Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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* saleyn/uds/PR-612/OTP-13572:
Rewrite inet* for address family 'local'
Rewrite inet_drv for AF_LOCAL
Assign externally open fd to gen_tcp (UDS support)
Conflicts:
erts/preloaded/ebin/prim_inet.beam
lib/kernel/doc/src/gen_tcp.xml
lib/kernel/doc/src/gen_udp.xml
lib/kernel/src/inet6_sctp.erl
lib/kernel/test/inet_SUITE.erl
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When handling a gen_tcp socket, it's handy to be able to give it its proper type
and have dialyzer be able to validate it, rather than falling back on using
port(). The gen_udp equivalent is already exported.
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An ECONNRESET is a socket error which tells us that a TCP peer has sent
an RST. The RST indicates that they have aborted the connection and
that the payload we have received should not be considered complete. Up
until now, the implementation of TCP in inet_drv.c has hidden the
receipt of the RST from the user, treating it as though it was just
a FIN terminating the read side of the socket.
There are many cases where user code needs to be able to distinguish
between a socket that was closed normally and one that was aborted.
Setting the option {show_econnreset, true} enables the user to receive
ECONNRESET errors on both active and passive sockets.
A connected socket returned from gen_tcp:accept/1 will inherit the
show_econnreset setting of the listening socket.
By default this option is set to {show_econnreset, false}.
Note that this patch only enables the reporting of ECONNRESET when
the socket is being read from. It does not report ECONNRESET (or
EPIPE) when the user tries to write to a connection when an RST
has already been received. Currently the TCP implementation in
inet_drv.c hides all such send errors from the user in favour
of returning {error, close}. A separate patch will be needed to
enable the reporting of such errors.
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Add the {active,N} socket option, where N is an integer in the range
-32768..32767, to allow a caller to specify the number of data messages to
be delivered to the controlling process. Once the socket's delivered
message count either reaches 0 or is explicitly set to 0 with
inet:setopts/2 or by including {active,0} as an option when the socket is
created, the socket transitions to passive ({active, false}) mode and the
socket's controlling process receives a message to inform it of the
transition. TCP sockets receive {tcp_passive,Socket}, UDP sockets receive
{udp_passive,Socket} and SCTP sockets receive {sctp_passive,Socket}.
The socket's delivered message counter defaults to 0, but it can be set
using {active,N} via any gen_tcp, gen_udp, or gen_sctp function that takes
socket options as arguments, or via inet:setopts/2. New N values are added
to the socket's current counter value, and negative numbers can be used to
reduce the counter value. Specifying a number that would cause the socket's
counter value to go above 32767 causes an einval error. If a negative
number is specified such that the counter value would become negative, the
socket's counter value is set to 0 and the socket transitions to passive
mode. If the counter value is already 0 and inet:setopts(Socket,
[{active,0}]) is specified, the counter value remains at 0 but the
appropriate passive mode transition message is generated for the socket.
This commit contains a modified preloaded prim_inet.beam due to changes in
prim_inet.erl.
Add tests for {active,N} mode for TCP, UDP, and SCTP sockets.
Add documentation for {active,N} mode for inet, gen_tcp, gen_udp, and
gen_sctp.
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When the TCP socket is in passive mode, it is possible that a close
message has not been delivered to the controlling process before
calling send/2. This results in the returning {error, closed} to the
caller, in the same way that recv/2,3 does. This commit adjusts the
type of the error "Reason" to include the atom 'closed'.
