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-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/Makefile5
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/communication.xml89
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/driver_entry.xml41
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/erl.xml101
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/erl_driver.xml242
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/erl_nif.xml97
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/erl_set_memory_block.xml172
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/erlang.xml4126
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/erts_alloc.xml6
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/notes.xml173
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/part.xml1
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/ref_man.xml1
12 files changed, 2567 insertions, 2487 deletions
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/Makefile b/erts/doc/src/Makefile
index da245d7fe8..89d7c85a86 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/Makefile
+++ b/erts/doc/src/Makefile
@@ -55,7 +55,6 @@ XML_REF3_EFILES = \
XML_REF3_FILES = \
driver_entry.xml \
erl_nif.xml \
- erl_set_memory_block.xml \
erl_driver.xml \
erl_prim_loader.xml \
erlang.xml \
@@ -78,6 +77,7 @@ XML_CHAPTER_FILES = \
inet_cfg.xml \
erl_ext_dist.xml \
erl_dist_protocol.xml \
+ communication.xml \
notes.xml \
notes_history.xml
@@ -158,9 +158,6 @@ $(SPECDIR)/specs_driver_entry.xml:
$(SPECDIR)/specs_erl_nif.xml:
escript $(SPECS_EXTRACTOR) $(SPECS_FLAGS) \
-o$(dir $@) -module erl_nif
-$(SPECDIR)/specs_erl_set_memory_block.xml:
- escript $(SPECS_EXTRACTOR) $(SPECS_FLAGS) \
- -o$(dir $@) -module erl_set_memory_block
$(SPECDIR)/specs_erl_driver.xml:
escript $(SPECS_EXTRACTOR) $(SPECS_FLAGS) \
-o$(dir $@) -module erl_driver
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/communication.xml b/erts/doc/src/communication.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..6049123f6a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/erts/doc/src/communication.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,89 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="latin1" ?>
+<!DOCTYPE chapter SYSTEM "chapter.dtd">
+
+<chapter>
+ <header>
+ <copyright>
+ <year>2012</year><year>2012</year>
+ <holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
+ </copyright>
+ <legalnotice>
+ The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
+ Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
+ compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
+ Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
+ retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+
+ Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
+ basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
+ the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
+ under the License.
+
+ </legalnotice>
+
+ <title>Communication in Erlang</title>
+ <prepared>Rickard Green</prepared>
+ <responsible></responsible>
+ <docno></docno>
+ <approved></approved>
+ <checked></checked>
+ <date>2012-12-03</date>
+ <rev>PA1</rev>
+ <file>communication.xml</file>
+ </header>
+ <p>Communication in Erlang is conceptually performed using
+ asynchronous signaling. All different executing entities
+ such as processes, and ports communicate via asynchronous
+ signals. The most commonly used signal is a message. Other
+ common signals are exit, link, unlink, monitor, demonitor
+ signals.</p>
+ <section>
+ <title>Passing of Signals</title>
+ <p>The amount of time that passes between a signal being sent
+ and the arrival of the signal at the destination is unspecified
+ but positive. If the receiver has terminated, the signal will
+ not arrive, but it is possible that it triggers another signal.
+ For example, a link signal sent to a non-existing process will
+ trigger an exit signal which will be sent back to where the link
+ signal originated from. When communicating over the distribution,
+ signals may be lost if the distribution channel goes down.</p>
+ <p>The only signal ordering guarantee given is the following. If
+ an entity sends multiple signals to the same destination entity,
+ the order will be preserved. That is, if <c>A</c> send
+ a signal <c>S1</c> to <c>B</c>, and later sends
+ the signal <c>S2</c> to <c>B</c>, <c>S1</c> is guaranteed not to
+ arrive after <c>S2</c>.</p>
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Synchronous Communication</title>
+ <p>Some communication is synchronous. If broken down into pieces,
+ a synchronous communication operation, consists of two asynchronous
+ signals. One request signal and one reply signal. An example of
+ such a synchronous communication is a call to <c>process_info/2</c>
+ when the first argument is not <c>self()</c>. The caller will send
+ an asynchronous signal requesting information, and will then
+ wait for the reply signal containing the requested information. When
+ the request signal reaches its destination the destination process
+ replies with the requested information.</p>
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Implementation</title>
+ <p>The implementation of different asynchronous signals in the
+ VM may vary over time, but the behavior will always respect this
+ concept of asynchronous signals being passed between entities
+ as described above.</p>
+ <p>By inspecting the implementation you might notice that some
+ specific signal actually gives a stricter guarantee than described
+ above. It is of vital importance that such knowledge about the
+ implementation is <em>not</em> used by Erlang code, since the
+ implementation might change at any time without prior notice.</p>
+ <p>Some example of major implementation changes:</p>
+ <list type="bulleted">
+ <item>As of ERTS version 5.5.2 exit signals to processes are truly
+ asynchronously delivered.</item>
+ <item>As of ERTS version 5.10 all signals from processes to ports
+ are truly asynchronously delivered.</item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+</chapter>
+
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/driver_entry.xml b/erts/doc/src/driver_entry.xml
index a2efdf3ebc..c37138e7b1 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/driver_entry.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/driver_entry.xml
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
<cref>
<header>
<copyright>
- <year>2001</year><year>2011</year>
+ <year>2001</year><year>2012</year>
<holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
@@ -34,6 +34,29 @@
<lib>driver_entry</lib>
<libsummary>The driver-entry structure used by erlang drivers.</libsummary>
<description>
+ <marker id="WARNING"/>
+ <warning><p><em>Use this functionality with extreme care!</em></p>
+ <p>A driver callback is executed as a direct extension of the
+ native code of the VM. Execution is not made in a safe environment.
+ The VM can <em>not</em> provide the same services as provided when
+ executing Erlang code, such as preemptive scheduling or memory
+ protection. If the driver callback function doesn't behave well,
+ the whole VM will misbehave.</p>
+ <list>
+ <item><p>A driver callback that crash will crash the whole VM.</p></item>
+ <item><p>An erroneously implemented driver callback might cause
+ a VM internal state inconsistency which may cause a crash of the VM,
+ or miscellaneous misbehaviors of the VM at any point after the call
+ to the driver callback.</p></item>
+ <item><p>A driver callback that do
+ <seealso marker="erl_driver#lengthy_work">lengthy work</seealso>
+ before returning will degrade responsiveness of the VM,
+ and may cause miscellaneous strange behaviors. Such strange behaviors
+ include, but are not limited to, extreme memory usage, and bad load
+ balancing between schedulers. Strange behaviors that might occur due
+ to lengthy work may also vary between OTP releases.</p></item>
+ </list>
+ </warning>
<p>
As of erts version 5.9 (OTP release R15B) the driver interface
has been changed with larger types for the callbacks
@@ -377,11 +400,11 @@ typedef struct erl_drv_entry {
<tag><marker id="driver_flags"/>int driver_flags</tag>
<item>
- <p>This field is used to pass driver capability information to the
- runtime system. If the <c>extended_marker</c> field equals
- <c>ERL_DRV_EXTENDED_MARKER</c>, it should contain <c>0</c> or
- driver flags (<c>ERL_DRV_FLAG_*</c>) ored bitwise. Currently
- the following driver flags exist:
+ <p>This field is used to pass driver capability and other
+ information to the runtime system. If the
+ <c>extended_marker</c> field equals <c>ERL_DRV_EXTENDED_MARKER</c>,
+ it should contain <c>0</c> or driver flags (<c>ERL_DRV_FLAG_*</c>)
+ ored bitwise. Currently the following driver flags exist:
</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>ERL_DRV_FLAG_USE_PORT_LOCKING</c></tag>
@@ -404,6 +427,12 @@ typedef struct erl_drv_entry {
by the Erlang distribution (the behaviour has always been
required by drivers used by the distribution).
</item>
+ <tag><c>ERL_DRV_FLAG_NO_BUSY_MSGQ</c></tag>
+ <item>Disable busy port message queue functionality. For
+ more information, see the documentation of the
+ <seealso marker="erl_driver#erl_drv_busy_msgq_limits">erl_drv_busy_msgq_limits()</seealso>
+ function.
+ </item>
</taglist>
</item>
<tag>void *handle2</tag>
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/erl.xml b/erts/doc/src/erl.xml
index f931445a3e..99f2466d79 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/erl.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/erl.xml
@@ -582,11 +582,71 @@
<seealso marker="erts_alloc">erts_alloc(3)</seealso> for
further information.</p>
</item>
+ <tag><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="max_processes"><c><![CDATA[+P Number]]></c></marker></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the maximum number of concurrent processes for this
- system. <c><![CDATA[Number]]></c> must be in the range 16..134217727.
- Default is 32768.</p>
+ <p>Sets the maximum number of simultaneously existing processes for this
+ system. 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>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="max_ports"><c><![CDATA[+Q Number]]></c></marker></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Sets the maximum number of simultaneously existing ports for this
+ system. 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>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>
</item>
<tag><marker id="compat_rel"><c><![CDATA[+R ReleaseNumber]]></c></marker></tag>
<item>
@@ -595,21 +655,14 @@
default. This flags 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[7..<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>For example, an R10 node is not automatically compatible
- with an R9 node, but R10 nodes started with the <c><![CDATA[+R 9]]></c>
- flag can co-exist with R9 nodes in the same distributed
- Erlang system, they are R9-compatible.</p>
+ <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>
- <p>For example: A distributed Erlang system can consist of
- R10 nodes, or of R9 nodes and R9-compatible R10 nodes, but
- not of R9 nodes, R9-compatible R10 nodes and "regular" R10
- nodes, as R9 and "regular" R10 nodes are not compatible.</p>
</item>
<tag><c><![CDATA[+r]]></c></tag>
<item>
@@ -932,6 +985,22 @@
without prior notice.
</p>
</item>
+ <tag><marker id="+spp"><c>+spp Bool</c></marker></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Set default scheduler hint for port parallelism. If set to
+ <c>true</c>, the VM will schedule port tasks when it by this can
+ improve the parallelism in the system. If set to <c>false</c>,
+ the VM will try to perform port tasks immediately and by this
+ improve 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></marker></tag>
<item>
<p>Suggested stack size, in kilowords, for scheduler threads.
@@ -1072,7 +1141,7 @@
</item>
</taglist>
</item>
- <tag><c><![CDATA[ERL_AFLAGS]]></c></tag>
+ <tag><marker id="ERL_AFLAGS"><c><![CDATA[ERL_AFLAGS]]></c></marker></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>
@@ -1082,7 +1151,7 @@
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><c><![CDATA[ERL_ZFLAGS]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[ERL_FLAGS]]></c></tag>
+ <tag><marker id="ERL_ZFLAGS"><c><![CDATA[ERL_ZFLAGS]]></c></marker> and <marker id="ERL_FLAGS"><c><![CDATA[ERL_FLAGS]]></c></marker></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>
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/erl_driver.xml b/erts/doc/src/erl_driver.xml
index 187c263b60..13f42a74a7 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/erl_driver.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/erl_driver.xml
@@ -34,6 +34,32 @@
<lib>erl_driver</lib>
<libsummary>API functions for an Erlang driver</libsummary>
<description>
+ <p>An Erlang driver is a library containing a set of native driver
+ callback functions that the Erlang VM calls when certain
+ events occur. There may be multiple instances of a driver, each
+ instance is associated with an Erlang port.</p>
+ <marker id="WARNING"/>
+ <warning><p><em>Use this functionality with extreme care!</em></p>
+ <p>A driver callback is executed as a direct extension of the
+ native code of the VM. Execution is not made in a safe environment.
+ The VM can <em>not</em> provide the same services as provided when
+ executing Erlang code, such as preemptive scheduling or memory
+ protection. If the driver callback function doesn't behave well,
+ the whole VM will misbehave.</p>
+ <list>
+ <item><p>A driver callback that crash will crash the whole VM.</p></item>
+ <item><p>An erroneously implemented driver callback might cause
+ a VM internal state inconsistency which may cause a crash of the VM,
+ or miscellaneous misbehaviors of the VM at any point after the call
+ to the driver callback.</p></item>
+ <item><p>A driver callback that do <seealso marker="#lengthy_work">lengthy
+ work</seealso> before returning will degrade responsiveness of the VM,
+ and may cause miscellaneous strange behaviors. Such strange behaviors
+ include, but are not limited to, extreme memory usage, and bad load
+ balancing between schedulers. Strange behaviors that might occur due
+ to lengthy work may also vary between OTP releases.</p></item>
+ </list>
+ </warning>
<p>As of erts version 5.5.3 the driver interface has been extended
(see <seealso marker="driver_entry#extended_marker">extended marker</seealso>).
The extended interface introduce
@@ -53,16 +79,12 @@
<p>The driver calls back to the emulator, using the API
functions declared in <c>erl_driver.h</c>. They are used for
outputting data from the driver, using timers, etc.</p>
- <p>A driver is a library with a set of function that the emulator
- calls, in response to Erlang functions and message
- sending. There may be multiple instances of a driver, each
- instance is connected to an Erlang port. Every port has a port
- owner process. Communication with the port is normally done
- through the port owner process.</p>
- <p>Most of the functions take the <c>port</c> handle as an
- argument. This identifies the driver instance. Note that this
- port handle must be stored by the driver, it is not given when
- the driver is called from the emulator (see
+ <p>Each driver instance is associated with a port. Every port
+ has a port owner process. Communication with the port is normally
+ done through the port owner process. Most of the functions take
+ the <c>port</c> handle as an argument. This identifies the driver
+ instance. Note that this port handle must be stored by the driver,
+ it is not given when the driver is called from the emulator (see
<seealso marker="driver_entry#emulator">driver_entry</seealso>).</p>
<p>Some of the functions take a parameter of type
<c>ErlDrvBinary</c>, a driver binary. It should be both
@@ -123,12 +145,35 @@
different threads. This, however, is not a problem for any
function in this API, since the emulator has control over
these threads.</p>
- <note>
- <p>Functions not explicitly documented as thread-safe are
- <em>not</em> thread-safe. Also note that some functions
+ <warning>
+ <p>Functions not explicitly documented as thread safe are
+ <em>not</em> thread safe. Also note that some functions
are <em>only</em> thread safe when used in a runtime
system with SMP support.</p>
- </note>
+ <p>A function not explicitly documented as thread safe may at
+ some point in time have a thread safe implementation in the
+ runtime system. Such an implementation may however change to
+ a thread <em>unsafe</em> implementation at any time <em>without
+ any notice</em> at all.
+ </p>
+ <p><em>Only use functions explicitly documented as thread safe
+ from arbitrary threads.</em></p>
+ </warning>
+ <p><marker id="lengthy_work"/>
+ As mentioned in the <seealso marker="#WARNING">warning</seealso> text at
+ the beginning of this document it is of vital importance that a driver callback
+ does return relatively fast. It is hard to give an exact maximum amount
+ of time that a driver callback is allowed to work, but as a rule of thumb
+ a well behaving driver callback should return before a millisecond has
+ passed. This can be achieved using different approaches.
+ If you have full control over the code that are to execute in the driver
+ callback, the best approach is to divide the work into multiple chunks of
+ work and trigger multiple calls to the
+ <seealso marker="driver_entry#timeout">timeout callback</seealso> using
+ zero timeouts. This might, however, not always be possible, e.g. when
+ calling third party libraries. In this case you typically want to dispatch
+ the work to another thread. Information about thread primitives can be
+ found below.</p>
</description>
<section>
@@ -1492,16 +1537,81 @@ typedef struct ErlIOVec {
</desc>
</func>
<func>
+ <name><ret>void</ret><nametext>erl_drv_busy_msgq_limits(ErlDrvPort port, ErlDrvSizeT *low, ErlDrvSizeT *high)</nametext></name>
+ <fsummary>Set and get limits for busy port message queue</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <marker id="erl_drv_busy_msgq_limits"></marker>
+ <p>Sets and gets limits that will be used for controling the
+ busy state of the port message queue.</p>
+ <p>The port message queue will be set into a busy
+ state when the amount of command data queued on the
+ message queue reaches the <c>high</c> limit. The port
+ message queue will be set into a not busy state when the
+ amount of command data queued on the message queue falls
+ below the <c>low</c> limit. Command data is in this
+ context data passed to the port using either
+ <c>Port ! {Owner, {command, Data}}</c>, or
+ <c>port_command/[2,3]</c>. Note that these limits
+ only concerns command data that have not yet reached the
+ port. The <seealso marker="#set_busy_port">busy port</seealso>
+ feature can be used for data that has reached the port.</p>
+
+ <p>Valid limits are values in the range
+ <c>[ERL_DRV_BUSY_MSGQ_LIM_MIN, ERL_DRV_BUSY_MSGQ_LIM_MAX]</c>.
+ Limits will be automatically adjusted to be sane. That is,
+ the system will adjust values so that the low limit used is
+ lower or equal to the high limit used. By default the high
+ limit will be 8 kB and the low limit will be 4 kB.</p>
+
+ <p>By passing a pointer to an integer variable containing
+ the value <c>ERL_DRV_BUSY_MSGQ_READ_ONLY</c>, currently used
+ limit will be read and written back to the integer variable.
+ A new limit can be set by passing a pointer to an integer
+ variable containing a valid limit. The passed value will be
+ written to the internal limit. The internal limit will then
+ be adjusted. After this the adjusted limit will be written
+ back to the integer variable from which the new value was
+ read. Values are in bytes.</p>
+
+ <p>The busy message queue feature can be disabled either
+ by setting the <c>ERL_DRV_FLAG_NO_BUSY_MSGQ</c>
+ <seealso marker="driver_entry#driver_flags">driver flag</seealso>
+ in the <seealso marker="driver_entry">driver_entry</seealso>
+ used by the driver, or by calling this function with
+ <c>ERL_DRV_BUSY_MSGQ_DISABLED</c> as a limit (either low or
+ high). When this feature has been disabled it cannot be
+ enabled again. When reading the limits both of them
+ will be <c>ERL_DRV_BUSY_MSGQ_DISABLED</c>, if this
+ feature has been disabled.</p>
+
+ <p>Processes sending command data to the port will be suspended
+ if either the port is busy or if the port message queue is
+ busy. Suspended processes will be resumed when neither the
+ port is busy, nor the port message queue is busy.</p>
+
+ <p>For information about busy port functionality
+ see the documentation of the
+ <seealso marker="#set_busy_port">set_busy_port()</seealso>
+ function.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
<name><ret>void</ret><nametext>set_busy_port(ErlDrvPort port, int on)</nametext></name>
<fsummary>Signal or unsignal port as busy</fsummary>
<desc>
<marker id="set_busy_port"></marker>
- <p>This function set and resets the busy status of the port. If
- <c>on</c> is 1, the port is set to busy, if it's 0 the port
- is set to not busy.</p>
- <p>When the port is busy, sending to it with <c>Port ! Data</c>
- or <c>port_command/2</c>, will block the port owner process,
- until the port is signaled as not busy.</p>
+ <p>This function set and unset the busy state of the port. If
+ <c>on</c> is non-zero, the port is set to busy, if it's zero the port
+ is set to not busy. You typically want to combine
+ this feature with the <seealso marker="#erl_drv_busy_msgq_limits">busy
+ port message queue</seealso> functionality.</p>
+ <p>Processes sending command data to the port will be suspended
+ if either the port is busy or if the port message queue
+ is busy. Suspended processes will be resumed when neither the
+ port is busy, nor the port message queue is busy. Command data
+ is in this context data passed to the port using either
+ <c>Port ! {Owner, {command, Data}}</c>, or
+ <c>port_command/[2,3]</c>.</p>
<p>If the
<seealso marker="driver_entry#driver_flags"><![CDATA[ERL_DRV_FLAG_SOFT_BUSY]]></seealso>
has been set in the
@@ -1510,6 +1620,10 @@ typedef struct ErlIOVec {
<seealso marker="erlang#port_command/3">port_command(Port, Data, [force])</seealso>
even though the driver has signaled that it is busy.
</p>
+ <p>For information about busy port message queue functionality
+ see the documentation of the
+ <seealso marker="#erl_drv_busy_msgq_limits">erl_drv_busy_msgq_limits()</seealso>
+ function.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
@@ -1570,6 +1684,8 @@ typedef struct ErlIOVec {
<desc>
<marker id="driver_connected"></marker>
<p>This function returns the port owner process.</p>
+ <p>Note that this function is <em>not</em> thread-safe, not
+ even when the emulator with SMP support is used.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
@@ -1597,22 +1713,32 @@ typedef struct ErlIOVec {
<tag><seealso marker="driver_entry#call">call</seealso></tag>
<item>Called from <c>erlang:port_call/3</c></item>
</taglist>
+ <p>Note that this function is <em>not</em> thread-safe, not
+ even when the emulator with SMP support is used.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name><ret>int</ret><nametext>driver_output_term(ErlDrvPort port, ErlDrvTermData* term, int n)</nametext></name>
+ <name><ret>int</ret><nametext>erl_drv_output_term(ErlDrvTermData port, ErlDrvTermData* term, int n)</nametext></name>
<fsummary>Send term data from driver to port owner</fsummary>
<desc>
- <marker id="driver_output_term"></marker>
+ <marker id="erl_drv_output_term"></marker>
<p>This functions sends data in the special driver term
- format. This is a fast way to deliver term data from a
- driver. It also needs no binary conversion, so the port
- owner process receives data as normal Erlang terms.</p>
+ format to the port owner process. This is a fast way to
+ deliver term data from a driver. It also needs no binary
+ conversion, so the port owner process receives data as
+ normal Erlang terms. The
+ <seealso marker="#erl_drv_send_term">erl_drv_send_term()</seealso>
+ functions can be used for sending to any arbitrary process
+ on the local node.</p>
+ <note><p>Note that the <c>port</c> parameter is <em>not</em>
+ an ordinary port handle, but a port handle converted using
+ <c>driver_mk_port()</c>.</p></note>
<p>The <c>term</c> parameter points to an array of
<c>ErlDrvTermData</c>, with <c>n</c> elements. This array
contains terms described in the driver term format. Every
term consists of one to four elements in the array. The
- term first has a term type, and then arguments.</p>
+ term first has a term type, and then arguments. The
+ <c>port</c> parameter specifies the sending port.</p>
<p>Tuple and lists (with the exception of strings, see below),
are built in reverse polish notation, so that to build a
tuple, the elements are given first, and then the tuple
@@ -1664,17 +1790,17 @@ ERL_DRV_EXT2TERM char *buf, ErlDrvUInt len
ErlDrvPort port = ...
ErlDrvTermData spec[] = {
ERL_DRV_ATOM, driver_mk_atom("tcp"),
- ERL_DRV_PORT, driver_mk_port(port),
+ ERL_DRV_PORT, driver_mk_port(drvport),
ERL_DRV_INT, 100,
ERL_DRV_BINARY, bin, 50, 0,
ERL_DRV_LIST, 2,
ERL_DRV_TUPLE, 3,
};
- driver_output_term(port, spec, sizeof(spec) / sizeof(spec[0]));
+ erl_drv_output_term(driver_mk_port(drvport), spec, sizeof(spec) / sizeof(spec[0]));
]]>
</code>
<p>Where <c>bin</c> is a driver binary of length at least 50
- and <c>port</c> is a port handle. Note that the <c>ERL_DRV_LIST</c>
+ and <c>drvport</c> is a port handle. Note that the <c>ERL_DRV_LIST</c>
comes after the elements of the list, likewise the
<c>ERL_DRV_TUPLE</c>.</p>
<p>The term <c>ERL_DRV_STRING_CONS</c> is a way to construct
@@ -1695,7 +1821,7 @@ ERL_DRV_EXT2TERM char *buf, ErlDrvUInt len
ERL_DRV_NIL,
ERL_DRV_LIST, 4
};
- driver_output_term(port, spec, sizeof(spec) / sizeof(spec[0]));
+ erl_drv_output_term(driver_mk_port(drvport), spec, sizeof(spec) / sizeof(spec[0]));
]]></code>
<p></p>
<code type="none"><![CDATA[
@@ -1705,7 +1831,7 @@ ERL_DRV_EXT2TERM char *buf, ErlDrvUInt len
ERL_DRV_STRING_CONS, (ErlDrvTermData)"123", 3,
ERL_DRV_STRING_CONS, (ErlDrvTermData)"abc", 3,
};
- driver_output_term(port, spec, sizeof(spec) / sizeof(spec[0]));
+ erl_drv_output_term(driver_mk_port(drvport), spec, sizeof(spec) / sizeof(spec[0]));
]]></code>
<p>The <c>ERL_DRV_EXT2TERM</c> term type is used for passing a
term encoded with the
@@ -1725,7 +1851,7 @@ ERL_DRV_EXT2TERM char *buf, ErlDrvUInt len
ERL_DRV_EXT2TERM, (ErlDrvTermData) binp->orig_bytes, binp->orig_size
ERL_DRV_TUPLE, 2,
};
- driver_output_term(port, spec, sizeof(spec) / sizeof(spec[0]));
+ erl_drv_output_term(driver_mk_port(drvport), spec, sizeof(spec) / sizeof(spec[0]));
]]></code>
<p>If you want to pass a binary and don't already have the content
of the binary in an <c>ErlDrvBinary</c>, you can benefit from using
@@ -1741,6 +1867,22 @@ ERL_DRV_EXT2TERM char *buf, ErlDrvUInt len
<c>ERL_DRV_EXT2TERM</c> term types were introduced in the 5.6
version of erts.
</p>
+ <p>This function is only thread-safe when the emulator with SMP
+ support is used.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name><ret>int</ret><nametext>driver_output_term(ErlDrvPort port, ErlDrvTermData* term, int n)</nametext></name>
+ <fsummary>Send term data from driver to port owner</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <marker id="driver_output_term"></marker>
+ <warning><p><c>driver_output_term()</c> is deferred and will
+ be removed in the OTP-R17 release. Use
+ <seealso marker="#erl_drv_send_term">erl_drv_output_term()</seealso>
+ instead.</p>
+ </warning>
+ <p>The parameters <c>term</c> and <c>n</c> do the same thing
+ as in <seealso marker="#erl_drv_output_term">erl_drv_output_term()</seealso>.</p>
<p>Note that this function is <em>not</em> thread-safe, not
even when the emulator with SMP support is used.</p>
</desc>
@@ -1754,6 +1896,8 @@ ERL_DRV_EXT2TERM char *buf, ErlDrvUInt len
<c>string</c>. The atom is created and won't change, so the
return value may be saved and reused, which is faster than
looking up the atom several times.</p>
+ <p>Note that this function is <em>not</em> thread-safe, not
+ even when the emulator with SMP support is used.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
@@ -1762,20 +1906,46 @@ ERL_DRV_EXT2TERM char *buf, ErlDrvUInt len
<desc>
<marker id="driver_mk_port"></marker>
<p>This function converts a port handle to the erlang term
- format, usable in the <c>driver_output_send</c> function.</p>
+ format, usable in the <seealso marker="#erl_drv_output_term">erl_drv_output_term()</seealso>, and <seealso marker="#erl_drv_send_term">erl_drv_send_term()</seealso> functions.</p>
+ <p>Note that this function is <em>not</em> thread-safe, not
+ even when the emulator with SMP support is used.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name><ret>int</ret><nametext>driver_send_term(ErlDrvPort port, ErlDrvTermData receiver, ErlDrvTermData* term, int n)</nametext></name>
+ <name><ret>int</ret><nametext>erl_drv_send_term(ErlDrvTermData port, ErlDrvTermData receiver, ErlDrvTermData* term, int n)</nametext></name>
<fsummary>Send term data to other process than port owner process</fsummary>
<desc>
- <marker id="driver_send_term"></marker>
+ <marker id="erl_drv_send_term"></marker>
<p>This function is the only way for a driver to send data to
<em>other</em> processes than the port owner process. The
<c>receiver</c> parameter specifies the process to receive
the data.</p>
+ <note><p>Note that the <c>port</c> parameter is <em>not</em>
+ an ordinary port handle, but a port handle converted using
+ <c>driver_mk_port()</c>.</p></note>
+ <p>The parameters <c>port</c>, <c>term</c> and <c>n</c> do the same thing
+ as in <seealso marker="#erl_drv_output_term">erl_drv_output_term()</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>This function is only thread-safe when the emulator with SMP
+ support is used.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name><ret>int</ret><nametext>driver_send_term(ErlDrvPort port, ErlDrvTermData receiver, ErlDrvTermData* term, int n)</nametext></name>
+ <fsummary>Send term data to other process than port owner process</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <marker id="driver_send_term"></marker>
+ <warning><p><c>driver_send_term()</c> is deferred and will
+ be removed in the OTP-R17 release. Use
+ <seealso marker="#erl_drv_send_term">erl_drv_send_term()</seealso>
+ instead.</p>
+ <p>Also note that parameters of <c>driver_send_term()</c>
+ cannot be properly checked by the runtime system when
+ executed by arbitrary threads. This may cause the
+ <c>driver_send_term()</c> function not to fail when
+ it should.</p>
+ </warning>
<p>The parameters <c>term</c> and <c>n</c> do the same thing
- as in <seealso marker="#driver_output_term">driver_output_term</seealso>.</p>
+ as in <seealso marker="#erl_drv_output_term">erl_drv_output_term()</seealso>.</p>
<p>This function is only thread-safe when the emulator with SMP
support is used.</p>
</desc>
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/erl_nif.xml b/erts/doc/src/erl_nif.xml
index f484e9eaf7..f00f7b9f46 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/erl_nif.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/erl_nif.xml
@@ -34,30 +34,6 @@
<lib>erl_nif</lib>
<libsummary>API functions for an Erlang NIF library</libsummary>
<description>
- <note><p>The NIF concept is officially supported from R14B. NIF source code
- written for earlier experimental versions might need adaption to run on R14B.</p>
- <p>No incompatible changes between <em>R14B</em> and R14A.</p>
- <p>Incompatible changes between <em>R14A</em> and R13B04:</p>
- <list>
- <item>Environment argument removed for <c>enif_alloc</c>,
- <c>enif_realloc</c>, <c>enif_free</c>, <c>enif_alloc_binary</c>,
- <c>enif_realloc_binary</c>, <c>enif_release_binary</c>,
- <c>enif_alloc_resource</c>, <c>enif_release_resource</c>,
- <c>enif_is_identical</c> and <c>enif_compare</c>.</item>
- <item>Character encoding argument added to <c>enif_get_atom</c>
- and <c>enif_make_existing_atom</c>.</item>
- <item>Module argument added to <c>enif_open_resource_type</c>
- while changing name spaces of resource types from global to module local.</item>
- </list>
- <p>Incompatible changes between <em>R13B04</em> and R13B03:</p>
- <list>
- <item>The function prototypes of the NIFs have changed to expect <c>argc</c> and <c>argv</c>
- arguments. The arity of a NIF is by that no longer limited to 3.</item>
- <item><c>enif_get_data</c> renamed as <c>enif_priv_data</c>.</item>
- <item><c>enif_make_string</c> got a third argument for character encoding.</item>
- </list>
- </note>
-
<p>A NIF library contains native implementation of some functions
of an Erlang module. The native implemented functions (NIFs) are
called like any other functions without any difference to the
@@ -67,6 +43,57 @@
is to throw an exception. But it can also be used as a fallback
implementation if the NIF library is not implemented for some
architecture.</p>
+ <marker id="WARNING"/>
+ <warning><p><em>Use this functionality with extreme care!</em></p>
+ <p>A native function is executed as a direct extension of the
+ native code of the VM. Execution is not made in a safe environment.
+ The VM can <em>not</em> provide the same services as provided when
+ executing Erlang code, such as preemptive scheduling or memory
+ protection. If the native function doesn't behave well, the whole
+ VM will misbehave.</p>
+ <list>
+ <item><p>A native function that crash will crash the whole VM.</p></item>
+ <item><p>An erroneously implemented native function might cause
+ a VM internal state inconsistency which may cause a crash of the VM,
+ or miscellaneous misbehaviors of the VM at any point after the call
+ to the native function.</p></item>
+ <item><p>A native function that do <seealso marker="#lengthy_work">lengthy
+ work</seealso> before returning will degrade responsiveness of the VM,
+ and may cause miscellaneous strange behaviors. Such strange behaviors
+ include, but are not limited to, extreme memory usage, and bad load
+ balancing between schedulers. Strange behaviors that might occur due
+ to lengthy work may also vary between OTP releases.</p></item>
+ </list>
+ </warning>
+
+ <p>The NIF concept is officially supported from R14B. NIF source code
+ written for earlier experimental versions might need adaption to run on R14B
+ or later versions:</p>
+ <list>
+ <item>No incompatible changes between <em>R14B</em> and R14A.</item>
+ <item>Incompatible changes between <em>R14A</em> and R13B04:
+ <list>
+ <item>Environment argument removed for <c>enif_alloc</c>,
+ <c>enif_realloc</c>, <c>enif_free</c>, <c>enif_alloc_binary</c>,
+ <c>enif_realloc_binary</c>, <c>enif_release_binary</c>,
+ <c>enif_alloc_resource</c>, <c>enif_release_resource</c>,
+ <c>enif_is_identical</c> and <c>enif_compare</c>.</item>
+ <item>Character encoding argument added to <c>enif_get_atom</c>
+ and <c>enif_make_existing_atom</c>.</item>
+ <item>Module argument added to <c>enif_open_resource_type</c>
+ while changing name spaces of resource types from global to module local.</item>
+ </list>
+ </item>
+ <item>Incompatible changes between <em>R13B04</em> and R13B03:
+ <list>
+ <item>The function prototypes of the NIFs have changed to expect <c>argc</c> and <c>argv</c>
+ arguments. The arity of a NIF is by that no longer limited to 3.</item>
+ <item><c>enif_get_data</c> renamed as <c>enif_priv_data</c>.</item>
+ <item><c>enif_make_string</c> got a third argument for character encoding.</item>
+ </list>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+
<p>A minimal example of a NIF library can look like this:</p>
<p/>
<code type="none">
@@ -136,7 +163,23 @@ ok
then retrieved by calling <seealso marker="#enif_priv_data">enif_priv_data</seealso>.</p>
<p>There is no way to explicitly unload a NIF library. A library will be
automatically unloaded when the module code that it belongs to is purged
- by the code server.</p>
+ by the code server.</p>
+
+ <p><marker id="lengthy_work"/>
+ As mentioned in the <seealso marker="#WARNING">warning</seealso> text at
+ the beginning of this document it is of vital importance that a native function
+ does return relatively fast. It is hard to give an exact maximum amount
+ of time that a native function is allowed to work, but as a rule of thumb
+ a well behaving native function should return to its caller before a
+ millisecond has passed. This can be achieved using different approaches.
+ If you have full control over the code that are to execute in the native
+ function, the best approach is to divide the work into multiple chunks of
+ work and call the native function multiple times. This might, however,
+ not always be possible, e.g. when calling third party libraries. In this
+ case you typically want to dispatch the work to another thread, return
+ from the native function, and wait for the result. The thread can send
+ the result back to the calling thread using message passing. Information
+ about thread primitives can be found below.</p>
</description>
<section>
<title>FUNCTIONALITY</title>
@@ -266,10 +309,6 @@ ok
mutable.</p>
<p>The library initialization callbacks <c>load</c>, <c>reload</c> and
<c>upgrade</c> are all thread-safe even for shared state data.</p>
- <p>Avoid doing lengthy work in NIF calls as that may degrade the
- responsiveness of the VM. NIFs are called directly by the same scheduler
- thread that executed the calling Erlang code. The calling scheduler will thus
- be blocked from doing any other work until the NIF returns.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
</section>
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/erl_set_memory_block.xml b/erts/doc/src/erl_set_memory_block.xml
deleted file mode 100644
index d77da56d95..0000000000
--- a/erts/doc/src/erl_set_memory_block.xml
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,172 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="latin1" ?>
-<!DOCTYPE cref SYSTEM "cref.dtd">
-
-<cref>
- <header>
- <copyright>
- <year>1998</year><year>2009</year>
- <holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
- </copyright>
- <legalnotice>
- The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
- Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
- compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
- Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
- retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
-
- Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
- basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
- the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
- under the License.
