This CL also replaces similar loops in other stdlib
package tests with calls to AllocsPerRun.
Fixes#4461.
R=minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7002055
Expressions involving nil, even if they can be evaluated
at compile time, do not count as Go constants and cannot
be used in const initializers.
Fixes#4673.
Fixes#4680.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7278043
The spec mostly uses the term embedded.
It's too late to change the field name but at least fix the docs.
Fixes#4514.
R=golang-dev, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7235080
Impossible for us to check (without sleazily reaching into the
runtime) but at least document it.
Fixes#3800.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7268043
Change the stack unwinding code to compensate for the dynamic
relocation of symbols.
Change the gc instruction GC_CALL to use a relative offset instead of
an absolute address.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7248048
Everybody either gets confused and thinks this is
TrimLeft/TrimRight or does this by hand which gets
repetitive looking.
R=rsc, kevlar
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7239044
* Separate internal and external LockOSThread, for cgo safety.
* Show goroutine that made faulting cgo call.
* Never start a panic due to a signal caused by a cgo call.
Fixes#3774.
Fixes#3775.
Fixes#3797.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7228081
Cut out temporary cgo file in error message.
Show C.foo instead of _Ctype_foo.
Before:
x.go:20[/var/folders/00/05_b8000h01000cxqpysvccm000n9d/T/go-build242036121/command-line-arguments/_obj/x.cgo1.go:19]: cannot use tv.Usec (type int32) as type _Ctype___darwin_suseconds_t in assignment
After:
x.go:20: cannot use tv.Usec (type int32) as type C.__darwin_suseconds_t in assignment
Fixes#4255.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7231075
The old version was using go/ast's CommentGroup.Text method,
but that method drops leading blank lines from the result, so that
if the comment looked like one of
//
// syntax error
import "C"
/*
syntax error
*/
import "C"
then the line numbers for the syntax error would be off by the
number of leading blank lines (1 in each of the above cases).
The new text extractor preserves blank lines.
Fixes#4019.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7232071
The Unix and Plan 9 readfile call breset(b) but Windows was not,
leaving dregs in the buffer.
TBR=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7229069
If runtime's proc.c does not compile, cmd/dist used to show
the compile errors in a sea of acid output, making them impossible
to find. Change the command invocation to write the acid output
to a file, so that the errors are the only thing shown on failure.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7221082
A step toward a fix for issue 4069.
To allow linking with arbitrary host object files, add a linker mode
that can generate a host object file instead of an executable.
Then the host linker can be invoked to generate the final executable.
This CL adds a new -hostobj flag that instructs the linker to write
a host object file instead of an executable.
That is, this works:
go tool 6g x.go
go tool 6l -hostobj -o x.o x.6
ld -e _rt0_amd64_linux x.o
./a.out
as does:
go tool 8g x.go
go tool 8l -hostld ignored -o x.o x.8
ld -m elf_i386 -e _rt0_386_linux x.o
./a.out
Because 5l was never updated to use the standard relocation scheme,
it will take more work to get this working on ARM.
This is a checkpoint of the basic functionality. It does not work
with cgo yet, and cgo is the main reason for the change.
The command-line interface will likely change too.
The gc linker has other information that needs to be returned to
the caller for use when invoking the host linker besides the single
object file.
R=iant, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7060044
This is a backwards compatible API change that fixes broken code.
In Go 1.0, ReadFull(r, buf) could return either len(buf), nil or len(buf), non-nil.
Most code expects only the former, so do that and document the guarantee.
Code that was correct before is still correct.
Code that was incorrect before, by assuming the guarantee, is now correct too.
The same applies to ReadAtLeast.
Fixes#4544.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7235074
Someone found software that generates negative numbers for the RSA
modulus in an X.509 certificate. Our error messages were very poor in
this case so this change improves that.
Update #4728
Return more helpful errors when RSA parameters are negative or zero.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7228072
* Reject import paths of the form cmd/x/y.
* Reject 'go install' of command outside GOPATH
* Clearer error rejecting 'go install' of package outside GOPATH.
* Name temporary binary for first file in 'go run' list or for test.
* Provide a way to pass -ldflags arguments with spaces.
* Pass all Go files (even +build ignored ones) to go fix, go fmt, go vet.
* Reject 'go run foo_test.go'.
* Silence 'exit 1' prints from 'go tool' invocations.
* Make go test -xxxprofile leave binary behind for analysis.
* Reject ~ in GOPATH except on Windows.
* Get a little less confused by symlinks.
* Document that go test x y z runs three test binaries.
* Fix go test -timeout=0.
* Add -tags flag to 'go list'.
* Use pkg/gccgo_$GOOS_$GOARCH for gccgo output.
Fixes#3389.
Fixes#3500.
Fixes#3503.
Fixes#3760.
Fixes#3941.
Fixes#4007.
Fixes#4032.
Fixes#4074.
Fixes#4127.
Fixes#4140.
Fixes#4311.
Fixes#4568.
Fixes#4576.
Fixes#4702.
R=adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7225074
The linker accepts MOVB involving non-byte-addressable
registers, by generating XCHG instructions to AX or BX.
It does not handle the case where nor AX nor BX are available.
See also revision 1470920a2804.
Assembling
TEXT ·Truc(SB),7,$0
MOVB BP, (BX)(AX*1)
RET
gives before:
08048c60 <main.Truc>:
8048c60: 87 dd xchg %ebx,%ebp
8048c62: 88 1c 03 mov %bl,(%ebx,%eax,1)
8048c65: 87 dd xchg %ebx,%ebp
8048c67: c3 ret
and after:
08048c60 <main.Truc>:
8048c60: 87 cd xchg %ecx,%ebp
8048c62: 88 0c 03 mov %cl,(%ebx,%eax,1)
8048c65: 87 cd xchg %ecx,%ebp
8048c67: c3 ret
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7226066
This adds a simple IntHeap example, and modifies the more complex
PriorityQueue example to make use of the index field it maintains.
Fixes#4331.
R=rsc, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7068048
ICU and collate package: ICU requires strings to be in FCD form.
Not all NFC strings are in this form, leading to incorrect results.
Change to NFD instead.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7201043
Export data was broken after revision 6b602ab487d6
when -l is specified at least 3 times: it makes the compiler
write out func (*T).Method() declarations in export data, which
is not supported.
Also fix the formatting of recover() in export data. It was
not treated like panic() and was rendered as "<node RECOVER>".
R=golang-dev, lvd, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7067051
Handle return values from recvfrom correctly when the
kernel decides to not return an address.
Fixes#4636.
Fixes#4352.
R=rsc, mikioh.mikioh, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7058062
If os.OpenFile holds ForkLock on files that block opens,
then threads that simultaneously try to do fork-exec will
get hung up (until the open succeeds). Blocked opens are
common enough on Plan 9 that protecting against fd leaks
into fork-execs means not being able to do fork-execs
properly in the general case. Thus, we forgo taking the
lock.
R=rsc, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7235066
An hostport of "[::1]" now results in the same error message
"missing port in address" as the hostport value "127.0.0.1",
so SplitHostPort won't complain about "too many colons
in address" anymore for an IPv6 address missing a port.
Added tests checking the error values.
Fixes#4526.
R=dave, rsc, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7038045
The JSON unmarshaller failed to allocate an array when there
are no values for the input causing the `[]` unmarshalled
to []interface{} to generate []interface{}(nil) rather than
[]interface{}{}. This wasn't caught in the tests because Decode()
works correctly and because jsonBig never generated zero-sized
arrays. The modification to scanner_test.go quickly triggers
the error:
without the change to decoder.go, but with the change to scanner_test.go:
$ go test
--- FAIL: TestUnmarshalMarshal (0.10 seconds)
decode_test.go:446: Marshal jsonBig
scanner_test.go:206: diverge at 70: «03c1OL6$":null},{"[=» vs «03c1OL6$":[]},{"[=^\»
FAIL
exit status 1
FAIL encoding/json 0.266s
Also added a simple regression to decode_test.go.
R=adg, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7196050
Binary data in mprof.goc may prevent the garbage collector from freeing
memory blocks. This patch replaces all calls to runtime·mallocgc() with
calls to an allocator private to mprof.goc, thus making the private
memory invisible to the garbage collector. The addrhash variable is
moved outside of the .bss section.
R=golang-dev, dvyukov, rsc, minux.ma
CC=dave, golang-dev, remyoudompheng
https://golang.org/cl/7135063
To allow for stdcall decorated names on Windows, two changes were needed:
1. Change the symbol versioning delimiter '@' in cgo's dynimport output to a '#', and in cmd/ld when it parses dynimports.
2. Remove the "@N" decorator from the first argument of cgo's dynimport output (PE only).
Fixes#4607.
R=minux.ma, adg, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7047043
Re-assigning the return value of an atomic operation to the same variable being operated is a common mistake:
x = atomic.AddUint64(&x, 1)
Add this check to go vet.
Fixes#4065.
R=dvyukov, golang-dev, remyoudompheng, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7097048
This change also resolves some issues with note handling: we now make
sure that there is enough room at the bottom of every goroutine to
execute the note handler, and the `exitstatus' is no longer a global
entity, which resolves some race conditions.
R=rminnich, npe, rsc, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6569068
Range access functions are already available in TSan library
but were not yet used.
Time for go test -race -short:
Before:
compress/flate 24.244s
exp/norm >200s
go/printer 78.268s
After:
compress/flate 17.760s
exp/norm 5.537s
go/printer 5.738s
Fixes#4250.
R=dvyukov, golang-dev, fullung
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7229044
Roll back CL making primitive type unmarshal faster,
because it broke the Unmarshal of malformed data.
Add benchmarks for unmarshal of primitive types.
Update #3949.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7228061
We explicitly spill all parameters to the frame during initial
SSA construction. (Later passes will remove spills.)
We now properly handle local Allocs escaping via Captures.
Also: allocate BasicBlock.Succs inline.
R=iant, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7231050
Useful for debugging of runtime bugs.
+ Do not print "stack segment boundary" unless GOTRACEBACK>1.
+ Do not traceback system goroutines unless GOTRACEBACK>1.
R=rsc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7098050
Otherwise it's impossible to know how much data from the
json.Decoder's underlying Reader was actually consumed.
The old fix from golang.org/issue/1955 just added docs. This
provides an actual mechanism.
Update #1955
R=golang-dev, adg, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7181053
The dumping routine incorrectly assumed that all incoming
symbols would be non-nil and load through it to retrieve the
symbol name. Instead of using the symbol to retrieve a name,
use the name provided by the caller.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7224043
Add 'math/big' to blacklist of packages that use shift
operations as yet unsupported by go/types.
(The failure was masked due to local bugfixes in my client.)
R=rsc, bradfitz, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7220057
This CL includes the implementation of Literal, all the
Value.String and Instruction.String methods, the sanity
checker, and other misc utilities.
R=gri, iant, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7199052
Added tests, using input data from strconv.ParseFloat.
Thanks to rsc for most of the test code.
math/big could use some good package-level documentation.
R=remyoudompheng, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6930059
Mark candidate spans one GC pass earlier.
Move scavenger's code out from mgc0 and constrain it into mheap (where it belongs).
R=rsc, dvyukov, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7002049
Add race.bash so anyone with suitable hardware can run a race detector build. race.bash can be called from the dashboard builder by passing -cmd="race.bash".
Original source for race.bash is here, http://code.google.com/p/go-wiki/wiki/DashboardBuilders
TODO: add race.bat for windows/amd64
R=dvyukov, minux.ma, adg, rsc
CC=fullung, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7179052
This is for SPARC64, a 64-bit processor that uses all 64-bits
of virtual addresses. The idea is to use the low order 3 bits
to at least get a small ABA counter. That should work since
pointers are aligned. The idea is for SPARC64 to set CNT_MASK
== 7, PTR_BITS == 0, PTR_MASK == 0xffffffffffffff8.
Also add uintptr casts to avoid GCC warnings. The gccgo
runtime code is compiled with GCC, and GCC warns when casting
between a pointer and a type of a different size.
R=dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7225043
It is now possible to run "go test -cpu=1,2,4 std"
successfully.
Fixes#3185.
R=golang-dev, dave, minux.ma, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7196052
These changes to test.bash were intended to be submitted with CL 6941058, but were accidentally excluded from the original CL.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7232043
net/http currently assumes that the response to a HEAD request
will always have a Content-Length header. This is incorrect.
RFC2616 says: "The HEAD method is identical to GET except that
the server MUST NOT return a message-body in the response. The
metainformation contained in the HTTP headers in response to a
HEAD request SHOULD be identical to the information sent in
response to a GET request. This method can be used for
obtaining metainformation about the entity implied by the
request without transferring the entity-body itself. This
method is often used for testing hypertext links for validity,
accessibility, and recent modification."
This means that three cases are possible: a Content-Length
header, a Transfer-Encoding header or neither. In the wild the
following sites exhibit these behaviours (curl -I):
HEAD on http://www.google.co.uk/ has Transfer-Encoding: chunked
HEAD on http://www.bbc.co.uk/ has Content-Length: 45247
HEAD on http://edition.cnn.com/ has neither header
This patch does not remove the ErrMissingContentLength error
for compatibility reasons, but it is no longer used.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7182045
This function is absolutely critical for clients such as
exp/ssa, and too complex for clients to duplicate.
As with CL 7200046, gri expressed in the doc below [gophers
only] before going on leave that he intended to expose such a
predicate, though his wording suggests as an interface method
of Type rather than a standalone function. (My preference is
for binary methods to be standalone; see "On Binary Methods",
Kim Bruce, 1995). In any case if he wishes to move it that's
easily accommodated by clients.
https://docs.google.com/a/google.com/document/d/1-DQ4fxlMDs9cYtnkKhAAehX6MArjOQyJsRXp-6kiJLA/edit#heading=h.k3bwja7xony9
R=iant, gri, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7203051
On Windows, crypto/x509 passes through to Windows's CryptoAPI
to verify certificate chains. This method can't produce a
SystemRootsError, so make sure we always skip the test on
Windows.
This is needed because testVerify is called in both
TestGoVerify and TestSystemVerify on Windows - one is for
testing the Go verifier, the other one is for testing the
CryptoAPI verifier. The orignal CL tried to sidestep
this issue by setting systemSkip to true, but that only
affected TestSystemVerify.
R=golang-dev, agl, snaury, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7185043
further to how (I believe) it will end up being.
It is nicer to separate search from sorting functionality. Collation needs tables that
are not needed by search and vice-versa. The common functionality is separated out
in the Weigher interface. As this interface is very low-level, it will be moved to
a sub package (colltab) in a next CL.
The types that will move to this package are Weigher, Elem, and Level. The addition
of Elem allows for removing some of the duplicate code between collate and collate/build.
This CL also introduces some stubs for a higher-level API for options. The default
proposed options are quite complex and require the user to have a decent understanding
of Unicode collation. The new options hide a lot of the complexity.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7058051
Fixes the fork-exec/wait race condition for ForkExec
as well, by making it use startProcess. This makes the
comment for StartProcess consistent as well.
Further, the passing of Waitmsg data in startProcess
and WaitProcess is protected against possible forks
from outside of ForkExec and StartProcess, which might
cause interference with the Await call.
