Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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When analyzing complex expressions (i.e. comprehensions, cases, tries,
ifs and receives), erl_lint does not forget about old unused variables
when returning the updated variable table. This causes a bug where old
unused variables are not recorded as such:
t(X, Y) ->
#r{a=[ K || K <- Y ],b=[ K || K <- Y ]}.
As erl_lint uses vtmerge_pat/2 to merge the results of the analysis of
the two list comprehensions, X is marked as used and the warning is not
emitted.
The function vtmerge_pat/2 is used instead of the similar vtmerge/2
which does not mark multiple occurrences of a variable as usage to
handle cases like the following one:
t(X, Y) ->
#r{a=A=X,b=A=Y}.
Other simpler expressions like conses, tuples and external fun
references do not correctly follow this behaviour, e.g. A is not marked
as used in the following code:
t(X, Y) ->
{A=X,A=Y}.
This commit fixes both issues and makes erl_lint not return old unused
variables in updated tables and makes all compound expressions use
vtmerge_pat/2.
Reported-by: Anders Ramsell
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* sze/edlin_understand_keys/OTP-11251:
Added primary bootstrap
erts: fixed documentation regarding tty and arrow keys
make edlin understand a few important control keys
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* alexrp/export_edge/OTP-11266:
Export the edge/0 type from the digraph module
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Thanks to Chris King and Kostis Sagonas for pinpointing the bug.
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* hb/stdlib/dets_bugfix/OTP-11245:
Fix a Dets bug concerning traversal of tables
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If the fun M:F/A construct was used erroneously the linter could
crash.
Thanks to Mikhail Sobolev for reporting the bug.
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The bug was introduced in R16B.
Thanks to Manuel Durán Aguete.
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Hi Fredrik,
> I've gotten some feedback from your review,
> You need to add documentation under Erts-> "User's Guide" -> "tty - A
> command line interface"
>
> You need to add testcase in interactive_shell_SUITE a simplified
> example of how this testcase could look like;
> ctrl_w_and_ctrl_u(_Conf) ->
> rtnode([{putline,""}, {putline, "2."}, {getline, "2"},
> {putline,"xxx yy"++[$\^w]++"."}, {getline,"xxx"}, {putline,"xxx
> yy"++[$\^u]++"z."}, {getline,"z"}],[]).
Please find an updated version of the patch attached to this e-mail. I
hope that you still accept it via e-mail because the former patch was
sent the same way ;-).
I have extended the documentation to list the new key combinations and
added tests to make sure they work.
Kind regards,
--
Dr. Stefan Zegenhagen
arcutronix GmbH
Garbsener Landstr. 10
30419 Hannover
Germany
Tel: +49 511 277-2734
Fax: +49 511 277-2709
Email: [email protected]
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Please consider the environment before printing this message.
>From ce4b827c78d18f39bb1146fd2959ffd7ae2b4bb6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Stefan Zegenhagen <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, 6 May 2013 14:39:07 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] [EDLIN] support a few more control keys
Add support for the following control keys that many users have become
accustomed to:
- <CTRL>+W : backward kill word
- <CTRL>+U : backward kill line
- <HOME> : goto start of line
- <END> : goto end of line
- <CTRL>+<LEFT> : backward word
- <CTRL>+<RIGHT> : forward word
It seems that the <CTRL>+<LEFT|RIGHT> control key sequences are
different between terminal emulators, therefore a few possible
combinations were added (similar to how libreadline is configured).
Documentation and tests are extended to reflect the new functionality.
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* jv/update-io_prompt-type/OTP-11208:
Update io:prompt() type
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Most functions in filelib support binaries as arguments but
that was not reflected in the typespecs.
The types filename_all() and dirname_all() were introduced
to mimic file:name_all().
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Functions that expect an io:prompt() also accept binaries and
iolists as arguments. Therefore its type has been updated to
reflect the same types accepted by other io functions.
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* genrich/stdlib/gen_server_typo/OTP-11200:
handle_info Info type possible typo
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Should it be 'timeout' instead of timeout(), as in doc: http://www.erlang.org/doc/man/gen_server.html#Module:handle_info-2?
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* jv/erl_lint-default_types/OTP-11143:
Updated primary bootstrap
stdlib: re-factored erl_lint.erl
Improve erl_lint performance
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* nox/erl_pp-callback/OTP-11140:
Update primary bootstrap
Support callback attributes in erl_pp
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The function was updated in 5805b576, but not the type specificatin.
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* nox/erl_eval-receive/OTP-11137:
Updated primary bootstrap for erl_eval
Added preloaded prim_eval
Fix receive support in erl_eval with a BEAM module
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* bjorn/stdlib/improve-ls/OTP-11108:
Teach c:ls/1 to show non-directory files
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bmk/snmp/snmp424_integration/r16
Conflicts:
lib/snmp/doc/src/notes.xml
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The default_types() in erl_lint returned a dictionary
with all default types. However, calculating this dict
was expensive and we actually didn't use the default
values in this dictionary.
This patch replaces the dictionary use for one function
that checks if the type is a default type or not,
and remove the bits that checked explicitly for those
default types when iterating the dictionary.
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Using the low-level BEAM instructions, we can loop over each message in
the process queue and removes the first message that matches, without
receiving them all to later send them back to itself.
The function prim_eval:'receive'/2 is equivalent to the
following pseudo-code:
'receive'(F, T) ->
RESET MESSAGE QUEUE POINTER,
LOOP:
case PEEK CURRENT MESSAGE WITH TIMEOUT T of
{ok,Msg} ->
case F(Msg) of
nomatch ->
DECREMENT TIMEOUT T,
ADVANCE MESSAGE QUEUE POINTER,
GOTO LOOP;
Result ->
RESET MESSAGE QUEUE POINTER,
Result
end;
timeout ->
RESET MESSAGE QUEUE POINTER,
timeout
end.
