Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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* schlagert/fix_basic_appups:
Dynamically configure typer_SUITE according to environment
Disable hipe_SUITE when environment doesn't support it
Make hipe non-upgradable by setting appup file empty
Fix missing module on hipe app file template
Add test suites performing app and appup file checks
Introduce appup test utility
Fix library application appup files
Fix non-library appup files according to issue #240
OTP-11744
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Add the mentioned test suites for *all* library and touched
non-library applications.
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* egil/compiler/maps-get_map_elements:
compiler: Strengthen Maps compile tests
compiler: Remove dead warning
erts: Fix erts_debug:disassemble/1
compiler: Transform list of Args to exact literal type
compiler: Test Maps aliasing
compiler: Use aliasing in map pair patterns
compiler: Check literal order in beam_validator
erts: Introduce new instructions for combined key fetches
compiler: Change map instructions for fetching values
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* bjorn/compiler/optimizations/OTP-11584:
Teach sys_core_fold:eval_case/2 to cope with handwritten Core Erlang
sys_core_fold: Remove a redundant word in a comment
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Starting in e12b7d5331c58b41db06cadfa4af75b78b62a2b1,
sys_core_fold:eval_case/2 will crash on handwritten but legal
Core Erlang programs such as:
case let <Var> = Arg in {'x',Var} of
{x,X} -> X
end
The problem is that the only clause *is* guaranteed to match, but
cerl_clauses:match_list/2 does not understand that; all it can say is
that the clause *may* match. In those circumstances, we will need to
keep the case.
Also make sure that we keep the case if the guard is something else
than 'true'. That is not strictly necessary, because in a legal Core
Erlang program the guard in the last clause in a case must always
evaluate to 'true', so removing the guard test would still leave the
program correct. Keeping the guard, however, will make it somewhat
easier to debug an incorrect Core Erlang program. (The unsafe_case
test case has guard test in the only clause in a case, so we don't
need to write a new test case to test that.)
Reported-by: Anthony Ramine
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* egil/compiler/maps-fix-sys_core_fold:
compiler: Fix sys_core_fold let optimization
compiler: Add debug listing after sys_core_fold
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* egil/compiler/maps-fix-codegen:
compiler: Fix codegen multiple updates for Maps
erts,compiler: Correct and amend tests for Maps
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Map variable was not covered and faulty optimization could occur.
Ex.
t() ->
M0 = id(#{ "a" => 1 }),
#{ "a" := _ } = M0,
M0#{ "a" := b }.
M0 was lost in let expression optimization.
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Faulty test for maps update
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* egil/erts/fix-maps-beam_load:
compiler: Update map_SUITE with error case test
erts: Maps must fail on exact updates of empty Maps
erts: Fix Maps for beam_load
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M#{ key := V } should fail when M is not a Map
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* bjorn/compiler/applying-binary-crash/OTP-11672:
beam_bsm: Eliminate emulator crash when a binary is called
beam_validator: Validate the "fun" argument for a call_fun/1 instruction
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* bjorn/compiler/optimizations/OTP-11584:
sys_core_fold: Prevent case expressions from being evaluated twice
sys_core_fold_SUITE: For cleanliness, move id/1 to the end
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We must not do the delayed binary creation optimization if the
code attempts to call the matched out binary. Calling a matchstate
will crash the run-time system.
Reported-by: Loïc Hoguin
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* bjorn/eep37/OTP-11537:
Issue a warning when a named fun is constructed but not used
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In e12b7d5331c58b41db06cadfa4af75b78b62a2b1, a bug was introduced
that would cause case expressions to be evaluated more than once
if there were aliases in the pattern. Example:
X = Y = io:put_chars("some chars"),
{X,Y}
That would be rewritten to code similar to (but in Core Erlang):
X = io:put_chars("some chars"),
X = io:put_chars("some chars"),
{X,Y}
Make sure that we only evalute the expression once by doing a
transformation similar to (but in Core Erlang):
NewVar = io:put_chars("some chars"),
X = NewVar,
Y = NewVar,
{X,Y}
Reported-by: José Valim
Reported-by: Anthony Ramine
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Code such as:
bar(X) ->
case {X+1} of
1 -> ok
end.
would crash the beam_except pass of the compiler.
