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* lukas/kernel/error_logger_warn_fix/OTP-13184:
kernel: Fix progress check in error logger warn suite
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On Windows, the pathnames for modules that are loaded early are
returned with mixed backslashes and slashes:
1> code:which(lists).
"C:\\Program Files\\erl8.0/lib/stdlib-2.7/ebin/lists.beam"
2>
Modules loaded later are fully normalized.
When starting the code_server, normalize the pathnames for all modules
that have been loaded so far.
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The documentation for rpc:call() says:
Evaluates apply(Module, Function, Args) on the node Node and
returns the corresponding value Res, or {badrpc, Reason} if
the call fails.
What is not said that rpc:call() can generate an exception if the
'rex' process on the other node is killed:
(kalle@host)1> Rex = rpc:call(arne@host, erlang, whereis, [rex]).
<6937.14.0>
(kalle@host)2> rpc:call(arne@host, erlang, exit, [Rex,kill]).
** exception exit: {killed,
{gen_server,call,
[{rex,arne@host},
{call,erlang,exit,[<6937.14.0>,kill],<0.33.0>},
infinity]}}
in function rpc:rpc_check/1 (rpc.erl, line 361)
On the other hand, if the other node shuts down for some other reason,
we'll get a {badrpc,nodedown} result:
(kalle@host)5> rpc:call(arne@host, erlang, halt, []).
{badrpc,nodedown}
There does not seem to be any reason to handle the two cases
differently. If the 'rex' process is terminated on the other node,
it will shut down shortly thereafter.
Therefore, change rpc:call() and rpc:block_call() to always return
{badrpc,Reason} is the call fails:
(kalle@host)1> Rex = rpc:call(arne@host, erlang, whereis, [rex]).
<6937.14.0>
(kalle@host)2> rpc:call(arne@host, erlang, exit, [Rex,kill]).
{badrpc,{'EXIT',{killed,{gen_server,call,
[{rex,arne@host},
{call,erlang,exit,[<7126.14.0>,kill],<0.33.0>},
infinity]}}}}
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* bjorn/kernel/modernize-tests:
Remove ?line macros
Fix comments
gen_tcp_misc_SUITE: Use unique node names
Eliminate use of the ?t macro
Eliminate use of doc and suite clauses
Replace use of test_server:capture*/0 with ct:capture*/0
Eliminate use test_server:format()
Eliminate use of test_server:sleep/1
Eliminate use of test_server:fail/0,1
Eliminate use of ?config() macro
Modernize timetraps
disk_log_SUITE: Remove vestiges of VxWorks support
Conflicts:
lib/kernel/test/code_SUITE.erl
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While we are it, also re-ident the files.
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Remove out-commented code. Make sure that comments that are not
at the end of a line starts with two '%' characters and not just
one. That will become important later when we'll remove all
?line macros and ask Emacs to re-indent the files.
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Use unique node names to ensure that one failed test case will
not cause other test cases to fail if a slave node was left.
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Those clause are obsolete and never used by common_test.
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Replace with io:format/2 or ct:pal/3.
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* bjorn/multiple-load/OTP-13111:
erl_prim_loader_SUITE: Add debug printout
Skip erl_prim_loader_SUITE:get_modules/1 when cover-compiled
multi_load_SUITE: Clarify failure reasons
multi_load_SUITE: Don't fail on non-HiPE systems
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?config is ugly and not recommended. Use proplists:get_value/2
instead.
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This bug was introduced by OTP-13388.
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* maint:
io_SUITE: Don't fail on fast computers with rough timers
Fix code_SUITE after test_server change
Set default value for crash_dump_dir
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code:which/1 will return 'cover_compiled' instead of a path. We
could work around that, but since erl_prim_loader is not
cover-compiled, it does not gain us anything.
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The failure reasons remained from a previous draft of the API.
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test_server:start_node does no longer add the test_server path to the
new node, since the needed code is present in the default path. This
caused two test cases in code_SUITE to fail.
code_SUITE:mult_lib_roots: Expected the test_server path to be first
in the code path. This check is removed.
code_SUITE:bad_erl_libs: Started a node with "-env ERL_LIBS ",
i.e. not giving any value to the ERL_LIBS variable. This test
succeeded by accident, since the combination with arguments set by
test_server_node.erl and by slave.erl caused the node start to work,
and no further checks were present in the test. This part of the test
case is now removed.
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Since removal of overload prot as default protection only 4
progress reports arrive when starting sasl.
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* bjorn/multiple-load/OTP-13111:
code: Add functions that can load multiple modules
Refactor post_beam_load handling
Simplify and robustify code_server:all_loaded/1
Update preloaded modules
Add erl_prim_loader:get_modules/3
Add has_prepared_code_on_load/1 BIF
Allow erlang:finish_loading/1 to load more than one module
beam_load.c: Add a function to check for an on_load function
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Conflicts:
erts/emulator/beam/erl_alloc.types
erts/emulator/beam/erl_bif_info.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_process.c
erts/preloaded/ebin/erts_internal.beam
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Change scheduler responsiveness to 'check_schedulers'.
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Add functions to 'code' to allow loading of multiple modules
at once.
code:atomic_load(Modules) will load all modules at once, or fail
having loaded none of them. Since we cannot guarantee the atomicity if
there are modules with -on_load functions, the list of modules must
not contain any modules with an -on_load function.
Also, to make it possible to put an application into an inactive state
for as short time as possible, also add code:prepare_loading/1 and
code:finish_loading/1. They are used like this:
{ok,Prepared} = code:prepare_loading(Modules)
.
.