-
- </legalnotice>
-
- <title>erl_set_memory_block</title>
- <prepared>Patrik Nyblom</prepared>
- <responsible></responsible>
- <docno></docno>
- <approved></approved>
- <checked></checked>
- <date>98-08-05</date>
- <rev>A</rev>
- <file>erl_set_memory_block.xml</file>
- </header>
- <lib>erl_set_memory_block</lib>
- <libsummary>Custom memory allocation for Erlang on VxWorks&reg;</libsummary>
- <description>
- <p>This documentation is specific to VxWorks.</p>
- <p>The <c><![CDATA[erl_set_memory_block]]></c> function/command initiates custom
- memory allocation for the Erlang emulator. It has to be called
- before the Erlang emulator is started and makes Erlang use one
- single large memory block for all memory allocation.</p>
- <p>The memory within the block can be utilized by other tasks than
- Erlang. This is accomplished by calling the functions
- <c><![CDATA[sys_alloc]]></c>, <c><![CDATA[sys_realloc]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[sys_free]]></c> instead
- of <c><![CDATA[malloc]]></c>, <c><![CDATA[realloc]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[free]]></c> respectively.</p>
- <p>The purpose of this is to avoid problems inherent in the
- VxWorks systems <c><![CDATA[malloc]]></c> library. The memory allocation within the
- large memory block avoids fragmentation by using an "address
- order first fit" algorithm. Another advantage of using a
- separate memory block is that resource reclamation can be made
- more easily when Erlang is stopped.</p>
- <p>The <c><![CDATA[erl_set_memory_block]]></c> function is callable from any C
- program as an ordinary 10 argument function as well as
- from the commandline.</p>
- </description>
- <funcs>
- <func>
- <name><ret>int</ret><nametext>erl_set_memory_block(size_t size, void *ptr, int warn_mixed_malloc, int realloc_always_moves, int use_reclaim, ...)</nametext></name>
- <fsummary>Specify parameters for Erlang internal memory allocation.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>The function is called before Erlang is
- started to specify a large memory block where Erlang can
- maintain memory internally.</p>
- <p>Parameters:</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag>size_t size</tag>
- <item>The size in bytes of Erlang's internal memory block. Has to
- be specified. Note that the VxWorks system uses dynamic
- memory allocation heavily, so leave some memory to the system.</item>
- <tag>void *ptr</tag>
- <item>
- <p>A pointer to the actual memory block of size
- <c><![CDATA[size]]></c>. If this is specified as 0 (NULL), Erlang will
- allocate the memory when starting and will reclaim the
- memory block (as a whole) when stopped.</p>
- <p>If a memory block is allocated and provided here, the
- <c><![CDATA[sys_alloc]]></c> etc routines can still be used after
- the Erlang emulator is stopped. The Erlang emulator can
- also be restarted while other tasks using the memory
- block are running without destroying the memory. If
- Erlang is to be restarted, also set the
- <c><![CDATA[use_reclaim]]></c> flag.</p>
- <p>If 0 is specified here, the Erlang system should not
- be stopped while some other task uses the memory block
- (has called <c><![CDATA[sys_alloc]]></c>).</p>
- </item>
- <tag>int warn_mixed_malloc</tag>
- <item>
- <p>If this flag is set to true (anything else than 0), the
- system will write a warning message on the console if a
- program is mixing normal <c><![CDATA[malloc]]></c> with
- <c><![CDATA[sys_realloc]]></c> or <c><![CDATA[sys_free]]></c>.</p>
- </item>
- <tag>int realloc_always_moves</tag>
- <item>
- <p>If this flag is set to true (anything else than 0), all
- calls to <c><![CDATA[sys_realloc]]></c> result in a moved memory
- block. This can in certain conditions give less
- fragmentation. This flag may be removed in future releases.</p>
- </item>
- <tag>int use_reclaim</tag>
- <item>
- <p>If this flag is set to true (anything else than 0), all
- memory allocated with <c><![CDATA[sys_alloc]]></c> is automatically
- reclaimed as soon as a task exits. This is very useful
- to make writing port programs (and other programs as
- well) easier. Combine this with using the routines
- <c><![CDATA[save_open]]></c> etc. specified in the reclaim.h
- file delivered in the Erlang distribution.</p>
- </item>
- </taglist>
- <p>Return Value:</p>
- <p>Returns 0 (OK) on success, otherwise a value &lt;&gt; 0.</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
- <func>
- <name><ret>int</ret><nametext>erl_memory_show(...)</nametext></name>
- <fsummary>A utility similar to VxWorks <c><![CDATA[memShow]]></c>, but for the Erlang memory area.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Return Value:</p>
- <p>Returns 0 (OK) on success, otherwise a value &lt;&gt; 0.</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
- <func>
- <name><ret>int</ret><nametext>erl_mem_info_get(MEM_PART_STATS *stats)</nametext></name>
- <fsummary>A utility similar to VxWorks <c><![CDATA[memPartInfoGet]]></c>, but for the Erlang memory area.</fsummary>
- <desc>
- <p>Parameter:</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag>MEM_PART_STATS *stats</tag>
- <item>A pointer to a MEM_PART_STATS structure as defined in
- <c><![CDATA[<memLib.h>]]></c>. A successful call will fill in all
- fields of the structure, on error all fields are left untouched. </item>
- </taglist>
- <p>Return Value:</p>
- <p>Returns 0 (OK) on success, otherwise a value &lt;&gt; 0</p>
- </desc>
- </func>
- </funcs>
-
- <section>
- <title>NOTES</title>
- <p>The memory block used by Erlang actually does not need to be
- inside the area known to ordinary <c><![CDATA[malloc]]></c>. It is possible
- to set the <c><![CDATA[USER_RESERVED_MEM]]></c> preprocessor symbol when compiling
- the wind kernel and then use user reserved memory for
- Erlang. Erlang can therefor utilize memory above the 32 Mb limit
- of VxWorks on the PowerPC architecture.</p>
- <p>Example:</p>
- <p>In config.h for the wind kernel:</p>
- <code type="none"><![CDATA[
- #undef LOCAL_MEM_AUTOSIZE
- #undef LOCAL_MEM_SIZE
- #undef USER_RESERVED_MEM
-
- #define LOCAL_MEM_SIZE 0x05000000
- #define USER_RESERVED_MEM 0x03000000
- ]]></code>
- <p>In the start-up script/code for the VxWorks node:</p>
- <code type="none"><![CDATA[
-erl_set_memory_block(sysPhysMemTop()-sysMemTop(),sysMemTop(),0,0,1);
- ]]></code>
- <p>Setting the <c><![CDATA[use_reclaim]]></c> flag decreases performance of the
- system, but makes programming much easier. Other similar
- facilities are present in the Erlang system even without using a
- separate memory block. The routines called <c><![CDATA[save_malloc]]></c>,
- <c><![CDATA[save_realloc]]></c> and <c><![CDATA[save_free]]></c> provide the same
- facilities by using VxWorks own <c><![CDATA[malloc]]></c>. Similar routines
- exist for files, see the file <c><![CDATA[reclaim.h]]></c> in the distribution.</p>
- </section>
-</cref>
-
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/erlang.xml b/erts/doc/src/erlang.xml
index 248b755969..1d67be2e52 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/erlang.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/erlang.xml
@@ -65,14 +65,14 @@
<funcs>
<func>
- <name>abs(Number) -> integer() | float()</name>
+ <name name="abs" arity="1" clause_i="1"/>
+ <name name="abs" arity="1" clause_i="2"/>
+ <type variable="Float" name_i="1"/>
+ <type variable="Int" name_i="2"/>
<fsummary>Arithmetical absolute value</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Number = number()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns an integer or float which is the arithmetical
- absolute value of <c>Number</c>.</p>
+ absolute value of <c><anno>Float</anno></c> or <c><anno>Int</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>abs(-3.33).</input>
3.33
@@ -82,26 +82,19 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:adler32(Data) -> integer()</name>
+ <name name="adler32" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Compute adler32 checksum</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Data = iodata()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Computes and returns the adler32 checksum for <c>Data</c>.</p>
+ <p>Computes and returns the adler32 checksum for <c><anno>Data</anno></c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:adler32(OldAdler, Data) -> integer()</name>
+ <name name="adler32" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Compute adler32 checksum</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>OldAdler = integer()</v>
- <v>Data = iodata()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Continue computing the adler32 checksum by combining
- the previous checksum, <c>OldAdler</c>, with the checksum of
- <c>Data</c>.</p>
+ the previous checksum, <c><anno>OldAdler</anno></c>, with the checksum of
+ <c><anno>Data</anno></c>.</p>
<p>The following code:</p>
<code>
X = erlang:adler32(Data1),
@@ -114,12 +107,8 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:adler32_combine(FirstAdler, SecondAdler, SecondSize) -> integer()</name>
+ <name name="adler32_combine" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Combine two adler32 checksums</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>FirstAdler = SecondAdler = integer()</v>
- <v>SecondSize = integer()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Combines two previously computed adler32 checksums.
This computation requires the size of the data object for
@@ -138,18 +127,14 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:append_element(Tuple1, Term) -> Tuple2</name>
+ <name name="append_element" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Append an extra element to a tuple</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Tuple1 = Tuple2 = tuple()</v>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a new tuple which has one element more than
- <c>Tuple1</c>, and contains the elements in <c>Tuple1</c>
- followed by <c>Term</c> as the last element. Semantically
+ <c><anno>Tuple1</anno></c>, and contains the elements in <c><anno>Tuple1</anno></c>
+ followed by <c><anno>Term</anno></c> as the last element. Semantically
equivalent to
- <c>list_to_tuple(tuple_to_list(Tuple) ++ [Term])</c>, but much
+ <c>list_to_tuple(tuple_to_list(<anno>Tuple1</anno>) ++ [<anno>Term</anno>])</c>, but much
faster.</p>
<pre>
> <input>erlang:append_element({one, two}, three).</input>
@@ -204,27 +189,24 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>atom_to_binary(Atom, Encoding) -> binary()</name>
+ <name name="atom_to_binary" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Return the binary representation of an atom</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Atom = atom()</v>
- <v>Encoding = latin1 | utf8 | unicode</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a binary which corresponds to the text
- representation of <c>Atom</c>. If <c>Encoding</c>
+ representation of <c><anno>Atom</anno></c>. If <c><anno>Encoding</anno></c>
is <c>latin1</c>, there will be one byte for each character
- in the text representation. If <c>Encoding</c> is <c>utf8</c> or
+ in the text representation. If <c><anno>Encoding</anno></c> is
+ <c>utf8</c> or
<c>unicode</c>, the characters will be encoded using UTF-8
(meaning that characters from 16#80 up to 0xFF will be
encoded in two bytes).</p>
- <note><p>Currently, <c>atom_to_binary(Atom, latin1)</c> can
+ <note><p>Currently, <c>atom_to_binary(<anno>Atom</anno>, latin1)</c> can
never fail because the text representation of an atom can only contain
characters from 0 to 16#FF. In a future release, the text representation
of atoms might be allowed to contain any Unicode character
- and <c>atom_to_binary(Atom, latin1)</c> will fail if the
- text representation for the <c>Atom</c> contains a Unicode
+ and <c>atom_to_binary(<anno>Atom</anno>, latin1)</c> will fail if the
+ text representation for the <c><anno>Atom</anno></c> contains a Unicode
character greater than 16#FF.</p></note>
<pre>
@@ -233,30 +215,21 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>atom_to_list(Atom) -> string()</name>
+ <name name="atom_to_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Text representation of an atom</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Atom = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a string which corresponds to the text
- representation of <c>Atom</c>.</p>
+ representation of <c><anno>Atom</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>atom_to_list('Erlang').</input>
"Erlang"</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>binary_part(Subject, PosLen) -> binary()</name>
+ <name name="binary_part" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Extracts a part of a binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Subject = binary()</v>
- <v>PosLen = {Start,Length}</v>
- <v>Start = integer() >= 0</v>
- <v>Length = integer() >= 0</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Extracts the part of the binary described by <c>PosLen</c>.</p>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Extracts the part of the binary described by <c><anno>PosLen</anno></c>.</p>
<p>Negative length can be used to extract bytes at the end of a binary:</p>
@@ -266,53 +239,44 @@
&lt;&lt;6,7,8,9,10&gt;&gt;
</code>
- <p>If <c>PosLen</c> in any way references outside the binary, a <c>badarg</c> exception is raised.</p>
+ <p>If <c><anno>PosLen</anno></c> in any way references outside the binary, a <c>badarg</c> exception is raised.</p>
- <p><c>Start</c> is zero-based, i.e.:</p>
+ <p><c><anno>Start</anno></c> is zero-based, i.e.:</p>
<code>
1> Bin = &lt;&lt;1,2,3&gt;&gt;
2> binary_part(Bin,{0,2}).
&lt;&lt;1,2&gt;&gt;
</code>
- <p>See the STDLIB module <c>binary</c> for details about the <c>PosLen</c> semantics.</p>
+ <p>See the STDLIB module <c>binary</c> for details about the <c><anno>PosLen</anno></c> semantics.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>binary_part(Subject, Start, Length) -> binary()</name>
+ <name name="binary_part" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Extracts a part of a binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Subject = binary()</v>
- <v>Start = integer() >= 0</v>
- <v>Length = integer() >= 0</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>The same as <c>binary_part(Subject, {Pos, Len})</c>.</p>
+ <p>The same as <c>binary_part(<anno>Subject</anno>, {<anno>Start</anno>, <anno>Length</anno>})</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>binary_to_atom(Binary, Encoding) -> atom()</name>
+ <name name="binary_to_atom" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Convert from text representation to an atom</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Binary = binary()</v>
- <v>Encoding = latin1 | utf8 | unicode</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the atom whose text representation is
- <c>Binary</c>. If <c>Encoding</c> is <c>latin1</c>, no
- translation of bytes in the binary is done. If <c>Encoding</c>
+ <c><anno>Binary</anno></c>. If <c><anno>Encoding</anno></c> is <c>latin1</c>, no
+ translation of bytes in the binary is done. If <c><anno>Encoding</anno></c>
is <c>utf8</c> or <c>unicode</c>, the binary must contain
valid UTF-8 sequences; furthermore, only Unicode characters up
to 0xFF are allowed.</p>
- <note><p><c>binary_to_atom(Binary, utf8)</c> will fail if
+ <note><p><c>binary_to_atom(<anno>Binary</anno>, utf8)</c> will fail if
the binary contains Unicode characters greater than 16#FF.
In a future release, such Unicode characters might be allowed
- and <c>binary_to_atom(Binary, utf8)</c>
+ and <c>binary_to_atom(<anno>Binary</anno>, utf8)</c>
will not fail in that case.</p></note>
<pre>
@@ -325,12 +289,8 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>binary_to_existing_atom(Binary, Encoding) -> atom()</name>
+ <name name="binary_to_existing_atom" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Convert from text representation to an atom</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Binary = binary()</v>
- <v>Encoding = latin1 | utf8 | unicode</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Works like <seealso marker="#binary_to_atom/2">binary_to_atom/2</seealso>,
but the atom must already exist.</p>
@@ -338,27 +298,21 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>binary_to_list(Binary) -> [char()]</name>
+ <name name="binary_to_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert a binary to a list</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Binary = binary()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a list of integers which correspond to the bytes of
- <c>Binary</c>.</p>
+ <c><anno>Binary</anno></c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>binary_to_list(Binary, Start, Stop) -> [char()]</name>
+ <name name="binary_to_list" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Convert part of a binary to a list</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Binary = binary()</v>
- <v>Start = Stop = 1..byte_size(Binary)</v>
- </type>
+ <type_desc variable="Start">1..byte_size(<anno>Binary</anno>)</type_desc>
<desc>
<p>As <c>binary_to_list/1</c>, but returns a list of integers
- corresponding to the bytes from position <c>Start</c> to
- position <c>Stop</c> in <c>Binary</c>. Positions in the
+ corresponding to the bytes from position <c><anno>Start</anno></c> to
+ position <c><anno>Stop</anno></c> in <c><anno>Binary</anno></c>. Positions in the
binary are numbered starting from 1.</p>
<note><p>This function's indexing style of using one-based indices for
@@ -368,27 +322,21 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>bitstring_to_list(Bitstring) -> [char()|bitstring()]</name>
+ <name name="bitstring_to_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert a bitstring to a list</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Bitstring = bitstring()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a list of integers which correspond to the bytes of
- <c>Bitstring</c>. If the number of bits in the binary is not
+ <c><anno>Bitstring</anno></c>. If the number of bits in the binary is not
divisible by 8, the last element of the list will be a bitstring
containing the remaining bits (1 up to 7 bits).</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>binary_to_term(Binary) -> term()</name>
+ <name name="binary_to_term" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Decode an Erlang external term format binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Binary = <seealso marker="#type-ext_binary">ext_binary()</seealso></v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns an Erlang term which is the result of decoding
- the binary object <c>Binary</c>, which must be encoded
+ the binary object <c><anno>Binary</anno></c>, which must be encoded
according to the Erlang external term format.</p>
<warning>
<p>When decoding binaries from untrusted sources, consider using
@@ -401,12 +349,8 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>binary_to_term(Binary, Opts) -> term()</name>
+ <name name="binary_to_term" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Decode an Erlang external term format binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Opts = [safe]</v>
- <v>Binary = <seealso marker="#type-ext_binary">ext_binary()</seealso></v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>As <c>binary_to_term/1</c>, but takes options that affect decoding
of the binary.</p>
@@ -436,13 +380,10 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>bit_size(Bitstring) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="bit_size" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Return the size of a bitstring</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Bitstring = bitstring()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns an integer which is the size in bits of <c>Bitstring</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns an integer which is the size in bits of <c><anno>Bitstring</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>bit_size(&lt;&lt;433:16,3:3&gt;&gt;).</input>
19
@@ -452,11 +393,8 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:bump_reductions(Reductions) -> void()</name>
+ <name name="bump_reductions" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Increment the reduction counter</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Reductions = integer() >= 0</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>This implementation-dependent function increments
the reduction counter for the calling process. In the Beam
@@ -472,14 +410,11 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>byte_size(Bitstring) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="byte_size" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Return the size of a bitstring (or binary)</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Bitstring = bitstring()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns an integer which is the number of bytes needed to contain
- <c>Bitstring</c>. (That is, if the number of bits in <c>Bitstring</c> is not
+ <c><anno>Bitstring</anno></c>. (That is, if the number of bits in <c><anno>Bitstring</anno></c> is not
divisible by 8, the resulting number of bytes will be rounded <em>up</em>.)</p>
<pre>
> <input>byte_size(&lt;&lt;433:16,3:3&gt;&gt;).</input>
@@ -490,21 +425,17 @@
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:cancel_timer(TimerRef) -> Time | false</name>
+ <name name="cancel_timer" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Cancel a timer</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>TimerRef = reference()</v>
- <v>Time = integer() >= 0</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Cancels a timer, where <c>TimerRef</c> was returned by
+ <p>Cancels a timer, where <c><anno>TimerRef</anno></c> was returned by
either
<seealso marker="#send_after/3">erlang:send_after/3</seealso>
or
<seealso marker="#start_timer/3">erlang:start_timer/3</seealso>.
If the timer is there to be removed, the function returns
the time in milliseconds left until the timer would have expired,
- otherwise <c>false</c> (which means that <c>TimerRef</c> was
+ otherwise <c>false</c> (which means that <c><anno>TimerRef</anno></c> was
never a timer, that it has already been cancelled, or that it
has already delivered its message).</p>
<p>See also
@@ -518,27 +449,20 @@
</func>
<func>
- <name>check_old_code(Module) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="check_old_code" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check if a module has old code</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if the <c>Module</c> has old code,
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if the <c><anno>Module</anno></c> has old code,
and <c>false</c> otherwise.</p>
<p>See also <seealso marker="kernel:code">code(3)</seealso>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>check_process_code(Pid, Module) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="check_process_code" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Check if a process is executing old code for a module</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- <v>Module = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if the process <c>Pid</c> is executing
- old code for <c>Module</c>. That is, if the current call of
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if the process <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> is executing
+ old code for <c><anno>Module</anno></c>. That is, if the current call of
the process executes old code for this module, or if the
process has references to old code for this module, or if the
process contains funs that references old code for this
@@ -550,26 +474,19 @@ false</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:crc32(Data) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="crc32" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Compute crc32 (IEEE 802.3) checksum</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Data = iodata()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Computes and returns the crc32 (IEEE 802.3 style) checksum for <c>Data</c>.</p>
+ <p>Computes and returns the crc32 (IEEE 802.3 style) checksum for <c><anno>Data</anno></c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:crc32(OldCrc, Data) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="crc32" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Compute crc32 (IEEE 802.3) checksum</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>OldCrc = integer() >= 0</v>
- <v>Data = iodata()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Continue computing the crc32 checksum by combining
- the previous checksum, <c>OldCrc</c>, with the checksum of
- <c>Data</c>.</p>
+ the previous checksum, <c><anno>OldCrc</anno></c>, with the checksum of
+ <c><anno>Data</anno></c>.</p>
<p>The following code:</p>
<code>
X = erlang:crc32(Data1),
@@ -582,12 +499,8 @@ false</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:crc32_combine(FirstCrc, SecondCrc, SecondSize) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="crc32_combine" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Combine two crc32 (IEEE 802.3) checksums</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>FirstCrc = SecondCrc = integer() >= 0</v>
- <v>SecondSize = integer() >= 0</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Combines two previously computed crc32 checksums.
This computation requires the size of the data object for
@@ -606,11 +519,8 @@ false</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>date() -> Date</name>
+ <name name="date" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Current date</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Date = <seealso marker="calendar#type-date">calendar:date()</seealso></v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the current date as <c>{Year, Month, Day}</c>.</p>
<p>The time zone and daylight saving time correction depend on
@@ -621,47 +531,24 @@ false</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:decode_packet(Type,Bin,Options) -> {ok,Packet,Rest} | {more,Length} | {error,Reason}</name>
+ <name name="decode_packet" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Extracts a protocol packet from a binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Bin = binary()</v>
- <v>Options = [Opt]</v>
- <v>Packet = binary() | HttpPacket</v>
- <v>Rest = binary()</v>
- <v>Length = integer() > 0 | undefined</v>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Type, Opt -- see below</v>
- <v></v>
- <v>HttpPacket = HttpRequest | HttpResponse | HttpHeader | http_eoh | HttpError</v>
- <v>HttpRequest = {http_request, HttpMethod, HttpUri, HttpVersion}</v>
- <v>HttpResponse = {http_response, HttpVersion, integer(), HttpString}</v>
- <v>HttpHeader = {http_header, integer(), HttpField, Reserved=term(), Value=HttpString}</v>
- <v>HttpError = {http_error, HttpString}</v>
- <v>HttpMethod = HttpMethodAtom | HttpString</v>
- <v>HttpMethodAtom = 'OPTIONS' | 'GET' | 'HEAD' | 'POST' | 'PUT' | 'DELETE' | 'TRACE'</v>
- <v>HttpUri = '*' | {absoluteURI, http|https, Host=HttpString, Port=integer()|undefined, Path=HttpString} |
- {scheme, Scheme=HttpString, HttpString} | {abs_path, HttpString} | HttpString</v>
- <v>HttpVersion = {Major=integer(), Minor=integer()}</v>
- <v>HttpString = string() | binary()</v>
- <v>HttpField = HttpFieldAtom | HttpString</v>
- <v>HttpFieldAtom = 'Cache-Control' | 'Connection' | 'Date' | 'Pragma' | 'Transfer-Encoding' | 'Upgrade' | 'Via' | 'Accept' | 'Accept-Charset' | 'Accept-Encoding' | 'Accept-Language' | 'Authorization' | 'From' | 'Host' | 'If-Modified-Since' | 'If-Match' | 'If-None-Match' | 'If-Range' | 'If-Unmodified-Since' | 'Max-Forwards' | 'Proxy-Authorization' | 'Range' | 'Referer' | 'User-Agent' | 'Age' | 'Location' | 'Proxy-Authenticate' | 'Public' | 'Retry-After' | 'Server' | 'Vary' | 'Warning' | 'Www-Authenticate' | 'Allow' | 'Content-Base' | 'Content-Encoding' | 'Content-Language' | 'Content-Length' | 'Content-Location' | 'Content-Md5' | 'Content-Range' | 'Content-Type' | 'Etag' | 'Expires' | 'Last-Modified' | 'Accept-Ranges' | 'Set-Cookie' | 'Set-Cookie2' | 'X-Forwarded-For' | 'Cookie' | 'Keep-Alive' | 'Proxy-Connection'</v>
- <v></v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Decodes the binary <c>Bin</c> according to the packet
- protocol specified by <c>Type</c>. Very similar to the packet
- handling done by sockets with the option {packet,Type}.</p>
- <p>If an entire packet is contained in <c>Bin</c> it is
+ <desc>
+
+ <p>Decodes the binary <c><anno>Bin</anno></c> according to the packet
+ protocol specified by <c><anno>Type</anno></c>. Very similar to the packet
+ handling done by sockets with the option {packet,<anno>Type</anno>}.</p>
+ <p>If an entire packet is contained in <c><anno>Bin</anno></c> it is
returned together with the remainder of the binary as
- <c>{ok,Packet,Rest}</c>.</p>
- <p>If <c>Bin</c> does not contain the entire packet,
- <c>{more,Length}</c> is returned. <c>Length</c> is either the
+ <c>{ok,<anno>Packet</anno>,<anno>Rest</anno>}</c>.</p>
+ <p>If <c><anno>Bin</anno></c> does not contain the entire packet,
+ <c>{more,<anno>Length</anno>}</c> is returned. <c><anno>Length</anno></c> is either the
expected <em>total size</em> of the packet or <c>undefined</c>
if the expected packet size is not known. <c>decode_packet</c>
can then be called again with more data added.</p>
<p>If the packet does not conform to the protocol format
- <c>{error,Reason}</c> is returned.</p>
- <p>The following values of <c>Type</c> are valid:</p>
+ <c>{error,<anno>Reason</anno>}</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>The following values of <c><anno>Type</anno></c> are valid:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>raw | 0</c></tag>
<item>
@@ -699,15 +586,15 @@ false</pre>
<item>
<p>The Hypertext Transfer Protocol. The packets
are returned with the format according to
- <c>HttpPacket</c> described above. A packet is either a
+ <c><anno>HttpPacket</anno></c> described above. A packet is either a
request, a response, a header or an end of header
- mark. Invalid lines are returned as <c>HttpError</c>.</p>
+ mark. Invalid lines are returned as <c><anno>HttpError</anno></c>.</p>
<p>Recognized request methods and header fields are returned as atoms.
Others are returned as strings.</p>
<p>The protocol type <c>http</c> should only be used for
- the first line when a <c>HttpRequest</c> or a
- <c>HttpResponse</c> is expected. The following calls
- should use <c>httph</c> to get <c>HttpHeader</c>'s until
+ the first line when a <c><anno>HttpRequest</anno></c> or a
+ <c><anno>HttpResponse</anno></c> is expected. The following calls
+ should use <c>httph</c> to get <c><anno>HttpHeader</anno></c>'s until
<c>http_eoh</c> is returned that marks the end of the
headers and the beginning of any following message body.</p>
<p>The variants <c>http_bin</c> and <c>httph_bin</c> will return
@@ -716,14 +603,14 @@ false</pre>
</taglist>
<p>The following options are available:</p>
<taglist>
- <tag><c>{packet_size, integer()}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{packet_size, integer() >= 0}</c></tag>
<item><p>Sets the max allowed size of the packet body. If
the packet header indicates that the length of the
packet is longer than the max allowed length, the packet
is considered invalid. Default is 0 which means no
size limit.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{line_length, integer()}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{line_length, integer() >= 0}</c></tag>
<item><p>For packet type <c>line</c>, truncate lines longer
than the indicated length.</p>
<p>Option <c>line_length</c> also applies to <c>http*</c>
@@ -739,14 +626,27 @@ false</pre>
{more,6}</pre>
</desc>
</func>
+
+ <func>
+ <name name="delete_element" arity="2"/>
+ <fsummary>Delete element at index in a tuple</fsummary>
+ <type_desc variable="Index">1..tuple_size(<anno>Tuple1</anno>)</type_desc>
+ <desc>
+ <p>
+ Returns a new tuple with element at <c><anno>Index</anno></c> removed from
+ tuple <c><anno>Tuple1</anno></c>.
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+> <input>erlang:delete_element(2, {one, two, three}).</input>
+{one,three}</pre>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+
<func>
- <name>delete_module(Module) -> true | undefined</name>
+ <name name="delete_module" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Make the current code for a module old</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Makes the current code for <c>Module</c> become old code, and
+ <p>Makes the current code for <c><anno>Module</anno></c> become old code, and
deletes all references for this module from the export table.
Returns <c>undefined</c> if the module does not exist,
otherwise <c>true</c>.</p>
@@ -760,27 +660,24 @@ false</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>demonitor(MonitorRef) -> true</name>
+ <name name="demonitor" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Stop monitoring</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>MonitorRef = reference()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>If <c>MonitorRef</c> is a reference which the calling process
+ <p>If <c><anno>MonitorRef</anno></c> is a reference which the calling process
obtained by calling
<seealso marker="#monitor/2">monitor/2</seealso>,
this monitoring is turned off. If the monitoring is already
turned off, nothing happens.</p>
- <p>Once <c>demonitor(MonitorRef)</c> has returned it is
- guaranteed that no <c>{'DOWN', MonitorRef, _, _, _}</c> message
+ <p>Once <c>demonitor(<anno>MonitorRef</anno>)</c> has returned it is
+ guaranteed that no <c>{'DOWN', <anno>MonitorRef</anno>, _, _, _}</c> message
due to the monitor will be placed in the caller's message queue
- in the future. A <c>{'DOWN', MonitorRef, _, _, _}</c> message
+ in the future. A <c>{'DOWN', <anno>MonitorRef</anno>, _, _, _}</c> message
might have been placed in the caller's message queue prior to
the call, though. Therefore, in most cases, it is advisable
to remove such a <c>'DOWN'</c> message from the message queue
after monitoring has been stopped.
- <seealso marker="#demonitor/2">demonitor(MonitorRef, [flush])</seealso> can be used instead of
- <c>demonitor(MonitorRef)</c> if this cleanup is wanted.</p>
+ <seealso marker="#demonitor/2">demonitor(<anno>MonitorRef</anno>, [flush])</seealso> can be used instead of
+ <c>demonitor(<anno>MonitorRef</anno>)</c> if this cleanup is wanted.</p>
<note>
<p>Prior to OTP release R11B (erts version 5.5) <c>demonitor/1</c>
behaved completely asynchronous, i.e., the monitor was active
@@ -792,35 +689,30 @@ false</pre>
asynchronously send a "demonitor signal" to the monitored entity
and ignore any future results of the monitor. </p>
</note>
- <p>Failure: It is an error if <c>MonitorRef</c> refers to a
+ <p>Failure: It is an error if <c><anno>MonitorRef</anno></c> refers to a
monitoring started by another process. Not all such cases are
cheap to check; if checking is cheap, the call fails with
- <c>badarg</c> (for example if <c>MonitorRef</c> is a remote
+ <c>badarg</c> (for example if <c><anno>MonitorRef</anno></c> is a remote
reference).</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>demonitor(MonitorRef, OptionList) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="demonitor" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Stop monitoring</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>MonitorRef = reference()</v>
- <v>OptionList = [Option]</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Option = flush | info</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>The returned value is <c>true</c> unless <c>info</c> is part
- of <c>OptionList</c>.
+ of <c><anno>OptionList</anno></c>.
</p>
- <p><c>demonitor(MonitorRef, [])</c> is equivalent to
- <seealso marker="#demonitor/1">demonitor(MonitorRef)</seealso>.</p>
- <p>Currently the following <c>Option</c>s are valid:</p>
+ <p><c>demonitor(<anno>MonitorRef</anno>, [])</c> is equivalent to
+ <seealso marker="#demonitor/1">demonitor(<anno>MonitorRef</anno>)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Currently the following <c><anno>Option</anno></c>s are valid:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>flush</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Remove (one) <c>{_, MonitorRef, _, _, _}</c> message,
+ <p>Remove (one) <c>{_, <anno>MonitorRef</anno>, _, _, _}</c> message,
if there is one, from the caller's message queue after
monitoring has been stopped.</p>
- <p>Calling <c>demonitor(MonitorRef, [flush])</c>
+ <p>Calling <c>demonitor(<anno>MonitorRef</anno>, [flush])</c>
is equivalent to the following, but more efficient:</p>
<code type="none">
@@ -860,8 +752,8 @@ false</pre>
<note>
<p>More options may be added in the future.</p>
</note>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>OptionList</c> is not a list, or
- if <c>Option</c> is not a valid option, or the same failure as for
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>OptionList</anno></c> is not a list, or
+ if <c><anno>Option</anno></c> is not a valid option, or the same failure as for
<seealso marker="#demonitor/1">demonitor/1</seealso></p>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -878,13 +770,10 @@ false</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:display(Term) -> true</name>
+ <name name="display" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Print a term on standard output</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Prints a text representation of <c>Term</c> on the standard
+ <p>Prints a text representation of <c><anno>Term</anno></c> on the standard
output.</p>
<warning>
<p>This BIF is intended for debugging only.</p>
@@ -892,15 +781,12 @@ false</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>element(N, Tuple) -> term()</name>
+ <name name="element" arity="2"/>
+ <type_desc variable="N">1..tuple_size(<anno>Tuple</anno>)</type_desc>
<fsummary>Get Nth element of a tuple</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>N = 1..tuple_size(Tuple)</v>
- <v>Tuple = tuple()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns the <c>N</c>th element (numbering from 1) of
- <c>Tuple</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns the <c><anno>N</anno></c>th element (numbering from 1) of
+ <c><anno>Tuple</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>element(2, {a, b, c}).</input>
b</pre>
@@ -908,11 +794,8 @@ b</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erase() -> [{Key, Val}]</name>
+ <name name="erase" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Return and delete the process dictionary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Key = Val = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the process dictionary and deletes it.</p>
<pre>
@@ -923,15 +806,12 @@ b</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erase(Key) -> Val | undefined</name>
+ <name name="erase" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Return and delete a value from the process dictionary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Key = Val = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns the value <c>Val</c> associated with <c>Key</c> and
+ <p>Returns the value <c><anno>Val</anno></c> associated with <c><anno>Key</anno></c> and
deletes it from the process dictionary. Returns
- <c>undefined</c> if no value is associated with <c>Key</c>.</p>
+ <c>undefined</c> if no value is associated with <c><anno>Key</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>put(key1, {merry, lambs, are, playing}),</input>
<input>X = erase(key1),</input>
@@ -940,15 +820,12 @@ b</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>error(Reason)</name>
+ <name name="error" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Stop execution with a given reason</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Stops the execution of the calling process with the reason
- <c>Reason</c>, where <c>Reason</c> is any term. The actual
- exit reason will be <c>{Reason, Where}</c>, where <c>Where</c>
+ <c><anno>Reason</anno></c>, where <c><anno>Reason</anno></c> is any term. The actual
+ exit reason will be <c>{<anno>Reason</anno>, Where}</c>, where <c>Where</c>
is a list of the functions most recently called (the current
function first). Since evaluating this function causes
the process to terminate, it has no return value.</p>
@@ -962,18 +839,14 @@ b</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>error(Reason, Args)</name>
+ <name name="error" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Stop execution with a given reason</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
- <v>Args = [term()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Stops the execution of the calling process with the reason
- <c>Reason</c>, where <c>Reason</c> is any term. The actual
- exit reason will be <c>{Reason, Where}</c>, where <c>Where</c>
+ <c><anno>Reason</anno></c>, where <c><anno>Reason</anno></c> is any term. The actual
+ exit reason will be <c>{<anno>Reason</anno>, Where}</c>, where <c>Where</c>
is a list of the functions most recently called (the current
- function first). <c>Args</c> is expected to be the list of
+ function first). <c><anno>Args</anno></c> is expected to be the list of
arguments for the current function; in Beam it will be used
to provide the actual arguments for the current function in
the <c>Where</c> term. Since evaluating this function causes
@@ -981,14 +854,11 @@ b</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>exit(Reason)</name>
+ <name name="exit" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Stop execution with a given reason</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Stops the execution of the calling process with the exit
- reason <c>Reason</c>, where <c>Reason</c> is any term. Since
+ reason <c><anno>Reason</anno></c>, where <c><anno>Reason</anno></c> is any term. Since
evaluating this function causes the process to terminate, it
has no return value.</p>
<pre>
@@ -999,78 +869,67 @@ b</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>exit(Pid, Reason) -> true</name>
- <fsummary>Send an exit signal to a process</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
- </type>
+ <name name="exit" arity="2"/>
+ <fsummary>Send an exit signal to a process or a port</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>Sends an exit signal with exit reason <c>Reason</c> to
- the process <c>Pid</c>.</p>
- <p>The following behavior apply if <c>Reason</c> is any term
+ <p>Sends an exit signal with exit reason <c><anno>Reason</anno></c> to
+ the process or port identified by <c><anno>Pid</anno></c>.</p>
+ <p>The following behavior apply if <c><anno>Reason</anno></c> is any term
except <c>normal</c> or <c>kill</c>:</p>
- <p>If <c>Pid</c> is not trapping exits, <c>Pid</c> itself will
- exit with exit reason <c>Reason</c>. If <c>Pid</c> is trapping
+ <p>If <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> is not trapping exits, <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> itself will
+ exit with exit reason <c><anno>Reason</anno></c>. If <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> is trapping
exits, the exit signal is transformed into a message
- <c>{'EXIT', From, Reason}</c> and delivered to the message
- queue of <c>Pid</c>. <c>From</c> is the pid of the process
+ <c>{'EXIT', From, <anno>Reason</anno>}</c> and delivered to the message
+ queue of <c><anno>Pid</anno></c>. <c>From</c> is the pid of the process
which sent the exit signal. See also
<seealso marker="#process_flag/2">process_flag/2</seealso>.</p>
- <p>If <c>Reason</c> is the atom <c>normal</c>, <c>Pid</c> will
+ <p>If <c><anno>Reason</anno></c> is the atom <c>normal</c>, <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> will
not exit. If it is trapping exits, the exit signal is
transformed into a message <c>{'EXIT', From, normal}</c>
and delivered to its message queue.</p>
- <p>If <c>Reason</c> is the atom <c>kill</c>, that is if
- <c>exit(Pid, kill)</c> is called, an untrappable exit signal
- is sent to <c>Pid</c> which will unconditionally exit with
+ <p>If <c><anno>Reason</anno></c> is the atom <c>kill</c>, that is if
+ <c>exit(<anno>Pid</anno>, kill)</c> is called, an untrappable exit signal
+ is sent to <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> which will unconditionally exit with
exit reason <c>killed</c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:external_size(Term) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="external_size" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Calculate the maximum size for a term encoded in the Erlang
external term format</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Calculates, without doing the encoding, the maximum byte size for
a term encoded in the Erlang external term format. The following
condition applies always:</p>
<p>
<pre>
-> <input>Size1 = byte_size(term_to_binary(Term)),</input>
-> <input>Size2 = erlang:external_size(Term),</input>
+> <input>Size1 = byte_size(term_to_binary(<anno>Term</anno>)),</input>
+> <input>Size2 = erlang:external_size(<anno>Term</anno>),</input>
> <input>true = Size1 =&lt; Size2.</input>
true
</pre>
</p>
- <p>This is equivalent to a call to: <code>erlang:external_size(Term, [])
+ <p>This is equivalent to a call to: <code>erlang:external_size(<anno>Term</anno>, [])
</code></p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:external_size(Term, [Option]) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="external_size" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Calculate the maximum size for a term encoded in the Erlang
external term format</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- <v>Option = {minor_version, Version}</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Calculates, without doing the encoding, the maximum byte size for
a term encoded in the Erlang external term format. The following
condition applies always:</p>
<p>
<pre>
-> <input>Size1 = byte_size(term_to_binary(Term, Options)),</input>
-> <input>Size2 = erlang:external_size(Term, Options),</input>
+> <input>Size1 = byte_size(term_to_binary(<anno>Term</anno>, <anno>Options</anno>)),</input>
+> <input>Size2 = erlang:external_size(<anno>Term</anno>, <anno>Options</anno>),</input>
> <input>true = Size1 =&lt; Size2.</input>
true
</pre>
</p>
- <p>The option <c>{minor_version, Version}</c> specifies how floats
+ <p>The option <c>{minor_version, <anno>Version</anno>}</c> specifies how floats
are encoded. See
<seealso marker="#term_to_binary/2">term_to_binary/2</seealso> for
a more detailed description.