R=rsc, rminnich, npe, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7128059
BenchmarkString before:
11990 ns/op 1621 B/op 73 allocs/op
Using bytes.Buffer:
8774 ns/op 1994 B/op 40 allocs/op
I also tried making a version of escape() that writes directly to the
bytes.Buffer, but it only saved 1 alloc/op and increased CPU time by
about 10%. Didn't seem worth the extra code path.
R=bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7182050
Parse("file:///foo") previously returned a URL with Scheme "file"
and Path "///foo". Now it returns a URL with Path "/foo",
such that
&URL{Scheme: "file", Path: "/foo"}.String() == "file:///foo"
This means that parsing and stringifying the URL "file:/foo"
returns "file:///foo", technically a regression but one that only
affects a corner case.
Fixes#4189.
R=bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7135051
This proposal adds two methods to *testing.T, Skip(string) and Skipf(format, args...). The intent is to replace the existing log and return idiom which currently has 97 cases in the standard library. A simple example of Skip would be:
func TestSomethingLong(t *testing.T) {
if testing.Short() {
t.Skip("skipping test in short mode.")
// not reached
}
... time consuming work
}
Additionally tests can be skipped anywhere a *testing.T is present. An example adapted from the go.crypto/ssh/test package would be:
// setup performs some before test action and returns a func()
// which should be defered by the caller for cleanup.
func setup(t *testing.T) func() {
...
cmd := exec.Command("sshd", "-f", configfile, "-i")
if err := cmd.Run(); err != nil {
t.Skipf("could not execute mock ssh server: %v", err)
}
...
return func() {
// stop subprocess and cleanup
}
}
func TestDialMockServer(t *testing.T) {
cleanup := setup(t)
defer cleanup()
...
}
In verbose mode tests that are skipped are now reported as a SKIP, rather than PASS.
Link to discussion: https://groups.google.com/d/topic/golang-nuts/BqorNARzt4U/discussion
R=adg, rsc, r, n13m3y3r
CC=golang-dev, minux.ma
https://golang.org/cl/6501094
Go 1.0 behavior was to create an UnmarshalFieldError when a json value name matched an unexported field name. This error will no longer be created and the field will be skipped instead.
Fixes#4660.
R=adg, rsc, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7139049
It wasn't removing names from func parameters for func types,
and it was handling "a, b string" as "string", not "string, string".
Fixes#4688
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7181051
The Plan 9 compilers complain about not
having type information for the function,
which sets off type signature problems
during the linking stage.
R=rsc, ality, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7058054
Before:
$ go list -f '{{range .Deps}}{{println $.Name .}}{{end}}' math time
math runtime
math unsafe
time errors
time runtime
time sync
time sync/atomic
time syscall
time unsafe
$
After:
$ go list -f '{{range .Deps}}{{println $.Name .}}{{end}}' math time
math runtime
math unsafe
time errors
time runtime
time sync
time sync/atomic
time syscall
time unsafe
$
R=minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7130052
All packages place testdata in a specific directory with the name
"testdata". The mime and strconv packages have been updated to use
the same convention.
mime: Move "mime/test.types" to "mime/testdata/test.types". Update test
code accordingly.
strconv: Move "strconv/testfp.txt" to "strconv/testdata/testfp.txt".
Update test code accordingly.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7098072
This fixes the incorrect unix timestamp of the standard time and adds
an example for (Time) Format to clarify how timezones work in format strings.
Fixes#4364.
R=golang-dev, remyoudompheng, kevlar, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7069046
Offsets for return values from seek were miscalculated
and a translation from 32-bit code for error handling
was incorrect.
R=rsc, rminnich, npe
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7181045
Previously, Go TLS servers always took the client's preferences into
account when selecting a ciphersuite. This change adds the option of
using the server's preferences, which can be expressed by setting
tls.Config.CipherSuites.
This mirrors Apache's SSLHonorCipherOrder directive.
R=golang-dev, nightlyone, bradfitz, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7163043
Currently it's summed to mark phase.
The change makes it easier to diagnose long stop-the-world phases.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7182043
1. note that to use C.free <stdlib.h> must be included
2. can also extract errno from a void C function
R=golang-dev, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6935045
sizeof(Adr) from 24 bytes down to 20 bytes.
sizeof(Prog) from 84 bytes down to 76 bytes.
5l linking cmd/godoc statistics:
Before:
Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 106668
After:
Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 99412
R=golang-dev, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7100059
so that the user don't need to decipher something like this:
template: main:1: expected %!s(parse.itemType=14) in end; got "|"
now they get this:
template: main:1: unexpected "|" in end
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7128054
I messed this up from the beginning. The receiver isn't a pointer so
setting Err is useless. In order to maintain the API, just remove the
superfluous code.
Fixes#4657.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7161043
Prog
* Remove the unused Prog* dlink
* note that align is also unused, but removing it does not help due to alignment issues.
Saves 4 bytes, sizeof(Prog): 84 => 80.
Sym
* Align {u,}char fields on word boundaries
Saves 4 bytes, sizeof(Sym): 136 => 132.
Tested on linux/arm and freebsd/arm.
R=minux.ma, remyoudompheng, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7106050
Fortunately we have never seen the panic on sockaddrToTCP
in the past year.
««« original CL description
net: panic if sockaddrToTCP returns nil incorrectly
Part of diagnosing the selfConnect bug
TBR=dsymonds
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5687057
»»»
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7137063
cmd/8g/gsubr.c: unreachable code
cmd/8g/reg.c: overspecifed class
cmd/dist/plan9.c: unused parameter
cmd/gc/fmt.c: stkdelta is now a vlong
cmd/gc/racewalk.c: used but not set
R=golang-dev, seed, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7067052
The FmtLong flag should only be used with the %D verb
when printing an ATEXT Prog. It was erroneously used
for every Prog except ADATA. This caused a preponderance
of exclamation points, "!!", in the assembly listings.
I also cleaned up the code so that the list.c files look
very similar. Now the real differences are easily spotted
with a simple diff.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7128045
For simplicity, only recognizes expressions of the exact form
"(x << a) | (x >> b)" where x is a variable and a and b are
integer constant expressions that add to x's bit width.
Fixes#4629.
$ cat rotate.c
unsigned int
rotate(unsigned int x)
{
x = (x << 3) | (x >> (sizeof(x) * 8 - 3));
return x;
}
## BEFORE
$ go tool 6c -S rotate.c
(rotate.c:2) TEXT rotate+0(SB),$0-8
(rotate.c:2) MOVL x+0(FP),!!DX
(rotate.c:4) MOVL DX,!!AX
(rotate.c:4) SALL $3,!!AX
(rotate.c:4) MOVL DX,!!CX
(rotate.c:4) SHRL $29,!!CX
(rotate.c:4) ORL CX,!!AX
(rotate.c:5) RET ,!!
(rotate.c:5) RET ,!!
(rotate.c:5) END ,!!
## AFTER
$ go tool 6c -S rotate.c
(rotate.c:2) TEXT rotate+0(SB),$0-8
(rotate.c:4) MOVL x+0(FP),!!AX
(rotate.c:4) ROLL $3,!!AX
(rotate.c:5) RET ,!!
(rotate.c:5) RET ,!!
(rotate.c:5) END ,!!
R=rsc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7069056
If the scanned block has no typeinfo the garbage collector will attempt
to get the actual type of the block.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7093045
On Plan 9, only the parent of a given process can enter its wait
queue. When a Go program tries to fork-exec a child process
and subsequently waits for it to finish, the goroutines doing
these two tasks do not necessarily tie themselves to the same
(or any single) OS thread. In the case that the fork and the wait
system calls happen on different OS threads (say, due to a
goroutine being rescheduled somewhere along the way), the
wait() will either return an error or end up waiting for a
completely different child than was intended.
This change forces the fork and wait syscalls to happen in the
same goroutine and ties that goroutine to its OS thread until
the child exits. The PID of the child is recorded upon fork and
exit, and de-queued once the child's wait message has been read.
The Wait API, then, is translated into a synthetic implementation
that simply waits for the requested PID to show up in the queue
and then reads the associated stats.
R=rsc, rminnich, npe, mirtchovski, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6545051
The test case of issue 4585 was not passing due to
miscalculation of memequal args, and the previous fix
does not handle padding at the end of a struct.
Handling of padding at end of structs also fixes the case
of [n]T where T is such a padded struct.
Fixes#4585.
(again)
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7133059
Reference the 80386 compiler documentation now that the
documentation for the 68020 is offline.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7127053
sse2 is a more precise description of the requirement,
and it matches what people will see in, for example
grep sse2 /proc/cpuinfo # linux
sysctl hw.optional.sse2 # os x
R=golang-dev, dsymonds, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7057050
Decode as much as possible of a Huffman symbol in a single table
lookup (much like the zlib implementation), filling more bits
(conservatively, so we don't consume past the end of the stream)
when the code prefix indicates more bits are needed. This
results in about a 50% performance gain in speed benchmarks.
The following set is benchcmp done on a retina MacBook Pro:
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsSpeed1e4 28.41 42.79 1.51x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsSpeed1e5 30.18 47.62 1.58x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsSpeed1e6 30.81 48.14 1.56x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsDefault1e4 30.28 44.61 1.47x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsDefault1e5 32.18 51.94 1.61x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsDefault1e6 35.57 53.28 1.50x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsCompress1e4 30.39 44.83 1.48x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsCompress1e5 33.05 51.64 1.56x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsCompress1e6 35.69 53.04 1.49x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainSpeed1e4 25.90 43.04 1.66x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainSpeed1e5 29.97 48.19 1.61x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainSpeed1e6 31.36 49.43 1.58x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainDefault1e4 28.79 45.02 1.56x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainDefault1e5 37.12 55.65 1.50x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainDefault1e6 39.28 58.16 1.48x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainCompress1e4 28.64 44.90 1.57x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainCompress1e5 37.40 55.98 1.50x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainCompress1e6 39.35 58.06 1.48x
R=rsc, dave, minux.ma, bradfitz, nigeltao
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6872063
Calling it will show memory allocation statistics for that
single benchmark (if -test.benchmem is not provided)
R=golang-dev, rsc, kevlar, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7027046
I think that the parser is complete enough to take that warning out.
It passes the test suite.
There may be incompatible API changes, but being in the exp directory
is warning enough for that.
R=nigeltao
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7131050
We need to wait for the handler to actually finish running,
not almost be done running.
This was always a bug, but now that handler output is buffered
it shows up easily on GOMAXPROCS >1 systems.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7109043
- always set the Pkg field in QualifiedIdents
- call Context.Ident for all identifiers in the AST that denote
a types.Object (bug fix)
- added test that Context.Ident is called for all such identifiers
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7101054
Completely removed *ast.Objects from being exposed by the
types API. *ast.Objects are still required internally for
resolution, but now the door is open for an internal-only
rewrite of identifier resolution entirely at type-check
time. Once that is done, ASTs can be type-checked whether
they have been created via the go/parser or otherwise,
and type-checking does not require *ast.Object or scope
invariants to be maintained externally.
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7096048
Also undo revision a5b96b602690 used to workaround the bug.
Fixes#4643.
R=rsc, golang-dev, dave, minux.ma, lucio.dere, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7090043
The existing type checker was relying on augmenting ast.Object
fields (empty interfaces) for its purposes. While this worked
for some time now, it has become increasingly brittle. Also,
the need for package information for Fields and Methods would
have required a new field in each ast.Object. Rather than making
them bigger and the code even more subtle, in this CL we are moving
away from ast.Objects.
The types packge now defines its own objects for different
language entities (Const, Var, TypeName, Func), and they
implement the types.Object interface. Imported packages
create a Package object which holds the exported entities
in a types.Scope of types.Objects.
For type-checking, the current package is still using ast.Objects
to make this transition manageable. In a next step, the type-
checker will also use types.Objects instead, which opens the door
door to resolving ASTs entirely by the type checker. As a result,
the AST and type checker become less entangled, and ASTs can be
manipulated "by hand" or programmatically w/o having to worry
about scope and object invariants that are very hard to maintain.
(As a consequence, a future parser can do less work, and a
future AST will not need to define objects and scopes anymore.
Also, object resolution which is now split across the parser,
the ast, (ast.NewPackage), and even the type checker (for composite
literal keys) can be done in a single place which will be simpler
and more efficient.)
Change details:
- Check now takes a []*ast.File instead of a map[string]*ast.File.
It's easier to handle (I deleted code at all use sites) and does
not suffer from undefined order (which is a pain for testing).
- ast.Object.Data is now a *types.Package rather then an *ast.Scope
if the object is a package (obj.Kind == ast.Pkg). Eventually this
will go away altogether.
- Instead of an ast.Importer, Check now uses a types.Importer
(which returns a *types.Package).
- types.NamedType has two object fields (Obj Object and obj *ast.Object);
eventually there will be only Obj. The *ast.Object is needed during
this transition since a NamedType may refer to either an imported
(using types.Object) or locally defined (using *ast.Object) type.
- ast.NewPackage is not used anymore - there's a local copy for
package-level resolution of imports.
- struct fields now take the package origin into account.
- The GcImporter is now returning a *types.Package. It cannot be
used with ast.NewPackage anymore. If that functionality is still
used, a copy of the old GcImporter should be made locally (note
that GcImporter was part of exp/types and it's API was not frozen).
- dot-imports are not handled for the time being (this will come back).
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7058060
This introduces a buffer between writing from a handler and
writing chunks. Further, it delays writing the header until
the first full chunk is ready. In the case where the first
full chunk is also the final chunk (for small responses), that
means we can also compute a Content-Length, which is a nice
side effect for certain benchmarks.
Fixes#2357
R=golang-dev, dave, minux.ma, rsc, adg, balasanjay
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6964043
The peephole optimizer would keep hands off AX and X0 during returns, even though go doesn't return through registers.
R=dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7030046
Changeset f483bfe81114 moved ELF generation to the architecture
independent code and in doing so added a Section* to the Sym
type and an Elf64_Shdr* to the Section type.
This caused the Plan 9 compilers to complain about incompatible
type signatures in the many files that reference the Sym type.
R=rsc, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7057058
Fixes#4186.
Back in the day, before the Go 1.0 release, $GOROOT was mandatory for building from source. Fast forward to now and $GOPATH is mandatory and $GOROOT is optional, and mainly used by those who use the binary distribution in uncommon places.
For example, most novices at least know about `sudo` as they would have used it to install the binary tarball into /usr/local. It is logical they would use the `sudo` hammer to `go get` other Go packages when faced with a permission error talking about the path they just had to use `sudo` on last time.
Even if they had read the documentation and set $GOPATH, go get will not work as expected as `sudo` masks most environment variables.
llucky(~) % ~/go/bin/go env | grep GOPATH
GOPATH="/home/dfc"
lucky(~) % sudo ~/go/bin/go env | grep GOPATH
GOPATH=""
This CL therefore proposes to remove support for using `go get` to download source into $GOROOT.
This CL also proposes an error when GOPATH=$GOROOT, as this is another place where new Go users can get stuck.
Further discussion: https://groups.google.com/d/topic/golang-nuts/VIg3fjHiHRI/discussion
R=rsc, adg, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6941058
The linker split PKGDEF into (prefix, name, def) pairs,
and defines def to begin after a space following the identifier.
