Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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The macro command was added quite recently and far from
all of our testmachines have this command
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This was changed in the logger in 8aa64c90ddd20ec0ca8cc5fe92a6124324c51da5.
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Communication between Erlang processes has conceptually always been
performed through asynchronous signaling. The runtime system
implementation has however previously preformed most operation
synchronously. In a system with only one true thread of execution, this
is not problematic (often the opposite). In a system with multiple threads
of execution (as current runtime system implementation with SMP support)
it becomes problematic. This since it often involves locking of structures
when updating them which in turn cause resource contention. Utilizing
true asynchronous communication often avoids these resource contention
issues.
The case that triggered this change was contention on the link lock due
to frequent updates of the monitor trees during communication with a
frequently used server. The signal order delivery guarantees of the
language makes it hard to change the implementation of only some signals
to use true asynchronous signaling. Therefore the implementations
of (almost) all signals have been changed.
Currently the following signals have been implemented as true
asynchronous signals:
- Message signals
- Exit signals
- Monitor signals
- Demonitor signals
- Monitor triggered signals (DOWN, CHANGE, etc)
- Link signals
- Unlink signals
- Group leader signals
All of the above already defined as asynchronous signals in the
language. The implementation of messages signals was quite
asynchronous to begin with, but had quite strict delivery constraints
due to the ordering guarantees of signals between a pair of processes.
The previously used message queue partitioned into two halves has been
replaced by a more general signal queue partitioned into three parts
that service all kinds of signals. More details regarding the signal
queue can be found in comments in the erl_proc_sig_queue.h file.
The monitor and link implementations have also been completely replaced
in order to fit the new asynchronous signaling implementation as good
as possible. More details regarding the new monitor and link
implementations can be found in the erl_monitor_link.h file.
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* lukas/erts/etp-processes-ports-optimization:
erts: Optimize etp-processes and etp-ports
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Not calculating the max, table and invalid addresses
each loop speeds up iterating through the processes list
by about 5x.
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Minimum known timeout position is saved in bot far and near
wheel. This information is used to avoid scanning from current
position in the cases were we know the minimum timeout position.
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Magic references are *intentionally* indistinguishable from ordinary
references for the Erlang software. Magic references do not change
the language, and are intended as a pure runtime internal optimization.
An ordinary reference is typically used as a key in some table. A
magic reference has a direct pointer to a reference counted magic
binary. This makes it possible to implement various things without
having to do lookups in a table, but instead access the data directly.
Besides very fast lookups this can also improve scalability by
removing a potentially contended table. A couple of examples of
planned future usage of magic references are ETS table identifiers,
and BIF timer identifiers.
Besides future optimizations using magic references it should also
be possible to replace the exposed magic binary cludge with magic
references. That is, magic binaries that are exposed as empty
binaries to the Erlang software.
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* maint:
Update etp-commands for dirty schedulers
Fix scheduling of system tasks on processes executing dirty
Fix call time tracing with dirty schedulers
Fix send of exit signal to process executing dirty
Fix dirty scheduler process priority
Fix alloc-util hard-debug
Silence debug warning when no beam jump table is used with dirty schedulers
Fix check_process_code() when NifExport is in use
Fix GC when NifExport is in use
Fix saving of original arguments when rescheduling via NifExport
Conflicts:
erts/emulator/beam/beam_bif_load.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_nif.c
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OTP-14051
* rickard/dirty-scheduling-fixes:
Update etp-commands for dirty schedulers
Fix scheduling of system tasks on processes executing dirty
Fix call time tracing with dirty schedulers
Fix send of exit signal to process executing dirty
Fix dirty scheduler process priority
Fix alloc-util hard-debug
Silence debug warning when no beam jump table is used with dirty schedulers
Conflicts:
erts/etc/unix/etp-commands.in
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Specifically etp-stacktrace/stackdump/process-info have been changed
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This commit adds two new structs to be used to represent
erlang code in erts.
ErtsCodeInfo is used to describe the i_func_info header
that is part of all Export entries and the prelude of
each function. This replaces all the BeamInstr * that
were previously used to point to these locations.
After this change the code should never use BeamInstr *
with offsets to figure out different parts of the
func_info header.
ErtsCodeMFA is a struct that is used to descripe a
MFA in code. It is used within ErtsCodeInfo and also
in Process->current.
All function that previously took Eterm * or BeamInstr *
to identify a MFA now use the ErtsCodeMFA or ErtsCodeInfo
where appropriate.
The code has been tested to work when adding a new field to the
ErtsCodeInfo struct, but some updates are needed in ops.tab to
make it work.
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* henrik/update-copyrightyear:
update copyright-year
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for a correct (non)value regardless of build type.
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* sverk/etp-check-beam-ranges:
erts: Add gdb command etp-check-beam-ranges
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* sverk/bin-alloc-refactor:
erts: Fix gdb command etp-carrier-blocks for 32-bit
erts: Refactor binary allocation interface to also initialize Binary
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* sverk/etp-alloc-stats:
erts: Fix documentation for no of default allocator instances
erts: Add etp-alloc-stats and etp-alloc-instances
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