Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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* maint:
stdlib: Correct a filelib test case
stdlib: Let filelib:find_source() search subdirs
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OTP:13713: Add documentation and typespecs for inet:i/0
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The Design Principles states that an application can have Erlang
source files one level below the "src" directory, and now
filelib:find_source() by default searches one level below "src".
The same applies to "esrc". That directory is only mentioned in
filename(3).
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Previously we accepted trailing NULs, which was backwards compatible
as such usage never resulted in misbehavior in the first place. The
downside is that it prevented erts_native_filename_need from
returning an accurate number of *actual characters*, needlessly
complicating encoding-agnostic code like erts_osenv.
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putenv(3) and friends aren't thread-safe regardless of how you slice
it; a global lock around all environment operations (like before)
keeps things safe as far as our own operations go, but we have
absolutely no control over what libc or a library dragged in by a
driver/NIF does -- they're free to call getenv(3) or putenv(3)
without honoring our lock.
This commit solves this by setting up an "emulated" environment which
can't be touched without going through our interfaces. Third-party
libraries can still shoot themselves in the foot but benign uses of
os:putenv/2 will no longer risk crashing the emulator.
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false should be never, false not found in the source code
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* dgud/kernel/refc_sched_wall_time/OTP-11694:
test: spawn scheduler_wall_time flag holder
Turn on scheduler_wall_time in an alive process
Redirect system_flag(scheduler_wall_time,_) to kernel_refc
kernel: add a resource reference counter
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Slightly optimize reading of cooked files in list mode
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by limiting the memory usage.
Our valgrind test machine (pharazon) seems to get totally swamped
by this test case.
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In general, the new NIF-based file routines are faster than the old
efile driver.
However, on some computers, building the entire OTP system is somewhat
slower. It turns out that it is because 'erlc' cheated by turning off
the IO thread pool (using '+A0') to avoid context switches between
scheduler threads and threads in the IO thread pool. The new file
routines perform IO on dirty IO threads, and there is (by intent) no
way to force the operations to occur on scheduler threads to avoid
the context switches
What we can do to is to use a small (4Kb) read-ahead buffer for files
opened for reading (only) in list mode (which is how the compiler
opens its input files). The buffering reduces the number of context
switches between scheduler threads and dirty IO threads. On my
computer that seems to slightly speed up building of the entire OTP
system.
The buffer should do no harm. The only potential for harm I can
think of is random access to a file opened in read mode, where
the read-ahead buffer could slightly decrease performance. That
does not seems to be a likely use case in practice, though.
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Also fix a typo.
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* origin/raimo/ssl-dist-bench/OTP-14657:
Write SSL distribution benchmarks
Polish SSL distribution
Handle whitebox test message
Correct distribution doc
Use SNI when connecting
Use -ssl_dist_optfile options
Read in -ssl_dist_optfile to ETS
Facilitate test certs with common root
Stop checking DNS name for SNI
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System resources/functionality may need to be reference counted
to be handled correctly when used or enabled/disabled from more
than one process or application.
It is easier to handle this in erlang code than in erts, so make a
process that deals with the housekeeping.
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The option no longer does anything; systems that lack support for
non-blocking sendfile(2) will use the Erlang fallback.
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The parts relating to drivers/ports are now obsolete, and the
provided example was far noisier than it had to be; the only
relevant metric is the number of calls and it's up to the user to
decide how those will be reduced. One could argue for its complete
removal, but I'm inclined to leave it be.
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The option no longer does anything at all.
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The old driver didn't fall back to using write(2) if writev(2) failed
due to the combined length of the iov overflowing a ssize_t, but the
new one doesn't have any problems with it so we failed this test with
a case_clause error on 32-bit machines.
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This test revolves around the possibility that the underlying port
can be killed, which is nonsense now that the file suite no longer
uses ports for anything.
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The cumulative wait time was as long as the delay itself in the
flush-on-size test, causing the test to pass because the write
managed to time out.
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This also hides the module behind ?PRIM_FILE to make testing new
implementations less painful.
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This improves the latency of file operations as dirty schedulers
are a bit more eager to run jobs than async threads, and use a
single global queue rather than per-thread queues, eliminating the
risk of a job stalling behind a long-running job on the same thread
while other async threads sit idle.
There's no such thing as a free lunch though; the lowered latency
comes at the cost of increased busy-waiting which may have an
adverse effect on some applications. This behavior can be tweaked
with the +sbwt flag, but unfortunately it affects all types of
schedulers and not just dirty ones. We plan to add type-specific
flags at a later stage.
sendfile has been moved to inet_drv to lessen the effect of a nasty
race; the cooperation between inet_drv and efile has never been
airtight and the socket dying at the wrong time (Regardless of
reason) could result in fd aliasing. Moving it to the inet driver
makes it impossible to trigger this by closing the socket in the
middle of a sendfile operation, while still allowing it to be
aborted -- something that can't be done if it stays in the file
driver.
The race still occurs if the controlling process dies in the short
window between dispatching the sendfile operation and the dup(2)
call in the driver, but it's much less likely to happen now.
A proper fix is in the works.
--
Notable functional differences:
* The use_threads option for file:sendfile/5 no longer has any
effect.
* The file-specific DTrace probes have been removed. The same
effect can be achieved with normal tracing together with the
nif__entry/nif__return probes to track scheduling.
--
OTP-14256
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* maint:
Update HOWTO with wxWidgets build examples
https should be mapped to url and not seealso
Update kernel appup for OTP-20.2
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* siri/appups-20.2:
Update kernel appup for OTP-20.2
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by suppressing DOP_MONITOR_P, DOP_MONITOR_P_EXIT and DOP_DEMONITOR_P
if not supported by the remote node.
In 17e198d6ee60f7dec9abfed272cf4226aea44535
I changed the behavior of erlang:monitor
to not raise badarg for c-nodes but instead create
a monitor to only supervise the connection.
But I forgot to prevent DOP_MONITOR_P and friends from being
sent to the node that does not expect them.
Note: We test both DFLAG_DIST_MONITOR and DFLAG_DIST_MONITOR_NAME
for the node to support process monitoring. This is because
erl_interface is buggy as it sets DFLAG_DIST_MONITOR without
really supporting it.
ToDo: Should erl_interface stop setting DFLAG_DIST_MONITOR
or should we change the meaning of these flags?
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d8d07a7593d811 that added the to_dis option to the compiler no longer
works when merged to master. That is because of 79f28cfd8df1b7
that removed some unused code in erts_debug.
Fix this by adding a new function erts_debug:dis_to_file/2 and
use it from compile module where we have access to the filename
(in beam_listing we only have an opened file).
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* lukas/system/improve_profile_docs/OTP-14633:
erts: Add term2bin note about encoding guarantee
Fix broken link in INSTALL howto
system: Add info to profiling effeciency guide
Update message queue and pinfo binary docs
kernel: Clarify gen_tcp:listen documentation
system: Add External OSS tools section to profiling guilde
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Conflicts:
lib/compiler/src/beam_listing.erl
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