This is totally wrong for the following export data:
func "".FunctionName()
var SomethingCompletelyUnrelated int
The linker would parse
name=`"".FunctionName()\n\tvar`
def=`SomethingCompletelyUnrelated int`
since there is no space after FunctionName.
R=minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7068051
Our source no longer needs these flags set to build cleanly using clang.
Tested with
* Ubuntu clang version 3.0-6ubuntu3 (tags/RELEASE_30/final) (based on LLVM 3.0) on i386
* clang version 3.2 (tags/RELEASE_32/final) on amd64 cross compiling all platforms
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7058053
The old code made it impossible to implement a reverse proxy
with anything less than 4k write granularity to the backends.
R=golang-dev, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7060059
A constant node of type uintptr with a nil literal could
happen in two cases: []int(nil)[1:] and
uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(nil)).
Fixes#4614.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7059043
There exists a test case for this condition, but it only runs on unix systems, which neatly dovetails into the code always using ':' as the list separator.
R=adg, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7057052
ratio isn't 1x1.
Fixes#4259.
The test data was generated by
cjpeg -quality 50 -sample 2x2 video-005.gray.pgm > video-005.gray.q50.2x2.jpeg
cjpeg -quality 50 -sample 2x2 -progressive video-005.gray.pgm > video-005.gray.q50.2x2.progressive.jpeg
similarly to video-005.gray.q50.* from
http://code.google.com/p/go/source/detail?r=51f26e36ba98
the key difference being the "-sample 2x2".
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7069045
There's no b in race detector.
The new flag matches the one in the go command
(go test -race math).
R=golang-dev, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7072043
bytes.Equal is simpler to read and should also be faster because
of short-circuiting and assembly implementations.
Change generated automatically using:
gofmt -r 'bytes.Compare(a, b) == 0 -> bytes.Equal(a, b)'
gofmt -r 'bytes.Compare(a, b) != 0 -> !bytes.Equal(a, b)'
R=golang-dev, dave, adg, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7038051
Closures are incredibly expensive on linux/arm due to
repetitive flush of instruction cache.
go test -short on ODROID-X:
Before:
ok exp/gotype 17.091s
ok go/types 2.225s
After:
ok exp/gotype 7.193s
ok go/types 1.143s
R=dave, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev, remy
https://golang.org/cl/7062045
This CL adds a flag parser that matches the semantics of Go's
package flag. It also changes the linkers and compilers to use
the new flag parser.
Command lines that used to work, like
8c -FVw
6c -Dfoo
5g -I/foo/bar
now need to be split into separate arguments:
8c -F -V -w
6c -D foo
5g -I /foo/bar
The new spacing will work with both old and new tools.
The new parser also allows = for arguments, as in
6c -D=foo
5g -I=/foo/bar
but that syntax will not work with the old tools.
In addition to matching standard Go binary flag parsing,
the new flag parser generates more detailed usage messages
and opens the door to long flag names.
The recently added gc flag -= has been renamed -complete.
R=remyoudompheng, daniel.morsing, minux.ma, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7035043
More cleanup in preparation for fixing issue 4069.
This CL replaces the three nearly identical copies of the
asmb ELF code with a single asmbelf function in elf.c.
In addition to the ELF code movement, remove the elfstr
array in favor of a simpler lookup, and identify sections by
name throughout instead of computing fragile indices.
The CL also replaces the three nearly identical copies of the
genasmsym code with a single genasmsym function in lib.c.
The ARM linker still compiles and generates binaries,
but I haven't tested the binaries. They may not work.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7062047
The Plan 9 symbol table format defines big-endian symbol values
for portability, but we want to be able to generate an ELF object file
and let the host linker link it, as part of the solution to issue 4069.
The symbol table itself, since it is loaded into memory at run time,
must be filled in by the final host linker, using relocation directives
to set the symbol values. On a little-endian machine, the linker will
only fill in little-endian values during relocation, so we are forced
to use little-endian symbol values.
To preserve most of the original portability of the symbol table
format, we make the table itself say whether it uses big- or
little-endian values. If the table begins with the magic sequence
fe ff ff ff 00 00
then the actual table begins after those six bytes and contains
little-endian symbol values. Otherwise, the table is in the original
format and contains big-endian symbol values. The magic sequence
looks like an "end of table" entry (the fifth byte is zero), so legacy
readers will see a little-endian table as an empty table.
All the gc architectures are little-endian today, so the practical
effect of this CL is to make all the generated tables little-endian,
but if a big-endian system comes along, ld will not generate
the magic sequence, and the various readers will fall back to the
original big-endian interpretation.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7066043
A few USED(xxx) additions and a couple of deletions of variable
initialisations that go unused. One questionable correction,
mirrored in 8l/asm.c, where the result of invocation of a function
shouldn't be used.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6736054
RFC5424 specifies a version number (currently 1) after the facility and
severity in a syslog message (e.g. <7>1 TIMESTAMP ...). This causes
rsyslog to fail to parse syslog message because the rest of the message
is not fully compliant with RFC5424.
For the widest compatibility, drop the version (messages are in the
RFC3164 BSD syslog format (e.g. <7>TIMESTAMP ...). Have tested this with
syslog-ng, rsyslog and syslogd.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7036050
TimeoutHandler was changed from "ns int64" to "dt time.Duration" on
Nov 30, 2011, but the godoc still refers to "ns".
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7031050
* Extended deadline to 30 seconds
* Added logging of the duration of each package import
* Fail the test immediately if directories cannot be read
R=gri, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7030055
It already did so for its sibling, *strings.Reader, as well as *bytes.Buffer.
R=edsrzf, dave, adg, kevlar, remyoudompheng, adg, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7031045
Add a check for this case and don't try to follow the anonymous
type's non-existent fields.
Fixes#4474.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6945065
Request.URL had no documentation before and some people were expecting all fields to be populated.
Fixes#3805.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7008046
A new environment variable GO386 is introduced to choose between
code generation targeting 387 or SSE2. No auto-detection is
performed and the setting defaults to 387 to preserve previous
behaviour.
The patch is a reorganization of CL6549052 by rsc.
Fixes#3912.
R=minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6962043
Unnamed types like structs with embedded fields can have methods.
These methods are generated on-the-fly by the compiler and
it may happen for identical types in different packages.
The linker must accept these multiple definitions.
Fixes#4590.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev, remy
https://golang.org/cl/7030051
sysarch requires arguments to be passed on the stack, not in registers.
Credit to Shenghou Ma (minux) for the fix.
R=minux.ma, devon.odell
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7037043
Under FreeBSD-CURRENT on arm, cgo enabled binaries segfault. Disable cgo support for the moment so we can have a freebsd/arm builder on the dashboard.
R=minux.ma, rsc, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7031044
Allows encoding and decoding of maps with key of string kind, not just string type.
Fixes#3519.
R=rsc, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6943047
Used to then die on a nil pointer situation. Most Linux standard setups are rather
restrictive regarding the default amount of lockable memory.
R=minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6997049
While half of all numbers don't have their most-significant bit set,
this is becoming increasingly impermissible for RSA moduli. In an
attempt to exclude weak keys, several bits of software either do, or
will, enforce that RSA moduli are >= 1024-bits.
However, Go often generates 1023-bit RSA moduli which this software
would then reject.
This change causes crypto/rsa to regenerate the primes in the event
that the result is shorter than requested.
It also alters crypto/rand in order to remove the performance impact
of this:
The most important change to crypto/rand is that it will now set the
top two bits in a generated prime (OpenSSL does the same thing).
Multiplying two n/2 bit numbers, where each have the top two bits set,
will always result in an n-bit product. (The effectively makes the
crypto/rsa change moot, but that seems too fragile to depend on.)
Also this change adds code to crypto/rand to rapidly eliminate some
obviously composite numbers and reduce the number of Miller-Rabin
tests needed to generate a prime.
R=rsc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7002050
- introduced type Method for methods
- renamed StructField -> Field
- removed ObjList
- methods are not sorted anymore in interfaces (for now)
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7023043
This is a just a file move with no other changes
besides the manual import path adjustments in these
two files:
src/pkg/exp/gotype/gotype.go
src/pkg/exp/gotype/gotype_test.go
Note: The go/types API continues to be subject to
possibly significant changes until Go 1.1. Do not
rely on it being stable at this point.
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7013049
The parser/resolver cannot accurately resolve
composite literal keys that are identifiers;
it needs type information.
Instead, try to resolve them but leave final
judgement to the type checker.
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6994047
These files are identical, so probably pre date // +build.
With a little work, fd_darwin could be merged as well.
R=mikioh.mikioh, jsing, devon.odell, lucio.dere, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7004053
The new garbage collector (CL 6114046) may find the fake *[]byte value
and interpret its contents as bytes rather than as potential pointers.
This may lead the garbage collector to free memory blocks that
shouldn't be freed.
R=dvyukov, rsc, dave, minux.ma, remyoudompheng, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7000059
Proper local system log semantics still need to be
created for Plan 9. In the meantime, the test suite
(viz., exp/gotype) expects there to be some Go
source for each import path. Thus, here is a stub,
equivalent to syslog_windows, for this purpose.
R=golang-dev, rsc, alex.brainman
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7000062
- added Context type for configuration of type checker
- type check all function and method bodies
- (partial) fixes to shift hinting (still not complete)
- revamped test harness - does not rely on specific position
representation anymore, just a standard (compiler) error
message
- lots of bug fixes
R=adonovan, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6948071
Motivations:
- Simpler UI. Previous API proved a bit awkward for practical purposes.
- Iter is often used in cases where one want to be able to bail out early.
The old implementaton had too much look-ahead to be efficient.
Disadvantages:
- ASCII performance is bad. This is unavoidable for tiny iterations.
Example is included to show how to work around this.
Description:
Iter now iterates per boundary/segment. It returns a slice of bytes that
either points to the input bytes, the internal decomposition strings,
or the small internal buffer that each iterator has. In many cases, copying
bytes is avoided.
The method Seek was added to support jumping around the input without
having to reinitialize.
Details:
- Table adjustments: some decompositions exist of multiple segments.
Decompositions that are of this type are now marked so that Iter can
handle them separately.
- The old iterator had a different next function for different normal forms
that was assigned to a function pointer called by Next.
The new iterator uses this mechanism to switch between different modes
for handling different type of input as well. This greatly improves
performance for Hangul and ASCII. It is also used for multi-segment
decompositions.
- input is now a struct of sting and []byte, instead of an interface.
This simplifies optimizing the ASCII case.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6873072
the need to decompose characters for the majority of cases. This considerably
speeds up collation while increasing the table size minimally.
To detect non-normalized strings, rather than relying on exp/norm, the table
now includes CCC information. The inclusion of this information does not
increase table size.
DETAILS
- Raw collation elements are now a struct that includes the CCC, rather
than a slice of ints.
- Builder now ensures that NFD and NFC counterparts are included in the table.
This also fixes a bug for Korean which is responsible for most of the growth
of the table size.
- As there is no more normalization step, code should now handle both strings
and byte slices as input. Introduced source type to facilitate this.
NOTES
- This change does not handle normalization correctly entirely for contractions.
This causes a few failures with the regtest. table_test.go contains a few
uncommented tests that can be enabled once this is fixed. The easiest is to
fix this once we have the new norm.Iter.
- Removed a test cases in table_test that covers cases that are now guaranteed
to not exist.
R=rsc, mpvl
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6971044
Currently it silently "succeeds" saying that it run 0 tests
if there are compilations errors.
With this change it fails and outputs the compilation error.
R=golang-dev, remyoudompheng
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7002058
NO_PROXY="example.com" should match "foo.example.com", just
the same as NO_PROXY=".example.com". This is what curl and
Python do.
Fixes#4574
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7005049
Before this CL, defining the variable worked fine, but then when
the implicit package-level init func was created, that caused a
name collision and a confusing error about the redeclaration.
Also add a test for issue 3705 (func init() needs body).
Fixes#4517.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7008045
An error during the compilation can be more precise
than an error at link time.
For 'func init', the error happens always: you can't forward
declare an init func because the name gets mangled.
For other funcs, the error happens only with the special
(and never used by hand) -= flag, which tells 6g the
package is pure go.
The go command now passes -= for pure Go packages.
Fixes#3705.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6996054
Ordinary variable load was assumed to be not worth saving,
but not if one of the function calls later might change
its value.
Fixes#4313.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6997047
When we release memory to the OS, if the OS doesn't want us
to release it (for example, because the program executed
mlockall(MCL_FUTURE)), madvise will fail. Ignore the failure
instead of crashing.
Fixes#3435.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6998052
Any flag.Value that has an IsBoolFlag method that returns true
will be treated as a bool flag type during parsing.
Fixes#4262.
R=bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6944064
The patch makes the compile user an ordinary package-local
symbol for the name of embedded fields of builtin type.
This is incompatible with the fix delivered for issue 2687
(revision 3c060add43fb) but fixes it in a different way, because
the explicit symbol on the field makes the typechecker able to
find it in lookdot.
Fixes#3552.
R=lvd, rsc, daniel.morsing
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6866047
The typechecking code was doing an extra, unnecessary
indirection.
Fixes#4458.
R=golang-dev, daniel.morsing, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6998051
remove zerostack compiler experiment; will do at link time instead
««« original CL description
cmd/gc: add GOEXPERIMENT=zerostack to clear stack on function entry
This is expensive but it might be useful in cases where
people are suffering from false positives during garbage
collection and are willing to trade the CPU time for getting
rid of the false positives.
On the other hand it only eliminates false positives caused
by other function calls, not false positives caused by dead
temporaries stored in the current function call.
The 5g/6g/8g changes were pulled out of the history, from
the last time we needed to do this (to work around a goto bug).
The code in go.h, lex.c, pgen.c is new but tiny.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6938073
»»»
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7002051
When using subexpressions ($1) as replacements, when they either don't exist or values weren't found causes a panic.
This patch ensures that the match location isn't -1, to prevent out of bounds errors.
Fixes#3816.
R=franciscossouza, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6931049
EDE2 is a rare DES mode that can be implemented with crypto/des, but
it's somewhat non-obvious so this CL adds an example of doing so.
Fixes#3537.
R=golang-dev, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6721056
Fixes#3559.
This makes Marshal handle fields marked ",any" instead of ignoring
them. That makes Marshal more symmetrical with Unmarshal, which seems
to have been a design goal.
Note some test cases were changed, because this patch changes
marshalling behavior. I think the previous behavior was buggy, but
there's still a backward-compatibility question to consider.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev, n13m3y3r
https://golang.org/cl/6938068
This disables checks for limited address space
and unlimited stack. They are not required for Go.
Fixes#4577.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev, kamil.kisiel, minux.ma
https://golang.org/cl/7003045
A fatal error used to happen when escassign-ing a multiple
function return to a single node. However, the situation
naturally appears when using "go f(g())" or "defer f(g())",
because g() is escassign-ed to sink.
Fixes#4529.
R=golang-dev, lvd, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6920060
This guarantees that powers of two return exact answers.
We could do a multiprecision approximation for the
rest of the answer too, but this seems like it should be
good enough.
Fixes#4567.
R=golang-dev, iant, remyoudompheng
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6943074
Enable cgo on OpenBSD.
