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NAME

       sys - A functional interface to system messages.

DESCRIPTION

       This  module  contains  functions  for  sending  system  messages used by programs, and messages used for
       debugging purposes.

       Functions used for implementation of processes are also expected to understand system messages,  such  as
       debug  messages and code change. These functions must be used to implement the use of system messages for
       a process; either directly, or through standard behaviors, such as gen_server.

       The default time-out is 5000 ms, unless otherwise specified. timeout defines the time  to  wait  for  the
       process  to  respond to a request. If the process does not respond, the function evaluates exit({timeout,
       {M, F, A}}).

       The functions make references to a debug structure. The debug structure is a list of dbg_opt(), which  is
       an  internal  data type used by function handle_system_msg/6. No debugging is performed if it is an empty
       list.

SYSTEM MESSAGES

       Processes that are not implemented as  one  of  the  standard  behaviors  must  still  understand  system
       messages. The following three messages must be understood:

         * Plain  system  messages.  These  are received as {system, From, Msg}. The content and meaning of this
           message are not interpreted by the receiving process module.  When  a  system  message  is  received,
           function handle_system_msg/6 is called to handle the request.

         * Shutdown  messages. If the process traps exits, it must be able to handle a shutdown request from its
           parent, the supervisor. The message  {'EXIT',  Parent,  Reason}  from  the  parent  is  an  order  to
           terminate. The process must terminate when this message is received, normally with the same Reason as
           Parent.

         * If the modules used to implement the process change dynamically  during  runtime,  the  process  must
           understand  one  more  message. An example is the gen_event processes. The message is {_Label, {From,
           Ref}, get_modules}. The reply to this message is From ! {Ref, Modules}, where Modules is  a  list  of
           the currently active modules in the process.

           This  message  is  used by the release handler to find which processes that execute a certain module.
           The process can later be suspended and ordered to perform a code change for one of its modules.

SYSTEM EVENTS

       When debugging a process with the functions of this module, the process  generates  system_events,  which
       are then treated in the debug function. For example, trace formats the system events to the terminal.

       Four  predefined  system events are used when a process receives or sends a message. The process can also
       define its own system events. It is always up to the process itself to format these events.

DATA TYPES

       name() =
           pid() | atom() | {global, term()} | {via, module(), term()}

       system_event() =
           {in, Msg :: term()} |
           {in, Msg :: term(), State :: term()} |
           {out, Msg :: term(), To :: term()} |
           {out, Msg :: term(), To :: term(), State :: term()} |
           {noreply, State :: term()} |
           {continue, Continuation :: term()} |
           {postpone,
            Event :: term(),
            State :: term(),
            NextState :: term()} |
           {consume,
            Event :: term(),
            State :: term(),
            NextState :: term()} |
           {start_timer, Action :: term(), State :: term()} |
           {insert_timeout, Event :: term(), State :: term()} |
           {enter, Module :: module(), State :: term()} |
           {module, Module :: module(), State :: term()} |
           {terminate, Reason :: term(), State :: term()} |
           term()

                {in,Msg}:
                  Is produced by gen_server and gen_event when the message Msg arrives.

                {in,Msg,State}:
                  Is produced by gen_statem when the message Msg arrives in state State.

                  For gen_statem the Msg term is an {EventType,EventContent} tuple.

                {out,Msg,To}:
                  Is produced by gen_statem when the reply Msg is sent back to To by returning a  {reply,To,Msg}
                  action from the callback module.

                  To is of the same type as the first argument to gen_statem:reply/2.

                {out,Msg,To,State}:
                  Is  produced  by  gen_server  when the reply Msg is sent back to To by returning a {reply,...}
                  tuple from the callback module.

                  To is of the same type as the first argument to gen_server:reply/2.

                  State is the new server state.

                {noreply,State}:
                  Is produced by gen_server when a {noreply,...} tuple is returned from the callback module.

                  State is the new server state.

                {continue,Continuation}:
                  Is produced by gen_server when a {continue,Continuation} tuple is returned from  the  callback
                  module.

                 {postpone,Event,State,NextState} :
                  Is produced by gen_statem when the message Event is postponed in state State. NextState is the
                  new state.

