1
0
mirror of https://github.com/golang/go synced 2024-10-01 16:28:33 -06:00
go/pointer/pointer_test.go

570 lines
15 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

// Copyright 2013 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.
package pointer_test
// This test uses 'expectation' comments embedded within testdata/*.go
// files to specify the expected pointer analysis behaviour.
// See below for grammar.
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"go/build"
"go/parser"
"go/token"
"io/ioutil"
"os"
"regexp"
"strconv"
"strings"
"testing"
"code.google.com/p/go.tools/go/types"
"code.google.com/p/go.tools/go/types/typemap"
"code.google.com/p/go.tools/importer"
"code.google.com/p/go.tools/pointer"
"code.google.com/p/go.tools/ssa"
)
var inputs = []string{
// Currently debugging:
// "testdata/tmp.go",
// Working:
"testdata/another.go",
"testdata/arrays.go",
"testdata/channels.go",
"testdata/context.go",
"testdata/conv.go",
"testdata/flow.go",
"testdata/fmtexcerpt.go",
"testdata/func.go",
"testdata/hello.go",
"testdata/interfaces.go",
"testdata/maps.go",
"testdata/panic.go",
"testdata/recur.go",
"testdata/structs.go",
"testdata/a_test.go",
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
"testdata/mapreflect.go",
// TODO(adonovan): get these tests (of reflection) passing.
// (The tests are mostly sound since they were used for a
// previous implementation.)
// "testdata/funcreflect.go",
// "testdata/arrayreflect.go",
// "testdata/chanreflect.go",
// "testdata/finalizer.go",
// "testdata/reflect.go",
// "testdata/structreflect.go",
}
// Expectation grammar:
//
// @calls f -> g
//
// A 'calls' expectation asserts that edge (f, g) appears in the
// callgraph. f and g are notated as per Function.String(), which
// may contain spaces (e.g. promoted method in anon struct).
//
// @pointsto a | b | c
//
// A 'pointsto' expectation asserts that the points-to set of its
// operand contains exactly the set of labels {a,b,c} notated as per
// labelString.
//
// A 'pointsto' expectation must appear on the same line as a
// print(x) statement; the expectation's operand is x.
//
// If one of the strings is "...", the expectation asserts that the
// points-to set at least the other labels.
//
// We use '|' because label names may contain spaces, e.g. methods
// of anonymous structs.
//
// From a theoretical perspective, concrete types in interfaces are
// labels too, but they are represented differently and so have a
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
// different expectation, @types, below.
//
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
// @types t | u | v
//
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
// A 'types' expectation asserts that the set of possible dynamic
// types of its interface operand is exactly {t,u,v}, notated per
// go/types.Type.String(). In other words, it asserts that the type
// component of the interface may point to that set of concrete type
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
// literals. It also works for reflect.Value, though the types
// needn't be concrete in that case.
//
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
// A 'types' expectation must appear on the same line as a
// print(x) statement; the expectation's operand is x.
//
// If one of the strings is "...", the expectation asserts that the
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
// interface's type may point to at least the other types.
//
// We use '|' because type names may contain spaces.
//
// @warning "regexp"
//
// A 'warning' expectation asserts that the analysis issues a
// warning that matches the regular expression within the string
// literal.
//
// @line id
//
// A line directive associates the name "id" with the current
// file:line. The string form of labels will use this id instead of
// a file:line, making @pointsto expectations more robust against
// perturbations in the source file.
// (NB, anon functions still include line numbers.)
//
type expectation struct {
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
kind string // "pointsto" | "types" | "calls" | "warning"
filename string
linenum int // source line number, 1-based
args []string
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
types []types.Type // for types
}
func (e *expectation) String() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("@%s[%s]", e.kind, strings.Join(e.args, " | "))
}
func (e *expectation) errorf(format string, args ...interface{}) {
fmt.Printf("%s:%d: ", e.filename, e.linenum)
fmt.Printf(format, args...)
fmt.Println()
}
func (e *expectation) needsProbe() bool {
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
return e.kind == "pointsto" || e.kind == "types"
}
// A record of a call to the built-in print() function. Used for testing.
type probe struct {
instr *ssa.CallCommon
arg0 pointer.Pointer // first argument to print
}
// Find probe (call to print(x)) of same source
// file/line as expectation.
func findProbe(prog *ssa.Program, probes []probe, e *expectation) *probe {
for _, p := range probes {
pos := prog.Fset.Position(p.instr.Pos())
if pos.Line == e.linenum && pos.Filename == e.filename {
// TODO(adonovan): send this to test log (display only on failure).
