Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This hopefully detects fault glibc's where
fallocate64 is nonexistent.
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writev will for large files return 0 indefinetely causing
the efile driver to go into an infinite loop.
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* dgud/wx/fix-wx-2.9-compat/OTP-10407: (26 commits)
wx: Fix comments
wx: Workaround wx-2.9 bugs
wx: Mac fixes
wx: Fix demo and tests
wx: Allow 64 bits compilation on mac, requires wxWidgets-2.9
appmon: Move runtime part to runtime_tools app
reltool: fix wxWidgets-2.9 compability
debugger: Fix 2.9 compat
observer: Fix check for graphics contexts
Observer: Fix distribution dialog
observer: Fix font sizes
wx: Fix the demo
wx: Fix loading icons and cursors in Windows
wx: Remove unnecessary casts
wx: Fix changed getfunctions
wx: Depricate wxCursor new functions
wx: Fix int to enum
wx: Include correct m4 file in 2.9
wx: Update examples so they work with both wxWidgets 2.8 and 2.9
wx: Modify tests so they work on wxWidgets-2.9
...
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* Default to 'no' for finding a working fallocate
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This operation allows pre-allocation of space for files.
It succeeds only on systems that support such operation.
The POSIX standard defines the optional system call
posix_fallocate() to implement this feature. However,
some systems implement more specific functions to
accomplish the same operation.
On Linux, if the more specific function fallocate() is
implemented, it is used instead of posix_fallocate(),
falling back to posix_fallocate() if the fallocate()
call failed (it's only supported for the ext4, ocfs2,
xfs and btrfs file systems at the moment).
On Mac OS X it uses the specific fcntl() operation
F_PREALLOCATE, falling back to posix_fallocate() if
it's available (at the moment Mac OS X doesn't provide
posix_fallocate()).
On any other UNIX system, it uses posix_fallocate() if it's
available. Any other system not providing this system call
or any function to pre-allocate space for files, this operation
always fails with the ENOTSUP POSIX error.
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Testing using wxWidgets-2.9 on mac
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* raimo/IPV6_V6ONLY/OTP-8928:
kernel: Document socket option ipv6_v6only
kernel: Add test cases for socket option ipv6_v6only
erts,kernel: Implement socket option ipv6_v6only in erlang code
erts: Implement socket option IPV6_V6ONLY
erts: Add configure test for IPV6_V6ONLY
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Reported-by: Matthew Dempsky
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* tab/fix-sctp-multihoming-IPv6/OTP-10217:
Allow mixed IPv4 and IPv6 addresses to sctp_bindx
Add checks for in6addr_any and in6addr_loopback
Fix SCTP multihoming
inet_drv.c: Set sockaddr lengths in inet_set_[f]address
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* msp/double_middle_endian/OTP-10209:
Configure now assumed normal doubles
Revise the autoconf tests for double middle endianness.
Add test for floating-point output to float_SUITE.
Unbreak floating point on middle-endian machines.
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These variables are normally declared by <netinet/in.h>,
but for instance not on Windows 7, SDK 7.1.
Work around that by using IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT and IN6ADDR_LOOPBACK_INIT
if present, fallback to using :: and ::1.
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erlang:universaltime_to_localtime is leap seconds-aware (since 2008),
however erlang:localtime_to_universaltime is not, which gives
surprising results on systems configured with leap seconds-aware
timezones:
1> erlang:universaltime_to_localtime({{2012,1,1},{0,0,0}}).
{{2012,1,1},{0,0,0}}
2> erlang:localtime_to_universaltime({{2012,1,1},{0,0,0}}).
{{2012,1,1},{0,0,24}}
and completely breaks calendar:local_time_to_universal_time_dst:
3> calendar:local_time_to_universal_time_dst({{2011,1,1},{0,0,0}}).
[]
Signed-off-by: Piotr Sikora <[email protected]>
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The hybrid heap emulator was last working in the non-SMP R11B
run-time system. When the constant pools were introduced in R12B,
the hybrid heap emulator was not updated to handle them.
