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mirror of https://github.com/golang/go synced 2024-11-05 15:06:09 -07:00

cmd/cover: copy to standard repository from golang.org/x/tools/cmd/cover

This required dealing with the ill-advised split of the profile code
into a separate package. I just copied it over unchanged. The package
does not deserve to be in the standard repository. We can cope
with the duplication.

Also update the go command to know about the new location.

Fixes #10528.

Change-Id: I05170ef3663326d57b9c18888d01163acd9256b6
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/9560
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
This commit is contained in:
Rob Pike 2015-04-30 14:37:43 -07:00
parent 198dcedad3
commit 5eddc5bae3
12 changed files with 1801 additions and 8 deletions

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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 main
import (
"bytes"
"flag"
"fmt"
"go/ast"
"go/parser"
"go/printer"
"go/token"
"io"
"io/ioutil"
"log"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"sort"
"strconv"
"strings"
)
const usageMessage = "" +
`Usage of 'go tool cover':
Given a coverage profile produced by 'go test':
go test -coverprofile=c.out
Open a web browser displaying annotated source code:
go tool cover -html=c.out
Write out an HTML file instead of launching a web browser:
go tool cover -html=c.out -o coverage.html
Display coverage percentages to stdout for each function:
go tool cover -func=c.out
Finally, to generate modified source code with coverage annotations
(what go test -cover does):
go tool cover -mode=set -var=CoverageVariableName program.go
`
func usage() {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, usageMessage)
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "Flags:")
flag.PrintDefaults()
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "\n Only one of -html, -func, or -mode may be set.")
os.Exit(2)
}
var (
mode = flag.String("mode", "", "coverage mode: set, count, atomic")
varVar = flag.String("var", "GoCover", "name of coverage variable to generate")
output = flag.String("o", "", "file for output; default: stdout")
htmlOut = flag.String("html", "", "generate HTML representation of coverage profile")
funcOut = flag.String("func", "", "output coverage profile information for each function")
)
var profile string // The profile to read; the value of -html or -func
var counterStmt func(*File, ast.Expr) ast.Stmt
const (
atomicPackagePath = "sync/atomic"
atomicPackageName = "_cover_atomic_"
)
func main() {
flag.Usage = usage
flag.Parse()
// Usage information when no arguments.
if flag.NFlag() == 0 && flag.NArg() == 0 {
flag.Usage()
}
err := parseFlags()
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, `For usage information, run "go tool cover -help"`)
os.Exit(2)
}
// Generate coverage-annotated source.
if *mode != "" {
annotate(flag.Arg(0))
return
}
// Output HTML or function coverage information.
if *htmlOut != "" {
err = htmlOutput(profile, *output)
} else {
err = funcOutput(profile, *output)
}
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "cover: %v\n", err)
os.Exit(2)
}
}
// parseFlags sets the profile and counterStmt globals and performs validations.
func parseFlags() error {
profile = *htmlOut
if *funcOut != "" {
if profile != "" {
return fmt.Errorf("too many options")
}
profile = *funcOut
}
// Must either display a profile or rewrite Go source.
if (profile == "") == (*mode == "") {
return fmt.Errorf("too many options")
}
if *mode != "" {
switch *mode {
case "set":
counterStmt = setCounterStmt
case "count":
counterStmt = incCounterStmt
case "atomic":
counterStmt = atomicCounterStmt
default:
return fmt.Errorf("unknown -mode %v", *mode)
}
if flag.NArg() == 0 {
return fmt.Errorf("missing source file")
} else if flag.NArg() == 1 {
return nil
}
} else if flag.NArg() == 0 {
return nil
}
return fmt.Errorf("too many arguments")
}
// Block represents the information about a basic block to be recorded in the analysis.
// Note: Our definition of basic block is based on control structures; we don't break
// apart && and ||. We could but it doesn't seem important enough to bother.
type Block struct {
startByte token.Pos
endByte token.Pos
numStmt int
}
// File is a wrapper for the state of a file used in the parser.
// The basic parse tree walker is a method of this type.
type File struct {
fset *token.FileSet
name string // Name of file.
astFile *ast.File
blocks []Block
atomicPkg string // Package name for "sync/atomic" in this file.
}
// Visit implements the ast.Visitor interface.
func (f *File) Visit(node ast.Node) ast.Visitor {
switch n := node.(type) {
case *ast.BlockStmt:
// If it's a switch or select, the body is a list of case clauses; don't tag the block itself.
if len(n.List) > 0 {
switch n.List[0].(type) {
case *ast.CaseClause: // switch
for _, n := range n.List {
clause := n.(*ast.CaseClause)
clause.Body = f.addCounters(clause.Pos(), clause.End(), clause.Body, false)
}
return f
case *ast.CommClause: // select
for _, n := range n.List {
clause := n.(*ast.CommClause)
clause.Body = f.addCounters(clause.Pos(), clause.End(), clause.Body, false)
}
return f
}
}
n.List = f.addCounters(n.Lbrace, n.Rbrace+1, n.List, true) // +1 to step past closing brace.
case *ast.IfStmt:
ast.Walk(f, n.Body)
if n.Else == nil {
return nil
}
// The elses are special, because if we have
// if x {
// } else if y {
// }
// we want to cover the "if y". To do this, we need a place to drop the counter,
// so we add a hidden block:
// if x {
// } else {
// if y {
// }
// }
switch stmt := n.Else.(type) {
case *ast.IfStmt:
block := &ast.BlockStmt{
Lbrace: n.Body.End(), // Start at end of the "if" block so the covered part looks like it starts at the "else".
List: []ast.Stmt{stmt},
Rbrace: stmt.End(),
}
n.Else = block
case *ast.BlockStmt:
stmt.Lbrace = n.Body.End() // Start at end of the "if" block so the covered part looks like it starts at the "else".
default:
panic("unexpected node type in if")
}
ast.Walk(f, n.Else)
return nil
case *ast.SelectStmt:
// Don't annotate an empty select - creates a syntax error.
if n.Body == nil || len(n.Body.List) == 0 {
return nil
}
case *ast.SwitchStmt:
// Don't annotate an empty switch - creates a syntax error.
if n.Body == nil || len(n.Body.List) == 0 {
return nil
}
case *ast.TypeSwitchStmt:
// Don't annotate an empty type switch - creates a syntax error.
if n.Body == nil || len(n.Body.List) == 0 {
return nil
}
}
return f
}
// unquote returns the unquoted string.
func unquote(s string) string {
t, err := strconv.Unquote(s)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("cover: improperly quoted string %q\n", s)
}
return t
}
// addImport adds an import for the specified path, if one does not already exist, and returns
