Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Write some extra log files for easy access by other tools.
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On my Mac, the highest successful value was 7673. The new value
provides some safety margin.
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The MIB compiler has changed how it reports syntax errors.
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Conflicts:
lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1ct.xml
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* ta/werror:
snmp: extend warnings_as_errors test
systools: add warnings_as_errors option
asn1ct: add warnings_as_errors option
leex: optimize werror/1
yecc: optimize werror/1
yecc: use more descriptive name: 'werror'
leex: use more descriptive name: 'werror'
compile: optimize werror/1
compile: log warnings as errors if -Werror is enabled
yecc: log warnings as errors if -Werror is enabled
leex: log warnings as errors if -Werror is enabled
yecc: honour -Werror passed from erlc
leex: honour -Werror passed from erlc
Do not write beam file if Werr and warnings /= []
parsetools: test if warnings_as_errors writes file
OTP-9536
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* dev:
erts: Add a sanity check to autoimport_SUITE
erts: Fix failing autoimport test case
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If we fail to parse out any functions from erlang.xml, make sure
that we fail.
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The autoimport_SUITE:autoimport/1 test case would interpret
data type definitions as function calls. Fix this by skipping
to the <funcs> tag before starting to collect function names.
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* dev:
erlc_SUITE: Fix arg_overflow/1 test case
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In commit be8759e68b337524c056b8bb757ea68c9996d863, a buffer overflow
was fixed in erlc and the erlc_SUITE:arg_overflow/1 test case was
added. That test cases invokes erlc with 10000 -D options, which will
result in 'erl' being invoked with more than 30000 arguments.
On some platforms, the test case will fail for the wrong reason:
* 64-bit Linux kernels before 2.6.23 limit the number of arguments in
an excvp() call to 16383. (See "Number of arguments and maximum length
of one argument" in http://www.in-ulm.de/~mascheck/various/argmax/.)
* The command shell in Windows limits the size of the command line to
8191 characters.
Depending on the platform, pass a different number of -D options
to erlc. Since the size of the options does not matter for this
test case, make the options as short as possible by generating
numbers in base 36.
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The ethread atomics API now also provide double word size atomics.
Double word size atomics are implemented using native atomic
instructions on x86 (when the cmpxchg8b instruction is available)
and on x86_64 (when the cmpxchg16b instruction is available). On
other hardware where 32-bit atomics or word size atomics are
available, an optimized fallback is used; otherwise, a spinlock,
or a mutex based fallback is used.
The ethread library now performs runtime tests for presence of
hardware features, such as for example SSE2 instructions, instead
of requiring this to be determined at compile time.
There are now functions implementing each atomic operation with the
following implied memory barrier semantics: none, read, write,
acquire, release, and full. Some of the operation-barrier
combinations aren't especially useful. But instead of filtering
useful ones out, and potentially miss a useful one, we implement
them all.
A much smaller set of functionality for native atomics are required
to be implemented than before. More or less only cmpxchg and a
membar macro are required to be implemented for each atomic size.
Other functions will automatically be constructed from these. It is,
of course, often wise to implement more that this if possible from a
performance perspective.
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* hw/call-chmod-without-f:
Call chmod without the "-f" flag
Conflicts:
erts/emulator/test/Makefile
lib/asn1/test/Makefile
lib/crypto/test/Makefile
lib/debugger/test/Makefile
lib/docbuilder/test/Makefile
lib/edoc/test/Makefile
lib/erl_interface/test/Makefile
lib/inviso/test/Makefile
lib/parsetools/test/Makefile
lib/percept/test/Makefile
lib/ssl/test/Makefile
lib/syntax_tools/test/Makefile
lib/test_server/test/Makefile
lib/tools/test/Makefile
OTP-9170
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* pan/unicode-filenames/OTP-8887: (27 commits)
Test and correct filelib and filename
Add documentation to erlang.xml and slight correction to unicode_usage.xml
Add section about Unicode file names to stdlib users guide
Correct bug in file_name_SUITE making it fail on Unix instead of Windows7
Add documentation about raw filenames and Unicode file name translation mode
Make filelib not crash on re codepoints beyond 255 in re when filename is raw
Mend on_load_embedded testcase which did not handle windows links
Correct testcase regarding windows versions supporting soft links.
