium</c>.
+ The threshold determines how long schedulers are to busy
+ wait when running out of work before going to sleep.</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>This flag can be removed or changed at any time
+ without prior notice.</p>
+ </note>
+ </item>
+<tag><marker id="+scl"/><c>+scl true|false</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Enable or disable scheduler compaction of load. By default
- scheduler compaction of load is enabled. When enabled, load
- balancing will strive for a load distribution which causes
- as many scheduler threads as possible to be fully loaded (i.e.,
- not run out of work). This is accomplished by migrating load
- (e.g. runnable processes) into a smaller set of schedulers
- when schedulers frequently run out of work. When disabled,
- the frequency with which schedulers run out of work will
- not be taken into account by the load balancing logic.
- <br/>&nbsp;&nbsp;<c>+scl false</c> is similar to
- <seealso marker="#+sub">+sub true</seealso> with the difference
- that <c>+sub true</c> also will balance scheduler utilization
- between schedulers.
- </p>
+ <p>Enables or disables scheduler compaction of load. By default
+ scheduler compaction of load is enabled. When enabled, load
+ balancing strives for a load distribution, which causes
+ as many scheduler threads as possible to be fully loaded (that is,
+ not run out of work). This is accomplished by migrating load
+ (for example, runnable processes) into a smaller set of schedulers
+ when schedulers frequently run out of work. When disabled,
+ the frequency with which schedulers run out of work is
+ not taken into account by the load balancing logic.</p>
+ <p><c>+scl false</c> is similar to
+ <seealso marker="#+sub"><c>+sub true</c></seealso>, but
+ <c>+sub true</c> also balances scheduler utilization
+ between schedulers.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+sct"/><c>+sct CpuTopology</c></tag>
<item>
<list type="bulleted">
- <item><c><![CDATA[<Id> = integer(); when 0 =< <Id> =< 65535]]></c></item>
+ <item><c><![CDATA[<Id> = integer(); when 0 =< <Id> =< 65535]]></c>
+ </item>
<item><c><![CDATA[<IdRange> = <Id>-<Id>]]></c></item>
<item><c><![CDATA[<IdOrIdRange> = <Id> | <IdRange>]]></c></item>
- <item><c><![CDATA[<IdList> = <IdOrIdRange>,<IdOrIdRange> | <IdOrIdRange>]]></c></item>
+ <item><c><![CDATA[<IdList> = <IdOrIdRange>,<IdOrIdRange> |
+ <IdOrIdRange>]]></c></item>
<item><c><![CDATA[<LogicalIds> = L<IdList>]]></c></item>
- <item><c><![CDATA[<ThreadIds> = T<IdList> | t<IdList>]]></c></item>
+ <item><c><![CDATA[<ThreadIds> = T<IdList> | t<IdList>]]></c>
+ </item>
<item><c><![CDATA[<CoreIds> = C<IdList> | c<IdList>]]></c></item>
- <item><c><![CDATA[<ProcessorIds> = P<IdList> | p<IdList>]]></c></item>
+ <item><c><![CDATA[<ProcessorIds> = P<IdList> | p<IdList>]]></c>
+ </item>
<item><c><![CDATA[<NodeIds> = N<IdList> | n<IdList>]]></c></item>
- <item><c><![CDATA[<IdDefs> = <LogicalIds><ThreadIds><CoreIds><ProcessorIds><NodeIds> | <LogicalIds><ThreadIds><CoreIds><NodeIds><ProcessorIds>]]></c></item>
- <item><c><![CDATA[CpuTopology = <IdDefs>:<IdDefs> | <IdDefs>]]></c></item>
+ <item><c><![CDATA[<IdDefs> =
+ <LogicalIds><ThreadIds><CoreIds><ProcessorIds><NodeIds> |
+ <LogicalIds><ThreadIds><CoreIds><NodeIds><ProcessorIds>]]></c>
+ </item>
+ <item><c><![CDATA[CpuTopology = <IdDefs>:<IdDefs> |
+ <IdDefs>]]></c></item>
+ </list>
+ <p>Sets a user-defined CPU topology. The user-defined
+ CPU topology overrides any automatically detected
+ CPU topology. The CPU topology is used when
+ <seealso marker="#+sbt">binding schedulers to logical
+ processors</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Uppercase letters signify real identifiers and lowercase
+ letters signify fake identifiers only used for description
+ of the topology. Identifiers passed as real identifiers can
+ be used by the runtime system when trying to access specific
+ hardware; if they are incorrect the behavior is
+ undefined. Faked logical CPU identifiers are not accepted,
+ as there is no point in defining the CPU topology without
+ real logical CPU identifiers. Thread, core, processor, and
+ node identifiers can be omitted. If omitted, the thread ID
+ defaults to <c>t0</c>, the core ID defaults to <c>c0</c>,
+ the processor ID defaults to <c>p0</c>, and the node ID is
+ left undefined. Either each logical processor must
+ belong to only one NUMA node, or no logical
+ processors must belong to any NUMA nodes.</p>
+ <p>Both increasing and decreasing <c><![CDATA[<IdRange>]]></c>s
+ are allowed.</p>
+ <p>NUMA node identifiers are system wide. That is, each NUMA
+ node on the system must have a unique identifier. Processor
+ identifiers are also system wide. Core identifiers are
+ processor wide. Thread identifiers are core wide.</p>