@@ -1078,13 +937,10 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>float(Number) -> float()</name>
+ <name name="float" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert a number to a float</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Number = number()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns a float by converting <c>Number</c> to a float.</p>
+ <p>Returns a float by converting <c><anno>Number</anno></c> to a float.</p>
<pre>
> <input>float(55).</input>
55.0</pre>
@@ -1101,14 +957,11 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>float_to_list(Float) -> string()</name>
+ <name name="float_to_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Text representation of a float</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Float = float()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a string which corresponds to the text
- representation of <c>Float</c>.</p>
+ representation of <c><anno>Float</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>float_to_list(7.0).</input>
"7.00000000000000000000e+00"</pre>
@@ -1213,18 +1066,15 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:fun_info(Fun, Item) -> {Item, Info}</name>
+ <name name="fun_info" arity="2"/>
+ <type name="fun_info_item"/>
<fsummary>Information about a fun</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Fun = fun()</v>
- <v>Item, Info -- see below</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns information about <c>Fun</c> as specified by
- <c>Item</c>, in the form <c>{Item,Info}</c>.</p>
- <p>For any fun, <c>Item</c> can be any of the atoms
+ <desc>
+ <p>Returns information about <c><anno>Fun</anno></c> as specified by
+ <c><anno>Item</anno></c>, in the form <c>{<anno>Item</anno>,<anno>Info</anno>}</c>.</p>
+ <p>For any fun, <c><anno>Item</anno></c> can be any of the atoms
<c>module</c>, <c>name</c>, <c>arity</c>, <c>env</c>, or <c>type</c>.</p>
- <p>For a local fun, <c>Item</c> can also be any of the atoms
+ <p>For a local fun, <c><anno>Item</anno></c> can also be any of the atoms
<c>index</c>, <c>new_index</c>, <c>new_uniq</c>,
<c>uniq</c>, and <c>pid</c>. For an external fun, the value
of any of these items is always the atom <c>undefined</c>.</p>
@@ -1233,33 +1083,26 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:fun_to_list(Fun) -> string()</name>
+ <name name="fun_to_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Text representation of a fun</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Fun = fun()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a string which corresponds to the text
- representation of <c>Fun</c>.</p>
+ representation of <c><anno>Fun</anno></c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:function_exported(Module, Function, Arity) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="function_exported" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Check if a function is exported and loaded</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = Function = atom()</v>
- <v>Arity = arity()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if the module <c>Module</c> is loaded
- and contains an exported function <c>Function/Arity</c>;
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if the module <c><anno>Module</anno></c> is loaded
+ and contains an exported function <c><anno>Function</anno>/<anno>Arity</anno></c>;
otherwise <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Returns <c>false</c> for any BIF (functions implemented in C
rather than in Erlang).</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>garbage_collect() -> true</name>
+ <name name="garbage_collect" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Force an immediate garbage collection of the calling process</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>Forces an immediate garbage collection of the currently
@@ -1276,26 +1119,20 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>garbage_collect(Pid) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="garbage_collect" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Force an immediate garbage collection of a process</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Works like <c>erlang:garbage_collect()</c> but on any
process. The same caveats apply. Returns <c>false</c> if
- <c>Pid</c> refers to a dead process; <c>true</c> otherwise.</p>
+ <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> refers to a dead process; <c>true</c> otherwise.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>get() -> [{Key, Val}]</name>
+ <name name="get" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Return the process dictionary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Key = Val = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the process dictionary as a list of
- <c>{Key, Val}</c> tuples.</p>
+ <c>{<anno>Key</anno>, <anno>Val</anno>}</c> tuples.</p>
<pre>
> <input>put(key1, merry),</input>
<input>put(key2, lambs),</input>
@@ -1305,14 +1142,11 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>get(Key) -> Val | undefined</name>
+ <name name="get" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Return a value from the process dictionary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Key = Val = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns the value <c>Val</c>associated with <c>Key</c> in
- the process dictionary, or <c>undefined</c> if <c>Key</c>
+ <p>Returns the value <c><anno>Val</anno></c>associated with <c><anno>Key</anno></c> in
+ the process dictionary, or <c>undefined</c> if <c><anno>Key</anno></c>
does not exist.</p>
<pre>
> <input>put(key1, merry),</input>
@@ -1331,14 +1165,11 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>get_keys(Val) -> [Key]</name>
+ <name name="get_keys" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Return a list of keys from the process dictionary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Val = Key = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a list of keys which are associated with the value
- <c>Val</c> in the process dictionary.</p>
+ <c><anno>Val</anno></c> in the process dictionary.</p>
<pre>
> <input>put(mary, {1, 2}),</input>
<input>put(had, {1, 2}),</input>
@@ -1351,28 +1182,23 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:get_stacktrace() -> [{Module, Function, Arity | Args, Location}]</name>
+ <name name="get_stacktrace" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Get the call stack back-trace of the last exception</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = Function = atom()</v>
- <v>Arity = arity()</v>
- <v>Args = [term()]</v>
- <v>Location = [{atom(),term()}]</v>
- </type>
+ <type name="stack_item"/>
<desc>
<p>Get the call stack back-trace (<em>stacktrace</em>) of the last
exception in the calling process as a list of
- <c>{Module,Function,Arity,Location}</c> tuples.
- The <c>Arity</c> field in the first tuple may be the argument
+ <c>{<anno>Module</anno>,<anno>Function</anno>,<anno>Arity</anno>,<anno>Location</anno>}</c> tuples.
+ The <c><anno>Arity</anno></c> field in the first tuple may be the argument
list of that function call instead of an arity integer,
depending on the exception.</p>
<p>If there has not been any exceptions in a process, the
- stacktrace is []. After a code change for the process,
+ stacktrace is <c>[]</c>. After a code change for the process,
the stacktrace may also be reset to [].</p>
<p>The stacktrace is the same data as the <c>catch</c> operator
returns, for example:</p>
<p><c>{'EXIT',{badarg,Stacktrace}} = catch abs(x)</c></p>
- <p><c>Location</c> is a (possibly empty) list of two-tuples that
+ <p><c><anno>Location</anno></c> is a (possibly empty) list of two-tuples that
may indicate the location in the source code of the function.
The first element is an atom that describes the type of
information in the second element. Currently the following
@@ -1397,11 +1223,8 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>group_leader() -> GroupLeader</name>
+ <name name="group_leader" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Get the group leader for the calling process</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>GroupLeader = pid()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the pid of the group leader for the process which
evaluates the function.</p>
@@ -1414,13 +1237,10 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>group_leader(GroupLeader, Pid) -> true</name>
+ <name name="group_leader" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Set the group leader for a process</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>GroupLeader = Pid = pid()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Sets the group leader of <c>Pid</c> to <c>GroupLeader</c>.
+ <p>Sets the group leader of <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> to <c><anno>GroupLeader</anno></c>.
Typically, this is used when a processes started from a
certain shell should have another group leader than
<c>init</c>.</p>
@@ -1429,7 +1249,7 @@ true
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>halt()</name>
+ <name name="halt" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Halt the Erlang runtime system and indicate normal exit to the calling environment</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>The same as
@@ -1440,14 +1260,11 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>halt(Status)</name>
+ <name name="halt" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Halt the Erlang runtime system</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Status = integer() >= 0 | string() | abort</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>The same as
- <seealso marker="#halt/2"><c>halt(Status, [])</c></seealso>.</p>
+ <seealso marker="#halt/2"><c>halt(<anno>Status</anno>, [])</c></seealso>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>halt(17).</input>
os_prompt% <input>echo $?</input>
@@ -1456,26 +1273,21 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>halt(Status, Options)</name>
+ <name name="halt" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Halt the Erlang runtime system</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Status = integer() >= 0 | string() | abort</v>
- <v>Options = [Option]</v>
- <v>Option = {flush,boolean()} | term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p><c>Status</c> must be a non-negative integer, a string,
+ <p><c><anno>Status</anno></c> must be a non-negative integer, a string,
or the atom <c>abort</c>.
Halts the Erlang runtime system. Has no return value.
- Depending on <c>Status</c>:
+ Depending on <c><anno>Status</anno></c>:
</p>
<taglist>
<tag>integer()</tag>
- <item>The runtime system exits with the integer value <c>Status</c>
+ <item>The runtime system exits with the integer value <c><anno>Status</anno></c>
as status code to the calling environment (operating system).
</item>
<tag>string()</tag>
- <item>An erlang crash dump is produced with <c>Status</c> as slogan,
+ <item>An erlang crash dump is produced with <c><anno>Status</anno></c> as slogan,
and then the runtime system exits with status code <c>1</c>.
</item>
<tag><c>abort</c></tag>
@@ -1487,10 +1299,10 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<p>Note that on many platforms, only the status codes 0-255 are
supported by the operating system.
</p>
- <p>For integer <c>Status</c> the Erlang runtime system closes all ports
+ <p>For integer <c><anno>Status</anno></c> the Erlang runtime system closes all ports
and allows async threads to finish their operations before exiting.
To exit without such flushing use
- <c>Option</c> as <c>{flush,false}</c>.
+ <c><anno>Option</anno></c> as <c>{flush,false}</c>.
</p>
<p>For statuses <c>string()</c> and <c>abort</c> the <c>flush</c>
option is ignored and flushing is <em>not</em> done.
@@ -1498,11 +1310,11 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:hash(Term, Range) -> Hash</name>
+ <name name="hash" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Hash function (deprecated)</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>Returns a hash value for <c>Term</c> within the range
- <c>1..Range</c>. The allowed range is 1..2^27-1.</p>
+ <p>Returns a hash value for <c><anno>Term</anno></c> within the range
+ <c>1..<anno>Range</anno></c>. The allowed range is 1..2^27-1.</p>
<warning>
<p>This BIF is deprecated as the hash value may differ on
different architectures. Also the hash values for integer
@@ -1515,35 +1327,28 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>hd(List) -> term()</name>
+ <name name="hd" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Head of a list</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>List = [term()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns the head of <c>List</c>, that is, the first element.</p>
+ <p>Returns the head of <c><anno>List</anno></c>, that is, the first element.</p>
<pre>
> <input>hd([1,2,3,4,5]).</input>
1</pre>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>List</c> is the empty list [].</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>List</anno></c> is the empty list [].</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:hibernate(Module, Function, Args)</name>
+ <name name="hibernate" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Hibernate a process until a message is sent to it</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = Function = atom()</v>
- <v>Args = [term()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Puts the calling process into a wait state where its memory
allocation has been reduced as much as possible, which is
useful if the process does not expect to receive any messages
in the near future.</p>
<p>The process will be awaken when a message is sent to it, and
- control will resume in <c>Module:Function</c> with
- the arguments given by <c>Args</c> with the call stack
+ control will resume in <c><anno>Module</anno>:<anno>Function</anno></c> with
+ the arguments given by <c><anno>Args</anno></c> with the call stack
emptied, meaning that the process will terminate when that
function returns. Thus <c>erlang:hibernate/3</c> will never
return to its caller.</p>
@@ -1572,15 +1377,30 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
when the process wakes up.</p>
</desc>
</func>
+
+ <func>
+ <name name="insert_element" arity="3"/>
+ <fsummary>Insert an element at index in a tuple</fsummary>
+ <type_desc variable="Index">1..tuple_size(<anno>Tuple1</anno>) + 1</type_desc>
+ <desc>
+ <p>
+ Returns a new tuple with element <c><anno>Term</anno></c> insert at position
+ <c><anno>Index</anno></c> in tuple <c><anno>Tuple1</anno></c>.
+ All elements from position <c><anno>Index</anno></c> and upwards are subsequently
+ pushed one step higher in the new tuple <c><anno>Tuple2</anno></c>.
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+> <input>erlang:insert_element(2, {one, two, three}, new).</input>
+{one,new,two,three}</pre>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+
<func>
- <name>integer_to_list(Integer) -> string()</name>
+ <name name="integer_to_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Text representation of an integer</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Integer = integer()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a string which corresponds to the text
- representation of <c>Integer</c>.</p>
+ representation of <c><anno>Integer</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>integer_to_list(77).</input>
"77"</pre>
@@ -1598,14 +1418,11 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>iolist_to_binary(IoListOrBinary) -> binary()</name>
+ <name name="iolist_to_binary" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert an iolist to a binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>IoListOrBinary = iolist() | binary()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a binary which is made from the integers and
- binaries in <c>IoListOrBinary</c>.</p>
+ binaries in <c><anno>IoListOrBinary</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>Bin1 = &lt;&lt;1,2,3&gt;&gt;.</input>
&lt;&lt;1,2,3&gt;&gt;
@@ -1618,22 +1435,19 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>iolist_size(Item) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="iolist_size" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Size of an iolist</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Item = iolist() | binary()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns an integer which is the size in bytes
of the binary that would be the result of
- <c>iolist_to_binary(Item)</c>.</p>
+ <c>iolist_to_binary(<anno>Item</anno>)</c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>iolist_size([1,2|&lt;&lt;3,4>>]).</input>
4</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_alive() -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_alive" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Check whether the local node is alive</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>Returns <c>true</c> if the local node is alive; that is, if
@@ -1642,25 +1456,19 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_atom(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_atom" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is an atom</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is an atom;
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is an atom;
otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_binary(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_binary" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a binary;
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a binary;
otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>A binary always contains a complete number of bytes.</p>
@@ -1669,158 +1477,113 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_bitstring(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_bitstring" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a bitstring</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a bitstring (including a binary);
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a bitstring (including a binary);
otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_boolean(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_boolean" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a boolean</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is
either the atom <c>true</c> or the atom <c>false</c>
(i.e. a boolean); otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:is_builtin(Module, Function, Arity) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_builtin" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Check if a function is a BIF implemented in C</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = Function = atom()</v>
- <v>Arity = arity()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Module:Function/Arity</c> is
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Module</anno>:<anno>Function</anno>/<anno>Arity</anno></c> is
a BIF implemented in C; otherwise returns <c>false</c>.
This BIF is useful for builders of cross reference tools.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_float(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_float" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a float</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a floating point
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a floating point
number; otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_function(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_function" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a fun</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a fun; otherwise
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a fun; otherwise
returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_function(Term, Arity) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_function" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a fun with a given arity</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- <v>Arity = arity()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a fun that can be
- applied with <c>Arity</c> number of arguments; otherwise
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a fun that can be
+ applied with <c><anno>Arity</anno></c> number of arguments; otherwise
returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
- <warning>
- <p>Currently, <c>is_function/2</c> will also return
- <c>true</c> if the first argument is a tuple fun (a tuple
- containing two atoms). In a future release, tuple funs will
- no longer be supported and <c>is_function/2</c> will return
- <c>false</c> if given a tuple fun.</p>
- </warning>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_integer(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_integer" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is an integer</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is an integer;
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is an integer;
otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_list(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a list</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a list with
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a list with
zero or more elements; otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_number(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_number" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a number</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is either an integer or a
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is either an integer or a
floating point number; otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_pid(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_pid" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a pid</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a pid (process
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a pid (process
identifier); otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_port(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_port" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a port</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a port identifier;
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a port identifier;
otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_process_alive(Pid) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_process_alive" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a process is alive</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>
- <c>Pid</c> must refer to a process at the local node.
+ <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> must refer to a process at the local node.
Returns <c>true</c> if the process exists and is alive, that
is, is not exiting and has not exited. Otherwise, returns
<c>false</c>.
@@ -1828,41 +1591,32 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_record(Term, RecordTag) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_record" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term appears to be a record</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- <v>RecordTag = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a tuple and its first
- element is <c>RecordTag</c>. Otherwise, returns <c>false</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a tuple and its first
+ element is <c><anno>RecordTag</anno></c>. Otherwise, returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<note>
<p>Normally the compiler treats calls to <c>is_record/2</c>
- specially. It emits code to verify that <c>Term</c> is a
- tuple, that its first element is <c>RecordTag</c>, and that
- the size is correct. However, if the <c>RecordTag</c> is
+ specially. It emits code to verify that <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a
+ tuple, that its first element is <c><anno>RecordTag</anno></c>, and that
+ the size is correct. However, if the <c><anno>RecordTag</anno></c> is
not a literal atom, the <c>is_record/2</c> BIF will be
called instead and the size of the tuple will not be
verified.</p>
</note>
- <p>Allowed in guard tests, if <c>RecordTag</c> is a literal
+ <p>Allowed in guard tests, if <c><anno>RecordTag</anno></c> is a literal
atom.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_record(Term, RecordTag, Size) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_record" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term appears to be a record</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- <v>RecordTag = atom()</v>
- <v>Size = integer()</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p><c>RecordTag</c> must be an atom. Returns <c>true</c> if
- <c>Term</c> is a tuple, its first element is <c>RecordTag</c>,
- and its size is <c>Size</c>. Otherwise, returns <c>false</c>.</p>
- <p>Allowed in guard tests, provided that <c>RecordTag</c> is
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>RecordTag</anno></c> must be an atom. Returns <c>true</c> if
+ <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a tuple, its first element is <c><anno>RecordTag</anno></c>,
+ and its size is <c><anno>Size</anno></c>. Otherwise, returns <c>false</c>.</p>
+ <p>Allowed in guard tests, provided that <c><anno>RecordTag</anno></c> is
a literal atom and <c>Size</c> is a literal integer.</p>
<note>
<p>This BIF is documented for completeness. In most cases
@@ -1871,37 +1625,28 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_reference(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_reference" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a reference</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a reference;
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a reference;
otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>is_tuple(Term) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="is_tuple" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check whether a term is a tuple</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c>Term</c> is a tuple;
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if <c><anno>Term</anno></c> is a tuple;
otherwise returns <c>false</c>.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>length(List) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="length" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Length of a list</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>List = [term()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns the length of <c>List</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns the length of <c><anno>List</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>length([1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]).</input>
9</pre>
@@ -1909,52 +1654,47 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>link(Pid) -> true</name>
+ <name name="link" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Create a link to another process (or port)</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Pid = pid() | port()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Creates a link between the calling process and another
- process (or port) <c>Pid</c>, if there is not such a link
+ process (or port) <c><anno>PidOrPort</anno></c>, if there is not such a link
already. If a process attempts to create a link to itself,
nothing is done. Returns <c>true</c>.</p>
- <p>If <c>Pid</c> does not exist, the behavior of the BIF depends
+ <p>If <c><anno>PidOrPort</anno></c> does not exist, the behavior of the BIF depends
on if the calling process is trapping exits or not (see
<seealso marker="#process_flag/2">process_flag/2</seealso>):</p>
<list type="bulleted">
<item>If the calling process is not trapping exits, and
- checking <c>Pid</c> is cheap -- that is, if <c>Pid</c> is
+ checking <c><anno>PidOrPort</anno></c> is cheap -- that is, if <c><anno>PidOrPort</anno></c> is
local -- <c>link/1</c> fails with reason <c>noproc</c>.</item>
<item>Otherwise, if the calling process is trapping exits,
- and/or <c>Pid</c> is remote, <c>link/1</c> returns
+ and/or <c><anno>PidOrPort</anno></c> is remote, <c>link/1</c> returns
<c>true</c>, but an exit signal with reason <c>noproc</c>
is sent to the calling process.</item>
</list>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>list_to_atom(String) -> atom()</name>
+ <name name="list_to_atom" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert from text representation to an atom</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>String = string()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns the atom whose text representation is <c>String</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns the atom whose text representation is <c><anno>String</anno></c>.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>String</anno></c> may only contain ISO-latin-1
+ characterns (i.e. numbers below 256) as the current
+ implementation does not allow unicode characters >= 256 in
+ atoms.</p>
<pre>
> <input>list_to_atom("Erlang").</input>
'Erlang'</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>list_to_binary(IoList) -> binary()</name>
+ <name name="list_to_binary" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert a list to a binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>IoList = iolist()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a binary which is made from the integers and
- binaries in <c>IoList</c>.</p>
+ binaries in <c><anno>IoList</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>Bin1 = &lt;&lt;1,2,3&gt;&gt;.</input>
&lt;&lt;1,2,3&gt;&gt;
@@ -1967,14 +1707,12 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>list_to_bitstring(BitstringList) -> bitstring()</name>
+ <name name="list_to_bitstring" arity="1"/>
+ <type name="bitstring_list"/>
<fsummary>Convert a list to a bitstring</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>BitstringList = [BitstringList | bitstring() | char()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a bitstring which is made from the integers and
- bitstrings in <c>BitstringList</c>. (The last tail in <c>BitstringList</c>
+ bitstrings in <c><anno>BitstringList</anno></c>. (The last tail in <c><anno>BitstringList</anno></c>
is allowed to be a bitstring.)</p>
<pre>
> <input>Bin1 = &lt;&lt;1,2,3&gt;&gt;.</input>
@@ -1983,51 +1721,42 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
&lt;&lt;4,5&gt;&gt;
> <input>Bin3 = &lt;&lt;6,7:4,&gt;&gt;.</input>
&lt;&lt;6&gt;&gt;
-> <input>list_to_binary([Bin1,1,[2,3,Bin2],4|Bin3]).</input>
+> <input>list_to_bitstring([Bin1,1,[2,3,Bin2],4|Bin3]).</input>
&lt;&lt;1,2,3,1,2,3,4,5,4,6,7:46&gt;&gt;</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>list_to_existing_atom(String) -> atom()</name>
+ <name name="list_to_existing_atom" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert from text representation to an atom</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>String = string()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns the atom whose text representation is <c>String</c>,
+ <p>Returns the atom whose text representation is <c><anno>String</anno></c>,
but only if there already exists such atom.</p>
<p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if there does not already exist an atom
- whose text representation is <c>String</c>.</p>
+ whose text representation is <c><anno>String</anno></c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>list_to_float(String) -> float()</name>
+ <name name="list_to_float" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert from text representation to a float</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>String = string()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns the float whose text representation is <c>String</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns the float whose text representation is <c><anno>String</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>list_to_float("2.2017764e+0").</input>
2.2017764</pre>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>String</c> contains a bad
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>String</anno></c> contains a bad
representation of a float.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>list_to_integer(String) -> integer()</name>
+ <name name="list_to_integer" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert from text representation to an integer</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>String = string()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns an integer whose text representation is
- <c>String</c>.</p>
+ <c><anno>String</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>list_to_integer("123").</input>
123</pre>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>String</c> contains a bad
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>String</anno></c> contains a bad
representation of an integer.</p>
</desc>
</func>
@@ -2045,13 +1774,10 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>list_to_pid(String) -> pid()</name>
+ <name name="list_to_pid" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert from text representation to a pid</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>String = string()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns a pid whose text representation is <c>String</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns a pid whose text representation is <c><anno>String</anno></c>.</p>
<warning>
<p>This BIF is intended for debugging and for use in
the Erlang operating system. It should not be used in
@@ -2060,18 +1786,15 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<pre>
> <input>list_to_pid("&lt;0.4.1>").</input>
&lt;0.4.1></pre>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>String</c> contains a bad
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>String</anno></c> contains a bad
representation of a pid.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>list_to_tuple(List) -> tuple()</name>
+ <name name="list_to_tuple" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert a list to a tuple</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>List = [term()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns a tuple which corresponds to <c>List</c>. <c>List</c>
+ <p>Returns a tuple which corresponds to <c><anno>List</anno></c>. <c><anno>List</anno></c>
can contain any Erlang terms.</p>
<pre>
> <input>list_to_tuple([share, ['Ericsson_B', 163]]).</input>
@@ -2079,38 +1802,30 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>load_module(Module, Binary) -> {module, Module} | {error, Reason}</name>
+ <name name="load_module" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Load object code for a module</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = atom()</v>
- <v>Binary = binary()</v>
- <v>Reason = badfile | not_purged | badfile</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>If <c>Binary</c> contains the object code for the module
- <c>Module</c>, this BIF loads that object code. Also, if
- the code for the module <c>Module</c> already exists, all
+ <desc>
+ <p>If <c><anno>Binary</anno></c> contains the object code for the module
+ <c><anno>Module</anno></c>, this BIF loads that object code. Also, if
+ the code for the module <c><anno>Module</anno></c> already exists, all
export references are replaced so they point to the newly
loaded code. The previously loaded code is kept in the system
as old code, as there may still be processes which are
executing that code. It returns either
- <c>{module, Module}</c>, or <c>{error, Reason}</c> if loading
- fails. <c>Reason</c> is one of the following:</p>
+ <c>{module, <anno>Module</anno>}</c>, or <c>{error, <anno>Reason</anno>}</c> if loading
+ fails. <c><anno>Reason</anno></c> is one of the following:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>badfile</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>The object code in <c>Binary</c> has an incorrect format.</p>
+ <p>The object code in <c><anno>Binary</anno></c> has an
+ incorrect format <em>or</em> the object code contains code
+ for another module than <c><anno>Module</anno></c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>not_purged</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Binary</c> contains a module which cannot be loaded
+ <p><c><anno>Binary</anno></c> contains a module which cannot be loaded
because old code for this module already exists.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>badfile</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>The object code contains code for another module than
- <c>Module</c></p>
- </item>
</taglist>
<warning>
<p>This BIF is intended for the code server (see
@@ -2120,15 +1835,8 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:load_nif(Path, LoadInfo) -> ok | {error, {Reason, Text}}</name>
+ <name name="load_nif" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Load NIF library</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Path = string()</v>
- <v>LoadInfo = term()</v>
- <v>Reason = load_failed | bad_lib | load | reload |
- upgrade | old_code</v>
- <v>Text = string()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<note>
<p>In releases older than OTP R14B, NIFs were an
@@ -2139,21 +1847,21 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<c>{error,Reason,Text}</c>.</p>
</note>
<p>Loads and links a dynamic library containing native
- implemented functions (NIFs) for a module. <c>Path</c> is a
+ implemented functions (NIFs) for a module. <c><anno>Path</anno></c> is a
file path to the sharable object/dynamic library file minus
the OS-dependent file extension (.so for Unix and .dll for
Windows). See <seealso marker="erl_nif">erl_nif</seealso>
on how to implement a NIF library.</p>
- <p><c>LoadInfo</c> can be any term. It will be passed on to
+ <p><c><anno>LoadInfo</anno></c> can be any term. It will be passed on to
the library as part of the initialization. A good practice is
to include a module version number to support future code
upgrade scenarios.</p>
<p>The call to <c>load_nif/2</c> must be made
<em>directly</em> from the Erlang code of the module that the
NIF library belongs to.</p>
- <p>It returns either <c>ok</c>, or <c>{error,{Reason,Text}}</c>
- if loading fails. <c>Reason</c> is one of the atoms below,
- while <c>Text</c> is a human readable string that may give
+ <p>It returns either <c>ok</c>, or <c>{error,{<anno>Reason</anno>,Text}}</c>
+ if loading fails. <c><anno>Reason</anno></c> is one of the atoms below,
+ while <c><anno>Text</anno></c> is a human readable string that may give
some more information about the failure.</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>load_failed</c></tag>
@@ -2179,11 +1887,8 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:loaded() -> [Module]</name>
+ <name name="loaded" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>List of all loaded modules</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a list of all loaded Erlang modules (current and/or
old code), including preloaded modules.</p>
@@ -2191,11 +1896,8 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:localtime() -> DateTime</name>
+ <name name="localtime" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Current local date and time</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>DateTime = <seealso marker="calendar#type-datetime">calendar:datetime()</seealso></v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the current local date and time
<c>{{Year, Month, Day}, {Hour, Minute, Second}}</c>.</p>
@@ -2212,32 +1914,27 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<desc>
<p>Converts local date and time to Universal Time Coordinated
(UTC), if this is supported by the underlying OS. Otherwise,
- no conversion is done and <c>{<anno>Date1</anno>, <anno>Time1</anno>}</c> is returned.</p>
+ no conversion is done and <c><anno>Localtime</anno></c> is returned.</p>
<pre>
> <input>erlang:localtime_to_universaltime({{1996,11,6},{14,45,17}}).</input>
{{1996,11,6},{13,45,17}}</pre>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Date1</c> or <c>Time1</c> do
- not denote a valid date or time.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Localtime</anno></c> does not denote
+ a valid date and time.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:localtime_to_universaltime({Date1, Time1}, IsDst) -> {Date2, Time2}</name>
+ <name name="localtime_to_universaltime" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Convert from local to Universal Time Coordinated (UTC) date and time</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Date1 = Date2 = <seealso marker="calendar#type-date">calendar:date()</seealso></v>
- <v>Time1 = Time2 = <seealso marker="calendar#type-time">calendar:time()</seealso></v>
- <v>IsDst = true | false | undefined</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Converts local date and time to Universal Time Coordinated
(UTC) just like <c>erlang:localtime_to_universaltime/1</c>,
but the caller decides if daylight saving time is active or
not.</p>
- <p>If <c>IsDst == true</c> the <c>{Date1, Time1}</c> is during
- daylight saving time, if <c>IsDst == false</c> it is not,
- and if <c>IsDst == undefined</c> the underlying OS may
+ <p>If <c><anno>IsDst</anno> == true</c> the <c><anno>Localtime</anno></c> is during
+ daylight saving time, if <c><anno>IsDst</anno> == false</c> it is not,
+ and if <c><anno>IsDst</anno> == undefined</c> the underlying OS may
guess, which is the same as calling
- <c>erlang:localtime_to_universaltime({Date1, Time1})</c>.</p>
+ <c>erlang:localtime_to_universaltime(<anno>Localtime</anno>)</c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>erlang:localtime_to_universaltime({{1996,11,6},{14,45,17}}, true).</input>
{{1996,11,6},{12,45,17}}
@@ -2245,12 +1942,12 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
{{1996,11,6},{13,45,17}}
> <input>erlang:localtime_to_universaltime({{1996,11,6},{14,45,17}}, undefined).</input>
{{1996,11,6},{13,45,17}}</pre>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Date1</c> or <c>Time1</c> do
- not denote a valid date or time.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Localtime</anno></c> does not denote
+ a valid date and time.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>make_ref() -> reference()</name>
+ <name name="make_ref" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Return an almost unique reference</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>Returns an almost unique reference.</p>
@@ -2262,33 +1959,23 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:make_tuple(Arity, InitialValue) -> tuple()</name>
+ <name name="make_tuple" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Create a new tuple of a given arity</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Arity = arity()</v>
- <v>InitialValue = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns a new tuple of the given <c>Arity</c>, where all
- elements are <c>InitialValue</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns a new tuple of the given <c><anno>Arity</anno></c>, where all
+ elements are <c><anno>InitialValue</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>erlang:make_tuple(4, []).</input>
{[],[],[],[]}</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:make_tuple(Arity, Default, InitList) -> tuple()</name>
+ <name name="make_tuple" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Create a new tuple with given arity and contents</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Arity = arity()</v>
- <v>Default = term()</v>
- <v>InitList = [{Position,term()}]</v>
- <v>Position = integer()</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p><c>erlang:make_tuple</c> first creates a tuple of size <c>Arity</c>
- where each element has the value <c>Default</c>. It then fills
- in values from <c>InitList</c>. Each list element in <c>InitList</c>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c>erlang:make_tuple</c> first creates a tuple of size <c><anno>Arity</anno></c>
+ where each element has the value <c><anno>DefaultValue</anno></c>. It then fills
+ in values from <c><anno>InitList</anno></c>. Each list element in <c><anno>InitList</anno></c>
must be a two-tuple where the first element is a position in the
newly created tuple and the second element is any term. If a position
occurs more than once in the list, the term corresponding to
@@ -2307,15 +1994,11 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:md5(Data) -> Digest</name>
+ <name name="md5" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Compute an MD5 message digest</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Data = iodata()</v>
- <v>Digest = binary()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Computes an <c>MD5</c> message digest from <c>Data</c>, where
- the length of the digest is 128 bits (16 bytes). <c>Data</c>
+ <p>Computes an <c>MD5</c> message digest from <c><anno>Data</anno></c>, where
+ the length of the digest is 128 bits (16 bytes). <c><anno>Data</anno></c>
is a binary or a list of small integers and binaries.</p>
<p>See The MD5 Message Digest Algorithm (RFC 1321) for more
information about MD5.</p>
@@ -2324,51 +2007,39 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:md5_final(Context) -> Digest</name>
+ <name name="md5_final" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Finish the update of an MD5 context and return the computed MD5 message digest</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Context = Digest = binary()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Finishes the update of an MD5 <c>Context</c> and returns
+ <p>Finishes the update of an MD5 <c><anno>Context</anno></c> and returns
the computed <c>MD5</c> message digest.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:md5_init() -> Context</name>
+ <name name="md5_init" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Create an MD5 context</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Context = binary()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Creates an MD5 context, to be used in subsequent calls to
<c>md5_update/2</c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:md5_update(Context, Data) -> NewContext</name>
+ <name name="md5_update" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Update an MD5 context with data, and return a new context</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Data = iodata()</v>
- <v>Context = NewContext = binary()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Updates an MD5 <c>Context</c> with <c>Data</c>, and returns
- a <c>NewContext</c>.</p>
+ <p>Updates an MD5 <c><anno>Context</anno></c> with <c><anno>Data</anno></c>, and returns
+ a <c><anno>NewContext</anno></c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:memory() -> [{Type, Size}]</name>
+ <name name="memory" arity="0"/>
+ <type name="memory_type"/>
<fsummary>Information about dynamically allocated memory</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Type, Size -- see below</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a list containing information about memory
dynamically allocated by the Erlang emulator. Each element of
the list is a tuple <c>{Type, Size}</c>. The first element
- <c>Type</c>is an atom describing memory type. The second
- element <c>Size</c>is memory size in bytes. A description of
+ <c><anno>Type</anno></c>is an atom describing memory type. The second
+ element <c><anno>Size</anno></c>is memory size in bytes. A description of
each memory type follows:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>total</c></tag>
@@ -2430,6 +2101,14 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<p>This memory is part of the memory presented as
<c>system</c> memory.</p>
</item>
+ <tag><c>low</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Only on 64-bit halfword emulator.</p>
+ <p>The total amount of memory allocated in low memory areas
+ that are restricted to less than 4 Gb even though
+ the system may have more physical memory.</p>
+ <p>May be removed in future releases of halfword emulator.</p>
+ </item>
<tag><c>maximum</c></tag>
<item>
<p>The maximum total amount of memory allocated since
@@ -2441,14 +2120,6 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<seealso marker="tools:instrument">instrument(3)</seealso>
and/or <seealso marker="erts:erl">erl(1)</seealso>.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>low</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Only on 64-bit halfword emulator.</p>
- <p>The total amount of memory allocated in low memory areas
- that are restricted to less than 4 Gb even though
- the system may have more physical memory.</p>
- <p>May be removed in future releases of halfword emulator.</p>
- </item>
</taglist>
<note>
<p>The <c>system</c> value is not complete. Some allocated
@@ -2512,16 +2183,15 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:memory(Type | [Type]) -> Size | [{Type, Size}]</name>
+ <name name="memory" arity="1" clause_i="1"/>
+ <name name="memory" arity="1" clause_i="2"/>
+ <type name="memory_type"/>
<fsummary>Information about dynamically allocated memory</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Type, Size -- see below</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the memory size in bytes allocated for memory of
- type <c>Type</c>. The argument can also be given as a list
- of <c>Type</c> atoms, in which case a corresponding list of
- <c>{Type, Size}</c> tuples is returned.</p>
+ type <c><anno>Type</anno></c>. The argument can also be given as a list
+ of <c>memory_type()</c> atoms, in which case a corresponding list of
+ <c>{memory_type(), Size :: integer >= 0}</c> tuples is returned.</p>
<note>
<p>
Since erts version 5.6.4 <c>erlang:memory/1</c> requires that
@@ -2533,13 +2203,13 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<taglist>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If <c>Type</c> is not one of the memory types listed in the
+ If <c><anno>Type</anno></c> is not one of the memory types listed in the
documentation of
<seealso marker="#memory/0">erlang:memory/0</seealso>.