// fmt.Printf("%s:%d: info: found probe for %s: %s\n",
// e.filename, e.linenum, e, p.arg0) // debugging
return &p
}
}
return nil // e.g. analysis didn't reach this call
}
func doOneInput(input, filename string) bool {
impctx := &importer.Config{Build: &build.Default}
imp := importer.New(impctx)
// Parsing.
f, err := parser.ParseFile(imp.Fset, filename, input, parser.DeclarationErrors)
if err != nil {
// TODO(adonovan): err is a scanner error list;
// display all errors not just first?
go.tools/importer: generalize command-line syntax. Motivation: pointer analysis tools (like the oracle) want the user to specify a set of initial packages, like 'go test'. This change enables the user to specify a set of packages on the command line using importer.LoadInitialPackages(args). Each argument is interpreted as either: - a comma-separated list of *.go source files together comprising one non-importable ad-hoc package. e.g. "src/pkg/net/http/triv.go" gives us [main]. - an import path, denoting both the imported package and its non-importable external test package, if any. e.g. "fmt" gives us [fmt, fmt_test]. Current type-checker limitations mean that only the first import path may contribute tests: multiple packages augmented by *_test.go files could create import cycles, which 'go test' avoids by building a separate executable for each one. That approach is less attractive for static analysis. Details: (many files touched, but importer.go is the crux) importer: - PackageInfo.Importable boolean indicates whether package is importable. - un-expose Importer.Packages; expose AllPackages() instead. - CreatePackageFromArgs has become LoadInitialPackages. - imports() moved to util.go, renamed importsOf(). - InitialPackagesUsage usage message exported to clients. - the package name for ad-hoc packages now comes from the 'package' decl, not "main". ssa.Program: - added CreatePackages() method - PackagesByPath un-exposed, renamed 'imported'. - expose AllPackages and ImportedPackage accessors. oracle: - describe: explain and workaround a go/types bug. Misc: - Removed various unnecessary error.Error() calls in Printf args. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13579043
2013-09-06 16:13:57 -06:00
fmt.Println(err)
return false
}
go.tools/importer: generalize command-line syntax. Motivation: pointer analysis tools (like the oracle) want the user to specify a set of initial packages, like 'go test'. This change enables the user to specify a set of packages on the command line using importer.LoadInitialPackages(args). Each argument is interpreted as either: - a comma-separated list of *.go source files together comprising one non-importable ad-hoc package. e.g. "src/pkg/net/http/triv.go" gives us [main]. - an import path, denoting both the imported package and its non-importable external test package, if any. e.g. "fmt" gives us [fmt, fmt_test]. Current type-checker limitations mean that only the first import path may contribute tests: multiple packages augmented by *_test.go files could create import cycles, which 'go test' avoids by building a separate executable for each one. That approach is less attractive for static analysis. Details: (many files touched, but importer.go is the crux) importer: - PackageInfo.Importable boolean indicates whether package is importable. - un-expose Importer.Packages; expose AllPackages() instead. - CreatePackageFromArgs has become LoadInitialPackages. - imports() moved to util.go, renamed importsOf(). - InitialPackagesUsage usage message exported to clients. - the package name for ad-hoc packages now comes from the 'package' decl, not "main". ssa.Program: - added CreatePackages() method - PackagesByPath un-exposed, renamed 'imported'. - expose AllPackages and ImportedPackage accessors. oracle: - describe: explain and workaround a go/types bug. Misc: - Removed various unnecessary error.Error() calls in Printf args. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13579043
2013-09-06 16:13:57 -06:00
// Load main package and its dependencies.
info := imp.LoadMainPackage(f)
// SSA creation + building.
