Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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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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