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go/oracle/oracle_test.go

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// 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 oracle_test
// This file defines a test framework for oracle queries.
//
// The files beneath testdata/src/main contain Go programs containing
// query annotations of the form:
//
// @verb id "select"
//
// where verb is the query mode (e.g. "callers"), id is a unique name
// for this query, and "select" is a regular expression matching the
// substring of the current line that is the query's input selection.
//
// The expected output for each query is provided in the accompanying
// .golden file.
//
// (Location information is not included because it's too fragile to
// display as text. TODO(adonovan): think about how we can test its
// correctness, since it is critical information.)
//
// Run this test with:
// % go test golang.org/x/tools/oracle -update
// to update the golden files.
import (
"bytes"
go.tools/oracle: add option to output results in JSON syntax. See json.go for interface specification. Example usage: % oracle -format=json -mode=callgraph code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/oracle + Tests, based on (small) golden files. Overview: Each <query>Result structure has been "lowered" so that all but the most trivial logic in each display() function has been moved to the main query. Each one now has a toJSON method that populates a json.Result struct. Though the <query>Result structs are similar to the correponding JSON protocol, they're not close enough to be used directly; for example, the former contain richer semantic entities (token.Pos, ast.Expr, ssa.Value, pointer.Pointer, etc) whereas JSON contains only their printed forms using Go basic types. The choices of what levels of abstractions the two sets of structs should have is somewhat arbitrary. We may want richer information in the JSON output in future. Details: - oracle.Main has been split into oracle.Query() and the printing of the oracle.Result. - the display() method no longer needs an *oracle param, only a print function. - callees: sort the result for determinism. - callees: compute the union across all contexts. - callers: sort the results for determinism. - describe(package): fixed a bug in the predicate for method accessibility: an unexported method defined in pkg A may belong to a type defined in package B (via embedding/promotion) and may thus be accessible to A. New accessibleMethods() utility fixes this. - describe(type): filter methods by accessibility. - added tests of 'callgraph'. - pointer: eliminated the 'caller CallGraphNode' parameter from pointer.Context.Call callback since it was redundant w.r.t site.Caller(). - added warning if CGO_ENABLED is unset. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13270045
2013-09-03 13:29:02 -06:00
"encoding/json"
"flag"
"fmt"
"go/build"
"go/parser"
"go/token"
"io"
"io/ioutil"
"os"
"os/exec"
"regexp"
"runtime"
"strconv"
"strings"
"testing"
"golang.org/x/tools/oracle"
)
var updateFlag = flag.Bool("update", false, "Update the golden files.")
type query struct {
id string // unique id
verb string // query mode, e.g. "callees"
posn token.Position // position of of query
filename string
queryPos string // value of -pos flag
}
func parseRegexp(text string) (*regexp.Regexp, error) {
pattern, err := strconv.Unquote(text)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("can't unquote %s", text)
}
return regexp.Compile(pattern)
}
// parseQueries parses and returns the queries in the named file.
func parseQueries(t *testing.T, filename string) []*query {
filedata, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
// Parse the file once to discover the test queries.
fset := token.NewFileSet()
f, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, filename, filedata, parser.ParseComments)
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
lines := bytes.Split(filedata, []byte("\n"))
var queries []*query
queriesById := make(map[string]*query)
// Find all annotations of these forms:
expectRe := regexp.MustCompile(`@([a-z]+)\s+(\S+)\s+(\".*)$`) // @verb id "regexp"
for _, c := range f.Comments {
text := strings.TrimSpace(c.Text())
if text == "" || text[0] != '@' {
continue
}
posn := fset.Position(c.Pos())
// @verb id "regexp"
match := expectRe.FindStringSubmatch(text)
if match == nil {
t.Errorf("%s: ill-formed query: %s", posn, text)
continue
}
id := match[2]
if prev, ok := queriesById[id]; ok {
t.Errorf("%s: duplicate id %s", posn, id)
t.Errorf("%s: previously used here", prev.posn)
continue
}
q := &query{
id: id,
verb: match[1],
filename: filename,
posn: posn,
}
if match[3] != `"nopos"` {
selectRe, err := parseRegexp(match[3])
if err != nil {
t.Errorf("%s: %s", posn, err)
continue
}
// Find text of the current line, sans query.
