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go/internal/imports/fix.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 imports
import (
"bytes"
"context"
"fmt"
"go/ast"
"go/build"
"go/parser"
"go/token"
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
"io/ioutil"
"os"
"os/exec"
"path"
"path/filepath"
"reflect"
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
"sort"
"strconv"
"strings"
"sync"
"time"
"unicode"
"unicode/utf8"
"golang.org/x/tools/go/ast/astutil"
"golang.org/x/tools/go/packages"
"golang.org/x/tools/internal/gopathwalk"
)
// importToGroup is a list of functions which map from an import path to
// a group number.
var importToGroup = []func(env *ProcessEnv, importPath string) (num int, ok bool){
func(env *ProcessEnv, importPath string) (num int, ok bool) {
if env.LocalPrefix == "" {
return
}
for _, p := range strings.Split(env.LocalPrefix, ",") {
if strings.HasPrefix(importPath, p) || strings.TrimSuffix(p, "/") == importPath {
return 3, true
}
}
return
},
func(_ *ProcessEnv, importPath string) (num int, ok bool) {
if strings.HasPrefix(importPath, "appengine") {
return 2, true
}
return
},
func(_ *ProcessEnv, importPath string) (num int, ok bool) {
if strings.Contains(importPath, ".") {
return 1, true
}
return
},
}
func importGroup(env *ProcessEnv, importPath string) int {
for _, fn := range importToGroup {
if n, ok := fn(env, importPath); ok {
return n
}
}
return 0
}
type ImportFixType int
const (
AddImport ImportFixType = iota
DeleteImport
SetImportName
)
type ImportFix struct {
// StmtInfo represents the import statement this fix will add, remove, or change.
StmtInfo ImportInfo
// IdentName is the identifier that this fix will add or remove.
IdentName string
// FixType is the type of fix this is (AddImport, DeleteImport, SetImportName).
FixType ImportFixType
}
// An ImportInfo represents a single import statement.
type ImportInfo struct {
ImportPath string // import path, e.g. "crypto/rand".
Name string // import name, e.g. "crand", or "" if none.
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// A packageInfo represents what's known about a package.
type packageInfo struct {
name string // real package name, if known.
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
exports map[string]bool // known exports.
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// parseOtherFiles parses all the Go files in srcDir except filename, including
// test files if filename looks like a test.
func parseOtherFiles(fset *token.FileSet, srcDir, filename string) []*ast.File {
// This could use go/packages but it doesn't buy much, and it fails
// with https://golang.org/issue/26296 in LoadFiles mode in some cases.
considerTests := strings.HasSuffix(filename, "_test.go")
fileBase := filepath.Base(filename)
packageFileInfos, err := ioutil.ReadDir(srcDir)
if err != nil {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
return nil
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
var files []*ast.File
for _, fi := range packageFileInfos {
if fi.Name() == fileBase || !strings.HasSuffix(fi.Name(), ".go") {
continue
}
if !considerTests && strings.HasSuffix(fi.Name(), "_test.go") {
continue
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
f, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, filepath.Join(srcDir, fi.Name()), nil, 0)
if err != nil {
continue
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
files = append(files, f)
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
return files
}
// addGlobals puts the names of package vars into the provided map.
func addGlobals(f *ast.File, globals map[string]bool) {
for _, decl := range f.Decls {
genDecl, ok := decl.(*ast.GenDecl)
if !ok {
continue
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
for _, spec := range genDecl.Specs {
valueSpec, ok := spec.(*ast.ValueSpec)
if !ok {
continue
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
globals[valueSpec.Names[0].Name] = true
}
}
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// collectReferences builds a map of selector expressions, from
// left hand side (X) to a set of right hand sides (Sel).
func collectReferences(f *ast.File) references {
refs := references{}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
var visitor visitFn
visitor = func(node ast.Node) ast.Visitor {
if node == nil {
return visitor
}
switch v := node.(type) {
case *ast.SelectorExpr:
xident, ok := v.X.(*ast.Ident)
if !ok {
break
}
if xident.Obj != nil {
// If the parser can resolve it, it's not a package ref.
break
}
if !ast.IsExported(v.Sel.Name) {
// Whatever this is, it's not exported from a package.
break
}
pkgName := xident.Name
r := refs[pkgName]
if r == nil {
r = make(map[string]bool)
refs[pkgName] = r
}
r[v.Sel.Name] = true
}
return visitor
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
ast.Walk(visitor, f)
return refs
}
// collectImports returns all the imports in f.
// Unnamed imports (., _) and "C" are ignored.
func collectImports(f *ast.File) []*ImportInfo {
var imports []*ImportInfo
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
for _, imp := range f.Imports {
var name string
if imp.Name != nil {
name = imp.Name.Name
}
if imp.Path.Value == `"C"` || name == "_" || name == "." {
continue
}
path := strings.Trim(imp.Path.Value, `"`)
imports = append(imports, &ImportInfo{
Name: name,
ImportPath: path,
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
})
}
return imports
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// findMissingImport searches pass's candidates for an import that provides
// pkg, containing all of syms.
func (p *pass) findMissingImport(pkg string, syms map[string]bool) *ImportInfo {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
for _, candidate := range p.candidates {
pkgInfo, ok := p.knownPackages[candidate.ImportPath]
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
if !ok {
continue
}
if p.importIdentifier(candidate) != pkg {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
continue
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
allFound := true
for right := range syms {
if !pkgInfo.exports[right] {
allFound = false
break
}
}
if allFound {
return candidate
}
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
return nil
}
// references is set of references found in a Go file. The first map key is the
// left hand side of a selector expression, the second key is the right hand
// side, and the value should always be true.
type references map[string]map[string]bool
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// A pass contains all the inputs and state necessary to fix a file's imports.
