Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
Filipe David Manana
OTP-9114: [ftp] Added (type) spec for all exported functions.
OTP-9123: mod_esi:deliver/2 made to accept binary data.
Bernard Duggan
OTP-9124: [httpd] Prevent XSS in error pages.
Michael Santos
OTP-9131: [httpd] Wrong security property names used in documentation.
Garrett Smith
OTP-9157: [httpd] Improved error messages.
Ricardo Catalinas Jim�nez
OTP-9158: [httpd] Fix timeout message generated by mod_esi.
Bernard Duggan
OTP-9202: [httpd] Extended support for file descriptors.
Attila Rajmund Nohl
OTP-9230: The default ssl kind has now been changed to essl.
OTP-9246: [httpc] httpc manager crash because of a handler retry
race condition.
Merge branch 'bmk/inets/inet56_integration' into dev
|
|
Use Erlang specs and types for documentation
|
|
bmk/inets/ftp/missing_spec_causes_dialyxer_problems/OTP-9114
Also fixed a bunch of "end-years" (was 2010 but should have been 2011,
which the commit hook not happy with).
|
|
|
|
|
|
* jp/dependencies_makefile:
Add dependencies Makefile generation to erlc(1) and compile(3)
Conflicts:
lib/compiler/test/compile_SUITE.erl
OTP-9065
|
|
This is useful when a project is built with Makefiles and erlc(1)
instead of EMakefiles. Tracking dependencies by hand is error-prone and
it becomes painful when using external application headers like EUnit's
one.
A dependencies Makefile will look like this:
module.beam: module.erl \
/usr/local/lib/erlang/lib/eunit-2.1.4/include/eunit.hrl \
header.hrl
When included in the main Makefile, 'module' will be recompiled only
when needed.
GCC offers the same feature and new erlc(1) options are compatible with
it.
More informations at:
http://wiki.github.com/dumbbell/otp/dependencies-makefile
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* 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.)
|
|
With this flag, warnings are treated as errors, like gcc flag '-Werror'.
|
|
|