+ <p>The order of the identifier types implies the hierarchy of the
+ CPU topology. The valid orders are as follows:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>
+ <p><c><![CDATA[<LogicalIds><ThreadIds><CoreIds><ProcessorIds><NodeIds>]]></c>,
+ that is, thread is part of a core that is part of a processor,
+ which is part of a NUMA node.</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p><c><![CDATA[<LogicalIds><ThreadIds><CoreIds><NodeIds><ProcessorIds>]]></c>,
+ that is, thread is part of a core that is part of a NUMA node,
+ which is part of a processor.</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ <p>A CPU topology can consist of both processor external, and
+ processor internal NUMA nodes as long as each logical processor
+ belongs to only one NUMA node. If
+ <c><![CDATA[<ProcessorIds>]]></c> is omitted, its default position
+ is before <c><![CDATA[<NodeIds>]]></c>. That is, the default is
+ processor external NUMA nodes.</p>
+ <p>If a list of identifiers is used in an
+ <c><![CDATA[<IdDefs>]]></c>:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item><c><![CDATA[<LogicalIds>]]></c> must be a list
+ of identifiers.</item>
+ <item>At least one other identifier type besides
+ <c><![CDATA[<LogicalIds>]]></c> must also have a
+ list of identifiers.</item>
+ <item>All lists of identifiers must produce the
+ same number of identifiers.</item>
</list>
- <p>Set a user defined CPU topology. The user defined
- CPU topology will override any automatically detected
- CPU topology. The CPU topology is used when
- <seealso marker="#+sbt">binding schedulers to logical
- processors</seealso>.
- </p>
- <p>Upper-case letters signify real identifiers and lower-case
- letters signify fake identifiers only used for description
- of the topology. Identifiers passed as real identifiers may
- be used by the runtime system when trying to access specific
- hardware and if they are not correct the behavior is
- undefined. Faked logical CPU identifiers are not accepted
- since there is no point in defining the CPU topology without
- real logical CPU identifiers. Thread, core, processor, and
- node identifiers may be left out. If left out, thread id
- defaults to <c>t0</c>, core id defaults to <c>c0</c>,
- processor id defaults to <c>p0</c>, and node id will
- be left undefined. Either each logical processor must
- belong to one and only one NUMA node, or no logical
- processors must belong to any NUMA nodes.
- </p>
- <p>Both increasing and decreasing <c><![CDATA[<IdRange>]]></c>s
- are allowed.</p>
- <p>NUMA node identifiers are system wide. That is, each NUMA
- node on the system have to have a unique identifier. Processor
- identifiers are also system wide. Core identifiers are
- processor wide. Thread identifiers are core wide.</p>
- <p>The order of the identifier types imply the hierarchy of the
- CPU topology. Valid orders are either
- <c><![CDATA[<LogicalIds><ThreadIds><CoreIds><ProcessorIds><NodeIds>]]></c>,
- or
- <c><![CDATA[<LogicalIds><ThreadIds><CoreIds><NodeIds><ProcessorIds>]]></c>.
- That is, thread is part of a core which is part of a processor
- which is part of a NUMA node, or thread is part of a core which
- is part of a NUMA node which is part of a processor. A cpu
- topology can consist of both processor external, and processor
- internal NUMA nodes as long as each logical processor belongs
- to one and only one NUMA node. If <c><![CDATA[<ProcessorIds>]]></c>
- is left out, its default position will be before
- <c><![CDATA[<NodeIds>]]></c>. That is, the default is
- processor external NUMA nodes.
- </p>
- <p>If a list of identifiers is used in an
- <c><![CDATA[<IdDefs>]]></c>:</p>
- <list type="bulleted">
- <item><c><![CDATA[<LogicalIds>]]></c> have to be a list
- of identifiers.</item>
- <item>At least one other identifier type apart from
- <c><![CDATA[<LogicalIds>]]></c> also have to have a
- list of identifiers.</item>
- <item>All lists of identifiers have to produce the
- same amount of identifiers.</item>
- </list>
- <p>A simple example. A single quad core processor may be
- described this way:</p>
+ <p>A simple example. A single quad core processor can be
+ described as follows:</p>
<pre>
% <input>erl +sct L0-3c0-3</input>
1> <input>erlang:system_info(cpu_topology).</input>
[{processor,[{core,{logical,0}},
{core,{logical,1}},
{core,{logical,2}},
- {core,{logical,3}}]}]
-</pre>
- <p>A little more complicated example. Two quad core
- processors. Each processor in its own NUMA node.
- The ordering of logical processors is a little weird.
- This in order to give a better example of identifier
- lists:</p>
+ {core,{logical,3}}]}]</pre>
+ <p>A more complicated example with two quad core
+ processors, each processor in its own NUMA node.
+ The ordering of logical processors is a bit weird.
