Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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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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* fenollp/treewide_remove_unexpected_0xff/OTP-11323:
Remove ^L characters hidden randomly in the code. Not those used in text files as delimiters.
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files as delimiters.
While working on a tool that processes Erlang code and testing it against this repo,
I found out about those little sneaky 0xff. I thought it may be of help to other
people build such tools to remove non-conforming-to-standard characters.
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Commit 60984ade updated the code, but not the type spec.
Noticed-by: Kostis Sagonas
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* bjorn/xml-encoding-fix/OTP-11310:
Change encoding of troublesome notes.xml files to utf-8
Convert some notes.xml files from latin-1 to utf-8
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Most notes.xml files will be updated in every release and cause
the kind of the problems described in the previous commit.
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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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By Erik Stenman (happi) with corrections by me.
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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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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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* nox/fix-comp-warnings/OTP-11212:
Bootstrap
Silence a misleading warning with some comprehensions
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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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This complements 933e701 (OTP-10209). Without this patch the test cases
"in_guard/1" and "coerce_to_float/1" in bs_construct_SUITE fail.
The added lines in bs_construct_SUITE cover all branches that were not
covered before (small and big numbers if BIT_OFFSET(erts_bin_offset) != 0).
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When compiling comprehensions with generators which are foldable to
'true', a misleading warning is emitted by sys_core_fold because a
clause resulting from the compilation of the comprehension to Core
Erlang is not marked as generated by the compiler.
An example of such a comprehension is [ true || true ].
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* bjorn/compiler/fix-compiler-crash/OTP-11119:
compiler: Correct liveness optimization for wait/1
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The live optimization in beam_utils:live_opt/4 did not take into
account that the wait/1 instruction *never* falls through to
the next instruction (it has the same effect on the control flow
as the jump/1 instruction).
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The clause was formerly commented-out because at this point in the code,
no bs_put_string instruction has been generated yet when compiling from
Erlang.
If an Erlang module is compiled to BEAM assembly and the result contains
a bs_put_string instruction, the output can't be compiled to binary
anymore and the compiler crashes with the following error:
$ erlc prs.S
Function: compress/1
prs.S:none: internal error in beam_block;
crash reason: {{case_clause,
{'EXIT',
{function_clause,
[{beam_utils,live_opt,
[[{bs_put_string,1,{string,[0]}},
{bs_init,
{f,0},
{bs_append,0,8,{field_flags,[]}},
0,
[{integer,8},{x,0}],
{x,1}},
{label,2}],
2,
{1,{1,1,nil,nil}},
[{block,
[{'%live',2},
{set,[{x,0}],[{x,1}],move},
{'%live',1}]},
return]],
[{file,"beam_utils.erl"},{line,639}]},
{beam_utils,live_opt,1,
[{file,"beam_utils.erl"},{line,205}]},
{beam_block,function,2,
[{file,"beam_block.erl"},{line,38}]},
{lists,mapfoldl,3,
[{file,"lists.erl"},{line,1329}]},
{beam_block,module,2,
[{file,"beam_block.erl"},{line,29}]},
{compile,'-select_passes/2-anonymous-2-',2,
[{file,"compile.erl"},{line,476}]},
{compile,'-internal_comp/4-anonymous-1-',2,
[{file,"compile.erl"},{line,276}]},
{compile,fold_comp,3,
[{file,"compile.erl"},{line,294}]}]}}},
[{compile,'-select_passes/2-anonymous-2-',2,
[{file,"compile.erl"},{line,476}]},
{compile,'-internal_comp/4-anonymous-1-',2,
[{file,"compile.erl"},{line,276}]},
{compile,fold_comp,3,[{file,"compile.erl"},{line,294}]},
{compile,internal_comp,4,[{file,"compile.erl"},{line,278}]},
{compile,'-do_compile/2-anonymous-0-',2,
[{file,"compile.erl"},{line,152}]}]}
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Since both the STDLIB and compiler applications turn warnings
into errors, we must stop using the old deprecated crypto functions.