To not break Dialyzer and other tools, we use a stub Erlang module which
abstract code is forcefully inserted into prim_inet.erl afterwards
compilation.
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In an email to erlang-questions, Bengt Kleberg wrote:
When I use c:ls/1 it reminds me so much of Unix "ls" that I
expect c:ls("filename") to work. The resulting error surprises
me every time (not the same day).
While teaching c:ls/1 to show non-directory files, update the
error handling to make use of the POSIX error codes from
file:list_dir/1 and file:format_error/1 (which had not been
invented when the c module was first implemented).
Suggested-by: Bengt Kleberg
Test-suite-by: Bengt Kleberg
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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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Thanks to Tomáš Janoušek.
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* nox/fix-epp-file-attrs/OTP-11079:
Fix an inconsistent state in epp
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This function is used all over the place in OTP itself and people
sometimes want that functionality, they may as well not reimplement it
themselves.
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When entering a new file, epp doesn't properly set #epp.name2 like it
does on initialisation, generating a malformed file attribute when it
leaves the file.
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I've found stdlib's timer to burn CPU without good reason. Here's what
happens.
The problem is that it sleeps in milliseconds but computes time in
microseconds. And there is bug in code to compute milliseconds to
sleep. It computes microseconds difference between now and nearest
timer event and then does _truncating_ division by 1000. So on average
it sleeps 500 microseconds _less than needed_. On wakeup its checks do
I have timer tick that already occurred? No. Ok how much I need to
sleep ? It does that bad computation again and gets 0
milliseconds. So next gen_server timeout happens right away only to
find we're still before closest timer tick and to decide to sleep 0
milliseconds again. And again and again.
This commit changes division to pick ceiling of ratio rather than
floor. So that we always sleep not less then difference between now
and closest event time.
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* lh/demonitor-flush/OTP-11039:
Use erlang:demonitor(Ref, [flush]) where applicable
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* lh/otp-optims/OTP-11035:
Use erlang:demonitor's flush option on timeout
Don't lookup the node unless required in gen:call/{3,4}
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* sv/stdlib/sys-get-state/OTP-11013:
Removed ?line macro
add sys:get_state/1,2 and sys:replace_state/2,3
update sys:get_status/2,3 documentation for gen_event
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In rest_for_one and one_for_all supervisors one child dying can cause
multiple children to be restarted. Previously if the child that caused
the restart is started successfully but another child fails to start,
the supervisor would not terminate this child with the other
successfully restarted children as no record of the pid was kept. Thus
the supervisor would try to start this child again. This could lead to
multiples of the same child or if the child is registered cause repeated
attempts at starting this child - until the max restart threshold was
reached.
Now the child that failed to start becomes the restarting child, instead
of staying with the same child, for the next restart attempt. This has
the following side effects:
1) In one_for_all the new version of the child that original died is
terminated before a restart attempt is made.
2) In rest_for_one all succesfully restarted children are not terminated
and restarting continues from the child that failed to start.
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At Erlang Factory 2013 there was discussion during one of the talks about
the sys:get_status functions and how useful they were for debugging. Geoff
Cant mentioned it would be very useful if the sys module also provided
functions to use while debugging to get just the state of a process and
also to be able to replace the state of a process, and many others in the
audience appeared to agree.
The sys:get_state/1,2 functions return the state of a gen_server, gen_fsm,
or gen_event process. The return value varies depending on the process
type: process state for a gen_server, state name and state data for a
gen_fsm, and handler module, handler id, and handler state for each handler
registered in a gen_event process.
The sys:replace_state/2,3 functions allow the state of a gen_server,
gen_fsm, or gen_event process to be replaced with a new state. These
functions take a function argument that updates or replaces the process
state; using a function to change the state eliminates the race condition
of first reading the state via sys:get_state/1 or sys:get_state/2, using
its return value to create a new state, and then replacing the old state
with the new state, since during that time the process might have received
other calls or messages that could have changed its state.
* For a gen_server process, the state replacement function takes the
process state as an argument and returns a new state.
* For a gen_fsm process, the state replacement function gets a tuple of
{StateName, StateData} and returns a similar tuple that specifies a new
state name, new state data, or both.
* For a gen_event process, the state replacement function is called for
each registered event handler. It gets a tuple {Module, Id, HandlerState}
and returns a similar tuple that specifies the same Module and Id values
but may specify a different value for HandlerState.
If the state replacement function crashes or results in an error, the
original state of a gen_server or gen_fsm process is maintained; if such a
crash occurs for a gen_event process, the original state of the event
handler for which the state replacement function was called is maintained,
but the states of other event handlers of the same gen_event process may
still be updated if no errors or crashes occur while replacing their
states.
Add documentation for sys:get_state/1,2 and sys:replace_state/2,3. The
documentation explicitly notes that the functions are intended for use
during debugging.
Add new tests for these functions to gen_server_SUITE, gen_fsm_SUITE, and
gen_event_SUITE.
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It is equivalent to the few lines removed, except more efficient.
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Move some operations that aren't required for the happy path.
The operations were small, so they shouldn't show a big difference
in benchmarks except for systems with many active gen processes.
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A bug has been fixed: when given the option {encoding,utf8} a list of
floating point numbers (in the correct interval) was mistakenly
returned as a string.
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The scanner did not crash when a floating point number was encountered
in the input string.
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