Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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To make it possible to build the entire OTP system, also define
dummys for the instructions in ops.tab.
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A process requesting a system task to be executed in the context of
another process will be notified by a message when the task has
executed. This message will be on the form:
{RequestType, RequestId, Pid, Result}.
A process requesting a system task to be executed can set priority
on the system task. The requester typically set the same priority
on the task as its own process priority, and by this avoiding
priority inversion. A request for execution of a system task is
made by calling the statically linked in NIF
erts_internal:request_system_task(Pid, Prio, Request). This is an
undocumented ERTS internal function that should remain so. It
should *only* be called from BIF implementations.
Currently defined system tasks are:
* garbage_collect
* check_process_code
Further system tasks can and will be implemented in the future.
The erlang:garbage_collect/[1,2] and erlang:check_process_code/[2,3]
BIFs are now implemented using system tasks. Both the
'garbage_collect' and the 'check_process_code' operations perform
or may perform garbage_collections. By doing these via the
system task functionality all garbage collect operations in the
system will be performed solely in the context of the process
being garbage collected. This makes it possible to later implement
functionality for disabling garbage collection of a process over
context switches.
Newly introduced BIFs:
* erlang:garbage_collect/2 - The new second argument is an option
list. Introduced option:
* {async, RequestId} - making it possible for users to issue
asynchronous garbage collect requests.
* erlang:check_process_code/3 - The new third argument is an
option list. Introduced options:
* {async, RequestId} - making it possible for users to issue
asynchronous check process code requests.
* {allow_gc, boolean()} - making it possible to issue requests
that aren't allowed to garbage collect (operation will abort
if gc should be needed).
These options have been introduced as a preparation for
parallelization of check_process_code operations when the
code_server is about to purge a module.
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The loader failed to load non-optimized BEAM code generated from:
element(2, not_a_tuple)
Commit ece4c17d2288a3161c995 introduced such code into
core_fold_SUITE, leading to core_fold_no_opt_SUITE and
core_fold_post_opt_SUITE failing to load.
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Calls to erlang:set_trace_pattern/3 will no longer block all
other schedulers.
We will still go to single-scheduler mode when new code is loaded
for a module that is traced, or when loading code when there is a
default trace pattern set. That is not impossible to fix, but that
requires much closer cooperation between tracing BIFs and the loader
BIFs.
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Change the data structures for breakpoints to make it possible
(in a future commit) to manage breakpoints without taking down the
system to single-scheduling mode.
The current "breakpoint wheel" data structure (a circular,
double-linked list of breakpoints) was invented before the
SMP emulator. To support it in the SMP emulator, there is essentially
one breakpoint wheel per scheduler. As more breakpoint types have
been added, the implementation has become messy and hard to understand
and maintain.
Therefore, the time for a rewrite has come. Use one struct to hold
all breakpoint data for a breakpoint in a function. Use a flag field
to indicate what different type of break actions that are enabled.
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Conflicts:
erts/emulator/beam/beam_emu.c
erts/emulator/beam/bif.tab
erts/preloaded/ebin/prim_file.beam
lib/hipe/cerl/erl_bif_types.erl
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It is wrongly assumed in the BEAM loader that apply/2 is a BIF
and must be treated specially. Also make it clearer in ops.tab
that apply/3 is a BIF, but apply/2 is not.
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Taking advantage of the new calling convention for BIFs, we
only need one instruction to handle BIFs with any number of
arguments. This change eliminates the limit of three arguments
for BIFs, but traps are still limited to three arguments.
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Each gc_bif[123] instruction must have both a transformation in
ops.tab and special code in gen_guard_bif[123]().
Rewrite it to do most of the work in gen_guard_bif[123]().
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In the handling of generic instructions, we used to always
test whether the instruction was 'too_old_compiler' and abort
loading with a special error message.
Refactor the code so that we only do test if we an error
has occurred. That will allow us to make the test more expensive
in the future, allowing us to customize error messages for certain
opcode without any cost in the successful case.
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We don't need type constraints that essentially are assertions;
the wrong type will be detected and loading aborted when no specific
instruction can be found.
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If the left part of a transformation will always match, omit the
the 'try_me_else' and 'fail' instructions.
