This will be nicer to the automatic tools.
It requires a few more assembly stubs
but fewer Go files.
There are a few instances where it looks like
there are new blobs of code, but they are just
being copied out of deleted files.
There is no new code here.
Suppose you have a portable implementation for Sin
and a 386-specific assembly one. The old way to
do this was to write three files
sin_decl.go
func Sin(x float64) float64 // declaration only
sin_386.s
assembly implementation
sin_port.go
func Sin(x float64) float64 { ... } // pure-Go impl
and then link in either sin_decl.go+sin_386.s or
just sin_port.go. The Makefile actually did the magic
of linking in only the _port.go files for those without
assembly and only the _decl.go files for those with
assembly, or at least some of that magic.
The biggest problem with this, beyond being hard
to explain to the build system, is that once you do
explain it to the build system, godoc knows which
of sin_port.go or sin_decl.go are involved on a given
architecture, and it (correctly) ignores the other.
That means you have to put identical doc comments
in both files.
The new approach, which is more like what we did
in the later packages math/big and sync/atomic,
is to have
sin.go
func Sin(x float64) float64 // decl only
func sin(x float64) float64 {...} // pure-Go impl
sin_386.s
// assembly for Sin (ignores sin)
sin_amd64.s
// assembly for Sin: jmp sin
sin_arm.s
// assembly for Sin: jmp sin
Once we abandon Makefiles we can put all the assembly
stubs in one source file, so the number of files will
actually go down.
Chris asked whether the branches cost anything.
Given that they are branching to pure-Go implementations
that are not typically known for their speed, the single
direct branch is not going to be noticeable. That is,
it's on the slow path.
An alternative would have been to preserve the old
"only write assembly files when there's an implementation"
and still have just one copy of the declaration of Sin
(and thus one doc comment) by doing:
sin.go
func Sin(x float64) float64 { return sin(x) }
sin_decl.go
func sin(x float64) float64 // declaration only
sin_386.s
// assembly for sin
sin_port.go
func sin(x float64) float64 { portable code }
In this version everyone would link in sin.go and
then either sin_decl.go+sin_386.s or sin_port.go.
This has an extra function call on all paths, including
the "fast path" to get to assembly, and it triples the
number of Go files involved compared to what I did
in this CL. On the other hand you don't have to
write assembly stubs. After starting down this path
I decided that the assembly stubs were the easier
approach.
As for generating the assembly stubs on the fly, much
of the goal here is to eliminate magic from the build
process, so that zero-configuration tools like goinstall
or the new go tool can handle this package.
R=golang-dev, r, cw, iant, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5488057
Acosh, Asinh, Atanh, Ceil, Floor, Trunc, Mod and Remainder affected. These changes add some non-finite arguments and results (and -0.0 results).
R=rsc, golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5469046
Added special cases to comments for asin.go and fabs.go.
Added Trunc() to floor.go and floor_386.s. Fixed formatting
error in hypot_386.s Added new functions Acosh, Asinh,
Atanh, Copysign, Erf, Erfc, Expm1, and Log1p. Added
386 FPU version of Fmod. Added tests, benchmarks, and
precision to expected results in all_test.go. Edited
makefile so it all compiles.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/195052
parsing and printing to new syntax.
Use -oldparser to parse the old syntax,
use -oldprinter to print the old syntax.
2) Change default gofmt formatting settings
to use tabs for indentation only and to use
spaces for alignment. This will make the code
alignment insensitive to an editor's tabwidth.
Use -spaces=false to use tabs for alignment.
3) Manually changed src/exp/parser/parser_test.go
so that it doesn't try to parse the parser's
source files using the old syntax (they have
new syntax now).
4) gofmt -w src misc test/bench
3rd set of files.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/180048
- enabled for function declarations (not just function literals)
- applied gofmt -w $GOROOT/src
(look for instance at src/pkg/debug/elf/elf.go)
R=r, rsc
CC=go-dev
http://go/go-review/1026006
whole-package compilation. new Makefiles,
tests now in separate package
bytes
flag
fmt
io
math
once
os
reflect
strconv
sync
time
utf8
delete import "xxx" in package xxx.
inside package xxx, xxx is not declared
anymore so s/xxx.//g
delete file and package level forward declarations.
note the new internal_test.go and sync
and strconv to provide public access to
internals during testing. the installed version
of the package omits that file and thus does
not open the internals to all clients.
R=r
OCL=33065
CL=33097