                  Event is an {EventType,EventContent} tuple.

                 {consume,Event,State,NextState} :
                  Is produced by gen_statem when the message Event is consumed in state State. NextState is  the
                  new state.

                  Event is an {EventType,EventContent} tuple.

                 {start_timer,Action,State} :
                  Is produced by gen_statem when the action Action starts a timer in state State.

                 {insert_timeout,Event,State} :
                  Is produced by gen_statem when a timeout zero action inserts event Event in state State.

                  Event is an {EventType,EventContent} tuple.

                 {enter,Module,State} :
                  Is produced by gen_statem when module Module enters the first state State.

                 {module,Module,State} :
                  Is produced by gen_statem when setting module Module in state State.

                 {terminate,Reason,State} :
                  Is produced by gen_statem when it terminates with reason Reason in state State.

       dbg_opt()

              See the introduction of this manual page.

       dbg_fun() =
           fun((FuncState :: term(),
                Event :: system_event(),
                ProcState :: term()) ->
                   done | (NewFuncState :: term()))

       debug_option() =
           trace | log |
           {log, N :: integer() >= 1} |
           statistics |
           {log_to_file, FileName :: file:name()} |
           {install,
            {Func :: dbg_fun(), FuncState :: term()} |
            {FuncId :: term(), Func :: dbg_fun(), FuncState :: term()}}

       format_fun() =
           fun((Device :: io:device() | file:io_device(),
                Event :: system_event(),
                Extra :: term()) ->
                   any())

EXPORTS

       change_code(Name, Module, OldVsn, Extra) -> ok | {error, Reason}

       change_code(Name, Module, OldVsn, Extra, Timeout) ->
                      ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Module = module()
                 OldVsn = undefined | term()
                 Extra = term()
                 Timeout = timeout()
                 Reason = term()

              Tells  the  process to change code. The process must be suspended to handle this message. Argument
              Extra is reserved for each process to use as  its  own.  Function  Module:system_code_change/4  is
              called. OldVsn is the old version of the Module.

       get_state(Name) -> State

       get_state(Name, Timeout) -> State

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Timeout = timeout()
                 State = term()

              Gets the state of the process.

          Note:
              These  functions  are  intended  only  to  help with debugging. They are provided for convenience,
              allowing developers to avoid having to create their own state extraction functions and also  avoid
              having  to  interactively extract the state from the return values of get_status/1 or get_status/2
              while debugging.

              The value of State varies for different types of processes, as follows:

                * For a gen_server process, the returned State is the state of the callback module.

                * For a gen_statem process, State is the tuple {CurrentState,CurrentData}.

                * For a gen_event process, State is a list of tuples, where each tuple corresponds to  an  event
                  handler registered in the process and contains {Module, Id, HandlerState}, as follows:

                  Module:
                    The module name of the event handler.

                  Id:
                    The ID of the handler (which is false if it was registered without an ID).

                  HandlerState:
                    The state of the handler.

              If  the  callback module exports a function system_get_state/1, it is called in the target process
              to get its state. Its argument is the same as the  Misc  value  returned  by  get_status/1,2,  and
              function  Module:system_get_state/1  is  expected to extract the state of the callback module from
              it. Function system_get_state/1 must return {ok, State}, where State is the state of the  callback
              module.

              If  the  callback module does not export a system_get_state/1 function, get_state/1,2 assumes that
              the Misc value is the state of the callback module and returns it directly instead.

              If the callback module's system_get_state/1 function crashes or throws an  exception,  the  caller
              exits  with  error {callback_failed, {Module, system_get_state}, {Class, Reason}}, where Module is
              the name of the callback module and Class and Reason indicate details of the exception.

              Function system_get_state/1 is primarily  useful  for  user-defined  behaviors  and  modules  that
              implement  OTP  special  processes. The gen_server, gen_statem, and gen_event OTP behavior modules
              export this function, so callback modules for those behaviors need not to supply their own.

