factorize some code developped over and over in the examples and AMOK.
It has still to be documented and used (only amok/peermanagement is
converted for now).
+ * Fix a vicious bug in the TCP buffering mecanism which leaded to message
+ loss when they were small enough to fit into the buffer and sent quickly
+ enough so that they can all get received in one shoot.
+ * gras_datadesc_by_name and gras_msgtype_by_name: now raise an exception
+ if not found. Use the *_or_null() variant for the old semantic.
+ * In gras_msg_handle, do not discard messages without callback.
+ They are probably messages to be explicitly awaited later (ie, proofs of
+ mis-synchronization in userland since they are sent before being awaited)
+ No big deal usually.
+ * gras_socket_meas_send/recv: semantic changed!
+ The numerical arguments used to be (1) the total amount of data to send
+ and (2) msg_size. This was changed to (1) msg_size and (2) amount of
+ messages. This was need for the fool willing to send more than MAXINT
+ bytes on quite fat pipes.
+
AMOK:
* Do really rename the hostmanagement module to peermanagement. [Mt]
Ie, rename functions from amok_hm_* to amok_pm_*. This breaks the API,
but this is rather new and this was documented in the module
- documentation (poor excuse, I admit)
-
- Documentation update:
- * New FAQ: "Valgrind spits tons of errors!" [Mt]
- * GRAS tutorial [Mt]
- It contains:
- - an introduction to the framework and to the used communication model
- - an initiatic tour introducing the most proheminent features:
- # Lesson 0: Installing GRAS
- # Lesson 1: Setting up your own project
- # Lesson 2: Exchanging simple messages
- # Lesson 3: Passing arguments to the processes (in SG)
- # Lesson 4: Attaching callbacks to messages
- # Lesson 5: Using globals in processes
- # Lesson 6: Logging informations properly
- # Lesson 7: Using internal timers
- # Lesson 8: Handling errors through exceptions
- More a due, of course. At least the one explaining how to add data
- into messages. In the meanwhile, you can check the examples which are
- still here.
-
+ documentation (poor excuses, I admit)
+ * Bandwidth measurement semantic changed! This follows the changes to
+ gras_socket_meas_send/recv explained above.
+
SIMDAG:
* A sequential mode has been added to the workstations. When a workstation
is in sequential mode, it can execute only one task, and the other tasks
SURF:
* The KCCFLN05 workstation model now handles parallel tasks. It is the
model for SIMDAG. [Christophe Thiery]
+ * Bug fix in the maxmin solver: Some values were close to 0 instead of
+ equal to 0, which caused some bad behaviors in
+ saturated_constraint_set_update. I now use a threshold mechanism like in
+ surf. [AL]
+
+ XBT:
+ * When running manually src/testall, you select specific units [Mt]
+ testall is the result of our cunit mecanism, and should replace all
+ the scripty thingy around since bash don't run easily on billware.
+
+ * A mallocator system has been added. [Christophe Thiery]
+ Mallocators allow you to recycle your unused objects instead of freeing them
+ and allocating new ones.
+
+ Documentation update:
+ * FAQ reworking + New FAQs:
+ - "Valgrind spits tons of errors!" [Mt]
+ - "How to repport bugs" [Mt]
+ - "Cross-compiling a Windows DLL of SimGrid from Linux" [Mt]
+ - Communication time measurement within MSG [AL]
+ - I experience weird communication times when I change the latency [AL]
+ * GRAS tutorial [Mt]
+ It contains:
+ - an introduction to the framework and to the used communication model
+ - an initiatic tour introducing the most proheminent features:
+ # Part 1: Bases
+ . Lesson 0: Installing GRAS
+ . Lesson 1: Setting up your own project
+ # Part 2: Message passing
+ . Lesson 2: Exchanging simple messages
+ . Lesson 3: Passing arguments to the processes (in SG)
+ . Lesson 4: Attaching callbacks to messages
+ . Lesson 5: Using globals in processes
+ . Lesson 6: Logging informations properly
+ . Lesson 7: Using internal timers
+ . Lesson 8: Handling errors through exceptions
+ . Lesson 9: Exchanging simple data
+ More are due, of course. They will come latter. In the meanwhile, you can
+ check the examples which are still here.
+
--
SimGrid (3.1) unstable; urgency=low