</item>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If <c>maximum</c> is passed as <c>Type</c> and the emulator
+ If <c>maximum</c> is passed as <c><anno>Type</anno></c> and the emulator
is not run in instrumented mode.
</item>
<tag><c>notsup</c></tag>
@@ -2561,13 +2231,10 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>module_loaded(Module) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="module_loaded" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Check if a module is loaded</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns <c>true</c> if the module <c>Module</c> is loaded,
+ <p>Returns <c>true</c> if the module <c><anno>Module</anno></c> is loaded,
otherwise returns <c>false</c>. It does not attempt to load
the module.</p>
<warning>
@@ -2578,22 +2245,15 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>monitor(Type, Item) -> MonitorRef</name>
+ <name name="monitor" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Start monitoring</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Type = process</v>
- <v>Item = pid() | {RegName, Node} | RegName</v>
- <v>&nbsp;RegName = atom()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Node = node()</v>
- <v>MonitorRef = reference()</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>The calling process starts monitoring <c>Item</c> which is
- an object of type <c>Type</c>.</p>
+ <desc>
+ <p>The calling process starts monitoring <c><anno>Item</anno></c> which is
+ an object of type <c><anno>Type</anno></c>.</p>
<p>Currently only processes can be monitored, i.e. the only
- allowed <c>Type</c> is <c>process</c>, but other types may be
+ allowed <c><anno>Type</anno></c> is <c>process</c>, but other types may be
allowed in the future.</p>
- <p><c>Item</c> can be:</p>
+ <p><c><anno>Item</anno></c> can be:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>pid()</c></tag>
<item>
@@ -2619,8 +2279,8 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
unregistered.</p>
</note>
<p>A <c>'DOWN'</c> message will be sent to the monitoring
- process if <c>Item</c> dies, if <c>Item</c> does not exist,
- or if the connection is lost to the node which <c>Item</c>
+ process if <c><anno>Item</anno></c> dies, if <c><anno>Item</anno></c> does not exist,
+ or if the connection is lost to the node which <c><anno>Item</anno></c>
resides on. A <c>'DOWN'</c> message has the following pattern:</p>
<code type="none">
{'DOWN', MonitorRef, Type, Object, Info}</code>
@@ -2631,11 +2291,11 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<item>
<p>A reference to the monitored object:</p>
<list type="bulleted">
- <item>the pid of the monitored process, if <c>Item</c> was
+ <item>the pid of the monitored process, if <c><anno>Item</anno></c> was
specified as a pid.</item>
- <item><c>{RegName, Node}</c>, if <c>Item</c> was specified as
+ <item><c>{RegName, Node}</c>, if <c><anno>Item</anno></c> was specified as
<c>{RegName, Node}</c>.</item>
- <item><c>{RegName, Node}</c>, if <c>Item</c> was specified as
+ <item><c>{RegName, Node}</c>, if <c><anno>Item</anno></c> was specified as
<c>RegName</c>. <c>Node</c> will in this case be the
name of the local node (<c>node()</c>).</item>
</list>
@@ -2644,7 +2304,7 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<item>
<p>Either the exit reason of the process, <c>noproc</c>
(non-existing process), or <c>noconnection</c> (no
- connection to <c>Node</c>).</p>
+ connection to <c><anno>Node</anno></c>).</p>
</item>
</taglist>
<note>
@@ -2662,7 +2322,7 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
where remote process monitoring by registered name is not
implemented), the call fails with <c>badarg</c>.</p>
<p>Making several calls to <c>monitor/2</c> for the same
- <c>Item</c> is not an error; it results in as many, completely
+ <c><anno>Item</anno></c> is not an error; it results in as many, completely
independent, monitorings.</p>
<note>
<p>The format of the <c>'DOWN'</c> message changed in the 5.2
@@ -2680,25 +2340,21 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>monitor_node(Node, Flag) -> true</name>
+ <name name="monitor_node" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Monitor the status of a node</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Node = node()</v>
- <v>Flag = boolean()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Monitors the status of the node <c>Node</c>. If <c>Flag</c>
- is <c>true</c>, monitoring is turned on; if <c>Flag</c> is
+ <p>Monitors the status of the node <c><anno>Node</anno></c>. If <c><anno>Flag</anno></c>
+ is <c>true</c>, monitoring is turned on; if <c><anno>Flag</anno></c> is
<c>false</c>, monitoring is turned off.</p>
<p>Making several calls to <c>monitor_node(Node, true)</c> for
- the same <c>Node</c> is not an error; it results in as many,
+ the same <c><anno>Node</anno></c> is not an error; it results in as many,
completely independent, monitorings.</p>
- <p>If <c>Node</c> fails or does not exist, the message
+ <p>If <c><anno>Node</anno></c> fails or does not exist, the message
<c>{nodedown, Node}</c> is delivered to the process. If a
process has made two calls to <c>monitor_node(Node, true)</c>
- and <c>Node</c> terminates, two <c>nodedown</c> messages are
+ and <c><anno>Node</anno></c> terminates, two <c>nodedown</c> messages are
delivered to the process. If there is no connection to
- <c>Node</c>, there will be an attempt to create one. If this
+ <c><anno>Node</anno></c>, there will be an attempt to create one. If this
fails, a <c>nodedown</c> message is delivered.</p>
<p>Nodes connected through hidden connections can be monitored
as any other node.</p>
@@ -2706,14 +2362,8 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:monitor_node(Node, Flag, Options) -> true</name>
+ <name name="monitor_node" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Monitor the status of a node</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Node = node()</v>
- <v>Flag = boolean()</v>
- <v>Options = [Option]</v>
- <v>Option = allow_passive_connect</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Behaves as <c>monitor_node/2</c> except that it allows an
extra option to be given, namely <c>allow_passive_connect</c>.
@@ -2736,11 +2386,8 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:nif_error(Reason)</name>
+ <name name="nif_error" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Stop execution with a given reason</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Works exactly like
<seealso marker="#error/1">erlang:error/1</seealso>,
@@ -2751,12 +2398,8 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:nif_error(Reason, Args)</name>
+ <name name="nif_error" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Stop execution with a given reason</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
- <v>Args = [term()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Works exactly like
<seealso marker="#error/2">erlang:error/2</seealso>,
@@ -2767,11 +2410,8 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>node() -> Node</name>
+ <name name="node" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Name of the local node</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Node = node()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the name of the local node. If the node is not alive,
<c>nonode@nohost</c> is returned instead.</p>
@@ -2779,14 +2419,10 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>node(Arg) -> Node</name>
+ <name name="node" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>At which node is a pid, port or reference located</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Arg = pid() | port() | reference()</v>
- <v>Node = node()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns the node where <c>Arg</c> is located. <c>Arg</c> can
+ <p>Returns the node where <c><anno>Arg</anno></c> is located. <c><anno>Arg</anno></c> can
be a pid, a reference, or a port. If the local node is not
alive, <c>nonode@nohost</c> is returned.</p>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
@@ -2801,17 +2437,13 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>nodes(Arg | [Arg]) -> Nodes</name>
+ <name name="nodes" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>All nodes of a certain type in the system</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Arg = visible | hidden | connected | this | known</v>
- <v>Nodes = [node()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a list of nodes according to argument given.
The result returned when the argument is a list, is the list
of nodes satisfying the disjunction(s) of the list elements.</p>
- <p><c>Arg</c> can be any of the following:</p>
+ <p><c><anno>NodeType</anno></c> can be any of the following:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>visible</c></tag>
<item>
@@ -2840,15 +2472,12 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<c>nodes() = nodes(visible)</c>.</p>
<p>If the local node is not alive,
<c>nodes(this) == nodes(known) == [nonode@nohost]</c>, for
- any other <c>Arg</c> the empty list [] is returned.</p>
+ any other <c><anno>Arg</anno></c> the empty list [] is returned.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>now() -> timestamp()</name>
- <type>
- <v>timestamp() = {MegaSecs, Secs, MicroSecs}</v>
- <v>MegaSecs = Secs = MicroSecs = integer() >= 0</v>
- </type>
+ <name name="now" arity="0"/>
+ <type name="timestamp"/>
<fsummary>Elapsed time since 00:00 GMT</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>Returns the tuple <c>{MegaSecs, Secs, MicroSecs}</c> which is
@@ -2870,35 +2499,19 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>open_port(PortName, PortSettings) -> port()</name>
+ <name name="open_port" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Open a port</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>PortName = {spawn, Command} | {spawn_driver, Command} | {spawn_executable, FileName} | {fd, In, Out}</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Command = string()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;FileName = [ FileNameChar ] | binary()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;FileNameChar = integer() (1..255 or any Unicode codepoint, see description)</v>
- <v>&nbsp;In = Out = integer()</v>
- <v>PortSettings = [Opt]</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Opt = {packet, N} | stream | {line, L} | {cd, Dir} | {env, Env} | {args, [ ArgString ]} | {arg0, ArgString} | exit_status | use_stdio | nouse_stdio | stderr_to_stdout | in | out | binary | eof</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;N = 1 | 2 | 4</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;L = integer()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;Dir = string()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;ArgString = [ FileNameChar ] | binary()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;Env = [{Name, Val}]</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Name = string()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Val = string() | false</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a port identifier as the result of opening a
new Erlang port. A port can be seen as an external Erlang
- process. <c>PortName</c> is one of the following:</p>
+ process. <c><anno>PortName</anno></c> is one of the following:</p>
<taglist>
- <tag><c>{spawn, Command}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{spawn, <anno>Command</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Starts an external program. <c>Command</c> is the name
- of the external program which will be run. <c>Command</c>
+ <p>Starts an external program. <c><anno>Command</anno></c> is the name
+ of the external program which will be run. <c><anno>Command</anno></c>
runs outside the Erlang work space unless an Erlang
- driver with the name <c>Command</c> is found. If found,
+ driver with the name <c><anno>Command</anno></c> is found. If found,
that driver will be started. A driver runs in the Erlang
workspace, which means that it is linked with the Erlang
runtime system.</p>
@@ -2918,24 +2531,24 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
name of the executable (or driver). This (among other
things) makes this option unsuitable for running
programs having spaces in file or directory names. Use
- {spawn_executable, Command} instead if spaces in executable
+ {spawn_executable, <anno>Command</anno>} instead if spaces in executable
file names is desired.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{spawn_driver, Command}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{spawn_driver, <anno>Command</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Works like <c>{spawn, Command}</c>, but demands the
+ <p>Works like <c>{spawn, <anno>Command</anno>}</c>, but demands the
first (space separated) token of the command to be the name of a
loaded driver. If no driver with that name is loaded, a
<c>badarg</c> error is raised.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{spawn_executable, Command}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{spawn_executable, <anno>FileName</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Works like <c>{spawn, Command}</c>, but only runs
- external executables. The <c>Command</c> in its whole
+ <p>Works like <c>{spawn, <anno>FileName</anno>}</c>, but only runs
+ external executables. The <c><anno>FileName</anno></c> in its whole
is used as the name of the executable, including any
spaces. If arguments are to be passed, the
- <c>args</c> and <c>arg0</c> <c>PortSettings</c> can be used.</p>
+ <c>args</c> and <c>arg0</c> <c><anno>PortSettings</anno></c> can be used.</p>
<p>The shell is not usually invoked to start the
program, it's executed directly. Neither is the
@@ -2966,7 +2579,7 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
of the executable is limited to the ISO-latin-1
character set.</p></note>
- <p>If the <c>Command</c> cannot be run, an error
+ <p>If the <c><anno>FileName</anno></c> cannot be run, an error
exception, with the posix error code as the reason, is
raised. The error reason may differ between operating
systems. Typically the error <c>enoent</c> is raised
@@ -2974,23 +2587,23 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<c>eaccess</c> is raised when the given file is not
executable.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{fd, In, Out}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{fd, <anno>In</anno>, <anno>Out</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
<p>Allows an Erlang process to access any currently opened
file descriptors used by Erlang. The file descriptor
- <c>In</c> can be used for standard input, and the file
- descriptor <c>Out</c> for standard output. It is only
+ <c><anno>In</anno></c> can be used for standard input, and the file
+ descriptor <c><anno>Out</anno></c> for standard output. It is only
used for various servers in the Erlang operating system
(<c>shell</c> and <c>user</c>). Hence, its use is very
limited.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
- <p><c>PortSettings</c> is a list of settings for the port.
+ <p><c><anno>PortSettings</anno></c> is a list of settings for the port.
Valid settings are:</p>
<taglist>
- <tag><c>{packet, N}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{packet, <anno>N</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Messages are preceded by their length, sent in <c>N</c>
+ <p>Messages are preceded by their length, sent in <c><anno>N</anno></c>
bytes, with the most significant byte first. Valid values
for <c>N</c> are 1, 2, or 4.</p>
</item>
@@ -3000,7 +2613,7 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
user-defined protocol must be used between the Erlang
process and the external object.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{line, L}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{line, <anno>L</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
<p>Messages are delivered on a per line basis. Each line
(delimited by the OS-dependent newline sequence) is
@@ -3008,7 +2621,7 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
is <c>{Flag, Line}</c>, where <c>Flag</c> is either
<c>eol</c> or <c>noeol</c> and <c>Line</c> is the actual
data delivered (without the newline sequence).</p>
- <p><c>L</c> specifies the maximum line length in bytes.
+ <p><c><anno>L</anno></c> specifies the maximum line length in bytes.
Lines longer than this will be delivered in more than one
message, with the <c>Flag</c> set to <c>noeol</c> for all
but the last message. If end of file is encountered
@@ -3016,39 +2629,40 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
sequence, the last line will also be delivered with
the <c>Flag</c> set to <c>noeol</c>. In all other cases,
lines are delivered with <c>Flag</c> set to <c>eol</c>.</p>
- <p>The <c>{packet, N}</c> and <c>{line, L}</c> settings are
+ <p>The <c>{packet, <anno>N</anno>}</c> and <c>{line, <anno>L</anno>}</c> settings are
mutually exclusive.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{cd, Dir}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{cd, <anno>Dir</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This is only valid for <c>{spawn, Command}</c> and
- <c>{spawn_executable, Command}</c>.
- The external program starts using <c>Dir</c> as its
- working directory. <c>Dir</c> must be a string. Not
- available on VxWorks.</p>
+ <p>This is only valid for <c>{spawn, <anno>Command</anno>}</c> and
+ <c>{spawn_executable, <anno>FileName</anno>}</c>.
+ The external program starts using <c><anno>Dir</anno></c> as its
+ working directory. <c><anno>Dir</anno></c> must be a string.
+ </p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{env, Env}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{env, <anno>Env</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This is only valid for <c>{spawn, Command}</c> and
- <c>{spawn_executable, Command}</c>.
+ <p>This is only valid for <c>{spawn, <anno>Command</anno>}</c> and
+ <c>{spawn_executable, <anno>FileName</anno>}</c>.
The environment of the started process is extended using
- the environment specifications in <c>Env</c>.</p>
- <p><c>Env</c> should be a list of tuples <c>{Name, Val}</c>,
- where <c>Name</c> is the name of an environment variable,
- and <c>Val</c> is the value it is to have in the spawned
- port process. Both <c>Name</c> and <c>Val</c> must be
- strings. The one exception is <c>Val</c> being the atom
+ the environment specifications in <c><anno>Env</anno></c>.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>Env</anno></c> should be a list of tuples <c>{<anno>Name</anno>, <anno>Val</anno>}</c>,
+ where <c><anno>Name</anno></c> is the name of an environment variable,
+ and <c><anno>Val</anno></c> is the value it is to have in the spawned
+ port process. Both <c><anno>Name</anno></c> and <c><anno>Val</anno></c> must be
+ strings. The one exception is <c><anno>Val</anno></c> being the atom
<c>false</c> (in analogy with <c>os:getenv/1</c>), which
- removes the environment variable.</p>
+ removes the environment variable.
+ </p>
<p>If Unicode filename encoding is in effect (see the <seealso
marker="erts:erl#file_name_encoding">erl manual
page</seealso>), the strings (both <c>Name</c> and
<c>Value</c>) may contain characters with codepoints > 255.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{args, [ string() ]}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{args, [ string() | binary() ]}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This option is only valid for <c>{spawn_executable, Command}</c>
+ <p>This option is only valid for <c>{spawn_executable, <anno>FileName</anno>}</c>
and specifies arguments to the executable. Each argument
is given as a separate string and (on Unix) eventually
ends up as one element each in the argument vector. On
@@ -3091,10 +2705,10 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
option can be used.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{arg0, string()}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{arg0, string() | binary()}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This option is only valid for <c>{spawn_executable, Command}</c>
+ <p>This option is only valid for <c>{spawn_executable, <anno>FileName</anno>}</c>
and explicitly specifies the program name argument when
running an executable. This might in some circumstances,
on some operating systems, be desirable. How the program
@@ -3108,9 +2722,9 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<tag><c>exit_status</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This is only valid for <c>{spawn, Command}</c> where
- <c>Command</c> refers to an external program, and for
- <c>{spawn_executable, Command}</c>.</p>
+ <p>This is only valid for <c>{spawn, <anno>Command</anno>}</c> where
+ <c><anno>Command</anno></c> refers to an external program, and for
+ <c>{spawn_executable, <anno>FileName</anno>}</c>.</p>
<p>When the external process connected to the port exits, a
message of the form <c>{Port,{exit_status,Status}}</c> is
sent to the connected process, where <c>Status</c> is the
@@ -3125,8 +2739,8 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</item>
<tag><c>use_stdio</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>This is only valid for <c>{spawn, Command}</c> and
- <c>{spawn_executable, Command}</c>. It
+ <p>This is only valid for <c>{spawn, <anno>Command</anno>}</c> and
+ <c>{spawn_executable, <anno>FileName</anno>}</c>. It
allows the standard input and output (file descriptors 0
and 1) of the spawned (UNIX) process for communication
with Erlang.</p>
@@ -3180,6 +2794,18 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
console window when spawning the port program.
(This option has no effect on other platforms.)</p>
</item>
+ <tag><marker id="open_port_parallelism"><c>{parallelism, Boolean}</c></marker></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Set scheduler hint for port parallelism. If set to <c>true</c>,
+ the VM will schedule port tasks when it by this can improve the
+ parallelism in the system. If set to <c>false</c>, the VM will
+ try to perform port tasks immediately and by this improving the
+ latency at the expense of parallelism. The default can be set on
+ system startup by passing the
+ <seealso marker="erl#+spp">+spp</seealso> command line argument
+ to <seealso marker="erl">erl(1)</seealso>.
+ </p>
+ </item>
</taglist>
<p>The default is <c>stream</c> for all types of port and
<c>use_stdio</c> for spawned ports.</p>
@@ -3223,7 +2849,7 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</item>
<tag><c>enoent</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>The <c>Command</c> given in <c>{spawn_executable, Command}</c> does not point out an existing file.</p>
+ <p>The <c><anno>FileName</anno></c> given in <c>{spawn_executable, <anno>FileName</anno>}</c> does not point out an existing file.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
<p>During use of a port opened using <c>{spawn, Name}</c>,
@@ -3232,63 +2858,55 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
the owning process using signals of the form
<c>{'EXIT', Port, PosixCode}</c>. See <c>file(3)</c> for
possible values of <c>PosixCode</c>.</p>
- <p><marker id="ERL_MAX_PORTS"></marker>
- The maximum number of ports that can be open at the same
- time is 1024 by default, but can be configured by
- the environment variable <c>ERL_MAX_PORTS</c>.</p>
+ <p>The maximum number of ports that can be open at the same
+ time can be configured by passing the
+ <seealso marker="erl#max_ports"><c>+Q</c></seealso>
+ command line flag to
+ <seealso marker="erl"><c>erl(1)</c></seealso>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:phash(Term, Range) -> Hash</name>
+ <name name="phash" arity="2"/>
+ <type_desc variable="Range">Range = 1..2^32, Hash = 1..Range</type_desc>
<fsummary>Portable hash function</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- <v>Range = 1..2^32</v>
- <v>Hash = 1..Range</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Portable hash function that will give the same hash for
the same Erlang term regardless of machine architecture and
ERTS version (the BIF was introduced in ERTS 4.9.1.1). Range
can be between 1 and 2^32, the function returns a hash value
- for <c>Term</c> within the range <c>1..Range</c>.</p>
+ for <c><anno>Term</anno></c> within the range <c>1..<anno>Range</anno></c>.</p>
<p>This BIF could be used instead of the old deprecated
<c>erlang:hash/2</c> BIF, as it calculates better hashes for
all data-types, but consider using <c>phash2/1,2</c> instead.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:phash2(Term [, Range]) -> Hash</name>
+ <name name="phash2" arity="1"/>
+ <name name="phash2" arity="2"/>
+ <type_desc variable="Range">1..2^32</type_desc>
+ <type_desc variable="Hash">0..Range-1</type_desc>
<fsummary>Portable hash function</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- <v>Range = 1..2^32</v>
- <v>Hash = 0..Range-1</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Portable hash function that will give the same hash for
the same Erlang term regardless of machine architecture and
ERTS version (the BIF was introduced in ERTS 5.2). Range can
be between 1 and 2^32, the function returns a hash value for
- <c>Term</c> within the range <c>0..Range-1</c>. When called
- without the <c>Range</c> argument, a value in the range
+ <c><anno>Term</anno></c> within the range <c>0..<anno>Range</anno>-1</c>. When called
+ without the <c><anno>Range</anno></c> argument, a value in the range
<c>0..2^27-1</c> is returned.</p>
<p>This BIF should always be used for hashing terms. It
distributes small integers better than <c>phash/2</c>, and
it is faster for bignums and binaries.</p>
- <p>Note that the range <c>0..Range-1</c> is different from
- the range of <c>phash/2</c> (<c>1..Range</c>).</p>
+ <p>Note that the range <c>0..<anno>Range</anno>-1</c> is different from
+ the range of <c>phash/2</c> (<c>1..<anno>Range</anno></c>).</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>pid_to_list(Pid) -> string()</name>
+ <name name="pid_to_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Text representation of a pid</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a string which corresponds to the text
- representation of <c>Pid</c>.</p>
+ representation of <c><anno>Pid</anno></c>.</p>
<warning>
<p>This BIF is intended for debugging and for use in
the Erlang operating system. It should not be used in
@@ -3297,88 +2915,81 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>port_close(Port) -> true</name>
+ <name name="port_close" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Close an open port</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Port = port() | atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Closes an open port. Roughly the same as
- <c>Port ! {self(), close}</c> except for the error behaviour
- (see below), and that the port does <em>not</em> reply with
- <c>{Port, closed}</c>. Any process may close a port with
- <c>port_close/1</c>, not only the port owner (the connected
- process).</p>
- <p>For comparison: <c>Port ! {self(), close}</c> fails with
- <c>badarg</c> if <c>Port</c> cannot be sent to (i.e.,
- <c>Port</c> refers neither to a port nor to a process). If
- <c>Port</c> is a closed port nothing happens. If <c>Port</c>
+ <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {self(), close}</c> except for the error behaviour
+ (see below), being synchronous, and that the port does
+ <em>not</em> reply with <c>{Port, closed}</c>. Any process may
+ close a port with <c>port_close/1</c>, not only the port owner
+ (the connected process).</p>
+ <p>For comparison: <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {self(), close}</c> fails with
+ <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> cannot be sent to (i.e.,
+ <c><anno>Port</anno></c> refers neither to a port nor to a process). If
+ <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is a closed port nothing happens. If <c><anno>Port</anno></c>
is an open port and the calling process is the port owner,
the port replies with <c>{Port, closed}</c> when all buffers
have been flushed and the port really closes, but if
the calling process is not the port owner the <em>port owner</em> fails with <c>badsig</c>.</p>
<p>Note that any process can close a port using
- <c>Port ! {PortOwner, close}</c> just as if it itself was
+ <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {PortOwner, close}</c> just as if it itself was
the port owner, but the reply always goes to the port owner.</p>
- <p>In short: <c>port_close(Port)</c> has a cleaner and more
- logical behaviour than <c>Port ! {self(), close}</c>.</p>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Port</c> is not an open port or
+ <p>As of OTP-R16 <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {PortOwner, close}</c> is truly
+ asynchronous. Note that this operation has always been
+ documented as an asynchronous operation, while the underlying
+ implementation has been synchronous. <c>port_close/1</c> is
+ however still fully synchronous. This due to its error
+ behavior.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not an open port or
the registered name of an open port.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>port_command(Port, Data) -> true</name>
+ <name name="port_command" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Send data to a port</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Port = port() | atom()</v>
- <v>Data = iodata()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Sends data to a port. Same as
- <c>Port ! {self(), {command, Data}}</c> except for the error
- behaviour (see below). Any process may send data to a port
- with <c>port_command/2</c>, not only the port owner
- (the connected process).</p>
- <p>For comparison: <c>Port ! {self(), {command, Data}}</c>
- fails with <c>badarg</c> if <c>Port</c> cannot be sent to
- (i.e., <c>Port</c> refers neither to a port nor to a process).
- If <c>Port</c> is a closed port the data message disappears
- without a sound. If <c>Port</c> is open and the calling
+ <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {PortOwner, {command, Data}}</c> except for the error
+ behaviour and being synchronous (see below). Any process may
+ send data to a port with <c>port_command/2</c>, not only the
+ port owner (the connected process).</p>
+ <p>For comparison: <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {PortOwner, {command, Data}}</c>
+ fails with <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> cannot be sent to
+ (i.e., <c><anno>Port</anno></c> refers neither to a port nor to a process).
+ If <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is a closed port the data message disappears
+ without a sound. If <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is open and the calling
process is not the port owner, the <em>port owner</em> fails
with <c>badsig</c>. The port owner fails with <c>badsig</c>
- also if <c>Data</c> is not a valid IO list.</p>
+ also if <c><anno>Data</anno></c> is not a valid IO list.</p>
<p>Note that any process can send to a port using
- <c>Port ! {PortOwner, {command, Data}}</c> just as if it
+ <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {PortOwner, {command, <anno>Data</anno>}}</c> just as if it
itself was the port owner.</p>
- <p>In short: <c>port_command(Port, Data)</c> has a cleaner and
- more logical behaviour than
- <c>Port ! {self(), {command, Data}}</c>.</p>
<p>If the port is busy, the calling process will be suspended
until the port is not busy anymore.</p>
+ <p>As of OTP-R16 <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {PortOwner, {command, Data}}</c> is
+ truly asynchronous. Note that this operation has always been
+ documented as an asynchronous operation, while the underlying
+ implementation has been synchronous. <c>port_command/2</c> is
+ however still fully synchronous. This due to its error
+ behavior.</p>
<p>Failures:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If <c>Port</c> is not an open port or the registered name
+ If <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not an open port or the registered name
of an open port.
</item>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If <c>Data</c> is not a valid io list.
+ If <c><anno>Data</anno></c> is not a valid io list.
</item>
</taglist>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>port_command(Port, Data, OptionList) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="port_command" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Send data to a port</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Port = port() | atom()</v>
- <v>Data = iodata()</v>
- <v>OptionList = [Option]</v>
- <v>Option = force</v>
- <v>Option = nosuspend</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Sends data to a port. <c>port_command(Port, Data, [])</c>
equals <c>port_command(Port, Data)</c>.</p>
@@ -3386,7 +2997,7 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
otherwise, <c>true</c> is returned.</p>
<p>If the port is busy, the calling process will be suspended
until the port is not busy anymore.</p>
- <p>Currently the following <c>Option</c>s are valid:</p>
+ <p>Currently the following <c><anno>Option</anno></c>s are valid:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>force</c></tag>
<item>The calling process will not be suspended if the port is
@@ -3410,16 +3021,16 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<taglist>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If <c>Port</c> is not an open port or the registered name
+ If <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not an open port or the registered name
of an open port.
</item>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If <c>Data</c> is not a valid io list.
+ If <c><anno>Data</anno></c> is not a valid io list.
</item>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If <c>OptionList</c> is not a valid option list.
+ If <c><anno>OptionList</anno></c> is not a valid option list.
</item>
<tag><c>notsup</c></tag>
<item>
@@ -3431,15 +3042,11 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>port_connect(Port, Pid) -> true</name>
+ <name name="port_connect" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Set the owner of a port</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Port = port() | atom()</v>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Sets the port owner (the connected port) to <c>Pid</c>.
- Roughly the same as <c>Port ! {self(), {connect, Pid}}</c>
+ <p>Sets the port owner (the connected port) to <c><anno>Pid</anno></c>.
+ Roughly the same as <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {Owner, {connect, <anno>Pid</anno>}}</c>
except for the following:</p>
<list type="bulleted">
<item>
@@ -3450,6 +3057,9 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<c>{Port,connected}</c>.</p>
</item>
<item>
+ <p><c>port_connect/1</c> is synchronous, see below.</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
<p>The new port owner gets linked to the port.</p>
</item>
</list>
@@ -3457,164 +3067,265 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<c>unlink(Port)</c> if this is not desired. Any process may
set the port owner to be any process with
<c>port_connect/2</c>.</p>
- <p>For comparison: <c>Port ! {self(), {connect, Pid}}</c> fails
- with <c>badarg</c> if <c>Port</c> cannot be sent to (i.e.,
- <c>Port</c> refers neither to a port nor to a process). If
- <c>Port</c> is a closed port nothing happens. If <c>Port</c>
+ <p>For comparison: <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {self(), {connect, <anno>Pid</anno>}}</c> fails
+ with <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> cannot be sent to (i.e.,
+ <c><anno>Port</anno></c> refers neither to a port nor to a process). If
+ <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is a closed port nothing happens. If <c><anno>Port</anno></c>
is an open port and the calling process is the port owner,
the port replies with <c>{Port, connected}</c> to the old
port owner. Note that the old port owner is still linked to
- the port, and that the new is not. If <c>Port</c> is an open
+ the port, and that the new is not. If <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is an open
port and the calling process is not the port owner,
the <em>port owner</em> fails with <c>badsig</c>. The port
- owner fails with <c>badsig</c> also if <c>Pid</c> is not an
+ owner fails with <c>badsig</c> also if <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> is not an
existing local pid.</p>
<p>Note that any process can set the port owner using
- <c>Port ! {PortOwner, {connect, Pid}}</c> just as if it
+ <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {PortOwner, {connect, <anno>Pid</anno>}}</c> just as if it
itself was the port owner, but the reply always goes to
the port owner.</p>
- <p>In short: <c>port_connect(Port, Pid)</c> has a cleaner and
- more logical behaviour than
- <c>Port ! {self(),{connect,Pid}}</c>.</p>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Port</c> is not an open port
+ <p>As of OTP-R16 <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {PortOwner, {connect, <anno>Pid</anno>}}</c> is
+ truly asynchronous. Note that this operation has always been
+ documented as an asynchronous operation, while the underlying
+ implementation has been synchronous. <c>port_connect/2</c> is
+ however still fully synchronous. This due to its error
+ behavior.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not an open port
or the registered name of an open port, or if <c>Pid</c> is
not an existing local pid.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>port_control(Port, Operation, Data) -> Res</name>
+ <name name="port_control" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Perform a synchronous control operation on a port</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Port = port() | atom()</v>
- <v>Operation = integer()</v>
- <v>Data = Res = iodata()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Performs a synchronous control operation on a port.
