We can once again create 2mb statically-linked Python binaries:
$ make -j8 m=tiny o/tiny/examples/pyapp/pyapp.com
$ ls -hal o/tiny/examples/pyapp/pyapp.com
-rwxr-xr-x 1 jart jart 2.1M May 1 14:04 o/tiny/examples/pyapp/pyapp.com
$ o/tiny/examples/pyapp/pyapp.com
cosmopolitan is cool!
The regression was caused by Python thread support in b15f9eb58
- Introduce -v and --verbose flags
- Don't print stats / diagnostics unless -v is passed
- Reduce --top_p default from 0.95 to 0.70
- Change --reverse-prompt to no longer imply --interactive
- Permit --reverse-prompt specifying custom EOS if non-interactive
The new stack size is 256kb in order to compromise with llama.cpp's
aggressive use of stack memory, which can't be easily patched. This
change disables the dynamic alloca() and VLA warnings for now, plus
frame sizes for individual functions may be <=50% of the stack size
This only applies to code in the cosmo monorepo. Open source builds
should already be using an 8mb stack by default, like everyone else
When redbean is functioning as a Lua interpreter, the `-e` flag should
behave the same way as other open source language interpreters. Namely
it should exit after evaluating the code rather than showing the REPL.
Right now, cosmopolitan uses Linux Landlock ABI version 2 on Linux,
meaning that the polyfill for unveil() cannot restrict operations such
as truncate() (a limitation of Landlock's ABI from then). This means
that to restrict truncation operations Cosmopolitan instead has to ban
the syscall through a SECCOMP BPF filter, meaning that completely
legitimate truncate() calls are blocked
However, the newest version of the Landlock ABI (version 3) introduced
in Linux 6.2, released in February 2023, implements support for controlling truncation
operations. As such, the previous SECCOMP BPF truncate() filtering is
no longer needed when the new ABI is available
This patch implements unveil truncate support for Linux Landlock ABI
version 3