// (Queries must be // not /**/ comments.)
line := lines[posn.Line-1][:posn.Column-1]
// Apply regexp to current line to find input selection.
loc := selectRe.FindIndex(line)
if loc == nil {
t.Errorf("%s: selection pattern %s doesn't match line %q",
posn, match[3], string(line))
continue
}
// Assumes ASCII. TODO(adonovan): test on UTF-8.
linestart := posn.Offset - (posn.Column - 1)
// Compute the file offsets.
q.queryPos = fmt.Sprintf("%s:#%d,#%d",
filename, linestart+loc[0], linestart+loc[1])
}
queries = append(queries, q)
queriesById[id] = q
}
// Return the slice, not map, for deterministic iteration.
return queries
}
// WriteResult writes res (-format=plain) to w, stripping file locations.
oracle: several major improvements Features: More robust: silently ignore type errors in modes that don't need SSA form: describe, referrers, implements, freevars, description. This makes the tool much more robust for everyday queries. Less configuration: don't require a scope argument for all queries. Only queries that do pointer analysis need it. For the rest, the initial position is enough for importQueryPackage to deduce the scope. It now works for queries in GoFiles, TestGoFiles, or XTestGoFiles. (It no longer works for ad-hoc main packages like $GOROOT/src/net/http/triv.go) More complete: "referrers" computes the scope automatically by scanning the import graph of the entire workspace, using gorename's refactor/importgraph package. This requires two passes at loading. Faster: simplified start-up logic avoids unnecessary package loading and SSA construction (a consequence of bad abstraction) in many cases. "callgraph": remove it. Unlike all the other commands it isn't related to the current selection, and we have golang.org/x/tools/cmdcallgraph now. Internals: Drop support for long-running clients (i.e., Pythia), since godoc -analysis supports all the same features except "pointsto", and precomputes all the results so latency is much lower. Get rid of various unhelpful abstractions introduced to support long-running clients. Expand out the set-up logic for each subcommand. This is simpler, easier to read, and gives us more control, at a small cost in duplication---the familiar story of abstractions. Discard PTA warnings. We weren't showing them (nor should we). Split tests into separate directories (so that importgraph works). Change-Id: I55d46b3ab33cdf7ac22436fcc2148fe04c901237 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8243 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-03-30 09:21:48 -06:00
func WriteResult(w io.Writer, q *oracle.Query) {
capture := new(bytes.Buffer) // capture standard output
oracle: several major improvements Features: More robust: silently ignore type errors in modes that don't need SSA form: describe, referrers, implements, freevars, description. This makes the tool much more robust for everyday queries. Less configuration: don't require a scope argument for all queries. Only queries that do pointer analysis need it. For the rest, the initial position is enough for importQueryPackage to deduce the scope. It now works for queries in GoFiles, TestGoFiles, or XTestGoFiles. (It no longer works for ad-hoc main packages like $GOROOT/src/net/http/triv.go) More complete: "referrers" computes the scope automatically by scanning the import graph of the entire workspace, using gorename's refactor/importgraph package. This requires two passes at loading. Faster: simplified start-up logic avoids unnecessary package loading and SSA construction (a consequence of bad abstraction) in many cases. "callgraph": remove it. Unlike all the other commands it isn't related to the current selection, and we have golang.org/x/tools/cmdcallgraph now. Internals: Drop support for long-running clients (i.e., Pythia), since godoc -analysis supports all the same features except "pointsto", and precomputes all the results so latency is much lower. Get rid of various unhelpful abstractions introduced to support long-running clients. Expand out the set-up logic for each subcommand. This is simpler, easier to read, and gives us more control, at a small cost in duplication---the familiar story of abstractions. Discard PTA warnings. We weren't showing them (nor should we). Split tests into separate directories (so that importgraph works). Change-Id: I55d46b3ab33cdf7ac22436fcc2148fe04c901237 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8243 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-03-30 09:21:48 -06:00
q.WriteTo(capture)
for _, line := range strings.Split(capture.String(), "\n") {
// Remove a "file:line: " prefix.