- The meaning of <c>Operation</c> and <c>Data</c> depends on
+ The meaning of <c><anno>Operation</anno></c> and <c><anno>Data</anno></c> depends on
the port, i.e., on the port driver. Not all port drivers
support this control feature.</p>
<p>Returns: a list of integers in the range 0 through 255, or a
binary, depending on the port driver. The meaning of
the returned data also depends on the port driver.</p>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Port</c> is not an open port or
- the registered name of an open port, if <c>Operation</c>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not an open port or
+ the registered name of an open port, if <c><anno>Operation</anno></c>
cannot fit in a 32-bit integer, if the port driver does not
support synchronous control operations, or if the port driver
so decides for any reason (probably something wrong with
- <c>Operation</c> or <c>Data</c>).</p>
+ <c><anno>Operation</anno></c> or <c><anno>Data</anno></c>).</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:port_call(Port, Operation, Data) -> term()</name>
+ <name name="port_call" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Synchronous call to a port with term data</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Port = port() | atom()</v>
- <v>Operation = integer()</v>
- <v>Data = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Performs a synchronous call to a port. The meaning of
- <c>Operation</c> and <c>Data</c> depends on the port, i.e.,
+ <c><anno>Operation</anno></c> and <c><anno>Data</anno></c> depends on the port, i.e.,
on the port driver. Not all port drivers support this feature.</p>
- <p><c>Port</c> is a port identifier, referring to a driver.</p>
- <p><c>Operation</c> is an integer, which is passed on to
+ <p><c><anno>Port</anno></c> is a port identifier, referring to a driver.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>Operation</anno></c> is an integer, which is passed on to
the driver.</p>
- <p><c>Data</c> is any Erlang term. This data is converted to
+ <p><c><anno>Data</anno></c> is any Erlang term. This data is converted to
binary term format and sent to the port.</p>
<p>Returns: a term from the driver. The meaning of the returned
data also depends on the port driver.</p>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Port</c> is not an open port or
- the registered name of an open port, if <c>Operation</c>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not an open port or
+ the registered name of an open port, if <c><anno>Operation</anno></c>
cannot fit in a 32-bit integer, if the port driver does not
support synchronous control operations, or if the port driver
so decides for any reason (probably something wrong with
- <c>Operation</c> or <c>Data</c>).</p>
+ <c><anno>Operation</anno></c> or <c><anno>Data</anno></c>).</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:port_info(Port) -> [{Item, Info}] | undefined</name>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Information about a port</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Port = port() | atom()</v>
- <v>Item, Info -- see below</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a list containing tuples with information about
- the <c>Port</c>, or <c>undefined</c> if the port is not open.
+ the <c><anno>Port</anno></c>, or <c>undefined</c> if the port is not open.
The order of the tuples is not defined, nor are all the
tuples mandatory.</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c>{registered_name, RegName}</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>RegName</c> (an atom) is the registered name of
- the port. If the port has no registered name, this tuple
- is not present in the list.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>{id, Index}</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>Index</c> (an integer) is the internal index of the
- port. This index may be used to separate ports.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>{connected, Pid}</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>Pid</c> is the process connected to the port.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>{links, Pids}</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>Pids</c> is a list of pids to which processes the
- port is linked.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>{name, String}</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>String</c> is the command name set by
- <c>open_port</c>.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>{input, Bytes}</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>Bytes</c> is the total number of bytes read from
- the port.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>{output, Bytes}</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>Bytes</c> is the total number of bytes written to
- the port.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>{os_pid, Integer | undefined}</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>Integer</c> is the process identifier (or equivalent) of an OS process created with <c>open_port({spawn | spawn_executable, Command}, Options)</c>. If the port is not the result of spawning an OS process, the value is <c>undefined</c>.</p>
- </item>
- </taglist>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Port</c> is not a local port.</p>
+ <p>Currently the result will containt information about the
+ following <c>Item</c>s: <c>registered_name</c> (if the port has
+ a registered name), <c>id</c>, <c>connected</c>, <c>links</c>,
+ <c>name</c>, <c>input</c>, and <c>output</c>. For more information
+ about the different <c>Item</c>s, see
+ <seealso marker="#port_info/2">port_info/2</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Port</c> is not a local port
+ identifier, or an atom.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:port_info(Port, Item) -> {Item, Info} | undefined | []</name>
- <fsummary>Information about a port</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Port = port() | atom()</v>
- <v>Item, Info -- see below</v>
- </type>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="1"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the connected process of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Pid</anno></c> is the process identifier of the process
+ connected to the port.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="2"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the internal index of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Index</anno></c> is the internal index of the port. This
+ index may be used to separate ports.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="3"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the input of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Bytes</anno></c> is the total number of bytes
+ read from the port.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="4"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the links of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Pids</anno></c> is a list of the process identifiers
+ of the processes that the port is linked to.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="5"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the locking of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Locking</anno></c> is currently either <c>false</c>
+ (emulator without SMP support), <c>port_level</c> (port specific
+ locking), or <c>driver_level</c> (driver specific locking). Note
+ that these results are highly implementation specific and might
+ change in the future.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="6"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the memory size of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Bytes</anno></c> is the total amount of memory,
+ in bytes, allocated for this port by the runtime system. Note
+ that the port itself might have allocated memory which is not
+ included in <c><anno>Bytes</anno></c>.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="7"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the monitors of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Monitors</anno></c> represent processes that this port
+ is monitoring.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="8"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the name of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Name</anno></c> is the command name set by
+ <seealso marker="#open_port/2">open_port/2</seealso>.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="9"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the OS pid of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>OsPid</anno></c> is the process identifier (or equivalent)
+ of an OS process created with
+ <seealso marker="#open_port/2">open_port({spawn | spawn_executable,
+ Command}, Options)</seealso>. If the port is not the result of spawning
+ an OS process, the value is <c>undefined</c>.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="10"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the output of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Bytes</anno></c> is the total number of bytes written
+ to the port from Erlang processes using either
+ <seealso marker="#port_command/2">port_command/2</seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="#port_command/3">port_command/3</seealso>,
+ or <c><anno>Port</anno> ! {Owner, {command, Data}</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="11"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the parallelism hint of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Boolean</anno></c> corresponds to the port parallelism
+ hint being used by this port. For more information see
+ the <seealso marker="#open_port_parallelism">parallelism</seealso>
+ option of <seealso marker="#open_port/2">open_port/2</seealso>.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="12"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the queue size of a port</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Bytes</anno></c> is the total amount of data,
+ in bytes, queued by the port using the ERTS driver queue
+ implementation.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="port_info" arity="2" clause_i="13"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the registered name of a port</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>Returns information about <c>Port</c> as specified
- by <c>Item</c>, or <c>undefined</c> if the port is not open.
- Also, if <c>Item == registered_name</c> and the port has no
- registered name, [] is returned.</p>
- <p>For valid values of <c>Item</c>, and corresponding
- values of <c>Info</c>, see
- <seealso marker="#port_info/1">erlang:port_info/1</seealso>.</p>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Port</c> is not a local port.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>RegisteredName</anno></c> is the registered name of
+ the port. If the port has no registered name, <c>[]</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>If the port identified by <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not open,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Port</anno></c> is not a local
+ port identifier, or an atom.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:port_to_list(Port) -> string()</name>
+ <name name="port_to_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Text representation of a port identifier</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Port = port()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a string which corresponds to the text
- representation of the port identifier <c>Port</c>.</p>
+ representation of the port identifier <c><anno>Port</anno></c>.</p>
<warning>
<p>This BIF is intended for debugging and for use in
the Erlang operating system. It should not be used in
@@ -3623,18 +3334,18 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:ports() -> [port()]</name>
+ <name name="ports" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>All open ports</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>Returns a list of all ports on the local node.</p>
+ <p>Returns a list of port identifiers corresponding to all the
+ ports currently existing on the local node.</p>
+
+ <p>Note that a port that is exiting, exists but is not open.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>pre_loaded() -> [Module]</name>
+ <name name="pre_loaded" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>List of all pre-loaded modules</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a list of Erlang modules which are pre-loaded in
the system. As all loading of code is done through the file
@@ -3643,220 +3354,222 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:process_display(Pid, Type) -> void()</name>
+ <name name="process_display" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Write information about a local process on standard error</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- <v>Type = backtrace</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Writes information about the local process <c>Pid</c> on
+ <p>Writes information about the local process <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> on
standard error. The currently allowed value for the atom
- <c>Type</c> is <c>backtrace</c>, which shows the contents of
+ <c><anno>Type</anno></c> is <c>backtrace</c>, which shows the contents of
the call stack, including information about the call chain, with
the current function printed first. The format of the output
is not further defined.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>process_flag(Flag, Value) -> OldValue</name>
- <fsummary>Set process flags for the calling process</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Flag, Value, OldValue -- see below</v>
- </type>
+ <name name="process_flag" arity="2" clause_i="1"/>
+ <fsummary>Set process flag trap_exit for the calling process</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>Sets certain flags for the process which calls this
- function. Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c>process_flag(trap_exit, Boolean)</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>When <c>trap_exit</c> is set to <c>true</c>, exit signals
- arriving to a process are converted to <c>{'EXIT', From, Reason}</c> messages, which can be received as ordinary
- messages. If <c>trap_exit</c> is set to <c>false</c>, the
- process exits if it receives an exit signal other than
- <c>normal</c> and the exit signal is propagated to its
- linked processes. Application processes should normally
- not trap exits.</p>
- <p>See also <seealso marker="#exit/2">exit/2</seealso>.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>process_flag(error_handler, Module)</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>This is used by a process to redefine the error handler
- for undefined function calls and undefined registered
- processes. Inexperienced users should not use this flag
- since code auto-loading is dependent on the correct
- operation of the error handling module.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>process_flag(min_heap_size, MinHeapSize)</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>This changes the minimum heap size for the calling
- process.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>process_flag(min_bin_vheap_size, MinBinVHeapSize)</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>This changes the minimum binary virtual heap size for the calling
- process.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="process_flag_priority"><c>process_flag(priority, Level)</c></marker></tag>
- <item>
- <p>This sets the process priority. <c>Level</c> is an atom.
- There are currently four priority levels: <c>low</c>,
- <c>normal</c>, <c>high</c>, and <c>max</c>. The default
- priority level is <c>normal</c>. <em>NOTE</em>: The
- <c>max</c> priority level is reserved for internal use in
- the Erlang runtime system, and should <em>not</em> be used
- by others.
- </p>
- <p>Internally in each priority level processes are scheduled
- in a round robin fashion.
- </p>
- <p>Execution of processes on priority <c>normal</c> and
- priority <c>low</c> will be interleaved. Processes on
- priority <c>low</c> will be selected for execution less
- frequently than processes on priority <c>normal</c>.
- </p>
- <p>When there are runnable processes on priority <c>high</c>
- no processes on priority <c>low</c>, or <c>normal</c> will
- be selected for execution. Note, however, that this does
- <em>not</em> mean that no processes on priority <c>low</c>,
- or <c>normal</c> will be able to run when there are
- processes on priority <c>high</c> running. On the runtime
- system with SMP support there might be more processes running
- in parallel than processes on priority <c>high</c>, i.e.,
- a <c>low</c>, and a <c>high</c> priority process might
- execute at the same time.
- </p>
- <p>When there are runnable processes on priority <c>max</c>
- no processes on priority <c>low</c>, <c>normal</c>, or
- <c>high</c> will be selected for execution. As with the
- <c>high</c> priority, processes on lower priorities might
- execute in parallel with processes on priority <c>max</c>.
- </p>
- <p>Scheduling is preemptive. Regardless of priority, a process
- is preempted when it has consumed more than a certain amount
- of reductions since the last time it was selected for
- execution.
- </p>
- <p><em>NOTE</em>: You should not depend on the scheduling
- to remain exactly as it is today. Scheduling, at least on
- the runtime system with SMP support, is very likely to be
- modified in the future in order to better utilize available
- processor cores.
- </p>
- <p>There is currently <em>no</em> automatic mechanism for
- avoiding priority inversion, such as priority inheritance,
- or priority ceilings. When using priorities you have
- to take this into account and handle such scenarios by
- yourself.
- </p>
- <p>Making calls from a <c>high</c> priority process into code
- that you don't have control over may cause the <c>high</c>
- priority process to wait for a processes with lower
- priority, i.e., effectively decreasing the priority of the
- <c>high</c> priority process during the call. Even if this
- isn't the case with one version of the code that you don't
- have under your control, it might be the case in a future
- version of it. This might, for example, happen if a
- <c>high</c> priority process triggers code loading, since
- the code server runs on priority <c>normal</c>.
- </p>
- <p>Other priorities than <c>normal</c> are normally not needed.
- When other priorities are used, they need to be used
- with care, especially the <c>high</c> priority <em>must</em>
- be used with care. A process on <c>high</c> priority should
- only perform work for short periods of time. Busy looping for
- long periods of time in a <c>high</c> priority process will
- most likely cause problems, since there are important servers
- in OTP running on priority <c>normal</c>.
- </p>
- </item>
-
- <tag><c>process_flag(save_calls, N)</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>N</c> must be an integer in the interval 0..10000.
- If <c>N</c> &gt; 0, call saving is made active for the
- process, which means that information about the <c>N</c>
- most recent global function calls, BIF calls, sends and
- receives made by the process are saved in a list, which
- can be retrieved with
- <c>process_info(Pid, last_calls)</c>. A global function
- call is one in which the module of the function is
- explicitly mentioned. Only a fixed amount of information
- is saved: a tuple <c>{Module, Function, Arity}</c> for
- function calls, and the mere atoms <c>send</c>,
- <c>'receive'</c> and <c>timeout</c> for sends and receives
- (<c>'receive'</c> when a message is received and
- <c>timeout</c> when a receive times out). If <c>N</c> = 0,
- call saving is disabled for the process, which is the
- default. Whenever the size of the call saving list is set,
- its contents are reset.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>process_flag(sensitive, Boolean)</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Set or clear the <c>sensitive</c> flag for the current process.
- When a process has been marked as sensitive by calling
- <c>process_flag(sensitive, true)</c>, features in the run-time
- system that can be used for examining the data and/or inner working
- of the process are silently disabled.</p>
- <p>Features that are disabled include (but are not limited to)
- the following:</p>
- <p>Tracing: Trace flags can still be set for the process, but no
- trace messages of any kind will be generated.
- (If the <c>sensitive</c> flag is turned off, trace messages will
- again be generated if there are any trace flags set.)</p>
- <p>Sequential tracing: The sequential trace token will be propagated
- as usual, but no sequential trace messages will be generated.</p>
- <p><c>process_info/1,2</c> cannot be used to read out the message
- queue or the process dictionary (both will be returned as empty lists).</p>
- <p>Stack back-traces cannot be displayed for the process.</p>
- <p>In crash dumps, the stack, messages, and the process dictionary
- will be omitted.</p>
- <p>If <c>{save_calls,N}</c> has been set for the process, no
- function calls will be saved to the call saving list.
- (The call saving list will not be cleared; furthermore, send, receive,
- and timeout events will still be added to the list.)</p>
- </item>
- </taglist>
+ <p>When <c>trap_exit</c> is set to <c>true</c>, exit signals
+ arriving to a process are converted to <c>{'EXIT', From, Reason}</c> messages, which can be received as ordinary
+ messages. If <c>trap_exit</c> is set to <c>false</c>, the
+ process exits if it receives an exit signal other than
+ <c>normal</c> and the exit signal is propagated to its
+ linked processes. Application processes should normally
+ not trap exits.</p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ <p>See also <seealso marker="#exit/2">exit/2</seealso>.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="process_flag" arity="2" clause_i="2"/>
+ <fsummary>Set process flag error_handler for the calling process</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>This is used by a process to redefine the error handler
+ for undefined function calls and undefined registered
+ processes. Inexperienced users should not use this flag
+ since code auto-loading is dependent on the correct
+ operation of the error handling module.</p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="process_flag" arity="2" clause_i="3"/>
+ <fsummary>Set process flag min_heap_size for the calling process</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>This changes the minimum heap size for the calling
+ process.</p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>process_flag(Pid, Flag, Value) -> OldValue</name>
+ <name name="process_flag" arity="2" clause_i="4"/>
+ <fsummary>Set process flag min_bin_vheap_size for the calling process</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>This changes the minimum binary virtual heap size for the calling
+ process.</p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p> </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="process_flag" arity="2" clause_i="5"/>
+ <type name="priority_level"/>
+ <fsummary>Set process flag priority for the calling process</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><marker id="process_flag_priority"></marker>
+ This sets the process priority. <c><anno>Level</anno></c> is an atom.
+ There are currently four priority levels: <c>low</c>,
+ <c>normal</c>, <c>high</c>, and <c>max</c>. The default
+ priority level is <c>normal</c>. <em>NOTE</em>: The
+ <c>max</c> priority level is reserved for internal use in
+ the Erlang runtime system, and should <em>not</em> be used
+ by others.
+ </p>
+ <p>Internally in each priority level processes are scheduled
+ in a round robin fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>Execution of processes on priority <c>normal</c> and
+ priority <c>low</c> will be interleaved. Processes on
+ priority <c>low</c> will be selected for execution less
+ frequently than processes on priority <c>normal</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>When there are runnable processes on priority <c>high</c>
+ no processes on priority <c>low</c>, or <c>normal</c> will
+ be selected for execution. Note, however, that this does
+ <em>not</em> mean that no processes on priority <c>low</c>,
+ or <c>normal</c> will be able to run when there are
+ processes on priority <c>high</c> running. On the runtime
+ system with SMP support there might be more processes running
+ in parallel than processes on priority <c>high</c>, i.e.,
+ a <c>low</c>, and a <c>high</c> priority process might
+ execute at the same time.
+ </p>
+ <p>When there are runnable processes on priority <c>max</c>
+ no processes on priority <c>low</c>, <c>normal</c>, or
+ <c>high</c> will be selected for execution. As with the
+ <c>high</c> priority, processes on lower priorities might
+ execute in parallel with processes on priority <c>max</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>Scheduling is preemptive. Regardless of priority, a process
+ is preempted when it has consumed more than a certain amount
+ of reductions since the last time it was selected for
+ execution.
+ </p>
+ <p><em>NOTE</em>: You should not depend on the scheduling
+ to remain exactly as it is today. Scheduling, at least on
+ the runtime system with SMP support, is very likely to be
+ modified in the future in order to better utilize available
+ processor cores.
+ </p>
+ <p>There is currently <em>no</em> automatic mechanism for
+ avoiding priority inversion, such as priority inheritance,
+ or priority ceilings. When using priorities you have
+ to take this into account and handle such scenarios by
+ yourself.
+ </p>
+ <p>Making calls from a <c>high</c> priority process into code
+ that you don't have control over may cause the <c>high</c>
+ priority process to wait for a processes with lower
+ priority, i.e., effectively decreasing the priority of the
+ <c>high</c> priority process during the call. Even if this
+ isn't the case with one version of the code that you don't
+ have under your control, it might be the case in a future
+ version of it. This might, for example, happen if a
+ <c>high</c> priority process triggers code loading, since
+ the code server runs on priority <c>normal</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>Other priorities than <c>normal</c> are normally not needed.
+ When other priorities are used, they need to be used
+ with care, especially the <c>high</c> priority <em>must</em>
+ be used with care. A process on <c>high</c> priority should
+ only perform work for short periods of time. Busy looping for
+ long periods of time in a <c>high</c> priority process will
+ most likely cause problems, since there are important servers
+ in OTP running on priority <c>normal</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="process_flag" arity="2" clause_i="6"/>
+ <fsummary>Set process flag save_calls for the calling process</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>N</anno></c> must be an integer in the interval 0..10000.
+ If <c><anno>N</anno></c> &gt; 0, call saving is made active for the
+ process, which means that information about the <c><anno>N</anno></c>
+ most recent global function calls, BIF calls, sends and
+ receives made by the process are saved in a list, which
+ can be retrieved with
+ <c>process_info(Pid, last_calls)</c>. A global function
+ call is one in which the module of the function is
+ explicitly mentioned. Only a fixed amount of information
+ is saved: a tuple <c>{Module, Function, Arity}</c> for
+ function calls, and the mere atoms <c>send</c>,
+ <c>'receive'</c> and <c>timeout</c> for sends and receives
+ (<c>'receive'</c> when a message is received and
+ <c>timeout</c> when a receive times out). If <c>N</c> = 0,
+ call saving is disabled for the process, which is the
+ default. Whenever the size of the call saving list is set,
+ its contents are reset.</p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="process_flag" arity="2" clause_i="7"/>
+ <fsummary>Set process flag sensitive for the calling process</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Set or clear the <c>sensitive</c> flag for the current process.
+ When a process has been marked as sensitive by calling
+ <c>process_flag(sensitive, true)</c>, features in the run-time
+ system that can be used for examining the data and/or inner working
+ of the process are silently disabled.</p>
+ <p>Features that are disabled include (but are not limited to)
+ the following:</p>
+ <p>Tracing: Trace flags can still be set for the process, but no
+ trace messages of any kind will be generated.
+ (If the <c>sensitive</c> flag is turned off, trace messages will
+ again be generated if there are any trace flags set.)</p>
+ <p>Sequential tracing: The sequential trace token will be propagated
+ as usual, but no sequential trace messages will be generated.</p>
+ <p><c>process_info/1,2</c> cannot be used to read out the message
+ queue or the process dictionary (both will be returned as empty lists).</p>
+ <p>Stack back-traces cannot be displayed for the process.</p>
+ <p>In crash dumps, the stack, messages, and the process dictionary
+ will be omitted.</p>
+ <p>If <c>{save_calls,N}</c> has been set for the process, no
+ function calls will be saved to the call saving list.
+ (The call saving list will not be cleared; furthermore, send, receive,
+ and timeout events will still be added to the list.)</p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="process_flag" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Set process flags for a process</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- <v>Flag, Value, OldValue -- see below</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Sets certain flags for the process <c>Pid</c>, in the same
+ <p>Sets certain flags for the process <c><anno>Pid</anno></c>, in the same
manner as
<seealso marker="#process_flag/2">process_flag/2</seealso>.
Returns the old value of the flag. The allowed values for
- <c>Flag</c> are only a subset of those allowed in
+ <c><anno>Flag</anno></c> are only a subset of those allowed in
<c>process_flag/2</c>, namely: <c>save_calls</c>.</p>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Pid</c> is not a local process.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> is not a local process.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>process_info(Pid) -> InfoResult</name>
+ <name name="process_info" arity="1"/>
+ <type name="process_info_result_item"/>
+ <type name="priority_level"/>
+ <type name="stack_item"/>
<fsummary>Information about a process</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- <v>Item = atom()</v>
- <v>Info = term()</v>
- <v>InfoTuple = {Item, Info}</v>
- <v>InfoTupleList = [InfoTuple]</v>
- <v>InfoResult = InfoTupleList | undefined</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns a list containing <c>InfoTuple</c>s with
+ <desc>
+ <p>Returns a list containing <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c>s with
miscellaneous information about the process identified by
<c>Pid</c>, or <c>undefined</c> if the process is not alive.
</p>
<p>
- The order of the <c>InfoTuple</c>s is not defined, nor
- are all the <c>InfoTuple</c>s mandatory. The <c>InfoTuple</c>s
+ The order of the <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c>s is not defined, nor
+ are all the <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c>s mandatory. The <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c>s
part of the result may be changed without prior notice.
- Currently <c>InfoTuple</c>s with the following <c>Item</c>s
+ Currently <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c>s with the following items
are part of the result:
<c>current_function</c>, <c>initial_call</c>, <c>status</c>,
<c>message_queue_len</c>, <c>messages</c>, <c>links</c>,
@@ -3864,12 +3577,12 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
<c>priority</c>, <c>group_leader</c>, <c>total_heap_size</c>,
<c>heap_size</c>, <c>stack_size</c>, <c>reductions</c>, and
<c>garbage_collection</c>.
- If the process identified by <c>Pid</c> has a registered name
- also an <c>InfoTuple</c> with <c>Item == registered_name</c>
+ If the process identified by <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> has a registered name
+ also an <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c> with the item <c>registered_name</c>
will appear.
</p>
<p>See <seealso marker="#process_info/2">process_info/2</seealso>
- for information about specific <c>InfoTuple</c>s.</p>
+ for information about specific <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c>s.</p>
<warning>
<p>This BIF is intended for <em>debugging only</em>, use
<seealso marker="#process_info/2">process_info/2</seealso>
@@ -3880,113 +3593,108 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>process_info(Pid, ItemSpec) -> InfoResult</name>
+ <name name="process_info" arity="2" clause_i="1"/>
+ <name name="process_info" arity="2" clause_i="2"/>
+ <type name="process_info_item"/>
+ <type name="process_info_result_item"/>
+ <type name="stack_item"/>
+ <type name="priority_level"/>
<fsummary>Information about a process</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- <v>Item = atom()</v>
- <v>Info = term()</v>
- <v>ItemList = [Item]</v>
- <v>ItemSpec = Item | ItemList</v>
- <v>InfoTuple = {Item, Info}</v>
- <v>InfoTupleList = [InfoTuple]</v>
- <v>InfoResult = InfoTuple | InfoTupleList | undefined | []</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns information about the process identified by <c>Pid</c>
- as specified by the <c>ItemSpec</c>, or <c>undefined</c> if the
+ <desc>
+ <p>Returns information about the process identified by <c><anno>Pid</anno></c>
+ as specified by the <c><anno>Item</anno></c> or the <c><anno>ItemList</anno></c>, or <c>undefined</c> if the
process is not alive.
</p>
- <p>If the process is alive and <c>ItemSpec</c> is a single
- <c>Item</c>, the returned value is the corresponding
- <c>InfoTuple</c> unless <c>ItemSpec == registered_name</c>
+ <p>If the process is alive and a single <c><anno>Item</anno></c> is given,
+ the returned value is the corresponding
+ <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c> unless <c>Item =:= registered_name</c>
and the process has no registered name. In this case
<c>[]</c> is returned. This strange behavior is due to
historical reasons, and is kept for backward compatibility.
</p>
- <p>If <c>ItemSpec</c> is an <c>ItemList</c>, the result is an
- <c>InfoTupleList</c>. The <c>InfoTuple</c>s in the
- <c>InfoTupleList</c> will appear with the corresponding
- <c>Item</c>s in the same order as the <c>Item</c>s appeared
- in the <c>ItemList</c>. Valid <c>Item</c>s may appear multiple
- times in the <c>ItemList</c>.
+ <p>If an <c>ItemList</c> is given, the result is an
+ <c><anno>InfoTupleList</anno></c>. The <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c>s in the
+ <c><anno>InfoTupleList</anno></c> will appear with the corresponding
+ <c><anno>Item</anno></c>s in the same order as the <c><anno>Item</anno></c>s appeared
+ in the <c><anno>ItemList</anno></c>. Valid <c><anno>Item</anno></c>s may appear multiple
+ times in the <c><anno>ItemList</anno></c>.
</p>
- <note><p>If <c>registered_name</c> is part of an <c>ItemList</c>
+ <note><p>If <c>registered_name</c> is part of an <c><anno>ItemList</anno></c>
and the process has no name registered a
- <c>{registered_name, []}</c> <c>InfoTuple</c> <em>will</em>
- appear in the resulting <c>InfoTupleList</c>. This
- behavior is different than when
- <c>ItemSpec == registered_name</c>, and than when
+ <c>{registered_name, []}</c> <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c> <em>will</em>
+ appear in the resulting <c><anno>InfoTupleList</anno></c>. This
+ behavior is different than when a single
+ <c>Item =:= registered_name</c> is given, and than when
<c>process_info/1</c> is used.
</p></note>
- <p>Currently the following <c>InfoTuple</c>s with corresponding
- <c>Item</c>s are valid:</p>
+ <p>Currently the following <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c>s with corresponding
+ <c><anno>Item</anno></c>s are valid:</p>
<taglist>
- <tag><c>{backtrace, Bin}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{backtrace, <anno>Bin</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>The binary <c>Bin</c> contains the same information as
+ <p>The binary <c><anno>Bin</anno></c> contains the same information as
the output from
- <c>erlang:process_display(Pid, backtrace)</c>. Use
+ <c>erlang:process_display(<anno>Pid</anno>, backtrace)</c>. Use
<c>binary_to_list/1</c> to obtain the string of characters
from the binary.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{binary, BinInfo}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{binary, <anno>BinInfo</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>BinInfo</c> is a list containing miscellaneous information
+ <p><c><anno>BinInfo</anno></c> is a list containing miscellaneous information
about binaries currently being referred to by this process.
- This <c>InfoTuple</c> may be changed or removed without prior
+ This <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c> may be changed or removed without prior
notice.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{catchlevel, CatchLevel}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{catchlevel, <anno>CatchLevel</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>CatchLevel</c> is the number of currently active
- catches in this process. This <c>InfoTuple</c> may be
+ <p><c><anno>CatchLevel</anno></c> is the number of currently active
+ catches in this process. This <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c> may be
changed or removed without prior notice.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{current_function, {Module, Function, Arity}}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{current_function, {<anno>Module</anno>, <anno>Function</anno>, <anno>Arity</anno>}}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Module</c>, <c>Function</c>, <c>Arity</c> is
+ <p><c><anno>Module</anno></c>, <c><anno>Function</anno></c>, <c><anno>Arity</anno></c> is
the current function call of the process.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{current_location, {Module, Function, Arity, Location}}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{current_location, {<anno>Module</anno>, <anno>Function</anno>, <anno>Arity</anno>, <anno>Location</anno>}}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Module</c>, <c>Function</c>, <c>Arity</c> is
+ <p><c><anno>Module</anno></c>, <c><anno>Function</anno></c>, <c><anno>Arity</anno></c> is
the current function call of the process.
- <c>Location</c> is a list of two-tuples that describes the
+ <c><anno>Location</anno></c> is a list of two-tuples that describes the
location in the source code.
</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{current_stacktrace, Stack}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{current_stacktrace, <anno>Stack</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
<p>Return the current call stack back-trace (<em>stacktrace</em>)
of the process. The stack has the same format as returned by
<seealso marker="#get_stacktrace/0">erlang:get_stacktrace/0</seealso>.
</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{dictionary, Dictionary}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{dictionary, <anno>Dictionary</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Dictionary</c> is the dictionary of the process.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>Dictionary</anno></c> is the dictionary of the process.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{error_handler, Module}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{error_handler, <anno>Module</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Module</c> is the error handler module used by
+ <p><c><anno>Module</anno></c> is the error handler module used by
the process (for undefined function calls, for example).</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{garbage_collection, GCInfo}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{garbage_collection, <anno>GCInfo</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>GCInfo</c> is a list which contains miscellaneous
+ <p><c><anno>GCInfo</anno></c> is a list which contains miscellaneous
information about garbage collection for this process.
- The content of <c>GCInfo</c> may be changed without
+ The content of <c><anno>GCInfo</anno></c> may be changed without
prior notice.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{group_leader, GroupLeader}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{group_leader, <anno>GroupLeader</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>GroupLeader</c> is group leader for the IO of
+ <p><c><anno>GroupLeader</anno></c> is group leader for the IO of
the process.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{heap_size, Size}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{heap_size, <anno>Size</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Size</c> is the size in words of youngest heap generation
+ <p><c><anno>Size</anno></c> is the size in words of youngest heap generation
of the process. This generation currently include the stack
of the process. This information is highly implementation
dependent, and may change if the implementation change.
@@ -3998,10 +3706,11 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
the initial function call with which the process was
spawned.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{links, Pids}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{links, <anno>PidsAndPorts</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Pids</c> is a list of pids, with processes to
- which the process has a link.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>PidsAndPorts</anno></c> is a list of pids and
+ port identifiers, with processes or ports to which the process
+ has a link.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>{last_calls, false|Calls}</c></tag>
<item>
@@ -4011,131 +3720,131 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
If call saving is active, a list is returned, in which
the last element is the most recent called.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{memory, Size}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{memory, <anno>Size</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Size</c> is the size in bytes of the process. This
+ <p><c><anno>Size</anno></c> is the size in bytes of the process. This
includes call stack, heap and internal structures.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{message_queue_len, MessageQueueLen}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{message_queue_len, <anno>MessageQueueLen</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>MessageQueueLen</c> is the number of messages
+ <p><c><anno>MessageQueueLen</anno></c> is the number of messages
currently in the message queue of the process. This is
- the length of the list <c>MessageQueue</c> returned as
+ the length of the list <c><anno>MessageQueue</anno></c> returned as
the info item <c>messages</c> (see below).</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{messages, MessageQueue}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{messages, <anno>MessageQueue</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>MessageQueue</c> is a list of the messages to
+ <p><c><anno>MessageQueue</anno></c> is a list of the messages to
the process, which have not yet been processed.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{min_heap_size, MinHeapSize}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{min_heap_size, <anno>MinHeapSize</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>MinHeapSize</c> is the minimum heap size for the process.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>MinHeapSize</anno></c> is the minimum heap size for the process.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{min_bin_vheap_size, MinBinVHeapSize}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{min_bin_vheap_size, <anno>MinBinVHeapSize</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>MinBinVHeapSize</c> is the minimum binary virtual heap size for the process.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>MinBinVHeapSize</anno></c> is the minimum binary virtual heap size for the process.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{monitored_by, Pids}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{monitored_by, <anno>Pids</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
<p>A list of pids that are monitoring the process (with
<c>monitor/2</c>).</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{monitors, Monitors}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{monitors, <anno>Monitors</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
<p>A list of monitors (started by <c>monitor/2</c>)
that are active for the process. For a local process
monitor or a remote process monitor by pid, the list item
- is <c>{process, Pid}</c>, and for a remote process
+ is <c>{process, <anno>Pid</anno>}</c>, and for a remote process
monitor by name, the list item is
- <c>{process, {RegName, Node}}</c>.</p>
+ <c>{process, {<anno>RegName</anno>, <anno>Node</anno>}}</c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>{priority, Level}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Level</c> is the current priority level for
+ <p><c><anno>Level</anno></c> is the current priority level for
the process. For more information on priorities see
<seealso marker="#process_flag_priority">process_flag(priority, Level)</seealso>.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{reductions, Number}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{reductions, <anno>Number</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Number</c> is the number of reductions executed by
+ <p><c><anno>Number</anno></c> is the number of reductions executed by
the process.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{registered_name, Atom}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{registered_name, <anno>Atom</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Atom</c> is the registered name of the process. If
+ <p><c><anno>Atom</anno></c> is the registered name of the process. If
the process has no registered name, this tuple is not
present in the list.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{sequential_trace_token, [] | SequentialTraceToken}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{sequential_trace_token, [] | <anno>SequentialTraceToken</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>SequentialTraceToken</c> the sequential trace token for
- the process. This <c>InfoTuple</c> may be changed or removed
+ <p><c><anno>SequentialTraceToken</anno></c> the sequential trace token for
+ the process. This <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c> may be changed or removed
without prior notice.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{stack_size, Size}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{stack_size, <anno>Size</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Size</c> is the stack size of the process in words.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>Size</anno></c> is the stack size of the process in words.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{status, Status}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{status, <anno>Status</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Status</c> is the status of the process. <c>Status</c>
+ <p><c><anno>Status</anno></c> is the status of the process. <c><anno>Status</anno></c>
is <c>exiting</c>, <c>garbage_collecting</c>,
<c>waiting</c> (for a message), <c>running</c>,
<c>runnable</c> (ready to run, but another process is
running), or <c>suspended</c> (suspended on a "busy" port
or by the <c>erlang:suspend_process/[1,2]</c> BIF).</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{suspending, SuspendeeList}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{suspending, <anno>SuspendeeList</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>SuspendeeList</c> is a list of <c>{Suspendee,
- ActiveSuspendCount, OutstandingSuspendCount}</c> tuples.
- <c>Suspendee</c> is the pid of a process that have been or is to
- be suspended by the process identified by <c>Pid</c> via the
+ <p><c><anno>SuspendeeList</anno></c> is a list of <c>{<anno>Suspendee</anno>,
+ <anno>ActiveSuspendCount</anno>, <anno>OutstandingSuspendCount</anno>}</c> tuples.
+ <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> is the pid of a process that have been or is to
+ be suspended by the process identified by <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> via the
<seealso marker="#suspend_process/2">erlang:suspend_process/2</seealso>
BIF, or the
<seealso marker="#suspend_process/1">erlang:suspend_process/1</seealso>
- BIF. <c>ActiveSuspendCount</c> is the number of times the
- <c>Suspendee</c> has been suspended by <c>Pid</c>.
- <c>OutstandingSuspendCount</c> is the number of not yet
- completed suspend requests sent by <c>Pid</c>. That is,
- if <c>ActiveSuspendCount /= 0</c>, <c>Suspendee</c> is
+ BIF. <c><anno>ActiveSuspendCount</anno></c> is the number of times the
+ <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> has been suspended by <c><anno>Pid</anno></c>.
