After a regrettable update,
the benchmark module ended up reloading sources for every compression level.
While the delay itself is likely torelable,
the main issue is that the `--quiet` mode now also displays a loading summary between each compression line.
This wasn't the original intention, which is to produce a compact view of all compressions.
This is fixed in this version,
where sources are loaded only once, for all compression levels,
and loading summary is only displayed once.
this generator replaces the statistical generator
for the general case when no statistic is requested.
Generated data features a compression level speed / ratio curve
which is more in line with expectation.
The timer storage type is no longer dependent on OS.
This will make it possible to re-enable posix precise timers
since the timer storage type will no longer be sensible to #include order.
See #3168 for details of pbs of previous interface.
Suggestion by @terrelln
```
for f in $(find . \( -path ./.git -o -path ./tests/fuzz/corpora \) -prune -o -type f);
do
sed -i 's/Facebook, Inc\./Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates./' $f;
done
```
xxHash symbols are present in `libzstd.so`, but they are local and therefore
unavailable outside the lib. There are two possible solutions to the problem.
We could make those symbols global, or we could remove the dependency.
This commit chooses the latter approach. I suppose this comes at the cost of
code size / build time. I'm open to comments on whether this is a good thing
to do, especially since this will apply even when we are statically linking
everything.
benchmark results are not progressively displayed on Windows terminal.
For long benchmark sessions, nothing is displayed,
until the end, where everything is flushed.
Force display to be flushed after each update.
Updates happen roughtly every second, or even less,
so it's not a substantial workload.
`zstd_errors.h` and `zdict.h` are public headers, so they deserve to be
in the root `lib/` directory with `zstd.h`, not mixed in with our private
headers.
* Switch to yearless copyright per FB policy
* Fix up SPDX-License-Identifier lines in `contrib/linux-kernel` sources
* Add zstd copyright/license header to the `contrib/linux-kernel` sources
* Update the `tests/test-license.py` to check for yearless copyright
* Improvements to `tests/test-license.py`
* Check `contrib/linux-kernel` in `tests/test-license.py`
* All copyright lines now have -2020 instead of -present
* All copyright lines include "Facebook, Inc"
* All licenses are now standardized
The copyright in `threading.{h,c}` is not changed because it comes from
zstdmt.
The copyright and license of `divsufsort.{h,c}` is not changed.
benchfn used to rely on mem.h, and util,
which in turn relied on platform.h.
Using benchfn outside of zstd required to bring all these dependencies.
Now, dependency is reduced to timefn only.
This required to create a separate timefn from util,
and rewrite benchfn and timefn to no longer need mem.h.
Separating timefn from util has a wide effect accross the code base,
as usage of time functions is widespread.
A lot of build scripts had to be updated to also include timefn.
as suggested in #1441.
generally U32 and unsigned are the same thing,
except when they are not ...
case : 32-bit compilation for MIPS (uint32_t == unsigned long)
A vast majority of transformation consists in transforming U32 into unsigned.
In rare cases, it's the other way around (typically for internal code, such as seeds).
Among a few issues this patches solves :
- some parameters were declared with type `unsigned` in *.h,
but with type `U32` in their implementation *.c .
- some parameters have type unsigned*,
but the caller user a pointer to U32 instead.
These fixes are useful.
However, the bulk of changes is about %u formating,
which requires unsigned type,
but generally receives U32 values instead,
often just for brevity (U32 is shorter than unsigned).
These changes are generally minor, or even annoying.
As a consequence, the amount of code changed is larger than I would expect for such a patch.
Testing is also a pain :
it requires manually modifying `mem.h`,
in order to lie about `U32`
and force it to be an `unsigned long` typically.
On a 64-bit system, this will break the equivalence unsigned == U32.
Unfortunately, it will also break a few static_assert(), controlling structure sizes.
So it also requires modifying `debug.h` to make `static_assert()` a noop.
And then reverting these changes.
So it's inconvenient, and as a consequence,
this property is currently not checked during CI tests.
Therefore, these problems can emerge again in the future.
I wonder if it is worth ensuring proper distinction of U32 != unsigned in CI tests.
It's another restriction for coding, adding more frustration during merge tests,
since most platforms don't need this distinction (hence contributor will not see it),
and while this can matter in theory, the number of platforms impacted seems minimal.
Thoughts ?