// the local package name.
func (f *File) addImport(path string) string {
// Does the package already import it?
for _, s := range f.astFile.Imports {
if unquote(s.Path.Value) == path {
if s.Name != nil {
return s.Name.Name
}
return filepath.Base(path)
}
}
newImport := &ast.ImportSpec{
Name: ast.NewIdent(atomicPackageName),
Path: &ast.BasicLit{
Kind: token.STRING,
Value: fmt.Sprintf("%q", path),
},
}
impDecl := &ast.GenDecl{
Tok: token.IMPORT,
Specs: []ast.Spec{
newImport,
},
}
// Make the new import the first Decl in the file.
astFile := f.astFile
astFile.Decls = append(astFile.Decls, nil)
copy(astFile.Decls[1:], astFile.Decls[0:])
astFile.Decls[0] = impDecl
astFile.Imports = append(astFile.Imports, newImport)
// Now refer to the package, just in case it ends up unused.
// That is, append to the end of the file the declaration
// var _ = _cover_atomic_.AddUint32
reference := &ast.GenDecl{
Tok: token.VAR,
Specs: []ast.Spec{
&ast.ValueSpec{
Names: []*ast.Ident{
ast.NewIdent("_"),
},
Values: []ast.Expr{
&ast.SelectorExpr{
X: ast.NewIdent(atomicPackageName),
Sel: ast.NewIdent("AddUint32"),
},
},
},
},
}
astFile.Decls = append(astFile.Decls, reference)
return atomicPackageName
}
var slashslash = []byte("//")
// initialComments returns the prefix of content containing only
// whitespace and line comments. Any +build directives must appear
// within this region. This approach is more reliable than using
// go/printer to print a modified AST containing comments.
//
func initialComments(content []byte) []byte {
// Derived from go/build.Context.shouldBuild.
end := 0
p := content
for len(p) > 0 {
line := p
if i := bytes.IndexByte(line, '\n'); i >= 0 {
line, p = line[:i], p[i+1:]
} else {
p = p[len(p):]
}
line = bytes.TrimSpace(line)
if len(line) == 0 { // Blank line.
end = len(content) - len(p)
continue
}
if !bytes.HasPrefix(line, slashslash) { // Not comment line.
break
}
}
return content[:end]
}
func annotate(name string) {
fset := token.NewFileSet()
content, err := ioutil.ReadFile(name)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("cover: %s: %s", name, err)
}
parsedFile, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, name, content, parser.ParseComments)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("cover: %s: %s", name, err)
}
parsedFile.Comments = trimComments(parsedFile, fset)
file := &File{
fset: fset,
name: name,
astFile: parsedFile,
}
if *mode == "atomic" {
file.atomicPkg = file.addImport(atomicPackagePath)
}
ast.Walk(file, file.astFile)
fd := os.Stdout
if *output != "" {
var err error
fd, err = os.Create(*output)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("cover: %s", err)
}
}
fd.Write(initialComments(content)) // Retain '// +build' directives.
file.print(fd)
// After printing the source tree, add some declarations for the counters etc.
// We could do this by adding to the tree, but it's easier just to print the text.
file.addVariables(fd)
}
// trimComments drops all but the //go: comments, some of which are semantically important.
// We drop all others because they can appear in places that cause our counters
// to appear in syntactically incorrect places. //go: appears at the beginning of
// the line and is syntactically safe.
func trimComments(file *ast.File, fset *token.FileSet) []*ast.CommentGroup {
var comments []*ast.CommentGroup
for _, group := range file.Comments {
var list []*ast.Comment
for _, comment := range group.List {
if strings.HasPrefix(comment.Text, "//go:") && fset.Position(comment.Slash).Column == 1 {
list = append(list, comment)
}
}
if list != nil {
comments = append(comments, &ast.CommentGroup{list})
}
}
return comments
}
func (f *File) print(w io.Writer) {
printer.Fprint(w, f.fset, f.astFile)
}
// intLiteral returns an ast.BasicLit representing the integer value.
func (f *File) intLiteral(i int) *ast.BasicLit {
node := &ast.BasicLit{
Kind: token.INT,
Value: fmt.Sprint(i),
}
return node
}
// index returns an ast.BasicLit representing the number of counters present.
func (f *File) index() *ast.BasicLit {
return f.intLiteral(len(f.blocks))
}
// setCounterStmt returns the expression: __count[23] = 1.
func setCounterStmt(f *File, counter ast.Expr) ast.Stmt {
return &ast.AssignStmt{
Lhs: []ast.Expr{counter},
Tok: token.ASSIGN,
Rhs: []ast.Expr{f.intLiteral(1)},
}
}
// incCounterStmt returns the expression: __count[23]++.
func incCounterStmt(f *File, counter ast.Expr) ast.Stmt {
return &ast.IncDecStmt{
X: counter,
Tok: token.INC,
}
}
// atomicCounterStmt returns the expression: atomic.AddUint32(&__count[23], 1)
func atomicCounterStmt(f *File, counter ast.Expr) ast.Stmt {
return &ast.ExprStmt{
X: &ast.CallExpr{
Fun: &ast.SelectorExpr{
X: ast.NewIdent(f.atomicPkg),
Sel: ast.NewIdent("AddUint32"),
},
Args: []ast.Expr{&ast.UnaryExpr{
Op: token.AND,
X: counter,
},
f.intLiteral(1),
},
},
}
}
// newCounter creates a new counter expression of the appropriate form.
func (f *File) newCounter(start, end token.Pos, numStmt int) ast.Stmt {
counter := &ast.IndexExpr{
X: &ast.SelectorExpr{
X: ast.NewIdent(*varVar),
Sel: ast.NewIdent("Count"),
},
Index: f.index(),
}
stmt := counterStmt(f, counter)
f.blocks = append(f.blocks, Block{start, end, numStmt})
return stmt
}
// addCounters takes a list of statements and adds counters to the beginning of
// each basic block at the top level of that list. For instance, given
//
// S1
// if cond {
// S2
// }
// S3
//
// counters will be added before S1 and before S3. The block containing S2
// will be visited in a separate call.
// TODO: Nested simple blocks get unnecessary (but correct) counters
func (f *File) addCounters(pos, blockEnd token.Pos, list []ast.Stmt, extendToClosingBrace bool) []ast.Stmt {
// Special case: make sure we add a counter to an empty block. Can't do this below
// or we will add a counter to an empty statement list after, say, a return statement.
if len(list) == 0 {
return []ast.Stmt{f.newCounter(pos, blockEnd, 0)}
}
// We have a block (statement list), but it may have several basic blocks due to the
// appearance of statements that affect the flow of control.
var newList []ast.Stmt
for {
// Find first statement that affects flow of control (break, continue, if, etc.).
// It will be the last statement of this basic block.
var last int
end := blockEnd
for last = 0; last < len(list); last++ {
end = f.statementBoundary(list[last])
if f.endsBasicSourceBlock(list[last]) {
extendToClosingBrace = false // Block is broken up now.
last++
break
}
}
if extendToClosingBrace {
end = blockEnd
}
if pos != end { // Can have no source to cover if e.g. blocks abut.
newList = append(newList, f.newCounter(pos, end, last))
}
newList = append(newList, list[0:last]...)
list = list[last:]
if len(list) == 0 {
break
}
