Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
|
|
Fix GC bug for HiPE primop bs_put_utf8
|
|
in order to detect incompatible changes in primop interface
(which we just did for bs_put_utf8) and refuse hipe loading.
|
|
by preventing it from doing GC, which generated code relies on.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* dgud/kernel/refc_sched_wall_time/OTP-11694:
test: spawn scheduler_wall_time flag holder
Turn on scheduler_wall_time in an alive process
Redirect system_flag(scheduler_wall_time,_) to kernel_refc
kernel: add a resource reference counter
|
|
|
|
Symptom: "Closing pipe in state Waiting. Event lost?"
Snake oil:
Do erlang:yield() instead of busy spinning in "Waiting" state.
|
|
|
|
Add syntax in try/catch to retrieve the stacktrace directly
|
|
|
|
When a dirty NIF is executed a "schedule in" trace event is
generated, which may in turn result in a generic system task being
created, causing the process to be scheduled out as it can't run
dirty with pending tasks.
This is usually fine since said system task is seldom created, but
ERTS_FORCE_ENIF_SEND_DELAY was de-facto always on for debug builds,
causing the process to bounce between dirty and normal schedulers
forever.
This commit is not a complete fix and it can go off the rails even
on normal builds; if there's a lot of dirty jobs lined up and the
receiver's msgq lock happens to be busy at the wrong time, the
additional trace messages generated through this will hammer the
lock and keep everything bouncing.
|
|
Most functions return this if they're given an invalid path, eg. if
they contain "<" or ">". ENOENT may seem like a strange translation,
but that's what open(2) returns when fed garbage, so we'll roll with
that.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* maint:
fix output formatting in several HiPE debug BIFs
|
|
fix output formatting in several HiPE debug BIFs
OTP-14804
|
|
* bjorn/compiler/clean-up-codegen:
bs_match_SUITE: Cover more clauses in v3_codegen:bs_rename_ctx/4
Clean up and comment code generation for basic blocks
Stop trying to maximize the use of x(0)
Clean up collection of basic blocks
|
|
|
|
efile_drv is gone and so is the need for file-specific DTrace. The
new implementation works fine with the normal tracing mechanism so
there's nothing preventing anyone from making an erl_tracer nif
that forward these events to DTrace.
|
|
|
|
There doesn't seem to be any science behind the long delays, and
the (newly introduced) dry run forces us to eat them twice, so
they've been shortened to more reasonable values.
|
|
Code loading is done through dirty IO now, causing the
dirty_scheduler_exit tests to fail as they block their own progress
by invoking erts_debug:dirty_io(wait, _); the spawned processes
will exit normally before we have a chance to kill them.
To get around this, we perform a dry run to ensure that all required
code is loaded. It isn't particularly pretty (or fast) but it saves
us the hassle of maintaining a module list (cf. embedded mode).
|
|
This test is irrelevant as the new implementation doesn't use async
threads.
|
|
This improves the latency of file operations as dirty schedulers
are a bit more eager to run jobs than async threads, and use a
single global queue rather than per-thread queues, eliminating the
risk of a job stalling behind a long-running job on the same thread
while other async threads sit idle.
There's no such thing as a free lunch though; the lowered latency
comes at the cost of increased busy-waiting which may have an
adverse effect on some applications. This behavior can be tweaked
with the +sbwt flag, but unfortunately it affects all types of
schedulers and not just dirty ones. We plan to add type-specific
flags at a later stage.
sendfile has been moved to inet_drv to lessen the effect of a nasty
race; the cooperation between inet_drv and efile has never been
airtight and the socket dying at the wrong time (Regardless of
reason) could result in fd aliasing. Moving it to the inet driver
makes it impossible to trigger this by closing the socket in the
middle of a sendfile operation, while still allowing it to be
aborted -- something that can't be done if it stays in the file
driver.
The race still occurs if the controlling process dies in the short
window between dispatching the sendfile operation and the dup(2)
call in the driver, but it's much less likely to happen now.
A proper fix is in the works.
--
Notable functional differences:
* The use_threads option for file:sendfile/5 no longer has any
effect.
* The file-specific DTrace probes have been removed. The same
effect can be achieved with normal tracing together with the
nif__entry/nif__return probes to track scheduling.
--
OTP-14256
|
|
|
|
If a NIF monitor fired while the resource was present in an ETS
table, the lock checker would erroneously report a lock order
violation.
This has no effect outside of debug builds.
|
|
This introduces a way to retrieve erlang terms from NIF IO queues
without having to resort to copying.
OTP-14797
|
|
|
|
This commit adds a new syntax for retrieving the stacktrace
without calling erlang:get_stacktrace/0. That allow us to
deprecate erlang:get_stacktrace/0 and ultimately remove it.
The problem with erlang:get_stacktrace/0 is that it can keep huge
terms in a process for an indefinite time after an exception. The
stacktrace can be huge after a 'function_clause' exception or a failed
call to a BIF or operator, because the arguments for the call will be
included in the stacktrace. For example:
1> catch abs(lists:seq(1, 1000)).
