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cmd/go/internal/mvs: prune spurious dependencies in Downgrade

Previously, mvs.Downgrade could introduce spurious dependencies if the
downgrade computed for one module lands on a “hidden” version (such as
a pseudo-version) due to a requirement introduced by the downgrade for
another module.

To eliminate those spurious dependencies, we can add one more call to
BuildList to recompute the “actual” downgraded versions, and then
including only those actual versions in the final call to BuildList.

For #36460

Change-Id: Icc6b54aa004907221b2bcbbae74598b0e4100776
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/294294
Trust: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Matloob <matloob@golang.org>
This commit is contained in:
Bryan C. Mills 2021-02-19 14:03:45 -05:00
parent c6374f5162
commit 09f4ef4fa7
3 changed files with 42 additions and 9 deletions

View File

@ -492,6 +492,41 @@ List:
downgraded = append(downgraded, r)
}
// The downgrades we computed above only downgrade to versions enumerated by
// reqs.Previous. However, reqs.Previous omits some versions — such as
// pseudo-versions and retracted versions — that may be selected as transitive
// requirements of other modules.
//
// If one of those requirements pulls the version back up above the version
// identified by reqs.Previous, then the transitive dependencies of that that
// initially-downgraded version should no longer matter — in particular, we
// should not add new dependencies on module paths that nothing else in the
// updated module graph even requires.
//
// In order to eliminate those spurious dependencies, we recompute the build
// list with the actual versions of the downgraded modules as selected by MVS,
// instead of our initial downgrades.
// (See the downhiddenartifact and downhiddencross test cases).
actual, err := BuildList(target, &override{
target: target,
list: downgraded,
Reqs: reqs,
})
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
actualVersion := make(map[string]string, len(actual))
for _, m := range actual {
actualVersion[m.Path] = m.Version
}
downgraded = downgraded[:0]
for _, m := range list {
if v, ok := actualVersion[m.Path]; ok {
downgraded = append(downgraded, module.Version{Path: m.Path, Version: v})
}
}
return BuildList(target, &override{
target: target,
list: downgraded,

View File

@ -282,8 +282,9 @@ downgrade A B1: A B1
# And C1 requires B2.hidden, and B2.hidden also meets our requirements:
# it is compatible with D1 and a strict downgrade from B3.
#
# BUG(?): B2.hidden does not require E1, so there is no need for E1
# to appear in the final build list. Nonetheless, there it is.
# Since neither the initial nor the final build list includes B1,
# and the nothing in the final downgraded build list requires E at all,
# no dependency on E1 (required by only B1) should be introduced.
#
name: downhiddenartifact
A: B3 C2
@ -298,7 +299,7 @@ D2:
build A1: A1 B3 D2
downgrade A1 D1: A1 B1 D1 E1
build A: A B3 C2 D2
downgrade A D1: A B2.hidden C1 D1 E1
downgrade A D1: A B2.hidden C1 D1
# Both B3 and C3 require D2.
# If we downgrade D to D1, then in isolation B3 would downgrade to B1,

View File

@ -26,18 +26,15 @@ cp go.mod go.mod.orig
go mod tidy
cmp go.mod.orig go.mod
# When we downgrade d.2 to d.1, no dependency on e should be added
# because nothing else in the module or import graph requires it.
go get -d example.net/d@v0.1.0
go list -m all
stdout '^example.net/b v0.2.1-0.20210219000000-000000000000 '
stdout '^example.net/c v0.1.0 '
stdout '^example.net/d v0.1.0 '
# BUG: A dependency on e is added even though nothing requires it.
stdout '^example.net/e '
go mod why -m example.net/e
stdout '^\(main module does not need module example.net/e\)'
! stdout '^example.net/e '
-- go.mod --
module example.net/a