// It can be modified in some ways during use; see comments below.
type pass struct {
// Inputs. These must be set before a call to load, and not modified after.
fset *token.FileSet // fset used to parse f and its siblings.
f *ast.File // the file being fixed.
srcDir string // the directory containing f.
env *ProcessEnv // the environment to use for go commands, etc.
loadRealPackageNames bool // if true, load package names from disk rather than guessing them.
otherFiles []*ast.File // sibling files.
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// Intermediate state, generated by load.
existingImports map[string]*ImportInfo
allRefs references
missingRefs references
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// Inputs to fix. These can be augmented between successive fix calls.
lastTry bool // indicates that this is the last call and fix should clean up as best it can.
candidates []*ImportInfo // candidate imports in priority order.
knownPackages map[string]*packageInfo // information about all known packages.
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
// loadPackageNames saves the package names for everything referenced by imports.
func (p *pass) loadPackageNames(imports []*ImportInfo) error {
if p.env.Debug {
p.env.Logf("loading package names for %v packages", len(imports))
defer func() {
p.env.Logf("done loading package names for %v packages", len(imports))
}()
}
var unknown []string
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
for _, imp := range imports {
if _, ok := p.knownPackages[imp.ImportPath]; ok {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
continue
}
unknown = append(unknown, imp.ImportPath)
}
names, err := p.env.GetResolver().loadPackageNames(unknown, p.srcDir)
if err != nil {
return err
}
for path, name := range names {
p.knownPackages[path] = &packageInfo{
name: name,
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
exports: map[string]bool{},
}
}
return nil
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
// importIdentifier returns the identifier that imp will introduce. It will
// guess if the package name has not been loaded, e.g. because the source
// is not available.
func (p *pass) importIdentifier(imp *ImportInfo) string {
if imp.Name != "" {
return imp.Name
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
known := p.knownPackages[imp.ImportPath]
if known != nil && known.name != "" {
return known.name
}
return importPathToAssumedName(imp.ImportPath)
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// load reads in everything necessary to run a pass, and reports whether the
// file already has all the imports it needs. It fills in p.missingRefs with the
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// file's missing symbols, if any, or removes unused imports if not.
func (p *pass) load() ([]*ImportFix, bool) {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
p.knownPackages = map[string]*packageInfo{}
p.missingRefs = references{}
p.existingImports = map[string]*ImportInfo{}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// Load basic information about the file in question.
p.allRefs = collectReferences(p.f)
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// Load stuff from other files in the same package:
// global variables so we know they don't need resolving, and imports
// that we might want to mimic.
globals := map[string]bool{}
for _, otherFile := range p.otherFiles {
// Don't load globals from files that are in the same directory
// but a different package. Using them to suggest imports is OK.
if p.f.Name.Name == otherFile.Name.Name {
addGlobals(otherFile, globals)
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
p.candidates = append(p.candidates, collectImports(otherFile)...)
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// Resolve all the import paths we've seen to package names, and store
// f's imports by the identifier they introduce.
imports := collectImports(p.f)
if p.loadRealPackageNames {
err := p.loadPackageNames(append(imports, p.candidates...))
if err != nil {
if p.env.Debug {
p.env.Logf("loading package names: %v", err)
}
return nil, false
}
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
for _, imp := range imports {
p.existingImports[p.importIdentifier(imp)] = imp
}
// Find missing references.
for left, rights := range p.allRefs {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
if globals[left] {
continue
}
_, ok := p.existingImports[left]
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
if !ok {
p.missingRefs[left] = rights
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
continue
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
if len(p.missingRefs) != 0 {
return nil, false
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
return p.fix()
}
// fix attempts to satisfy missing imports using p.candidates. If it finds
// everything, or if p.lastTry is true, it updates fixes to add the imports it found,
// delete anything unused, and update import names, and returns true.
func (p *pass) fix() ([]*ImportFix, bool) {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// Find missing imports.
var selected []*ImportInfo
for left, rights := range p.missingRefs {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
if imp := p.findMissingImport(left, rights); imp != nil {
selected = append(selected, imp)
}
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
if !p.lastTry && len(selected) != len(p.missingRefs) {
return nil, false
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
// Found everything, or giving up. Add the new imports and remove any unused.
var fixes []*ImportFix
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
for _, imp := range p.existingImports {
// We deliberately ignore globals here, because we can't be sure
// they're in the same package. People do things like put multiple
// main packages in the same directory, and we don't want to
// remove imports if they happen to have the same name as a var in
// a different package.
if _, ok := p.allRefs[p.importIdentifier(imp)]; !ok {
fixes = append(fixes, &ImportFix{
StmtInfo: *imp,
IdentName: p.importIdentifier(imp),
FixType: DeleteImport,
})
continue
}
// An existing import may need to update its import name to be correct.
if name := p.importSpecName(imp); name != imp.Name {
fixes = append(fixes, &ImportFix{
StmtInfo: ImportInfo{
Name: name,
ImportPath: imp.ImportPath,
},
IdentName: p.importIdentifier(imp),
FixType: SetImportName,
})
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
for _, imp := range selected {
fixes = append(fixes, &ImportFix{
StmtInfo: ImportInfo{
Name: p.importSpecName(imp),
ImportPath: imp.ImportPath,
},
IdentName: p.importIdentifier(imp),
FixType: AddImport,
})
}
return fixes, true
}
// importSpecName gets the import name of imp in the import spec.
//
// When the import identifier matches the assumed import name, the import name does
// not appear in the import spec.
func (p *pass) importSpecName(imp *ImportInfo) string {
// If we did not load the real package names, or the name is already set,
// we just return the existing name.
if !p.loadRealPackageNames || imp.Name != "" {
return imp.Name
}
ident := p.importIdentifier(imp)
if ident == importPathToAssumedName(imp.ImportPath) {
return "" // ident not needed since the assumed and real names are the same.