At this point, the harm from reduced readability of the code is
greater than any potential usefulness of keeping the code.
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On some ARMs (and maybe other platforms), doubles are stored with the
the two 32-bit words reversed with respect to more common
architectures.
The symptom is this:
> io_lib:write(1.0).
"0.000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000005299808824"
Detect that and account for it when decoding floats.
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Also make dyntrace NIF's load in on_load instead of init/0
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Since it's been quite a while since I've written C code, *and* I
haven't done any significant hacking on the VM itself in years, it's
quite likely that I haven't done things in 100% proper style. Or
my co-collaborators Dustin Sallings (CouchBase) or Michal Ptaszek
(Erlang Solutions). My intent for this patch is to start discussion
and review of DTrace support for consideration for the R15 release.
For additional background on the motivation for this work, please
see the slides for the presentation at the Erlang User Conference 2011
in Stockholm:
https://www.erlang-factory.com/upload/presentations/462/euc2011-draft2.pdf
Changes relative to dtrace-review2 branch:
* Fix errors in OTP test suite 'kernel' file_SUITE
* Fix errors in OTP test suite 'kernel' prim_file_SUITE
* Fix bad pointer bug in efile_drv.c flush_write()
* Move the DTrace material from the top of `README.md` into a
new file, `README.dtrace.md`
Changes since last push to GitHub (relative to commit 5828a4fb28, which
was the former `dtrace-review1` branch):
* Rebased onto 14 Nov 2011's "master" branch
* Recent changes to the async task queuing mechanism means that
the async worker queue length is not available. A bogus value
of -1 is hard-coded until there's a good way to peek into the
new queue structure and find the queue length.
* Small fixes based on review comments by Mikael Pettersson,
Andrew Thompson, and Andreas Schultz.
Add autoconf support: use "./configure --enable-dtrace" on all supported
platforms:
* OS X Snow Leopard or later
* Solaris 10 or OpenSolaris
* Linux, via SystemTap's DTrace compatibility packages
* FreeBSD 9.0RC1. FreeBSD 8 and earlier do not have support
for USDT, DTrace's User-land Statically Defined Tracing.
See the file `erts/emulator/beam/erlang_dtrace.d` for the definition
of all DTrace probes in the virtual machine so far.
Example D scripts can be found in `lib/dtrace/examples`. Note that if
you see the error message `{name of probe} does not match any probes`,
then there is no Erlang VM process + DTrace probes running. To fix,
start a DTrace-enabled VM or remove `-q` from the `dtrace` command line.
The `lib/dtrace` directory contains a small code-only OTP application
that contains code that allows Erlang code to trigger a DTrace probe.
Dynamic creation & deletion of DTrace probes is not currently
supported, so the `dtrace:p()` function is hacked to allow a variable
number of arguments (up to four integers and up to four strings) to be
used. See the comments at the top of `lib/dtrace/src/dtrace.c` for
more detail.
One feature that may be controversial is the notion I've introduced
of a special process dictionary key that can be used by Erlang code to
tag I/O operations for an application-specific purpose. Right now,
that tag's name is `dtrace_utag`. The dictionary keys used by `sys`
and other modules start with a dollar sign. Perhaps there is some
convention (but not a dollar sign?) that this tag should use?
The purpose of the process dictionary key is to allow the tag to
be included in trace messages, e.g. for file I/O, without changing the
API of the `file.erl` module's functions. For example, here's a use
of the tag when calling the `file:rename/2` function:
(bar@sbb2)1> put(dtrace_utag, "GGOOOAAALL!!!!!").
undefined
(bar@sbb2)2> dtrace:init().
ok
%% Now start both the `user-probe.d` and `efile_drv.d` D scripts
%% found in the `lib/dtrace/examples` directory.
(bar@sbb2)3> dtrace:p(7, 8, 9, "one", "four").
true
%% The output from the `user-probe.d` script:
<0.40.0> GGOOOAAALL!!!!! 7 8 9 0 'one' 'four' '' ''
(bar@sbb2)4> file:rename("old-name", "new-name").