The OpenBSD ld.so(1) does not currently support PT_TLS sections. Work
around this by fixing up the TCB that has been provided by librthread
and reallocating a TCB with additional space for TLS. Also provide a
wrapper for pthread_create, allowing zeroed TLS to be allocated for
threads created externally to Go.
Joint work with Shenghou Ma (minux).
Requires change 6846064.
Fixes#3205.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, iant, rsc, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6853059
The OpenBSD ld.so(1) does not currently support PT_TLS and refuses
to load ELF binaries that contain PT_TLS sections. Do not emit PT_TLS
sections - we will handle this appropriately in runtime/cgo instead.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6846064
Fixes#4345.
Benchmarks are promising,
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkPrint 14716391 14747131 +0.21%
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkParse 8846219 8809343 -0.42%
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
BenchmarkParse 6.61 6.64 1.00x
Also includes additional tests to improve token.FileSet coverage.
R=dvyukov, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6968044
Fixes#4481.
hello-world-core.gz was generated with a simple hello world c program and core dumped as suggested in the issue.
Also: add support for gz compressed test fixtures.
R=minux.ma, rsc, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6936058
Details:
- fixed variadic parameter passing and calls of the form f(g())
- fixed implementation of ^x for unsigned constants x
- fixed assignability of untyped booleans
- resolved a few TODOs, various minor fixes
- enabled many more tests (only 6 std packages don't typecheck)
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6930053
This is expensive but it might be useful in cases where
people are suffering from false positives during garbage
collection and are willing to trade the CPU time for getting
rid of the false positives.
On the other hand it only eliminates false positives caused
by other function calls, not false positives caused by dead
temporaries stored in the current function call.
The 5g/6g/8g changes were pulled out of the history, from
the last time we needed to do this (to work around a goto bug).
The code in go.h, lex.c, pgen.c is new but tiny.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6938073
reader.Read() can return both 0,nil and len(buf),err.
To be safe, we use io.ReadFull instead of doing reader.Read directly.
Fixes#3472.
R=bradfitz, rsc, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6285050
This decreases the amount of system calls during the
first call to Getenv. Calling Environ will still read
in all environment variables and populate the cache.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6939048
With this change the runtime can now read GOMAXPROCS, GOGC, etc.
I'm not quite sure how we missed this.
R=seed, lucio.dere, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6935062
The code:
func main() {
v := make([]int64, 10)
i := 1
_ = v[(i*4)/3]
}
crashes compiler with:
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x000000000043c274 in walkexpr (np=0x7fffffffc9b8, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:587
587 *init = concat(*init, n->ninit);
(gdb) bt
#0 0x000000000043c274 in walkexpr (np=0x7fffffffc9b8, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:587
#1 0x0000000000432d15 in copyexpr (n=0x7ffff7f69a48, t=<optimized out>, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/subr.c:2020
#2 0x000000000043f281 in walkdiv (init=0x0, np=0x7fffffffca70) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:2901
#3 walkexpr (np=0x7ffff7f69760, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:956
#4 0x000000000043d801 in walkexpr (np=0x7ffff7f69bc0, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:988
#5 0x000000000043cc9b in walkexpr (np=0x7ffff7f69d38, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:1068
#6 0x000000000043c50b in walkexpr (np=0x7ffff7f69f50, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:879
#7 0x000000000043c50b in walkexpr (np=0x7ffff7f6a0c8, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:879
#8 0x0000000000440a53 in walkexprlist (l=0x7ffff7f6a0c8, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:357
#9 0x000000000043d0bf in walkexpr (np=0x7fffffffd318, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:566
#10 0x00000000004402bf in vmkcall (fn=<optimized out>, t=0x0, init=0x0, va=0x7fffffffd368) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:2275
#11 0x000000000044059a in mkcall (name=<optimized out>, t=0x0, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:2287
#12 0x000000000042862b in callinstr (np=0x7fffffffd4c8, init=0x7fffffffd568, wr=0, skip=<optimized out>) at src/cmd/gc/racewalk.c:478
#13 0x00000000004288b7 in racewalknode (np=0x7ffff7f68108, init=0x7fffffffd568, wr=0, skip=0) at src/cmd/gc/racewalk.c:287
#14 0x0000000000428781 in racewalknode (np=0x7ffff7f65840, init=0x7fffffffd568, wr=0, skip=0) at src/cmd/gc/racewalk.c:302
#15 0x0000000000428abd in racewalklist (l=0x7ffff7f65840, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/racewalk.c:97
#16 0x0000000000428d0b in racewalk (fn=0x7ffff7f5f010) at src/cmd/gc/racewalk.c:63
#17 0x0000000000402b9c in compile (fn=0x7ffff7f5f010) at src/cmd/6g/../gc/pgen.c:67
#18 0x0000000000419f86 in funccompile (n=0x7ffff7f5f010, isclosure=0) at src/cmd/gc/dcl.c:1414
#19 0x0000000000424161 in p9main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at src/cmd/gc/lex.c:431
#20 0x0000000000401739 in main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at src/lib9/main.c:35
The problem is nil init passed to mkcall().
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6940045
Add a Hello method that allows clients to set the server sent in the EHLO/HELO exchange; the default remains localhost.
Based on CL 5555045 by rsc.
Fixes#4219.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6946057
Details:
- This CL is the conceptual skeleton of code found in CL 6114046
- The garbage collector uses struct Obj to specify memory blocks
- scanblock() is putting found memory blocks into an intermediate buffer
(xbuf) before adding/flushing them to the main work buffer (wbuf)
- The main loop in scanblock() is replaced with a skeleton code that
in the future will be able to recognize the type of objects and
thus will improve the garbage collector's precision.
For now, all objects are simply sequences of pointers so
the precision of the garbage collector remains unchanged.
- The code plugs .gcdata and .gcbss sections into the garbage collector.
scanblock() in this CL is unable to make any use of this.
R=rsc, dvyukov, remyoudompheng
CC=dave, golang-dev, minux.ma
https://golang.org/cl/6856121
This CL breaks Go 1 API compatibility but it doesn't matter because
previous ListenUnixgram doesn't work in any use cases, oops.
The public API change is:
-pkg net, func ListenUnixgram(string, *UnixAddr) (*UDPConn, error)
+pkg net, func ListenUnixgram(string, *UnixAddr) (*UnixConn, error)
Fixes#3875.
R=rsc, golang-dev, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6937059
Tests that here should be automatic retries if a database
driver's connection returns ErrBadConn on Begin. See
"TestTxErrBadConn" in sql_test.go
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6942050
This includes GORACE history_size and log_path flags.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, rsc, remyoudompheng, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6947046
Ignore signals during "go run" and wait for running child
process to exit. Stop executing further tests during "go test",
wait for running tests to exit and report error exit code.
Original CL 6351053 by dfc.
Fixes#3572.
Fixes#3581.
R=golang-dev, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6903061
I've been writing some code which involves syncing files (like
rsync) and it became apparent that under Linux I could read
modification times (os.Lstat) with nanosecond precision but
only write them with microsecond precision. This difference
in precision is rather annoying when trying to discover
whether files need syncing or not!
I've patched syscall and os to increases the accuracy of of
os.Chtimes for Linux and Windows. This involved exposing the
utimensat system call under Linux and a bit of extra code
under Windows. I decided not to expose the "at" bit of the
system call as it is impossible to replicate under Windows, so
the patch adds syscall.Utimens() to all architectures along
with a ImplementsUtimens flag.
If the utimensat syscall isn't available (utimensat was added
to Linux in 2.6.22, Released, 8 July 2007) then it silently
falls back to the microsecond accuracy version it uses now.
The improved accuracy for Windows should be good for all
versions of Windows.
Unfortunately Darwin doesn't seem to have a utimensat system
call that I could find so I couldn't implement it there. The
BSDs do, but since they share their syscall implementation
with Darwin I couldn't figure out how to define a syscall for
*BSD and not Darwin. I've left this as a TODO in the code.
In the process I implemented the missing methods for Timespec
under Windows which I needed which just happened to round out
the Timespec API for all platforms!
------------------------------------------------------------
Test code: http://play.golang.org/p/1xnGuYOi4b
Linux Before (1000 ns precision)
$ ./utimetest.linux.before z
Setting mtime 1344937903123456789: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456789 +0100 BST
Reading mtime 1344937903123457000: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123457 +0100 BST
Linux After (1 ns precision)
$ ./utimetest.linux.after z
Setting mtime 1344937903123456789: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456789 +0100 BST
Reading mtime 1344937903123456789: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456789 +0100 BST
Windows Before (1000 ns precision)
X:\>utimetest.windows.before.exe c:\Test.txt
Setting mtime 1344937903123456789: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456789 +0100 GMTDT
Reading mtime 1344937903123456000: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456 +0100 GMTDT
Windows After (100 ns precision)
X:\>utimetest.windows.after.exe c:\Test.txt
Setting mtime 1344937903123456789: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456789 +0100 GMTDT
Reading mtime 1344937903123456700: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.1234567 +0100 GMTDT
R=golang-dev, alex.brainman, rsc, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6905057
5g: Prog went from 128 bytes to 88 bytes
6g: Prog went from 174 bytes to 144 bytes
8g: Prog went from 124 bytes to 92 bytes
There may be a little more that can be squeezed out of Addr, but alignment will be a factor.
All: remove the unused pun field from Addr
R=rsc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6922048
TestDialTimeoutFDLeak will fail when system state somaxconn is
greater than expected fixed value.
Fixes#4384 (again).
R=fullung, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6873069
Fixes#4467.
The syslog tests can fail if the timeout fires before the data arrives at the mock server. Moving the timeout onto the goroutine that is calling ReadFrom() and always processing the data returned before handling the error should improve the reliability of the test.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6920047
Change suggested by iant. The compiler generates
special code for a/b when a is -0x80...0 and b = -1.
A single instruction can cover the case where b is -1,
so only one comparison is needed.
Fixes#3551.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6922049
The code inside the casee and casep labels can perfectly be merged since
they essentially do the same. The character to be stored where cp points is
just the character contained by the c variable.
R=golang-dev, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6845112
The code that was commented out was for the old regexp package.
In the new one the errors and the space of valid regexps are different.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6873063
Implementation is mostly identical to passing a non-negative int64 to
SetInt64, and calling Int64 with a non-negative value in the *Int.
Fixes#4389.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6929048
Also, implement a global OPTIONS * handler, like Apache.
Permit sending "*" requests to handlers, but not path-based
(ServeMux) handlers. That means people can go out of their
way to support SSDP or SIP or whatever, but most users will be
unaffected.
See RFC 2616 Section 5.1.2 (Request-URI)
See RFC 2616 Section 9.2 (OPTIONS)
Fixes#3692
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6868095
This check for BADWIDTH might happen while in defercheckwidth, making it raise errors for non-erroneous situations.
Fixes#4495.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6927043
Can happen in both request and response.
Also use it in one place that wasn't.
Fixes#3997.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6903057
Fixes#4492.
% go version
go version devel +6b602ab487d6 Sat Dec 08 14:43:00 2012 +0100 linux/amd64
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6906058
New in Go 1 will be nanosecond precision in the result of time.Now on Linux.
This will break code that stores time in external formats at microsecond
precision, reads it back, and expects to get exactly the same time.
Code like that can be fixed by using time.Now().Round(time.Microsecond)
instead of time.Now() in those contexts.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, iant, remyoudompheng
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6903050
This changes the output of
rand.Seed(0)
perm := rand.Perm(100)
When giving the same seeds to Go 1.0 and Go 1.1 programs
I would like them to generate the same random numbers.
««« original CL description
math/rand: remove noop iteration in Perm
The first iteration always do `m[0], m[0] = m[0], m[0]`, because
`rand.Intn(1)` is 0.
fun note: IIRC in TAOCP version of this algorithm, `i` goes
backward (n-1->1), meaning that the "already" shuffled part of the
array is never altered betweens iterations, while in the current
implementation the "not-yet" shuffled part of the array is
conserved between iterations.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6845121
»»»
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6905049
gotype can now handle much of the standard library.
- marked packages which have type checker issues
- this CL depends on CL 6846131
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6850130
Also:
- better handling of type assertions
- implemented built-in error type
- first cut at handling variadic function signatures
- several bug fixes
R=rsc, rogpeppe
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6846131
The fixjmp step eliminates redundant chains of JMP
instructions that are produced by the compiler during
code generation.
It is already implemented in gc, and can be adapted to 6c/8c with
the exception that JMPs refer to destination by pc instead of by
pointer. The algorithm is modified to operate on Regs instead of Progs
for this reason. The pcs are already restored later by regopt.
R=goalng-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6865046
Add missing file that should have been included in CL 6854063 / 5eac1a2d6fc3
R=remyoudompheng, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6891049
The 0-length part is fine, but some callers that write 0 bytes
also pass nil as the data pointer, and the Plan 9 kernel kills the
process with 'invalid address in sys call' in that case.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6862051
Per the curl man page, the http_proxy configuration can be
of the form:
[protocol://]<host>[:port]
And we had a test that <ip>:<port> worked, but if
the host began with a letter, url.Parse parsed the hostname
as the scheme instead, confusing ProxyFromEnvironment.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6875060
Used to say:
issue4251.go:12: inverted slice range
issue4251.go:12: constant -1 overflows uint64
issue4251.go:16: inverted slice range
issue4251.go:16: constant -1 overflows uint64
issue4251.go:20: inverted slice range
issue4251.go:20: constant -1 overflows uint64
With this patch, only gives the "inverted slice range" errors.
R=golang-dev, daniel.morsing
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6871058
Fixes#4396.
For fixed arrays larger than the unmapped page, agenr would general a nil check by loading the first word of the array. However there is no requirement for the first element of a byte array to be word aligned, so this check causes a trap on ARMv5 hardware (ARMv6 since relaxed that restriction, but it probably still comes at a cost).
Switching the check to MOVB ensures alignment is not an issue. This check is only invoked in a few places in the code where large fixed arrays are embedded into structs, compress/lzw is the biggest offender, and switching to MOVB has no observable performance penalty.
Thanks to Rémy and Daniel Morsing for helping me debug this on IRC last night.
R=remyoudompheng, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6854063
Using append simplifies the code and makes it work if
the initial capacity of the slice is smaller than the
number of items pushed.
R=golang-dev, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6869060
The debian/kFreeBSD project uses the FreeBSD kernel and the debian userspace. From our point of view, this is freebsd not linux as GOOS talks about the kernel syscall interface, not the userspace (although cgo alters that). As debian/kFreeBSD is experimental at this time, I do not think it is worth the effort of duplicating all the freebsd specific code so this is proposal represents a reasonable workaround.
Currently cgo is not supported, make.bash will detect this and disable cgo automatically during the build.
dfc@debian:~/go/src$ uname -a
GNU/kFreeBSD debian 8.1-1-686 #0 Sat Jul 21 17:02:04 UTC 2012 i686 i386 Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2415M CPU @ 2.30GHz GNU/kFreeBSD
dfc@debian:~/go/src$ ../bin/go version
go version devel +d05272f402ec Sat Dec 01 15:15:14 2012 -0800
Tested with GOOS=freebsd GOARCH=386
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6868046
The compiler was confused when inlining a T.Method(f()) call
where f returns multiple values: support for this was marked
as TODO.
Variadic calls are not supported but are not inlined either.