if i := strings.Index(line, ": "); i >= 0 {
line = line[i+2:]
}
fmt.Fprintf(w, "%s\n", line)
}
}
// doQuery poses query q to the oracle and writes its response and
// error (if any) to out.
go.tools/oracle: add option to output results in JSON syntax. See json.go for interface specification. Example usage: % oracle -format=json -mode=callgraph code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/oracle + Tests, based on (small) golden files. Overview: Each <query>Result structure has been "lowered" so that all but the most trivial logic in each display() function has been moved to the main query. Each one now has a toJSON method that populates a json.Result struct. Though the <query>Result structs are similar to the correponding JSON protocol, they're not close enough to be used directly; for example, the former contain richer semantic entities (token.Pos, ast.Expr, ssa.Value, pointer.Pointer, etc) whereas JSON contains only their printed forms using Go basic types. The choices of what levels of abstractions the two sets of structs should have is somewhat arbitrary. We may want richer information in the JSON output in future. Details: - oracle.Main has been split into oracle.Query() and the printing of the oracle.Result. - the display() method no longer needs an *oracle param, only a print function. - callees: sort the result for determinism. - callees: compute the union across all contexts. - callers: sort the results for determinism. - describe(package): fixed a bug in the predicate for method accessibility: an unexported method defined in pkg A may belong to a type defined in package B (via embedding/promotion) and may thus be accessible to A. New accessibleMethods() utility fixes this. - describe(type): filter methods by accessibility. - added tests of 'callgraph'. - pointer: eliminated the 'caller CallGraphNode' parameter from pointer.Context.Call callback since it was redundant w.r.t site.Caller(). - added warning if CGO_ENABLED is unset. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13270045
2013-09-03 13:29:02 -06:00
func doQuery(out io.Writer, q *query, useJson bool) {
fmt.Fprintf(out, "-------- @%s %s --------\n", q.verb, q.id)
var buildContext = build.Default
buildContext.GOPATH = "testdata"
oracle: several major improvements Features: More robust: silently ignore type errors in modes that don't need SSA form: describe, referrers, implements, freevars, description. This makes the tool much more robust for everyday queries. Less configuration: don't require a scope argument for all queries. Only queries that do pointer analysis need it. For the rest, the initial position is enough for importQueryPackage to deduce the scope. It now works for queries in GoFiles, TestGoFiles, or XTestGoFiles. (It no longer works for ad-hoc main packages like $GOROOT/src/net/http/triv.go) More complete: "referrers" computes the scope automatically by scanning the import graph of the entire workspace, using gorename's refactor/importgraph package. This requires two passes at loading. Faster: simplified start-up logic avoids unnecessary package loading and SSA construction (a consequence of bad abstraction) in many cases. "callgraph": remove it. Unlike all the other commands it isn't related to the current selection, and we have golang.org/x/tools/cmdcallgraph now. Internals: Drop support for long-running clients (i.e., Pythia), since godoc -analysis supports all the same features except "pointsto", and precomputes all the results so latency is much lower. Get rid of various unhelpful abstractions introduced to support long-running clients. Expand out the set-up logic for each subcommand. This is simpler, easier to read, and gives us more control, at a small cost in duplication---the familiar story of abstractions. Discard PTA warnings. We weren't showing them (nor should we). Split tests into separate directories (so that importgraph works). Change-Id: I55d46b3ab33cdf7ac22436fcc2148fe04c901237 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8243 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-03-30 09:21:48 -06:00
query := oracle.Query{
Mode: q.verb,
Pos: q.queryPos,
Build: &buildContext,
Scope: []string{q.filename},
Reflection: true,
}
if err := oracle.Run(&query); err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(out, "\nError: %s\n", err)