+ <c><anno>OutstandingSuspendCount</anno></c> is the number of not yet
+ completed suspend requests sent by <c><anno>Pid</anno></c>. That is,
+ if <c><anno>ActiveSuspendCount</anno> =/= 0</c>, <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> is
currently in the suspended state, and if
- <c>OutstandingSuspendCount /= 0</c> the <c>asynchronous</c>
+ <c><anno>OutstandingSuspendCount</anno> =/= 0</c> the <c>asynchronous</c>
option of <c>erlang:suspend_process/2</c> has been used and
- the suspendee has not yet been suspended by <c>Pid</c>.
- Note that the <c>ActiveSuspendCount</c> and
- <c>OutstandingSuspendCount</c> are not the total suspend count
- on <c>Suspendee</c>, only the parts contributed by <c>Pid</c>.
+ the suspendee has not yet been suspended by <c><anno>Pid</anno></c>.
+ Note that the <c><anno>ActiveSuspendCount</anno></c> and
+ <c><anno>OutstandingSuspendCount</anno></c> are not the total suspend count
+ on <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c>, only the parts contributed by <c>Pid</c>.
</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{total_heap_size, Size}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{total_heap_size, <anno>Size</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Size</c> is the total size in words of all heap
+ <p><c><anno>Size</anno></c> is the total size in words of all heap
fragments of the process. This currently include the stack
of the process.
</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{trace, InternalTraceFlags}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{trace, <anno>InternalTraceFlags</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>InternalTraceFlags</c> is an integer representing
- internal trace flag for this process. This <c>InfoTuple</c>
+ <p><c><anno>InternalTraceFlags</anno></c> is an integer representing
+ internal trace flag for this process. This <c><anno>InfoTuple</anno></c>
may be changed or removed without prior notice.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>{trap_exit, Boolean}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>{trap_exit, <anno>Boolean</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p><c>Boolean</c> is <c>true</c> if the process is trapping
+ <p><c><anno>Boolean</anno></c> is <c>true</c> if the process is trapping
exits, otherwise it is <c>false</c>.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
<p>Note however, that not all implementations support every one
- of the above <c>Items</c>.</p>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Pid</c> is not a local process,
- or if <c>Item</c> is not a valid <c>Item</c>.</p>
+ of the above <c><anno>Item</anno></c>s.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> is not a local process,
+ or if <c><anno>Item</anno></c> is not a valid <c><anno>Item</anno></c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>processes() -> [pid()]</name>
+ <name name="processes" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>All processes</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>Returns a list of process identifiers corresponding to
@@ -4152,13 +3861,10 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>purge_module(Module) -> void()</name>
+ <name name="purge_module" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Remove old code for a module</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Removes old code for <c>Module</c>. Before this BIF is used,
+ <p>Removes old code for <c><anno>Module</anno></c>. Before this BIF is used,
<c>erlang:check_process_code/2</c> should be called to check
that no processes are executing old code in the module.</p>
<warning>
@@ -4167,20 +3873,17 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
used elsewhere.</p>
</warning>
<p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if there is no old code for
- <c>Module</c>.</p>
+ <c><anno>Module</anno></c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>put(Key, Val) -> OldVal | undefined</name>
+ <name name="put" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Add a new value to the process dictionary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Key = Val = OldVal = term()</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Adds a new <c>Key</c> to the process dictionary, associated
- with the value <c>Val</c>, and returns <c>undefined</c>. If
- <c>Key</c> already exists, the old value is deleted and
- replaced by <c>Val</c> and the function returns the old value.</p>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Adds a new <c><anno>Key</anno></c> to the process dictionary, associated
+ with the value <c><anno>Val</anno></c>, and returns <c>undefined</c>. If
+ <c><anno>Key</anno></c> already exists, the old value is deleted and
+ replaced by <c><anno>Val</anno></c> and the function returns the old value.</p>
<note>
<p>The values stored when <c>put</c> is evaluated within
the scope of a <c>catch</c> will not be retracted if a
@@ -4194,17 +3897,9 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:raise(Class, Reason, Stacktrace)</name>
+ <name name="raise" arity="3"/>
+ <type name="raise_stacktrace"/>
<fsummary>Stop execution with an exception of given class, reason and call stack backtrace</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Class = error | exit | throw</v>
- <v>Reason = term()</v>
- <v>Stacktrace = [{Module, Function, Arity | Args} | {Fun, Args}]</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Module = Function = atom()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Arity = arity()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Args = [term()]</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Fun = [fun()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Stops the execution of the calling process with an
exception of given class, reason and call stack backtrace
@@ -4215,11 +3910,11 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
be avoided in applications, unless you know
very well what you are doing.</p>
</warning>
- <p><c>Class</c> is one of <c>error</c>, <c>exit</c> or
+ <p><c><anno>Class</anno></c> is one of <c>error</c>, <c>exit</c> or
<c>throw</c>, so if it were not for the stacktrace
- <c>erlang:raise(Class, Reason, Stacktrace)</c> is
- equivalent to <c>erlang:Class(Reason)</c>.
- <c>Reason</c> is any term and <c>Stacktrace</c> is a list as
+ <c>erlang:raise(<anno>Class</anno>, <anno>Reason</anno>, <anno>Stacktrace</anno>)</c> is
+ equivalent to <c>erlang:<anno>Class</anno>(<anno>Reason</anno>)</c>.
+ <c><anno>Reason</anno></c> is any term and <c><anno>Stacktrace</anno></c> is a list as
returned from <c>get_stacktrace()</c>, that is a list of
4-tuples <c>{Module, Function, Arity | Args,
Location}</c> where <c>Module</c> and <c>Function</c>
@@ -4236,24 +3931,21 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
terminate, it has no return value - unless the arguments are
invalid, in which case the function <em>returns the error reason</em>, that is <c>badarg</c>. If you want to be
really sure not to return you can call
- <c>error(erlang:raise(Class, Reason, Stacktrace))</c>
+ <c>error(erlang:raise(<anno>Class</anno>, <anno>Reason</anno>, <anno>Stacktrace</anno>))</c>
and hope to distinguish exceptions later.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:read_timer(TimerRef) -> integer() >= 0 | false</name>
+ <name name="read_timer" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Number of milliseconds remaining for a timer</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>TimerRef = reference()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p><c>TimerRef</c> is a timer reference returned by
+ <p><c><anno>TimerRef</anno></c> is a timer reference returned by
<seealso marker="#send_after/3">erlang:send_after/3</seealso>
or
<seealso marker="#start_timer/3">erlang:start_timer/3</seealso>.
If the timer is active, the function returns the time in
milliseconds left until the timer will expire, otherwise
- <c>false</c> (which means that <c>TimerRef</c> was never a
+ <c>false</c> (which means that <c><anno>TimerRef</anno></c> was never a
timer, that it has been cancelled, or that it has already
delivered its message).</p>
<p>See also
@@ -4264,14 +3956,11 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:ref_to_list(Ref) -> string()</name>
+ <name name="ref_to_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Text representation of a reference</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Ref = reference()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a string which corresponds to the text
- representation of <c>Ref</c>.</p>
+ representation of <c><anno>Ref</anno></c>.</p>
<warning>
<p>This BIF is intended for debugging and for use in
the Erlang operating system. It should not be used in
@@ -4280,33 +3969,25 @@ os_prompt% </pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>register(RegName, Pid | Port) -> true</name>
+ <name name="register" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Register a name for a pid (or port)</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>RegName = atom()</v>
- <v>Pid = pid()</v>
- <v>Port = port()</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Associates the name <c>RegName</c> with a pid or a port
- identifier. <c>RegName</c>, which must be an atom, can be used
+ <desc>
+ <p>Associates the name <c><anno>RegName</anno></c> with a pid or a port
+ identifier. <c><anno>RegName</anno></c>, which must be an atom, can be used
instead of the pid / port identifier in the send operator
- (<c>RegName ! Message</c>).</p>
+ (<c><anno>RegName</anno> ! Message</c>).</p>
<pre>
> <input>register(db, Pid).</input>
true</pre>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Pid</c> is not an existing,
- local process or port, if <c>RegName</c> is already in use,
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>PidOrPort</anno></c> is not an existing,
+ local process or port, if <c><anno>RegName</anno></c> is already in use,
if the process or port is already registered (already has a
- name), or if <c>RegName</c> is the atom <c>undefined</c>.</p>
+ name), or if <c><anno>RegName</anno></c> is the atom <c>undefined</c>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>registered() -> [RegName]</name>
+ <name name="registered" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>All registered names</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>RegName = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a list of names which have been registered using
<seealso marker="#register/2">register/2</seealso>.</p>
@@ -4316,22 +3997,19 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:resume_process(Suspendee) -> true</name>
+ <name name="resume_process" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Resume a suspended process</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Suspendee = pid()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Decreases the suspend count on the process identified by
- <c>Suspendee</c>. <c>Suspendee</c> should previously have been
+ <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c>. <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> should previously have been
suspended via
<seealso marker="#suspend_process/2">erlang:suspend_process/2</seealso>,
or
<seealso marker="#suspend_process/1">erlang:suspend_process/1</seealso>
- by the process calling <c>erlang:resume_process(Suspendee)</c>. When
- the suspend count on <c>Suspendee</c> reach zero, <c>Suspendee</c>
+ by the process calling <c>erlang:resume_process(<anno>Suspendee</anno>)</c>. When
+ the suspend count on <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> reach zero, <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c>
will be resumed, i.e., the state of the <c>Suspendee</c> is changed
- from suspended into the state <c>Suspendee</c> was in before it was
+ from suspended into the state <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> was in before it was
suspended.
</p>
<warning>
@@ -4341,29 +4019,26 @@ true</pre>
<taglist>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If <c>Suspendee</c> isn't a process identifier.
+ If <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> isn't a process identifier.
</item>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
If the process calling <c>erlang:resume_process/1</c> had
not previously increased the suspend count on the process
- identified by <c>Suspendee</c>.
+ identified by <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c>.
</item>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If the process identified by <c>Suspendee</c> is not alive.
+ If the process identified by <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> is not alive.
</item>
</taglist>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>round(Number) -> integer()</name>
+ <name name="round" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Return an integer by rounding a number</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Number = number()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns an integer by rounding <c>Number</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns an integer by rounding <c><anno>Number</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>round(5.5).</input>
6</pre>
@@ -4371,7 +4046,7 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>self() -> pid()</name>
+ <name name="self" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Pid of the calling process</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>Returns the pid (process identifier) of the calling process.</p>
@@ -4382,33 +4057,21 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:send(Dest, Msg) -> Msg</name>
+ <name name="send" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Send a message</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Dest = pid() | port() | RegName | {RegName, Node}</v>
- <v>Msg = term()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;RegName = atom()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Node = node()</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Sends a message and returns <c>Msg</c>. This is the same as
- <c>Dest ! Msg</c>.</p>
- <p><c>Dest</c> may be a remote or local pid, a (local) port, a
- locally registered name, or a tuple <c>{RegName, Node}</c>
+ <type name="dst"/>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Sends a message and returns <c><anno>Msg</anno></c>. This is the same as
+ <c><anno>Dest</anno> ! <anno>Msg</anno></c>.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>Dest</anno></c> may be a remote or local pid, a (local) port, a
+ locally registered name, or a tuple <c>{<anno>RegName</anno>, <anno>Node</anno>}</c>
for a registered name at another node.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:send(Dest, Msg, [Option]) -> Res</name>
+ <name name="send" arity="3"/>
+ <type name="dst"/>
<fsummary>Send a message conditionally</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Dest = pid() | port() | RegName | {RegName, Node}</v>
- <v>&nbsp;RegName = atom()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Node = node()</v>
- <v>Msg = term()</v>
- <v>Option = nosuspend | noconnect</v>
- <v>Res = ok | nosuspend | noconnect</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Sends a message and returns <c>ok</c>, or does not send
the message but returns something else (see below). Otherwise
@@ -4438,28 +4101,24 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:send_after(Time, Dest, Msg) -> TimerRef</name>
+ <name name="send_after" arity="3"/>
+ <type_desc variable="Time">0 &lt;= Time &lt;= 4294967295</type_desc>
<fsummary>Start a timer</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Time = integer() >= 0</v>
- <v>&nbsp;0 &lt;= Time &lt;= 4294967295</v>
- <v>Dest = pid() | RegName </v>
- <v>&nbsp;LocalPid = pid() (of a process, alive or dead, on the local node)</v>
- <v>Msg = term()</v>
- <v>TimerRef = reference()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Starts a timer which will send the message <c>Msg</c>
- to <c>Dest</c> after <c>Time</c> milliseconds.</p>
- <p>If <c>Dest</c> is an atom, it is supposed to be the name of
+ to <c><anno>Dest</anno></c> after <c><anno>Time</anno></c> milliseconds.</p>
+ <p>If <c><anno>Dest</anno></c> is a <c>pid()</c> it has to be a <c>pid()</c> of a local process, dead or alive.</p>
+ <p>The <c><anno>Time</anno></c> value can, in the current implementation, not be greater than 4294967295.</p>
+ <p>If <c><anno>Dest</anno></c> is an <c>atom()</c>, it is supposed to be the name of
a registered process. The process referred to by the name is
looked up at the time of delivery. No error is given if
the name does not refer to a process.</p>
- <p>If <c>Dest</c> is a pid, the timer will be automatically
- canceled if the process referred to by the pid is not alive,
+
+ <p>If <c><anno>Dest</anno></c> is a <c>pid()</c>, the timer will be automatically
+ canceled if the process referred to by the <c>pid()</c> is not alive,
or when the process exits. This feature was introduced in
erts version 5.4.11. Note that timers will not be
- automatically canceled when <c>Dest</c> is an atom.</p>
+ automatically canceled when <c><anno>Dest</anno></c> is an <c>atom</c>.</p>
<p>See also
<seealso marker="#start_timer/3">erlang:start_timer/3</seealso>,
<seealso marker="#cancel_timer/1">erlang:cancel_timer/1</seealso>,
@@ -4559,32 +4218,25 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>setelement(Index, Tuple1, Value) -> Tuple2</name>
+ <name name="setelement" arity="3"/>
+ <type_desc variable="Index">1..tuple_size(<anno>Tuple1</anno>)</type_desc>
<fsummary>Set Nth element of a tuple</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Index = 1..tuple_size(Tuple1)</v>
- <v>Tuple1 = Tuple2 = tuple()</v>
- <v>Value = term()</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Returns a tuple which is a copy of the argument <c>Tuple1</c>
- with the element given by the integer argument <c>Index</c>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Returns a tuple which is a copy of the argument <c><anno>Tuple1</anno></c>
+ with the element given by the integer argument <c><anno>Index</anno></c>
(the first element is the element with index 1) replaced by
- the argument <c>Value</c>.</p>
+ the argument <c><anno>Value</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>setelement(2, {10, green, bottles}, red).</input>
{10,red,bottles}</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>size(Item) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="size" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Size of a tuple or binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Item = tuple() | binary()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns an integer which is the size of the argument
- <c>Item</c>, which must be either a tuple or a binary.</p>
+ <c><anno>Item</anno></c>, which must be either a tuple or a binary.</p>
<pre>
> <input>size({morni, mulle, bwange}).</input>
3</pre>
@@ -4612,20 +4264,16 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>spawn(Module, Function, Args) -> pid()</name>
+ <name name="spawn" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Create a new process with a function as entry point</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = Function = atom()</v>
- <v>Args = [term()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the pid of a new process started by the application
- of <c>Module:Function</c> to <c>Args</c>. The new process
+ of <c><anno>Module</anno>:<anno>Function</anno></c> to <c><anno>Args</anno></c>. The new process
created will be placed in the system scheduler queue and be
run some time later.</p>
- <p><c>error_handler:undefined_function(Module, Function, Args)</c> is evaluated by the new process if
- <c>Module:Function/Arity</c> does not exist (where
- <c>Arity</c> is the length of <c>Args</c>). The error handler
+ <p><c>error_handler:undefined_function(<anno>Module</anno>, <anno>Function</anno>, <anno>Args</anno>)</c> is evaluated by the new process if
+ <c><anno>Module</anno>:<anno>Function</anno>/Arity</c> does not exist (where
+ <c>Arity</c> is the length of <c><anno>Args</anno></c>). The error handler
can be redefined (see
<seealso marker="#process_flag/2">process_flag/2</seealso>).
If <c>error_handler</c> is undefined, or the user has
@@ -4672,15 +4320,11 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>spawn_link(Module, Function, Args) -> pid()</name>
+ <name name="spawn_link" arity="3"/>
<fsummary>Create and link to a new process with a function as entry point</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Module = Function = atom()</v>
- <v>Args = [term()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the pid of a new process started by the application
- of <c>Module:Function</c> to <c>Args</c>. A link is created
+ of <c><anno>Module</anno>:<anno>Function</anno></c> to <c><anno>Args</anno></c>. A link is created
between the calling process and the new process, atomically.
Otherwise works like
<seealso marker="#spawn/3">spawn/3</seealso>.</p>
@@ -4859,15 +4503,12 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>split_binary(Bin, Pos) -> {Bin1, Bin2}</name>
+ <name name="split_binary" arity="2"/>
+ <type_desc variable="Pos">0..byte_size(Bin)</type_desc>
<fsummary>Split a binary into two</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Bin = Bin1 = Bin2 = binary()</v>
- <v>Pos = 0..byte_size(Bin)</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a tuple containing the binaries which are the result
- of splitting <c>Bin</c> into two parts at position <c>Pos</c>.
+ of splitting <c><anno>Bin</anno></c> into two parts at position <c><anno>Pos</anno></c>.
This is not a destructive operation. After the operation,
there will be three binaries altogether.</p>
<pre>
@@ -4884,30 +4525,24 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:start_timer(Time, Dest, Msg) -> TimerRef</name>
+ <name name="start_timer" arity="3"/>
+ <type_desc variable="Time">0 &lt;= Time &lt;= 4294967295</type_desc>
<fsummary>Start a timer</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Time = integer() >= 0</v>
- <v>&nbsp;0 &lt;= Time &lt;= 4294967295</v>
- <v>Dest = LocalPid | RegName </v>
- <v>&nbsp;LocalPid = pid() (of a process, alive or dead, on the local node)</v>
- <v>&nbsp;RegName = atom()</v>
- <v>Msg = term()</v>
- <v>TimerRef = reference()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Starts a timer which will send the message
- <c>{timeout, TimerRef, Msg}</c> to <c>Dest</c>
- after <c>Time</c> milliseconds.</p>
- <p>If <c>Dest</c> is an atom, it is supposed to be the name of
+ <c>{timeout, <anno>TimerRef</anno>, <anno>Msg</anno>}</c> to <c><anno>Dest</anno></c>
+ after <c><anno>Time</anno></c> milliseconds.</p>
+ <p>If <c><anno>Dest</anno></c> is a <c>pid()</c> it has to be a <c>pid()</c> of a local process, dead or alive.</p>
+ <p>The <c><anno>Time</anno></c> value can, in the current implementation, not be greater than 4294967295.</p>
+ <p>If <c><anno>Dest</anno></c> is an <c>atom()</c>, it is supposed to be the name of
a registered process. The process referred to by the name is
looked up at the time of delivery. No error is given if
the name does not refer to a process.</p>
- <p>If <c>Dest</c> is a pid, the timer will be automatically
- canceled if the process referred to by the pid is not alive,
+ <p>If <c><anno>Dest</anno></c> is a <c>pid()</c>, the timer will be automatically
+ canceled if the process referred to by the <c>pid()</c> is not alive,
or when the process exits. This feature was introduced in
erts version 5.4.11. Note that timers will not be
- automatically canceled when <c>Dest</c> is an atom.</p>
+ automatically canceled when <c><anno>Dest</anno></c> is an <c>atom()</c>.</p>
<p>See also
<seealso marker="#send_after/3">erlang:send_after/3</seealso>,
<seealso marker="#cancel_timer/1">erlang:cancel_timer/1</seealso>,
@@ -4918,54 +4553,52 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>statistics(Type) -> Res</name>
- <fsummary>Information about the system</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Type, Res -- see below</v>
- </type>
+ <name name="statistics" arity="1" clause_i="1"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about context switches</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>All times are in milliseconds unless otherwise specified.</p>
- <p>Returns information about the system as specified by
- <c>Type</c>:</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c>context_switches</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns <c>{ContextSwitches, 0}</c>, where
- <c>ContextSwitches</c> is the total number of context
- switches since the system started.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="statistics_exact_reductions"><c>exact_reductions</c></marker></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns
- <c>{Total_Exact_Reductions, Exact_Reductions_Since_Last_Call}</c>.</p>
- <note><p><c>statistics(exact_reductions)</c> is
- a more expensive operation than
- <seealso marker="#statistics_reductions">statistics(reductions)</seealso>
- especially on an Erlang machine with SMP support.</p>
- </note>
- </item>
- <tag><c>garbage_collection</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns <c>{Number_of_GCs, Words_Reclaimed, 0}</c>. This
- information may not be valid for all implementations.</p>
- <pre>
+ <p><c><anno>ContextSwitches</anno></c> is the total number of context
+ switches since the system started.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="statistics" arity="1" clause_i="2"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about exact reductions</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <marker id="statistics_exact_reductions"></marker>
+ <note><p><c>statistics(exact_reductions)</c> is
+ a more expensive operation than
+ <seealso marker="#statistics_reductions">statistics(reductions)</seealso>
+ especially on an Erlang machine with SMP support.</p>
+ </note>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="statistics" arity="1" clause_i="3"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about garbage collection</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>This information may not be valid for all implementations.</p>
+ <pre>
> <input>statistics(garbage_collection).</input>
{85,23961,0}
</pre>
- </item>
- <tag><c>io</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns <c>{{input, Input}, {output, Output}}</c>,
- where <c>Input</c> is the total number of bytes received
- through ports, and <c>Output</c> is the total number of
- bytes output to ports.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="statistics_reductions"><c>reductions</c></marker></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns
- <c>{Total_Reductions, Reductions_Since_Last_Call}</c>.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="statistics" arity="1" clause_i="4"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about io</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Input</anno></c> is the total number of bytes received
+ through ports, and <c><anno>Output</anno></c> is the total number of
+ bytes output to ports.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="statistics" arity="1" clause_i="5"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about reductions</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <marker id="statistics_reductions"></marker>
<note>
- <p>From erts version 5.5 (OTP release R11B)
+ <p>Since erts-5.5 (OTP release R11B)
this value does not include reductions performed in current
time slices of currently scheduled processes. If an
exact value is wanted, use
@@ -4975,53 +4608,65 @@ true</pre>
> <input>statistics(reductions).</input>
{2046,11}
</pre>
- </item>
- <tag><c>run_queue</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns the length of the run queue, that is, the number
- of processes that are ready to run.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>runtime</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns <c>{Total_Run_Time, Time_Since_Last_Call}</c>.
- Note that the run-time is the sum of the run-time for all
- threads in the Erlang run-time system and may therefore be greater
- than the wall-clock time.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="statistics" arity="1" clause_i="6"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the run-queue</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Returns the length of the run queue, that is, the number
+ of processes that are ready to run.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="statistics" arity="1" clause_i="7"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about run-time</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Note that the run-time is the sum of the run-time for all
+ threads in the Erlang run-time system and may therefore be greater
+ than the wall-clock time.</p>
<pre>
> <input>statistics(runtime).</input>
{1690,1620}
</pre>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="statistics_scheduler_wall_time"><c>scheduler_wall_time</c></marker></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns a list of tuples with
- <c>{SchedulerId, ActiveTime, TotalTime}</c>, where <c>SchedulerId</c> is an integer id of the scheduler, <c>ActiveTime</c> is
- the duration the scheduler has been busy, <c>TotalTime</c> is the total time duration since
- <seealso marker="#system_flag_scheduler_wall_time">scheduler_wall_time</seealso>
- activation. The time unit is not defined and may be subject to change
- between releases, operating systems and system restarts.
- <c>scheduler_wall_time</c> should only be used to calculate relative
- values for scheduler-utilization. <c>ActiveTime</c> can never exceed <c>TotalTime</c>.
- </p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="statistics" arity="1" clause_i="8"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about each schedulers work time</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <marker id="statistics_scheduler_wall_time"></marker>
+ <p>
+ Returns a list of tuples with <c>{<anno>SchedulerId</anno>,
+ <anno>ActiveTime</anno>, <anno>TotalTime</anno>}</c>, where
+ <c>SchedulerId</c> is an integer id of the scheduler, <c>ActiveTime</c> is
+ the duration the scheduler has been busy, <c>TotalTime</c> is the total time duration since
+ <seealso marker="#system_flag_scheduler_wall_time">scheduler_wall_time</seealso>
+ activation. The time unit is not defined and may be subject to change
+ between releases, operating systems and system restarts.
+ <c>scheduler_wall_time</c> should only be used to calculate relative
+ values for scheduler-utilization. <c>ActiveTime</c> can never exceed <c>TotalTime</c>.
+ </p>
- <p>The definition of a busy scheduler is when it is not idle or not
- scheduling (selecting) a process or port, meaning; executing process
- code, executing linked-in-driver or NIF code, executing
- built-in-functions or any other runtime handling, garbage collecting
- or handling any other memory management. Note, a scheduler may also be
- busy even if the operating system has scheduled out the scheduler
- thread.
- </p>
+ <p>The definition of a busy scheduler is when it is not idle or not
+ scheduling (selecting) a process or port, meaning; executing process
+ code, executing linked-in-driver or NIF code, executing
+ built-in-functions or any other runtime handling, garbage collecting
+ or handling any other memory management. Note, a scheduler may also be
+ busy even if the operating system has scheduled out the scheduler
+ thread.
+ </p>
- <p>
- Returns <c>undefined</c> if the system flag <seealso marker="#system_flag_scheduler_wall_time">
- scheduler_wall_time</seealso> is turned off.
- </p>
+ <p>
+ Returns <c>undefined</c> if the system flag
+ <seealso marker="#system_flag_scheduler_wall_time">scheduler_wall_time</seealso>
+ is turned off.
+ </p>
- <p>The list of scheduler information is unsorted and may appear in different order
- between calls.
- </p>
- <p>Using <c>scheduler_wall_time</c> to calculate scheduler utilization.</p>
+ <p>The list of scheduler information is unsorted and may appear in different order
+ between calls.
+ </p>
+ <p>Using <c>scheduler_wall_time</c> to calculate scheduler utilization.</p>
<pre>
> <input>erlang:system_flag(scheduler_wall_time, true).</input>
false
@@ -5049,34 +4694,26 @@ ok
{Ai + (A1 - A0), Ti + (T1 - T0)} end, {0, 0}, lists:zip(Ts0,Ts1)), A/T.</input>
0.9769136803764825
</pre>
-
<note>
<p><c>scheduler_wall_time</c> is by default disabled. Use <c>erlang:system_flag(scheduler_wall_time, true)</c> to enable it. </p>
</note>
- </item>
-
- <tag><c>wall_clock</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns
- <c>{Total_Wallclock_Time, Wallclock_Time_Since_Last_Call}</c>.
- <c>wall_clock</c> can be used in the same manner as
- <c>runtime</c>, except that real time is measured as
- opposed to runtime or CPU time.</p>
- </item>
- </taglist>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:suspend_process(Suspendee, OptList) -> boolean()</name>
+ <name name="statistics" arity="1" clause_i="9"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about wall-clock</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c>wall_clock</c> can be used in the same manner as
+ <c>runtime</c>, except that real time is measured as
+ opposed to runtime or CPU time.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="suspend_process" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Suspend a process</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Suspendee = pid()</v>
- <v>OptList = [Opt]</v>
- <v>Opt = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Increases the suspend count on the process identified by
- <c>Suspendee</c> and puts it in the suspended state if it isn't
+ <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> and puts it in the suspended state if it isn't
already in the suspended state. A suspended process will not be
scheduled for execution until the process has been resumed.
</p>
@@ -5084,49 +4721,49 @@ ok
<p>A process can be suspended by multiple processes and can
be suspended multiple times by a single process. A suspended
process will not leave the suspended state until its suspend
- count reach zero. The suspend count of <c>Suspendee</c> is
- decreased when
- <seealso marker="#resume_process/1">erlang:resume_process(Suspendee)</seealso>
+ count reach zero. The suspend count of <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c>
+ is decreased when
+ <seealso marker="#resume_process/1">erlang:resume_process(<anno>Suspendee</anno>)</seealso>
is called by the same process that called
- <c>erlang:suspend_process(Suspendee)</c>. All increased suspend
+ <c>erlang:suspend_process(<anno>Suspendee</anno>)</c>. All increased suspend
counts on other processes acquired by a process will automatically be
decreased when the process terminates.</p>
- <p>Currently the following options (<c>Opt</c>s) are available:</p>
+ <p>Currently the following options (<c><anno>Opt</anno></c>s) are available:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>asynchronous</c></tag>
<item>
A suspend request is sent to the process identified by
- <c>Suspendee</c>. <c>Suspendee</c> will eventually suspend
+ <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c>. <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> will eventually suspend
unless it is resumed before it was able to suspend. The caller
of <c>erlang:suspend_process/2</c> will return immediately,
- regardless of whether the <c>Suspendee</c> has suspended yet
- or not. Note that the point in time when the <c>Suspendee</c>
+ regardless of whether the <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> has suspended yet
+ or not. Note that the point in time when the <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c>
will actually suspend cannot be deduced from other events
in the system. The only guarantee given is that the
- <c>Suspendee</c> will <em>eventually</em> suspend (unless it
+ <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> will <em>eventually</em> suspend (unless it
is resumed). If the <c>asynchronous</c> option has <em>not</em>
been passed, the caller of <c>erlang:suspend_process/2</c> will
- be blocked until the <c>Suspendee</c> has actually suspended.
+ be blocked until the <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> has actually suspended.
</item>
<tag><c>unless_suspending</c></tag>
<item>
- The process identified by <c>Suspendee</c> will be suspended
+ The process identified by <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> will be suspended
unless the calling process already is suspending the
- <c>Suspendee</c>. If <c>unless_suspending</c> is combined
+ <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c>. If <c>unless_suspending</c> is combined
with the <c>asynchronous</c> option, a suspend request will be
sent unless the calling process already is suspending the
- <c>Suspendee</c> or if a suspend request already has been sent
+ <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> or if a suspend request already has been sent
and is in transit. If the calling process already is suspending
- the <c>Suspendee</c>, or if combined with the <c>asynchronous</c>
+ the <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c>, or if combined with the <c>asynchronous</c>
option and a send request already is in transit,
- <c>false</c> is returned and the suspend count on <c>Suspendee</c>
+ <c>false</c> is returned and the suspend count on <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c>
will remain unchanged.
</item>
</taglist>
<p>If the suspend count on the process identified by
- <c>Suspendee</c> was increased, <c>true</c> is returned; otherwise,
+ <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> was increased, <c>true</c> is returned; otherwise,
<c>false</c> is returned.</p>
<warning>
@@ -5136,28 +4773,28 @@ ok
<taglist>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If <c>Suspendee</c> isn't a process identifier.
+ If <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> isn't a process identifier.
</item>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If the process identified by <c>Suspendee</c> is same the process as
+ If the process identified by <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> is same the process as
the process calling <c>erlang:suspend_process/2</c>.
</item>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If the process identified by <c>Suspendee</c> is not alive.
+ If the process identified by <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> is not alive.
</item>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If the process identified by <c>Suspendee</c> resides on another node.
+ If the process identified by <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> resides on another node.
</item>
<tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- If <c>OptList</c> isn't a proper list of valid <c>Opt</c>s.
+ If <c><anno>OptList</anno></c> isn't a proper list of valid <c><anno>Opt</anno></c>s.
</item>
<tag><c>system_limit</c></tag>
<item>
- If the process identified by <c>Suspendee</c> has been suspended more
+ If the process identified by <c><anno>Suspendee</anno></c> has been suspended more
times by the calling process than can be represented by the
currently used internal data structures. The current system limit
is larger than 2 000 000 000 suspends, and it will never be less
@@ -5180,292 +4817,322 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:system_flag(Flag, Value) -> OldValue</name>
- <fsummary>Set system flags</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Flag, Value, OldValue -- see below</v>
- </type>
+ <name name="system_flag" arity="2" clause_i="1"/>
+ <fsummary>Set system flag backtrace_depth</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Sets the maximum depth of call stack back-traces in the
+ exit reason element of <c>'EXIT'</c> tuples.</p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_flag" arity="2" clause_i="2"/>
+ <type name="cpu_topology"/>
+ <type name="level_entry"/>
+ <type name="level_tag"/>
+ <type name="sub_level"/>
+ <type name="info_list"/>
+ <fsummary>Set system flag cpu_topology</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <warning>
+ <p><marker id="system_flag_cpu_topology"></marker>
+ This argument is <em>deprecated</em> and
+ scheduled for removal in erts-5.10/OTP-R16. Instead of using
+ this argument you are advised to use the <c>erl</c> command
+ line argument <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso>.
+ When this argument has been removed a final CPU topology to use
+ will be determined at emulator boot time.</p>
+ </warning>
+ <p>Sets the user defined <c><anno>CpuTopology</anno></c>. The user defined
+ CPU topology will override any automatically detected
+ CPU topology. By passing <c>undefined</c> as <c><anno>CpuTopology</anno></c>
+ the system will revert back to the CPU topology automatically
+ detected. The returned value equals the value returned
+ from <c>erlang:system_info(cpu_topology)</c> before the
+ change was made.
+ </p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ <p>The CPU topology is used when binding schedulers to logical
+ processors. If schedulers are already bound when the CPU
+ topology is changed, the schedulers will be sent a request
+ to rebind according to the new CPU topology.
+ </p>
+ <p>The user defined CPU topology can also be set by passing
+ the <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso> command
+ line argument to <c>erl</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>For information on the <c><anno>CpuTopology</anno></c> type
+ and more, see the documentation of
+ <seealso marker="#system_info_cpu_topology">erlang:system_info(cpu_topology)</seealso>,
+ and the <c>erl</c> <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso>
+ and <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt</seealso>
+ command line flags.
+ </p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_flag" arity="2" clause_i="3"/>
+ <fsummary>Set system flag fullsweep_after</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><c><anno>Number</anno></c> is a non-negative integer which indicates
+ how many times generational garbage collections can be
+ done without forcing a fullsweep collection. The value
+ applies to new processes; processes already running are
+ not affected.</p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ <p>In low-memory systems (especially without virtual
+ memory), setting the value to 0 can help to conserve
+ memory.</p>
+ <p>An alternative way to set this value is through the
+ (operating system) environment variable
+ <c>ERL_FULLSWEEP_AFTER</c>.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_flag" arity="2" clause_i="4"/>
+ <fsummary>Set system flag min_heap_size</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Sets the default minimum heap size for processes. The
+ size is given in words. The new <c>min_heap_size</c> only
+ effects processes spawned after the change of
+ <c>min_heap_size</c> has been made.
+ The <c>min_heap_size</c> can be set for individual
+ processes by use of
+ <seealso marker="#spawn_opt/4">spawn_opt/N</seealso> or
+ <seealso marker="#process_flag/2">process_flag/2</seealso>. </p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_flag" arity="2" clause_i="5"/>
+ <fsummary>Set system flag min_bin_vheap_size</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Sets the default minimum binary virtual heap size for processes. The
+ size is given in words. The new <c>min_bin_vhheap_size</c> only
+ effects processes spawned after the change of
+ <c>min_bin_vhheap_size</c> has been made.
+ The <c>min_bin_vheap_size</c> can be set for individual
+ processes by use of
+ <seealso marker="#spawn_opt/4">spawn_opt/N</seealso> or
+ <seealso marker="#process_flag/2">process_flag/2</seealso>. </p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_flag" arity="2" clause_i="6"/>
+ <fsummary>Set system flag multi_scheduling</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p><marker id="system_flag_multi_scheduling"></marker>
+ If multi-scheduling is enabled, more than one scheduler
+ thread is used by the emulator. Multi-scheduling can be
+ blocked. When multi-scheduling has been blocked, only
+ one scheduler thread will schedule Erlang processes.</p>
+ <p>If <c><anno>BlockState</anno> =:= block</c>, multi-scheduling will
+ be blocked. If <c><anno>BlockState</anno> =:= unblock</c> and no-one
+ else is blocking multi-scheduling and this process has
+ only blocked one time, multi-scheduling will be unblocked.