.
ok = code:finish_loading(Prepared)
code:ensure_modules_loaded/1 is useful as a pure optimization to
ensure that modules that will be needed soon have indeed been
loaded. It will not reload modules that have already been loaded and
it *will* accept modules that have an on_load function. Therefore, it
does not make sense to give any atomicity guarantees.
I did consider overloading the existing code:ensure_loaded/1
function, but rejected it because the return value is very
different. Having different forms of return values depending
on the types of arguments is confusing.
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When we are going to implement functions that can load many modules
at once, we don't the erl_prim_loader server to become a bottleneck.
Therefore, we need erl_prim_loader:get_modules/3 that can read many
BEAM files in parallel.
Note that we will not bother making reading from archive files
or using the inet loader efficient. That can be done later if it
turns out to be important.
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The test_server application has previously been deprecated.
In OTP 19, we will move relevant parts of test_server into the
common_test application. Test suites that include test_server.hrl
must be updated to include ct.hrl instead. Test suites that include
test_server_line.hrl must removed that inclusion. Test suites that
call the test_server module directly will continue to work in OTP 19.
The test suites for Erlang/OTP are built and executed in exactly
the same way as previously.
Here are some more details.
The modules test_server*.erl and erl2html2.erl in lib/test_server/src
have been moved to common_test/src.
The test_server.hrl and test_server_line.hrl include files have
been deleted. The macros in test_server.hrl have been copied into
lib/common_test/include/ct.hrl.
The ts*.erl modules and their associated data files in
lib/test_server/src has been been moved to the new directory
lib/common_test/test_server. The ts* modules are no longer built
to lib/common_test/ebin. They will only built when 'make release_tests'
is executed.
The test suite for test_server has been moved to lib/common_test/test.
The rest of the files have been deleted.
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Cleanliness.
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Since no test suites includede test_server.hrl, there is no need
to have test_server in the include path or code path.
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As a first step to removing the test_server application as
as its own separate application, change the inclusion of
test_server.hrl to an inclusion of ct.hrl and remove the
inclusion of test_server_line.hrl.
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Eliminate duplicated code by factoring out the common code
for starting erl_boot_server and a slave node.
Also, in the new start_boot_server/0 helper, fix a problem
with Linux systems that assign 127.0.1.1 as the IP address
for the hostname.
Also stop using the -setcookie option when starting a node
using -loader inet. The inet loading method doesn't use
the distribution anymore.
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The perf_counter is a very very cheap and high resolution timer
that can be used to timestamp system events. It does not have
monoticity guarantees, but should on most OS's expose a monotonous
time.
A special instruction has been created for this counter to further
speed up fetching it.
OTP-12908
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* maint:
Introduce time management in native APIs
Introduce time warp safe replacement for safe_fixed option
Introduce time warp safe trace timestamp formats
Conflicts:
erts/emulator/beam/erl_bif_trace.c
erts/emulator/beam/erl_driver.h
erts/emulator/beam/erl_nif.h
erts/emulator/beam/erl_trace.c
erts/preloaded/ebin/erlang.beam
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* rickard/monotonic-time-improvements/OTP-13222:
Introduce time management in native APIs
Introduce time warp safe replacement for safe_fixed option
Introduce time warp safe trace timestamp formats
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* bjorn/kernel/clean-up-code_server:
code_server: Add specs for all exported functions
code_server: Add types to the state record
code_server: Don't export internal system_* functions
Simplify starting of code server
Remove first argument of code_server:call()
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* maint:
Update documentation for code-loading functions
code: Correct the types for error returns
Eliminate run-time system crash in code:load_abs/1
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The specifications for functions that load code in the 'code'
module (e.g. code:load_file/1) have some problems:
* The specs claim that the functions can return {error,on_load}, but
they never do. However, they can return {error,on_load_failure} if
the -on_load function in a module fails.
* The specs claim that the functions can return {error,native_code},
but they never do.
While we are it, also extend the on_load_errors/1 test case to test
that the load functions return {error,on_load_failure} when an
-on_load function fails.
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There is no reason to export system_continue/3 and system_terminate/4
from code_server. Servers that use proc_lib and 'sys' to handle system
message do need those functions exported, but code_server contains a
modified copy of the system message handling code from 'sys', and that
code only make local calls to system_continue/3 and
system_terminate/4.
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The run-time system would terminate if code:load_abs/1 was
called with a filename containing any non-latin1 characters.
The reason is that code_server would attempt to construct a
module name from the filename using list_to_atom/1 and that
atoms currently are limited to the latin1 character set.
But how should the error be reported?
I have decided to that the simplest and least confusing way
is to move the call to list_to_atom/1 to 'code' module and
let it crash the calling process. The resulting stack back
trace will make it clear what the reason for the crash was.
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Rename release_archives/0 to purge_archive_cache/0 to make it
clearer what it does and what it doesn't do. Also add a comment
about its intended purpose.
Note that release_archives/0 is not documented and is part of the
experimental archive feature. Furthermore, the only uses I could find
were in the test suite. I did not find any uses in the external
applications relx and rebar3 applications that are known to use
archives. Therefore, I think that the increased clarity is worth
the small risk of breaking code.
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New timestamp options for trace, sequential trace, and
system profile:
- monotonic_timestamp
- strict_monotonic_timestamp
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Problem: erlang:purge_module/1 is not safe in the sense
that very bad things may happen if the code to be purged
is still referred to by live processes.
Introduce erts_internal:purge_module which is the same as the old
erlang:purge_module BIF (except it returns false if no such old module).
Implement erlang:purge_module in Erlang and let it invoke
erts_code_purger for safe purging where all clogging processes
first are killed.
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