Add a test preventively for that case.
Fixes#4167.
R=golang-dev, rsc, lvd
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6871043
The first iteration always do `m[0], m[0] = m[0], m[0]`, because
`rand.Intn(1)` is 0.
fun note: IIRC in TAOCP version of this algorithm, `i` goes
backward (n-1->1), meaning that the "already" shuffled part of the
array is never altered betweens iterations, while in the current
implementation the "not-yet" shuffled part of the array is
conserved between iterations.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6845121
`godoc net/http` used to complain "/target contains more than one package: http, main"
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6852100
64bit atomics are broken on 32bit systems. This is issue 599.
linux/arm builders all broke with this change, I am concerned that the other 32bit builders are silently impacted.
««« original CL description
net: fix data races on deadline vars
Fixes#4434.
R=mikioh.mikioh, bradfitz, dvyukov, alex.brainman
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6855110
»»»
R=rsc, mikioh.mikioh, dvyukov, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6852105
When a race happens inside of runtime (chan, slice, etc),
currently reports contain only user file:line.
If the line contains a complex expression,
it's difficult to figure out where the race exactly.
This change adds one more top frame with exact
runtime function (e.g. runtime.chansend, runtime.mapaccess).
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6851125
W/o this change stack traces do not show from where sync.Once()
or atomic.XXX was called.
This change add funcenter/exit instrumentation to sync/sync.atomic
packages.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6854112
RFC 2616: "The 204 response MUST NOT include a message-body,
and thus is always terminated by the first empty line after
the header fields."
Previously we'd trigger chunked encoding by default on
responses, and then when finishing the request we'd write the
chunk trailers, which counted as a message-body.
Fixes#4454
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6782139
More lenient parsing with better error recovery.
It's easier for the type check to pick up the slack.
R=iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6856108
Test creates 2 tcp connections for put and get. Make sure
these are closed properly after test is over, otherwise
server hangs waiting for connection to be closed.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6842109
Update #4434.
The proposal attempts to reduce the number of places where fd,{r,w}deadline is checked and updated in preparation for issue 4434. In doing so the deadline logic is simplified by letting the pollster return errTimeout from netFD.Wait{Read,Write} as part of the wakeup logic.
The behaviour of setting n = 0 has been restored to match rev 2a55e349097f, which was the previous change to fd_unix.go before CL 6851096.
R=jsing, bradfitz, mikioh.mikioh, rsc
CC=fullung, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6850110
A fix similar to CL 6859043 was effective in resolving the intermittent failure.
Fixes#4423.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6854102
This CL continues with introducing IPv6 scoped addressing capability
into the net package.
Update #4234.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6842053
Package format is a utility package that takes care of
parsing, sorting of imports, and formatting of .go source
using the canonical gofmt formatting parameters.
Use go/format in various clients instead of the lower-level components.
R=r, bradfitz, dave, rogpeppe, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6852075
Garbage collection code (to be merged later) is calling functions
which have many local variables. This increases the probability that
the stack capacity won't be big enough to hold the local variables.
So, start gc() on a bigger stack to eliminate a potentially large number
of calls to runtime·morestack().
R=rsc, remyoudompheng, dsymonds, minux.ma, iant, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6846044
The syslog implementation was not correctly implementing the
traditional syslog format because it had a confused notion of
'priority'. syslog priority is not a single number but is, in
fact, the combination of a facility number and a severity. The
previous Go syslog implementation had a single Priority that
appeared to be the syslog severity and no way of setting the
facility. That meant that all syslog messages from Go
programs appeared to have a facility of 0 (LOG_KERN) which
meant they all appeared to come from the kernel.
Also, the 'prefix' was in fact the syslog tag (changed the
internal name for clarity as the term tag is more widely used)
and the timestamp and hostname values were missing from
messages.
With this change syslog messages are generated in the correct
format with facility and severity combined into a priority,
the timestamp in RFC3339 format, the hostname, the tag (with
the PID in [] appened) and the message.
The format is now:
<PRI>1 TIMESTAMP HOSTNAME TAG[PID]: MSG
The TIMESTAMP, HOSTNAME and PID fields are filled in
automatically by the package. The TAG and the MSG are supplied
by the user. This is what rsyslogd calls TraditionalFormat and
should be compatible with multiple systems.
R=rsc, jgc, 0xjnml, mikioh.mikioh, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6782118
This CL defines the API. Implementation will come in follow-up CLs.
Update #1960.
R=bradfitz, dr.volker.dobler, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6849092
It's better to use IsValid() then checking a (possibly
partially set up) position against NoPos directly.
R=dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6855099
This allows 5g and 8g to benefit from the rewrite as shifts
or magic multiplies. The 64-bit arithmetic is not handled there,
and left in 6g.
Update #2230.
R=golang-dev, dave, mtj, iant, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6819123
Thanks to Dustin Sallings for exposing the most frustrating
bug ever, and for providing repro cases (which formed the
basis of the new tests in this CL), and to Dave Cheney and
Dmitry Vyukov for help debugging and fixing.
This CL depends on submited pollster CLs ffd1e075c260 (Unix)
and 14b544194509 (Windows), as well as unsubmitted 6852085.
Some operating systems (OpenBSD, NetBSD, ?) may still require
more pollster work, fixing races (Issue 4434 and
http://goo.gl/JXB6W).
Tested on linux-amd64 and darwin-amd64, both with GOMAXPROCS 1
and 4 (all combinations of which previously failed differently)
Fixes#4191
Update #4434 (related fallout from this bug)
R=dave, bradfitz, dsallings, rsc, fullung
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6851061
Bools from comparisons can be assigned to all bool types, but this idealness would propagate through logical operators when the result should have been lowered to a non-ideal form.
Fixes#3924.
R=golang-dev, remyoudompheng, r, rsc, mtj
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6855061
Also: Can set base indentation in printer.Config: all code
is going to be indented by at least that amount (except for
raw string literals spanning multiple lines, since their
values must not change).
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6847086
The stack overflow checker in the linker uses the spadj field
to determine whether stack space will be large enough or not.
When spadj=0, the checker treats the function as a nosplit
and emits an error although the program is correct.
Also enable the stack checker in 8l.
Fixes#4316.
R=rsc, golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6855088
also:
- composite literal checking close to complete
- cleaned up parameter, method, field checking
- don't let panics escape type checker
- more TODOs eliminated
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6816083
The 8l linker automatically inserts XCHG instructions
to support otherwise impossible byte registers
(only available on AX, BX, CX, DX).
Sometimes AX or DX is needed (for MUL and DIV) so
we need to avoid clobbering them.
R=golang-dev, dave, iant, iant, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6846057
This CL starts to introduce IPv6 scoped addressing capability
into the net package.
The Public API changes are:
+pkg net, type IPAddr struct, Zone string
+pkg net, type IPNet struct, Zone string
+pkg net, type TCPAddr struct, Zone string
+pkg net, type UDPAddr struct, Zone string
Update #4234.
R=rsc, bradfitz, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6849045
Check the return value from malloc - do not assume that we were
allocated memory just because we asked for it.
Update #4415.
R=minux.ma, daniel.morsing, remyoudompheng, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6782100
If the a network read would block, and a packet arrived just before the timeout expired, then the number of bytes from the previous (blocking) read, -1, would be returned.
This change restores the previous logic, where n would be unconditionally set to 0 if err != nil, but was skipped due to a change in CL 6851096.
The test for this change is CL 6851061.
R=bradfitz, mikioh.mikioh, dvyukov, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6852085
Should make BSDs more reliable. (they seem to reuse ports
quicker than Linux)
Tested by hand with local modifications to force reuse on
Linux. (net/http tests failed before, pass now) Details in the
issue.
Fixes#4436
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6847101
The tests verify that deadlines are "persistent",
read/write deadlines do not interfere, can be reset,
read deadline can be set with both SetDeadline()
and SetReadDeadline(), etc.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6850070
The fix for issue 4403 may include more calls to time.Now().UnixNano(). I was concerned that if this function allocated it would cause additional garbage on the heap. It turns out that it doesn't, which is a nice surprise.
Also add benchmark for Now().UnixNano()
R=bradfitz, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6849097
Otherwise a fast sender or receiver can make sockets always
readable or writable, preventing deadline checks from ever
occuring.
Update #4191 (fixes it with other CL, coming separately)
Fixes#4403
R=golang-dev, alex.brainman, dave, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6851096
madvise was missing so implement it in assembler. This change
needs to be extended to the other BSD variantes (Net and Open)
Without this change the scavenger will attempt to pass memory back
to the operating system when it has become idle, but the memory is
not returned and for long running Go processes the total memory used
can grow until OOM occurs.
I have only been able to test the code on FreeBSD AMD64. The ARM
platforms needs testing.
R=golang-dev, mikioh.mikioh, dave, jgc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6850081
Update OpenBSD runtime to use the new version of the sys___tfork
syscall and switch TLS initialisation from sys_arch to sys___set_tcb
(note that both of these syscalls are available in OpenBSD 5.2).
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6843058
Putting aside the unguarded access to fd.sysfile, the condition will never be true as fd.incref above handles the closed condition.
R=mikioh.mikioh, dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6845062
The exp/types packages does not support the gccgo export data
format. At some point it should, but not yet.
R=gri, bradfitz, r, iant, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6854068
Noticed this while closing tabs. Yesterday I thought I could
ignore this garbage and hope that a fix for issue 2205 handled
it, but I just realized that's the opposite case,
string->[]byte, whereas this is []byte->string. I'm having a
hard time convincing myself that an Issue 2205-style fix with
static analysis and faking a string header would be safe in
all cases without violating the memory model (callee assumes
frozen memory; are there non-racy ways it could keep being
modified?)
R=dsymonds
CC=dave, gobot, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6850067
Saves 5 seconds on my machine. If Issue 4380 is fixed this
clone can be removed.
Update #4380
R=golang-dev, remyoudompheng, minux.ma, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6845058
There's no good reason to make any printer state adjustments
simply because the file name in node position information has
changed. Eliminate the relevant code.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6856054
This enables to loop over some goroutines, e.g. to print the
backtrace of goroutines 1 to 9:
set $i = 1
while $i < 10
printf "backtrace of goroutine %d:\n", $i
goroutine $i++ bt
end
R=lvd, lvd
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6843071
Fixes#4369.
Remove the check for fd.sysfd < 0, the first line of fd.accept() tests if the fd is open correctly and will handle the fd being closed during accept.
R=dvyukov, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6843076
This is part 1 of a series of proposals to fix issue 4369.
In resolving issue 3507 it was decided not to nil out the inner conn.fd field to avoid a race. This implies the checks for fd == nil inside incref/decref are never true.
Removing this logic removes one source of errClosing error values, which affects issue 4373 and moves towards bradfitz's request that fd.accept() return io.EOF when closed concurrently.
Update #4369.
Update #4373.
R=mikioh.mikioh, bradfitz, dvyukov, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6852057
ASTs may be created by various tools and built from nodes of
different files. An incorrectly constructed AST will likely
not print at all, but a (structurally) correct AST with bad
position information should still print structurally correct.
One heuristic used was to reset indentation when the filename
in the position information of nodes changed. However, this
can lead to wrong indentation for structurally correct ASTs.
Fix: Don't change the indentation in this case.
Related to issue 4300.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6849066
This significantly decreases amount of shadow memory
mapped by race detector.
I haven't tested on Windows, but on Linux it reduces
virtual memory size from 1351m to 330m for fmt.test.
Fixes#4379.
R=golang-dev, alex.brainman, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6849057
Add support for loading X.509 key pairs that consist of a certificate
with an EC public key and its corresponding EC private key.
R=agl
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6776043
compare incrementally. Also modified collation API to be more high-level
by removing the need for an explicit buffer to be passed as an argument.
This considerably speeds up Compare and CompareString. This change also eliminates
the need to reinitialize the normalization buffer for each use of an iter. This
also significantly improves performance for Key and KeyString.
R=r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6842050
Since we no longer skip the first entry when reading a symbol table,
we no longer need to allow for the offset difference when processing
the GNU version symbols.
Unbreaks builds on Linux.
R=golang-dev, agl, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6843057
Do not skip the first symbol in the symbol table. Any other indexes
into the symbol table (for example, indexes in relocation entries)
will now refer to the symbol following the one that was intended.
Add an object that contains debug relocations, which debug/dwarf
failed to decode correctly. Extend the relocation tests to cover
this case.
Note that the existing tests passed since the symbol following the
symbol that required relocation is also of type STT_SECTION.
Fixes#4107.
R=golang-dev, mikioh.mikioh, iant, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6848044
Currently race detector runtime just disables race detection in the finalizer goroutine.
It has false positives when a finalizer writes to shared memory -- the race with finalizer is reported in a normal goroutine that accesses the same memory.
After this change I am going to synchronize the finalizer goroutine with the rest of the world in racefingo(). This is closer to what happens in reality and so
does not have false positives.
And also add README file with instructions how to build the runtime.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6810095
It allows to catch e.g. a data race between atomic write and non-atomic write,
or Mutex.Lock() and mutex overwrite (e.g. mu = Mutex{}).
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6817103
This is a simplified version of earlier versions of this CL
and now only fixes obviously incorrect things, without
changing the locking on bodyEOFReader.
I'd like to see if this is sufficient before changing the
locking.
Update #4191
R=golang-dev, rsc, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6739055
The existing algorithm did not properly propagate the type
count from one level to the next, and as a consequence it
missed collisions.
Properly propagate multiplicity (count) information to the
next level.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkFieldByName1 182 180 -1.10%
BenchmarkFieldByName2 6273 6183 -1.43%
BenchmarkFieldByName3 49267 46784 -5.04%
Fixes#4355.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6821094
In order to add these, we need to be able to find references
to such types that already exist in the binary. To do that, introduce
a new linker section holding a list of the types corresponding to
arrays, chans, maps, and slices.
To offset the storage cost of this list, and to simplify the code,
remove the interface{} header from the representation of a
runtime type. It was used in early versions of the code but was
made obsolete by the kind field: a switch on kind is more efficient
than a type switch.
In the godoc binary, removing the interface{} header cuts two
words from each of about 10,000 types. Adding back the list of pointers
to array, chan, map, and slice types reintroduces one word for
each of about 500 types. On a 64-bit machine, then, this CL *removes*
a net 156 kB of read-only data from the binary.
This CL does not include the needed support for precise garbage
collection. I have created issue 4375 to track that.
This CL also does not set the 'algorithm' - specifically the equality
and copy functions - for a new array correctly, so I have unexported
ArrayOf for now. That is also part of issue 4375.
Fixes#2339.
R=r, remyoudompheng, mirtchovski, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6572043
This patch introduces a sort of pre-regopt peephole optimization.
When a temporary is introduced that just holds a value for the
duration of the next instruction and is otherwise unused, we
elide it to make the job of regopt easier.