pos = list[0].Pos()
}
return newList
}
// hasFuncLiteral reports the existence and position of the first func literal
// in the node, if any. If a func literal appears, it usually marks the termination
// of a basic block because the function body is itself a block.
// Therefore we draw a line at the start of the body of the first function literal we find.
// TODO: what if there's more than one? Probably doesn't matter much.
func hasFuncLiteral(n ast.Node) (bool, token.Pos) {
if n == nil {
return false, 0
}
var literal funcLitFinder
ast.Walk(&literal, n)
return literal.found(), token.Pos(literal)
}
// statementBoundary finds the location in s that terminates the current basic
// block in the source.
func (f *File) statementBoundary(s ast.Stmt) token.Pos {
// Control flow statements are easy.
switch s := s.(type) {
case *ast.BlockStmt:
// Treat blocks like basic blocks to avoid overlapping counters.
return s.Lbrace
case *ast.IfStmt:
found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s.Init)
if found {
return pos
}
found, pos = hasFuncLiteral(s.Cond)
if found {
return pos
}
return s.Body.Lbrace
case *ast.ForStmt:
found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s.Init)
if found {
return pos
}
found, pos = hasFuncLiteral(s.Cond)
if found {
return pos
}
found, pos = hasFuncLiteral(s.Post)
if found {
return pos
}
return s.Body.Lbrace
case *ast.LabeledStmt:
return f.statementBoundary(s.Stmt)
case *ast.RangeStmt:
found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s.X)
if found {
return pos
}
return s.Body.Lbrace
case *ast.SwitchStmt:
found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s.Init)
if found {
return pos
}
found, pos = hasFuncLiteral(s.Tag)
if found {
return pos
}
return s.Body.Lbrace
case *ast.SelectStmt:
return s.Body.Lbrace
case *ast.TypeSwitchStmt:
found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s.Init)
if found {
return pos
}
return s.Body.Lbrace
}
// If not a control flow statement, it is a declaration, expression, call, etc. and it may have a function literal.
// If it does, that's tricky because we want to exclude the body of the function from this block.
// Draw a line at the start of the body of the first function literal we find.
// TODO: what if there's more than one? Probably doesn't matter much.
found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s)
if found {
return pos
}
return s.End()
}
// endsBasicSourceBlock reports whether s changes the flow of control: break, if, etc.,
// or if it's just problematic, for instance contains a function literal, which will complicate
// accounting due to the block-within-an expression.
func (f *File) endsBasicSourceBlock(s ast.Stmt) bool {
switch s := s.(type) {
case *ast.BlockStmt:
// Treat blocks like basic blocks to avoid overlapping counters.
return true
case *ast.BranchStmt:
return true
case *ast.ForStmt:
return true
case *ast.IfStmt:
return true
case *ast.LabeledStmt:
return f.endsBasicSourceBlock(s.Stmt)
case *ast.RangeStmt:
return true
case *ast.SwitchStmt:
return true
case *ast.SelectStmt:
return true
case *ast.TypeSwitchStmt:
return true
case *ast.ExprStmt:
// Calls to panic change the flow.
// We really should verify that "panic" is the predefined function,
// but without type checking we can't and the likelihood of it being
// an actual problem is vanishingly small.
if call, ok := s.X.(*ast.CallExpr); ok {
if ident, ok := call.Fun.(*ast.Ident); ok && ident.Name == "panic" && len(call.Args) == 1 {
return true
}
}
}
found, _ := hasFuncLiteral(s)
return found
}
// funcLitFinder implements the ast.Visitor pattern to find the location of any
// function literal in a subtree.
type funcLitFinder token.Pos
func (f *funcLitFinder) Visit(node ast.Node) (w ast.Visitor) {
if f.found() {
return nil // Prune search.
}
switch n := node.(type) {
case *ast.FuncLit:
*f = funcLitFinder(n.Body.Lbrace)
return nil // Prune search.
}
return f
}
func (f *funcLitFinder) found() bool {
return token.Pos(*f) != token.NoPos
}
// Sort interface for []block1; used for self-check in addVariables.
type block1 struct {
Block
index int
}
type blockSlice []block1
func (b blockSlice) Len() int { return len(b) }
func (b blockSlice) Less(i, j int) bool { return b[i].startByte < b[j].startByte }
func (b blockSlice) Swap(i, j int) { b[i], b[j] = b[j], b[i] }
// offset translates a token position into a 0-indexed byte offset.
func (f *File) offset(pos token.Pos) int {
return f.fset.Position(pos).Offset
}
// addVariables adds to the end of the file the declarations to set up the counter and position variables.
func (f *File) addVariables(w io.Writer) {
// Self-check: Verify that the instrumented basic blocks are disjoint.
t := make([]block1, len(f.blocks))
for i := range f.blocks {
t[i].Block = f.blocks[i]
t[i].index = i
}
sort.Sort(blockSlice(t))
for i := 1; i < len(t); i++ {
if t[i-1].endByte > t[i].startByte {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "cover: internal error: block %d overlaps block %d\n", t[i-1].index, t[i].index)
// Note: error message is in byte positions, not token positions.
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "\t%s:#%d,#%d %s:#%d,#%d\n",
f.name, f.offset(t[i-1].startByte), f.offset(t[i-1].endByte),
f.name, f.offset(t[i].startByte), f.offset(t[i].endByte))
}
}
// Declare the coverage struct as a package-level variable.
fmt.Fprintf(w, "\nvar %s = struct {\n", *varVar)
fmt.Fprintf(w, "\tCount [%d]uint32\n", len(f.blocks))
fmt.Fprintf(w, "\tPos [3 * %d]uint32\n", len(f.blocks))
fmt.Fprintf(w, "\tNumStmt [%d]uint16\n", len(f.blocks))
fmt.Fprintf(w, "} {\n")
// Initialize the position array field.
fmt.Fprintf(w, "\tPos: [3 * %d]uint32{\n", len(f.blocks))
// A nice long list of positions. Each position is encoded as follows to reduce size:
// - 32-bit starting line number
// - 32-bit ending line number
// - (16 bit ending column number << 16) | (16-bit starting column number).
for i, block := range f.blocks {
start := f.fset.Position(block.startByte)
end := f.fset.Position(block.endByte)
fmt.Fprintf(w, "\t\t%d, %d, %#x, // [%d]\n", start.Line, end.Line, (end.Column&0xFFFF)<<16|(start.Column&0xFFFF), i)
}
// Close the position array.
fmt.Fprintf(w, "\t},\n")
// Initialize the position array field.
fmt.Fprintf(w, "\tNumStmt: [%d]uint16{\n", len(f.blocks))
// A nice long list of statements-per-block, so we can give a conventional
// valuation of "percent covered". To save space, it's a 16-bit number, so we
// clamp it if it overflows - won't matter in practice.
for i, block := range f.blocks {
n := block.numStmt
if n > 1<<16-1 {
n = 1<<16 - 1
}
fmt.Fprintf(w, "\t\t%d, // %d\n", n, i)
}
// Close the statements-per-block array.
fmt.Fprintf(w, "\t},\n")
// Close the struct initialization.
fmt.Fprintf(w, "}\n")
}