              For more information about a process, including its state, see get_status/1 and get_status/2.

       get_status(Name) -> Status

       get_status(Name, Timeout) -> Status

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Timeout = timeout()
                 Status =
                     {status, Pid :: pid(), {module, Module :: module()}, [SItem]}
                 SItem =
                     (PDict :: [{Key :: term(), Value :: term()}]) |
                     (SysState :: running | suspended) |
                     (Parent :: pid()) |
                     (Dbg :: [dbg_opt()]) |
                     (Misc :: term())

              Gets the status of the process.

              The value of Misc varies for different types of processes, for example:

                * A gen_server process returns the state of the callback module.

                * A gen_statem process returns information, such as its current state name and state data.

                * A gen_event process returns information about each of its registered handlers.

              Callback modules for gen_server, gen_statem, and gen_event can also change the value  of  Misc  by
              exporting  a function format_status/2, which contributes module-specific information. For details,
              see gen_server:format_status/2, gen_statem:format_status/2, and gen_event:format_status/2.

       install(Name, FuncSpec) -> ok

       install(Name, FuncSpec, Timeout) -> ok

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 FuncSpec = {Func, FuncState} | {FuncId, Func, FuncState}
                 FuncId = term()
                 Func = dbg_fun()
                 FuncState = term()
                 Timeout = timeout()

              Enables installation of alternative debug functions. An example of such a function is a trigger, a
              function  that  waits for some special event and performs some action when the event is generated.
              For example, turning on low-level tracing.

              Func is called whenever a system event is generated. This function is to return  done,  or  a  new
              Func  state. In the first case, the function is removed. It is also removed if the function fails.
              If one debug function should be installed more times, a unique FuncId must be specified  for  each
              installation.

       log(Name, Flag) -> ok | {ok, [system_event()]}

       log(Name, Flag, Timeout) -> ok | {ok, [system_event()]}

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Flag = true | {true, N :: integer() >= 1} | false | get | print
                 Timeout = timeout()

              Turns  the  logging of system events on or off. If on, a maximum of N events are kept in the debug
              structure (default is 10).

              If Flag is get, a list of all logged events is returned.

              If Flag is print, the logged events are printed to standard_io.

              The events are formatted with a function that is defined by the process that generated  the  event
              (with a call to handle_debug/4).

       log_to_file(Name, Flag) -> ok | {error, open_file}

       log_to_file(Name, Flag, Timeout) -> ok | {error, open_file}

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Flag = (FileName :: string()) | false
                 Timeout = timeout()

              Enables  or  disables  the logging of all system events in text format to the file. The events are
              formatted with a function that is defined by the process that generated the event (with a call  to
              handle_debug/4). The file is opened with encoding UTF-8.

       no_debug(Name) -> ok

       no_debug(Name, Timeout) -> ok

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Timeout = timeout()

              Turns  off  all  debugging  for the process. This includes functions that are installed explicitly
              with function install/2,3, for example, triggers.

       remove(Name, FuncOrFuncId :: Func | FuncId) -> ok

       remove(Name, FuncOrFuncId :: Func | FuncId, Timeout) -> ok

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Func = dbg_fun()
                 FuncId = term()
                 Timeout = timeout()

              Removes an installed debug function from  the  process.  Func  or  FuncId  must  be  the  same  as
              previously installed.

       replace_state(Name, StateFun) -> NewState

       replace_state(Name, StateFun, Timeout) -> NewState

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 StateFun = fun((State :: term()) -> NewState :: term())
                 Timeout = timeout()
                 NewState = term()

              Replaces the state of the process, and returns the new state.

          Note:
              These  functions  are  intended  only to help with debugging, and are not to be called from normal
              code. They are provided for convenience, allowing developers to avoid having to create  their  own
              custom state replacement functions.

              Function  StateFun  provides  a  new state for the process. Argument State and the NewState return
              value of StateFun vary for different types of processes as follows:

                * For a gen_server process, State is the state of the callback module  and  NewState  is  a  new
                  instance of that state.

                * For  a  gen_statem  process,  State is the tuple {CurrentState,CurrentData}, and NewState is a
                  similar tuple, which can contain a new current state, new state data, or both.

                * For a gen_event process, State is the tuple {Module, Id, HandlerState} as follows:

                  Module:
                    The module name of the event handler.

                  Id:
                    The ID of the handler (which is false if it was registered without an ID).