go.tools/oracle: add option to output results in JSON syntax. See json.go for interface specification. Example usage: % oracle -format=json -mode=callgraph code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/oracle + Tests, based on (small) golden files. Overview: Each <query>Result structure has been "lowered" so that all but the most trivial logic in each display() function has been moved to the main query. Each one now has a toJSON method that populates a json.Result struct. Though the <query>Result structs are similar to the correponding JSON protocol, they're not close enough to be used directly; for example, the former contain richer semantic entities (token.Pos, ast.Expr, ssa.Value, pointer.Pointer, etc) whereas JSON contains only their printed forms using Go basic types. The choices of what levels of abstractions the two sets of structs should have is somewhat arbitrary. We may want richer information in the JSON output in future. Details: - oracle.Main has been split into oracle.Query() and the printing of the oracle.Result. - the display() method no longer needs an *oracle param, only a print function. - callees: sort the result for determinism. - callees: compute the union across all contexts. - callers: sort the results for determinism. - describe(package): fixed a bug in the predicate for method accessibility: an unexported method defined in pkg A may belong to a type defined in package B (via embedding/promotion) and may thus be accessible to A. New accessibleMethods() utility fixes this. - describe(type): filter methods by accessibility. - added tests of 'callgraph'. - pointer: eliminated the 'caller CallGraphNode' parameter from pointer.Context.Call callback since it was redundant w.r.t site.Caller(). - added warning if CGO_ENABLED is unset. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13270045
2013-09-03 13:29:02 -06:00
return
}
go.tools/oracle: add option to output results in JSON syntax. See json.go for interface specification. Example usage: % oracle -format=json -mode=callgraph code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/oracle + Tests, based on (small) golden files. Overview: Each <query>Result structure has been "lowered" so that all but the most trivial logic in each display() function has been moved to the main query. Each one now has a toJSON method that populates a json.Result struct. Though the <query>Result structs are similar to the correponding JSON protocol, they're not close enough to be used directly; for example, the former contain richer semantic entities (token.Pos, ast.Expr, ssa.Value, pointer.Pointer, etc) whereas JSON contains only their printed forms using Go basic types. The choices of what levels of abstractions the two sets of structs should have is somewhat arbitrary. We may want richer information in the JSON output in future. Details: - oracle.Main has been split into oracle.Query() and the printing of the oracle.Result. - the display() method no longer needs an *oracle param, only a print function. - callees: sort the result for determinism. - callees: compute the union across all contexts. - callers: sort the results for determinism. - describe(package): fixed a bug in the predicate for method accessibility: an unexported method defined in pkg A may belong to a type defined in package B (via embedding/promotion) and may thus be accessible to A. New accessibleMethods() utility fixes this. - describe(type): filter methods by accessibility. - added tests of 'callgraph'. - pointer: eliminated the 'caller CallGraphNode' parameter from pointer.Context.Call callback since it was redundant w.r.t site.Caller(). - added warning if CGO_ENABLED is unset. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13270045
2013-09-03 13:29:02 -06:00
if useJson {
// JSON output
oracle: several major improvements Features: More robust: silently ignore type errors in modes that don't need SSA form: describe, referrers, implements, freevars, description. This makes the tool much more robust for everyday queries. Less configuration: don't require a scope argument for all queries. Only queries that do pointer analysis need it. For the rest, the initial position is enough for importQueryPackage to deduce the scope. It now works for queries in GoFiles, TestGoFiles, or XTestGoFiles. (It no longer works for ad-hoc main packages like $GOROOT/src/net/http/triv.go) More complete: "referrers" computes the scope automatically by scanning the import graph of the entire workspace, using gorename's refactor/importgraph package. This requires two passes at loading. Faster: simplified start-up logic avoids unnecessary package loading and SSA construction (a consequence of bad abstraction) in many cases. "callgraph": remove it. Unlike all the other commands it isn't related to the current selection, and we have golang.org/x/tools/cmdcallgraph now. Internals: Drop support for long-running clients (i.e., Pythia), since godoc -analysis supports all the same features except "pointsto", and precomputes all the results so latency is much lower. Get rid of various unhelpful abstractions introduced to support long-running clients. Expand out the set-up logic for each subcommand. This is simpler, easier to read, and gives us more control, at a small cost in duplication---the familiar story of abstractions. Discard PTA warnings. We weren't showing them (nor should we). Split tests into separate directories (so that importgraph works). Change-Id: I55d46b3ab33cdf7ac22436fcc2148fe04c901237 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8243 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-03-30 09:21:48 -06:00
