Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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* siri/unicode-atoms:
Document that app names and nodes names are restricted to latin-1
Conflicts:
lib/stdlib/doc/src/unicode_usage.xml
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Merge PR-1215 from 'marianoguerra/improve-docs-style'
OTP-14371
Improve Documentation Style
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Introduce new "Dbgi" chunk
OTP-14369
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* raimo/rand-dev/OTP-14295:
Polish
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* sverker/refactor:
erts: Introduce struct binary_internals
erts: Introduce erts_bin_release
erts: Init refc=1 in erts_bin_drv_alloc*
erts: Init refc=1 in erts_bin_nrml_alloc
erts: Remove deliberate leak of hipe fun entries
erts: Remove hipe_bifs:remove_refs_from/1
Refactor hipe specific code to use ErtsCodeInfo
erts: Refactor ErtsCodeInfo.native
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* ingela/available_hash_signature_algs/OTP-13820:
ssl: TLS-1.2 clients will now always send hello messages on its own format.
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Drop some legacy Emacs compatibility code
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* lukas/erts/list_to_port/OTP-14348:
erts: Add erlang:list_to_port/1 debug bif
erts: Auto-import port_to_list for consistency
erts: Polish off erlang:list_to_ref/1
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Follow the same pattern as pid_to_list
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By moving to effects_code_generation/1, there is no need
to explicitly remove those options when storing compile
information in the DebugInfo chunk.
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The new Dbgi chunk returns data in the following format:
{debug_info_v1, Backend, Data}
This allows compilers to store the debug info in different
formats. In order to retrieve a particular format, for
instance, Erlang Abstract Format, one may invoke:
Backend:debug_info(erlang_v1, Module, Data, Opts)
Besides introducing the chunk above, this commit also:
* Changes beam_lib:chunk(Beam, [:abstract_code]) to
read from the new Dbgi chunk while keeping backwards
compatibility with old .beams
* Adds the {debug_info, {Backend, Data}} option to
compile:file/2 and friends that are stored in the
Dbgi chunk. This allows the debug info encryption
mechanism to work across compilers
* Improves dialyzer to work directly on Core Erlang,
allowing languages that do not have the Erlang
Abstract Format to be dialyzer as long as they emit
the new chunk and their backend implementation is
available
Backwards compatibility is kept across the board except
for those calling beam_lib:chunk(Beam, ["Abst"]), as the
old chunk is no longer available. Note however the "Abst"
chunk has always been optional.
Future OTP versions may remove parsing the "Abst" chunk
altogether from beam_lib once Erlang 19 and earlier is no
longer supported.
The current Dialyzer implementation still supports earlier
.beam files and such may also be removed in future versions.
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* maint:
stdlib: Fix documentation on sets’ representation
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* lukas/erts/deprecate-non-smp/OTP-14272:
erts: Fix testcases for smp +S 1:1
erts: Deprecate the non-smp emulators
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The Erlang shell's temporary support for Unicode node names is
removed. There will be no support for Unicode node names in
Erlang/OTP 20.0.
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* siri/ct/delete-old-logs/OTP-14179:
[ct] Add 'keep_logs' option
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* dgud/stdlib/unicode-string/OTP-10289:
Handle chardata in string:to_float and string:to_list
New unicode aware string module that works with unicode:chardata()
Add nf(k)d, nf(k)c conversion functions to unicode module
Reorder code and whitespace fixes
Add unicode_util
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Works with unicode:chardata() as input as was decided on OTP board
meeting as response to EEP-35 a long time ago.
Works on graphemes clusters as base, with a few exceptions, does not
handle classic (nor nfd'ified) Hangul nor the extended grapheme
clusters such as the prepend class. That would make handling binaries
as input/output very slow.
List input => list output, binary input => binary output and
mixed input => mixed output for all find/split functions.
So that results can be post-processed without the need to invoke
unicode:characters_to_list|binary for intermediate data.
pad functions return lists of unicode:chardata() for performance.
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Put internal functions below api functions.
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A base for unicode functions, not intended to be a user api.
Whitespace returns a reasonable subset of non nobreak whitespace
characters.
Implementation notes:
Make function clauses instead of using arrays and store tuples instead
of maps to save space.
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* zandra/stdlib/optional-callbacks/OTP-13801:
wx: make wx_object callbacks optional
stdlib: Make gen_fsm callbacks optional
stdlib: Make gen_event callbacks optional
stdlib: Make gen_server callbacks optional
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Merge branch RoadRunnr/feature/so_bindtodevice (GitHub#1326) into master
OTP-14357
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Fixes https://bugs.erlang.org/browse/ERL-406 - a bug introduced in
0377592dc2238f561291be854d2ce859dd9a5fb1
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* rand/arbitrary_normal_distributions:
rand: Support arbitrary normal distributions
Conflicts:
lib/stdlib/test/rand_SUITE.erl
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Note this is a change form how it works for earlier versions that will
send the first hello message on the lowest supported version.