                  HandlerState:
                    The state of the handler.

                  NewState is a similar tuple where Module and Id are to have the same values as in  State,  but
                  the  value  of  HandlerState can be different. Returning a NewState, whose Module or Id values
                  differ from those of State, leaves the state of the event handler unchanged. For  a  gen_event
                  process, StateFun is called once for each event handler registered in the gen_event process.

              If  a  StateFun  function  decides  not  to effect any change in process state, then regardless of
              process type, it can return its State argument.

              If a StateFun function crashes or throws an exception,  the  original  state  of  the  process  is
              unchanged for gen_server, and gen_statem processes. For gen_event processes, a crashing or failing
              StateFun function means that only the state of the particular event handler it was working on when
              it  failed  or  crashed  is  unchanged; it can still succeed in changing the states of other event
              handlers registered in the same gen_event process.

              If the callback module exports a system_replace_state/2 function,  it  is  called  in  the  target
              process  to  replace its state using StateFun. Its two arguments are StateFun and Misc, where Misc
              is the same as the Misc value returned by get_status/1,2.  A  system_replace_state/2  function  is
              expected  to  return  {ok,  NewState,  NewMisc},  where  NewState is the new state of the callback
              module, obtained by calling StateFun, and NewMisc is a possibly new  value  used  to  replace  the
              original Misc (required as Misc often contains the state of the callback module within it).

              If  the  callback  module  does  not  export  a system_replace_state/2 function, replace_state/2,3
              assumes that Misc is the state of the callback module, passes it to StateFun and uses  the  return
              value as both the new state and as the new value of Misc.

              If  the  callback  module's  function  system_replace_state/2  crashes or throws an exception, the
              caller exits with error {callback_failed, {Module, system_replace_state}, {Class, Reason}},  where
              Module  is the name of the callback module and Class and Reason indicate details of the exception.
              If the callback module does not provide a system_replace_state/2 function and StateFun crashes  or
              throws an exception, the caller exits with error {callback_failed, StateFun, {Class, Reason}}.

              Function  system_replace_state/2  is  primarily useful for user-defined behaviors and modules that
              implement OTP special processes. The OTP behavior modules gen_server,  gen_statem,  and  gen_event
              export this function, so callback modules for those behaviors need not to supply their own.

       resume(Name) -> ok

       resume(Name, Timeout) -> ok

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Timeout = timeout()

              Resumes a suspended process.

       statistics(Name, Flag) -> ok | {ok, Statistics}

       statistics(Name, Flag, Timeout) -> ok | {ok, Statistics}

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Flag = true | false | get
                 Statistics = [StatisticsTuple] | no_statistics
                 StatisticsTuple =
                     {start_time, DateTime1} |
                     {current_time, DateTime2} |
                     {reductions, integer() >= 0} |
                     {messages_in, integer() >= 0} |
                     {messages_out, integer() >= 0}
                 DateTime1 = DateTime2 = file:date_time()
                 Timeout = timeout()

              Enables  or  disables  the collection of statistics. If Flag is get, the statistical collection is
              returned.

       suspend(Name) -> ok

       suspend(Name, Timeout) -> ok

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Timeout = timeout()

              Suspends the process. When the process is suspended, it only responds to  other  system  messages,
              but not other messages.

       terminate(Name, Reason) -> ok

       terminate(Name, Reason, Timeout) -> ok

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Reason = term()
                 Timeout = timeout()

              Orders the process to terminate with the specified Reason. The termination is done asynchronously,
              so it is not guaranteed that the process is terminated when the function returns.

       trace(Name, Flag) -> ok

       trace(Name, Flag, Timeout) -> ok

              Types:

                 Name = name()
                 Flag = boolean()
                 Timeout = timeout()

              Prints all system events on standard_io. The events are formatted with a function that is  defined
              by the process that generated the event (with a call to handle_debug/4).

PROCESS IMPLEMENTATION FUNCTIONS

       The  following functions are used when implementing a special process. This is an ordinary process, which
       does not use a standard behavior, but a process that understands the standard system messages.