b, err := json.MarshalIndent(query.Serial(), "", "\t")
go.tools/oracle: add option to output results in JSON syntax. See json.go for interface specification. Example usage: % oracle -format=json -mode=callgraph code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/oracle + Tests, based on (small) golden files. Overview: Each <query>Result structure has been "lowered" so that all but the most trivial logic in each display() function has been moved to the main query. Each one now has a toJSON method that populates a json.Result struct. Though the <query>Result structs are similar to the correponding JSON protocol, they're not close enough to be used directly; for example, the former contain richer semantic entities (token.Pos, ast.Expr, ssa.Value, pointer.Pointer, etc) whereas JSON contains only their printed forms using Go basic types. The choices of what levels of abstractions the two sets of structs should have is somewhat arbitrary. We may want richer information in the JSON output in future. Details: - oracle.Main has been split into oracle.Query() and the printing of the oracle.Result. - the display() method no longer needs an *oracle param, only a print function. - callees: sort the result for determinism. - callees: compute the union across all contexts. - callers: sort the results for determinism. - describe(package): fixed a bug in the predicate for method accessibility: an unexported method defined in pkg A may belong to a type defined in package B (via embedding/promotion) and may thus be accessible to A. New accessibleMethods() utility fixes this. - describe(type): filter methods by accessibility. - added tests of 'callgraph'. - pointer: eliminated the 'caller CallGraphNode' parameter from pointer.Context.Call callback since it was redundant w.r.t site.Caller(). - added warning if CGO_ENABLED is unset. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13270045
2013-09-03 13:29:02 -06:00
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(out, "JSON error: %s\n", err.Error())
return
}
out.Write(b)
oracle: several major improvements Features: More robust: silently ignore type errors in modes that don't need SSA form: describe, referrers, implements, freevars, description. This makes the tool much more robust for everyday queries. Less configuration: don't require a scope argument for all queries. Only queries that do pointer analysis need it. For the rest, the initial position is enough for importQueryPackage to deduce the scope. It now works for queries in GoFiles, TestGoFiles, or XTestGoFiles. (It no longer works for ad-hoc main packages like $GOROOT/src/net/http/triv.go) More complete: "referrers" computes the scope automatically by scanning the import graph of the entire workspace, using gorename's refactor/importgraph package. This requires two passes at loading. Faster: simplified start-up logic avoids unnecessary package loading and SSA construction (a consequence of bad abstraction) in many cases. "callgraph": remove it. Unlike all the other commands it isn't related to the current selection, and we have golang.org/x/tools/cmdcallgraph now. Internals: Drop support for long-running clients (i.e., Pythia), since godoc -analysis supports all the same features except "pointsto", and precomputes all the results so latency is much lower. Get rid of various unhelpful abstractions introduced to support long-running clients. Expand out the set-up logic for each subcommand. This is simpler, easier to read, and gives us more control, at a small cost in duplication---the familiar story of abstractions. Discard PTA warnings. We weren't showing them (nor should we). Split tests into separate directories (so that importgraph works). Change-Id: I55d46b3ab33cdf7ac22436fcc2148fe04c901237 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8243 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-03-30 09:21:48 -06:00
fmt.Fprintln(out)