+ This to give a better example of identifier lists:</p>
<pre>
% <input>erl +sct L0-1,3-2c0-3p0N0:L7,4,6-5c0-3p1N1</input>
1> <input>erlang:system_info(cpu_topology).</input>
@@ -1221,239 +1203,247 @@
{node,[{processor,[{core,{logical,7}},
{core,{logical,4}},
{core,{logical,6}},
- {core,{logical,5}}]}]}]
-</pre>
- <p>As long as real identifiers are correct it is okay
- to pass a CPU topology that is not a correct
- description of the CPU topology. When used with
- care this can actually be very useful. This in
- order to trick the emulator to bind its schedulers
- as you want. For example, if you want to run multiple
- Erlang runtime systems on the same machine, you
- want to reduce the amount of schedulers used and
- manipulate the CPU topology so that they bind to
- different logical CPUs. An example, with two Erlang
- runtime systems on a quad core machine:</p>
+ {core,{logical,5}}]}]}]</pre>
+ <p>As long as real identifiers are correct, it is OK
+ to pass a CPU topology that is not a correct
+ description of the CPU topology. When used with
+ care this can be very useful. This
+ to trick the emulator to bind its schedulers
+ as you want. For example, if you want to run multiple
+ Erlang runtime systems on the same machine, you
+ want to reduce the number of schedulers used and
+ manipulate the CPU topology so that they bind to
+ different logical CPUs. An example, with two Erlang
+ runtime systems on a quad core machine:</p>
<pre>
% <input>erl +sct L0-3c0-3 +sbt db +S3:2 -detached -noinput -noshell -sname one</input>
-% <input>erl +sct L3-0c0-3 +sbt db +S3:2 -detached -noinput -noshell -sname two</input>
-</pre>
- <p>In this example each runtime system have two
- schedulers each online, and all schedulers online
- will run on different cores. If we change to one
- scheduler online on one runtime system, and three
- schedulers online on the other, all schedulers
- online will still run on different cores.</p>
- <p>Note that a faked CPU topology that does not reflect
- how the real CPU topology looks like is likely to
- decrease the performance of the runtime system.</p>
- <p>For more information, see
- <seealso marker="erlang#system_info_cpu_topology">erlang:system_info(cpu_topology)</seealso>.</p>
+% <input>erl +sct L3-0c0-3 +sbt db +S3:2 -detached -noinput -noshell -sname two</input></pre>
+ <p>In this example, each runtime system have two
+ schedulers each online, and all schedulers online
+ will run on different cores. If we change to one
+ scheduler online on one runtime system, and three
+ schedulers online on the other, all schedulers
+ online will still run on different cores.</p>
+ <p>Notice that a faked CPU topology that does not reflect
+ how the real CPU topology looks like is likely to
+ decrease the performance of the runtime system.</p>
+ <p>For more information, see
+ <seealso marker="erlang#system_info_cpu_topology">
+ <c>erlang:system_info(cpu_topology)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+secio"/><c>+secio true|false</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Enable or disable eager check I/O scheduling. The default
- is currently <c>true</c>. The default was changed from <c>false</c>
- to <c>true</c> as of erts version 7.0. The behaviour before this
- flag was introduced corresponds to <c>+secio false</c>.</p>
- <p>The flag effects when schedulers will check for I/O
- operations possible to execute, and when such I/O operations
- will execute. As the name of the parameter implies,
- schedulers will be more eager to check for I/O when
- <c>true</c> is passed. This however also implies that
- execution of outstanding I/O operation will not be
- prioritized to the same extent as when <c>false</c> is
- passed.</p>
- <p><seealso marker="erlang#system_info_eager_check_io"><c>erlang:system_info(eager_check_io)</c></seealso>
- returns the value of this parameter used when starting the VM.</p>
+ <p>Enables or disables eager check I/O scheduling. Defaults
+ to <c>true</c>. The default was changed from <c>false</c>
+ as from <c>ERTS</c> 7.0. The behavior before this
+ flag was introduced corresponds to <c>+secio false</c>.</p>
+ <p>The flag effects when schedulers will check for I/O
+ operations possible to execute, and when such I/O operations
+ will execute. As the parameter name implies,
+ schedulers are more eager to check for I/O when
+ <c>true</c> is passed. This, however, also implies that
+ execution of outstanding I/O operation is not
+ prioritized to the same extent as when <c>false</c> is
+ passed.</p>
+ <p><seealso marker="erlang#system_info_eager_check_io">
+ <c>erlang:system_info(eager_check_io)</c></seealso>
+ returns the value of this parameter used when starting
+ the virtual machine.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+sfwi"/><c>+sfwi Interval</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Set scheduler forced wakeup interval. All run queues will
- be scanned each <c>Interval</c> milliseconds. While there are
- sleeping schedulers in the system, one scheduler will be woken
- for each non-empty run queue found. An <c>Interval</c> of zero
- disables this feature, which also is the default.
- </p>
- <p>This feature has been introduced as a temporary workaround
- for long-executing native code, and native code that does not
- bump reductions properly in OTP. When these bugs have be fixed
- the <c>+sfwi</c> flag will be removed.
