Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Call count previously used a global lock for accessing and writing
its counter in the breakpoint. This is now changed to atomics instead.
The change will let call count tracing and cprof to scale better
when increasing the number of schedulers.
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To solve the issue of multiple schedulers constantly updating the
head pointer to the bp data wheel, each scheduler now has its own
entrypoint to the wheel. This head pointer can be updated without
a locking being taken. Previously there were no lock ...
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call_time trace will use instruction pointers instead of
breakpoint data pointers. More costly lookup but the bdt
structure might be deallocated, we do not want that.
Remove unnecessary pattern lock.
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op_i_time_breakpoint is now used
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Call time breakpoint tracing traces per call trace per process.
- Add hashes to support the extra dimension.
- Teach trace_info/2 to handle the extra information dimension.
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Initial commit with a new breakpoint instruction and PSD areas
for temporary time storage during tracing.
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erlang:system_info(multi_scheduling) sometimes erroneously returned enabled
when it should have returned blocked.
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Alignment of scheduler data and run queues were adjusted.
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The runtime system will by default bind schedulers to logical processors
using the default_bind bind type if the amount of schedulers are at least
equal to the amount of logical processors configured, binding of schedulers
is supported, and a CPU topology is available at startup.
NOTE: If the Erlang runtime system is the only operating system process
that binds threads to logical processors, this improves the performance of
the runtime system. However, if other operating system processes (as for
example another Erlang runtime system) also bind threads to logical
processors, there might be a performance penalty instead. If this is the
case you, are are advised to unbind the schedulers using the <seealso
marker="erl#+sbt">+sbtu</seealso> command line argument, or by invoking
<seealso
marker="erlang#system_flag_scheduler_bind_type">erlang:system_flag(schedule
r_bind_type, unbound)</seealso>.
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New NIF features:
Send messages from a NIF, or from thread created by NIF, to any local
process (enif_send)
Store terms between NIF calls (enif_alloc_env, enif_make_copy)
Create binary terms with user defined memory management
(enif_make_resource_binary)
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* origin/pan/otp_8579_autoimport_override:
Update preloaded modules
Update primary bootstrap
Remove outcommented code from erl_lint
Make port_command/3 auto-imported
Remove (harmless) warnings about min/max in core applications
Autoimport min/2 and max/2
Improve coverage of erl_int in testcases
Change warning to error for nowarn_bif_clash compiler directive
Add -compile({no_auto_import,[F/A]}) doc to compiler.xml
Add some testcases to compiler to verify that overriding really happens
Return nowarn_bif_clash functionality but with warning
Teach erl_lint to better override BIFs with local functions and imports
Teach compiler to override autoimport with import
First prototype for local functions overriding autoimported
OTP-8579 Local functions should override auto-imported
Local and imported functions now override the autoimported
BIFs when the names clash. The pre R14 behaviour was that
autoimported BIFs would override local functions. To avoid
that old programs change behaviour, the following will
generate an error:
Doing a call without explicit module name to a local function
having a name clashing with the name of an autoimported BIF
that was present (and autoimported) before OTP R14A
Explicitly importing a function having a name clashing with
the name of an autoimported BIF that was present (and
autoimported) before OTP R14A Using any form of the old
compiler directive nowarn_bif_clash
If the BIF was added or autoimported in OTP R14A or later,
overriding it with an import or a local function will only
result in a warning,
To resolve clashes, you can either use the explicit module
name erlang to call the BIF, or you can remove the autoimport
of that specific BIF by using the new compiler directive
-compile({no_auto_import,[F/A]})., which makes all calls to
the local or imported function without explicit module name
pass without warnings or errors.
The change makes it possible to add autoimported BIFs without
breaking or silently changing old code in the future. However
some current code ingeniously utilizing the old behaviour or
the nowarn_bif_clash compiler directive, might need changing
to be accepted by the compiler.
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* pan/unregister_error:
Add possibly missing process lock before unregistering oneself
Keep process lock over trace of unregister
OTP-8663 Unregister may crash VM
Extreme combinations of register/unregister in a highly parallell SMP
application could crash the VM. The error is corrected.
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* pan/otp_8086_ms_grammar:
Add match_specification grammar documentation specifically for ets
OTP-8086 Grammar for match specification describes tracing only
The grammar for match specifications in ERTS users guide only described the
tracing dialect of match specifications. An informal grammar for the ETS
dialect is added.
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Import directives still not sorted out!
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* jv/autoimport-binary_to_term_2:
Change binary_to_term/2 to be auto-imported
OTP-8671 jv/autoimport-binary_to_term_2
Now, binary_to_term/2 is auto-imported. This will cause a compile warning
if and only if a module has got a local function with that name.
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See dwShareMode on
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa363858(VS.85).aspx
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ethr_rwmutex_tryrlock() acquired and refused to acquire a lock with
inverted logic. The lock was however never acquired in a thread unsafe
manner. (Thanks to JR Zhang for noting this issue)
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Writer preferred pthread read/write locks has been enabled on Linux.
