Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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There is one remaining bug where ttsl_drv's state ends up inconsistent
with the terminal own state; when a wide character is entered on the
last column of the terminal.
Reported-by: Loïc Hoguin
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* lukas/erts/efile_delayed_write_fix/OTP-10984:
Do driver_deq in worker threads instead of async_ready
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Doing it in async_ready was needed before the pdl was introduced, but
now with the pdl the deq no longer needs the port lock to protect it.
This was not an issue when async_ready was called in the worker thread,
but now (R15B) that it is signalled back to the scheduler, some very nasty
race conditions could occur when using driver_timer and async jobs.
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* egil/win-efile-bugfix/OTP-10890:
erts: Use correct type for ReadFile bytes read
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Using a 64bit type for bytes read will not always clear the higher bits.
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* sverk/tcp-exit_on_close-false:
inet_drv: Fix condition to reject INET_REQ_IGNOREFD for UDP and SCTP
A stab at fixing bug with {exit_on_close,false} not working
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Seems to happen with async threads and when user closes
the file explicitly before the port is closed.
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when invalid packets are received.
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* pan/fix-compiler-warnings-clang-and-new-gcc:
Fix compiler warnings from GCC 4.7.1 on ARCH Linux
Fix clang compiler warnings on FreeBSD in erts
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The following are deliberately left, as I have only a list of compiler
warnings and no system to test on:
hipe/hipe_x86_signal.c:264:5: warning: no previous prototype for function '_sigaction' [-Wmissing-prototypes]
int __SIGACTION(int signum, const struct sigaction *act, struct sigaction *oldact)
^
hipe/hipe_x86_signal.c:222:21: note: expanded from macro '__SIGACTION'
^
1 warning generated.
sys/unix/sys_float.c:835:16: warning: declaration of 'struct exception' will not be visible outside of this function [-Wvisibility]
matherr(struct exception *exc)
^
sys/unix/sys_float.c:835:1: warning: no previous prototype for function 'matherr' [-Wmissing-prototypes]
matherr(struct exception *exc)
^
2 warnings generated.
drivers/unix/unix_efile.c:1504:11: warning: implicit declaration of function 'sendfile' [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
retval = sendfile(in_fd, out_fd, *offset, SENDFILE_CHUNK_SIZE,
^
1 warning generated.
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Also, on 64 bit architectures, use 64 bit int's for the
counters and be specific about the counter variables sizes
utilizing datatypes from sys.h.
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* pan/R16/redhat_workaround:
Clean up and make the fix work on windows.
Add workaround for CentOS/RedHat writev bug to inet_drv
OTP-10747
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Some file operations provided by the Erlang file module
didn't open the target file with all the file share flags.
This made some concurrent file operations against the
same file fail on Windows, while on other platforms such
as GNU/Linux or Mac OS X they succeed. The operations will
fail only if they're performed concurrently by different
threads (async IO threads or scheduler threads).
For example, one Erlang process does a file:delete/1 call
while another Erlang process is doing a filelib:file_size/1
call. This made the former process get an eacces error from
the file:delete/1 call. On GNU/Linux or Mac OS X the call would
succeed. Another example is if one Erlang process attempts to
open a file for reading while another one is in the middle of
a file:read_file_info/1 call (after it opened the file and
before it closed the file).
It's easy to verify that if a file is not open with all the
share flags, it's impossible for other threads (even if they
belong to the same OS process) to open the file while the
file is not closed by the first thread.
