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2018-03-21Implementation of true asynchronous signaling between processesRickard Green
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 The previously used message queue partitioned into two halves has been replaced by a more general signal queue partitioned into three parts that service all kinds of signals.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.
2017-11-20Merge branch 'lukas/stdlib/maps_iterators/OTP-14012'Lukas Larsson
* lukas/stdlib/maps_iterators/OTP-14012: erts: Limit size of first iterator for hashmaps Update primary bootstrap Update preloaded modules erts: Remove erts_internal:maps_to_list/2 stdlib: Make io_lib and io_lib_pretty use maps iterator erts: Implement batching maps:iterator erts: Implement maps path iterator erts: Implement map iterator using a stack stdlib: Introduce maps iterator API Conflicts: bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/io_lib.beam bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/io_lib_pretty.beam erts/emulator/beam/bif.tab erts/preloaded/ebin/erlang.beam erts/preloaded/ebin/erts_internal.beam erts/preloaded/ebin/zlib.beam
2017-11-20Update preloaded modulesLukas Larsson
2017-06-20Update preloaded modulesHans Nilsson
2017-06-14Update preloaded modulesRickard Green
2017-05-04Update preloaded modulesBjörn Gustavsson
2017-04-25Update preloaded modulesLukas Larsson
2017-04-10Update preloaded modulesLukas Larsson
2017-02-17Teach make_preload to handle the new 'AtU8' chunkBjörn Gustavsson
26b59dfe67 introduced the new 'AtU8' chunk to support Unicode atoms. make_preload strips the pre-loaded BEAM files so that they only contain essential chunks. It expects to find the old 'Atom' chunk. Teach make_preload to read the new 'AtU8' chunk instead of the old chunk. Also produce a nice error message if someone by mistake compiles the pre-loaded modules with an OTP 19 compiler.
2016-12-20Update preloaded modulesLukas Larsson
2016-08-31Remove old purge strategyRickard Green
2016-08-29Perform check_process_code while process is executing dirtyRickard Green