Since x86 has very few registers, this situation happens very
often. The result is large savings in stack variables for
arithmetic-heavy functions.
crypto/aes
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkEncrypt 1301 392 -69.87%
BenchmarkDecrypt 1309 368 -71.89%
BenchmarkExpand 2913 1036 -64.44%
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
BenchmarkEncrypt 12.29 40.74 3.31x
BenchmarkDecrypt 12.21 43.37 3.55x
crypto/md5
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkHash8Bytes 1761 914 -48.10%
BenchmarkHash1K 16912 5570 -67.06%
BenchmarkHash8K 123895 38286 -69.10%
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
BenchmarkHash8Bytes 4.54 8.75 1.93x
BenchmarkHash1K 60.55 183.83 3.04x
BenchmarkHash8K 66.12 213.97 3.24x
bench/go1
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkBinaryTree17 8364835000 8303154000 -0.74%
BenchmarkFannkuch11 7511723000 6381729000 -15.04%
BenchmarkGobDecode 27764090 27103270 -2.38%
BenchmarkGobEncode 11240880 11184370 -0.50%
BenchmarkGzip 1470224000 856668400 -41.73%
BenchmarkGunzip 240660800 201697300 -16.19%
BenchmarkJSONEncode 155225800 185571900 +19.55%
BenchmarkJSONDecode 243347900 282123000 +15.93%
BenchmarkMandelbrot200 12240970 12201880 -0.32%
BenchmarkParse 8837445 8765210 -0.82%
BenchmarkRevcomp 2556310000 1868566000 -26.90%
BenchmarkTemplate 389298000 379792000 -2.44%
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
BenchmarkGobDecode 27.64 28.32 1.02x
BenchmarkGobEncode 68.28 68.63 1.01x
BenchmarkGzip 13.20 22.65 1.72x
BenchmarkGunzip 80.63 96.21 1.19x
BenchmarkJSONEncode 12.50 10.46 0.84x
BenchmarkJSONDecode 7.97 6.88 0.86x
BenchmarkParse 6.55 6.61 1.01x
BenchmarkRevcomp 99.43 136.02 1.37x
BenchmarkTemplate 4.98 5.11 1.03x
Fixes#4035.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6828056
When a nil listener address is passed to some protocol specific
listen function, it will create an unnamed, unbound socket because
of the nil listener address. Other listener functions may return
invalid address error.
This CL allows to pass a nil listener address to all protocol
specific listen functions to fix above inconsistency. Also make it
possible to return a proper local socket address in case of a nil
listner address.
Fixes#4190.
Fixes#3847.
R=rsc, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6525048
The package go.net/ipv4 allows to exist a single UDP listener
that join multiple different group addresses. That means that
LocalAddr on multicast UDPConn returns a first joined group
address is not desirable.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6822108
By keeping a single copy of the strings that commonly show up
in headers, we can avoid one string allocation per header.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkReadMIMEHeader 19590 10824 -44.75%
BenchmarkUncommon 3168 1861 -41.26%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkReadMIMEHeader 32 25 -21.88%
BenchmarkUncommon 5 5 0.00%
R=bradfitz, golang-dev, dave, rsc, jra
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6721055
When HTTP bodies were too large and we didn't want to finish
reading them for DoS reasons, we previously found it necessary
to send a FIN and then pause before closing the connection
(which might send a RST) if we wanted the client to have a
better chance at receiving our error response. That was Issue 3595.
This issue adds the same fix to request headers which
are too large, which might fix the Windows flakiness
we observed on TestRequestLimit at:
http://build.golang.org/log/146a2a7d9b24441dc14602a1293918191d4e75f1
R=golang-dev, alex.brainman, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6826084
The patch adds more cases to agenr to allocate registers later,
and makes 6g generate addresses for sgen in something else than
SI and DI. It avoids a complex save/restore sequence that
amounts to allocate a register before descending in subtrees.
Fixes#4207.
R=golang-dev, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6817080
There was an init race between
check_test.go:init
universe.go:def
use of Universe
and
universe.go:init
creation of Universe
The order in which init funcs are executed in a package is unspecified.
The test is not currently broken in the golang.org environment
because the go tool compiles the test with non-test sources before test sources,
but other environments may, say, sort the source files before compiling,
and thus trigger this race, causing a nil pointer panic.
R=gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6827076
As discussed in issue 2540, nulls are allowed for any type in JSON so they should not result in an error during Unmarshal.
Fixes#2540.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6759043
Arbitrary decisions: order of the arguments and the
fact it takes a block-type argument (rather than
leaving to user to fill it in later); I'm happy whatever
colour we want to paint it.
We also change DecryptPEMBlock so that it won't
panic when the IV has the wrong size.
R=agl, agl
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6820114
xtramodes' C_PBIT optimisation transforms:
MOVW 0(R3),R1
ADD $4,R3,R3
into:
MOVW.P 4(R3),R1
and the AADD optimisation tranforms:
ADD R0,R1
MOVBU 0(R1),R0
into:
MOVBU R0<<0(R1),R0
5g does not appear to generate sequences that
can be transformed by xtramodes' AMOVW.
R=remyoudompheng, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6817085
Otherwise a poorly timed GC can collect the memory before it
is returned to the Go program.
R=golang-dev, dave, dvyukov, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6819119
On ARM, char is unsigned, and the code generation for
multiplication gets totally broken.
Fixes#4354.
R=golang-dev, dave, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6826079
Currently it works incorrectly if user specifies own build tags
and with race detection (e.g. runtime/race is not selected,
because it contains only test files with +build race).
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6814107
When exporting a body containing
x, ok := v.(Type)
the definition for Type was not being included, so when the body
was actually used, it would cause an "unknown type" compiler error.
Fixes#4370.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6827064
Re-enable the crash tests on NetBSD now that the issue has been
identified and fixed.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6813100
Integrates with the pollserver now.
Uses the old implementation on windows and plan9.
Fixes#2631
R=paul, iant, adg, bendaglish, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6815049
This is blocking me submitting the net fd timeout
CL, since goapi chokes on my constant.
The much more extensive fix to goapi's type checker
in pending review in https://golang.org/cl/6742050
But I'd rather get this quick fix in first.
R=golang-dev, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6818104
The code assumed that the only choices were EscNone, EscScope, and EscHeap,
so that it makes sense to set EscScope only if the current setting is EscNone.
Now that we have the many variants of EscReturn, this logic is false, and it was
causing important EscScopes to be ignored in favor of EscReturn.
Fixes#4360.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev, lvd
https://golang.org/cl/6816103
The old code worked with gc, I assume because the linker
unified identical strings, but it failed with gccgo.
R=rsc
CC=gobot, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6826063
The current implement can fail when the
block size is not a multiple of 8 bytes.
This CL makes it work, and also checks that the
data is in fact a multiple of the block size.
R=agl, agl
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6827058
Avoids problems with local declarations shadowing other names.
We write a more explicit form than the incoming program, so there
may be additional type annotations. For example:
int := "hello"
j := 2
would normally turn into
var int string = "hello"
var j int = 2
but the int variable shadows the int type in the second line.
This CL marks all local variables with a per-function sequence number,
so that this would instead be:
var int·1 string = "hello"
var j·2 int = 2
Fixes#4326.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6816100
Currently race detector runtime maps shadow memory eagerly at process startup.
It works poorly on Windows, because Windows requires reservation in swap file
(especially problematic if several Go program runs at the same, each consuming GBs
of memory).
With this change race detector maps shadow memory lazily, so Go runtime must notify
about all new heap memory.
It will help with Windows port, but also eliminates scary 16TB virtual mememory
consumption in top output (which sometimes confuses some monitoring scripts).
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6811085
Current racewalk transformation looks like:
x := <-makeChan().c
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
runtime.raceread(&makeChan().c)
x := <-makeChan().c
and so makeChan() is called twice.
With this CL the transformation looks like:
x := <-makeChan().c
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
chan *tmp = &(makeChan().c)
raceread(&*tmp)
x := <-(*tmp)
Fixes#4245.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6822075
It is refactoring towards generic walk
+ it handles mode nodes.
Partially fixes 4228 issue.
R=golang-dev, lvd, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6775098
Thank you zhoumichaely for original CL 5175042.
Fixes#1740.
Fixes#2315.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-dev, zhoumichaely
https://golang.org/cl/6822045
Unlike when using -http, godoc -url didn't initialize the "filesystem"
and metadata that are used when generating responses. This CL adds this
initialization, so that -url provides the same results as an HTTP
request when using -http.
Fixes#4335.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6817075
When the first result of a type assertion is blank, the compiler would still copy out a potentially large non-interface type.
Fixes#1021.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6812079
The test for this is test/index.go, which is not run by
default. That test does not currently pass even after this is
applied, due to issue 4348.
Fixes#4344.
R=golang-dev, daniel.morsing, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6815085
It speedups the race detector somewhat, but also prevents
getcallerpc() from obtaining lessstack().
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6812091
Currently the build fails with -race if a package in GOPATH
imports another package in GOPATH.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6811083
The deadlock occurs when another goroutine requests GC
during the test. When wait=true the test expects physical parallelism,
that is, that P goroutines are all active at the same time.
If GC is requested, then part of the goroutines are not scheduled,
so other goroutines deadlock.
With wait=false, goroutines finish parallel for w/o waiting for all
other goroutines.
Fixes#3954.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6820098
The race detector does not understand ParFor synchronization, because it's implemented in C.
If run with -cpu=2 currently race detector says:
WARNING: DATA RACE
Read by goroutine 5:
runtime_test.TestParForParallel()
src/pkg/runtime/parfor_test.go:118 +0x2e0
testing.tRunner()
src/pkg/testing/testing.go:301 +0x8f
Previous write by goroutine 6:
runtime_test.func·024()
src/pkg/runtime/parfor_test.go:111 +0x52
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6811082
This CL is a backport of 6012049 which improves code
generation for shift operations.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkLSL 9 5 -49.67%
BenchmarkLSR 9 4 -50.00%
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6813045
It also increases timeout deltas to allow for longer wait.
Also disables this test on plan9.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6821062
It was well-defined but easy to miss that the return value for
"not found" is len(input) not -1 as many expect.
Fixes#4205.
R=golang-dev, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6820080
It happens that blocks are used for function calls in a
quite low-level way so they cannot be instrumented as
usual.
Blocks are also used for inlined functions.
R=golang-dev, rsc, dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6821068
Compiling expressions like:
s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[i]]]]]]]]]]]]
make 5g and 6g run out of registers. Such expressions can arise
if a slice is used to represent a permutation and the user wants
to iterate it.
This is due to the usual problem of allocating registers before
going down the expression tree, instead of allocating them in a
postfix way.
The functions cgenr and agenr (that generate a value to a newly
allocated register instead of an existing location), are either
introduced or modified when they already existed to allocate
the new register as late as possible, and sudoaddable is disabled
for OINDEX nodes so that igen/agenr is used instead.
Update #4207.
R=dave, daniel.morsing, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6733055
This is an experiment in static analysis of Go programs
to understand which struct fields a program might use.
It is not part of the Go language specification, it must
be enabled explicitly when building the toolchain,
and it may be removed at any time.
After building the toolchain with GOEXPERIMENT=fieldtrack,
a specific field can be marked for tracking by including
`go:"track"` in the field tag:
package pkg
type T struct {
F int `go:"track"`
G int // untracked
}
To simplify usage, only named struct types can have
tracked fields, and only exported fields can be tracked.
The implementation works by making each function begin
with a sequence of no-op USEFIELD instructions declaring
which tracked fields are accessed by a specific function.
After the linker's dead code elimination removes unused
functions, the fields referred to by the remaining
USEFIELD instructions are the ones reported as used by
the binary.
The -k option to the linker specifies the fully qualified
symbol name (such as my/pkg.list) of a string variable that
should be initialized with the field tracking information
for the program. The field tracking string is a sequence
of lines, each terminated by a \n and describing a single
tracked field referred to by the program. Each line is made
up of one or more tab-separated fields. The first field is
the name of the tracked field, fully qualified, as in
"my/pkg.T.F". Subsequent fields give a shortest path of
reverse references from that field to a global variable or
function, corresponding to one way in which the program
might reach that field.
A common source of false positives in field tracking is
types with large method sets, because a reference to the
type descriptor carries with it references to all methods.
To address this problem, the CL also introduces a comment
annotation
//go:nointerface
that marks an upcoming method declaration as unavailable
for use in satisfying interfaces, both statically and
dynamically. Such a method is also invisible to package
reflect.
Again, all of this is disabled by default. It only turns on
if you have GOEXPERIMENT=fieldtrack set during make.bash.
R=iant, ken
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6749064
The only code change is in exp/gotype/gotype.go.
The latest reviewed version of exp/types is now
exp/types/staging.
First step toward replacing exp/types with
exp/types/staging.
R=iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6819071
1. Prepend racefuncenter() to fn->enter -- fn->enter can contain new() calls,
and we want them to be in the scope of the function.
2. Dump fn->enter and fn->exit.
3. Add TODO that OTYPESW expression can contain interesting memory accesses.
4. Ignore only _ names instead of all names starting with _.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6822048
- simplified assignment checking by removing duplicate code
- implemented field lookup (methods, structs, embedded fields)
- importing methods (not just parsing them)
- type-checking functions and methods
- typechecking more statements (inc/dec, select, return)
- tracing support for easier debugging
- handling nil more correctly (comparisons)
- initial support for [...]T{} arrays
- initial support for method expressions
- lots of bug fixes
All packages under pkg/go as well as pkg/exp/types typecheck
now with pkg/exp/gotype applied to them; i.e., a significant
amount of typechecking works now (several statements are not
implemented yet, but handling statements is almost trivial in
comparison with typechecking expressions).
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6768063
Use wrapper functions to tell scheduler what we are doing.
With this patch, and a separate patch to the go tool, all the
cgo tests pass with gccgo.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6812058
* Use -fgo-pkgpath and -gccgopkgpath rather than -fgo-prefix
and -gccgoprefix.
* Define GOPKGPATH when compiling .c or .s files for gccgo.
* Use -fgo-relative-import-path.
* Produce .o files for gccgo, not .[568] files.
* Pass -E when linking if using cgo.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6820064
The idea is to (1) process ninit of all nodes,
and (2) put instrumentation of ninit into the nodes themselves (not the top-level statement ninit).
Fixes#4304.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev, lvd
https://golang.org/cl/6818049
When local declarations needed unexported types, these could
be missing in the export data.
Fixes build with -gcflags -lll, except for exp/gotype.
R=golang-dev, rsc, lvd
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6813067
This should make the compiler emit errors specific to the bounds checking instead of overflow errors on the underlying types.
Updates #4232.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6783054
Incorrect cast was causing panics when
calling String() on dnsMsg with dnsRR_A
answers.
R=golang-dev, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6818043
Plan 9 and Go's lib9/fmt disagree on whether %#x includes the 0x prefix
when printing 0, because ANSI C gave bad advice long ago.
Avoiding that case makes binaries compiled on different systems compatible.
R=ken2
CC=akumar, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6814066
defined by the PLTE chunk. Such pixels decode to opaque black,
which matches what libpng does.
Fixes#4319.
On my reading, the PNG spec isn't clear whether palette index values
outside of those defined by the PLTE chunk is an error, and if not,
what to do.
Libpng 1.5.3 falls back to opaque black. png_set_PLTE says:
/* Changed in libpng-1.2.1 to allocate PNG_MAX_PALETTE_LENGTH instead
* of num_palette entries, in case of an invalid PNG file that has
* too-large sample values.
