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* maint:
Fix max atom size overflow on 64-bits Erlang by lowering the MAX_ATOM_TABLE_SIZE
Fix integer overflow when set a large maximum value for atom table
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When setting maximum atom table size using +t option, there will be a
integer overflow for a large size.
$ erl +t2147482625
ll_alloc: Cannot allocate 18446744073692774400 bytes of memory
(of type "atom_tab").
The overflow is caused by the arithmetic operations on int type.
When 2147482625 + 1024 it will become -2147483647 due to the signed
integerger overflow. Then the result will be resized to Uint type, which
is a unsigned long type, the negative int will first be expand to 64
bits long via sign extension, then change to unsigned type, which
becomes 18446744073692774400.
The fix is done by convert `limit` to Uint type before doing any
arithmetic operation. This will expand variable to 64 bits long type via
zero extension, then the following operation are all positive, therefore
no overflow will happen.
Note: here we assume the int `limit` passed in is always positive. If
some future change cause the `limit` passed in maybe negative, then the
current fix will also cause overflow.
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* sverker/make-export-fun-race/OTP-14144:
erts: Fix race bug between export fun creation and code loading
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Symptom: SEGV crash on ARM in delete_code() -> export_list().
Could probably happen on other machines as well.
Problem: Staging export table was iterated in an unsafe way
while an entry was added for a new export fun.
Solution: Correct write order and some memory barriers.
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Instead of passing around a file descriptor
use a function pointer to facilitate more advanced
backend write logic such as size limitation or compression.
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This is mostly a pure refactoring.
Except for the buggy cases when calling erlang:halt() with a positive
integer in the range -(INT_MIN+2) to -INT_MIN that got confused with
ERTS_ABORT_EXIT, ERTS_DUMP_EXIT and ERTS_INTR_EXIT.
Outcome OLD erl_exit(n, ) NEW erts_exit(n, )
------- ------------------- -------------------------------------------
exit(Status) n = -Status <= 0 n = Status >= 0
crashdump+abort n > 0, ignore n n = ERTS_ERROR_EXIT < 0
The outcome of the old ERTS_ABORT_EXIT, ERTS_INTR_EXIT and
ERTS_DUMP_EXIT are the same as before (even though their values have
changed).
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Conflicts:
erts/etc/common/heart.c
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Not setting ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS will now terminate beam
immediately on a crash without writing a crash dump file.
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.
Setting ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS to a negative value will let the beam wait
indefinitely on the crash dump file being written.
Setting ERL_CRASH_DUMP_SECONDS to a positive value will let the beam wait
that many seconds on the crash dump file being written.
A positive value will set both an alarm in beam AND a heart timeout for restart
if heart is running.
This is due to the change of 'heart' behavior when 'heart' is
listening for a crash.
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Same as index_put() but returns pointer to entry instead of index integer.
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