The following test program shows this:
#include <windows.h>
#include <iostream>
// Must be an existing file
//#define SHARE_FLAGS (FILE_SHARE_READ)
static DWORD WINAPI MyThreadFunction(LPVOID lpParam);
static char *lastError();
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
DWORD threadId;
HANDLE threadHandle, hFile;
hFile = CreateFile(FILENAME, GENERIC_READ, SHARE_FLAGS, NULL,
OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, NULL);
if (hFile == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
std::cerr << "File open error from main: " <<
lastError() << std::endl;
return 1;
}
std::cout << "Main thread opened file successfully" << std::endl;
threadHandle = CreateThread(NULL, 0, MyThreadFunction, NULL, 0, &threadId);
if (threadHandle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
std::cerr << "Thread create error from main: " <<
lastError() << std::endl;
return 1;
}
WaitForSingleObject(threadHandle, INFINITE);
CloseHandle(threadHandle);
CloseHandle(hFile);
return 0;
}
static DWORD WINAPI MyThreadFunction( LPVOID lpParam )
{
HANDLE hFile;
hFile = CreateFile(FILENAME, GENERIC_READ, SHARE_FLAGS, NULL,
OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, NULL);
if (hFile == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
std::cerr << "File open error from second thread: " <<
lastError() << std::endl;
return 1;
}
std::cout << "Second thread opened file successfully" << std::endl;
CloseHandle(hFile);
return 0;
}
static char *lastError()
{
static char *buf = NULL;
DWORD dw = GetLastError();
if (buf != NULL) {
LocalFree((LPTSTR) &buf);
}
FormatMessage(FORMAT_MESSAGE_ALLOCATE_BUFFER | FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM |
FORMAT_MESSAGE_IGNORE_INSERTS,
NULL, dw, MAKELANGID(LANG_NEUTRAL, SUBLANG_DEFAULT),
(LPTSTR) &buf, 0, NULL);
return buf;
}
Rnning this program with SHARE_FLAGS set to 0 (as efile_fileinfo()
does for e.g.), shows that the second thread is unable to open the
file:
C:\cygwin\home\fdmanana\tmp>touch foo.bar
C:\cygwin\home\fdmanana\tmp>threads_fopen_test.exe
Main thread opened file successfully
File open error from second thread: The process cannot access the
file because it is being used by another process.
Changing the program's SHARE_FLAGS to FILE_SHARE_READ, shows that
both threads are able to open the file:
C:\cygwin\home\fdmanana\tmp>touch foo.bar
C:\cygwin\home\fdmanana\tmp>threads_test.exe
Main thread opened file successfully
Second thread opened file successfully
Same logic applies to opening files for writing or deleting and
renaming files while they're open by some other thread that didn't
specify the flags FILE_SHARE_WRITE and FILE_SHARE_DELETE.
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* fdm/file-allocate/OTP-10680:
Update preloaded prim_file.beam
erts: Fix xcomp configure for fallocate
Add file:allocate/3 operation
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* pn/ansi-console/OTP-10678:
Support ANSI in the console
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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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When using the async thread pool, if an erlang process
asks to open a file and it gets shutdown/killed while
the file:open/2 call hasn't returned, it's possible to
leak a file descriptor against the target file.
This happens because when the file driver is stopped
(file_stop() function is called), an async thread is
executing, about to execute, or executed already the
invoke_open() function. After file_stop() is called,
the file_async_ready() function will not run, and this
function is responsible for setting desc->fd with the
file descriptor that invoke_open() got. The file_stop()
call closes desc->fd if it refers to a valid file
descriptor, which is not the case here, because this
function was called before file_async_ready() could
run.
This leak is easily reproducile in a GNU/Linux system
using the following test code:
-module(t).
-export([t/1]).
t(N) ->
Pid = spawn_link(fun() ->
process_flag(trap_exit, true),
loop(N)
end),
Ref = erlang:monitor(process, Pid),
receive {'DOWN', Ref, _, _, _} ->
ok
end.
loop(0) ->
ok;
loop(N) ->
Name = integer_to_list(N),
Server = self(),
Pid = spawn(fun() ->
Server ! continue,
{ok, FdW} = file:open(Name, [raw, write]),
{ok, FdR} = file:open(Name, [raw, read]),
% Optional close calls, with or without them
% it makes no difference.
%ok = file:close(FdW),
%ok = file:close(FdR),
ok
end),
receive continue -> ok end,
exit(Pid, shutdown),
loop(N - 1).