From RFC 5246
Appendix E. Backward Compatibility
E.1. Compatibility with TLS 1.0/1.1 and SSL 3.0
Since there are various versions of TLS (1.0, 1.1, 1.2, and any
future versions) and SSL (2.0 and 3.0), means are needed to negotiate
the specific protocol version to use. The TLS protocol provides a
built-in mechanism for version negotiation so as not to bother other
protocol components with the complexities of version selection.
TLS versions 1.0, 1.1, and 1.2, and SSL 3.0 are very similar, and use
compatible ClientHello messages; thus, supporting all of them is
relatively easy. Similarly, servers can easily handle clients trying
to use future versions of TLS as long as the ClientHello format
remains compatible, and the client supports the highest protocol
version available in the server.
A TLS 1.2 client who wishes to negotiate with such older servers will
send a normal TLS 1.2 ClientHello, containing { 3, 3 } (TLS 1.2) in
ClientHello.client_version. If the server does not support this
version, it will respond with a ServerHello containing an older
version number. If the client agrees to use this version, the
negotiation will proceed as appropriate for the negotiated protocol.
If the version chosen by the server is not supported by the client
(or not acceptable), the client MUST send a "protocol_version" alert
message and close the connection.
If a TLS server receives a ClientHello containing a version number
greater than the highest version supported by the server, it MUST
reply according to the highest version supported by the server.
A TLS server can also receive a ClientHello containing a version
number smaller than the highest supported version. If the server
wishes to negotiate with old clients, it will proceed as appropriate
for the highest version supported by the server that is not greater
than ClientHello.client_version. For example, if the server supports
TLS 1.0, 1.1, and 1.2, and client_version is TLS 1.0, the server will
proceed with a TLS 1.0 ServerHello. If server supports (or is
willing to use) only versions greater than client_version, it MUST
send a "protocol_version" alert message and close the connection.
Whenever a client already knows the highest protocol version known to
a server (for example, when resuming a session), it SHOULD initiate
the connection in that native protocol.
Note: some server implementations are known to implement version
negotiation incorrectly. For example, there are buggy TLS 1.0
servers that simply close the connection when the client offers a
version newer than TLS 1.0. Also, it is known that some servers will
refuse the connection if any TLS extensions are included in
ClientHello. Interoperability with such buggy servers is a complex
topic beyond the scope of this document, and may require multiple
connection attempts by the client.
Earlier versions of the TLS specification were not fully clear on
what the record layer version number (TLSPlaintext.version) should
contain when sending ClientHello (i.e., before it is known which
version of the protocol will be employed). Thus, TLS servers
compliant with this specification MUST accept any value {03,XX} as
the record layer version number for ClientHello.
TLS clients that wish to negotiate with older servers MAY send any
value {03,XX} as the record layer version number. Typical values
would be {03,00}, the lowest version number supported by the client,
and the value of ClientHello.client_version. No single value will
guarantee interoperability with all old servers, but this is a
complex topic beyond the scope of this document.
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* raimo/rand-dev/OTP-14295:
Implement Xoroshiro116+ and improve statisticals
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Implement Xoroshiro116+ as 'exrop' with fixes.
Deprecate all old algorithms but reincarnate 'exs1024' as 'exs1024s'
and 'exsplus' as 'exsp' with fixes.
Fixes:
* Avoid skew for uniform integers caused by using a simple 'rem'
operation for range confinement. Correctness requires retry
with new random value for an unfortunate first value.
* Implement a correct algorithm that collects enough random
bits for ranges larger than the generator's precision.
* Fix uniform density for floats by acquiring 53 bits
then multiplying with 2.0^(-53) which produces floats
on the form N * 2.0^(-53).
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* bjorn/remove-r12-r15-compatibility:
compile: Remove the r12 through r15 options
test_server: Change compatibility to R16
crashdump_helper: Change compatibility to R18
Remove test case for testing compatibility with R9B
Do atom roundtripping with an R16B node
Remove -compile(r12)
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* bjorn/dialyzer/add-typer/OTP-14336:
Add smoke test for TypER
Add back TypEr to the main OTP repository
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* ingela/ssl/AEAD:
ssl, dtls: Refactor so that DTLS records are handled correctly together with AEAD handling
ssl, dtls: Correct integer type for sequence number
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* ingela/ssl/test-data:
ssl: Rewrite test data generation
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With the new help functions for creating test data we can simplify the
code. And sometimes corrections have been made so that the test actually
perform the test intended.
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bind to device is needed to properly support VRF-Lite under
Linux (see [1] for details).
[1]: https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/networking/vrf.txt
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It turned out that the dependencies between Dialyzer
and TypEr makes it impractical to have TypEr in a
separate repository.
Add it back to the OTP repository, but put the Erlang
module 'typer' in the dialyzer application.
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The main purpose of these options is compatibility with
old Erlang systems. Since it is no longer possible to
communicate with R15B or earlier, we no longer need the
r12 through r15 options.
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