{error,enoent}
%% The output from the `efile_drv.d` script:
async I/O pool port #Port<0.59> queue len 1
async I/O pool port #Port<0.59> queue len 0
efile_drv enter tag={1,110} user tag GGOOOAAALL!!!!! | RENAME (12) | args: old-name new-name , 0 0 (port #Port<0.59>)
async I/O worker tag={1,110} | RENAME (12) | efile_drv-int_entry
async I/O worker tag={1,110} | RENAME (12) | efile_drv-int_return
efile_drv return tag={1,110} user tag GGOOOAAALL!!!!! | RENAME (12) | errno 2
I'm not exactly happy with this choice of tagging, namely using
`put(dtrace_utag, Tag::list())`. But this is an experiment, so
we'll see how it goes. I can't imagine changing the API for
all file.erl functions in order pass the tag explicitly.
Some modules have some extensive (ab)use of the C preprocessor to
reduce the amount of #ifdefs that clutter the code. In several places,
I have not #ifdef'ed automatic variables because of clutter. For the
same reason, there are a handful of cases where I added DTrace-related
members to a struct definition without an #ifdef. I feel that the
result is easier to read than earlier drafts where I did use many more
`https://github.com/slfritchie/otp/tree/dtrace-experiment+michal2` if
you're curious.) I expect there may be some debate about whether the
bloat of the affected structs is worthwhile. I erred on adding stuff
to structs, especially in the efile_drv.c driver, not having a full
grasp on what was thread-safe and what was not ... so I erred on the
side of caution.
The efile_drv.c has a work-around for a crazy GCC optimization bug.
Thank goodness for Google, I dunno how I would've found a work-around
for this silly thing. Many thanks to Trond Norbye for writing clearly
about the problem in a membase Git repo commit message.
/*
* A note on probe naming: if "__" appears in a provider probe
* definition, then two things happen during compilation:
*
* 1. The "__" will turn into a hypen, "-", for the probe name.
* 2. The "__" will turn into a single underscore, "_", for the
* macro names and function definitions that the compiler and
* C developers will see.
*
* We'll try to use the following naming convention. We're a bit
* limited because, as a USDT probe, we can only specify the 4th part
* of the probe name, e.g. erlang*:::mumble. The 2nd part of the
* probe name is always going to be "beam" or "beam.smp", and the 3rd
* part of the probe name will always be the name of the function
* that's calling the probe.
*
* So, all probes will be have names defined in this file using the
* convention category__name or category__sub_category__name. This
* will translate to probe names of category-name or
* category-sub_category-name.
*
* Each of "category", "sub_category", and "name" may have underscores
* but may not have hyphens.
*/
Add tentative support for sequential tracing sending, queueing, and
receiving a message. I don't believe I've fully covered all the major
places where it would be useful to have the sequential trace token info
in a probe -- guidance from the OTP team would be helpful, if there's
time to do that kind of review.
Add global variable `erts_this_node_sysname`.
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Convert the recursive make for zlib into a make include file.
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* ta/sendfile/OTP-9240:
Do not use async threads on DARWIN
Fix cleanup when sendfile process crashes
Return {error,closed} from sendfile if closed
Do not use SFV_NOWAIT as it does not exist on all solaris
Clarify some code comments
Make solaris use sendfilev
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sendfilev is a richer API which allows us to
do non blocking TCP on solaris. The normal
sendfile API seems to have some issue with
non blocking sockets and the return value of
sendfile.
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Still does not run, just compiles.
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* ta/sendfile/OTP-9240: (31 commits)
Add sendfile server printouts
Skip recv/send during tests for fallback platforms
Remove header/trailer support
Remove windows implementation
Expand sendfile documentation
Only allow tcp sockets as target for sendfile
Move sendfile api to file module
Preliminary work on header/trailer
Use free_sendfile explicitly for non-async
Remove debug printouts
Add tests for send/recv/sendfile interactions
Remove tests for file_server sendfile
sendfile caller now has to be the controlling_process
Remove support for file_server, sendfile has to be raw
Set chunk size to 3 GB
Change type of fd to be ErlDrvEvent
Add ifdef's for HAVE_SENDFILE
Fix freebsd support for sendfile
Change nbytes to 64 bit
Implement ignorefd for TCP
...