- </p>
- </item>
+ <p>Sets scheduler-forced wakeup interval. All run queues are
+ scanned each <c>Interval</c> milliseconds. While there are
+ sleeping schedulers in the system, one scheduler is woken
+ for each non-empty run queue found. <c>Interval</c> default
+ to <c>0</c>, meaning this feature is disabled.</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>This feature has been introduced as a temporary workaround
+ for long-executing native code, and native code that does not
+ bump reductions properly in OTP. When these bugs have be fixed,
+ this flag will be removed.</p>
+ </note>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="+spp"/><c>+spp Bool</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets default scheduler hint for port parallelism. If set to
+ <c>true</c>, the virtual machine schedules port tasks when it
+ improves parallelism in the system. If set to <c>false</c>, the
+ virtual machine tries to perform port tasks immediately,
+ improving latency at the expense of parallelism. Default to
+ <c>false</c>. The default used can be inspected in runtime by
+ calling <seealso marker="erlang#system_info_port_parallelism">
+ <c>erlang:system_info(port_parallelism)</c></seealso>.
+ The default can be overridden on port creation by passing option
+ <seealso marker="erlang#open_port_parallelism">
+ <c>parallelism</c></seealso> to
+ <seealso marker="erlang#open_port/2">
+ <c>erlang:open_port/2</c></seealso></p>.
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="sched_thread_stack_size"/>
+ <c><![CDATA[+sss size]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Suggested stack size, in kilowords, for scheduler threads.
+ Valid range is 4-8192 kilowords. The default stack size is
+ OS-dependent.</p>
+ </item>
<tag><marker id="+stbt"/><c>+stbt BindType</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Try to set scheduler bind type. The same as the
- <seealso marker="#+sbt">+sbt</seealso> flag with the exception of
- how some errors are handled. For more information, see the
- documentation of the <seealso marker="#+sbt">+sbt</seealso> flag.
- </p>
- </item>
+ <p>Tries to set the scheduler bind type. The same as flag
+ <seealso marker="#+sbt"><c>+sbt</c></seealso> except
+ how some errors are handled. For more information, see
+ <seealso marker="#+sbt"><c>+sbt</c></seealso>.</p>
+ </item>
<tag><marker id="+sub"/><c>+sub true|false</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Enable or disable
- <seealso marker="erts:erlang#statistics_scheduler_wall_time">scheduler
- utilization</seealso> balancing of load. By default scheduler
- utilization balancing is disabled and instead scheduler
- compaction of load is enabled which will strive for a load
- distribution which causes as many scheduler threads as possible
- to be fully loaded (i.e., not run out of work). When scheduler
- utilization balancing is enabled the system will instead try to
- balance scheduler utilization between schedulers. That is,
- strive for equal scheduler utilization on all schedulers.
- <br/>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<c>+sub true</c> is only supported on
- systems where the runtime system detects and uses a monotonically
- increasing high resolution clock. On other systems, the runtime
- system will fail to start.
- <br/>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<c>+sub true</c> implies
- <seealso marker="#+scl">+scl false</seealso>. The difference
- between <c>+sub true</c> and <c>+scl false</c> is that
- <c>+scl false</c> will not try to balance the scheduler
- utilization.
- </p>
+ <p>Enables or disables
+ <seealso marker="erts:erlang#statistics_scheduler_wall_time">
+ scheduler utilization</seealso> balancing of load. By default
+ scheduler utilization balancing is disabled and instead scheduler
+ compaction of load is enabled, which strives for a load
+ distribution that causes as many scheduler threads as possible
+ to be fully loaded (that is, not run out of work). When scheduler
+ utilization balancing is enabled, the system instead tries to
+ balance scheduler utilization between schedulers. That is,
+ strive for equal scheduler utilization on all schedulers.</p>
+ <p><c>+sub true</c> is only supported on systems where the runtime
+ system detects and uses a monotonically increasing high-resolution
+ clock. On other systems, the runtime system fails to start.</p>
+ <p><c>+sub true</c> implies <seealso marker="#+scl">
+ <c>+scl false</c></seealso>. The difference between
+ <c>+sub true</c> and <c>+scl false</c> is that <c>+scl false</c>
+ does not try to balance the scheduler utilization.</p>
</item>
- <tag><marker id="+swct"/><c>+swct very_eager|eager|medium|lazy|very_lazy</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>
- Set scheduler wake cleanup threshold. Default is <c>medium</c>.
- This flag controls how eager schedulers should be requesting
- wake up due to certain cleanup operations. When a lazy setting
- is used, more outstanding cleanup operations can be left undone
- while a scheduler is idling. When an eager setting is used,
- schedulers will more frequently be woken, potentially increasing
- CPU-utilization.
- </p>
- <p><em>NOTE:</em> This flag may be removed or changed at any time without prior notice.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+sws"/><c>+sws default|legacy</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>
- Set scheduler wakeup strategy. Default strategy changed in erts-5.10/OTP-R16A. This strategy was previously known as <c>proposal</c> in OTP-R15. The <c>legacy</c> strategy was used as default from R13 up to and including R15.
- </p>
- <p><em>NOTE:</em> This flag may be removed or changed at any time without prior notice.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+swt"/><c>+swt very_low|low|medium|high|very_high</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Set scheduler wakeup threshold. Default is <c>medium</c>.
- The threshold determines when to wake up sleeping schedulers
- when more work than can be handled by currently awake schedulers
- exist. A low threshold will cause earlier wakeups, and a high
- threshold will cause later wakeups. Early wakeups will
- distribute work over multiple schedulers faster, but work will
- more easily bounce between schedulers.