}
return ident
}
// apply will perform the fixes on f in order.
func apply(fset *token.FileSet, f *ast.File, fixes []*ImportFix) {
for _, fix := range fixes {
switch fix.FixType {
case DeleteImport:
astutil.DeleteNamedImport(fset, f, fix.StmtInfo.Name, fix.StmtInfo.ImportPath)
case AddImport:
astutil.AddNamedImport(fset, f, fix.StmtInfo.Name, fix.StmtInfo.ImportPath)
case SetImportName:
// Find the matching import path and change the name.
for _, spec := range f.Imports {
path := strings.Trim(spec.Path.Value, `"`)
if path == fix.StmtInfo.ImportPath {
spec.Name = &ast.Ident{
Name: fix.StmtInfo.Name,
NamePos: spec.Pos(),
}
}
}
}
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
// assumeSiblingImportsValid assumes that siblings' use of packages is valid,
// adding the exports they use.
func (p *pass) assumeSiblingImportsValid() {
for _, f := range p.otherFiles {
refs := collectReferences(f)
imports := collectImports(f)
importsByName := map[string]*ImportInfo{}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
for _, imp := range imports {
importsByName[p.importIdentifier(imp)] = imp
}
for left, rights := range refs {
if imp, ok := importsByName[left]; ok {
if m, ok := stdlib[imp.ImportPath]; ok {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// We have the stdlib in memory; no need to guess.
rights = copyExports(m)
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
p.addCandidate(imp, &packageInfo{
// no name; we already know it.
exports: rights,
})
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// addCandidate adds a candidate import to p, and merges in the information
// in pkg.
func (p *pass) addCandidate(imp *ImportInfo, pkg *packageInfo) {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
p.candidates = append(p.candidates, imp)
if existing, ok := p.knownPackages[imp.ImportPath]; ok {
if existing.name == "" {
existing.name = pkg.name
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
for export := range pkg.exports {
existing.exports[export] = true
}
} else {
p.knownPackages[imp.ImportPath] = pkg
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
}
// fixImports adds and removes imports from f so that all its references are
// satisfied and there are no unused imports.
//
// This is declared as a variable rather than a function so goimports can
// easily be extended by adding a file with an init function.
var fixImports = fixImportsDefault
func fixImportsDefault(fset *token.FileSet, f *ast.File, filename string, env *ProcessEnv) error {
fixes, err := getFixes(fset, f, filename, env)
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
if err != nil {
return err
}
apply(fset, f, fixes)
return err
}
// getFixes gets the import fixes that need to be made to f in order to fix the imports.
// It does not modify the ast.
func getFixes(fset *token.FileSet, f *ast.File, filename string, env *ProcessEnv) ([]*ImportFix, error) {
abs, err := filepath.Abs(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
srcDir := filepath.Dir(abs)
if env.Debug {
env.Logf("fixImports(filename=%q), abs=%q, srcDir=%q ...", filename, abs, srcDir)
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
// First pass: looking only at f, and using the naive algorithm to
// derive package names from import paths, see if the file is already
// complete. We can't add any imports yet, because we don't know
// if missing references are actually package vars.
p := &pass{fset: fset, f: f, srcDir: srcDir}
if fixes, done := p.load(); done {
return fixes, nil
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
otherFiles := parseOtherFiles(fset, srcDir, filename)
// Second pass: add information from other files in the same package,
// like their package vars and imports.
p.otherFiles = otherFiles
if fixes, done := p.load(); done {
return fixes, nil
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
// Now we can try adding imports from the stdlib.
p.assumeSiblingImportsValid()
addStdlibCandidates(p, p.missingRefs)
if fixes, done := p.fix(); done {
return fixes, nil
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
// Third pass: get real package names where we had previously used
// the naive algorithm. This is the first step that will use the
// environment, so we provide it here for the first time.
p = &pass{fset: fset, f: f, srcDir: srcDir, env: env}
p.loadRealPackageNames = true
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
p.otherFiles = otherFiles
if fixes, done := p.load(); done {
return fixes, nil
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
addStdlibCandidates(p, p.missingRefs)
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
p.assumeSiblingImportsValid()
if fixes, done := p.fix(); done {
return fixes, nil
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
// Go look for candidates in $GOPATH, etc. We don't necessarily load
// the real exports of sibling imports, so keep assuming their contents.
if err := addExternalCandidates(p, p.missingRefs, filename); err != nil {
return nil, err
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
p.lastTry = true
fixes, _ := p.fix()
return fixes, nil
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
// getCandidatePkgs returns the list of pkgs that are accessible from filename,
// optionall filtered to only packages named pkgName.
func getCandidatePkgs(pkgName, filename string, env *ProcessEnv) ([]*pkg, error) {
// TODO(heschi): filter out current package. (Don't forget x_test can import x.)
var result []*pkg
// Start off with the standard library.
for importPath := range stdlib {
if pkgName != "" && path.Base(importPath) != pkgName {
continue
}
result = append(result, &pkg{
dir: filepath.Join(env.GOROOT, "src", importPath),
importPathShort: importPath,
packageName: path.Base(importPath),
relevance: 0,
})
}
// Exclude goroot results -- getting them is relatively expensive, not cached,
// and generally redundant with the in-memory version.
exclude := []gopathwalk.RootType{gopathwalk.RootGOROOT}
// Only the go/packages resolver uses the first argument, and nobody uses that resolver.
scannedPkgs, err := env.GetResolver().scan(nil, true, exclude)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
dupCheck := map[string]struct{}{}
for _, pkg := range scannedPkgs {
if pkgName != "" && pkg.packageName != pkgName {
continue
}
if !canUse(filename, pkg.dir) {
continue
}
if _, ok := dupCheck[pkg.importPathShort]; ok {
continue
}
dupCheck[pkg.importPathShort] = struct{}{}
result = append(result, pkg)
}
// Sort first by relevance, then by package name, with import path as a tiebreaker.
sort.Slice(result, func(i, j int) bool {
pi, pj := result[i], result[j]
if pi.relevance != pj.relevance {
return pi.relevance < pj.relevance
}
if pi.packageName != pj.packageName {
return pi.packageName < pj.packageName
}
return pi.importPathShort < pj.importPathShort
})
return result, nil
}
// getAllCandidates gets all of the candidates to be imported, regardless of if they are needed.