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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 main_test
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"os"
"os/exec"
"path/filepath"
"testing"
)
const (
// Data directory, also the package directory for the test.
testdata = "testdata"
// Binaries we compile.
testcover = "./testcover.exe"
)
var (
// Files we use.
testMain = filepath.Join(testdata, "main.go")
testTest = filepath.Join(testdata, "test.go")
coverInput = filepath.Join(testdata, "test_line.go")
coverOutput = filepath.Join(testdata, "test_cover.go")
)
var debug = false // Keeps the rewritten files around if set.
// Run this shell script, but do it in Go so it can be run by "go test".
//
// replace the word LINE with the line number < testdata/test.go > testdata/test_line.go
// go build -o ./testcover
// ./testcover -mode=count -var=CoverTest -o ./testdata/test_cover.go testdata/test_line.go
// go run ./testdata/main.go ./testdata/test.go
//
func TestCover(t *testing.T) {
// Read in the test file (testTest) and write it, with LINEs specified, to coverInput.
file, err := ioutil.ReadFile(testTest)
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
lines := bytes.Split(file, []byte("\n"))
for i, line := range lines {
lines[i] = bytes.Replace(line, []byte("LINE"), []byte(fmt.Sprint(i+1)), -1)
}
err = ioutil.WriteFile(coverInput, bytes.Join(lines, []byte("\n")), 0666)
// defer removal of test_line.go
if !debug {
defer os.Remove(coverInput)
}
// go build -o testcover
cmd := exec.Command("go", "build", "-o", testcover)
run(cmd, t)
// defer removal of testcover
defer os.Remove(testcover)
// ./testcover -mode=count -var=coverTest -o ./testdata/test_cover.go testdata/test_line.go
cmd = exec.Command(testcover, "-mode=count", "-var=coverTest", "-o", coverOutput, coverInput)
run(cmd, t)
// defer removal of ./testdata/test_cover.go
if !debug {
defer os.Remove(coverOutput)
}
// go run ./testdata/main.go ./testdata/test.go
cmd = exec.Command("go", "run", testMain, coverOutput)
run(cmd, t)
}
func run(c *exec.Cmd, t *testing.T) {
c.Stdout = os.Stdout
c.Stderr = os.Stderr
err := c.Run()
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
}