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rickard/r16/port-optimizations/OTP-10336
* rickard/port-optimizations/OTP-10336:
Change annotate level for emacs-22 in cerl
Update etp-commands
Add documentation on communication in Erlang
Add support for busy port message queue
Add driver callback epilogue
Implement true asynchronous signaling between processes and ports
Add erl_drv_[send|output]_term
Move busy port flag
Use rwlock for driver list
Optimize management of port tasks
Improve configuration of process and port tables
Remove R9 compatibility features
Use ptab functionality also for ports
Prepare for use of ptab functionality also for ports
Atomic port state
Generalize process table implementation
Implement functionality for delaying thread progress from unmanaged threads
Conflicts:
erts/doc/src/erl_driver.xml
erts/doc/src/erlang.xml
erts/emulator/beam/beam_bif_load.c
erts/emulator/beam/beam_bp.c
erts/emulator/beam/beam_emu.c
erts/emulator/beam/bif.c
erts/emulator/beam/copy.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_alloc.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_alloc.types
erts/emulator/beam/erl_bif_info.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_bif_port.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_bif_trace.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_init.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_message.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_port_task.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_process.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_process.h
erts/emulator/beam/erl_process_lock.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_trace.c
erts/emulator/beam/export.h
erts/emulator/beam/global.h
erts/emulator/beam/io.c
erts/emulator/sys/unix/sys.c
erts/emulator/sys/vxworks/sys.c
erts/emulator/test/port_SUITE.erl
erts/etc/unix/cerl.src
erts/preloaded/ebin/erlang.beam
erts/preloaded/ebin/prim_inet.beam
erts/preloaded/src/prim_inet.erl
lib/hipe/cerl/erl_bif_types.erl
lib/kernel/doc/src/inet.xml
lib/kernel/src/inet.erl
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* The option is removed to force warnings for dialyzer
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The {error, enfile} return value is badly misleading and confusing for
this case, since the Posix ENFILE errno value has a well-defined meaning
that has nothing to do with Erlang ports. The fix changes the return
value to {error, system_limit}, which is consistent with e.g. various
file(3) functions. inet:format_error/1 has also been updated to support
system_limit in the same manner as file:format_error/1.
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Since sendfile could in theory be used to send to any type
of file descriptor in *nix, it is a better fit to have it
in file.
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Have to figure out how to represent progress in header writing when
using non-blocking, not sure how to do this.
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This is needed because otherwise there could be scenarios
when the efile driver blocks a fd and then crashes without
the inet driver ever finding out. Now when the process
crashes the port will close and we can cleanup in the inet
driver.
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Because the sending process has to be the controlling process
of the tcp socket used to send data it is not possible to use
the file_server
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Ignore fd is a feature used by sendfile to temporarily remove
all driver_select calls on that fd so that another driver can
select on it. It also delays all actions which sends or receives
data in that fd until in the fd is no longer ignored.
Only the controlling_process should use the feature as it is otherwise
possible that the ignore will never be cleaned up and hence create
a memory leak in the driver.
An ignored driver will not detect that an fd has been closed until
it is unignored.
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Move sendfile data to invoke data instead of file_descr.
Remove usage of ready_output when doing a send.
If told to send 0 bytes, file_sendfile now sends the entire file
for linux.
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Move the command handling to outputv in preparation for
header and trailer inclusion in the sendfile api.
Use the standard efile communication functions for sendfile.
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Created erlang fallback for sendfile in gen_tcp and
moved sendfile from file to gen_tcp. Also created testcases
for testing all different options to sendfile.
For info about how sendfile should work see the BSD man pages
as they contain a more complete API than other *nixes.
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The type is marked as a binary() or a string() but in practice it can
be an iodata(). The test suite was updated to confirm the gen_tcp/2
and gen_udp:send/4 functions accept iodata() (iolists) packets.
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Currently an 8-tuple representing an IPv6 address is not accepted by
gen_tcp:listen/2, gen_tcp:connect/3,4, gen_udp:open/2, or
gen_sctp:open/1,2, unless the 'inet6' option is also given. This means
that an application that has obtained the address, e.g. from
configuration that allows for either IPv4 or IPv6, must always check the
type of the address before passing it to these functions. Letting the
functions infer 'inet6' from the 8-tuple, in case other options do not
override this choice, improves usability.
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