- </p>
- <p><em>NOTE:</em> This flag may be removed or changed at any time
- without prior notice.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="+spp"/><c>+spp Bool</c></tag>
+ <tag><marker id="+swct"/>
+ <c>+swct very_eager|eager|medium|lazy|very_lazy</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Set default scheduler hint for port parallelism. If set to
- <c>true</c>, the VM will schedule port tasks when doing so will
- improve parallelism in the system. If set to <c>false</c>, the VM
- will try to perform port tasks immediately, improving latency at the
- expense of parallelism. If this flag has not been passed, the
- default scheduler hint for port parallelism is currently
- <c>false</c>. The default used can be inspected in runtime by
- calling <seealso
- marker="erlang#system_info_port_parallelism">erlang:system_info(port_parallelism)</seealso>.
- The default can be overriden on port creation by passing the
- <seealso marker="erlang#open_port_parallelism">parallelism</seealso>
- option to <seealso
- marker="erlang#open_port/2">open_port/2</seealso></p>.
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="sched_thread_stack_size"/><c><![CDATA[+sss size]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Suggested stack size, in kilowords, for scheduler threads.
- Valid range is 4-8192 kilowords. The default stack size
- is OS dependent.</p>
- </item>
+ <p>Sets scheduler wake cleanup threshold. Defaults to <c>medium</c>.
+ Controls how eager schedulers are to be requesting
+ wakeup because of certain cleanup operations. When a lazy setting
+ is used, more outstanding cleanup operations can be left undone
+ while a scheduler is idling. When an eager setting is used,
+ schedulers are more frequently woken, potentially increasing
+ CPU-utilization.</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>This flag can be removed or changed at any time without prior
+ notice.</p>
+ </note>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="+sws"/><c>+sws default|legacy</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets scheduler wakeup strategy. Default strategy changed in
+ <c>ERTS</c> 5.10 (Erlang/OTP R16A). This strategy was known as
+ <c>proposal</c> in Erlang/OTP R15. The <c>legacy</c> strategy
+ was used as default from R13 up to and including R15.</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>This flag can be removed or changed at any time without prior
+ notice.</p>
+ </note>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="+swt"/>
+ <c>+swt very_low|low|medium|high|very_high</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets scheduler wakeup threshold. Defaults to <c>medium</c>.
+ The threshold determines when to wake up sleeping schedulers
+ when more work than can be handled by currently awake schedulers
+ exists. A low threshold causes earlier wakeups, and a high
+ threshold causes later wakeups. Early wakeups distribute work
+ over multiple schedulers faster, but work does more easily bounce
+ between schedulers.</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>This flag can be removed or changed at any time without prior
+ notice.</p>
+ </note>
+ </item>
</taglist>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+t"/><c><![CDATA[+t size]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Set the maximum number of atoms the VM can handle. Default is 1048576.</p>
+ <p>Sets the maximum number of atoms the virtual machine can handle.
+ Defaults to 1,048,576.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+T"/><c><![CDATA[+T Level]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Enables modified timing and sets the modified timing level.
- Currently valid range is 0-9. The timing of the runtime system
- will change. A high level usually means a greater change than
- a low level. Changing the timing can be very useful for finding
- timing related bugs.</p>
- <p>Currently, modified timing affects the following:</p>
+ <p>Enables modified timing and sets the modified timing level. Valid
+ range is 0-9. The timing of the runtime system is changed. A high
+ level usually means a greater change than a low level. Changing the
+ timing can be very useful for finding timing-related bugs.</p>
+ <p>Modified timing affects the following:</p>
<taglist>
<tag>Process spawning</tag>
- <item>
- <p>A process calling <c><![CDATA[spawn]]></c>, <c><![CDATA[spawn_link]]></c>,
- <c><![CDATA[spawn_monitor]]></c>, or <c><![CDATA[spawn_opt]]></c> will be scheduled
- out immediately after completing the call. When higher modified
- timing levels are used, the caller will also sleep for a while
- after being scheduled out.</p>
+ <item>A process calling <c><![CDATA[spawn]]></c>,
+ <c><![CDATA[spawn_link]]></c>, <c><![CDATA[spawn_monitor]]></c>,
+ or <c><![CDATA[spawn_opt]]></c> is scheduled out immediately
+ after completing the call. When higher modified timing levels are
+ used, the caller also sleeps for a while after it is scheduled out.
</item>
<tag>Context reductions</tag>
- <item>The amount of reductions a process is a allowed to
- use before being scheduled out is increased or reduced.</item>
+ <item>The number of reductions a process is allowed to use before it
+ is scheduled out is increased or reduced.
+ </item>
<tag>Input reductions</tag>
- <item>The amount of reductions performed before checking I/O
- is increased or reduced.</item>
+ <item>The number of reductions performed before checking I/O is
+ increased or reduced.