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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.
/*
Cover is a program for analyzing the coverage profiles generated by
'go test -coverprofile=cover.out'.
Cover is also used by 'go test -cover' to rewrite the source code with
annotations to track which parts of each function are executed.
It operates on one Go source file at a time, computing approximate
basic block information by studying the source. It is thus more portable
than binary-rewriting coverage tools, but also a little less capable.
For instance, it does not probe inside && and || expressions, and can
be mildly confused by single statements with multiple function literals.
For usage information, please see:
go help testflag
go tool cover -help
*/
package main // import "golang.org/x/tools/cmd/cover"

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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.
// This file implements the visitor that computes the (line, column)-(line-column) range for each function.
package main
import (
"bufio"
"fmt"
"go/ast"
"go/build"
"go/parser"
"go/token"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"text/tabwriter"
"golang.org/x/tools/cover"
)
// funcOutput takes two file names as arguments, a coverage profile to read as input and an output
// file to write ("" means to write to standard output). The function reads the profile and produces
// as output the coverage data broken down by function, like this:
//
// fmt/format.go:30: init 100.0%
// fmt/format.go:57: clearflags 100.0%
// ...
// fmt/scan.go:1046: doScan 100.0%
// fmt/scan.go:1075: advance 96.2%
// fmt/scan.go:1119: doScanf 96.8%
// total: (statements) 91.9%
func funcOutput(profile, outputFile string) error {
profiles, err := cover.ParseProfiles(profile)
if err != nil {
return err
}
var out *bufio.Writer
if outputFile == "" {
out = bufio.NewWriter(os.Stdout)
} else {
fd, err := os.Create(outputFile)
if err != nil {
return err
}
defer fd.Close()
out = bufio.NewWriter(fd)
}
defer out.Flush()
tabber := tabwriter.NewWriter(out, 1, 8, 1, '\t', 0)
defer tabber.Flush()
var total, covered int64
for _, profile := range profiles {
fn := profile.FileName
file, err := findFile(fn)
if err != nil {
return err
}
funcs, err := findFuncs(file)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Now match up functions and profile blocks.
for _, f := range funcs {
c, t := f.coverage(profile)
fmt.Fprintf(tabber, "%s:%d:\t%s\t%.1f%%\n", fn, f.startLine, f.name, 100.0*float64(c)/float64(t))
total += t
covered += c
}
}
fmt.Fprintf(tabber, "total:\t(statements)\t%.1f%%\n", 100.0*float64(covered)/float64(total))
return nil
}
// findFuncs parses the file and returns a slice of FuncExtent descriptors.
func findFuncs(name string) ([]*FuncExtent, error) {
fset := token.NewFileSet()
parsedFile, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, name, nil, 0)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
visitor := &FuncVisitor{
fset: fset,
name: name,
astFile: parsedFile,
}
ast.Walk(visitor, visitor.astFile)
return visitor.funcs, nil
}
// FuncExtent describes a function's extent in the source by file and position.
type FuncExtent struct {
name string
startLine int
startCol int
endLine int
endCol int
}
// FuncVisitor implements the visitor that builds the function position list for a file.
type FuncVisitor struct {
fset *token.FileSet
name string // Name of file.
astFile *ast.File
funcs []*FuncExtent
}
// Visit implements the ast.Visitor interface.
func (v *FuncVisitor) Visit(node ast.Node) ast.Visitor {
switch n := node.(type) {
case *ast.FuncDecl:
start := v.fset.Position(n.Pos())
end := v.fset.Position(n.End())
fe := &FuncExtent{
name: n.Name.Name,
startLine: start.Line,
startCol: start.Column,
endLine: end.Line,
endCol: end.Column,
}
v.funcs = append(v.funcs, fe)
}
return v
}
// coverage returns the fraction of the statements in the function that were covered, as a numerator and denominator.
func (f *FuncExtent) coverage(profile *cover.Profile) (num, den int64) {
// We could avoid making this n^2 overall by doing a single scan and annotating the functions,
// but the sizes of the data structures is never very large and the scan is almost instantaneous.
var covered, total int64
// The blocks are sorted, so we can stop counting as soon as we reach the end of the relevant block.
for _, b := range profile.Blocks {
if b.StartLine > f.endLine || (b.StartLine == f.endLine && b.StartCol >= f.endCol) {
// Past the end of the function.
break
}
if b.EndLine < f.startLine || (b.EndLine == f.startLine && b.EndCol <= f.startCol) {
// Before the beginning of the function
continue
}
total += int64(b.NumStmt)
if b.Count > 0 {
covered += int64(b.NumStmt)
}
}
if total == 0 {
total = 1 // Avoid zero denominator.
}
return covered, total
}
// findFile finds the location of the named file in GOROOT, GOPATH etc.
func findFile(file string) (string, error) {
dir, file := filepath.Split(file)
pkg, err := build.Import(dir, ".", build.FindOnly)
if err != nil {
return "", fmt.Errorf("can't find %q: %v", file, err)
}
return filepath.Join(pkg.Dir, file), nil
}