+ One process can block multi-scheduling multiple times.
+ If a process has blocked multiple times, it has to
+ unblock exactly as many times as it has blocked before it
+ has released its multi-scheduling block. If a process that
+ has blocked multi-scheduling exits, it will release its
+ blocking of multi-scheduling.</p>
+ <p>The return values are <c>disabled</c>, <c>blocked</c>,
+ or <c>enabled</c>. The returned value describes the
+ state just after the call to
+ <c>erlang:system_flag(multi_scheduling, <anno>BlockState</anno>)</c>
+ has been made. The return values are described in the
+ documentation of <seealso marker="#system_info_multi_scheduling">erlang:system_info(multi_scheduling)</seealso>.</p>
+ <p><em>NOTE</em>: Blocking of multi-scheduling should normally
+ not be needed. If you feel that you need to
+ block multi-scheduling, think through the
+ problem at least a couple of times again.
+ Blocking multi-scheduling should only be used
+ as a last resort since it will most likely be
+ a <em>very inefficient</em> way to solve the
+ problem.</p>
+ <p>See also <seealso marker="#system_info_multi_scheduling">erlang:system_info(multi_scheduling)</seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="#system_info_multi_scheduling_blockers">erlang:system_info(multi_scheduling_blockers)</seealso>, and
+ <seealso marker="#system_info_schedulers">erlang:system_info(schedulers)</seealso>.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_flag" arity="2" clause_i="7"/>
+ <type name="scheduler_bind_type"/>
+ <fsummary>Set system flag scheduler_bind_type</fsummary>
<desc>
<warning>
- <p>The
- <seealso marker="#system_flag_cpu_topology">cpu_topology</seealso>,
- and
- <seealso marker="#system_flag_scheduler_bind_type">scheduler_bind_type</seealso>
- <c>Flag</c>s are <em>deprecated</em> and have been scheduled for
- removal in erts-5.10/OTP-R16.</p>
+ <p><marker id="system_flag_scheduler_bind_type"></marker>
+ This argument is <em>deprecated</em> and
+ scheduled for removal in erts-5.10/OTP-R16. Instead of using
+ this argument you are advised to use the <c>erl</c> command
+ line argument <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt</seealso>.
+ When this argument has been removed a final scheduler bind type
+ to use will be determined at emulator boot time.</p>
</warning>
- <p>Sets various system properties of the Erlang node. Returns
- the old value of the flag.</p>
+ <p>Controls if and how schedulers are bound to logical
+ processors.</p>
+ <p>When <c>erlang:system_flag(scheduler_bind_type, <anno>How</anno>)</c> is
+ called, an asynchronous signal is sent to all schedulers
+ online which causes them to try to bind or unbind as requested.
+ <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="#system_info_scheduler_bindings">erlang:system_info(scheduler_bindings)</seealso>.
+ </p>
+ <p>Schedulers can currently only be bound on newer Linux,
+ Solaris, FreeBSD, and Windows systems, but more systems will be
+ supported in the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>In order for the runtime system to be able to bind schedulers,
+ the CPU topology needs to be known. If the runtime system fails
+ to automatically detect the CPU topology, it can be defined.
+ For more information on how to define the CPU topology, see
+ the <c>erl</c> <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso> command
+ line flag.
+ </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>
+ <p>Schedulers can be bound in different ways. The <c><anno>How</anno></c>
+ argument determines how schedulers are bound. <c><anno>How</anno></c> can
+ currently be one of:</p>
<taglist>
- <tag><c>erlang:system_flag(backtrace_depth, Depth)</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Sets the maximum depth of call stack back-traces in the
- exit reason element of <c>'EXIT'</c> tuples.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="system_flag_cpu_topology"><c>erlang:system_flag(cpu_topology, CpuTopology)</c></marker></tag>
- <item>
- <p><em>NOTE:</em> This argument is <em>deprecated</em> and
- scheduled for removal in erts-5.10/OTP-R16. Instead of using
- this argument you are advised to use the <c>erl</c> command
- line argument <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso>.
- When this argument has been removed a final CPU topology to use
- will be determined at emulator boot time.</p>
- <p>Sets the user defined <c>CpuTopology</c>. The user defined
- CPU topology will override any automatically detected
- CPU topology. By passing <c>undefined</c> as <c>CpuTopology</c>
- the system will revert back to the CPU topology automatically
- detected. The returned value equals the value returned
- from <c>erlang:system_info(cpu_topology)</c> before the
- change was made.
- </p>
- <p>The CPU topology is used when binding schedulers to logical
- processors. If schedulers are already bound when the CPU
- topology is changed, the schedulers will be sent a request
- to rebind according to the new CPU topology.
- </p>
- <p>The user defined CPU topology can also be set by passing
- the <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso> command
- line argument to <c>erl</c>.
- </p>
- <p>For information on the <c>CpuTopology</c> type
- and more, see the documentation of
- <seealso marker="#system_info_cpu_topology">erlang:system_info(cpu_topology)</seealso>,
- and the <c>erl</c> <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso>
- and <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt</seealso>
- command line flags.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>erlang:system_flag(fullsweep_after, Number)</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>Number</c> is a non-negative integer which indicates
- how many times generational garbage collections can be
- done without forcing a fullsweep collection. The value
- applies to new processes; processes already running are
- not affected.</p>
- <p>In low-memory systems (especially without virtual
- memory), setting the value to 0 can help to conserve
- memory.</p>
- <p>An alternative way to set this value is through the
- (operating system) environment variable
- <c>ERL_FULLSWEEP_AFTER</c>.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>erlang:system_flag(min_heap_size, MinHeapSize)</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Sets the default minimum heap size for processes. The
- size is given in words. The new <c>min_heap_size</c> only
- effects processes spawned after the change of
- <c>min_heap_size</c> has been made.
- The <c>min_heap_size</c> can be set for individual
- processes by use of
- <seealso marker="#spawn_opt/4">spawn_opt/N</seealso> or
- <seealso marker="#process_flag/2">process_flag/2</seealso>. </p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>erlang:system_flag(min_bin_vheap_size, MinBinVHeapSize)</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Sets the default minimum binary virtual heap size for processes. The
- size is given in words. The new <c>min_bin_vhheap_size</c> only
- effects processes spawned after the change of
- <c>min_bin_vhheap_size</c> has been made.
- The <c>min_bin_vheap_size</c> can be set for individual
- processes by use of
- <seealso marker="#spawn_opt/4">spawn_opt/N</seealso> or
- <seealso marker="#process_flag/2">process_flag/2</seealso>. </p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="system_flag_multi_scheduling"><c>erlang:system_flag(multi_scheduling, BlockState)</c></marker></tag>
- <item>
- <p><c>BlockState = block | unblock</c></p>
- <p>If multi-scheduling is enabled, more than one scheduler
- thread is used by the emulator. Multi-scheduling can be
- blocked. When multi-scheduling has been blocked, only
- one scheduler thread will schedule Erlang processes.</p>
- <p>If <c>BlockState =:= block</c>, multi-scheduling will
- be blocked. If <c>BlockState =:= unblock</c> and no-one
- else is blocking multi-scheduling and this process has
- only blocked one time, multi-scheduling will be unblocked.
- One process can block multi-scheduling multiple times.
- If a process has blocked multiple times, it has to
- unblock exactly as many times as it has blocked before it
- has released its multi-scheduling block. If a process that
- has blocked multi-scheduling exits, it will release its
- blocking of multi-scheduling.</p>
- <p>The return values are <c>disabled</c>, <c>blocked</c>,
- or <c>enabled</c>. The returned value describes the
- state just after the call to
- <c>erlang:system_flag(multi_scheduling, BlockState)</c>
- has been made. The return values are described in the
- documentation of <seealso marker="#system_info_multi_scheduling">erlang:system_info(multi_scheduling)</seealso>.</p>
- <p><em>NOTE</em>: Blocking of multi-scheduling should normally
- not be needed. If you feel that you need to
- block multi-scheduling, think through the
- problem at least a couple of times again.
- Blocking multi-scheduling should only be used
- as a last resort since it will most likely be
- a <em>very inefficient</em> way to solve the
- problem.</p>
- <p>See also <seealso marker="#system_info_multi_scheduling">erlang:system_info(multi_scheduling)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="#system_info_multi_scheduling_blockers">erlang:system_info(multi_scheduling_blockers)</seealso>, and
- <seealso marker="#system_info_schedulers">erlang:system_info(schedulers)</seealso>.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="system_flag_scheduler_bind_type"><c>erlang:system_flag(scheduler_bind_type, How)</c></marker></tag>
- <item>
- <p><em>NOTE:</em> This argument is <em>deprecated</em> and
- scheduled for removal in erts-5.10/OTP-R16. Instead of using
- this argument you are advised to use the <c>erl</c> command
- line argument <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt</seealso>.
- When this argument has been removed a final scheduler bind type
- to use will be determined at emulator boot time.</p>
- <p>Controls if and how schedulers are bound to logical
- processors.</p>
- <p>When <c>erlang:system_flag(scheduler_bind_type, How)</c> is
- called, an asynchronous signal is sent to all schedulers
- online which causes them to try to bind or unbind as requested.
- <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="#system_info_scheduler_bindings">erlang:system_info(scheduler_bindings)</seealso>.
- </p>
- <p>Schedulers can currently only be bound on newer Linux,
- Solaris, FreeBSD, and Windows systems, but more systems will be
- supported in the future.
- </p>
- <p>In order for the runtime system to be able to bind schedulers,
- the CPU topology needs to be known. If the runtime system fails
- to automatically detect the CPU topology, it can be defined.
- For more information on how to define the CPU topology, see
- the <c>erl</c> <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso> command
- line flag.
- </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>
- <p>Schedulers can be bound in different ways. The <c>How</c>
- argument determines how schedulers are bound. <c>How</c> can
- currently be one of:</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c>unbound</c></tag>
- <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt u</seealso>.
- </p></item>
- <tag><c>no_spread</c></tag>
- <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt ns</seealso>.
- </p></item>
- <tag><c>thread_spread</c></tag>
- <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt ts</seealso>.
- </p></item>
- <tag><c>processor_spread</c></tag>
- <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt ps</seealso>.
- </p></item>
- <tag><c>spread</c></tag>
- <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt s</seealso>.
- </p></item>
- <tag><c>no_node_thread_spread</c></tag>
- <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt nnts</seealso>.
- </p></item>
- <tag><c>no_node_processor_spread</c></tag>
- <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt nnps</seealso>.
- </p></item>
- <tag><c>thread_no_node_processor_spread</c></tag>
- <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt tnnps</seealso>.
- </p></item>
- <tag><c>default_bind</c></tag>
- <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt db</seealso>.
- </p></item>
- </taglist>
- <p>The value returned equals <c>How</c> before the
- <c>scheduler_bind_type</c> flag was changed.</p>
- <p>Failure:</p>
- <taglist>
- <tag><c>notsup</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>If binding of schedulers is not supported.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>If <c>How</c> isn't one of the documented alternatives.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>If no CPU topology information is available.</p>
- </item>
- </taglist>
- <p>The scheduler bind type can also be set by passing
- the <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt</seealso> command
- line argument to <c>erl</c>.
- </p>
- <p>For more information, see
- <seealso marker="#system_info_scheduler_bind_type">erlang:system_info(scheduler_bind_type)</seealso>,
- <seealso marker="#system_info_scheduler_bindings">erlang:system_info(scheduler_bindings)</seealso>,
- the <c>erl</c> <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt</seealso>
- and <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso> command line
- flags.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="system_flag_scheduler_wall_time"><c>erlang:system_flag(scheduler_wall_time, Boolean)</c></marker></tag>
+ <tag><c>unbound</c></tag>
+ <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
+ <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt u</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
+ <tag><c>no_spread</c></tag>
+ <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
+ <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt ns</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
+ <tag><c>thread_spread</c></tag>
+ <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
+ <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt ts</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
+ <tag><c>processor_spread</c></tag>
+ <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
+ <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt ps</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
+ <tag><c>spread</c></tag>
+ <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
+ <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt s</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
+ <tag><c>no_node_thread_spread</c></tag>
+ <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
+ <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt nnts</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
+ <tag><c>no_node_processor_spread</c></tag>
+ <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
+ <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt nnps</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
+ <tag><c>thread_no_node_processor_spread</c></tag>
+ <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
+ <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt tnnps</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
+ <tag><c>default_bind</c></tag>
+ <item><p>Same as the <c>erl</c> command line argument
+ <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt db</seealso>.
+ </p></item>
+ </taglist>
+ <p>The value returned equals <c><anno>How</anno></c> before the
+ <c>scheduler_bind_type</c> flag was changed.</p>
+ <p>Failure:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>notsup</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Turns on/off scheduler wall time measurements. </p>
- <p>For more information see,
- <seealso marker="#statistics_scheduler_wall_time">erlang:statistics(scheduler_wall_time)</seealso>.
- </p>
+ <p>If binding of schedulers is not supported.</p>
</item>
-
- <tag><marker id="system_flag_schedulers_online"><c>erlang:system_flag(schedulers_online, SchedulersOnline)</c></marker></tag>
+ <tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the amount of schedulers online. Valid range is
- <![CDATA[1 <= SchedulerId <= erlang:system_info(schedulers)]]>.
- </p>
- <p>For more information see,
- <seealso marker="#system_info_schedulers">erlang:system_info(schedulers)</seealso>,
- and
- <seealso marker="#system_info_schedulers_online">erlang:system_info(schedulers_online)</seealso>.
- </p>
+ <p>If <c>How</c> isn't one of the documented alternatives.</p>
</item>
-
- <tag><c>erlang:system_flag(trace_control_word, TCW)</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>badarg</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Sets the value of the node's trace control word to
- <c>TCW</c>. <c>TCW</c> should be an unsigned integer. For
- more information see documentation of the
- <seealso marker="erts:match_spec#set_tcw">set_tcw</seealso>
- function in the match specification documentation in the
- ERTS User's Guide.</p>
+ <p>If no CPU topology information is available.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
- <note>
- <p>The <c>schedulers</c> option has been removed as
- of erts version 5.5.3. The number of scheduler
- threads is determined at emulator boot time, and
- cannot be changed after that.</p>
- </note>
+ <p>The scheduler bind type can also be set by passing
+ the <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt</seealso> command
+ line argument to <c>erl</c>.
+ </p>
+ <p>For more information, see
+ <seealso marker="#system_info_scheduler_bind_type">erlang:system_info(scheduler_bind_type)</seealso>,
+ <seealso marker="#system_info_scheduler_bindings">erlang:system_info(scheduler_bindings)</seealso>,
+ the <c>erl</c> <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sbt">+sbt</seealso>
+ and <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso> command line
+ flags.
+ </p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:system_info(Type) -> Res</name>
- <fsummary>Information about the system</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Type, Res -- see below</v>
- </type>
+ <name name="system_flag" arity="2" clause_i="8"/>
+ <fsummary>Set system flag scheduler_wall_time</fsummary>
+ <desc><p><marker id="system_flag_scheduler_wall_time"></marker>
+ Turns on/off scheduler wall time measurements. </p>
+ <p>For more information see,
+ <seealso marker="#statistics_scheduler_wall_time">erlang:statistics(scheduler_wall_time)</seealso>.
+ </p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_flag" arity="2" clause_i="9"/>
+ <fsummary>Set system flag schedulers_online</fsummary>
<desc>
- <p>Returns various information about the current system
- (emulator) as specified by <c>Type</c>:</p>
+ <p><marker id="system_flag_schedulers_online"></marker>
+ Sets the amount of schedulers online. Valid range is
+ <![CDATA[1 <= SchedulersOnline <= erlang:system_info(schedulers)]]>.
+ </p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ <p>For more information see,
+ <seealso marker="#system_info_schedulers">erlang:system_info(schedulers)</seealso>,
+ and
+ <seealso marker="#system_info_schedulers_online">erlang:system_info(schedulers_online)</seealso>.
+ </p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_flag" arity="2" clause_i="10"/>
+ <fsummary>Set system flag trace_control_word</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Sets the value of the node's trace control word to
+ <c><anno>TCW</anno></c>. <c><anno>TCW</anno></c> should be an unsigned integer. For
+ more information see documentation of the
+ <seealso marker="erts:match_spec#set_tcw">set_tcw</seealso>
+ function in the match specification documentation in the
+ ERTS User's Guide.</p>
+ <p>Returns the old value of the flag.</p>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="1"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="2"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="3"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="4"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="5"/>
+ <type variable="Allocator" name_i="2"/>
+ <type variable="Version" name_i="2"/>
+ <type variable="Features" name_i="2"/>
+ <type variable="Settings" name_i="2"/>
+ <type variable="Alloc" name_i="3"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the allocators of the system</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>
+ Returns various information about the
+ <marker id="system_info_allocator_tags">allocators</marker> of the
+ current system (emulator) as specified by
+ <c><anno>Item</anno></c>:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><marker id="system_info_allocated_areas"><c>allocated_areas</c></marker></tag>
<item>
@@ -5490,37 +5157,27 @@ ok
</item>
<tag><marker id="system_info_allocator"><c>allocator</c></marker></tag>
<item>
- <p>Returns <c>{Allocator, Version, Features, Settings}.</c></p>
- <p>Types:</p>
- <list type="bulleted">
- <item><c>Allocator = undefined | glibc</c></item>
- <item><c>Version = [integer()]</c></item>
- <item><c>Features = [atom()]</c></item>
- <item><c>Settings = [{Subsystem, [{Parameter, Value}]}]</c></item>
- <item><c>Subsystem = atom()</c></item>
- <item><c>Parameter = atom()</c></item>
- <item><c>Value = term()</c></item>
- </list>
+ <p>Returns <c>{<anno>Allocator</anno>, <anno>Version</anno>, <anno>Features</anno>, <anno>Settings</anno>}.</c></p>
<p>Explanation:</p>
<list type="bulleted">
<item>
- <p><c>Allocator</c> corresponds to the <c>malloc()</c>
- implementation used. If <c>Allocator</c> equals
+ <p><c><anno>Allocator</anno></c> corresponds to the <c>malloc()</c>
+ implementation used. If <c><anno>Allocator</anno></c> equals
<c>undefined</c>, the <c>malloc()</c> implementation
used could not be identified. Currently
<c>glibc</c> can be identified.</p>
</item>
<item>
- <p><c>Version</c> is a list of integers (but not a
+ <p><c><anno>Version</anno></c> is a list of integers (but not a
string) representing the version of
the <c>malloc()</c> implementation used.</p>
</item>
<item>
- <p><c>Features</c> is a list of atoms representing
+ <p><c><anno>Features</anno></c> is a list of atoms representing
allocation features used.</p>
</item>
<item>
- <p><c>Settings</c> is a list of subsystems, their
+ <p><c><anno>Settings</anno></c> is a list of subsystems, their
configurable parameters, and used values. Settings
may differ between different combinations of
platforms, allocators, and allocation features.
@@ -5540,15 +5197,15 @@ ok
erts_alloc(3)</seealso> documentation.
</p>
</item>
- <tag><marker id="system_info_allocator_tuple"><c>{allocator, Alloc}</c></marker></tag>
+ <tag><marker id="system_info_allocator_tuple"><c>{allocator, <anno>Alloc</anno>}</c></marker></tag>
<item>
<p>Returns information about the specified allocator.
As of erts version 5.6.1 the return value is a list
of <c>{instance, InstanceNo, InstanceInfo}</c> tuples
where <c>InstanceInfo</c> contains information about
a specific instance of the allocator.
- If <c>Alloc</c> is not a recognized allocator,
- <c>undefined</c> is returned. If <c>Alloc</c> is disabled,
+ If <c><anno>Alloc</anno></c> is not a recognized allocator,
+ <c>undefined</c> is returned. If <c><anno>Alloc</anno></c> is disabled,
<c>false</c> is returned.</p>
<p><em>Note:</em> The information returned is highly
implementation dependent and may be changed, or removed
@@ -5577,54 +5234,51 @@ ok
values. The first value is memory pool size and
the second value used memory size.</p>
</item>
- <tag><marker id="system_info_allocator_sizes"><c>{allocator_sizes, Alloc}</c></marker></tag>
+ <tag><marker id="system_info_allocator_sizes"><c>{allocator_sizes, <anno>Alloc</anno>}</c></marker></tag>
<item>
<p>Returns various size information for the specified
allocator. The information returned is a subset of the
information returned by
- <seealso marker="#system_info_allocator_tuple">erlang:system_info({allocator, Alloc})</seealso>.
+ <seealso marker="#system_info_allocator_tuple">erlang:system_info({allocator, <anno>Alloc</anno>})</seealso>.
</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>build_type</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns an atom describing the build type of the runtime
- system. This is normally the atom <c>opt</c> for optimized.
- Other possible return values are <c>debug</c>, <c>purify</c>,
- <c>quantify</c>, <c>purecov</c>, <c>gcov</c>, <c>valgrind</c>,
- <c>gprof</c>, and <c>lcnt</c>. Possible return values
- may be added and/or removed at any time without prior notice.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>c_compiler_used</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns a two-tuple describing the C compiler used when
- compiling the runtime system. The first element is an
- atom describing the name of the compiler, or <c>undefined</c>
- if unknown. The second element is a term describing the
- version of the compiler, or <c>undefined</c> if unknown.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>check_io</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns a list containing miscellaneous information
- regarding the emulators internal I/O checking. Note,
- the content of the returned list may vary between
- platforms and over time. The only thing guaranteed is
- that a list is returned.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>compat_rel</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>Returns the compatibility mode of the local node as
- an integer. The integer returned represents the
- Erlang/OTP release which the current emulator has been
- set to be backward compatible with. The compatibility
- mode can be configured at startup by using the command
- line flag <c>+R</c>, see
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#compat_rel">erl(1)</seealso>.</p>
- </item>
- <tag><marker id="system_info_cpu_topology"><c>cpu_topology</c></marker></tag>
+ </taglist>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="10"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="11"/>
+ <type name="cpu_topology"/>
+ <type name="level_entry"/>
+ <type_desc name="cpu_topology">
+ <marker id="system_info_cpu_topology"></marker>
+ All <c><anno>LevelEntry</anno></c>s of a list
+ must contain the same <c><anno>LevelTag</anno></c>, except
+ on the top level where both <c>node</c> and
+ <c>processor</c> <c><anno>LevelTag</anno></c>s may co-exist.
+ </type_desc>
+ <type_desc name="level_entry">
+ <c>{<anno>LevelTag</anno>, <anno>SubLevel</anno>} == {<anno>LevelTag</anno>, [], <anno>SubLevel</anno>}</c>
+ </type_desc>
+ <type name="level_tag"/>
+ <type_desc name="level_tag">
+ More <c><anno>LevelTag</anno></c>s may be introduced in the future.
+ </type_desc>
+ <type name="sub_level"/>
+ <type name="info_list"/>
+ <type_desc name="info_list">
+ The <c>info_list()</c> may be extended in the future.
+ </type_desc>
+ <fsummary>Information about the CPU topology of the system</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Returns various information about the
+ <marker id="system_info_cpu_topology_tags">CPU topology</marker>
+ of the current system
+ (emulator) as specified by <c><anno>Item</anno></c>:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>cpu_topology</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Returns the <c>CpuTopology</c> which currently is used by the
+ <p>Returns the <c><anno>CpuTopology</anno></c> which currently is used by the
emulator. The CPU topology is used when binding schedulers
to logical processors. The CPU topology used is the
<seealso marker="erlang#system_info_cpu_topology_defined">user
@@ -5632,31 +5286,11 @@ ok
<seealso marker="erlang#system_info_cpu_topology_detected">automatically
detected CPU topology</seealso> if such exists. If no CPU topology
exists, <c>undefined</c> is returned.</p>
- <p>Types:</p>
- <list type="bulleted">
- <item><c>CpuTopology = LevelEntryList | undefined</c></item>
- <item><c>LevelEntryList = [LevelEntry]</c> (all
- <c>LevelEntry</c>s of a <c>LevelEntryList</c>
- must contain the same <c>LevelTag</c>, except
- on the top level where both <c>node</c> and
- <c>processor</c> <c>LevelTag</c>s may co-exist)</item>
- <item><c>LevelEntry = {LevelTag, SubLevel}
- | {LevelTag, InfoList, SubLevel}</c>
- (<c>{LevelTag, SubLevel}
- == {LevelTag, [], SubLevel}</c>)</item>
- <item><c>LevelTag = node|processor|core|thread</c>
- (more <c>LevelTag</c>s may be introduced in
- the future)</item>
- <item><c>SubLevel = [LevelEntry] | LogicalCpuId</c></item>
- <item><c>LogicalCpuId = {logical, integer()}</c></item>
- <item><c>InfoList = []</c> (the <c>InfoList</c>
- may be extended in the future)</item>
- </list>
<p><c>node</c> refers to NUMA (non-uniform memory access)
nodes, and <c>thread</c> refers to hardware threads
(e.g. Intels hyper-threads).</p>
- <p>A level in the <c>CpuTopology</c> term can be omitted if
- only one entry exists and the <c>InfoList</c> is empty.
+ <p>A level in the <c><anno>CpuTopology</anno></c> term can be omitted if
+ only one entry exists and the <c><anno>InfoList</anno></c> is empty.
</p>
<p><c>thread</c> can only be a sub level to <c>core</c>.
<c>core</c> can be a sub level to either <c>processor</c>
@@ -5668,15 +5302,15 @@ ok
consist of a mix of processor internal and external
NUMA nodes, as long as each logical CPU belongs to one
and only one NUMA node. Cache hierarchy is not part of
- the <c>CpuTopology</c> type yet, but will be in the
+ the <c><anno>CpuTopology</anno></c> type yet, but will be in the
future. Other things may also make it into the CPU
topology in the future. In other words, expect the
- <c>CpuTopology</c> type to change.
+ <c><anno>CpuTopology</anno></c> type to change.
</p>
</item>
<tag><marker id="system_info_cpu_topology_defined"><c>{cpu_topology, defined}</c></marker></tag>
<item>
- <p>Returns the user defined <c>CpuTopology</c>. For more
+ <p>Returns the user defined <c><anno>CpuTopology</anno></c>. For more
information see the documentation of
the <c>erl</c> <seealso marker="erts:erl#+sct">+sct</seealso> command
line flag, and the documentation of the
@@ -5686,7 +5320,7 @@ ok
</item>
<tag><marker id="system_info_cpu_topology_detected"><c>{cpu_topology, detected}</c></marker></tag>
<item>
- <p>Returns the automatically detected <c>CpuTopology</c>. The
+ <p>Returns the automatically detected <c><anno>CpuTopology</anno></c>. The
emulator currently only detects the CPU topology on some newer
Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, and Windows systems. On Windows system with
more than 32 logical processors the CPU topology is not detected.
@@ -5698,13 +5332,112 @@ ok
</item>
<tag><c>{cpu_topology, used}</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Returns the <c>CpuTopology</c> which is used by the
+ <p>Returns the <c><anno>CpuTopology</anno></c> which is used by the
emulator. For more information see the
documentation of the
<seealso marker="#system_info_cpu_topology">cpu_topology</seealso>
argument.
</p>
</item>
+ </taglist>
+ </desc>
+ </func>
+ <func>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="6"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="7"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="8"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="9"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="12"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="13"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="14"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="15"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="16"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="17"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="18"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="19"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="20"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="21"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="22"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="23"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="24"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="25"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="26"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="27"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="28"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="29"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="30"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="31"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="32"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="33"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="34"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="35"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="36"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="37"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="38"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="39"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="40"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="41"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="42"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="43"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="44"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="45"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="46"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="47"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="48"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="49"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="50"/>
+ <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="51"/>
+ <fsummary>Information about the system</fsummary>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Returns various information about the current system
+ (emulator) as specified by <c><anno>Item</anno></c>:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag><c>allocated_areas</c>, <c>allocator</c>,
+ <c>alloc_util_allocators</c>, <c>allocator_sizes</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>See <seealso marker="#system_info_allocator_tags">above</seealso>.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><c>build_type</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Returns an atom describing the build type of the runtime
+ system. This is normally the atom <c>opt</c> for optimized.
+ Other possible return values are <c>debug</c>, <c>purify</c>,
+ <c>quantify</c>, <c>purecov</c>, <c>gcov</c>, <c>valgrind</c>,
+ <c>gprof</c>, and <c>lcnt</c>. Possible return values
+ may be added and/or removed at any time without prior notice.
+ </p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><c>c_compiler_used</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Returns a two-tuple describing the C compiler used when
+ compiling the runtime system. The first element is an
+ atom describing the name of the compiler, or <c>undefined</c>
+ if unknown. The second element is a term describing the
+ version of the compiler, or <c>undefined</c> if unknown.
+ </p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><c>check_io</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Returns a list containing miscellaneous information
+ regarding the emulators internal I/O checking. Note,
+ the content of the returned list may vary between
+ platforms and over time. The only thing guaranteed is
+ that a list is returned.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><c>compat_rel</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Returns the compatibility mode of the local node as
+ an integer. The integer returned represents the
+ Erlang/OTP release which the current emulator has been
+ set to be backward compatible with. The compatibility
+ mode can be configured at startup by using the command
+ line flag <c>+R</c>, see
+ <seealso marker="erts:erl#compat_rel">erl(1)</seealso>.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><c>cpu_topology</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>See <seealso marker="#system_info_cpu_topology_tags">above</seealso>.</p>
+ </item>
<tag><c>creation</c></tag>
<item>
<p>Returns the creation of the local node as an integer.
@@ -5734,10 +5467,10 @@ ok
<item>
<p>Returns a list of tuples
<c>{Node, ControllingEntity}</c>, one entry for each
- connected remote node. The <c>Node</c> is the name of the
- node and the <c>ControllingEntity</c> is the port or pid
+ connected remote node. The <c><anno>Node</anno></c> is the name of the
+ node and the <c><anno>ControllingEntity</anno></c> is the port or pid
responsible for the communication to that node. More
- specifically, the <c>ControllingEntity</c> for nodes
+ specifically, the <c><anno>ControllingEntity</anno></c> for nodes
connected via TCP/IP (the normal case) is the socket
actually used in communication with the specific node.</p>
</item>
@@ -5785,7 +5518,7 @@ ok
</item>
<tag><c>fullsweep_after</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Returns <c>{fullsweep_after, integer()}</c> which is the
+ <p>Returns <c>{fullsweep_after, integer() >= 0}</c> which is the
<c>fullsweep_after</c> garbage collection setting used
by default. For more information see
<c>garbage_collection</c> described below.</p>
@@ -5878,12 +5611,12 @@ ok
</item>
<tag><c>min_heap_size</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Returns <c>{min_heap_size, MinHeapSize}</c> where <c>MinHeapSize</c> is the current system wide
+ <p>Returns <c>{min_heap_size, <anno>MinHeapSize</anno>}</c> where <c><anno>MinHeapSize</anno></c> is the current system wide
minimum heap size for spawned processes.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>min_bin_vheap_size</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Returns <c>{min_bin_vheap_size, MinBinVHeapSize}</c> where <c>MinBinVHeapSize</c> is the current system wide
+ <p>Returns <c>{min_bin_vheap_size, <anno>MinBinVHeapSize</anno>}</c> where <c><anno>MinBinVHeapSize</anno></c> is the current system wide
minimum binary virtual heap size for spawned processes.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>modified_timing_level</c></tag>
@@ -5927,10 +5660,10 @@ ok
</item>
<tag><marker id="system_info_multi_scheduling_blockers"><c>multi_scheduling_blockers</c></marker></tag>
<item>
- <p>Returns a list of <c>PID</c>s when multi-scheduling
- is blocked; otherwise, the empty list. The <c>PID</c>s
- in the list is <c>PID</c>s of the processes currently
- blocking multi-scheduling. A <c>PID</c> will only be
+ <p>Returns a list of <c><anno>PID</anno></c>s when multi-scheduling
+ is blocked; otherwise, the empty list. The <c><anno>PID</anno></c>s
+ in the list is <c><anno>PID</anno></c>s of the processes currently
+ blocking multi-scheduling. A <c><anno>PID</anno></c> will only be
present once in the list, even if the corresponding
process has blocked multiple times.</p>
<p>See also <seealso marker="#system_flag_multi_scheduling">erlang:system_flag(multi_scheduling, BlockState)</seealso>,
@@ -5941,19 +5674,40 @@ ok
<item>
<p>Returns a string containing the OTP release number.</p>
</item>
+ <tag><marker id="system_info_port_parallelism"><c>port_parallelism</c></marker></tag>
+ <item><p>Returns the default port parallelism scheduling hint used.
+ For more information see the
+ <seealso marker="erl#+spp">+spp</seealso> command line argument
+ of <seealso marker="erl">erl(1)</seealso>.</p></item>
+ <tag><c>process_count</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Returns the number of ports currently existing at
+ the local node as an integer. The same value as
+ <c>length(erlang:ports())</c> returns.</p>
+ </item>
+ <tag><marker id="system_info_port_limit"><c>port_limit</c></marker></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>Returns the maximum number of simultaneously existing
+ ports at the local node as an integer. This limit
+ can be configured at startup by using the
+ <seealso marker="erl#max_ports"><c>+Q</c></seealso>
+ command line flag of
+ <seealso marker="erl"><c>erl(1)</c></seealso>.</p>
+ </item>
<tag><c>process_count</c></tag>
<item>
<p>Returns the number of processes currently existing at
the local node as an integer. The same value as
<c>length(processes())</c> returns.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>process_limit</c></tag>
+ <tag><marker id="system_info_process_limit"><c>process_limit</c></marker></tag>
<item>
- <p>Returns the maximum number of concurrently existing
+ <p>Returns the maximum number of simultaneously existing
processes at the local node as an integer. This limit
- can be configured at startup by using the command line
- flag <c>+P</c>, see
- <seealso marker="erts:erl#max_processes">erl(1)</seealso>.</p>
+ can be configured at startup by using the
+ <seealso marker="erl#max_processes"><c>+P</c></seealso>
+ command line flag of
+ <seealso marker="erl"><c>erl(1)</c></seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>procs</c></tag>
<item>
@@ -6005,7 +5759,7 @@ ok
<item>
<p>Returns the scheduler id (<c>SchedulerId</c>) of the
scheduler thread that the calling process is executing
- on. <c>SchedulerId</c> is a positive integer; where
+ on. <c><anno>SchedulerId</anno></c> is a positive integer; where
<c><![CDATA[1 <= SchedulerId <= erlang:system_info(schedulers)]]></c>. See also
<seealso marker="#system_info_schedulers">erlang:system_info(schedulers)</seealso>.</p>
</item>
@@ -6037,7 +5791,8 @@ ok
<seealso marker="#system_info_schedulers">erlang:system_info(schedulers)</seealso>,
and
<seealso marker="#system_flag_schedulers_online">erlang:system_flag(schedulers_online, SchedulersOnline)</seealso>.
