1
0
mirror of https://github.com/golang/go synced 2024-11-24 20:40:23 -07:00
go/test/winbatch.go

69 lines
2.0 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

// run
// Copyright 2020 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
all: treat all files as binary, but check in .bat with CRLF This is a followup to CL 96495. It should be simpler and more robust to achieve .bat files having CRLF line endings by treating it as a binary file, like all other files, and checking it in with the desired CRLF line endings. A test is used to check the entire Go tree, short of directories starting with "." and named "testdata", for any .bat files that have anything other than strict CRLF line endings. This will help catch any accidental modifications to existing .bat files or check ins of new .bat files. Importantly, this is compatible with how Gerrit serves .tar.gz files, making it so that CRLF line endings are preserved. The Go project is supported on many different environments, some of which may have limited git implementations available, or none at all. Relying on fewer git features and special rules makes it easier to have confidence in the exact content of all files. Additionally, Go development started in Subversion, moved to Perforce, then Mercurial, and now uses Git.¹ Reducing its reliance on git-specific features will help if there will be another transition in the project's future. There are only 5 .bat files in the entire Go source tree, so a new one being added is a rare event, and we prefer to do things in Go instead. We still have the option of improving the experience for developers by adding a pre-commit converter for .bat files to the git-codereview tool. ¹ https://groups.google.com/d/msg/golang-dev/sckirqOWepg/YmyT7dWJiocJ Fixes #39391. For #37791. Change-Id: I6e202216322872f0307ac96f1b8d3f57cb901e6b Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/236437 Reviewed-by: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2020-06-03 22:35:09 -06:00
// Check that batch files are maintained as CRLF files (consistent
// behavior on all operating systems). See golang.org/issue/37791.
package main
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
all: treat all files as binary, but check in .bat with CRLF This is a followup to CL 96495. It should be simpler and more robust to achieve .bat files having CRLF line endings by treating it as a binary file, like all other files, and checking it in with the desired CRLF line endings. A test is used to check the entire Go tree, short of directories starting with "." and named "testdata", for any .bat files that have anything other than strict CRLF line endings. This will help catch any accidental modifications to existing .bat files or check ins of new .bat files. Importantly, this is compatible with how Gerrit serves .tar.gz files, making it so that CRLF line endings are preserved. The Go project is supported on many different environments, some of which may have limited git implementations available, or none at all. Relying on fewer git features and special rules makes it easier to have confidence in the exact content of all files. Additionally, Go development started in Subversion, moved to Perforce, then Mercurial, and now uses Git.¹ Reducing its reliance on git-specific features will help if there will be another transition in the project's future. There are only 5 .bat files in the entire Go source tree, so a new one being added is a rare event, and we prefer to do things in Go instead. We still have the option of improving the experience for developers by adding a pre-commit converter for .bat files to the git-codereview tool. ¹ https://groups.google.com/d/msg/golang-dev/sckirqOWepg/YmyT7dWJiocJ Fixes #39391. For #37791. Change-Id: I6e202216322872f0307ac96f1b8d3f57cb901e6b Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/236437 Reviewed-by: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2020-06-03 22:35:09 -06:00
"log"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"runtime"
all: treat all files as binary, but check in .bat with CRLF This is a followup to CL 96495. It should be simpler and more robust to achieve .bat files having CRLF line endings by treating it as a binary file, like all other files, and checking it in with the desired CRLF line endings. A test is used to check the entire Go tree, short of directories starting with "." and named "testdata", for any .bat files that have anything other than strict CRLF line endings. This will help catch any accidental modifications to existing .bat files or check ins of new .bat files. Importantly, this is compatible with how Gerrit serves .tar.gz files, making it so that CRLF line endings are preserved. The Go project is supported on many different environments, some of which may have limited git implementations available, or none at all. Relying on fewer git features and special rules makes it easier to have confidence in the exact content of all files. Additionally, Go development started in Subversion, moved to Perforce, then Mercurial, and now uses Git.¹ Reducing its reliance on git-specific features will help if there will be another transition in the project's future. There are only 5 .bat files in the entire Go source tree, so a new one being added is a rare event, and we prefer to do things in Go instead. We still have the option of improving the experience for developers by adding a pre-commit converter for .bat files to the git-codereview tool. ¹ https://groups.google.com/d/msg/golang-dev/sckirqOWepg/YmyT7dWJiocJ Fixes #39391. For #37791. Change-Id: I6e202216322872f0307ac96f1b8d3f57cb901e6b Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/236437 Reviewed-by: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2020-06-03 22:35:09 -06:00
"strings"
)
func main() {