prog := ssa.NewProgram(imp.Fset, ssa.SanityCheckFunctions)
go.tools/importer: generalize command-line syntax. Motivation: pointer analysis tools (like the oracle) want the user to specify a set of initial packages, like 'go test'. This change enables the user to specify a set of packages on the command line using importer.LoadInitialPackages(args). Each argument is interpreted as either: - a comma-separated list of *.go source files together comprising one non-importable ad-hoc package. e.g. "src/pkg/net/http/triv.go" gives us [main]. - an import path, denoting both the imported package and its non-importable external test package, if any. e.g. "fmt" gives us [fmt, fmt_test]. Current type-checker limitations mean that only the first import path may contribute tests: multiple packages augmented by *_test.go files could create import cycles, which 'go test' avoids by building a separate executable for each one. That approach is less attractive for static analysis. Details: (many files touched, but importer.go is the crux) importer: - PackageInfo.Importable boolean indicates whether package is importable. - un-expose Importer.Packages; expose AllPackages() instead. - CreatePackageFromArgs has become LoadInitialPackages. - imports() moved to util.go, renamed importsOf(). - InitialPackagesUsage usage message exported to clients. - the package name for ad-hoc packages now comes from the 'package' decl, not "main". ssa.Program: - added CreatePackages() method - PackagesByPath un-exposed, renamed 'imported'. - expose AllPackages and ImportedPackage accessors. oracle: - describe: explain and workaround a go/types bug. Misc: - Removed various unnecessary error.Error() calls in Printf args. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13579043
2013-09-06 16:13:57 -06:00
if err := prog.CreatePackages(imp); err != nil {
fmt.Println(err)
return false
}
prog.BuildAll()
mainpkg := prog.Package(info.Pkg)
ptrmain := mainpkg // main package for the pointer analysis
if mainpkg.Func("main") == nil {
// No main function; assume it's a test.
mainpkg.CreateTestMainFunction()
fmt.Printf("%s: synthesized testmain package for test.\n", imp.Fset.Position(f.Package))
}
ok := true
lineMapping := make(map[string]string) // maps "file:line" to @line tag
// Parse expectations in this input.
var exps []*expectation
re := regexp.MustCompile("// *@([a-z]*) *(.*)$")
lines := strings.Split(input, "\n")
for linenum, line := range lines {
linenum++ // make it 1-based
if matches := re.FindAllStringSubmatch(line, -1); matches != nil {
match := matches[0]
kind, rest := match[1], match[2]
e := &expectation{kind: kind, filename: filename, linenum: linenum}
if kind == "line" {
if rest == "" {
ok = false
e.errorf("@%s expectation requires identifier", kind)
} else {
lineMapping[fmt.Sprintf("%s:%d", filename, linenum)] = rest
}
continue
}
if e.needsProbe() && !strings.Contains(line, "print(") {
ok = false
e.errorf("@%s expectation must follow call to print(x)", kind)
continue
}
switch kind {
case "pointsto":
e.args = split(rest, "|")
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
case "types":
for _, typstr := range split(rest, "|") {
var t types.Type = types.Typ[types.Invalid] // means "..."
if typstr != "..." {
texpr, err := parser.ParseExpr(typstr)
if err != nil {
ok = false
// Don't print err since its location is bad.
e.errorf("'%s' is not a valid type", typstr)
continue
}
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
mainFileScope := mainpkg.Object.Scope().Child(0)
t, _, err = types.EvalNode(imp.Fset, texpr, mainpkg.Object, mainFileScope)
if err != nil {
ok = false
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
// Don't print err since its location is bad.
e.errorf("'%s' is not a valid type: %s", typstr, err)
continue
}
}
e.types = append(e.types, t)
}
case "calls":
e.args = split(rest, "->")
// TODO(adonovan): eagerly reject the
// expectation if fn doesn't denote
// existing function, rather than fail
// the expectation after analysis.
if len(e.args) != 2 {
ok = false
e.errorf("@calls expectation wants 'caller -> callee' arguments")
continue
}
case "warning":
lit, err := strconv.Unquote(strings.TrimSpace(rest))
if err != nil {
ok = false
e.errorf("couldn't parse @warning operand: %s", err.Error())
continue
}
e.args = append(e.args, lit)
default:
ok = false
e.errorf("unknown expectation kind: %s", e)
continue
}
exps = append(exps, e)
}
}
var probes []probe
var warnings []string
var log bytes.Buffer
callgraph := make(pointer.CallGraph)
// Run the analysis.