As part of this optimization, make it an error to have a
transformation that can never be reached because of a previous
transformation that will always match. (Remove one transformation
from ops.tab that was found to be unreachable.)
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is_list/2 and other test instructions with a zero label was last
generated by the v1 BEAM compiler which was last supported in R6B.
Since BEAM modules produced by that compiler will be rejected with
a nice error message for other reasons (e.g. by the test for the
module_info/0,1 functions), retaining those transformations serves
no useful purpose.
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The hybrid-heap emulator is broken since R12, so there is no
need to keep those instructions.
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Ancient versions of BEAM compiler could generate move instruction with
the same source and destination registers, so the loader would optimize
away such instructions.
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Introduce the line/1 instruction in the compiler and the BEAM
virtual machine. It will not yet be generated by the compiler and
will not actually carry any information.
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Constructing binaries using the bit syntax with literals sizes
that would not fit in an Uint will either cause an emulator crash
or the loading to be aborted.
Use the new TAG_o tag introduced in the previous commit to make sure
that the attempt to create huge binary literals will generate a
system_limit exception at run-time.
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For some historical reason, the transformation of a func_info/3
instruction to the internal i_func_info/4 instruction is more
involved than it needs to be. Remove the gen_func_info() function
in the loader and use a simple transformation.
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Frequency counts show that
move Const x(1)
move Const x(2)
are very common.
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That will save one word and small amount of time for
each occurrence.
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The is_eq_exact/3 and is_ne_exact/3 instructions are commonly used
with one immediate or literal operand.
Introduce three new specialized instructions:
i_is_eq_exact_literal/3
i_is_ne_exact_immed/3
i_is_ne_exact_literal/3
The i_is_ne_exact_literal/3 instruction is not very frequently
used, but its existence is justified because we removed in a
a previous commit the special instruction for matching bignums
and we now use i_is_ne_exact_literal/3 instead.
For consistency, rename the existing is_eq_immed/3 instruction to
is_eq_exact_immed/3.
While at it, remove the optimization of an is_eq/3 instruction
with an immediate operand because that optimization is already
done by the compiler.
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Introduce a new i_increment/4 to optimize the addition of
a register and a small integer. This instruction saves two
instruction words compared to the standard instructions
(an i_fetch/2 instruction followed by a i_plus/3 instruction)
and will also be slightly faster.
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The new instruction will save one word (because no size operand
is needed), and is slightly faster.
Handle select_tuple_arity in the same way.
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Since the literal (constant) pool was introduced in R12, the
BEAM compiler will never generate a "put_list Const [] Dst"
instruction (it will instead generate a "move [Const] Dst"
instruction).
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The move_sd specific instruction is no longer used since there
are specific move instructions covering all possible permutations
of operands. Also eliminate the move_cy instruction because it
is almost never generated by the compiler.
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Create separate instructions for each register type. The "badmatch x(0)"
and "case_end x(0)" (which are very common) will only require a single
word each, compared to two words when GetArg1() is used.
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Use separate instructions for each register type.
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Use separate instructions for each register type.
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Instead of having one i_select_val_sfI instruction that uses
the GetArg1() macro to fetch the controlling expression, use
three separate instructions for each of the register types.
That will save one word when selecting on the {x,0} register.
It should also be slightly faster since a conditional branch
is eliminated.
Although it seems that the BEAM compiler will never generate
a constant controlling expression (even with optimizations
turned off), we still make sure that they will work by
evaluating the select_val instruction at load time.
Handle the select_tuple_arity instruction in the same way.
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Combine the put_tuple/2 and all following put/1 instructions
to one i_put_tuple/2 instruction. In general, that will reduce
the number of instruction words by 50 percent.
Measurements seem to indicate that the speed is about the same.
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Introduce a new 'Q' type, similar to 'P' except that it
can be packed.
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There was a version of the BEAM loader and emulator that
had two versions of the fmove/2 instruction, one version
that allocated heap space internally and a newer version that
assumed that a previous test_heap/2 instruction had already
allocated the heap space.
Though the allocating fmove/2 instruction is no longer
supported, some vestiges of it still remains.
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Without the instruction defined in ops the interpreter will not
compile when using NO_JUMPTABLE.
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Initial commit with a new breakpoint instruction and PSD areas
for temporary time storage during tracing.
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