all: treat all files as binary, but check in .bat with CRLF This is a followup to CL 96495. It should be simpler and more robust to achieve .bat files having CRLF line endings by treating it as a binary file, like all other files, and checking it in with the desired CRLF line endings. A test is used to check the entire Go tree, short of directories starting with "." and named "testdata", for any .bat files that have anything other than strict CRLF line endings. This will help catch any accidental modifications to existing .bat files or check ins of new .bat files. Importantly, this is compatible with how Gerrit serves .tar.gz files, making it so that CRLF line endings are preserved. The Go project is supported on many different environments, some of which may have limited git implementations available, or none at all. Relying on fewer git features and special rules makes it easier to have confidence in the exact content of all files. Additionally, Go development started in Subversion, moved to Perforce, then Mercurial, and now uses Git.¹ Reducing its reliance on git-specific features will help if there will be another transition in the project's future. There are only 5 .bat files in the entire Go source tree, so a new one being added is a rare event, and we prefer to do things in Go instead. We still have the option of improving the experience for developers by adding a pre-commit converter for .bat files to the git-codereview tool. ¹ https://groups.google.com/d/msg/golang-dev/sckirqOWepg/YmyT7dWJiocJ Fixes #39391. For #37791. Change-Id: I6e202216322872f0307ac96f1b8d3f57cb901e6b Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/236437 Reviewed-by: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2020-06-03 22:35:09 -06:00
// Ensure that the GOROOT/src/all.bat file exists and has strict CRLF line endings.
enforceBatchStrictCRLF(filepath.Join(runtime.GOROOT(), "src", "all.bat"))
// Walk the entire Go repository source tree (without GOROOT/pkg),
// skipping directories that start with "." and named "testdata",
// and ensure all .bat files found have exact CRLF line endings.
err := filepath.WalkDir(runtime.GOROOT(), func(path string, d os.DirEntry, err error) error {
all: treat all files as binary, but check in .bat with CRLF This is a followup to CL 96495. It should be simpler and more robust to achieve .bat files having CRLF line endings by treating it as a binary file, like all other files, and checking it in with the desired CRLF line endings. A test is used to check the entire Go tree, short of directories starting with "." and named "testdata", for any .bat files that have anything other than strict CRLF line endings. This will help catch any accidental modifications to existing .bat files or check ins of new .bat files. Importantly, this is compatible with how Gerrit serves .tar.gz files, making it so that CRLF line endings are preserved. The Go project is supported on many different environments, some of which may have limited git implementations available, or none at all. Relying on fewer git features and special rules makes it easier to have confidence in the exact content of all files. Additionally, Go development started in Subversion, moved to Perforce, then Mercurial, and now uses Git.¹ Reducing its reliance on git-specific features will help if there will be another transition in the project's future. There are only 5 .bat files in the entire Go source tree, so a new one being added is a rare event, and we prefer to do things in Go instead. We still have the option of improving the experience for developers by adding a pre-commit converter for .bat files to the git-codereview tool. ¹ https://groups.google.com/d/msg/golang-dev/sckirqOWepg/YmyT7dWJiocJ Fixes #39391. For #37791. Change-Id: I6e202216322872f0307ac96f1b8d3f57cb901e6b Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/236437 Reviewed-by: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2020-06-03 22:35:09 -06:00
if err != nil {
return err
}
if d.IsDir() && (strings.HasPrefix(d.Name(), ".") || d.Name() == "testdata") {
all: treat all files as binary, but check in .bat with CRLF This is a followup to CL 96495. It should be simpler and more robust to achieve .bat files having CRLF line endings by treating it as a binary file, like all other files, and checking it in with the desired CRLF line endings. A test is used to check the entire Go tree, short of directories starting with "." and named "testdata", for any .bat files that have anything other than strict CRLF line endings. This will help catch any accidental modifications to existing .bat files or check ins of new .bat files. Importantly, this is compatible with how Gerrit serves .tar.gz files, making it so that CRLF line endings are preserved. The Go project is supported on many different environments, some of which may have limited git implementations available, or none at all. Relying on fewer git features and special rules makes it easier to have confidence in the exact content of all files. Additionally, Go development started in Subversion, moved to Perforce, then Mercurial, and now uses Git.¹ Reducing its reliance on git-specific features will help if there will be another transition in the project's future. There are only 5 .bat files in the entire Go source tree, so a new one being added is a rare event, and we prefer to do things in Go instead. We still have the option of improving the experience for developers by adding a pre-commit converter for .bat files to the git-codereview tool. ¹ https://groups.google.com/d/msg/golang-dev/sckirqOWepg/YmyT7dWJiocJ Fixes #39391. For #37791. Change-Id: I6e202216322872f0307ac96f1b8d3f57cb901e6b Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/236437 Reviewed-by: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2020-06-03 22:35:09 -06:00
return filepath.SkipDir
}
if path == filepath.Join(runtime.GOROOT(), "pkg") {
// GOROOT/pkg is known to contain generated artifacts, not source code.