{'EXIT',{badarg,[{erlang,abs,
[[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20|...]],
[]},
{erl_eval,do_apply,6,[{file,"erl_eval.erl"},{line,674}]},
{erl_eval,expr,5,[{file,"erl_eval.erl"},{line,431}]},
{shell,exprs,7,[{file,"shell.erl"},{line,687}]},
{shell,eval_exprs,7,[{file,"shell.erl"},{line,642}]},
{shell,eval_loop,3,[{file,"shell.erl"},{line,627}]}]}}
2> erlang:get_stacktrace().
[{erlang,abs,
[[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,
23,24|...]],
[]},
{erl_eval,do_apply,6,[{file,"erl_eval.erl"},{line,674}]},
{erl_eval,expr,5,[{file,"erl_eval.erl"},{line,431}]},
{shell,exprs,7,[{file,"shell.erl"},{line,687}]},
{shell,eval_exprs,7,[{file,"shell.erl"},{line,642}]},
{shell,eval_loop,3,[{file,"shell.erl"},{line,627}]}]
3>
We can extend the syntax for clauses in try/catch to optionally bind
the stacktrace to a variable.
Here is an example using the current syntax:
try
Expr
catch C:E ->
Stk = erlang:get_stacktrace(),
.
.
.
In the new syntax, it would look like:
try
Expr
catch
C:E:Stk ->
.
.
.
Only a variable (not a pattern) is allowed in the stacktrace position,
to discourage matching of the stacktrace. (Matching would also be
expensive, because the raw format of the stacktrace would have to be
converted to the cooked form before matching.)
Note that:
try
Expr
catch E ->
.
.
.
is a shorthand for:
try
Expr
catch throw:E ->
.
.
.
If the stacktrace is to be retrieved for a throw, the 'throw:'
prefix must be explicitly included:
try
Expr
catch throw:E:Stk ->
.
.
.
|
|
X register 0 used to be mapped to a hardware register, and therefore
faster than the other registers. Because of that, the compiler
tried to use x(0) as much as possible as a temporary register.
That was changed a few releases ago. X register 0 is now placed
in the array of all X registers and has no special speed
advantage compared to the other registers.
Remove the code in the compiler that attempts to use x(0) as
much as possible. As a result, the following type of instruction
will be much less frequent:
{put_list,Src,{x,0},{x,0}}
Instead, the following type of instruction will be more frequent:
{put_list,Src,{x,X},{x,X}}
(Where X is an arbitrary X register.)
Update the runtime system to specialize that kind of put_list
instruction.
|
|
* 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
|
|
Fix integer overflow when set a large maximum value for atom table
OTP-14796
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When compiling Erlang source code, the literal area for the
module can only contain data types that have a literal
syntax.
However, it is possible to sneak in other data types
(such as references) in the literal pool by compiling from
abstract or assembly code. Those "fake literals" would work
fine, but would crash the runtime system when the module containing
the literals was purged.
Although fake literals are not officially supported, the
runtime should not crash when attempting to use them.
Therefore, fix the garbage collection of literals and releasing
of literal areas.
https://bugs.erlang.org/browse/ERL-508
|
|
* maint:
Use base64 encoding in crash dumps
Correct parsing of sub binaries
Generalize passing of options for decoding
|
|
* bjorn/base64-in-dumps/OTP-14686:
Use base64 encoding in crash dumps
Correct parsing of sub binaries
Generalize passing of options for decoding
|
|
|
|
by suppressing DOP_MONITOR_P, DOP_MONITOR_P_EXIT and DOP_DEMONITOR_P
if not supported by the remote node.
In 17e198d6ee60f7dec9abfed272cf4226aea44535
I changed the behavior of erlang:monitor
to not raise badarg for c-nodes but instead create
a monitor to only supervise the connection.
But I forgot to prevent DOP_MONITOR_P and friends from being
sent to the node that does not expect them.
Note: We test both DFLAG_DIST_MONITOR and DFLAG_DIST_MONITOR_NAME
for the node to support process monitoring. This is because
erl_interface is buggy as it sets DFLAG_DIST_MONITOR without
really supporting it.
ToDo: Should erl_interface stop setting DFLAG_DIST_MONITOR
or should we change the meaning of these flags?
|
|
|
|
|
|
We should break out when out of reductions.
|
|
|
|
This will reduce the size of crash dumps, especially if
there are large binaries.
|
|
MAX_ATOM_TABLE_SIZE
Currently, the max atom size on 64-bits Erlang is
((UWORD_CONSTANT(1) << 32) = 4294967296
This number will cause the range of atom size to be displayed as
[8192-0].
Also, the +t option for max atom size will be parsed as a long type, and
assigned to a int variable erts_atom_table_size (erl_init.c),
which will cause integer overflow if the number is larger than the
maximum value a 4-bytes signed integer can hold
((1 << 31) - 1) = 2147483647
Therefore, during the comparison
erts_atom_table_size < MIN_ATOM_TABLE_SIZE
any number above 2147483647 will be come negative, and causing
the condition to be true, which then errored out as bad atom table size.
Hence, the actual max atom size is same as the max signed int value.
|