*/
png_ptr->palette = (png_colorp)png_calloc(png_ptr,
PNG_MAX_PALETTE_LENGTH * png_sizeof(png_color));
ImageMagick 6.5.7 returns an error:
$ convert -version
Version: ImageMagick 6.5.7-8 2012-08-17 Q16 http://www.imagemagick.org
Copyright: Copyright (C) 1999-2009 ImageMagick Studio LLC
Features: OpenMP
$ convert packetloss.png x.bmp
convert: Invalid colormap index `packetloss.png' @ image.c/SyncImage/3849.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6822065
Tailorings are represented by removing and reinserting entries from a linked list.
After all tailorings are done, missing weights are computed and verified.
This implementation assumes that entries that are used in expansions are not
reinserted at a later point. This considerably simplifies the implementation.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6739052
incremental comparisons. Instead, processing is now done directly on colElems.
As a result, the size of the weights array is now reduced by 75%.
Details:
- Primary value of type 1 colElem is shifted by 1 bit so that primaries
of all types can be compared without shifting.
- Quaternary values are now stored in the colElem itself. This is possible
as quaternary values other than 0 or maxQuaternary are only needed when other
values are ignored.
- Simplified processWeights by removing cases that are needed for ICU but not
for us (our CJK primary values fit in a single value).
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6817054
It is common to close network connection while another goroutine is
blocked reading on another goroutine. This sequence corresponds to
windows calls to WSARecv to start io, followed by GetQueuedCompletionStatus
that blocks until io completes, and, finally, closesocket called from
another thread. We were expecting that closesocket would unblock
GetQueuedCompletionStatus, and it does, but not always
(http://code.google.com/p/go/issues/detail?id=4170#c5). Also that sequence
results in connection is being reset.
This CL inserts CancelIo between GetQueuedCompletionStatus and closesocket,
and waits for both WSARecv and GetQueuedCompletionStatus to complete before
proceeding to closesocket. This seems to fix both connection resets and
issue 4170. It also makes windows code behave similar to unix version.
Unfortunately, CancelIo needs to be called on the same thread as WSARecv.
So we have to employ strategy we use for connections with deadlines to
every connection now. It means, there are 2 unavoidable thread switches
for every io. Some newer versions of windows have new CancelIoEx api that
doesn't have these drawbacks, and this CL uses this capability when available.
As time goes by, we should have less of CancelIo and more of CancelIoEx
systems. Computers with CancelIoEx are also not affected by issue 4195 anymore.
Fixes#3710Fixes#3746Fixes#4170
Partial fix for issue 4195
R=golang-dev, mikioh.mikioh, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6604072
compiler_rt introduces a weak and hidden symbol compilerrt_abort_impl
into our pre-linked _all.o object, we have to handle it.
Fixes#4273.
R=iant, rsc, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6783050
Feature extraction was tested before, but not the final diffs.
This CL breaks function main into a smaller main + testable
compareAPI.
No functional changes.
R=golang-dev, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6820057
On 6g/linux:
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkFDCT 4606 4241 -7.92%
BenchmarkIDCT 4187 3923 -6.31%
BenchmarkDecodeBaseline 3154864 3170224 +0.49%
BenchmarkDecodeProgressive 4072812 4017132 -1.37%
BenchmarkEncode 39406920 34596760 -12.21%
Stack requirements before (from 'go tool 6g -S'):
(scan.go:37) TEXT (*decoder).processSOS+0(SB),$1352-32
(writer.go:448) TEXT (*encoder).writeSOS+0(SB),$5344-24
after:
(scan.go:37) TEXT (*decoder).processSOS+0(SB),$1064-32
(writer.go:448) TEXT (*encoder).writeSOS+0(SB),$2520-24
Also, in encoder.writeSOS, re-use the yBlock scratch buffer for Cb and
Cr. This reduces the stack requirement slightly, but also avoids an
unlucky coincidence where a BenchmarkEncode stack split lands between
encoder.writeByte and bufio.Writer.WriteByte, which occurs very often
during Huffman encoding and is otherwise disasterous for the final
benchmark number. FWIW, the yBlock re-use *without* the s/int/int32/
change does not have a noticable effect on the benchmarks.
R=r
CC=golang-dev, rsc
https://golang.org/cl/6823043
Fix the problem with no cookie handling when sending
other than GET or HEAD request through
(*Client) Do(*Request) (*Resposne, error).
https://code.google.com/p/go/issues/detail?id=3985
Adds a function (*Client) send(*Request) (*Reponse, error):
- sets cookies from CookieJar to request,
- sends request
- parses a reply cookies and updates CookieJar
Fixes#3985
R=bradfitz
CC=gobot, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6653049
Previously we converted a time to UTC *and* serialized the timezone of
the original time. With this change, we serialize a UTCTime in the
original timezone.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6817048
- make sure dclcontext == PAUTO only in function bodies
- introduce PDISCARD to discard declarations in bodies of repeated imports
- skip printing initializing OAS'es in export mode, assuming they only occur after ODCL's
- remove ODCL and the initializing OAS from inl.c:ishairy
- fix confused use of ->typecheck in typecheckinl: it's about the ->inl, not about the fn.
- debuging aids: print ntype on ONAMEs too and -Emm instead of -Ell.
fixes#2812
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6800043
includes step 0: synthesize outparams, from 6600044
includes step 1,2: give outparams loopdepth 0 and verify unchanged results
generate esc:$mask tags, but still tie to sink if a param has mask != 0
from 6610054
adds final steps:
- have esccall generate n->escretval, a list of nodes the function results flow to
- use these in esccall and ORETURN/OAS2FUNC/and f(g())
- only tie parameters to sink if tag is absent, otherwise according to mask, tie them to escretval
R=rsc, bradfitz
CC=dave, gobot, golang-dev, iant, rsc
https://golang.org/cl/6741044
Before this patch the test would close the file descriptor but
not the os.File. When the os.File was GC'ed, the finalizer
would close the file descriptor again. That would cause
problems if the same file descriptor were returned by a later
call to open in another test.
On my system:
> GOGC=30 go test
--- FAIL: TestPassFD (0.04 seconds)
passfd_test.go:62: FileConn: dup: bad file descriptor
FAIL
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6776053
setAddr was showing up in profiles due to string concatenation construction the os.File name field. netFD.sysfile's Name() is never used, except in dup() so I believe it is safe to avoid this allocation.
R=mikioh.mikioh, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6742058
- Allow secondary values below the default value in second form. This is
to support before tags for secondary values, as used by Chinese.
- Eliminate collation elements that are guaranteed to be immaterial
after a weight increment.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6739051
includes step 0: synthesize outparams, from 6600044
step 1: give outparams loopdepth 0 and verify unchanged results
step 2: generate esc:$mask tags, but still tie to sink if a param has mask != 0
next step: use in esccall (and ORETURN with implicit OAS2FUNC) to avoid tying to sink
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6610054
in typecheck and walk, conversion from OAS2RECV to OAS2
and to OSELRECV2 duplicated the ->rlist->n to ->right
thereby destroying the strict tree-ness of the AST (up to
ONAMES) of course. Several recursions in esc.c and inl.c
and probably elsewhere assume nodes of the tree aren't duplicated.
rather than defensively code around this, i'd rather assert
these cases away and fix their cause.
(this was tripped in 6741044)
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6750043
It's common to use the go list command in shell scripts, but
currently it's awkward to print a string slice from the Package
type in a way that's easily parseable by the shell. For example:
go list -f '{{range .Deps}}{{.}}
{{end}}'
(and even that prints an unwanted new line at the end|).
To make this easier, this CL adds a "join" function to the
format template.
go list -f '{{join .Deps "\n"}}'
R=rsc, dsymonds, minux.ma, remyoudompheng, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6680044
Previously, multi-byte characters were not allowed. Also certain single-byte
characters, such as '-', were disallowed.
Fixes#3813.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6641052
I just realized that there is no good place for adding
exposed function or method tests because server, unicast
and multicast_test.go do test complicated multiple test
objects, platform behaviros, protocol behaviors and API,
at the same time. Perhaps splitting them into per test
object might be better, so this CL provides tests focused
on API.
R=rsc
CC=gobot, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6501057
Someone new to the language may not know the connection between ints and arrays, which was the only thing that the previous error told you anything about.
Fixes#4256.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6739048
PauseNs is a circular buffer of recent pause times, and the
most recent one is at [((NumGC-1)+256)%256].
Also fix comments cross-linking the Go and C definition of
various structs.
R=golang-dev, rsc, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6657047
many small writes to a network may be less efficient that a few
large writes.
This fixes net/http's TestClientWrites, broken by 6565056 that
introduced Writer.ReadFrom. That test implicitly assumed that
calling io.Copy on a *bufio.Writer wouldn't write to the
underlying network until the buffer was full.
R=dsymonds
CC=bradfitz, golang-dev, mchaten, mikioh.mikioh
https://golang.org/cl/6743044
This is part 2 of 2 for issue 4028.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkWriterCopyOptimal 53293 28326 -46.85%
BenchmarkWriterCopyUnoptimal 53757 30537 -43.19%
BenchmarkWriterCopyNoReadFrom 53192 36642 -31.11%
Fixes#4028.
R=nigeltao
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6565056
The value of cosines are cached in a global array
instead of being recomputed each time.
The test was terribly slow on arm.
R=golang-dev, dave, nigeltao
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6733046
Since this patch changes the way complex literals are written
in export data, there are a few other glitches.
Fixes#4159.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev, remy
https://golang.org/cl/6674047
A 4-bit window is convenient because 4 divides both 32 and 64,
therefore we never have a window spanning words of the exponent.
Additionaly, the benefit of a 5-bit window is only 2.6% at 1024-bits
and 3.3% at 2048-bits.
This code is still not constant time, however.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkRSA2048Decrypt 17108590 11180370 -34.65%
Benchmark3PrimeRSA2048Decrypt 13003720 7680390 -40.94%
R=gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6716048
Define the properties of the arguments better. In particular,
explain that the path is (sort of) relative to the argument to
Walk.
Fixes#4119.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6721048
- always return 1 for y <= 0
- document that the sign of m is ignored
- protect against div-0 panics by treating
m == 0 the same way as m == nil
- added extra tests
Fixes#4239.
R=agl, remyoudompheng, agl
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6724046
The RFC doesn't actually have an opinion on whether this is a fatal or
warning level alert, but common practice suggests that it should be a
warning.
This involves rebasing most of the tests.
Fixes#3413.
R=golang-dev, shanemhansen, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6654050
This patch is enough to fix compilation of
exp/types tests but only passes a stripped down
version of the appripriate torture test.
Update #4207.
R=dave, nigeltao, rsc, golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6621061
To be clear, this supports decoding the bytes on the wire into an
in-memory image. There is no API change: jpeg.Decode will still not
return until the entire image is decoded.
The code is obviously more complicated, and costs around 10% in
performance on baseline JPEGs. The processSOS code could be cleaned up a
bit, and maybe some of that loss can be reclaimed, but I'll leave that
for follow-up CLs, to keep the diff for this one as small as possible.
Before:
BenchmarkDecode 1000 2855637 ns/op 21.64 MB/s
After:
BenchmarkDecodeBaseline 500 3178960 ns/op 19.44 MB/s
BenchmarkDecodeProgressive 500 4082640 ns/op 15.14 MB/s
Fixes#3976.
The test data was generated by:
# Create intermediate files; cjpeg on Ubuntu 10.04 can't read PNG.
convert video-001.png video-001.bmp
convert video-005.gray.png video-005.gray.pgm
# Create new test files.
cjpeg -quality 100 -sample 1x1,1x1,1x1 -progressive video-001.bmp > video-001.progressive.jpeg
cjpeg -quality 50 -sample 2x2,1x1,1x1 video-001.bmp > video-001.q50.420.jpeg
cjpeg -quality 50 -sample 2x1,1x1,1x1 video-001.bmp > video-001.q50.422.jpeg
cjpeg -quality 50 -sample 1x1,1x1,1x1 video-001.bmp > video-001.q50.444.jpeg
cjpeg -quality 50 -sample 2x2,1x1,1x1 -progressive video-001.bmp > video-001.q50.420.progressive.jpeg
cjpeg -quality 50 -sample 2x1,1x1,1x1 -progressive video-001.bmp > video-001.q50.422.progressive.jpeg
cjpeg -quality 50 -sample 1x1,1x1,1x1 -progressive video-001.bmp > video-001.q50.444.progressive.jpeg
cjpeg -quality 50 video-005.gray.pgm > video-005.gray.q50.jpeg
cjpeg -quality 50 -progressive video-005.gray.pgm > video-005.gray.q50.progressive.jpeg
# Delete intermediate files.
rm video-001.bmp video-005.gray.pgm
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6684046
caller of ioutil.TempFile() can use f.Name() to get "pathname"
of the temporary file, instead of just the "name" of the file.
Also remove an out-of-date comment about random number state.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6649054
Valgrind Massif result when linking godoc:
On amd64:
old new -/+
mem_heap_B 185844612 175358047 -5.7%
mem_heap_extra_B 773404 773137 -0.0%
On 386/ARM:
old new -/+
mem_heap_B 141775701 131289941 -7.4%
mem_heap_extra_B 737011 736955 -0.0%
R=golang-dev, r, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6655045
Better explanation of width for floating-point values.
Explain that scanning does not handle %#q etc.
Fixes#4202.
Fixes#4206.
R=golang-dev, adg, rsc, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6620074
I was an idiot and was thinking that a small base didn't matter
because the exponentiation would quickly make the number the same size
as the modulus. But, of course, the small base continues to make
multiplications unrealistically cheap throughout the computation.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6649048
It was suggested that it's too easy to use crypto/hmac insecurely and
I think that has some merit. This change adds a Equal function to
make it obvious that MAC values should be compared in constant time.
R=rsc, max
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6632044
If source are not available, then the stack looks like:
stack_test.go:40: /tmp/gobuilder/linux-amd64-race-72b15c5d6f65/go/src/pkg/runtime/debug/bla-bla-bla/src/pkg/runtime/debug/stack_test.go:15 (0x43fb11)
stack_test.go:40: /tmp/gobuilder/linux-amd64-race-72b15c5d6f65/go/src/pkg/runtime/debug/bla-bla-bla/src/pkg/runtime/debug/stack_test.go:18 (0x43fb7a)
stack_test.go:40: /tmp/gobuilder/linux-amd64-race-72b15c5d6f65/go/src/pkg/runtime/debug/bla-bla-bla/src/pkg/runtime/debug/stack_test.go:37 (0x43fbf4)
stack_test.go:40: /tmp/gobuilder/linux-amd64-race-72b15c5d6f65/go/src/pkg/testing/bla-bla-bla/src/pkg/testing/testing.go:301 (0x43b5ba)
stack_test.go:40: /tmp/gobuilder/linux-amd64-race-72b15c5d6f65/go/src/pkg/runtime/bla-bla-bla/src/pkg/runtime/proc.c:276 (0x410670)
stack_test.go:40:
which is 6 lines.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6637060
The compiler is crashing on the following code:
type TypeID int
func (t *TypeID) encodeType(x int) (tt TypeID, err error) {
switch x {
case 0:
return t.encodeType(x * x)
}
return 0, nil
}
The pass marks "return struct" {tt TypeID, err error} as used,
and this causes internal check failure.