The reason for the crash is that the '+' operator would add a line/1
instruction that the beam_except pass was not prepared to handle.
Reported-by: Erik Søe Sørensen
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re needs unicode option
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* bjorn/compiler/optimizations/OTP-11584:
Generalize optimizations of case statements
Ignore warnings when running sys_core_fold after inlining
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Case expressions such as:
case {Expr1,Expr} of
{V1,V2} -> ...
end
are already optimized to not actually build the tuple. Generalize
the optimization to avoid building any kind of composite term,
such as:
case {ok,[A,B]} of
{ok,[X,Y]} -> ...
end
We don't expect programmers to write such code directly, but
inlining can produce such code.
We need to be careful about the warnings we produce. If the case
expression is a literal, it is expected that no warnings should be
produced for clauses that don't match. We must make sure that we
continue to suppress those warnings.
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* nox/fix-dbg_ieval-exporting-rules/OTP-11553:
compiler tests: Test exporting rules for andalso/orelse
Fix evaluation of andalso and orelse in the debugger
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erlc is wired to treat *.S files as assembler and build them as
compile:file(File, [from_asm]), but this is not documented. There's also
a documented compile:file/2 option called 'asm' (mapping to 'from_asm'),
but the wording discourages its use. All of this has been in place and
in use for a long time. Therefore, it should be supported officially.
To fix that, make the following changes:
* document erlc handling of *.core files
* un-document 'asm' and document 'from_asm' instead
* deprecate 'asm'
While at it, fix a minor typo in the test suite.
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* maint:
Rename otp_8949_a/0 which common_test interprets as an info function
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Before running a test case named testcase/1, common_test will call
testcase/0 (the info function). Exceptions and illegal return values
would be silently ignored. In a planned update to common_test, errors
will instead cause the test case to fail.
The test case otp_8949_a/1 has a helper function called otp_8949_a/0.
Rename it to do_otp_8949_a/0.
While at it, also fix a copy and paste bug in the list of test cases.
otp_8949_a was run twice; otp_8949_b was never run.
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* maint:
compiler: Conform returned errors to the documented format
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ErrorInfo is documented to be:
{ErrorLine,Module,ErrorDescriptor}
but for some errors with line numbers it would look like:
{Module,ErrorDescriptor}
Ensure that all ErrorInfo tuples have three elements. Use 'none'
instead of a line number:
{none,Module,ErrorDescriptor}
There already are errors that return 'none' when no line number is
available, but that convention was not documented. Mention it in the
documentation.
Also make sure that the compiler will not print 'none' as a line
number in error messages (if the 'report_errors' option is given) as
that looks stupid. That is, when attempting to compile a non-existing
module, the error message should be:
non-existing.erl: no such file or directory
and not:
non-existing.erl:none: no such file or directory
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* nox/match-context-return/OTP-11247:
Added primary bootstrap
Forbid returning a match context in beam_validator
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* maint:
Fix compiler crash for 'B and B' guard
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If a match context is returned from a function without being converted
back to a plain old binary, the whole VM will crash.
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Conflicts:
bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/v3_core.beam
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* nox/fix-comp-warnings/OTP-11212:
Bootstrap
Silence a misleading warning with some comprehensions
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Conflicts:
bootstrap/lib/compiler/ebin/cerl_inline.beam
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* nox/fix-fname-inlining/OTP-11211:
Added primary bootstrap
Restrict inlining of local fun references
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* jw/fix-float-middle-endian/OTP-11201:
Fix binary construction on floating point middle-endian machines
Fix binary matching on floating point middle-endian machines
Fix erlang:phash2() on floating point middle-endian machines
Fix external term format BIFs on floating point middle-endian machines
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Local fun references look like plain old variables in the Core Erlang
AST but should not be treated as such. Inlining of such expressions is
now restricted to application contexts as a local fun reference should
never occur in a guard.
This is not perfect as it forbids inlining in some safe situations, but
that is still better than a compiler crash.
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