func getAllCandidates(filename string, env *ProcessEnv) ([]ImportFix, error) {
pkgs, err := getCandidatePkgs("", filename, env)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
result := make([]ImportFix, 0, len(pkgs))
for _, pkg := range pkgs {
result = append(result, ImportFix{
StmtInfo: ImportInfo{
ImportPath: pkg.importPathShort,
},
IdentName: pkg.packageName,
FixType: AddImport,
})
}
return result, nil
}
// A PackageExport is a package and its exports.
type PackageExport struct {
Fix *ImportFix
Exports []string
}
func getPackageExports(completePackage, filename string, env *ProcessEnv) ([]PackageExport, error) {
pkgs, err := getCandidatePkgs(completePackage, filename, env)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
results := make([]PackageExport, 0, len(pkgs))
for _, pkg := range pkgs {
fix := &ImportFix{
StmtInfo: ImportInfo{
ImportPath: pkg.importPathShort,
},
IdentName: pkg.packageName,
FixType: AddImport,
}
var exports []string
if e, ok := stdlib[pkg.importPathShort]; ok {
exports = e
} else {
exports, err = loadExportsForPackage(context.Background(), env, completePackage, pkg)
if err != nil {
if env.Debug {
env.Logf("while completing %q, error loading exports from %q: %v", completePackage, pkg.importPathShort, err)
}
continue
}
}
sort.Strings(exports)
results = append(results, PackageExport{
Fix: fix,
Exports: exports,
})
}
return results, nil
}
// ProcessEnv contains environment variables and settings that affect the use of
// the go command, the go/build package, etc.
type ProcessEnv struct {
LocalPrefix string
Debug bool
// If non-empty, these will be used instead of the
// process-wide values.
GOPATH, GOROOT, GO111MODULE, GOPROXY, GOFLAGS, GOSUMDB string
WorkingDir string
// If true, use go/packages regardless of the environment.
ForceGoPackages bool
// Logf is the default logger for the ProcessEnv.
Logf func(format string, args ...interface{})
resolver Resolver
}
func (e *ProcessEnv) env() []string {
env := os.Environ()
add := func(k, v string) {
if v != "" {
env = append(env, k+"="+v)
}
}
add("GOPATH", e.GOPATH)
add("GOROOT", e.GOROOT)
add("GO111MODULE", e.GO111MODULE)
add("GOPROXY", e.GOPROXY)
add("GOFLAGS", e.GOFLAGS)
add("GOSUMDB", e.GOSUMDB)
if e.WorkingDir != "" {
add("PWD", e.WorkingDir)
}
return env
}
func (e *ProcessEnv) GetResolver() Resolver {
if e.resolver != nil {
return e.resolver
}
if e.ForceGoPackages {
e.resolver = &goPackagesResolver{env: e}
return e.resolver
}
out, err := e.invokeGo("env", "GOMOD")
if err != nil || len(bytes.TrimSpace(out.Bytes())) == 0 {
e.resolver = &gopathResolver{env: e}
return e.resolver
}
e.resolver = &ModuleResolver{env: e}
return e.resolver
}
func (e *ProcessEnv) newPackagesConfig(mode packages.LoadMode) *packages.Config {
return &packages.Config{
Mode: mode,
Dir: e.WorkingDir,
Env: e.env(),
}
}
func (e *ProcessEnv) buildContext() *build.Context {
ctx := build.Default
ctx.GOROOT = e.GOROOT
ctx.GOPATH = e.GOPATH
// As of Go 1.14, build.Context has a WorkingDir field
// (see golang.org/issue/34860).
// Populate it only if present.
if wd := reflect.ValueOf(&ctx).Elem().FieldByName("WorkingDir"); wd.IsValid() && wd.Kind() == reflect.String {
wd.SetString(e.WorkingDir)
}
return &ctx
}
func (e *ProcessEnv) invokeGo(args ...string) (*bytes.Buffer, error) {
cmd := exec.Command("go", args...)
stdout := &bytes.Buffer{}
stderr := &bytes.Buffer{}
cmd.Stdout = stdout
cmd.Stderr = stderr
cmd.Env = e.env()
cmd.Dir = e.WorkingDir
if e.Debug {
defer func(start time.Time) { e.Logf("%s for %v", time.Since(start), cmdDebugStr(cmd)) }(time.Now())
}
if err := cmd.Run(); err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("running go: %v (stderr:\n%s)", err, stderr)
}
return stdout, nil
}
func cmdDebugStr(cmd *exec.Cmd) string {
env := make(map[string]string)
for _, kv := range cmd.Env {
split := strings.Split(kv, "=")
k, v := split[0], split[1]
env[k] = v
}
return fmt.Sprintf("GOROOT=%v GOPATH=%v GO111MODULE=%v GOPROXY=%v PWD=%v go %v", env["GOROOT"], env["GOPATH"], env["GO111MODULE"], env["GOPROXY"], env["PWD"], cmd.Args)
}
func addStdlibCandidates(pass *pass, refs references) {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
add := func(pkg string) {
exports := copyExports(stdlib[pkg])
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
pass.addCandidate(
&ImportInfo{ImportPath: pkg},
&packageInfo{name: path.Base(pkg), exports: exports})
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
for left := range refs {
if left == "rand" {
// Make sure we try crypto/rand before math/rand.
add("crypto/rand")
add("math/rand")
continue
}
for importPath := range stdlib {
if path.Base(importPath) == left {
add(importPath)
}
}
}
}
// A Resolver does the build-system-specific parts of goimports.
type Resolver interface {
// loadPackageNames loads the package names in importPaths.
loadPackageNames(importPaths []string, srcDir string) (map[string]string, error)
// scan finds (at least) the packages satisfying refs. If loadNames is true,
// package names will be set on the results, and dirs whose package name
// could not be determined will be excluded.
scan(refs references, loadNames bool, exclude []gopathwalk.RootType) ([]*pkg, error)
// loadExports returns the set of exported symbols in the package at dir.