Teach filelib to use re in unicode mode when filenames are not raw
Treat soft links on Windows correctly in file_name_SUITE
Adapt new soft and hard link routines on Windos to Unicode
Corrected testcases broken by unicode filenames
Update preloaded prim_file
Teach prim_file not to accept atoms and not to throw exceptions
Adapt inet_drv to Visual Studio 2008
Teach spawn_executable about Unicode
Convert filenames read on MacOSX to canonical form
Teach file to accept codepoints beyond 255.
Add testcases
Correct shell utilities to handle unicode and possibly binaries
...
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For some reason pthread_create() crashes when more
threads cannot be created, instead of returning an
error code on our MacOS X Leopard machine...
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"-f" is a non-standard chmod option which at least SGI IRIX and HP UX do
not support. As the only effect of the "-f" flag is to suppress warning
messages, it can be safely omitted.
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* sf/erts_de_busy_limit:
Add flag-based setting for the distribution buffer busy limit
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Id: OTP-8912
This patch creates a new family of flags with the "+z" prefix. It
further creates a new configuration option called "dbbl" (which is the
first letter of the name dist_buf_busy_limit). Example usage of this
flag would be "+zdbbl 1048576".
This patch creates an adjustable buffer limit for the amount of data
that may be buffered by the erlang distribution code (in dist.c
specifically). Before this patch, this hard-coded constant was used:
#define ERTS_DE_BUSY_LIMIT (128*1024)
When large binaries are transmitted between nodes (or simply a lot of
medium-sized binaries), it is very easy to hit the old 128KB limit.
Processes that use the erlang:system_monitor() BIF to monitor system
events can be spammed by {monitor, busy_dist_port, ...} message tuples
at rates of tens to even hundreds of messages/second.
A larger buffer limit will allow processes to buffer more outgoing
messages over the distribution. When the buffer limit has been
reached, sending processes will be suspended until the buffer size has
shrunk. The buffer limit is per distribution channel. A higher limit
will give lower latency and higher throughput at the expense of
higher memory usage.
A variation of this patch has been in commercial production use in at
least two companies that the author is aware of. Larger buffer values
can reduce the number of {monitor, busy_dist_port, ...} system
messages drastically, lower overall messaging latencies, and prevent
false timeouts and 'nodedown' messages in extremely busy Mnesia systems.
Test suite: there are two tests:
a. In erlexec_SUITE.erl to test basic set & get of the value
b. In distribution_SUITE.erl, to verify that setting +zdbbl very
low will actually change behavior.
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Check buffer operations and increase the size of the buffer used for
holding command line arguments, since the "-D" switch will be expanded
into 3 arguments when passed to erl.
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Large parts of the ethread library have been rewritten. The
ethread library is an Erlang runtime system internal, portable
thread library used by the runtime system itself.
Most notable improvement is a reader optimized rwlock
implementation which dramatically improve the performance of
read-lock/read-unlock operations on multi processor systems by
avoiding ping-ponging of the rwlock cache lines. The reader
optimized rwlock implementation is used by miscellaneous
rwlocks in the runtime system that are known to be read-locked
frequently, and can be enabled on ETS tables by passing the
`{read_concurrency, true}' option upon table creation. See the
documentation of `ets:new/2' for more information.
The ethread library can now also use the libatomic_ops library
for atomic memory accesses. This makes it possible for the
Erlang runtime system to utilize optimized atomic operations
on more platforms than before. Use the
`--with-libatomic_ops=PATH' configure command line argument
when specifying where the libatomic_ops installation is
located. The libatomic_ops library can be downloaded from:
http://www.hpl.hp.com/research/linux/atomic_ops/
The changed API of the ethread library has also caused
modifications in the Erlang runtime system. Preparations for
the to come "delayed deallocation" feature has also been done
since it depends on the ethread library.
Note: When building for x86, the ethread library will now use
instructions that first appeared on the pentium 4 processor. If
you want the runtime system to be compatible with older
processors (back to 486) you need to pass the
`--enable-ethread-pre-pentium4-compatibility' configure command
line argument when configuring the system.
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* bg/remove-stray-ose-support:
configure: Remove stray OSE/Delta support
Makefiles: Remove stray OSE/Delta support
kernel tests: Remove stray OSE/Delta support
system tests: Remove stray OSE/Delta support
erl_interface tests: Remove stray OSE/Delta support
epmd: Remove stray OSE/Delta support
epmd: #ifdef out start_epmd() for other platforms than VxWorks
emulator tests: Remove stray OSE/Delta support
emulator: Remove stray OSE/Delta support
emulator: Eliminate #ifdef for sys_tty_reset()
test_server: Remove stray support for OSE/Delta
OTP-8585 bg/remove-stray-ose-support
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improvements.