While we are at it, generalize the format of the key tuple returned
by beam_lib:make_crypto_key/2 to facilitate introducing new crypto
methods in the future. Change the format to:
{Type,Key,IV,BlockSize}
where Type, Key, and IV are the first three arguments for either
crypto:block_encrypt4/ or crypto:block_decrypt/4, and BlockSize
is the block size for the crypto algorithm (it is needed to properly
pad the plaintext blocks before encryption).
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In some circumstances, as when inlining code, when some optimization
passes are disabled or with hand-written but semantically correct Core
Erlang or BEAM assembly, a fresh reference may be live in more than one
register:
...
{allocate_zero,2,2}.
...
{call_ext,0,{extfunc,erlang,make_ref,0}}. % Ref in [x0]
...
{move,{x,0},{y,0}}. % Ref in [x0,y0]
{move,{y,1},{x,0}}. % Ref in [y0]
...
{move,{y,0},{x,0}}. % Ref in [x0,y0]
{move,{x,0},{y,1}}. % Ref in [x0,y0,y1]
{label,5}.
{loop_rec,{f,6},{x,0}}. % Ref in [y0,y1]
...
{loop_rec_end,{f,5}}.
{label,6}.
{wait,{f,5}}.
...
Pass beam_receive expects a single live register for the ref when it
encounters the loop_rec instruction and crashes with the following
reason:
$ erlc t.S
...
crash reason: {{case_clause,
{'EXIT',
{{case_clause,[{y,1},{y,0}]},
[{beam_receive,opt_recv,5,
[{file,"beam_receive.erl"},{line,154}]},
...]}}},
...}
This commit teaches beam_receive how to use a set of registers instead
of a single one when tracking fresh references, thus avoiding the crash.
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* nox/fix-bc-optim/OTP-11005:
Add a new option +clint0 to the compiler
Fix optimization of some binary comprehensions
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This option makes the compiler run the Core Erlang linting pass before
any optimization pass, which can crash if the given code has unbound
variables, something that is detected by core_lint.
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If a variable bound in a generator is used as the size of a segment
in the comprehension body, v3_core uses this variable in the code
generated to compute the initial size given to the `bs_init_writable`
primop before the variable is actually bound, as in:
<< <<0:S>> || S <- Slist >>
Reported-By: Peer Stritzinger
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beam_utils:is_not_used_at/3 could be very slow for complex guards,
because the cached result for previously encountered labels were
neither used nor updated within blocks.
Reported-by: Magnus Müller
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Added: binary_to_integer/1,2, integer_to_binary/1,2
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Commits 53bd4974a101 and 726f6e4c7afe simplified the handling of
match_fail (used to generated exceptions such as 'function_clause')
by first rewriting them to a call to erlang/error{1,2} and later
rewriting them to specialized BEAM instructions (to reduce the
code size).
There was one flaw, though, which only was exposed when more
aggressive optimizations were added in c3b60f86c622. Here is an
example to explain it:
t(V) ->
fun(get) -> V end.
The following BEAM code will be initially generated for the fun:
{function, '-t/1-fun-0-', 2, 5}.
{label,1}.
{line,[{location,"t.erl",5}]}.
{func_info,{atom,t},{atom,'-t/1-fun-0-'},2}.
{label,2}.
{test,is_eq_exact,{f,2},[{x,0},{atom,get}]}.
{move,{x,1},{x,0}}.
return.
{label,2}.
{test_heap,2,1}.
{put_list,{x,0},nil,{x,1}}.
{move,{atom,function_clause},{x,0}}.
{line,[{location,"t.erl",5}]}.
{call_ext_only,2,{extfunc,erlang,error,2}}.
Translating back to Erlang code, that would be roughly:
'-t/1-fun-0-'(get, V) -> V;
'-t/1-fun-0-'(Arg1, _) -> erlang:error(function_clause, [Arg1]).