EXPORTS

       debug_options(Options :: [Opt :: debug_option()]) -> [dbg_opt()]

              Can be used by a process that initiates a debug structure from a list of options.  The  values  of
              argument Opt are the same as for the corresponding functions.

       get_debug(Item, Debug, Default) -> term()

              Types:

                 Item = log | statistics
                 Debug = [dbg_opt()]
                 Default = term()

          Warning:
              get_debug/3 is deprecated since it returns data of an internal type only useful for debugging.

              Gets  the  data  associated  with a debug option. Default is returned if Item is not found. Can be
              used by the process to retrieve debug data for printing before it terminates.

       handle_debug(Debug, FormFunc, Extra, Event) -> [dbg_opt()]

              Types:

                 Debug = [dbg_opt()]
                 FormFunc = format_fun()
                 Extra = term()
                 Event = system_event()

              This function is called by a process when it generates a system event. FormFunc  is  a  formatting
              function,  called  as  FormFunc(Device,  Event,  Extra) to print the events, which is necessary if
              tracing is activated. Extra is any  extra  information  that  the  process  needs  in  the  format
              function, for example, the process name.

       handle_system_msg(Msg, From, Parent, Module, Debug, Misc) ->
                            no_return()

              Types:

                 Msg = term()
                 From = {pid(), Tag :: term()}
                 Parent = pid()
                 Module = module()
                 Debug = [dbg_opt()]
                 Misc = term()

              This  function is used by a process module to take care of system messages. The process receives a
              {system, From, Msg} message and passes Msg and From to this function.

              This function never returns. It calls either of the following functions:

                * Module:system_continue(Parent, NDebug, Misc), where the process continues the execution.

                * Module:system_terminate(Reason, Parent, Debug, Misc), if the process is to terminate.

              Module must export the following:

                * system_continue/3

                * system_terminate/4

                * system_code_change/4

                * system_get_state/1

                * system_replace_state/2

              Argument Misc can be used to save internal data in a process, for example, its state. It  is  sent
              to Module:system_continue/3 or Module:system_terminate/4.

       print_log(Debug) -> ok

              Types:

                 Debug = [dbg_opt()]

              Prints  the  logged system events in the debug structure, using FormFunc as defined when the event
              was generated by a call to handle_debug/4.

       get_log(Debug) -> [system_event()]

              Types:

                 Debug = [dbg_opt()]

              Returns the  logged  system  events  in  the  debug  structure,  that  is  the  last  argument  to
              handle_debug/4.

       Module:system_code_change(Misc, Module, OldVsn, Extra) -> {ok, NMisc}

              Types:

                 Misc = term()
                 OldVsn = undefined | term()
                 Module = atom()
                 Extra = term()
                 NMisc = term()

              Called  from  handle_system_msg/6 when the process is to perform a code change. The code change is
              used when the internal data structure has changed. This function converts argument Misc to the new
              data  structure. OldVsn is attribute vsn of the old version of the Module. If no such attribute is
              defined, the atom undefined is sent.

       Module:system_continue(Parent, Debug, Misc) -> none()

              Types:

                 Parent = pid()
                 Debug = [dbg_opt()]
                 Misc = term()

              Called from handle_system_msg/6 when the process is to continue its execution (for example,  after
              it has been suspended). This function never returns.

       Module:system_get_state(Misc) -> {ok, State}

              Types:

                 Misc = term()
                 State = term()

              Called  from  handle_system_msg/6  when  the process is to return a term that reflects its current
              state. State is the value returned by get_state/2.

       Module:system_replace_state(StateFun, Misc) -> {ok, NState, NMisc}

              Types:

                 StateFun = fun((State :: term()) -> NState)
                 Misc = term()
                 NState = term()
                 NMisc = term()

              Called from handle_system_msg/6 when the process is to replace its current state.  NState  is  the
              value returned by replace_state/3.

       Module:system_terminate(Reason, Parent, Debug, Misc) -> none()

              Types:

                 Reason = term()
                 Parent = pid()
                 Debug = [dbg_opt()]
                 Misc = term()

              Called  from  handle_system_msg/6  when the process is to terminate. For example, this function is
              called when the process is suspended and its parent orders shutdown. It gives the process a chance
              to do a cleanup. This function never returns.