Most notable:
Lots of cross compilation improvements. The old cross compilation
support was more or less non-existing as well as broken. Please,
note that the cross compilation support should still be
considered as experimental. Also note that old cross compilation
configurations cannot be used without modifications. For more
information on cross compiling Erlang/OTP see the
$ERL_TOP/xcomp/README file.
Support for staged install using <url
href="http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/DESTDIR.html">D
ESTDIR</url>. The old broken INSTALL_PREFIX has also been fixed.
For more information see the $ERL_TOP/README file.
Documentation of the release target of the top Makefile. For more
information see the $ERL_TOP/README file.
make install now by default creates relative symbolic links
instead of absolute ones. For more information see the
$ERL_TOP/README file.
$ERL_TOP/configure --help=recursive now works and prints help for
all applications with configure scripts.
Doing make install, or make release directly after make all no
longer triggers miscellaneous rebuilds.
Existing bootstrap system is now used when doing make install, or
make release without a preceding make all.
The crypto and ssl applications use the same runtime library path
when dynamically linking against libssl.so and libcrypto.so. The
runtime library search path has also been extended.
The configure scripts of erl_interface and odbc now search for
thread libraries and thread library quirks the same way as erts
do.
The configure script of the odbc application now also looks for
odbc libraries in lib64 and lib/64 directories when building on a
64-bit system.
The config.h.in file in the erl_interface application is now
automatically generated in instead of statically updated which
reduces the risk of configure tests without any effect.
(Thanks to Henrik Riomar and Winston Smith for testing)
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improvements.
Most notable:
Lots of cross compilation improvements. The old cross compilation
support was more or less non-existing as well as broken. Please,
note that the cross compilation support should still be
considered as experimental. Also note that old cross compilation
configurations cannot be used without modifications. For more
information on cross compiling Erlang/OTP see the
$ERL_TOP/xcomp/README file.
Support for staged install using <url
href="http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/DESTDIR.html">D
ESTDIR</url>. The old broken INSTALL_PREFIX has also been fixed.
For more information see the $ERL_TOP/README file.
Documentation of the release target of the top Makefile. For more
information see the $ERL_TOP/README file.
make install now by default creates relative symbolic links
instead of absolute ones. For more information see the
$ERL_TOP/README file.
$ERL_TOP/configure --help=recursive now works and prints help for
all applications with configure scripts.
Doing make install, or make release directly after make all no
longer triggers miscellaneous rebuilds.
Existing bootstrap system is now used when doing make install, or
make release without a preceding make all.
The crypto and ssl applications use the same runtime library path
when dynamically linking against libssl.so and libcrypto.so. The
runtime library search path has also been extended.
The configure scripts of erl_interface and odbc now search for
thread libraries and thread library quirks the same way as erts
do.
The configure script of the odbc application now also looks for
odbc libraries in lib64 and lib/64 directories when building on a
64-bit system.
The config.h.in file in the erl_interface application is now
automatically generated in instead of statically updated which
reduces the risk of configure tests without any effect.
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* bg/avoid-etop-in-include:
epmd tests: fix build of test suites on Windows
system test: fix build of test suites on Windows
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On Windows, the ERL_TOP environment variable contains
a path that only is valid for cygwin-enabled programs,
such as 'make'. It is not meaningful to pass the value
of $ERL_TOP in the -I option to the Erlang compiler,
because the Erlang emulator does not interpret cygwin
paths correctly. Therefore, -include("test_server.hrl")
will fail to find test_server.hrl.
Work around the problem by using -include_lib().
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* cf/compile_warning_as_error:
Add option -Werror in erlc(1)
compile: add flag warnings_as_errors to treat warnings as errors
compile.erl: remove trailing whitespace
OTP-8382 The -Werror option for erlc and the compiler option
warnings_as_errors will cause warnings to be treated as errors.
(Thanks to Christopher Faulet.)
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Like in gcc, this option treats warnings as errors.
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The MIB compiler in the snmp applications formats its warnings slightly
differently, so we'll need to update the regexp that should match the
expected output.
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