go.tools/oracle: add option to output results in JSON syntax. See json.go for interface specification. Example usage: % oracle -format=json -mode=callgraph code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/oracle + Tests, based on (small) golden files. Overview: Each <query>Result structure has been "lowered" so that all but the most trivial logic in each display() function has been moved to the main query. Each one now has a toJSON method that populates a json.Result struct. Though the <query>Result structs are similar to the correponding JSON protocol, they're not close enough to be used directly; for example, the former contain richer semantic entities (token.Pos, ast.Expr, ssa.Value, pointer.Pointer, etc) whereas JSON contains only their printed forms using Go basic types. The choices of what levels of abstractions the two sets of structs should have is somewhat arbitrary. We may want richer information in the JSON output in future. Details: - oracle.Main has been split into oracle.Query() and the printing of the oracle.Result. - the display() method no longer needs an *oracle param, only a print function. - callees: sort the result for determinism. - callees: compute the union across all contexts. - callers: sort the results for determinism. - describe(package): fixed a bug in the predicate for method accessibility: an unexported method defined in pkg A may belong to a type defined in package B (via embedding/promotion) and may thus be accessible to A. New accessibleMethods() utility fixes this. - describe(type): filter methods by accessibility. - added tests of 'callgraph'. - pointer: eliminated the 'caller CallGraphNode' parameter from pointer.Context.Call callback since it was redundant w.r.t site.Caller(). - added warning if CGO_ENABLED is unset. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13270045
2013-09-03 13:29:02 -06:00
} else {
// "plain" (compiler diagnostic format) output
oracle: several major improvements Features: More robust: silently ignore type errors in modes that don't need SSA form: describe, referrers, implements, freevars, description. This makes the tool much more robust for everyday queries. Less configuration: don't require a scope argument for all queries. Only queries that do pointer analysis need it. For the rest, the initial position is enough for importQueryPackage to deduce the scope. It now works for queries in GoFiles, TestGoFiles, or XTestGoFiles. (It no longer works for ad-hoc main packages like $GOROOT/src/net/http/triv.go) More complete: "referrers" computes the scope automatically by scanning the import graph of the entire workspace, using gorename's refactor/importgraph package. This requires two passes at loading. Faster: simplified start-up logic avoids unnecessary package loading and SSA construction (a consequence of bad abstraction) in many cases. "callgraph": remove it. Unlike all the other commands it isn't related to the current selection, and we have golang.org/x/tools/cmdcallgraph now. Internals: Drop support for long-running clients (i.e., Pythia), since godoc -analysis supports all the same features except "pointsto", and precomputes all the results so latency is much lower. Get rid of various unhelpful abstractions introduced to support long-running clients. Expand out the set-up logic for each subcommand. This is simpler, easier to read, and gives us more control, at a small cost in duplication---the familiar story of abstractions. Discard PTA warnings. We weren't showing them (nor should we). Split tests into separate directories (so that importgraph works). Change-Id: I55d46b3ab33cdf7ac22436fcc2148fe04c901237 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8243 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-03-30 09:21:48 -06:00
WriteResult(out, &query)
}
}
func TestOracle(t *testing.T) {
switch runtime.GOOS {
case "windows":
t.Skipf("skipping test on %q (no /usr/bin/diff)", runtime.GOOS)
}
for _, filename := range []string{
oracle: several major improvements Features: More robust: silently ignore type errors in modes that don't need SSA form: describe, referrers, implements, freevars, description. This makes the tool much more robust for everyday queries. Less configuration: don't require a scope argument for all queries. Only queries that do pointer analysis need it. For the rest, the initial position is enough for importQueryPackage to deduce the scope. It now works for queries in GoFiles, TestGoFiles, or XTestGoFiles. (It no longer works for ad-hoc main packages like $GOROOT/src/net/http/triv.go) More complete: "referrers" computes the scope automatically by scanning the import graph of the entire workspace, using gorename's refactor/importgraph package. This requires two passes at loading. Faster: simplified start-up logic avoids unnecessary package loading and SSA construction (a consequence of bad abstraction) in many cases. "callgraph": remove it. Unlike all the other commands it isn't related to the current selection, and we have golang.org/x/tools/cmdcallgraph now. Internals: Drop support for long-running clients (i.e., Pythia), since godoc -analysis supports all the same features except "pointsto", and precomputes all the results so latency is much lower. Get rid of various unhelpful abstractions introduced to support long-running clients. Expand out the set-up logic for each subcommand. This is simpler, easier to read, and gives us more control, at a small cost in duplication---the familiar story of abstractions. Discard PTA warnings. We weren't showing them (nor should we). Split tests into separate directories (so that importgraph works). Change-Id: I55d46b3ab33cdf7ac22436fcc2148fe04c901237 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8243 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-03-30 09:21:48 -06:00