+ </item>
</taglist>
- <p><em>NOTE:</em> Performance will suffer when modified timing
- is enabled. This flag is <em>only</em> intended for testing and
- debugging. Also note that <c><![CDATA[return_to]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[return_from]]></c>
- trace messages will be lost when tracing on the spawn BIFs. This
- flag may be removed or changed at any time without prior notice.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[+V]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Makes the emulator print out its version number.</p>
+ <note>
+ <p>Performance suffers when modified timing is enabled. This flag is
+ <em>only</em> intended for testing and debugging.</p>
+ <p><c><![CDATA[return_to]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[return_from]]></c>
+ trace messages are lost when tracing on the spawn BIFs.</p>
+ <p>This flag can be removed or changed at any time without prior
+ notice.</p>
+ </note>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+v]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>Verbose.</p>
</item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[+V]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Makes the emulator print its version number.</p>
+ </item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+W w | i | e]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the mapping of warning messages for <c><![CDATA[error_logger]]></c>.
- Messages sent to the error logger using one of the warning
- routines can be mapped either to errors (<c><![CDATA[+W e]]></c>),
- warnings (<c><![CDATA[+W w]]></c>), or info reports
- (<c><![CDATA[+W i]]></c>). The default is warnings.
+ <p>Sets the mapping of warning messages for
+ <c><![CDATA[error_logger]]></c>. Messages sent to the error logger
+ using one of the warning routines can be mapped to errors
+ (<c><![CDATA[+W e]]></c>), warnings (<c><![CDATA[+W w]]></c>), or
+ information reports (<c><![CDATA[+W i]]></c>). Defaults to warnings.
The current mapping can be retrieved using
- <c><![CDATA[error_logger:warning_map/0]]></c>. See
- <seealso marker="kernel:error_logger#warning_map/0">error_logger(3)</seealso>
- for further information.</p>
+ <c><![CDATA[error_logger:warning_map/0]]></c>. For more information,
+ see <seealso marker="kernel:error_logger#warning_map/0">
+ <c>error_logger:warning_map/0</c></seealso> in <c>Kernel</c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+zFlag Value]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Miscellaneous flags.</p>
+ <p>Miscellaneous flags:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><marker id="+zdbbl"/><c>+zdbbl size</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Set the distribution buffer busy limit
- (<seealso marker="erlang#system_info_dist_buf_busy_limit">dist_buf_busy_limit</seealso>)
- in kilobytes. Valid range is 1-2097151. Default is 1024.</p>
- <p>A larger buffer limit will allow processes to buffer
- more outgoing messages over the distribution. When the
- buffer limit has been reached, sending processes will be
- suspended until the buffer size has shrunk. The buffer
- limit is per distribution channel. A higher limit will
- give lower latency and higher throughput at the expense
- of higher memory usage.</p>
+ <p>Sets the distribution buffer busy limit
+ (<seealso marker="erlang#system_info_dist_buf_busy_limit">
+ <c>dist_buf_busy_limit</c></seealso>)
+ in kilobytes. Valid range is 1-2097151. Defaults to 1024.</p>
+ <p>A larger buffer limit allows processes to buffer
+ more outgoing messages over the distribution. When the
+ buffer limit has been reached, sending processes will be
+ suspended until the buffer size has shrunk. The buffer
+ limit is per distribution channel. A higher limit
+ gives lower latency and higher throughput at the expense
+ of higher memory use.</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="+zdntgc"/><c>+zdntgc time</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Set the delayed node table garbage collection time
- (<seealso marker="erlang#system_info_delayed_node_table_gc">delayed_node_table_gc</seealso>)
- in seconds. Valid values are either <c>infinity</c> or
- an integer in the range [0-100000000]. Default is 60.</p>
- <p>Node table entries that are not referred will linger
- in the table for at least the amount of time that this
- parameter determines. The lingering prevents repeated
- deletions and insertions in the tables from occurring.
- </p>
+ <p>Sets the delayed node table garbage collection time
+ (<seealso marker="erlang#system_info_delayed_node_table_gc">
+ <c>delayed_node_table_gc</c></seealso>)
+ in seconds. Valid values are either <c>infinity</c> or
+ an integer in the range 0-100000000. Defaults to 60.</p>
+ <p>Node table entries that are not referred linger
+ in the table for at least the amount of time that this
+ parameter determines. The lingering prevents repeated
+ deletions and insertions in the tables from occurring.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
</item>
@@ -1462,104 +1452,95 @@
<section>
<marker id="environment_variables"></marker>
- <title>Environment variables</title>
+ <title>Environment Variables</title>
<taglist>
<tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP]]></c></tag>
<item>
<p>If the emulator needs to write a crash dump, the value of this
- variable will be the file name of the crash dump file.
- If the variable is not set, the name of the crash dump file will
- be <c><![CDATA[erl_crash.dump]]></c> in the current directory.</p>
+ variable is the filename of the crash dump file.
+ If the variable is not set, the name of the crash dump file is
+ <c><![CDATA[erl_crash.dump]]></c> in the current directory.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_NICE]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p><em>Unix systems</em>: If the emulator needs to write a crash dump,
- it will use the value of this variable to set the nice value
- for the process, thus lowering its priority. The allowable range is
- 1 through 39 (higher values will be replaced with 39). The highest
- value, 39, will give the process the lowest priority.</p>
+ <p><em>Unix systems</em>: If the emulator needs to write a crash dump,
+ it uses the value of this variable to set the nice value
+ for the process, thus lowering its priority. Valid range is
+ 1-39 (higher values are replaced with 39). The highest
+ value, 39, gives the process the lowest priority.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p><em>Unix systems</em>: This variable gives the number of seconds that
- the emulator will be allowed to spend writing a crash dump. When
- the given number of seconds have elapsed, the emulator will be
- terminated by a SIGALRM signal.</p>
-
- <p> If the environment variable is <em>not</em> set or it is set to zero seconds, <c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=0]]></c>,
- the runtime system will not even attempt to write the crash dump file. It will just terminate.