config := &pointer.Config{
Mains: []*ssa.Package{ptrmain},
Log: &log,
Print: func(site *ssa.CallCommon, p pointer.Pointer) {
probes = append(probes, probe{site, p})
},
Call: callgraph.AddEdge,
Warn: func(pos token.Pos, format string, args ...interface{}) {
msg := fmt.Sprintf(format, args...)
fmt.Printf("%s: warning: %s\n", prog.Fset.Position(pos), msg)
warnings = append(warnings, msg)
},
}
pointer.Analyze(config)
// Print the log is there was an error or a panic.
complete := false
defer func() {
if !complete || !ok {
log.WriteTo(os.Stderr)
}
}()
// Check the expectations.
for _, e := range exps {
var pr *probe
if e.needsProbe() {
if pr = findProbe(prog, probes, e); pr == nil {
ok = false
e.errorf("unreachable print() statement has expectation %s", e)
continue
}
if pr.arg0 == nil {
ok = false
e.errorf("expectation on non-pointerlike operand: %s", pr.instr.Args[0].Type())
continue
}
}
switch e.kind {
case "pointsto":
if !checkPointsToExpectation(e, pr, lineMapping, prog) {
ok = false
}
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
case "types":
if !checkTypesExpectation(e, pr) {
ok = false
}
case "calls":
if !checkCallsExpectation(prog, e, callgraph) {
ok = false
}
case "warning":
if !checkWarningExpectation(prog, e, warnings) {
ok = false
}
}
}
complete = true
// ok = false // debugging: uncomment to always see log
return ok
}
func labelString(l *pointer.Label, lineMapping map[string]string, prog *ssa.Program) string {
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
// Functions and Globals need no pos suffix,
// nor do allocations in intrinsic operations
// (for which we'll print the function name).
switch l.Value().(type) {
case nil, *ssa.Function, *ssa.Global:
return l.String()
}
str := l.String()
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
if pos := l.Pos(); pos != token.NoPos {
// Append the position, using a @line tag instead of a line number, if defined.
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
posn := prog.Fset.Position(pos)
s := fmt.Sprintf("%s:%d", posn.Filename, posn.Line)
if tag, ok := lineMapping[s]; ok {
return fmt.Sprintf("%s@%s:%d", str, tag, posn.Column)
}
str = fmt.Sprintf("%s@%s", str, posn)
}
return str
}
func checkPointsToExpectation(e *expectation, pr *probe, lineMapping map[string]string, prog *ssa.Program) bool {
expected := make(map[string]struct{})
surplus := make(map[string]struct{})
exact := true
for _, g := range e.args {
if g == "..." {
exact = false
continue
}
expected[g] = struct{}{}
}
// Find the set of labels that the probe's
// argument (x in print(x)) may point to.
for _, label := range pr.arg0.PointsTo().Labels() {
name := labelString(label, lineMapping, prog)
if _, ok := expected[name]; ok {
delete(expected, name)
} else if exact {
surplus[name] = struct{}{}
}
}
// Report set difference:
ok := true
if len(expected) > 0 {
ok = false
e.errorf("value does not alias these expected labels: %s", join(expected))
}
if len(surplus) > 0 {
ok = false
e.errorf("value may additionally alias these labels: %s", join(surplus))
}
return ok
}
// underlying returns the underlying type of typ. Copied from go/types.
func underlyingType(typ types.Type) types.Type {
if typ, ok := typ.(*types.Named); ok {
return typ.Underlying() // underlying types are never NamedTypes
}
if typ == nil {
panic("underlying(nil)")
}
return typ
}
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
func checkTypesExpectation(e *expectation, pr *probe) bool {
var expected typemap.M
var surplus typemap.M
exact := true
for _, g := range e.types {
if g == types.Typ[types.Invalid] {
exact = false
continue
}
expected.Set(g, struct{}{})
}
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
if t := pr.instr.Args[0].Type(); !pointer.CanHaveDynamicTypes(t) {
e.errorf("@types expectation requires an interface- or reflect.Value-typed operand, got %s", t)
return false
}
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
// Find the set of types that the probe's
// argument (x in print(x)) may contain.