// loadExports may be called concurrently.
loadExports(ctx context.Context, pkg *pkg) (string, []string, error)
ClearForNewScan()
}
// gopackagesResolver implements resolver for GOPATH and module workspaces using go/packages.
type goPackagesResolver struct {
env *ProcessEnv
}
func (r *goPackagesResolver) ClearForNewScan() {}
func (r *goPackagesResolver) loadPackageNames(importPaths []string, srcDir string) (map[string]string, error) {
if len(importPaths) == 0 {
return nil, nil
}
cfg := r.env.newPackagesConfig(packages.LoadFiles)
pkgs, err := packages.Load(cfg, importPaths...)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
names := map[string]string{}
for _, pkg := range pkgs {
names[VendorlessPath(pkg.PkgPath)] = pkg.Name
}
// We may not have found all the packages. Guess the rest.
for _, path := range importPaths {
if _, ok := names[path]; ok {
continue
}
names[path] = importPathToAssumedName(path)
}
return names, nil
}
func (r *goPackagesResolver) scan(refs references, _ bool, _ []gopathwalk.RootType) ([]*pkg, error) {
var loadQueries []string
for pkgName := range refs {
loadQueries = append(loadQueries, "iamashamedtousethedisabledqueryname="+pkgName)
}
sort.Strings(loadQueries)
cfg := r.env.newPackagesConfig(packages.LoadFiles)
goPackages, err := packages.Load(cfg, loadQueries...)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
var scan []*pkg
for _, goPackage := range goPackages {
scan = append(scan, &pkg{
dir: filepath.Dir(goPackage.CompiledGoFiles[0]),
importPathShort: VendorlessPath(goPackage.PkgPath),
goPackage: goPackage,
packageName: goPackage.Name,
})
}
return scan, nil
}
func (r *goPackagesResolver) loadExports(ctx context.Context, pkg *pkg) (string, []string, error) {
if pkg.goPackage == nil {
return "", nil, fmt.Errorf("goPackage not set")
}
var exports []string
fset := token.NewFileSet()
for _, fname := range pkg.goPackage.CompiledGoFiles {
f, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, fname, nil, 0)
if err != nil {
return "", nil, fmt.Errorf("parsing %s: %v", fname, err)
}
for name := range f.Scope.Objects {
if ast.IsExported(name) {
exports = append(exports, name)
}
}
}
return pkg.goPackage.Name, exports, nil
}
func addExternalCandidates(pass *pass, refs references, filename string) error {
dirScan, err := pass.env.GetResolver().scan(refs, false, nil)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Search for imports matching potential package references.
type result struct {
imp *ImportInfo
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
pkg *packageInfo
}
results := make(chan result, len(refs))
ctx, cancel := context.WithCancel(context.TODO())
var wg sync.WaitGroup
defer func() {
cancel()
wg.Wait()
}()
var (
firstErr error
firstErrOnce sync.Once
)
for pkgName, symbols := range refs {
wg.Add(1)
go func(pkgName string, symbols map[string]bool) {
defer wg.Done()
found, err := findImport(ctx, pass, dirScan, pkgName, symbols, filename)
if err != nil {
firstErrOnce.Do(func() {
firstErr = err
cancel()
})
return
}
if found == nil {
return // No matching package.
}
imp := &ImportInfo{
ImportPath: found.importPathShort,
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
}
pkg := &packageInfo{
name: pkgName,
exports: symbols,
}
results <- result{imp, pkg}
}(pkgName, symbols)
}
go func() {
wg.Wait()
close(results)
}()
for result := range results {
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
pass.addCandidate(result.imp, result.pkg)
}
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
return firstErr
}
// notIdentifier reports whether ch is an invalid identifier character.
func notIdentifier(ch rune) bool {
return !('a' <= ch && ch <= 'z' || 'A' <= ch && ch <= 'Z' ||
'0' <= ch && ch <= '9' ||
ch == '_' ||
ch >= utf8.RuneSelf && (unicode.IsLetter(ch) || unicode.IsDigit(ch)))
}
// importPathToAssumedName returns the assumed package name of an import path.
// It does this using only string parsing of the import path.
// It picks the last element of the path that does not look like a major
// version, and then picks the valid identifier off the start of that element.
// It is used to determine if a local rename should be added to an import for
// clarity.
// This function could be moved to a standard package and exported if we want
// for use in other tools.
func importPathToAssumedName(importPath string) string {
base := path.Base(importPath)
if strings.HasPrefix(base, "v") {
if _, err := strconv.Atoi(base[1:]); err == nil {
dir := path.Dir(importPath)
if dir != "." {
base = path.Base(dir)
}
}
}
base = strings.TrimPrefix(base, "go-")
if i := strings.IndexFunc(base, notIdentifier); i >= 0 {
base = base[:i]
}
return base
}
// gopathResolver implements resolver for GOPATH workspaces.
type gopathResolver struct {
env *ProcessEnv
cache *dirInfoCache
}
func (r *gopathResolver) init() {
if r.cache == nil {
r.cache = &dirInfoCache{
dirs: map[string]*directoryPackageInfo{},
}
}
}
func (r *gopathResolver) ClearForNewScan() {
r.cache = nil
}
func (r *gopathResolver) loadPackageNames(importPaths []string, srcDir string) (map[string]string, error) {
r.init()
names := map[string]string{}
for _, path := range importPaths {
names[path] = importPathToName(r.env, path, srcDir)
}
return names, nil
}
// importPathToName finds out the actual package name, as declared in its .go files.