- </p>
- <p> If the environment variable is set to negative valie, e.g. <c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=-1]]></c>,
- the runtime system will wait indefinitely for the crash dump file to be written.
- </p>
- <p> This environment variable is used in conjuction with
- <seealso marker="kernel:heart"><c>heart</c></seealso> if <c>heart</c> is running:
- </p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=0]]></c></tag>
- <item><p>
- Suppresses the writing a crash dump file entirely,
- thus rebooting the runtime system immediately.
- This is the same as not setting the environment variable.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=-1]]></c></tag>
- <item><p>Setting the environment variable to a negative value will cause the
- termination of the runtime system to wait until the crash dump file
- has been completly written.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=S]]></c></tag>
- <item><p>
- Will wait for <c>S</c> seconds to complete the crash dump file and
- then terminate the runtime system.
- </p>
- </item>
- </taglist>
+ <p><em>Unix systems</em>: This variable gives the number of seconds
+ that the emulator is allowed to spend writing a crash dump. When the
+ given number of seconds have elapsed, the emulator is terminated by a
+ <c>SIGALRM</c> signal.</p>
+ <p>If the variable is <em>not</em> set or set to <c>0</c> seconds
+ (<c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=0]]></c>), the runtime system does
+ not even attempt to write the crash dump file. It only terminates.</p>
+ <p>If the variable is set to negative value, such as
+ <c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=-1]]></c>, the runtime system
+ waits indefinitely for the crash dump file to be written.</p>
+ <p>This variable is used with <seealso marker="kernel:heart">
+ <c>kernel:heart</c></seealso> if <c>heart</c> is running:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=0]]></c></tag>
+ <item>Suppresses the writing a crash dump file entirely, thus
+ rebooting the runtime system immediately. This is the same as not
+ setting the environment variable.
+ </item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=-1]]></c></tag>
+ <item>Setting the environment variable to a negative value causes the
+ termination of the runtime system to wait until the crash dump file
+ has been completly written.
+ </item>
+ <tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS=S]]></c></tag>
+ <item>Waits for <c>S</c> seconds to complete the crash dump file and
+ then terminates the runtime system.
+ </item>
+ </taglist>
</item>
<tag><marker id="ERL_AFLAGS"/><c><![CDATA[ERL_AFLAGS]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>The content of this environment variable will be added to the
- beginning of the command line for <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c>.</p>
- <p>The <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag is treated specially. Its scope ends
- at the end of the environment variable content. Arguments
- following an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag are moved on the command line into
- the <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> section, i.e. the end of the command line
- following after an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="ERL_ZFLAGS"/><c><![CDATA[ERL_ZFLAGS]]></c> and <marker id="ERL_FLAGS"/><c><![CDATA[ERL_FLAGS]]></c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>The content of these environment variables will be added to the
- end of the command line for <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c>.</p>
- <p>The <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag is treated specially. Its scope ends
- at the end of the environment variable content. Arguments
- following an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag are moved on the command line into
- the <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> section, i.e. the end of the command line
- following after an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag.</p>
+ <p>The content of this variable is added to the beginning of the
+ command line for <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>Flag <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> is treated in a special way. Its
+ scope ends at the end of the environment variable content. Arguments
+ following an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag are moved on the command
+ line into section <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c>, that is, the end of the
+ command line following an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="ERL_ZFLAGS"/><c><![CDATA[ERL_ZFLAGS]]></c> and
+ <marker id="ERL_FLAGS"/><c><![CDATA[ERL_FLAGS]]></c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>The content of these variables are added to the end of the command
+ line for <c><![CDATA[erl]]></c>.</p>
+ <p>Flag <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> is treated in a special way. Its
+ scope ends at the end of the environment variable content. Arguments
+ following an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag are moved on the command
+ line into section <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c>, that is, the end of the
+ command line following an <c><![CDATA[-extra]]></c> flag.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_LIBS]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This environment variable contains a list of additional library
- directories that the code server will search for applications and
- add to the code path.
- See <seealso marker="kernel:code">code(3)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Contains a list of additional library directories that the code
+ server searches for applications and adds to the code path; see
+ <seealso marker="kernel:code"><c>kernel:code(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_EPMD_ADDRESS]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This environment variable may be set to a comma-separated
- list of IP addresses, in which case the
- <seealso marker="epmd">epmd</seealso> daemon
- will listen only on the specified address(es) and on the
- loopback address (which is implicitly added to the list if it
- has not been specified).</p>
+ <p>Can be set to a comma-separated list of IP addresses, in which case
+ the <seealso marker="epmd"><c>epmd</c></seealso> daemon listens only
+ on the specified address(es) and on the loopback address (which is
+ implicitly added to the list if it has not been specified).</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_EPMD_PORT]]></c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This environment variable can contain the port number to use when
- communicating with <seealso marker="epmd">epmd</seealso>. The default
- port will work fine in most cases. A different port can be specified
+ <p>Can contain the port number to use when communicating with
+ <seealso marker="epmd"><c>epmd</c></seealso>. The default port works
+ fine in most cases. A different port can be specified
to allow nodes of independent clusters to co-exist on the same host.