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
for _, T := range pr.arg0.PointsTo().DynamicTypes().Keys() {
if expected.At(T) != nil {
expected.Delete(T)
} else if exact {
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
surplus.Set(T, struct{}{})
}
}
// Report set difference:
ok := true
if expected.Len() > 0 {
ok = false
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
e.errorf("interface cannot contain these types: %s", expected.KeysString())
}
if surplus.Len() > 0 {
ok = false
go.tools/pointer: reflection, part 1: maps, and some core features. Core: reflect.TypeOf reflect.ValueOf reflect.Zero reflect.Value.Interface Maps: (reflect.Value).MapIndex (reflect.Value).MapKeys (reflect.Value).SetMapIndex (*reflect.rtype).Elem (*reflect.rtype).Key + tests: pointer/testdata/mapreflect.go. oracle/testdata/src/main/reflection.go. Interface objects (T, V...) have been renamed "tagged objects". Abstraction: we model reflect.Value similar to interface{}---as a pointer that points only to tagged objects---but a reflect.Value may also point to an "indirect tagged object", one in which the payload V is of type *T not T. These are required because reflect.Values can hold lvalues, e.g. when derived via Field() or Elem(), though we won't use them till we get to structs and pointers. Solving: each reflection intrinsic defines a new constraint and resolution rule. Because of the nature of reflection, generalizing across types, the resolution rules dynamically create additional complex constraints during solving, where previously only simple (copy) constraints were created. This requires some solver changes: The work done before the main solver loop (to attach new constraints to the graph) is now done before each iteration, in processNewConstraints. Its loop over constraints is broken into two passes: the first handles base (addr-of) constraints, the second handles simple and complex constraints. constraint.init() has been inlined. The only behaviour that varies across constraints is ptr() Sadly this will pessimize presolver optimisations, when we get there; such is the price of reflection. Objects: reflection intrinsics create objects (i.e. cause memory allocations) with no SSA operation. We will represent them as the cgnode of the instrinsic (e.g. reflect.New), so we extend Labels and node.data to represent objects as a product (not sum) of ssa.Value and cgnode and pull this out into its own type, struct object. This simplifies a number of invariants and saves space. The ntObject flag is now represented by obj!=nil; the other flags are moved into object. cgnodes are now always recorded in objects/Labels for which it is appropriate (all but those for globals, constants and the shared contours for functions). Also: - Prepopulate the flattenMemo cache to consider reflect.Value a fake pointer, not a struct. - Improve accessors and documentation on type Label. - @conctypes assertions renamed @types (since dyn. types needn't be concrete). - add oracle 'describe' test on an interface (missing, an oversight). R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13418048
2013-09-16 07:49:10 -06:00
e.errorf("interface may additionally contain these types: %s", surplus.KeysString())
}
return ok
return false
}
func checkCallsExpectation(prog *ssa.Program, e *expectation, callgraph pointer.CallGraph) bool {
// TODO(adonovan): this is inefficient and not robust against
// typos. Better to convert strings to *Functions during
// expectation parsing (somehow).
for caller, callees := range callgraph {
if caller.Func().String() == e.args[0] {
found := make(map[string]struct{})
for callee := range callees {
s := callee.Func().String()
found[s] = struct{}{}
if s == e.args[1] {
return true // expectation satisfied
}
}
e.errorf("found no call from %s to %s, but only to %s",
e.args[0], e.args[1], join(found))
return false
}
}
e.errorf("didn't find any calls from %s", e.args[0])
return false
}
func checkWarningExpectation(prog *ssa.Program, e *expectation, warnings []string) bool {
// TODO(adonovan): check the position part of the warning too?
