Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Faulty test for maps update
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* bjorn/eep37/OTP-11537:
Issue a warning when a named fun is constructed but not used
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Simplify compiler internals and parsing of core format.
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Simplify compiler internals for kernel passes.
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Make map update expressions safe, i.e. (foo())#{ k1 := 1 }
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The instruction get_map_element has a faillabel so you may not
use the instruction within a allocate/deallocate block.
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With the => and := operators for updating maps, this optimization is
no longer valid.
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The syntax is handled upto v3_kernel where it is reduced to
previous behaviour for construction and updates. Meaning,
the ':=' operator is handled exactly as '=>' operator.
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Update erlang lint and syntax expand for #{ K := V }
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To add a type-testing guard BIF, the following steps are needed:
* The BIF itself is added to bif.tab (note that it should be declared
using "ubif", not "bif"), and its implementation to erl_bif_op.c.
* erl_internal must be modified in 3 places: The type test must be
recognized as guard BIF, as a type test, and it must be auto-imported.
* There must be an instruction that implements the same type test as
the BIF (it will be used in guards). beam_utils:bif_to_test/3 must
be updated to recognize the new guard BIF.
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All pairs in a Map needs to be in strict ascending key order.
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If a literal key already is present in a Map update the latter should be used.
Warn for previous duplicates in the Map.
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Can now handle {list [reg()]} elements in instructions.
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To make it possible to build the entire OTP system, also define
dummys for the instructions in ops.tab.
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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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* bjorn/fix-line-number-in-bs-exception/OTP-11572:
compiler: Correct line number in exception from binary construction
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Because 26940a8c0c lifted code in the 'after' clause of 'try' to
a new function, Dialyzer could produce false warnings for code such
as:
try
...
after
file:close(F)
end.
Mark the the call to the generated function as 'compiler_generated'
to silence the warning.
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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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Reported-by: Stanislav Seletskiy
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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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The new inliner (cerl_inline) does not mark inlined code as compiler
generated. Therefore, when sys_core_fold is run after inlining, it
may generate spurious warnings.
The easiest way out (for now, at least) is to discard all warnings
found when running sys_core_fold after inlining.
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Compiling programs with very many uses of the "dot notation"
for extracting a record element could be very slow. The reason
is that each extraction of a record element (R#r.a) would first be
transformed to code like this:
case R of
{r,rec0,_,_} -> rec0;
_ -> error({badrecord,r})
end
In Core Erlang, each '_' would be become a new variable. The
resulting code would be optimized by sys_core_fold, but the
optimization process could be very slow.
Profiling shows that sub_del_var/2 was the worst bottleneck, and the
sub_is_val/2 the second worst bottleneck. In both cases, the culprit
is the linear traversal of a very long list (the list of variable
substitutions). Fortunately, there already is a gb_set (the scope)
which contains all variables that are currently live. If a variable is
not known to be live, it is no point in doing the linear operation on
the list.
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erlc is wired to treat *.core files as core and build them as
compile:file(File, [from_core]), but this is not documented. There's
also an udocumented compile:file/2 option called 'from_core'. 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
* document 'from_core'
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