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* maint:
kernel: Correct contracts and a bug in group_history
stdlib: Correct contracts
dialyzer: Optimize handling of a lot of warnings
Conflicts:
lib/kernel/src/erl_boot_server.erl
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If the gen_server process needs to perform an action immediately
after initialization or to break the execution of a callback into
multiple steps, it can return {continue, term()} in place of the
time-out or hibernation value, which will immediately invoke the
handle_continue/2 callback with the given term.
This provides a more accessible approach to after initialization
compared to proc_lib+enter_loop that is also guaranteed to be
safe.
It also allows callbacks that need to do lengthy or stateful work
to checkpoint the state throughout multiple iterations. This can
be useful, for example, when implementing behaviours on top of
gen_server.
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Prior to this patch, the stacktrace of an error or
exit in a callback would always be discarded in crash
reports. For example, an exit(crashed) in handle_call/3
would emit:
=CRASH REPORT==== 10-May-2017::14:15:50 ===
crasher:
initial call: gen_server_SUITE:init/1
pid: <0.201.0>
registered_name: []
exception exit: crashed
in function gen_server:terminate/8 (src/gen_server.erl, line 828)
Note that the stacktrace is pointing to the gen_server
internal terminate implementation that calls exit/1.
This patch uses erlang:raise/3 so the stacktrace is not
lost, allowing proc_lib to show the class, reason
and stacktrace coming from the user implementation
(in this case gen_server_SUITE):
=CRASH REPORT==== 10-May-2017::14:16:44 ===
crasher:
initial call: gen_server_SUITE:init/1
pid: <0.197.0>
registered_name: []
exception exit: crashed
in function gen_server_SUITE:handle_call/3 (gen_server_SUITE.erl, line 1529)
This change is completely backwards compatible as
using erlang:raise/3 will still emit the same exit
reason to any linked process and monitor as before.
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Add option hibernate_after to gen_server, gen_statem and gen_event.
Also added to the deprecated gen_fsm behaviour.
OTP14405
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It was done because "hibernate_after" option already used in ssl for the same reason.
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gen_event process's.
There is realized gen_server, gen_fsm, gen_event automatic hibernation functionality.
Added unit tests for realized functionality.
Added documentation for auto_hibernate_timeout option.
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When a gen_server crashes it is in many cases helpful to know in which
context its client made its call.
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gen_server_SUITE:start often fails since a call which is expected to
give 'noproc' error instead gives 'stopped' error. This happens when
the call is done before the process is really dead. To overcome this
problem, we now wait for the process exit before doing the call.
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While we are it, also re-ident the files.
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We want to re-ident the source files after having taken out
all ?line macros. When re-indenting using Emacs, it's important
that comments that should be at the beginning of a line (or
follow the indentation of statements around it) must start with
"%%".
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Note that the sleeping time in ct:sleep/1 will be scaled if
the test is run with (for example) cover. When it is important
that the sleep time is not adjusted, use timer:sleep/1.
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Either rely on the default 30 minutes timetrap, or set the timeout
using the supported methods in common_test.
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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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The running time for gen_server_SUITE:hibernate/1 is about 12 seconds
because of 1000 ms sleeps in the test case. Introduce a helper
function to avoid sleeping more than necessary.
While we are it, also remove all ?line macros in the test case.
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If a callback function was terminated with exit/1, there would be no
stack trace in the ERROR REPORT produced by gen_server. This has been
corrected. The actual exit reason for the process is not changed.
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The format_status callback (if exists) should always be invoked when
logging errors.
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The functions utilize proc_lib:stop, which in turn utilizes
sys:terminate.
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Add two new system callbacks Module:system_get_state/1 and
Module:system_replace_state/2 to allow sys:get_state/1,2 and
sys:replace_state/2,3 to operate correctly even if a process is sys
suspended. Modify gen_server, gen_fsm, and gen_event to support the new
callbacks.
If a callback module does not export these functions, then by default the
Misc value (the same as that passed as the final argument to
sys:handle_system_msg/6, and returned as part of the return value of
sys:get_status/1,2) is treated as the callback module's state.
The previous behaviour of intercepting the system message and passing a
tuple of size 2 as the last argument to sys:handle_system_msg/6 is no
longer supported.
Add tests to verify the correctness of sys:get_state/1,2 and
sys:replace_state/2,3 when processes are sys suspended. Add two tests for
modules that implement special processes, one that exports
system_get_state/1 and system_replace_state/2 and one that doesn't.
Much of the credit for this patch goes to James Fish, who reported the
initial problem and implemented much of the fix.
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This test always fails when gen is native compiled, since the
optmization is not implemented then. The test is now skipped when
running with hipe.
The test does also quite often fail on one of the test hosts which
runs in a virtual machine. The reason is that the clock runs "in
bursts" on this host, which is outside of the control of the erlang VM
and probably due to the fact that the host runs as a virtual
machine. To overcome this problem, the echo message is now sent 10000
times instead of 10 times - i.e. the test run is prolonged in order to
even out the effect of the bursts.
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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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Conflicts:
lib/diameter/autoconf/vxworks/sed.general
xcomp/README.md
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to match on result of a gen_server:call/2
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to match global scope in ServerName without timeout.
OTP-10130
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OTP behaviour instances (gen_server, gen_fsm, gen_event) can currently
register themselves either locally or globally, and the behaviour
libraries (including gen.erl) support both addressing methods, as well
as the normal Pid and {Name, Node}.
However, there are alternative registry implementations - e.g. gproc -
and one can well imagine other ways of locating a behaviour instance,
e.g. on a node connected only via a TCP tunnel, rather than via
Distributed Erlang. In all these cases, one needs to write extra code
to identify the behaviour instance, even though the instance itself
need not be aware of how it is located.
This patch introduces a new way of locating a behaviour instance:
{via, Module, Name}.
Module is expected to export a subset of the functions in global.erl,
namely:
register_name(Name, Pid) -> yes | no
whereis_name(Name) -> pid() | undefined
unregister_name(Name) -> ok
send(Name, Msg) -> Pid
Semantics are expected to be the same as for global.erl
This can be used in all places where {global, Name} is accepted.
faulty export in gen_fsm_SUITE.erl
await process death in dummy_via:reset()
fix error in gen_[server|fsm]:enter_loop()
fix documentation
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The gen_fsm, gen_server, and wx_object format_status implementations
fail to handle global names of the form {global, term()} where term()
is something other than an atom, pid, or list. Change these
format_status implementations to treat names that are atoms, pids, or
lists as before, but for all other terms, set the header property of
the function return value to a tuple whose first element is a string
describing the return value and whose second element is the name term.
Add unit tests for gen_server and gen_fsm to verify sys:get_status
calls work successfully for globally registered instances.
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When a gen_server or gen_fsm process terminates abnormally, sometimes
the text representation of the process state can occupy many lines of
the error log, depending on the definition of the state
term. Developers sometimes would like a way to trim out parts of the
state from the log if those parts don't contribute to documenting the
circumstances of the error, thereby helping to reduce the amount of
logged output.
Since the format_status callback can already format and specialize
gen_server and gen_fsm state for inclusion in the term returned from
sys:get_status, this patch extends format_status in a
backward-compatible way to also be able to specialize the state logged
for abnormal gen_server and gen_fsm termination, and includes new unit
tests to verify the new functionality.
This patch also eliminates the previous restriction that the status
returned by format_status must be a list. It can now be any term.
The documentation is extended to cover the new usage for
format_status, and it's been improved to recommend a form for the
normal case that allows the returned status to fit well with the rest
of the term returned by sys:get_status. The documentation is clear
that this form is only recommended, not required.
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