"testdata/src/calls/main.go",
"testdata/src/describe/main.go",
"testdata/src/freevars/main.go",
"testdata/src/implements/main.go",
"testdata/src/implements-methods/main.go",
"testdata/src/imports/main.go",
"testdata/src/peers/main.go",
"testdata/src/pointsto/main.go",
"testdata/src/reflection/main.go",
"testdata/src/what/main.go",
"testdata/src/whicherrs/main.go",
go.tools/oracle: add option to output results in JSON syntax. See json.go for interface specification. Example usage: % oracle -format=json -mode=callgraph code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/oracle + Tests, based on (small) golden files. Overview: Each <query>Result structure has been "lowered" so that all but the most trivial logic in each display() function has been moved to the main query. Each one now has a toJSON method that populates a json.Result struct. Though the <query>Result structs are similar to the correponding JSON protocol, they're not close enough to be used directly; for example, the former contain richer semantic entities (token.Pos, ast.Expr, ssa.Value, pointer.Pointer, etc) whereas JSON contains only their printed forms using Go basic types. The choices of what levels of abstractions the two sets of structs should have is somewhat arbitrary. We may want richer information in the JSON output in future. Details: - oracle.Main has been split into oracle.Query() and the printing of the oracle.Result. - the display() method no longer needs an *oracle param, only a print function. - callees: sort the result for determinism. - callees: compute the union across all contexts. - callers: sort the results for determinism. - describe(package): fixed a bug in the predicate for method accessibility: an unexported method defined in pkg A may belong to a type defined in package B (via embedding/promotion) and may thus be accessible to A. New accessibleMethods() utility fixes this. - describe(type): filter methods by accessibility. - added tests of 'callgraph'. - pointer: eliminated the 'caller CallGraphNode' parameter from pointer.Context.Call callback since it was redundant w.r.t site.Caller(). - added warning if CGO_ENABLED is unset. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13270045
2013-09-03 13:29:02 -06:00
// JSON:
// TODO(adonovan): most of these are very similar; combine them.
oracle: several major improvements Features: More robust: silently ignore type errors in modes that don't need SSA form: describe, referrers, implements, freevars, description. This makes the tool much more robust for everyday queries. Less configuration: don't require a scope argument for all queries. Only queries that do pointer analysis need it. For the rest, the initial position is enough for importQueryPackage to deduce the scope. It now works for queries in GoFiles, TestGoFiles, or XTestGoFiles. (It no longer works for ad-hoc main packages like $GOROOT/src/net/http/triv.go) More complete: "referrers" computes the scope automatically by scanning the import graph of the entire workspace, using gorename's refactor/importgraph package. This requires two passes at loading. Faster: simplified start-up logic avoids unnecessary package loading and SSA construction (a consequence of bad abstraction) in many cases. "callgraph": remove it. Unlike all the other commands it isn't related to the current selection, and we have golang.org/x/tools/cmdcallgraph now. Internals: Drop support for long-running clients (i.e., Pythia), since godoc -analysis supports all the same features except "pointsto", and precomputes all the results so latency is much lower. Get rid of various unhelpful abstractions introduced to support long-running clients. Expand out the set-up logic for each subcommand. This is simpler, easier to read, and gives us more control, at a small cost in duplication---the familiar story of abstractions. Discard PTA warnings. We weren't showing them (nor should we). Split tests into separate directories (so that importgraph works). Change-Id: I55d46b3ab33cdf7ac22436fcc2148fe04c901237 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8243 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-03-30 09:21:48 -06:00
"testdata/src/calls-json/main.go",
"testdata/src/peers-json/main.go",
"testdata/src/describe-json/main.go",
"testdata/src/implements-json/main.go",
"testdata/src/implements-methods-json/main.go",
