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Operating Systems AIX Undestanding LANG setting in /etc/environment Post 302778249 by bakunin on Sunday 10th of March 2013 07:56:12 AM
Old 03-10-2013
Quote:
Originally Posted by Don Cragun
Setting LANG=C will do what Aaron Boyce wants only if neither LC_ALL nor LC_NUMERIC is set in the environment. LC_NUMERIC will override LANG for purposes of determining the radix character used and the formatting of numeric output. LC_ALL will override both LANG and LC_NUMERIC.

If LC_NUMERIC is effectively set to a value that sets non-null thousands separators or that uses comma as the radix character, you need to take extra precautions when working with CSV files that contain numeric strings that represent non-integral values, or integral values greater than 999 or less than -999.
You are right, Don, as always. In his entry posting Aaron stated that his SysAdmin has traced back the problem to the changed LANG-entry in /etc/environment, so i took it that none of the applicable LC_-variables are defined in his case, because these would have overridden the old as well as the new setting.

Still, its a good idea to explain the interdependence of LANG and LC_ALL the other LC_-variables.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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cord2(1)						      General Commands Manual							  cord2(1)

Name
       cord2 - rearranges basic blocks in an executable file to facilitate better cache mapping.

Syntax
       cord2 [-v] [-o outfile] [-c cachewords] [-d] [-b bridge_limit] [-n] [-A addersfile] [[-C countsfile] ...] obj

Description
       The  cord2  command extracts basic blocks from a program and deposits them in a new area in the text, making jumps to and from that area as
       necessary.  By separating the basic blocks, you can reduce instruction cache miss rates.  The cord2 command takes the  output  of  a  pixie
       profiling run as input (see

       The executable object file has the suffix obj.  The cord2 command only requires one addersfile; it creates the filename by appending .Bbad-
       drs to the obj filename if none is specified with -A. Multiple counts files can be specified from many runs with multiple -C arguments.	If
       none are specified, cord2 creates the counts filename by appending .Counts to the obj name.

       Multiple  counts  files are added together into an internal counts array represented with C double-type elements. The counts array elements
       contain the density of a block or cycles/byte.  If you specify -n, then the counts are normalized  so  that  each  counts  array  entry	is
       cycles/totalcycles.   When one counts file is specified, the default is to favor small blocks; -n negates that.	When many counts files are
       specified, -n also negates favoring one counts file. This is because its totalcycles may exceed the totalcycles of another counts file.

       The cord2 command determines which basic blocks to insert by sorting the counts array and collecting the blocks	with  the  highest  counts
       that can fit into the new area.	The cord2 command may skip over huge blocks that do not fit at the end of the new area.

       Once  the  blocks are determined, they are inserted into the new area, and their original location is modified to jump to the new area.	At
       the end of each block in the new area, a jump is added  back  to  the  original	block's  subsequent  or  fall-through  location,  and  the
       branch/jump  target  (if necessary).  Both entering and exiting the new area is optimized to take advantage of other blocks in the new area
       and jump delay slots.

       Often, there may be one or more fall-through blocks of a block in the new area which are small, hardly ever used, and not in the new  area.
       If  the	block  following  these  fall-through blocks is in the new area, the fall-through blocks are called bridge blocks.  It may be more
       costly to generate jumps to and from bridge blocks rather than to simply copy them.

       The cord2 command allows you to specify that bridge blocks be added to the new area if they total less than the	bridge_limit  instructions
       between	two  new-area blocks. You can specify the bridge_limit with -b; the default is zero.  Bridge blocks can bump blocks out of the new
       area that might normally fit into it.

       Because the cord2 command works from profile output, the resulting binary is data dependent. In other words, it may perform  well  only	on
       the  same input data that generated the profile information, and may perform worse than the original binary on other data.  Furthermore, if
       the hot areas in the cache do not fit well into one cachepage, performance can degrade.

Options
       The cord2 command also accepts these options:

       -d   Fill the delay slots with nops only when adding jumps to and from the new area.

       -v   Print verbose information. This includes statistics about the cord2 process.

       -v -v
	    Print all of the -v information, but include detailed disassemblies of the code moved, changed, and generated by cord2.

       -c cachewords
	    Specify the number of words in the cache of the machine on which you want to execute.  This is actually the size of the new area.  The
	    cachesize  may be a misnomer, as you can specify a size other than your machine's cache size; however, it is probably the correct num-
	    ber.

       -o outputfile
	    Specify the output file.  If it is not specified, the default is a.out.cord2.

Restrictions
       The cord2 command adds the new area to the end of text so any program using the etext symbol may not work.  See

See Also
       pixie(1), cord(1)

								       RISC								  cord2(1)
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