I've added the test to:
https://golang.org/cl/6525052/diff/7020/src/pkg/runtime/race/regression_test.go
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6611049
Also:
- Refactored testing framework to permit easier
idempotency testing.
- Applied gofmt -w src misc
This CL depends on CL 6639044 being applied first.
Formatting is not idempotent for all files: In those
files the comment position has changed (due to missing
precise location information) and/or the comment formatting
cannot/is not aware of independent code re-formatting.
In general it is very hard to make format idempotent when
running it in one pass only. Leaving that aside for now.
Fixes#1835.
R=r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6624051
Preparation for forthcoming CL 6624051: Will make it
easier to see if/what changes are incurred by it.
The alignment changes in this CL are due to CL 6610051
(fix to alignment heuristic) where it appears that an
old version of gofmt was run (and thus the correct
alignment updates were not done).
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6639044
I typoed the code and tried to parse all the way to the end of the
message. Therefore it fails when NPN is not the last extension in the
ServerHello.
Fixes#4088.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6637052
1. correctly initialize .plt.got entries (point to the 1st entry)
2. add section .rel.plt (FreeBSD insists PLT relocs to be there)
3. put relocs of .got.plt into .rel.plt
4. set ELFOSABI_FREEBSD in ELF header
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6643050
This is a part of a bigger change that adds data race detection feature:
https://golang.org/cl/6456044
The purpose of this patch is to provide coarse-grained synchronization
between all Read() and Write() calls.
R=rsc, bradfitz, alex.brainman
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6610064
Check for specific, important misalignment in garbage collector.
Not a complete fix for issue 599 but an important workaround.
Update #599.
R=golang-dev, iant, dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6641049
No longer assume that e_lfanew (in the IMAGE_DOS_HEADER strcuture) is always one byte. It is now regarded as a 4 byte uint32.
Fixes#4177.
R=golang-dev, alex.brainman, dave, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6587048
Updates setup-godoc-app.bash to produce a working godoc app
by substituting the go1.0.x go/... packages with those from tip.
R=gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6587080
- Changed Check signature to take function parameters for
more flexibility: Now a client can interrupt type checking
early (via panic in one the upcalls) once the desired
type information or number of errors is reached. Default
use is still simple.
- Cleaned up main typechecking loops. Now does not neglect
_ declarations anymore.
- Various other cleanups.
R=golang-dev, r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6612049
This code has been reviewed before. The most significant
change is to check_test which now can handle more than
one error at the same error position (due to spurious
errors - should not happen in praxis once error handling
has been fine-tuned). This change makes check_test easier
to use during development.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6584057
1. R_ARM_CALL can also be used to call a PLT entry
2. add support for R_ARM_PC24 and R_ARM_JUMP24
3. refactor, remove D_PLT32 in favor of D_CALL
Fixes#4006.
R=rsc, dave
CC=fullung, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6622057
The protection against segfaults does not completely solve
crashes and breaks test/fixedbugs/bug365.go
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6615058
Also add call to GC() to make it easier to re-enable the test.
Update #4155.
When we have precise GC merged, re-enable this test.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6622058
Don't assume the test has a clean environment within /tmp.
Use an actual new tempdir for its tests.
Fixes FreeBSD build failure as seen at:
http://build.golang.org/log/396738676356d7fb6bab6eaf1b97cac820f8a90f
--- FAIL: TestMkdirAllWithSymlink (0.00 seconds)
path_test.go:178: Mkdir /tmp/dir: mkdir /tmp/dir: file exists
FAIL
FAIL os 1.091s
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6615057
t.Log("line 1\nline 2\nline 3")
Old output:
=== RUN TestLine3
--- PASS: TestLine3 (0.00 seconds)
testing_test.go:25: line 1
line 2
line 3
PASS
New output:
=== RUN TestLine3
--- PASS: TestLine3 (0.00 seconds)
testing_test.go:24: line 1
line 2
line 3
PASS
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6613069
decoder struct, inside the unmappedzero limit, to eliminate some
TESTB instructions in the inner decoding loop.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkDecode 2943204 2746360 -6.69%
R=r, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6625058
The nil dereference in the next few lines doesn't seem
to cause a segmentation fault on Unix, but does seem
to halt the Go compiler.
The following is a test case:
>>>
package main
func mine(int b) int {
return b + 2
}
func main() {
mine()
c = mine()
}
<<<
Without this change only the following is caught:
typecheck.go:3: undefined: b
typecheck.go:4: undefined: b
with it, we catch all the errors:
typecheck.go:3: undefined: b
typecheck.go:4: undefined: b
typecheck.go:10: undefined: c
typecheck.go:10: cannot assign to c .
R=rsc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6542060
to be consistent with the fdct function, and to ease any future
idct rewrites in assembly.
The BenchmarkIDCT delta is obviously just an accounting change and not
a real saving, but it does give an indication of what proportion of
time was spent in the actual IDCT and what proportion was in shift and
clip. The idct time taken is now comparable to fdct.
The BenchmarkFDCT delta is an estimate of benchmark noise.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkFDCT 3842 3837 -0.13%
BenchmarkIDCT 5611 3478 -38.01%
BenchmarkDecodeRGBOpaque 2932785 2929751 -0.10%
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6625057
refer to opacity. Those references were copy/pasted from the
image/png encoding benchmarks, which cares whether or not the
source image is opaque, but the JPEG encoder does not care.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6623052
elimination) in idct.go.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkIDCT 5649 5610 -0.69%
BenchmarkDecodeRGBOpaque 2948607 2941051 -0.26%
The "type block" declaration moved so that idct.go is compilable
as a stand-alone file: "go tool 6g -S idct.go" works.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6619056
The profiler collects goroutine blocking information similar to Google Perf Tools.
You may see an example of the profile (converted to svg) attached to
http://code.google.com/p/go/issues/detail?id=3946
The public API changes are:
+pkg runtime, func BlockProfile([]BlockProfileRecord) (int, bool)
+pkg runtime, func SetBlockProfileRate(int)
+pkg runtime, method (*BlockProfileRecord) Stack() []uintptr
+pkg runtime, type BlockProfileRecord struct
+pkg runtime, type BlockProfileRecord struct, Count int64
+pkg runtime, type BlockProfileRecord struct, Cycles int64
+pkg runtime, type BlockProfileRecord struct, embedded StackRecord
R=rsc, dave, minux.ma, r
CC=gobot, golang-dev, r, remyoudompheng
https://golang.org/cl/6443115
The Go run-time assumes that all SSE floating-point exceptions
are masked so that Go programs are not broken by such invalid
operations. By default, the 64-bit version of the Plan 9 kernel
masks only some SSE floating-point exceptions. Here, we mask
them all on a per-thread basis.
R=rsc, rminnich, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6592056
The AST representation is already identical. Making the
code (nearly) identical in the parser reduces code size
and ensures that the ast.ValueSpec nodes have the same
values (specifically, iota). This in turn permits the
sharing of much of the respective code in the typechecker.
While at it: type functions work now, so use them.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6624047
Code for parsing email addresses was already partially part of the public API with "func (Header) AddressList". This CL adds a trivial implementation for two public methods to parse address and lists from a string. With tests.
R=dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5676067
Adds a DecryptBlock function which takes a password and a *pem.Block and
returns the decrypted DER bytes suitable for passing into other crypto/x509
functions.
R=golang-dev, agl, leterip
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6555052
They now show the correct name, the byte offset on the line, and context for the failed evaluation.
Before:
template: three:7: error calling index: index out of range: 5
After:
template: top:7:20: executing "three" at <index "hi" $>: error calling index: index out of range: 5
Here top is the template that was parsed to create the set, and the error appears with the action
starting at byte 20 of line 7 of "top", inside the template called "three", evaluating the expression
<index "hi" $>.
Also fix a bug in index: it didn't work on strings. Ouch.
Also fix bug in error for index: was showing type of index not slice.
The real previous error was:
template: three:7: error calling index: can't index item of type int
The html/template package's errors can be improved by building on this;
I'll do that in a separate pass.
Extends the API for text/template/parse but only by addition of a field and method. The
old API still works.
Fixes#3188.
R=golang-dev, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6576058
This is a backward-compatible API change.
Without the correct <- position information,
certain channel types have incorrect position
information.
R=iant, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6585063
This is the first part of a bigger change that adds data race detection feature:
https://golang.org/cl/6456044
This change makes gc compiler instrument memory accesses when supplied with -b flag.
R=rsc, nigeltao, lvd
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6497074
This fixes some example code in the tar package documentation, which
first refers to tar.NewWriter and then to Header, which is inconsistent
because NewWriter and Header are both in the tar namespace.
R=golang-dev, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6595050
This change allows the Go build and install tools to
recognize Plan 9 i386 and amd64 binaries.
R=rsc, r, rminnich
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6575064
This change updates CL 6576057 for exceptional cases where
return values from Syscall/RawSyscall functions are used.
The system calls return 32-bit integers. With the recent change
in size of `int' in Go for amd64, the type conversion was not
catching `-1' return values. This change makes the conversion
explicitly `int32'.
R=rsc, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6590047
Also mention that ignoring second blank identifier of range is required by the spec in the code.
Fixes#4173.
R=daniel.morsing, remyoudompheng, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6594043
FormatSelections tries to call a nil function value if lw is nil
and the final entry in the selections array is non-nil. Luckily,
this doesn't actually happen in practice since godoc doesn't use
this combination (no line numbers, but with selections).
R=gri
CC=gobot, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6488106
The previous implementation was a mess with invariants
maintained inconsistently. Essentially reimplemented
the package:
- used a circular list as internal representation for
significantly simpler implementation with fewer
special cases while maintaining the illusion of
a nil-terminated doubly linked list externally
- more precise documentation
- cleaned up and simplified tests, added test case
for issue 4103.
No changes to the API or documented semantics.
All this said, I would be in favor of removing
this package eventually. container/ring provides
a faster implementation and a simpler and more
powerful API.
Fixes#4103.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6569072
The string searching is implemented separately so other functions
may make use of it in the future.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkSingleMaxSkipping 125889 2474 -98.03%
BenchmarkSingleLongSuffixFail 16252 1996 -87.72%
BenchmarkSingleMatch 260793 136266 -47.75%
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
BenchmarkSingleMaxSkipping 79.43 4041.57 50.88x
BenchmarkSingleLongSuffixFail 61.65 501.81 8.14x
BenchmarkSingleMatch 57.52 110.08 1.91x
R=nigeltao
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6545049
The system calls return 32-bit integers. With the recent change
in size of `int' in Go for amd64, the type conversion was not
catching `-1' return values. This change makes the conversion
explicitly `int32'.
R=rsc, rminnich, npe, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6576057
Silly and small but easy to be consistent.
To make it worthwhile, I eliminated an allocation when using
%x on a byte slice.
Fixes#4149.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6574046
In two cases, registers were allocated too early resulting
in exhausting of available registers when nesting these
operations.
The case of method calls was due to missing cases in igen,
which only makes calls but doesn't allocate a register for
the result.
The case of 8-bit multiplication was due to a wrong order
in register allocation when Ullman numbers were bigger on the
RHS.
Fixes#3907.
Fixes#4156.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev, remy
https://golang.org/cl/6560054
Low hanging fruit optimization. Will remove an expensive copy if the range variable is an array.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6564052
This CL adds support for the these 7 new instructions to 6a/6l in
preparation of the upcoming CL for AES-NI accelerated crypto/aes:
AESENC, AESENCLAST, AESDEC, AESDECLAST, AESIMC, AESKEYGENASSIST,
and PSHUFD.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5970055
Do not check compiler/linker timestamps for packages that are in the
$GOROOT. Avoids trying to rebuild non-writable standard packages when
timestamps have not been retained on the Go binaries.
Fixes#4106.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6533053
The previous version was created by an idiot. This time, Rog Peppe
wrote the text. Thanks, Rog.
(== doesn't work on slices in general, so it makes no sense to
talk about in the context of DeepEqual.)
R=golang-dev, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6566054
This code relies on some functions that are not yet in staging,
but it get's harder to keep all this in sync in a piece-meal
fashion.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6492124
More pieces of the typechecker code:
- Operands are temporary objects representing an expressions's
type and value (for constants). An operand is the equivalent of
an "attribute" in attribute grammars except that it's not stored
but only passed around during type checking.
- Constant operations are implemented in const.go. Constants are
represented as bool (booleans), int64 and *big.Int (integers),
*big.Rat (floats), complex (complex numbers), and string (strings).
- Error reporting is consolidated in errors.go. Only the first
dozen of lines is new code, the rest of the file contains the
exprString and typeString functions formerly in two separate
files (which have been removed).
This is a replacement CL for 6492101 (which was created without
proper use of hg).
R=rsc, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6500114
file old_size new_size base@c1ce95068533
bin/go 14717392 6287824 5918236
this huge size difference is due to GC data for runtime.mheap
(NOPTR dataflag is not obeyed).
R=rsc, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6547051
Remove VERSION, which was forcing version to 'devel'.
Old:
$ go version
go version devel
New:
$ go version
go version devel +0a3866d6cc6b Mon Sep 24 20:08:05 2012 -0400
The date and time (and time zone) is that of the most recent commit,
not the time of the build itself. With some effort we could normalize
the zone, but I don't think it's worth the effort (more C coding,
since Mercurial is unhelpful).
R=r, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6569049
The assembly offsets were converted mechanically using
code.google.com/p/rsc/cmd/asmlint. The instruction
changes were done by hand.
Fixes#2188.
R=iant, r, bradfitz, remyoudompheng
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6550058
Both methods allow to access the IP ancillary data through
socket control messages.
This CL is required for CL 6482044; go.net/ipv4: new package.
R=rsc, r, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6426047
Session resumption saves a round trip and removes the need to perform
the public-key operations of a TLS handshake when both the client and
server support it (which is true of Firefox and Chrome, at least).
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6555051
Was not handling &x.y[0] and &x.y.z correctly where
y is an array or struct-valued field (not a pointer).
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6551059
This CL makes the compiler understand that the type of
the len or cap of a map, slice, or string is 'int', not 'int32'.
It does not change the meaning of int, but it should make
the eventual change of the meaning of int in 6g a bit smoother.
Update #2188.
R=ken, dave, remyoudompheng
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6542059
Use explicit IntSize constant instead of 4.
This CL does not change the meaning of int, but it should make
the eventual change of the meaning of int on amd64 a bit
smoother.
Update #2188.
R=ken, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6554076
This CL makes the size of an int controlled by a variable
in cgo instead of hard-coding 4 (or 32 bits) in various places.
Update #2188.
R=iant, r, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6548061
This CL makes the runtime understand that the type of
the len or cap of a map, slice, or string is 'int', not 'int32',
and it is also careful to distinguish between function arguments
and results of type 'int' vs type 'int32'.
In the runtime, the new typedefs 'intgo' and 'uintgo' refer
to Go int and uint. The C types int and uint continue to be
unavailable (cause intentional compile errors).
This CL does not change the meaning of int, but it should make
the eventual change of the meaning of int on amd64 a bit
smoother.
Update #2188.
R=iant, r, dave, remyoudompheng
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6551067
Using offsets from Tos is cumbersome and we've had problems
in the past. Since it's only being used to grab the PID, we'll just
get that from the default TLS instead.
R=rsc, rminnich, npe
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6543049