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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 main
import (
"bufio"
"bytes"
"fmt"
"html/template"
"io"
"io/ioutil"
"math"
"os"
"os/exec"
"path/filepath"
"runtime"
"golang.org/x/tools/cover"
)
// htmlOutput reads the profile data from profile and generates an HTML
// coverage report, writing it to outfile. If outfile is empty,
// it writes the report to a temporary file and opens it in a web browser.
func htmlOutput(profile, outfile string) error {
profiles, err := cover.ParseProfiles(profile)
if err != nil {
return err
}
var d templateData
for _, profile := range profiles {
fn := profile.FileName
if profile.Mode == "set" {
d.Set = true
}
file, err := findFile(fn)
if err != nil {
return err
}
src, err := ioutil.ReadFile(file)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("can't read %q: %v", fn, err)
}
var buf bytes.Buffer
err = htmlGen(&buf, src, profile.Boundaries(src))
if err != nil {
return err
}
d.Files = append(d.Files, &templateFile{
Name: fn,
Body: template.HTML(buf.String()),
Coverage: percentCovered(profile),
})
}
var out *os.File
if outfile == "" {
var dir string
dir, err = ioutil.TempDir("", "cover")
if err != nil {
return err
}
out, err = os.Create(filepath.Join(dir, "coverage.html"))
} else {
out, err = os.Create(outfile)
}
err = htmlTemplate.Execute(out, d)
if err == nil {
err = out.Close()
}
if err != nil {
return err
}
if outfile == "" {
if !startBrowser("file://" + out.Name()) {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "HTML output written to %s\n", out.Name())
}
}
return nil
}
// percentCovered returns, as a percentage, the fraction of the statements in
// the profile covered by the test run.
// In effect, it reports the coverage of a given source file.
func percentCovered(p *cover.Profile) float64 {
var total, covered int64
for _, b := range p.Blocks {
total += int64(b.NumStmt)
if b.Count > 0 {
covered += int64(b.NumStmt)
}
}
if total == 0 {
return 0
}
return float64(covered) / float64(total) * 100
}
// htmlGen generates an HTML coverage report with the provided filename,
// source code, and tokens, and writes it to the given Writer.
func htmlGen(w io.Writer, src []byte, boundaries []cover.Boundary) error {
dst := bufio.NewWriter(w)
for i := range src {
for len(boundaries) > 0 && boundaries[0].Offset == i {
b := boundaries[0]
if b.Start {
n := 0
if b.Count > 0 {
n = int(math.Floor(b.Norm*9)) + 1
}
fmt.Fprintf(dst, `<span class="cov%v" title="%v">`, n, b.Count)
} else {
dst.WriteString("</span>")
}
boundaries = boundaries[1:]
}
switch b := src[i]; b {
case '>':
dst.WriteString("&gt;")
case '<':
dst.WriteString("&lt;")
case '&':
dst.WriteString("&amp;")
case '\t':
dst.WriteString(" ")
default:
dst.WriteByte(b)
}
}
return dst.Flush()
}
// startBrowser tries to open the URL in a browser
// and reports whether it succeeds.
func startBrowser(url string) bool {
// try to start the browser
var args []string
switch runtime.GOOS {
case "darwin":
args = []string{"open"}
case "windows":
args = []string{"cmd", "/c", "start"}
default:
args = []string{"xdg-open"}
}
cmd := exec.Command(args[0], append(args[1:], url)...)
return cmd.Start() == nil
}
// rgb returns an rgb value for the specified coverage value
// between 0 (no coverage) and 10 (max coverage).
func rgb(n int) string {
if n == 0 {
return "rgb(192, 0, 0)" // Red
}
// Gradient from gray to green.
r := 128 - 12*(n-1)
g := 128 + 12*(n-1)
b := 128 + 3*(n-1)
return fmt.Sprintf("rgb(%v, %v, %v)", r, g, b)
}
// colors generates the CSS rules for coverage colors.
func colors() template.CSS {
var buf bytes.Buffer
for i := 0; i < 11; i++ {
fmt.Fprintf(&buf, ".cov%v { color: %v }\n", i, rgb(i))
}
return template.CSS(buf.String())
}
var htmlTemplate = template.Must(template.New("html").Funcs(template.FuncMap{
"colors": colors,
}).Parse(tmplHTML))
type templateData struct {
Files []*templateFile
Set bool
}
type templateFile struct {
Name string
Body template.HTML
Coverage float64
}
const tmplHTML = `
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
<style>
body {
background: black;
color: rgb(80, 80, 80);
}
body, pre, #legend span {
font-family: Menlo, monospace;
font-weight: bold;
}
#topbar {
background: black;
position: fixed;
top: 0; left: 0; right: 0;
height: 42px;
border-bottom: 1px solid rgb(80, 80, 80);
}
#content {
margin-top: 50px;
}
#nav, #legend {
float: left;
margin-left: 10px;
}
#legend {
margin-top: 12px;
}
#nav {
margin-top: 10px;
}
#legend span {
margin: 0 5px;
}
{{colors}}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="topbar">
<div id="nav">
<select id="files">
{{range $i, $f := .Files}}
<option value="file{{$i}}">{{$f.Name}} ({{printf "%.1f" $f.Coverage}}%)</option>
{{end}}
</select>
</div>
<div id="legend">
<span>not tracked</span>
{{if .Set}}
<span class="cov0">not covered</span>
<span class="cov8">covered</span>
{{else}}
<span class="cov0">no coverage</span>
<span class="cov1">low coverage</span>
<span class="cov2">*</span>
<span class="cov3">*</span>
<span class="cov4">*</span>
<span class="cov5">*</span>
<span class="cov6">*</span>
<span class="cov7">*</span>
<span class="cov8">*</span>
<span class="cov9">*</span>
<span class="cov10">high coverage</span>
{{end}}
</div>
</div>
<div id="content">
{{range $i, $f := .Files}}
<pre class="file" id="file{{$i}}" {{if $i}}style="display: none"{{end}}>{{$f.Body}}</pre>
{{end}}
</div>
</body>
<script>
(function() {
var files = document.getElementById('files');
var visible = document.getElementById('file0');
files.addEventListener('change', onChange, false);
function onChange() {
visible.style.display = 'none';
visible = document.getElementById(files.value);
visible.style.display = 'block';
window.scrollTo(0, 0);
}
})();
</script>
</html>
`