re, err := regexp.Compile(e.args[0])
if err != nil {
e.errorf("invalid regular expression in @warning expectation: %s", err.Error())
return false
}
if len(warnings) == 0 {
e.errorf("@warning %s expectation, but no warnings", strconv.Quote(e.args[0]))
return false
}
for _, warning := range warnings {
if re.MatchString(warning) {
return true
}
}
e.errorf("@warning %s expectation not satised; found these warnings though:", strconv.Quote(e.args[0]))
for _, warning := range warnings {
fmt.Println("\t", warning)
}
return false
}
func TestInput(t *testing.T) {
ok := true
wd, err := os.Getwd()
if err != nil {
go.tools/importer: generalize command-line syntax. Motivation: pointer analysis tools (like the oracle) want the user to specify a set of initial packages, like 'go test'. This change enables the user to specify a set of packages on the command line using importer.LoadInitialPackages(args). Each argument is interpreted as either: - a comma-separated list of *.go source files together comprising one non-importable ad-hoc package. e.g. "src/pkg/net/http/triv.go" gives us [main]. - an import path, denoting both the imported package and its non-importable external test package, if any. e.g. "fmt" gives us [fmt, fmt_test]. Current type-checker limitations mean that only the first import path may contribute tests: multiple packages augmented by *_test.go files could create import cycles, which 'go test' avoids by building a separate executable for each one. That approach is less attractive for static analysis. Details: (many files touched, but importer.go is the crux) importer: - PackageInfo.Importable boolean indicates whether package is importable. - un-expose Importer.Packages; expose AllPackages() instead. - CreatePackageFromArgs has become LoadInitialPackages. - imports() moved to util.go, renamed importsOf(). - InitialPackagesUsage usage message exported to clients. - the package name for ad-hoc packages now comes from the 'package' decl, not "main". ssa.Program: - added CreatePackages() method - PackagesByPath un-exposed, renamed 'imported'. - expose AllPackages and ImportedPackage accessors. oracle: - describe: explain and workaround a go/types bug. Misc: - Removed various unnecessary error.Error() calls in Printf args. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13579043
2013-09-06 16:13:57 -06:00
t.Errorf("os.Getwd: %s", err)
return
}
// 'go test' does a chdir so that relative paths in
// diagnostics no longer make sense relative to the invoking
// shell's cwd. We print a special marker so that Emacs can
// make sense of them.
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "Entering directory `%s'\n", wd)
for _, filename := range inputs {
content, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
go.tools/importer: generalize command-line syntax. Motivation: pointer analysis tools (like the oracle) want the user to specify a set of initial packages, like 'go test'. This change enables the user to specify a set of packages on the command line using importer.LoadInitialPackages(args). Each argument is interpreted as either: - a comma-separated list of *.go source files together comprising one non-importable ad-hoc package. e.g. "src/pkg/net/http/triv.go" gives us [main]. - an import path, denoting both the imported package and its non-importable external test package, if any. e.g. "fmt" gives us [fmt, fmt_test]. Current type-checker limitations mean that only the first import path may contribute tests: multiple packages augmented by *_test.go files could create import cycles, which 'go test' avoids by building a separate executable for each one. That approach is less attractive for static analysis. Details: (many files touched, but importer.go is the crux) importer: - PackageInfo.Importable boolean indicates whether package is importable. - un-expose Importer.Packages; expose AllPackages() instead. - CreatePackageFromArgs has become LoadInitialPackages. - imports() moved to util.go, renamed importsOf(). - InitialPackagesUsage usage message exported to clients. - the package name for ad-hoc packages now comes from the 'package' decl, not "main". ssa.Program: - added CreatePackages() method - PackagesByPath un-exposed, renamed 'imported'. - expose AllPackages and ImportedPackage accessors. oracle: - describe: explain and workaround a go/types bug. Misc: - Removed various unnecessary error.Error() calls in Printf args. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13579043
2013-09-06 16:13:57 -06:00
t.Errorf("couldn't read file '%s': %s", filename, err)
continue
}
if !doOneInput(string(content), filename) {
ok = false
}
}
if !ok {
t.Fail()
}
}
// join joins the elements of set with " | "s.
func join(set map[string]struct{}) string {
var buf bytes.Buffer
sep := ""
for name := range set {
buf.WriteString(sep)
sep = " | "
buf.WriteString(name)
}
return buf.String()
}
// split returns the list of sep-delimited non-empty strings in s.
func split(s, sep string) (r []string) {
for _, elem := range strings.Split(s, sep) {
elem = strings.TrimSpace(elem)
if elem != "" {
r = append(r, elem)
}
}
return
}