// If there's a problem, it returns "".
func importPathToName(env *ProcessEnv, importPath, srcDir string) (packageName string) {
// Fast path for standard library without going to disk.
imports: redesign fixImports Redesign fixImports to have a clearer workflow, and hopefully create clear places to plug in go/packages. This change is mostly performance/functionality neutral, but does clean up some corner cases. The new flow centers around the pass type, which encapsulates the process of loading information about the current code, adding possible new imports, and trying to apply them. I'm hoping that it's easy to understand what's happening just by reading fixImports, and that new sources of information (e.g. a network service) fit well into that flow. Where possible, I left the functions near where they were extracted in hopes of making review easier, but it's probably not going to be easy. Sorry. I might move them into a more reasonable order in a followup CL. Notable modifications: - The stdlib cache is restructured to match pass' internal storage. - Sibling imports with conflicting names are considered. - Package name lookups are batched, hopefully making it easier to plug in go/packages. Questions that might be worth answering: - Should findImportGoPath really scan $GOROOT? Unless the user is working on a development copy, it's totally redundant with the cache. - What is the best way to combine candidates from multiple sources? Right now the first one wins, and findStdlibCandidates relies on that to get crypto/rand ahead of math/rand. - In the third pass, should it assume sibling imports or should it actually go load the exports? It didn't load them before, but that seems arbitrary. Change-Id: Ie4ad0b69bfbe9b16883f2b0517b1278575c9f540 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/150339 Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-11-19 15:56:05 -07:00
if _, ok := stdlib[importPath]; ok {
return path.Base(importPath) // stdlib packages always match their paths.
}
buildPkg, err := env.buildContext().Import(importPath, srcDir, build.FindOnly)
if err != nil {
return ""
}
pkgName, err := packageDirToName(buildPkg.Dir)
if err != nil {
return ""
}
return pkgName
}
// packageDirToName is a faster version of build.Import if
// the only thing desired is the package name. Given a directory,
// packageDirToName then only parses one file in the package,
// trusting that the files in the directory are consistent.
func packageDirToName(dir string) (packageName string, err error) {
d, err := os.Open(dir)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
names, err := d.Readdirnames(-1)
d.Close()
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
sort.Strings(names) // to have predictable behavior
var lastErr error
var nfile int
for _, name := range names {
if !strings.HasSuffix(name, ".go") {
continue
}
if strings.HasSuffix(name, "_test.go") {
continue
}
nfile++
fullFile := filepath.Join(dir, name)
fset := token.NewFileSet()
f, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, fullFile, nil, parser.PackageClauseOnly)
if err != nil {
lastErr = err
continue
}
pkgName := f.Name.Name
if pkgName == "documentation" {
// Special case from go/build.ImportDir, not
// handled by ctx.MatchFile.
continue
}
if pkgName == "main" {
// Also skip package main, assuming it's a +build ignore generator or example.
// Since you can't import a package main anyway, there's no harm here.
continue
}
return pkgName, nil
}
if lastErr != nil {
return "", lastErr
}
return "", fmt.Errorf("no importable package found in %d Go files", nfile)
}
type pkg struct {
goPackage *packages.Package
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
dir string // absolute file path to pkg directory ("/usr/lib/go/src/net/http")
importPathShort string // vendorless import path ("net/http", "a/b")
packageName string // package name loaded from source if requested
relevance int // a weakly-defined score of how relevant a package is. 0 is most relevant.
}
type pkgDistance struct {
pkg *pkg
distance int // relative distance to target
}
// byDistanceOrImportPathShortLength sorts by relative distance breaking ties
// on the short import path length and then the import string itself.
type byDistanceOrImportPathShortLength []pkgDistance
func (s byDistanceOrImportPathShortLength) Len() int { return len(s) }
func (s byDistanceOrImportPathShortLength) Less(i, j int) bool {
di, dj := s[i].distance, s[j].distance
if di == -1 {
return false
}
if dj == -1 {
return true
}
if di != dj {
return di < dj
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
vi, vj := s[i].pkg.importPathShort, s[j].pkg.importPathShort
if len(vi) != len(vj) {
return len(vi) < len(vj)
}
return vi < vj
}
func (s byDistanceOrImportPathShortLength) Swap(i, j int) { s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i] }
func distance(basepath, targetpath string) int {
p, err := filepath.Rel(basepath, targetpath)
if err != nil {
return -1
}
if p == "." {
return 0
}
return strings.Count(p, string(filepath.Separator)) + 1
}
func (r *gopathResolver) scan(_ references, loadNames bool, exclude []gopathwalk.RootType) ([]*pkg, error) {
r.init()
add := func(root gopathwalk.Root, dir string) {
// We assume cached directories have not changed. We can skip them and their
// children.
if _, ok := r.cache.Load(dir); ok {
return
}
importpath := filepath.ToSlash(dir[len(root.Path)+len("/"):])
info := directoryPackageInfo{
status: directoryScanned,
dir: dir,
rootType: root.Type,
nonCanonicalImportPath: VendorlessPath(importpath),
}
r.cache.Store(dir, info)
}
roots := filterRoots(gopathwalk.SrcDirsRoots(r.env.buildContext()), exclude)
gopathwalk.Walk(roots, add, gopathwalk.Options{Debug: r.env.Debug, ModulesEnabled: false})
var result []*pkg
for _, dir := range r.cache.Keys() {
info, ok := r.cache.Load(dir)
if !ok {
continue
}
if loadNames {
var err error
info, err = r.cache.CachePackageName(info)
if err != nil {
continue
}
}
p := &pkg{
importPathShort: info.nonCanonicalImportPath,
dir: dir,
relevance: 1,
packageName: info.packageName,
}
if info.rootType == gopathwalk.RootGOROOT {
p.relevance = 0
}
result = append(result, p)
}
return result, nil
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
func filterRoots(roots []gopathwalk.Root, exclude []gopathwalk.RootType) []gopathwalk.Root {
var result []gopathwalk.Root
outer:
for _, root := range roots {
for _, i := range exclude {
if i == root.Type {
continue outer
}
}
result = append(result, root)
}
return result
}
func (r *gopathResolver) loadExports(ctx context.Context, pkg *pkg) (string, []string, error) {
r.init()
if info, ok := r.cache.Load(pkg.dir); ok {
return r.cache.CacheExports(ctx, r.env, info)
}
return loadExportsFromFiles(ctx, r.env, pkg.dir)
}
// VendorlessPath returns the devendorized version of the import path ipath.