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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.
// This file provides support for parsing coverage profiles
// generated by "go test -coverprofile=cover.out".
// It is a copy of golang.org/x/tools/cover/profile.go.
package main
import (
"bufio"
"fmt"
"math"
"os"
"regexp"
"sort"
"strconv"
"strings"
)
// Profile represents the profiling data for a specific file.
type Profile struct {
FileName string
Mode string
Blocks []ProfileBlock
}
// ProfileBlock represents a single block of profiling data.
type ProfileBlock struct {
StartLine, StartCol int
EndLine, EndCol int
NumStmt, Count int
}
type byFileName []*Profile
func (p byFileName) Len() int { return len(p) }
func (p byFileName) Less(i, j int) bool { return p[i].FileName < p[j].FileName }
func (p byFileName) Swap(i, j int) { p[i], p[j] = p[j], p[i] }
// ParseProfiles parses profile data in the specified file and returns a
// Profile for each source file described therein.
func ParseProfiles(fileName string) ([]*Profile, error) {
pf, err := os.Open(fileName)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
defer pf.Close()
files := make(map[string]*Profile)
buf := bufio.NewReader(pf)
// First line is "mode: foo", where foo is "set", "count", or "atomic".
// Rest of file is in the format
// encoding/base64/base64.go:34.44,37.40 3 1
// where the fields are: name.go:line.column,line.column numberOfStatements count
s := bufio.NewScanner(buf)
mode := ""
for s.Scan() {
line := s.Text()
if mode == "" {
const p = "mode: "
if !strings.HasPrefix(line, p) || line == p {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("bad mode line: %v", line)
}
mode = line[len(p):]
continue
}
m := lineRe.FindStringSubmatch(line)
if m == nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("line %q doesn't match expected format: %v", m, lineRe)
}
fn := m[1]
p := files[fn]
if p == nil {
p = &Profile{
FileName: fn,
Mode: mode,
}
files[fn] = p
}
p.Blocks = append(p.Blocks, ProfileBlock{
StartLine: toInt(m[2]),
StartCol: toInt(m[3]),
EndLine: toInt(m[4]),
EndCol: toInt(m[5]),
NumStmt: toInt(m[6]),
Count: toInt(m[7]),
})
}
if err := s.Err(); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
for _, p := range files {
sort.Sort(blocksByStart(p.Blocks))
}
// Generate a sorted slice.
profiles := make([]*Profile, 0, len(files))
for _, profile := range files {
profiles = append(profiles, profile)
}
sort.Sort(byFileName(profiles))
return profiles, nil
}
type blocksByStart []ProfileBlock
func (b blocksByStart) Len() int { return len(b) }
func (b blocksByStart) Swap(i, j int) { b[i], b[j] = b[j], b[i] }
func (b blocksByStart) Less(i, j int) bool {
bi, bj := b[i], b[j]
return bi.StartLine < bj.StartLine || bi.StartLine == bj.StartLine && bi.StartCol < bj.StartCol
}
var lineRe = regexp.MustCompile(`^(.+):([0-9]+).([0-9]+),([0-9]+).([0-9]+) ([0-9]+) ([0-9]+)$`)
func toInt(s string) int {
i, err := strconv.Atoi(s)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return i
}
// Boundary represents the position in a source file of the beginning or end of a
// block as reported by the coverage profile. In HTML mode, it will correspond to
// the opening or closing of a <span> tag and will be used to colorize the source
type Boundary struct {
Offset int // Location as a byte offset in the source file.
Start bool // Is this the start of a block?
Count int // Event count from the cover profile.
Norm float64 // Count normalized to [0..1].
}
// Boundaries returns a Profile as a set of Boundary objects within the provided src.
func (p *Profile) Boundaries(src []byte) (boundaries []Boundary) {
// Find maximum count.
max := 0
for _, b := range p.Blocks {
if b.Count > max {
max = b.Count
}
}
// Divisor for normalization.
divisor := math.Log(float64(max))
// boundary returns a Boundary, populating the Norm field with a normalized Count.
boundary := func(offset int, start bool, count int) Boundary {
b := Boundary{Offset: offset, Start: start, Count: count}
if !start || count == 0 {
return b
}
if max <= 1 {
b.Norm = 0.8 // Profile is in"set" mode; we want a heat map. Use cov8 in the CSS.
} else if count > 0 {
b.Norm = math.Log(float64(count)) / divisor
}
return b
}
line, col := 1, 2 // TODO: Why is this 2?
for si, bi := 0, 0; si < len(src) && bi < len(p.Blocks); {
b := p.Blocks[bi]
if b.StartLine == line && b.StartCol == col {
boundaries = append(boundaries, boundary(si, true, b.Count))
}
if b.EndLine == line && b.EndCol == col || line > b.EndLine {
boundaries = append(boundaries, boundary(si, false, 0))
bi++
continue // Don't advance through src; maybe the next block starts here.
}
if src[si] == '\n' {
line++
col = 0
}
col++
si++
}
sort.Sort(boundariesByPos(boundaries))
return
}
type boundariesByPos []Boundary
func (b boundariesByPos) Len() int { return len(b) }
func (b boundariesByPos) Swap(i, j int) { b[i], b[j] = b[j], b[i] }
func (b boundariesByPos) Less(i, j int) bool {
if b[i].Offset == b[j].Offset {
return !b[i].Start && b[j].Start
}
return b[i].Offset < b[j].Offset
}

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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.
// Test runner for coverage test. This file is not coverage-annotated; test.go is.
// It knows the coverage counter is called "coverTest".
package main
import (
"fmt"
"os"
)
func main() {
testAll()
verify()
}
type block struct {
count uint32
line uint32
}
var counters = make(map[block]bool)
// check records the location and expected value for a counter.
func check(line, count uint32) {
b := block{
count,
line,
}
counters[b] = true
}
// checkVal is a version of check that returns its extra argument,
// so it can be used in conditionals.
func checkVal(line, count uint32, val int) int {
b := block{
count,
line,
}
counters[b] = true
return val
}
var PASS = true
// verify checks the expected counts against the actual. It runs after the test has completed.
func verify() {
for b := range counters {
got, index := count(b.line)
if b.count == anything && got != 0 {
got = anything
}
if got != b.count {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "test_go:%d expected count %d got %d [counter %d]\n", b.line, b.count, got, index)
PASS = false
}
}
verifyPanic()
if !PASS {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "FAIL\n")
os.Exit(2)
}
}
// verifyPanic is a special check for the known counter that should be
// after the panic call in testPanic.
func verifyPanic() {
if coverTest.Count[panicIndex-1] != 1 {
// Sanity check for test before panic.
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "bad before panic")
PASS = false
}
if coverTest.Count[panicIndex] != 0 {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "bad at panic: %d should be 0\n", coverTest.Count[panicIndex])
PASS = false
}
if coverTest.Count[panicIndex+1] != 1 {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "bad after panic")
PASS = false
}
}
// count returns the count and index for the counter at the specified line.
func count(line uint32) (uint32, int) {
// Linear search is fine. Choose perfect fit over approximate.
// We can have a closing brace for a range on the same line as a condition for an "else if"
// and we don't want that brace to steal the count for the condition on the "if".
// Therefore we test for a perfect (lo==line && hi==line) match, but if we can't
// find that we take the first imperfect match.
index := -1
indexLo := uint32(1e9)
for i := range coverTest.Count {
lo, hi := coverTest.Pos[3*i], coverTest.Pos[3*i+1]
if lo == line && line == hi {
return coverTest.Count[i], i
}
// Choose the earliest match (the counters are in unpredictable order).
if lo <= line && line <= hi && indexLo > lo {
index = i
indexLo = lo
}
}
if index == -1 {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "cover_test: no counter for line", line)
PASS = false
return 0, 0
}
return coverTest.Count[index], index
}