Running this code with a few iterations is enough to very often
notice, with the lsof command, that the beam.smp process is holding
forever file descriptors open. This issue doesn't happen if the
async thread pool is not used.
Example:
$ erl +A 4
Erlang R15B03 (erts-5.9.3) [source] [64-bit] [smp:4:4] [async-threads:4] [hipe] [kernel-poll:false]
Eshell V5.9.3 (abort with ^G)
1> c(t).
{ok,t}
2> os:getpid().
"31975"
3> t:t(20).
ok
In a separate shell:
$ lsof -p 31975
COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE NODE NAME
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana cwd DIR 8,18 22736896 32563204 /home/fdmanana/git/hub/otp/tmp
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana rtd DIR 8,1 4096 2 /
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana txt REG 8,1 7600263 1835126 /opt/r15b03/lib/erlang/erts-5.9.3/bin/beam.smp
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana mem REG 8,1 7220736 2497283 /usr/lib/locale/locale-archive
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana mem REG 8,1 10280 2505021 /usr/lib/libsctp.so.1.0.11
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana mem REG 8,1 1811128 917795 /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc-2.15.so
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana mem REG 8,1 31752 917803 /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/librt-2.15.so
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana mem REG 8,1 135366 917799 /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread-2.15.so
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana mem REG 8,1 159200 921249 /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libtinfo.so.5.9
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana mem REG 8,1 1030512 917962 /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libm-2.15.so
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana mem REG 8,1 14768 917702 /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libdl-2.15.so
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana mem REG 8,1 149280 917974 /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ld-2.15.so
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 0u CHR 136,1 4 /dev/pts/1
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 1u CHR 136,1 4 /dev/pts/1
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 2u CHR 136,1 4 /dev/pts/1
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 3r FIFO 0,8 1298297 pipe
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 4w FIFO 0,8 1298297 pipe
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 5r FIFO 0,8 1298298 pipe
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 6w FIFO 0,8 1298298 pipe
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 7w REG 8,18 0 32564173 /home/fdmanana/git/hub/otp/tmp/20
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 8w REG 8,18 0 32564176 /home/fdmanana/git/hub/otp/tmp/16
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 9w REG 8,18 0 32564177 /home/fdmanana/git/hub/otp/tmp/15
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 10w REG 8,18 0 32564179 /home/fdmanana/git/hub/otp/tmp/12
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 11w REG 8,18 0 32564180 /home/fdmanana/git/hub/otp/tmp/11
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 12w REG 8,18 0 32564205 /home/fdmanana/git/hub/otp/tmp/10
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 13w REG 8,18 0 32564182 /home/fdmanana/git/hub/otp/tmp/8
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 14w REG 8,18 0 32564183 /home/fdmanana/git/hub/otp/tmp/7
beam.smp 31975 fdmanana 15w REG 8,18 0 32564186 /home/fdmanana/git/hub/otp/tmp/3
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Thanks to Tony Rogvall.
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rickard/r16/port-optimizations/OTP-10336
* rickard/port-optimizations/OTP-10336:
Change annotate level for emacs-22 in cerl
Update etp-commands
Add documentation on communication in Erlang
Add support for busy port message queue
Add driver callback epilogue
Implement true asynchronous signaling between processes and ports
Add erl_drv_[send|output]_term
Move busy port flag
Use rwlock for driver list
Optimize management of port tasks
Improve configuration of process and port tables
Remove R9 compatibility features
Use ptab functionality also for ports
Prepare for use of ptab functionality also for ports
Atomic port state
Generalize process table implementation
Implement functionality for delaying thread progress from unmanaged threads
Conflicts:
erts/doc/src/erl_driver.xml
erts/doc/src/erlang.xml
erts/emulator/beam/beam_bif_load.c
erts/emulator/beam/beam_bp.c
erts/emulator/beam/beam_emu.c
erts/emulator/beam/bif.c
erts/emulator/beam/copy.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_alloc.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_alloc.types
erts/emulator/beam/erl_bif_info.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_bif_port.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_bif_trace.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_init.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_message.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_port_task.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_process.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_process.h
erts/emulator/beam/erl_process_lock.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_trace.c
erts/emulator/beam/export.h
erts/emulator/beam/global.h
erts/emulator/beam/io.c
erts/emulator/sys/unix/sys.c
erts/emulator/sys/vxworks/sys.c
erts/emulator/test/port_SUITE.erl
erts/etc/unix/cerl.src
erts/preloaded/ebin/erlang.beam
erts/preloaded/ebin/prim_inet.beam
erts/preloaded/src/prim_inet.erl
lib/hipe/cerl/erl_bif_types.erl
lib/kernel/doc/src/inet.xml
lib/kernel/src/inet.erl
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When using values of sfv_len and sfv_off which are larger than
the file in question, sendfilev can sometimes return -1 and send
data. It seems to be only Oracle SunOS which this happens on.