Note that the second argument (the free variable V) is not included
in the call to erlang:error/2.
The beam_except pass will simplify the code to:
{function, '-t/1-fun-0-', 2, 8}.
{label,1}.
{line,[{location,"t.erl",5}]}.
{func_info,{atom,t},{atom,'-t/1-fun-0-'},2}.
{label,2}.
{test,is_eq_exact,{f,1},[{x,0},{atom,get}]}.
{move,{x,1},{x,0}}.
return.
The code has been shortened by jumping to the func_info/3 instruction.
Translating back to Erlang:
'-t/1-fun-0-'(get, V) -> V;
'-t/1-fun-0-'(Arg1, Arg2) -> erlang:error(function_clause, [Arg1,Arg2]).
it is clear that both arguments are now included in the
'function_clause' exception, even though the initially generated
code only included the first argument.
That is no problem in this particular case, but for some more complex
funs, optimizing the first version based on variable usage could make
the second version unsafe.
I rejected the following potential solutions:
- Including the free arguments in the call to erlang:error/2:
'-t/1-fun-0-'(get, V) -> V;
'-t/1-fun-0-'(Arg1, Arg2) -> erlang:error(function_clause, [Arg1,Arg2]).
Unfortunately, that is tricky. The free variables are only known
after the second pass in v3_kernel when variable usage has been
calculated. We would need to add a third pass (only for funs) that
would the free arguments to the second argument for erlang:error/2
*and* update the variable usage information.
- Calling beam_except earlier, from within beam_block before any
optimizations based on variable usages are done. But means that the
problem could reappear in some other form in the future when other
updates are done to the code generator and/or optimization passes.
The solution I have chosen is to modify beam_except to only replace
a call to erlang:error(function_class, Args) if the length of Args
is the same as the arity in the func_info/3 instruction. The code
will be slightly larger. Also, the free variables for funs and list
comprehensions will no longer be included in the function_clause
exception (that could be less confusing, but it also means less
information during debugging).
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* bjorn/compiler/dialyzer-warnings:
compile: Eliminate warnings for unmatched return values
beam_receive: Eliminate dialyzer warning for unmatched return
beam_validator: Eliminate dialyzer warnings for unmatched returns
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* nox/fix-seq-opt/OTP-10818:
Add two tests for unused multiple values in effect context
Forbid multiple values in Core Erlang sequence arguments
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The assert_fls/2 and assert_type/3 functions both return the
Vst passed to them, but all callers ignore the return value.
Given the name of the functions, they are not expected to return
anything. Make it so by changing the return value to 'ok'.
There are two calls to bsm_get_context/2 used only to validate
that the match context is valid. Call bsm_validate_context/2
instead.
In bsm_validate_context/2, explicitly match the return value of
bsm_get_context/2 to '_' to make it clear that it is not used.
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* bjorn/compiler/crash/OTP-10794:
Test setelement(1, not_a_tuple, NewValue)
Fix crash in the compiler when compiling element(2, not_a_tuple)
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It does not make sense to return multiple values from a sequence
argument and the Kernel Erlang passes can't cope with it.
The linting pass now knows how to detect this kind of defunct code and
the Core code folding pass is changed to not generate code like that
when optimizing away multiple-valued lets in effect mode.
Reported-by: José Valim
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In code such as:
X / 2
the following code would be output from beam_type for the division:
{fconv,{x,0},{fr,0}}.
{fconv,{integer,2},{fr,1}}.
fclearerror.
{bif,fdiv,{f,0},[{fr,0},{fr,1}],{fr,0}}.
That is, the integer 2 would be converted to the float 2.0 at
run-time by "{fconv,{integer,2},{fr,1}}". Make sure that we do
the conversion at compile time.
Noticed-by: Richard O'Keefe
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The BEAM loader will put floating point constants into the
literal pools for the module, but it will not check for duplicates.
We can do much better by having the compiler use the literal
pool for floating point constants.
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