// For example, VendorlessPath("foo/bar/vendor/a/b") returns "a/b".
func VendorlessPath(ipath string) string {
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
// Devendorize for use in import statement.
if i := strings.LastIndex(ipath, "/vendor/"); i >= 0 {
return ipath[i+len("/vendor/"):]
}
if strings.HasPrefix(ipath, "vendor/") {
return ipath[len("vendor/"):]
}
return ipath
}
func loadExportsFromFiles(ctx context.Context, env *ProcessEnv, dir string) (string, []string, error) {
var exports []string
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
// Look for non-test, buildable .go files which could provide exports.
all, err := ioutil.ReadDir(dir)
if err != nil {
return "", nil, err
}
var files []os.FileInfo
for _, fi := range all {
name := fi.Name()
if !strings.HasSuffix(name, ".go") || strings.HasSuffix(name, "_test.go") {
continue
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
match, err := env.buildContext().MatchFile(dir, fi.Name())
if err != nil || !match {
continue
}
files = append(files, fi)
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
if len(files) == 0 {
return "", nil, fmt.Errorf("dir %v contains no buildable, non-test .go files", dir)
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
var pkgName string
fset := token.NewFileSet()
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
for _, fi := range files {
select {
case <-ctx.Done():
return "", nil, ctx.Err()
default:
}
fullFile := filepath.Join(dir, fi.Name())
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
f, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, fullFile, nil, 0)
if err != nil {
return "", nil, fmt.Errorf("parsing %s: %v", fullFile, err)
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
if f.Name.Name == "documentation" {
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
// Special case from go/build.ImportDir, not
// handled by MatchFile above.
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
continue
}
pkgName = f.Name.Name
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
for name := range f.Scope.Objects {
if ast.IsExported(name) {
exports = append(exports, name)
}
}
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
if env.Debug {
sortedExports := append([]string(nil), exports...)
sort.Strings(sortedExports)
env.Logf("loaded exports in dir %v (package %v): %v", dir, pkgName, strings.Join(sortedExports, ", "))
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
return pkgName, exports, nil
}
// findImport searches for a package with the given symbols.
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
// If no package is found, findImport returns ("", false, nil)
func findImport(ctx context.Context, pass *pass, dirScan []*pkg, pkgName string, symbols map[string]bool, filename string) (*pkg, error) {
pkgDir, err := filepath.Abs(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
pkgDir = filepath.Dir(pkgDir)
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
// Find candidate packages, looking only at their directory names first.
var candidates []pkgDistance
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
for _, pkg := range dirScan {
if pkg.dir == pkgDir && pass.f.Name.Name == pkgName {
// The candidate is in the same directory and has the
// same package name. Don't try to import ourselves.
continue
}
if pkgIsCandidate(filename, pkgName, pkg) {
candidates = append(candidates, pkgDistance{
pkg: pkg,
distance: distance(pkgDir, pkg.dir),
})
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
// Sort the candidates by their import package length,
// assuming that shorter package names are better than long
// ones. Note that this sorts by the de-vendored name, so
// there's no "penalty" for vendoring.
sort.Sort(byDistanceOrImportPathShortLength(candidates))
if pass.env.Debug {
for i, c := range candidates {
pass.env.Logf("%s candidate %d/%d: %v in %v", pkgName, i+1, len(candidates), c.pkg.importPathShort, c.pkg.dir)
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
// Collect exports for packages with matching names.
rescv := make([]chan *pkg, len(candidates))
for i := range candidates {
rescv[i] = make(chan *pkg, 1)
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
const maxConcurrentPackageImport = 4
loadExportsSem := make(chan struct{}, maxConcurrentPackageImport)
ctx, cancel := context.WithCancel(ctx)
var wg sync.WaitGroup
defer func() {
cancel()
wg.Wait()
}()
wg.Add(1)
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
go func() {
defer wg.Done()
for i, c := range candidates {
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
select {
case loadExportsSem <- struct{}{}:
case <-ctx.Done():
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
return
}
wg.Add(1)
go func(c pkgDistance, resc chan<- *pkg) {
defer func() {
<-loadExportsSem
wg.Done()
}()
if pass.env.Debug {
pass.env.Logf("loading exports in dir %s (seeking package %s)", c.pkg.dir, pkgName)
}
exports, err := loadExportsForPackage(ctx, pass.env, pkgName, c.pkg)
if err != nil {
if pass.env.Debug {
pass.env.Logf("loading exports in dir %s (seeking package %s): %v", c.pkg.dir, pkgName, err)
}
resc <- nil
return
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
exportsMap := make(map[string]bool, len(exports))
for _, sym := range exports {
exportsMap[sym] = true
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
// If it doesn't have the right
// symbols, send nil to mean no match.
for symbol := range symbols {
if !exportsMap[symbol] {
resc <- nil
return
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
}
resc <- c.pkg
}(c, rescv[i])
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
}()
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
for _, resc := range rescv {
pkg := <-resc
if pkg == nil {
continue
}
return pkg, nil
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
}
return nil, nil
}
func loadExportsForPackage(ctx context.Context, env *ProcessEnv, expectPkg string, pkg *pkg) ([]string, error) {
pkgName, exports, err := env.GetResolver().loadExports(ctx, pkg)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if expectPkg != pkgName {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("dir %v is package %v, wanted %v", pkg.dir, pkgName, expectPkg)
}
return exports, err
}
// pkgIsCandidate reports whether pkg is a candidate for satisfying the
// finding which package pkgIdent in the file named by filename is trying
// to refer to.
//
// This check is purely lexical and is meant to be as fast as possible
// because it's run over all $GOPATH directories to filter out poor
// candidates in order to limit the CPU and I/O later parsing the
// exports in candidate packages.