- All nodes in a cluster must use the same epmd port number.</p>
+ All nodes in a cluster must use the same <c>epmd</c> port number.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
</section>
@@ -1567,59 +1548,64 @@
<section>
<marker id="configuration"></marker>
<title>Configuration</title>
- <p>The standard Erlang/OTP system can be re-configured to change the default
- behavior on start-up.</p>
+ <p>The standard Erlang/OTP system can be reconfigured to change the default
+ behavior on startup.</p>
<taglist>
- <tag>The .erlang Start-up File</tag>
- <item>
- <p>When Erlang/OTP is started, the system searches for a file named .erlang
- in the directory where Erlang/OTP is started. If not found, the user's home
- directory is searched for an .erlang file.</p>
- <p>If an .erlang file is found, it is assumed to contain valid Erlang expressions.
- These expressions are evaluated as if they were input to the shell.</p>
- <p>A typical .erlang file contains a set of search paths, for example:</p>
- <code type="none"><![CDATA[
- io:format("executing user profile in HOME/.erlang\n",[]).
- code:add_path("/home/calvin/test/ebin").
- code:add_path("/home/hobbes/bigappl-1.2/ebin").
- io:format(".erlang rc finished\n",[]).
- ]]></code>
- </item>
- <tag>user_default and shell_default</tag>
- <item>
- <p>Functions in the shell which are not prefixed by a module name are assumed
- to be functional objects (Funs), built-in functions (BIFs), or belong to the
- module user_default or shell_default.</p>
- <p>To include private shell commands, define them in a module user_default and
- add the following argument as the first line in the .erlang file.</p>
+ <tag>The <c>.erlang</c> startup file</tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>When Erlang/OTP is started, the system searches for a file named
+ <c>.erlang</c> in the directory where Erlang/OTP is started. If not
+ found, the user's home directory is searched for an <c>.erlang</c>
+ file.</p>
+ <p>If an <c>.erlang</c> file is found, it is assumed to contain valid
+ Erlang expressions. These expressions are evaluated as if they were
+ input to the shell.</p>
+ <p>A typical <c>.erlang</c> file contains a set of search paths, for
+ example:</p>
<code type="none"><![CDATA[
- code:load_abs("..../user_default").
- ]]></code>
- </item>
- <tag>erl</tag>
- <item>
- <p>If the contents of .erlang are changed and a private version of
- user_default is defined, it is possible to customize the Erlang/OTP environment.
- More powerful changes can be made by supplying command line arguments in the
- start-up script erl. Refer to erl(1) and <seealso marker="init">init(3)</seealso>
- for further information.</p>
- </item>
+io:format("executing user profile in HOME/.erlang\n",[]).
+code:add_path("/home/calvin/test/ebin").
+code:add_path("/home/hobbes/bigappl-1.2/ebin").
+io:format(".erlang rc finished\n",[]). ]]></code>
+ </item>
+ <tag>user_default and shell_default</tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Functions in the shell that are not prefixed by a module name are
+ assumed to be functional objects (funs), built-in functions (BIFs),
+ or belong to the module <c>user_default</c> or
+ <c>shell_default</c>.</p>
+ <p>To include private shell commands, define them in a module
+ <c>user_default</c> and add the following argument as the first line
+ in the <c>.erlang</c> file:</p>
+ <code type="none"><![CDATA[
+code:load_abs("..../user_default"). ]]></code>
+ </item>
+ <tag>erl</tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>If the contents of <c>.erlang</c> are changed and a private version
+ of <c>user_default</c> is defined, the Erlang/OTP environment can be
+ customized. More powerful changes can be made by supplying
+ command-line arguments in the startup script <c>erl</c>. For more
+ information, see <seealso marker="init"><c>init(3)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ </item>
</taglist>
</section>
- <section>
- <title>SEE ALSO</title>
- <p><seealso marker="init">init(3)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="erl_prim_loader">erl_prim_loader(3)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="kernel:erl_boot_server">erl_boot_server(3)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="kernel:code">code(3)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="kernel:application">application(3)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="kernel:heart">heart(3)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="kernel:net_kernel">net_kernel(3)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="kernel:auth">auth(3)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="tools:make">make(3)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="epmd">epmd(1)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="erts_alloc">erts_alloc(3)</seealso></p>
+ <section>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <p><seealso marker="epmd"><c>epmd(1)</c></seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="erl_prim_loader"><c>erl_prim_loader(3)</c></seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="erts_alloc"><c>erts_alloc(3)</c></seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="init"><c>init(3)</c></seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="kernel:application">
+ <c>kernel:application(3)</c></seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="kernel:auth"><c>kernel:auth(3)</c></seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="kernel:code"><c>kernel:code(3)</c></seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="kernel:erl_boot_server">
+ <c>kernel:erl_boot_server(3)</c></seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="kernel:heart"><c>kernel:heart(3)</c></seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="kernel:net_kernel"><c>kernel:net_kernel(3)</c></seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="tools:make"><c>tools:make(3)</c></seealso></p>
</section>
</comref>