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The number of spinlocks used when implementing atomic fall-backs when no
native atomic implementation is available has been increased from 16 to
1024.
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Port locks could be prematurely destroyed.
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Support for using gcc's built-in functions for atomic memory access has
been added. This functionallity will be used if available and no other
native atomic implementation in ERTS is available.
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Missing memory barriers in erts_poll() could cause the runtime system to
hang indefinitely.
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This BIF was only used by the now broken SAE support.
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The experimental Standalone Erlang (SAE) support based on
Joe Armstrong's work has long been broken. Remove the remaining
code and Makefile rules.
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* sv/socket-error-portability:
inet_drv.c: Remove red herring
use macro to portably test for socket system call errors
OTP-8654 sv/socket-error-portability
On some combination of Montavista Linux on Cavium Octeon processors, some
socket-related system calls returned other numbers than -1 for errors. This
caused a core dump in inet_drv.c. Now the code works around this problem.
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* se/spawn_drv_win_deadlock:
Fix deadlock in spawn driver on windows
OTP-8641 se/spawn_drv_win_deadlock
Windows: Closing port of program that stalled without reading all data
could deadlock scheduler thread.
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* ta/extend-nif-api:
erl_nif: add make_atom_len, make_existing_atom_len and make_string_len
erl_nif: add enif_get_atom_length and enif_get_list_length
erl_nif: add enif_is_list and enif_is_tuple
OTP-8640 ta/extend-nif-api
New NIF API functions: enif_make_atom_len, enif_make_existing_atom_len,
enif_make_string_len, enif_get_atom_length, enif_get_list_length,
enif_is_list, enif_is_tuple (by Tuncer Ayaz)
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Remove redundant "!defined(__WIN32__)". It is used inside
the #else branch of a "#ifdef __WIN32__", so it serves no
useful purpose except to fool unsuspecting readers.
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On some combinations of Montavista Linux running on Cavium Octeon
chips, some socket-related system calls erroneously return negative
numbers other than -1 to indicate errors, but inet_drv.c specifically
compares against -1 to test for errors. The result is that beam dumps
core due to the code treating these negative numbers as success
indicators, as counts/offsets of bytes written, etc. thereby
corrupting its own internal data structures.
To fix this, introduce a portability macro to test the result of
socket system calls. The test remains unchanged on Windows but for
other platforms the macro considers all return values that are less
than zero to be errors.
Though POSIX specifies that errors from these system calls are
indicated by a return value of -1, treating all negative return values
as errors is also safe, as described in detail below. In networking
programming, treating all negative return values from system calls as
errors is very common practice -- see the examples in W. Richard
Stevens's popular and highly lauded network programming books, for
example.
For system calls that return 0 to indicate success, treating all
negative numbers as errors is safe because only 0 is specified to
indicate success. These include:
getsockname
getpeername
getsockopt
gethostname
bind
listen
connect
close
shutdown
Likewise, for system calls that return non-negative numbers to
indicate success, treating all negative numbers as errors is also
safe. These functions typically return signed integers of type
ssize_t, and they treat any parameters of type size_t that cannot fit
within the ssize_t return value, such as numbers of bytes to read or
write, as errors (specifically EINVAL). For example, in the "ERRORS"
section of the man page for writev from several varieties of Linux, it
states that EINVAL is returned when the total length of the I/O is
more than can be expressed by the ssize_t return value.
These calls include:
recv
recvfrom
recvmsg
writev
send
sendto
sendmsg
Finaly, the socket() system call is also similar to these in that it
returns a signed type (int) with all non-negative return values
indicating success, so treating all negative return values as errors
is safe.
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* fm/file-operations:
Update preloaded modules
Add file:advise/4 - a wrapper to the POSIX syscall posix_fadvise
Add file:datasync/1 for syncing file contents only
sys.h: Correct the get_int64() macro
OTP-8637 fm/file-operations
The functions file:advise/4 and file:datasync/1 have been added. (Thanks to
Filipe David Manana.)
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A misbehaving port program that does not read all data written to the port
may deadlock the scheduler thread when it calls port_close. The chosen solution
was to use the new function CancelIoEx if it exist (Vista) otherwise let the
spawn driver wait for a short while (10ms) and then to spawn a thread that will
wait for the port program to exit.
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Add new NIF API functions
- enif_make_atom_len
- enif_make_existing_atom_len
- enif_make_string_len
These are basically the same as enif_make_atom,
enif_make_existing_atom and enif_make_string except that the
new functions require a length parameter instead of a
null-terminated C-string.
Signed-off-by: Tuncer Ayaz <[email protected]>
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Add new NIF API functions
- enif_get_atom_length
- enif_get_list_length
Signed-off-by: Tuncer Ayaz <[email protected]>
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