CL 294430 made packages in std and cmd modules use Go 1.17 gofmt format,
adding //go:build lines. This change applies the same formatting to some
more packages that 'go fmt' missed (e.g., syscall/js, runtime/msan), and
everything else that is easy and safe to modify in bulk.
Consider the top-level test directory, testdata, and vendor directories
out of scope, since there are many files that don't follow strict gofmt
formatting, often for intentional and legitimate reasons (testing gofmt
itself, invalid Go programs that shouldn't crash the compiler, etc.).
That makes it easy and safe to gofmt -w the .go files that are found
with gofmt -l with aforementioned directories filtered out:
$ gofmt -l . 2>/dev/null | \
grep -v '^test/' | \
grep -v '/testdata/' | \
grep -v '/vendor/' | wc -l
51
None of the 51 files are generated. After this change, the same command
prints 0.
For #41184.
Change-Id: Ia96ee2a0f998d6a167d4473bcad17ad09bc1d86e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/341009
Run-TryBot: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Trust: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@golang.org>
This CL was written by rsc. I just tweaked 8l.
This CL adds TLS relocation to the ELF .o file we write during external linking,
so that the host linker (gcc) can decide the final location of m and g.
Similar relocations are not necessary on OS X because we use an alternate
program start-time mechanism to acquire thread-local storage.
Similar relocations are not necessary on ARM or Plan 9 or Windows
because external linking mode is not yet supported on those systems.
On almost all ELF systems, the references we use are like %fs:-0x4 or %gs:-0x4,
which we write in 6a/8a as -0x4(FS) or -0x4(GS). On Linux/ELF, however,
Xen's lack of support for this mode forced us long ago to use a two-instruction
sequence: first we load %gs:0x0 into a register r, and then we use -0x4(r).
(The ELF program loader arranges that %gs:0x0 contains a regular pointer to
that same memory location.) In order to relocate those -0x4(r) references,
the linker must know where they are. This CL adds the equivalent notation
-0x4(r)(GS*1) for this purpose: it assembles to the same encoding as -0x4(r)
but the (GS*1) indicates to the linker that this is one of those thread-local
references that needs relocation.
Thanks to Elias Naur for reminding me about this missing piece and
also for writing the test.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7891047