// Skip it to avoid false positives. (Also see golang.org/issue/37929.)
return filepath.SkipDir
}
if filepath.Ext(d.Name()) == ".bat" {
all: treat all files as binary, but check in .bat with CRLF This is a followup to CL 96495. It should be simpler and more robust to achieve .bat files having CRLF line endings by treating it as a binary file, like all other files, and checking it in with the desired CRLF line endings. A test is used to check the entire Go tree, short of directories starting with "." and named "testdata", for any .bat files that have anything other than strict CRLF line endings. This will help catch any accidental modifications to existing .bat files or check ins of new .bat files. Importantly, this is compatible with how Gerrit serves .tar.gz files, making it so that CRLF line endings are preserved. The Go project is supported on many different environments, some of which may have limited git implementations available, or none at all. Relying on fewer git features and special rules makes it easier to have confidence in the exact content of all files. Additionally, Go development started in Subversion, moved to Perforce, then Mercurial, and now uses Git.¹ Reducing its reliance on git-specific features will help if there will be another transition in the project's future. There are only 5 .bat files in the entire Go source tree, so a new one being added is a rare event, and we prefer to do things in Go instead. We still have the option of improving the experience for developers by adding a pre-commit converter for .bat files to the git-codereview tool. ¹ https://groups.google.com/d/msg/golang-dev/sckirqOWepg/YmyT7dWJiocJ Fixes #39391. For #37791. Change-Id: I6e202216322872f0307ac96f1b8d3f57cb901e6b Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/236437 Reviewed-by: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2020-06-03 22:35:09 -06:00
enforceBatchStrictCRLF(path)
}
return nil
})
if err != nil {
log.Fatalln(err)
}
}
func enforceBatchStrictCRLF(path string) {
b, err := ioutil.ReadFile(path)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalln(err)
}
cr, lf := bytes.Count(b, []byte{13}), bytes.Count(b, []byte{10})
crlf := bytes.Count(b, []byte{13, 10})
if cr != crlf || lf != crlf {
if rel, err := filepath.Rel(runtime.GOROOT(), path); err == nil {
// Make the test failure more readable by showing a path relative to GOROOT.
path = rel
}
all: treat all files as binary, but check in .bat with CRLF This is a followup to CL 96495. It should be simpler and more robust to achieve .bat files having CRLF line endings by treating it as a binary file, like all other files, and checking it in with the desired CRLF line endings. A test is used to check the entire Go tree, short of directories starting with "." and named "testdata", for any .bat files that have anything other than strict CRLF line endings. This will help catch any accidental modifications to existing .bat files or check ins of new .bat files. Importantly, this is compatible with how Gerrit serves .tar.gz files, making it so that CRLF line endings are preserved. The Go project is supported on many different environments, some of which may have limited git implementations available, or none at all. Relying on fewer git features and special rules makes it easier to have confidence in the exact content of all files. Additionally, Go development started in Subversion, moved to Perforce, then Mercurial, and now uses Git.¹ Reducing its reliance on git-specific features will help if there will be another transition in the project's future. There are only 5 .bat files in the entire Go source tree, so a new one being added is a rare event, and we prefer to do things in Go instead. We still have the option of improving the experience for developers by adding a pre-commit converter for .bat files to the git-codereview tool. ¹ https://groups.google.com/d/msg/golang-dev/sckirqOWepg/YmyT7dWJiocJ Fixes #39391. For #37791. Change-Id: I6e202216322872f0307ac96f1b8d3f57cb901e6b Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/236437 Reviewed-by: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2020-06-03 22:35:09 -06:00
fmt.Printf("Windows batch file %s does not use strict CRLF line termination.\n", path)
fmt.Printf("Please convert it to CRLF before checking it in due to golang.org/issue/37791.\n")
os.Exit(1)
}
}