- </p>
+ </p> <name name="system_info" arity="1" clause_i="49"/>
+
</item>
<tag><c>smp_support</c></tag>
<item>
@@ -6131,53 +5886,39 @@ ok
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:system_monitor() -> MonSettings</name>
+ <name name="system_monitor" arity="0"/>
+ <type name="system_monitor_option"/>
<fsummary>Current system performance monitoring settings</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>MonSettings -> {MonitorPid, Options} | undefined</v>
- <v>&nbsp;MonitorPid = pid()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Options = [Option]</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;Option = {long_gc, Time} | {large_heap, Size} | busy_port | busy_dist_port</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Time = Size = integer()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the current system monitoring settings set by
<seealso marker="#system_monitor/2">erlang:system_monitor/2</seealso>
- as <c>{MonitorPid, Options}</c>, or <c>undefined</c> if there
+ as <c>{<anno>MonitorPid</anno>, <anno>Options</anno>}</c>, or <c>undefined</c> if there
are no settings. The order of the options may be different
from the one that was set.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:system_monitor(undefined | {MonitorPid, Options}) -> MonSettings</name>
+ <name name="system_monitor" arity="1"/>
+ <type name="system_monitor_option"/>
<fsummary>Set or clear system performance monitoring options</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>MonitorPid, Options, MonSettings -- see below</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>When called with the argument <c>undefined</c>, all
system performance monitoring settings are cleared.</p>
- <p>Calling the function with <c>{MonitorPid, Options}</c> as
+ <p>Calling the function with <c>{<anno>MonitorPid</anno>, <anno>Options</anno>}</c> as
argument, is the same as calling
- <seealso marker="#system_monitor/2">erlang:system_monitor(MonitorPid, Options)</seealso>.</p>
+ <seealso marker="#system_monitor/2">erlang:system_monitor(<anno>MonitorPid</anno>, <anno>Options</anno>)</seealso>.</p>
<p>Returns the previous system monitor settings just like
<seealso marker="#system_monitor/0">erlang:system_monitor/0</seealso>.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:system_monitor(MonitorPid, [Option]) -> MonSettings</name>
+ <name name="system_monitor" arity="2"/>
+ <type name="system_monitor_option"/>
<fsummary>Set system performance monitoring options</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>MonitorPid = pid()</v>
- <v>Option = {long_gc, Time} | {large_heap, Size} | busy_port | busy_dist_port</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Time = Size = integer()</v>
- <v>MonSettings = {OldMonitorPid, [Option]}</v>
- <v>&nbsp;OldMonitorPid = pid()</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Sets system performance monitoring options. <c>MonitorPid</c>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Sets system performance monitoring options. <c><anno>MonitorPid</anno></c>
is a local pid that will receive system monitor messages, and
the second argument is a list of monitoring options:</p>
<taglist>
@@ -6186,7 +5927,7 @@ ok
<p>If a garbage collection in the system takes at least
<c>Time</c> wallclock milliseconds, a message
<c>{monitor, GcPid, long_gc, Info}</c> is sent to
- <c>MonitorPid</c>. <c>GcPid</c> is the pid that was
+ <c><anno>MonitorPid</anno></c>. <c>GcPid</c> is the pid that was
garbage collected and <c>Info</c> is a list of two-element
tuples describing the result of the garbage collection.
One of the tuples is <c>{timeout, GcTime}</c> where
@@ -6209,7 +5950,7 @@ ok
<p>If a garbage collection in the system results in
the allocated size of a heap being at least <c>Size</c>
words, a message <c>{monitor, GcPid, large_heap, Info}</c>
- is sent to <c>MonitorPid</c>. <c>GcPid</c> and <c>Info</c>
+ is sent to <c><anno>MonitorPid</anno></c>. <c>GcPid</c> and <c>Info</c>
are the same as for <c>long_gc</c> above, except that
the tuple tagged with <c>timeout</c> is not present.
<em>Note</em>: As of erts version 5.6 the monitor message
@@ -6225,7 +5966,7 @@ ok
<p>If a process in the system gets suspended because it
sends to a busy port, a message
<c>{monitor, SusPid, busy_port, Port}</c> is sent to
- <c>MonitorPid</c>. <c>SusPid</c> is the pid that got
+ <c><anno>MonitorPid</anno></c>. <c>SusPid</c> is the pid that got
suspended when sending to <c>Port</c>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>busy_dist_port</c></tag>
@@ -6234,7 +5975,7 @@ ok
sends to a process on a remote node whose inter-node
communication was handled by a busy port, a message
<c>{monitor, SusPid, busy_dist_port, Port}</c> is sent to
- <c>MonitorPid</c>. <c>SusPid</c> is the pid that got
+ <c><anno>MonitorPid</anno></c>. <c>SusPid</c> is the pid that got
suspended when sending through the inter-node
communication port <c>Port</c>.</p>
</item>
@@ -6249,48 +5990,48 @@ ok
<p>Keep the monitoring process neat and do not set the system
monitor limits too tight.</p>
</note>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>MonitorPid</c> does not exist.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>MonitorPid</anno></c> does not exist or is not a local process.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:system_profile() -> ProfilerSettings</name>
+ <name name="system_profile" arity="0"/>
+ <type name="system_profile_option"/>
<fsummary>Current system profiling settings</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>ProfilerSettings -> {ProfilerPid, Options} | undefined</v>
- <v>&nbsp;ProfilerPid = pid() | port()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Options = [Option]</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;Option = runnable_procs | runnable_ports | scheduler | exclusive</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the current system profiling settings set by
<seealso marker="#system_profile/2">erlang:system_profile/2</seealso>
- as <c>{ProfilerPid, Options}</c>, or <c>undefined</c> if there
+ as <c>{<anno>ProfilerPid</anno>, <anno>Options</anno>}</c>, or <c>undefined</c> if there
are no settings. The order of the options may be different
from the one that was set.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:system_profile(ProfilerPid, Options) -> ProfilerSettings</name>
+ <name name="system_profile" arity="2"/>
+ <type name="system_profile_option"/>
<fsummary>Current system profiling settings</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>ProfilerSettings -> {ProfilerPid, Options} | undefined</v>
- <v>&nbsp;ProfilerPid = pid() | port()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Options = [Option]</v>
- <v>&nbsp;&nbsp;Option = runnable_procs | runnable_ports | scheduler | exclusive</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Sets system profiler options. <c>ProfilerPid</c>
+ <desc>
+ <p>Sets system profiler options. <c><anno>ProfilerPid</anno></c>
is a local pid or port that will receive profiling messages. The
receiver is excluded from all profiling.
The second argument is a list of profiling options:</p>
<taglist>
+ <tag><c>exclusive</c></tag>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ If a synchronous call to a port from a process is done, the
+ calling process is considered not runnable during the call
+ runtime to the port. The calling process is notified as
+ <c>inactive</c> and subsequently <c>active</c> when the port
+ callback returns.
+ </p>
+ </item>
<tag><c>runnable_procs</c></tag>
<item>
<p>If a process is put into or removed from the run queue a message,
<c>{profile, Pid, State, Mfa, Ts}</c>, is sent to
- <c>ProfilerPid</c>. Running processes that is reinserted into the
+ <c><anno>ProfilerPid</anno></c>. Running processes that is reinserted into the
run queue after having been preemptively scheduled out will not trigger this
message.
</p>
@@ -6299,24 +6040,14 @@ ok
<item>
<p>If a port is put into or removed from the run queue a message,
<c>{profile, Port, State, 0, Ts}</c>, is sent to
- <c>ProfilerPid</c>.
+ <c><anno>ProfilerPid</anno></c>.
</p>
</item>
<tag><c>scheduler</c></tag>
<item>
<p>If a scheduler is put to sleep or awoken a message,
<c>{profile, scheduler, Id, State, NoScheds, Ts}</c>, is sent
- to <c>ProfilerPid</c>.
- </p>
- </item>
- <tag><c>exclusive</c></tag>
- <item>
- <p>
- If a synchronous call to a port from a process is done, the
- calling process is considered not runnable during the call
- runtime to the port. The calling process is notified as
- <c>inactive</c> and subsequently <c>active</c> when the port
- callback returns.
+ to <c><anno>ProfilerPid</anno></c>.
</p>
</item>
</taglist>
@@ -6327,14 +6058,11 @@ ok
</func>
<func>
- <name>term_to_binary(Term) -> ext_binary()</name>
+ <name name="term_to_binary" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Encode a term to an Erlang external term format binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a binary data object which is the result of encoding
- <c>Term</c> according to the Erlang external term format.</p>
+ <c><anno>Term</anno></c> according to the Erlang external term format.</p>
<p>This can be used for a variety of purposes, for example
writing a term to a file in an efficient way, or sending an
Erlang term to some type of communications channel not
@@ -6344,20 +6072,16 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>term_to_binary(Term, [Option]) -> ext_binary()</name>
+ <name name="term_to_binary" arity="2"/>
<fsummary>Encode a term to en Erlang external term format binary</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Term = term()</v>
- <v>Option = compressed | {compressed,Level} | {minor_version,Version}</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns a binary data object which is the result of encoding
- <c>Term</c> according to the Erlang external term format.</p>
+ <c><anno>Term</anno></c> according to the Erlang external term format.</p>
<p>If the option <c>compressed</c> is provided, the external
term format will be compressed. The compressed format is
automatically recognized by <c>binary_to_term/1</c> in R7B and later.</p>
<p>It is also possible to specify a compression level by giving
- the option <c>{compressed,Level}</c>, where <c>Level</c> is an
+ the option <c>{compressed, <anno>Level</anno>}</c>, where <c><anno>Level</anno></c> is an
integer from 0 through 9. <c>0</c> means that no compression
will be done (it is the same as not giving any <c>compressed</c> option);
<c>1</c> will take the least time but may not compress as well as
@@ -6366,16 +6090,16 @@ ok
on the input term, level 9 compression may or may not produce a smaller
result than level 1 compression.</p>
<p>Currently, <c>compressed</c> gives the same result as
- <c>{compressed,6}</c>.</p>
- <p>The option <c>{minor_version,Version}</c> can be use to control
+ <c>{compressed, 6}</c>.</p>
+ <p>The option <c>{minor_version, <anno>Version</anno>}</c> can be use to control
some details of the encoding. This option was
- introduced in R11B-4. Currently, the allowed values for <c>Version</c>
+ introduced in R11B-4. Currently, the allowed values for <c><anno>Version</anno></c>
are <c>0</c> and <c>1</c>.</p>
- <p><c>{minor_version,1}</c> forces any floats in the term to be encoded
+ <p><c>{minor_version, 1}</c> forces any floats in the term to be encoded
in a more space-efficient and exact way (namely in the 64-bit IEEE format,
rather than converted to a textual representation). <c>binary_to_term/1</c>
in R11B-4 and later is able decode the new representation.</p>
- <p><c>{minor_version,0}</c> is currently the default, meaning that floats
+ <p><c>{minor_version, 0}</c> is currently the default, meaning that floats
will be encoded using a textual representation; this option is useful if
you want to ensure that releases prior to R11B-4 can decode resulting
binary.</p>
@@ -6384,14 +6108,11 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>throw(Any)</name>
+ <name name="throw" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Throw an exception</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Any = term()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>A non-local return from a function. If evaluated within a
- <c>catch</c>, <c>catch</c> will return the value <c>Any</c>.</p>
+ <c>catch</c>, <c>catch</c> will return the value <c><anno>Any</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>catch throw({hello, there}).</input>
{hello,there}</pre>
@@ -6399,11 +6120,8 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>time() -> {Hour, Minute, Second}</name>
+ <name name="time" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Current time</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Hour = Minute = Second = integer() >= 0</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the current time as <c>{Hour, Minute, Second}</c>.</p>
<p>The time zone and daylight saving time correction depend on
@@ -6414,35 +6132,27 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>tl(List1) -> List2</name>
+ <name name="tl" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Tail of a list</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>List1 = List2 = [term()]</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns the tail of <c>List1</c>, that is, the list minus
+ <p>Returns the tail of <c><anno>List</anno></c>, that is, the list minus
the first element.</p>
<pre>
> <input>tl([geesties, guilies, beasties]).</input>
[guilies, beasties]</pre>
<p>Allowed in guard tests.</p>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>List</c> is the empty list [].</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>List</anno></c> is the empty list [].</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:trace(PidSpec, How, FlagList) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="trace" arity="3"/>
+ <type name="trace_flag"/>
<fsummary>Set trace flags for a process or processes</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>PidSpec = pid() | existing | new | all</v>
- <v>How = boolean()</v>
- <v>FlagList = [Flag]</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Flag -- see below</v>
- </type>
- <desc>
- <p>Turns on (if <c>How == true</c>) or off (if
- <c>How == false</c>) the trace flags in <c>FlagList</c> for
- the process or processes represented by <c>PidSpec</c>.</p>
- <p><c>PidSpec</c> is either a pid for a local process, or one of
+ <desc>
+ <p>Turns on (if <c><anno>How</anno> == true</c>) or off (if
+ <c><anno>How</anno> == false</c>) the trace flags in <c><anno>FlagList</anno></c> for
+ the process or processes represented by <c><anno>PidSpec</anno></c>.</p>
+ <p><c><anno>PidSpec</anno></c> is either a pid for a local process, or one of
the following atoms:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>existing</c></tag>
@@ -6459,7 +6169,7 @@ ok
will be created in the future.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
- <p><c>FlagList</c> can contain any number of the following
+ <p><c><anno>FlagList</anno></c> can contain any number of the following
flags (the "message tags" refers to the list of messages
following below):</p>
<taglist>
@@ -6774,11 +6484,11 @@ ok
<p>Only one process can trace a particular process. For this
reason, attempts to trace an already traced process will fail.</p>
<p>Returns: A number indicating the number of processes that
- matched <c>PidSpec</c>. If <c>PidSpec</c> is a pid,
- the return value will be <c>1</c>. If <c>PidSpec</c> is
+ matched <c><anno>PidSpec</anno></c>. If <c><anno>PidSpec</anno></c> is a pid,
+ the return value will be <c>1</c>. If <c><anno>PidSpec</anno></c> is
<c>all</c> or <c>existing</c> the return value will be
the number of processes running, excluding tracer processes.
- If <c>PidSpec</c> is <c>new</c>, the return value will be
+ If <c><anno>PidSpec</anno></c> is <c>new</c>, the return value will be
<c>0</c>.</p>
<p>Failure: If specified arguments are not supported. For
example <c>cpu_timestamp</c> is not supported on all
@@ -6786,64 +6496,58 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:trace_delivered(Tracee) -> Ref</name>
+ <name name="trace_delivered" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Notification when trace has been delivered</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Tracee = pid() | all</v>
- <v>Ref = reference()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>The delivery of trace messages is dislocated on the time-line
compared to other events in the system. If you know that the
- <c>Tracee</c> has passed some specific point in its execution,
+ <c><anno>Tracee</anno></c> has passed some specific point in its execution,
and you want to know when at least all trace messages
corresponding to events up to this point have reached the tracer
- you can use <c>erlang:trace_delivered(Tracee)</c>. A
- <c>{trace_delivered, Tracee, Ref}</c> message is sent to
- the caller of <c>erlang:trace_delivered(Tracee)</c> when it
+ you can use <c>erlang:trace_delivered(<anno>Tracee</anno>)</c>. A
+ <c>{trace_delivered, <anno>Tracee</anno>, <anno>Ref</anno>}</c> message is sent to
+ the caller of <c>erlang:trace_delivered(<anno>Tracee</anno>)</c> when it
is guaranteed that all trace messages have been delivered to
- the tracer up to the point that the <c>Tracee</c> had reached
+ the tracer up to the point that the <c><anno>Tracee</anno></c> had reached
at the time of the call to
- <c>erlang:trace_delivered(Tracee)</c>.</p>
+ <c>erlang:trace_delivered(<anno>Tracee</anno>)</c>.</p>
<p>Note that the <c>trace_delivered</c> message does <em>not</em>
imply that trace messages have been delivered; instead, it implies
that all trace messages that <em>should</em> be delivered have
- been delivered. It is not an error if <c>Tracee</c> isn't, and
+ been delivered. It is not an error if <c><anno>Tracee</anno></c> isn't, and
hasn't been traced by someone, but if this is the case,
<em>no</em> trace messages will have been delivered when the
<c>trace_delivered</c> message arrives.</p>
- <p>Note that <c>Tracee</c> has to refer to a process currently,
+ <p>Note that <c><anno>Tracee</anno></c> has to refer to a process currently,
or previously existing on the same node as the caller of
- <c>erlang:trace_delivered(Tracee)</c> resides on.
- The special <c>Tracee</c> atom <c>all</c> denotes all processes
+ <c>erlang:trace_delivered(<anno>Tracee</anno>)</c> resides on.
+ The special <c><anno>Tracee</anno></c> atom <c>all</c> denotes all processes
that currently are traced in the node.</p>
- <p>An example: Process <c>A</c> is tracee, port <c>B</c> is
+ <p>An example: Process <c>A</c> is <c><anno>Tracee</anno></c>, port <c>B</c> is
tracer, and process <c>C</c> is the port owner of <c>B</c>.
<c>C</c> wants to close <c>B</c> when <c>A</c> exits. <c>C</c>
can ensure that the trace isn't truncated by calling
<c>erlang:trace_delivered(A)</c> when <c>A</c> exits and wait
- for the <c>{trace_delivered, A, Ref}</c> message before closing
+ for the <c>{trace_delivered, A, <anno>Ref</anno>}</c> message before closing
<c>B</c>.</p>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Tracee</c> does not refer to a
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c><anno>Tracee</anno></c> does not refer to a
process (dead or alive) on the same node as the caller of
- <c>erlang:trace_delivered(Tracee)</c> resides on.</p>
+ <c>erlang:trace_delivered(<anno>Tracee</anno>)</c> resides on.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:trace_info(PidOrFunc, Item) -> Res</name>
+ <name name="trace_info" arity="2"/>
+ <type name="trace_info_return"/>
+ <type name="trace_info_item_result"/>
+ <type name="trace_info_flag"/>
+ <type name="trace_match_spec"/>
<fsummary>Trace information about a process or function</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>PidOrFunc = pid() | new | {Module, Function, Arity} | on_load</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Module = Function = atom()</v>
- <v>&nbsp;Arity = arity()</v>
- <v>Item, Res -- see below</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns trace information about a process or function.</p>
- <p>To get information about a process, <c>PidOrFunc</c> should
+ <p>To get information about a process, <c><anno>PidOrFunc</anno></c> should
be a pid or the atom <c>new</c>. The atom <c>new</c> means
that the default trace state for processes to be created will
- be returned. <c>Item</c> must have one of the following
+ be returned. <c><anno>Item</anno></c> must have one of the following
values:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>flags</c></tag>
@@ -6923,22 +6627,24 @@ ok
<tag><c>all</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Return a list containing the <c>{Item, Value}</c> tuples
+ <p>Return a list containing the <c>{<anno>Item</anno>, Value}</c> tuples
for all other items, or return <c>false</c> if no tracing
is active for this function.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
- <p>The actual return value will be <c>{Item, Value}</c>, where
+ <p>The actual return value will be <c>{<anno>Item</anno>, Value}</c>, where
<c>Value</c> is the requested information as described above.
If a pid for a dead process was given, or the name of a
non-existing function, <c>Value</c> will be <c>undefined</c>.</p>
- <p>If <c>PidOrFunc</c> is the <c>on_load</c>, the information
+ <p>If <c><anno>PidOrFunc</anno></c> is the <c>on_load</c>, the information
returned refers to the default value for code that will be
loaded.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:trace_pattern(MFA, MatchSpec) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="trace_pattern" arity="2" clause_i="1"/>
+ <type name="trace_pattern_mfa"/>
+ <type name="trace_match_spec"/>
<fsummary>Set trace patterns for global call tracing</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>The same as
@@ -6947,11 +6653,11 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:trace_pattern(MFA, MatchSpec, FlagList) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="trace_pattern" arity="3"/>
+ <type name="trace_pattern_mfa"/>
+ <type name="trace_match_spec"/>
+ <type name="trace_pattern_flag"/>
<fsummary>Set trace patterns for tracing of function calls</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>MFA, MatchSpec, FlagList -- see below</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>This BIF is used to enable or disable call tracing for
exported functions. It must be combined with
@@ -6976,7 +6682,7 @@ ok
and an action to be performed. The default action is to send a
trace message. If the pattern does not match or the guard
fails, the action will not be executed.</p>
- <p>The <c>MFA</c> argument should be a tuple like
+ <p>The <c><anno>MFA</anno></c> argument should be a tuple like
<c>{Module, Function, Arity}</c> or the atom <c>on_load</c>
(described below). It can be the module, function, and arity
for an exported function (or a BIF in any module).
@@ -6999,11 +6705,11 @@ ok
</taglist>
<p>Other combinations, such as <c>{Module,'_',Arity}</c>, are
not allowed. Local functions will match wildcards only if
- the <c>local</c> option is in the <c>FlagList</c>.</p>
- <p>If the <c>MFA</c> argument is the atom <c>on_load</c>,
+ the <c>local</c> option is in the <c><anno>FlagList</anno></c>.</p>
+ <p>If the <c><anno>MFA</anno></c> argument is the atom <c>on_load</c>,
the match specification and flag list will be used on all
modules that are newly loaded.</p>
- <p>The <c>MatchSpec</c> argument can take any of the following
+ <p>The <c><anno>MatchSpec</anno></c> argument can take any of the following
forms:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>false</c></tag>
@@ -7015,7 +6721,7 @@ ok
<item>
<p>Enable tracing for the matching function(s).</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>MatchSpecList</c></tag>
+ <tag><c><anno>MatchSpecList</anno></c></tag>
<item>
<p>A list of match specifications. An empty list is
equivalent to <c>true</c>. See the ERTS User's Guide
@@ -7023,18 +6729,18 @@ ok
</item>
<tag><c>restart</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>For the <c>FlagList</c> option <c>call_count</c> and <c>call_time</c>:
+ <p>For the <c><anno>FlagList</anno></c> option <c>call_count</c> and <c>call_time</c>:
restart the existing counters. The behaviour is undefined
- for other <c>FlagList</c> options.</p>
+ for other <c><anno>FlagList</anno></c> options.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>pause</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>For the <c>FlagList</c> option <c>call_count</c> and <c>call_time</c>: pause
+ <p>For the <c><anno>FlagList</anno></c> option <c>call_count</c> and <c>call_time</c>: pause
the existing counters. The behaviour is undefined for
other <c>FlagList</c> options.</p>
</item>
</taglist>
- <p>The <c>FlagList</c> parameter is a list of options.
+ <p>The <c><anno>FlagList</anno></c> parameter is a list of options.
The following options are allowed:</p>
<taglist>
<tag><c>global</c></tag>
@@ -7053,13 +6759,13 @@ ok
the process, a <c>return_to</c> message will also be sent
when this function returns to its caller.</p>
</item>
- <tag><c>meta | {meta, Pid}</c></tag>
+ <tag><c>meta | {meta, <anno>Pid</anno>}</c></tag>
<item>
<p>Turn on or off meta tracing for all types of function
calls. Trace messages will be sent to the tracer process
- or port <c>Pid</c> whenever any of the specified
+ or port <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> whenever any of the specified
functions are called, regardless of how they are called.
- If no <c>Pid</c> is specified, <c>self()</c> is used as a
+ If no <c><anno>Pid</anno></c> is specified, <c>self()</c> is used as a
default tracer process.</p>
<p>Meta tracing traces all processes and does not care
about the process trace flags set by <c>trace/3</c>,
@@ -7071,32 +6777,32 @@ ok
</item>
<tag><c>call_count</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Starts (<c>MatchSpec == true</c>) or stops
- (<c>MatchSpec == false</c>) call count tracing for all
+ <p>Starts (<c><anno>MatchSpec</anno> == true</c>) or stops
+ (<c><anno>MatchSpec</anno> == false</c>) call count tracing for all
types of function calls. For every function a counter is
incremented when the function is called, in any process.
No process trace flags need to be activated.</p>
<p>If call count tracing is started while already running,
the count is restarted from zero. Running counters can be
- paused with <c>MatchSpec == pause</c>. Paused and running
+ paused with <c><anno>MatchSpec</anno> == pause</c>. Paused and running
counters can be restarted from zero with
- <c>MatchSpec == restart</c>.</p>
+ <c><anno>MatchSpec</anno> == restart</c>.</p>
<p>The counter value can be read with
<seealso marker="#trace_info/2">erlang:trace_info/2</seealso>.</p>
</item>
<tag><c>call_time</c></tag>
<item>
- <p>Starts (<c>MatchSpec == true</c>) or stops
- (<c>MatchSpec == false</c>) call time tracing for all
+ <p>Starts (<c><anno>MatchSpec</anno> == true</c>) or stops
+ (<c><anno>MatchSpec</anno> == false</c>) call time tracing for all
types of function calls. For every function a counter is
incremented when the function is called. Time spent in the function
is accumulated in two other counters, seconds and micro-seconds.
The counters are stored for each call traced process.</p>
<p>If call time tracing is started while already running,
the count and time is restarted from zero. Running counters can be
- paused with <c>MatchSpec == pause</c>. Paused and running
+ paused with <c><anno>MatchSpec</anno> == pause</c>. Paused and running
counters can be restarted from zero with
- <c>MatchSpec == restart</c>.</p>
+ <c><anno>MatchSpec</anno> == restart</c>.</p>
<p>The counter value can be read with
<seealso marker="#trace_info/2">erlang:trace_info/2</seealso>.</p>
</item>
@@ -7122,18 +6828,15 @@ ok
<seealso marker="#trace_info/2">erlang:trace_info/2</seealso>
BIF to retrieve the existing match specification.</p>
<p>Returns the number of exported functions that matched
- the <c>MFA</c> argument. This will be zero if none matched at
+ the <c><anno>MFA</anno></c> argument. This will be zero if none matched at
all.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>trunc(Number) -> integer()</name>
+ <name name="trunc" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Return an integer by the truncating a number</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Number = number()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns an integer by the truncating <c>Number</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns an integer by the truncating <c><anno>Number</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>trunc(5.5).</input>
5</pre>
@@ -7141,13 +6844,10 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>tuple_size(Tuple) -> integer() >= 0</name>
+ <name name="tuple_size" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Return the size of a tuple</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Tuple = tuple()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns an integer which is the number of elements in <c>Tuple</c>.</p>
+ <p>Returns an integer which is the number of elements in <c><anno>Tuple</anno></c>.</p>
<pre>
> <input>tuple_size({morni, mulle, bwange}).</input>
3</pre>
@@ -7155,25 +6855,19 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>tuple_to_list(Tuple) -> [term()]</name>
+ <name name="tuple_to_list" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert a tuple to a list</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Tuple = tuple()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Returns a list which corresponds to <c>Tuple</c>.
- <c>Tuple</c> may contain any Erlang terms.</p>
+ <p>Returns a list which corresponds to <c><anno>Tuple</anno></c>.
+ <c><anno>Tuple</anno></c> may contain any Erlang terms.</p>
<pre>
> <input>tuple_to_list({share, {'Ericsson_B', 163}}).</input>
[share,{'Ericsson_B',163}]</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:universaltime() -> DateTime</name>
+ <name name="universaltime" arity="0"/>
<fsummary>Current date and time according to Universal Time Coordinated (UTC)</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>DateTime = <seealso marker="calendar#type-datetime">calendar:datetime()</seealso></v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Returns the current date and time according to Universal
Time Coordinated (UTC), also called GMT, in the form
@@ -7187,46 +6881,39 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>erlang:universaltime_to_localtime({Date1, Time1}) -> {Date2, Time2}</name>
+ <name name="universaltime_to_localtime" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Convert from Universal Time Coordinated (UTC) to local date and time</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Date1 = Date2 = <seealso marker="calendar#type-date">calendar:date()</seealso></v>
- <v>Time1 = Time2 = <seealso marker="calendar#type-time">calendar:time()</seealso></v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Converts Universal Time Coordinated (UTC) date and time to
local date and time, if this is supported by the underlying
OS. Otherwise, no conversion is done, and
- <c>{Date1, Time1}</c> is returned.</p>
+ <c><anno>Universaltime</anno></c> is returned.</p>
<pre>
> <input>erlang:universaltime_to_localtime({{1996,11,6},{14,18,43}}).</input>
{{1996,11,7},{15,18,43}}</pre>
- <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Date1</c> or <c>Time1</c> do
- not denote a valid date or time.</p>
+ <p>Failure: <c>badarg</c> if <c>Universaltime</c> does not denote
+ a valid date and time.</p>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>unlink(Id) -> true</name>
+ <name name="unlink" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Remove a link, if there is one, to another process or port</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>Id = pid() | port()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
<p>Removes the link, if there is one, between the calling
- process and the process or port referred to by <c>Id</c>.</p>
+ process and the process or port referred to by <c><anno>Id</anno></c>.</p>
<p>Returns <c>true</c> and does not fail, even if there is no
- link to <c>Id</c>, or if <c>Id</c> does not exist.</p>
- <p>Once <c>unlink(Id)</c> has returned it is guaranteed that
+ link to <c><anno>Id</anno></c>, or if <c><anno>Id</anno></c> does not exist.</p>
+ <p>Once <c>unlink(<anno>Id</anno>)</c> has returned it is guaranteed that
the link between the caller and the entity referred to by
- <c>Id</c> has no effect on the caller in the future (unless
+ <c><anno>Id</anno></c> has no effect on the caller in the future (unless
the link is setup again). If caller is trapping exits, an
- <c>{'EXIT', Id, _}</c> message due to the link might have
+ <c>{'EXIT', <anno>Id</anno>, _}</c> message due to the link might have
been placed in the caller's message queue prior to the call,
- though. Note, the <c>{'EXIT', Id, _}</c> message can be the
- result of the link, but can also be the result of <c>Id</c>
+ though. Note, the <c>{'EXIT', <anno>Id</anno>, _}</c> message can be the
+ result of the link, but can also be the result of <c><anno>Id</anno></c>
calling <c>exit/2</c>. Therefore, it <em>may</em> be
appropriate to cleanup the message queue when trapping exits
- after the call to <c>unlink(Id)</c>, as follow:</p>
+ after the call to <c>unlink(<anno>Id</anno>)</c>, as follow:</p>
<code type="none">
unlink(Id),
@@ -7249,13 +6936,10 @@ ok
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>unregister(RegName) -> true</name>
+ <name name="unregister" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Remove the registered name for a process (or port)</fsummary>
- <type>
- <v>RegName = atom()</v>
- </type>
<desc>
- <p>Removes the registered name <c>RegName</c>, associated with a
+ <p>Removes the registered name <c><anno>RegName</anno></c>, associated with a
pid or a port identifier.</p>
<pre>
> <input>unregister(db).</input>
@@ -7266,7 +6950,7 @@ true</pre>
</desc>
</func>
<func>
- <name>whereis(RegName) -> pid() | port() | undefined</name>
+ <name name="whereis" arity="1"/>
<fsummary>Get the pid (or port) with a given registered name</fsummary>
<desc>
<p>Returns the pid or port identifier with the registered name
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/erts_alloc.xml b/erts/doc/src/erts_alloc.xml
index ec5e7d9b74..87d6682328 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/erts_alloc.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/erts_alloc.xml
@@ -341,7 +341,8 @@
Largest (<c>mseg_alloc</c>) multiblock carrier size (in
kilobytes). See <seealso marker="#mseg_mbc_sizes">the description
on how sizes for mseg_alloc multiblock carriers are decided</seealso>
- in "the <c>alloc_util</c> framework" section.</item>
+ in "the <c>alloc_util</c> framework" section. On 32-bit Unix style OS
+ this limit can not be set higher than 128 megabyte.</item>
<tag><marker id="M_mbcgs"><c><![CDATA[+M<S>mbcgs <ratio>]]></c></marker></tag>
<item>
(<c>mseg_alloc</c>) multiblock carrier growth stages. See
@@ -413,7 +414,8 @@
Singleblock carrier threshold. Blocks larger than this
threshold will be placed in singleblock carriers. Blocks
smaller than this threshold will be placed in multiblock
- carriers.</item>
+ carriers. On 32-bit Unix style OS this threshold can not be set higher
+ than 8 megabytes.</item>
<tag><marker id="M_sbmbcs"><c><![CDATA[+M<S>sbmbcs <size>]]></c></marker></tag>
<item>
Small block multiblock carrier size (in bytes). Memory blocks smaller
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/notes.xml b/erts/doc/src/notes.xml
index cdb72b2b98..e996d3e8e3 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/notes.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/notes.xml
@@ -30,6 +30,179 @@
</header>
<p>This document describes the changes made to the ERTS application.</p>
+<section><title>Erts 5.9.3.1</title>
+
+ <section><title>Known Bugs and Problems</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Create an erl_crash.dump if no heart exists and no
+ ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS is set (behaviour changed).</p>
+ <p>
+ Don't create an erl_crash.dump if heart do exists and no
+ ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS is set (behaviour not changed).</p>
+ <p>
+ This changes the behaviour back to the R15B02 default
+ considering if a beam was running with no heart.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10602</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
+<section><title>Erts 5.9.3</title>
+
+ <section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix linking in OpenBSD. (Thanks to Matthew Dempsky)</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10395</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix bug causing fallback atomics to be used even though
+ healthy gcc atomics or libatomic_ops was detected.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10418</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Ensure 'erl_crash.dump' when asked for it. This will
+ change erl_crash.dump behaviour.</p>
+ <p>
+ * Not setting ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS will now terminate
+ beam immediately on a crash without writing a crash dump
+ file.</p>
+ <p>
+ * Setting ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS to 0 will also terminate
+ beam immediately on a crash without writing a crash dump
+ file, i.e. same as not setting ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS
+ environment variable.</p>
+ <p>
+ * Setting ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS to a negative value will
+ let the beam wait indefinitely on the crash dump file
+ being written.</p>
+ <p>
+ * Setting ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS to a positive value will
+ let the beam wait that many seconds on the crash dump
+ file being written.</p>
+ <p>
+ A positive value will set an alarm/timeout for restart
+ both in beam and in heart if heart is running.</p>
+ <p>
+ *** POTENTIAL INCOMPATIBILITY ***</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10422 Aux Id: kunagi-250 [161] </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix bug where MSVRT100.dll was not included in the
+ windows installer.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10481</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>In the expression
+ <c>&lt;&lt;Bin/binary,...&gt;&gt;</c>, if <c>Bin</c> was
+ a bitstring with a size not a multiple of 8, either no
+ exception was generated or an incorrect exception was
+ generated. (Thanks to Adam Rutkowski for reporting this
+ bug.)</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10524</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The runtime system could crash while scheduling a port
+ task. The port task was scheduled either due to an
+ external I/O event being triggered, a driver timeout
+ being triggered, or data being sent over a distribution
+ channel.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10556</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ <c>erlang:memory(ets)</c> erroneously included the size
+ of each ETS-table main structure twice.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10558</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Fix compile error in generated file hipe_amd64_bifs.S for
+ Solaris.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10577</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ A faulty spec for process_info/2 could cause false
+ dialyzer warnings. The spec is corrected.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10584</p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ In very rare cases, the VM could crash if a garbage
+ collector was called while executing an appending bit
+ syntax instruction. The symptom was a core when
+ reallocating memory in the function erts_bs_append. The
+ garbage collector bug is now corrected.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10590</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+
+ <section><title>Improvements and New Features</title>
+ <list>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Improve support for building and testing in embedded ppc
+ environments.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10265 Aux Id: kunagi-159
+ [daf97f67-5724-4812-a5b6-7e86990133d2-1] </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Due to a race condition on Windows, sometimes when
+ printing to standard output and then immediately
+ terminating erlang all data would not be printed. The
+ emulator now waits for all data to be printed before
+ exiting.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10325 Aux Id: kunagi-166
+ [dd72d0e2-3e76-4a51-8b56-7564e24eecae] </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ The frequency with which sleeping schedulers are woken
+ due to outstanding memory deallocation jobs has been
+ reduced.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10476 Aux Id: OTP-10162 </p>
+ </item>
+ <item>
+ <p>
+ Clearer warnings about the dangers of misuse of <seealso
+ marker="erl_nif#WARNING">native functions</seealso> and
+ <seealso marker="erl_driver#WARNING">drivers</seealso>
+ have been added to the documentation.</p>
+ <p>
+ Own Id: OTP-10557</p>
+ </item>
+ </list>
+ </section>
+
+</section>
+
<section><title>Erts 5.9.2</title>
<section><title>Fixed Bugs and Malfunctions</title>
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/part.xml b/erts/doc/src/part.xml
index e27b722721..2c178556d4 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/part.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/part.xml
@@ -31,6 +31,7 @@
<description>
<p>The Erlang Runtime System Application <em>ERTS</em>.</p>
</description>
+ <xi:include href="communication.xml"/>
<xi:include href="match_spec.xml"/>
<xi:include href="crash_dump.xml"/>
<xi:include href="alt_dist.xml"/>
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/ref_man.xml b/erts/doc/src/ref_man.xml
index 2042cf28bd..5c9938075c 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/ref_man.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/ref_man.xml
@@ -49,7 +49,6 @@
<xi:include href="escript.xml"/>
<xi:include href="erlsrv.xml"/>
<xi:include href="start_erl.xml"/>
- <xi:include href="erl_set_memory_block.xml"/>
<xi:include href="run_erl.xml"/>
<xi:include href="start.xml"/>
<xi:include href="erl_driver.xml"/>