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* bjorn/llvm-issues/OTP-9712:
INSTALL.md: Update build instructions for Lion
Fix clang linking problem
configure: Define NO_JUMP_TABLE if all we have is llvm-gcc
beam_emu.c: Eliminate warnings when NO_JUMP_TABLE is defined
beam_emu.c: Use the correct void* type for computed gotos
MacOS X: Completely remove obsolete -no-cpp-precomp option
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* tn/inet_drv-fix:
Cleanup - remove unnecesary bracket level and configure for ifreq.ifr_enaddr
Work around gcc linking with own view of default libs on Solaris
Use libdlpi to get physical address
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Many test cases provoke printouts similar to:
ERTS_FP_CHECK_INIT at 0x131fd218: detected unhandled FPE at 0x1
Until the problem has been identified and fixed, disable floating
point exceptions by default on Mac OS X.
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Allow Erlang code to use sendfile() where available by wrapping it as
file:sendfile/4 and file:sendfile/2.
sendfile(2) - Linux man page:
"sendfile() copies data between one file descriptor and another.
Because this copying is done within the kernel, sendfile() is more
efficient than the combination of read(2) and write(2), which would
require transferring data to and from user space."
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Also use 64-bit lib when necessary, specify runtime lib path
for secondary dependency libs, and better check before using
SIOCGIFHWADDR.
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clang does not recognize the -no-cpp-precomp option and generates
a warning. -no-cpp-precomp is an obsolete Apple-specific gcc option,
which last had any effect in gcc 3.1 for Jaguar.
Since we cannot build for Jaguar anyway, the configure test added
in 8412a400e92d5cbcd is not needed.
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* pan/osx_gcc_fixes:
Fix typo in erts/configure.in
Make OTP build w/alternative gcc on MacOS Lion
OTP-9712
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* sverk/hipe-without-fpe/OTP-9724:
otp_build: Disable FPE by default on Linux
stdlib: Make sure qlc_SUITE:otp_6964 restores backtrace_depth
erts: Add test for inf/NaN intermediate float results
hipe,erts: Allow hipe without floating point exceptions
hipe: Fix bug in hipe_rtl_lcm:calc_killed_expr_bb
erts: Rename macros used by float instructions without FPE
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On e.g FreeBSD the functions sctp_bindx() and sctp_peeloff() do not require
any extra linkage library flags and there is no dynamic lib to load
for them; use configure to find them.
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Requires own build of wxMac for wx to work:
$ arch_flags="-arch i386"
$ ./configure CFLAGS="$arch_flags" CXXFLAGS="$arch_flags" \
CPPFLAGS="$arch_flags" LDFLAGS="$arch_flags" OBJCFLAGS="$arch_flags" \
OBJCXXFLAGS="$arch_flags" --prefix=/usr/local \
--with-macosx-sdk=/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.6.sdk \
--with-macosx-version-min=10.6 --enable-unicode --with-opengl
$ make
$ sudo make install
- and we have macports gcc 4.5 in /opt/local/bin, so we configure
and build OTP like this for 32bit (which is required for wx):
$ cd $ERL_TOP
$ PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH CC=/opt/local/bin/gcc-mp-4.5 CXX=/opt/local/bin/g++-mp-4.5 ./configure --enable-m32-build
$ MAKEFLAGS="-j6" PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH make
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* bjorn/some-configure-clean-ups:
erts/configure.in: Remove test for reversed setvbuf() arguments
erts/configure.in: Remove broken support for System V
erts/configure.in: Don't check for the presence of mach-o/dyld.h
erts/configure.in: Remove useless --disable-fixalloc option
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