"testdata/src/pointsto-json/main.go",
"testdata/src/referrers-json/main.go",
"testdata/src/what-json/main.go",
} {
oracle: several major improvements Features: More robust: silently ignore type errors in modes that don't need SSA form: describe, referrers, implements, freevars, description. This makes the tool much more robust for everyday queries. Less configuration: don't require a scope argument for all queries. Only queries that do pointer analysis need it. For the rest, the initial position is enough for importQueryPackage to deduce the scope. It now works for queries in GoFiles, TestGoFiles, or XTestGoFiles. (It no longer works for ad-hoc main packages like $GOROOT/src/net/http/triv.go) More complete: "referrers" computes the scope automatically by scanning the import graph of the entire workspace, using gorename's refactor/importgraph package. This requires two passes at loading. Faster: simplified start-up logic avoids unnecessary package loading and SSA construction (a consequence of bad abstraction) in many cases. "callgraph": remove it. Unlike all the other commands it isn't related to the current selection, and we have golang.org/x/tools/cmdcallgraph now. Internals: Drop support for long-running clients (i.e., Pythia), since godoc -analysis supports all the same features except "pointsto", and precomputes all the results so latency is much lower. Get rid of various unhelpful abstractions introduced to support long-running clients. Expand out the set-up logic for each subcommand. This is simpler, easier to read, and gives us more control, at a small cost in duplication---the familiar story of abstractions. Discard PTA warnings. We weren't showing them (nor should we). Split tests into separate directories (so that importgraph works). Change-Id: I55d46b3ab33cdf7ac22436fcc2148fe04c901237 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8243 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2015-03-30 09:21:48 -06:00
useJson := strings.Contains(filename, "-json/")
queries := parseQueries(t, filename)
golden := filename + "lden"
got := filename + "t"
gotfh, err := os.Create(got)
if err != nil {
t.Errorf("Create(%s) failed: %s", got, err)
continue
}
defer gotfh.Close()
defer os.Remove(got)
// Run the oracle on each query, redirecting its output
// and error (if any) to the foo.got file.
for _, q := range queries {
go.tools/oracle: add option to output results in JSON syntax. See json.go for interface specification. Example usage: % oracle -format=json -mode=callgraph code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/oracle + Tests, based on (small) golden files. Overview: Each <query>Result structure has been "lowered" so that all but the most trivial logic in each display() function has been moved to the main query. Each one now has a toJSON method that populates a json.Result struct. Though the <query>Result structs are similar to the correponding JSON protocol, they're not close enough to be used directly; for example, the former contain richer semantic entities (token.Pos, ast.Expr, ssa.Value, pointer.Pointer, etc) whereas JSON contains only their printed forms using Go basic types. The choices of what levels of abstractions the two sets of structs should have is somewhat arbitrary. We may want richer information in the JSON output in future. Details: - oracle.Main has been split into oracle.Query() and the printing of the oracle.Result. - the display() method no longer needs an *oracle param, only a print function. - callees: sort the result for determinism. - callees: compute the union across all contexts. - callers: sort the results for determinism. - describe(package): fixed a bug in the predicate for method accessibility: an unexported method defined in pkg A may belong to a type defined in package B (via embedding/promotion) and may thus be accessible to A. New accessibleMethods() utility fixes this. - describe(type): filter methods by accessibility. - added tests of 'callgraph'. - pointer: eliminated the 'caller CallGraphNode' parameter from pointer.Context.Call callback since it was redundant w.r.t site.Caller(). - added warning if CGO_ENABLED is unset. R=crawshaw CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/13270045
2013-09-03 13:29:02 -06:00
doQuery(gotfh, q, useJson)
}
// Compare foo.got with foo.golden.
var cmd *exec.Cmd
switch runtime.GOOS {
case "plan9":
cmd = exec.Command("/bin/diff", "-c", golden, got)
default:
cmd = exec.Command("/usr/bin/diff", "-u", golden, got)
}
buf := new(bytes.Buffer)
cmd.Stdout = buf
cmd.Stderr = os.Stderr
if err := cmd.Run(); err != nil {
t.Errorf("Oracle tests for %s failed: %s.\n%s\n",
filename, err, buf)
if *updateFlag {
t.Logf("Updating %s...", golden)
if err := exec.Command("/bin/cp", got, golden).Run(); err != nil {
t.Errorf("Update failed: %s", err)
}
}
}
}
}