//
// filename is the file being formatted.
// pkgIdent is the package being searched for, like "client" (if
// searching for "client.New")
func pkgIsCandidate(filename, pkgIdent string, pkg *pkg) bool {
// Check "internal" and "vendor" visibility:
if !canUse(filename, pkg.dir) {
return false
}
// Speed optimization to minimize disk I/O:
// the last two components on disk must contain the
// package name somewhere.
//
// This permits mismatch naming like directory
// "go-foo" being package "foo", or "pkg.v3" being "pkg",
// or directory "google.golang.org/api/cloudbilling/v1"
// being package "cloudbilling", but doesn't
// permit a directory "foo" to be package
// "bar", which is strongly discouraged
// anyway. There's no reason goimports needs
// to be slow just to accommodate that.
lastTwo := lastTwoComponents(pkg.importPathShort)
if strings.Contains(lastTwo, pkgIdent) {
return true
}
if hasHyphenOrUpperASCII(lastTwo) && !hasHyphenOrUpperASCII(pkgIdent) {
lastTwo = lowerASCIIAndRemoveHyphen(lastTwo)
if strings.Contains(lastTwo, pkgIdent) {
return true
}
}
return false
}
func hasHyphenOrUpperASCII(s string) bool {
for i := 0; i < len(s); i++ {
b := s[i]
if b == '-' || ('A' <= b && b <= 'Z') {
return true
}
}
return false
}
func lowerASCIIAndRemoveHyphen(s string) (ret string) {
buf := make([]byte, 0, len(s))
for i := 0; i < len(s); i++ {
b := s[i]
switch {
case b == '-':
continue
case 'A' <= b && b <= 'Z':
buf = append(buf, b+('a'-'A'))
default:
buf = append(buf, b)
}
}
return string(buf)
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
// canUse reports whether the package in dir is usable from filename,
// respecting the Go "internal" and "vendor" visibility rules.
func canUse(filename, dir string) bool {
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
// Fast path check, before any allocations. If it doesn't contain vendor
// or internal, it's not tricky:
// Note that this can false-negative on directories like "notinternal",
// but we check it correctly below. This is just a fast path.
if !strings.Contains(dir, "vendor") && !strings.Contains(dir, "internal") {
return true
}
dirSlash := filepath.ToSlash(dir)
if !strings.Contains(dirSlash, "/vendor/") && !strings.Contains(dirSlash, "/internal/") && !strings.HasSuffix(dirSlash, "/internal") {
return true
}
// Vendor or internal directory only visible from children of parent.
// That means the path from the current directory to the target directory
// can contain ../vendor or ../internal but not ../foo/vendor or ../foo/internal
// or bar/vendor or bar/internal.
// After stripping all the leading ../, the only okay place to see vendor or internal
// is at the very beginning of the path.
absfile, err := filepath.Abs(filename)
if err != nil {
return false
}
absdir, err := filepath.Abs(dir)
if err != nil {
return false
}
rel, err := filepath.Rel(absfile, absdir)
if err != nil {
return false
}
relSlash := filepath.ToSlash(rel)
if i := strings.LastIndex(relSlash, "../"); i >= 0 {
relSlash = relSlash[i+len("../"):]
}
return !strings.Contains(relSlash, "/vendor/") && !strings.Contains(relSlash, "/internal/") && !strings.HasSuffix(relSlash, "/internal")
}
cmd/goimports, imports: make goimports great again I felt the burn of my laptop on my legs, spinning away while processing goimports, and felt that it was time to make goimports great again. Over the past few years goimports fell into a slow state of disrepair with too many feature additions and no attention to the performance death by a thousand cuts. This was particularly terrible on OS X with its lackluster filesystem buffering. This CL makes goimports stronger, together with various optimizations and more visibility into what goimports is doing. * adds more internal documentation * avoids scanning $GOPATH for answers when running goimports on a file under $GOROOT (for Go core hackers) * don't read all $GOROOT & $GOPATH directories' Go code looking for their package names until much later. Require the package name of missing imports to be present in the last two directory path components. Then only try importing them in order from best to worst (shortest to longest, as before), so we can stop early. * when adding imports, add names to imports when the imported package name doesn't match the baes of its import path. For example: import foo "example.net/foo/v1" * don't read all *.go files in a package directory once the first file in a directory has revealed itself to be a package we're not looking for. For example, if we're looking for the right "client" for "client.Foo", we used to consider a directory "bar/client" as a candidate and read all 50 of its *.go files instead of stopping after its first *.go file had a "package main" line. * add some fast paths to remove allocations * add some fast paths to remove disk I/O when looking up the base package name of a standard library import (of existing imports in a file, which are very common) * adds a special case for import "C", to avoid some disk I/O. * add a -verbose flag to goimports for debugging On my Mac laptop with a huge $GOPATH, with a test file like: package foo import ( "fmt" "net/http" ) /* */ import "C" var _ = cloudbilling.New var _ = http.NewRequest var _ = client.New ... this took like 10 seconds before, and now 1.3 seconds. (Still slow; disk-based caching can come later) Updates golang/go#16367 (goimports is slow) Updates golang/go#16384 (refactor TestRename is broken on Windows) Change-Id: I97e85d3016afc9f2ad5501f97babad30c7989183 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/24941 Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rob Pike <r@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2016-07-14 18:08:27 -06:00
// lastTwoComponents returns at most the last two path components
// of v, using either / or \ as the path separator.
func lastTwoComponents(v string) string {
nslash := 0
for i := len(v) - 1; i >= 0; i-- {
if v[i] == '/' || v[i] == '\\' {
nslash++
if nslash == 2 {
return v[i:]
}
}
}
return v
}
type visitFn func(node ast.Node) ast.Visitor
func (fn visitFn) Visit(node ast.Node) ast.Visitor {
return fn(node)
}
func copyExports(pkg []string) map[string]bool {
m := make(map[string]bool, len(pkg))
for _, v := range pkg {
m[v] = true
}
return m
}