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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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Peeloff feature of SCTP association creates a new socket which is not
set to nonblocking.
Function for receving data is shared with udp which has a default
loop when reading packets which is set to 5.
Calling the receive function more then once, is fine as long as
there are more data to receive or socket are nonblocking.
Set new peeled off socket to be nonblocking to prevent a erlang vm hangup.
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Conflicts:
lib/diameter/autoconf/vxworks/sed.general
xcomp/README.md
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Long input paths (longer than MAX_PATH) would get copied
into a buffer of size MAX_PATH for read_link and altname
in efile_drv.
Also fixed misuse of size_t parameter as wchar_t *
string length in win_efile:efile_readlink.
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* maint:
Bumped version nr
ssl & public_key: Workaround that some certificates encode countryname as utf8 and close down gracefully if other ASN-1 errors occur.
Add more cross reference links to ct docs
Remove config option from common_test args
Update user config to use nested tuple keys
Allow mixed IPv4 and IPv6 addresses to sctp_bindx
Add checks for in6addr_any and in6addr_loopback
Fix SCTP multihoming
observer: fix app file (Noticed-by: Motiejus Jakstys)
Fix lib/src/test/ssh_basic_SUITE.erl to fix IPv6 option typos
Prevent index from being corrupted if a nonexistent item is deleted
Add tests showing that trying to delete non-existing object may corrupt the table index
Fix Table Viewer search crash on new|changed|deleted rows
Escape control characters in Table Viewer
Fix Table Viewer crash after a 'Found' -> 'Not found' search sequence
inet_drv.c: Set sockaddr lengths in inet_set_[f]address
Conflicts:
erts/preloaded/ebin/prim_inet.beam
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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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Conflicts:
erts/doc/src/erlang.xml
erts/preloaded/ebin/init.beam
lib/kernel/doc/src/os.xml
lib/stdlib/test/filename_SUITE.erl
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Also allow mixed address families to bind, since the first address on
a multihomed sctp socket must be bound with bind, while the rest are
to be bound using sctp_bindx.
At least Linux supports adding address of mixing families.
Make inet_set_faddress function available also when HAVE_SCTP is not
defined, since we use it to find an address for bind to be able to mix
ipv4 and ipv6 addresses.
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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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Setting several ip addresses for an SCTP socket worked only for IPv4
on Linux. For IPv6 and for other for instance Solaris and FreeBSD, it
failed with badarg for both IPv4 and IPv6.
For the first address specified to gen_sctp:open, bind is now called,
while for any following addresses, sctp_bindx is called, repeatedly,
with one address at a time. Previously, sctp_bindx was called for all
addresses in one go, with the addresses in reverse order, and bind was
not called at all if more than one address was specified. Both
Solaris and FreeBSD requires bind to have been called before calling
sctp_bindx, and FreeBSD additionally allows at most one address at a
time in the call to sctp_bindx.
For some versions of Linux, for instance SuSE 10, the port can be 0
only for the call to bind but not for subsequent calls to sctp_bindx,
so replace with the port number assigned by the operating system.
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