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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.
// This program is processed by the cover command, and then testAll is called.
// The test driver in main.go can then compare the coverage statistics with expectation.
// The word LINE is replaced by the line number in this file. When the file is executed,
// the coverage processing has changed the line numbers, so we can't use runtime.Caller.
package main
const anything = 1e9 // Just some unlikely value that means "we got here, don't care how often"
func testAll() {
testSimple()
testBlockRun()
testIf()
testFor()
testRange()
testSwitch()
testTypeSwitch()
testSelect1()
testSelect2()
testPanic()
testEmptySwitches()
}
// The indexes of the counters in testPanic are known to main.go
const panicIndex = 3
// This test appears first because the index of its counters is known to main.go
func testPanic() {
defer func() {
recover()
}()
check(LINE, 1)
panic("should not get next line")
check(LINE, 0) // this is GoCover.Count[panicIndex]
// The next counter is in testSimple and it will be non-zero.
// If the panic above does not trigger a counter, the test will fail
// because GoCover.Count[panicIndex] will be the one in testSimple.
}
func testSimple() {
check(LINE, 1)
}
func testIf() {
if true {
check(LINE, 1)
} else {
check(LINE, 0)
}
if false {
check(LINE, 0)
} else {
check(LINE, 1)
}
for i := 0; i < 3; i++ {
if checkVal(LINE, 3, i) <= 2 {
check(LINE, 3)
}
if checkVal(LINE, 3, i) <= 1 {
check(LINE, 2)
}
if checkVal(LINE, 3, i) <= 0 {
check(LINE, 1)
}
}
for i := 0; i < 3; i++ {
if checkVal(LINE, 3, i) <= 1 {
check(LINE, 2)
} else {
check(LINE, 1)
}
}
for i := 0; i < 3; i++ {
if checkVal(LINE, 3, i) <= 0 {
check(LINE, 1)
} else if checkVal(LINE, 2, i) <= 1 {
check(LINE, 1)
} else if checkVal(LINE, 1, i) <= 2 {
check(LINE, 1)
} else if checkVal(LINE, 0, i) <= 3 {
check(LINE, 0)
}
}
if func(a, b int) bool { return a < b }(3, 4) {
check(LINE, 1)
}
}
func testFor() {
for i := 0; i < 10; func() { i++; check(LINE, 10) }() {
check(LINE, 10)
}
}
func testRange() {
for _, f := range []func(){
func() { check(LINE, 1) },
} {
f()
check(LINE, 1)
}
}
func testBlockRun() {
check(LINE, 1)
{
check(LINE, 1)
}
{
check(LINE, 1)
}
check(LINE, 1)
{
check(LINE, 1)
}
{
check(LINE, 1)
}
check(LINE, 1)
}
func testSwitch() {
for i := 0; i < 5; func() { i++; check(LINE, 5) }() {
switch i {
case 0:
check(LINE, 1)
case 1:
check(LINE, 1)
case 2:
check(LINE, 1)
default:
check(LINE, 2)
}
}
}
func testTypeSwitch() {
var x = []interface{}{1, 2.0, "hi"}
for _, v := range x {
switch func() { check(LINE, 3) }(); v.(type) {
case int:
check(LINE, 1)
case float64:
check(LINE, 1)
case string:
check(LINE, 1)
case complex128:
check(LINE, 0)
default:
check(LINE, 0)
}
}
}
func testSelect1() {
c := make(chan int)
go func() {
for i := 0; i < 1000; i++ {
c <- i
}
}()
for {
select {
case <-c:
check(LINE, anything)
case <-c:
check(LINE, anything)
default:
check(LINE, 1)
return
}
}
}
func testSelect2() {
c1 := make(chan int, 1000)
c2 := make(chan int, 1000)
for i := 0; i < 1000; i++ {
c1 <- i
c2 <- i
}
for {
select {
case <-c1:
check(LINE, 1000)
case <-c2:
check(LINE, 1000)
default:
check(LINE, 1)
return
}
}
}
// Empty control statements created syntax errors. This function
// is here just to be sure that those are handled correctly now.
func testEmptySwitches() {
check(LINE, 1)
switch 3 {
}
check(LINE, 1)
switch i := (interface{})(3).(int); i {
}
check(LINE, 1)
c := make(chan int)
go func() {
check(LINE, 1)
c <- 1
select {}
}()
<-c
check(LINE, 1)
}

View File

@ -406,6 +406,7 @@ var goTools = map[string]targetDir{
"cmd/api": toTool,
"cmd/asm": toTool,
"cmd/cgo": toTool,
"cmd/cover": toTool,
"cmd/dist": toTool,
"cmd/doc": toTool,
"cmd/fix": toTool,
@ -420,7 +421,6 @@ var goTools = map[string]targetDir{
"cmd/pprof": toTool,
"cmd/trace": toTool,
"cmd/yacc": toTool,
"golang.org/x/tools/cmd/cover": toTool,
"golang.org/x/tools/cmd/godoc": toBin,
"golang.org/x/tools/cmd/vet": toTool,
"code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/cover": stalePath,

View File

@ -738,12 +738,6 @@ elif ! grep "case-insensitive file name collision" $d/out >/dev/null; then
ok=false
fi
TEST go get cover
./testgo get golang.org/x/tools/cmd/cover || ok=false
unset GOPATH
rm -rf $d
TEST go get -t "code.google.com/p/go-get-issue-8181/{a,b}"
d=$(TMPDIR=/var/tmp mktemp -d -t testgoXXX)
export GOPATH=$d

View File

@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ func tool(toolName string) string {
func isInGoToolsRepo(toolName string) bool {
switch toolName {
case "cover", "vet":
case "vet":
return true
}
return false