of syscall.Syscall and syscall.SYS_KILL.
In RTEMS, there is no syscall.Syscall support, but it does
support POSIX signals. So, if this testcase is changed to use
syscall.Kill, then it would run fine on RTEMS, when using gccgo.
R=rsc, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1863046
Plus automatic package<->project association script.
(This is just a helper script for now. I intend to fully automate
the associations further down the track.)
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1715054
Goroutine 1:
Call Read on read half of pipe, entering pipeHalf.rw.
Check ioclosed field, which is false.
Send data to p.c1
Wait for response on p.c2.
Goroutine 2:
Call Close on read half of pipe, entering pipeHalf.close.
Set closed field.
Send error to p.cclose.
Set ioclosed field.
Send 1 to p.done.
Return and exit goroutine.
Goroutine 3:
This is the goroutine running pipe.run, and for some reason
it has started late.
Read error from p.rclose; set rerr and continue.
Read 1 from p.done; increment ndone and continue.
Read data from r1 (sent by goroutine 1); set r1 = nil and continue
Now goroutine 1 is waiting for a response, and goroutine 3 is
waiting for something else to happen.
This patch fixes the race by having the runner check whether
the read half is closed when it is asked for read data, and
similarly for the corresponding race on the write half.
This patch also fixes the similar race in which ndone gets
bumped up to 2 while there is a reader or writer waiting.
There is still another race to fix. It is possible for the
read half and the write half to both be closed, and for the
runner goroutine to exit, all before the runner goroutine sees
the request from a reader. E.g., in the above, have goroutine
2 also close the write half, and have goroutine 3 see both
done messages before it sees the request from goroutine 1.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1862045
For the Windows version of syscall Errstr, set the
FORMAT_MESSAGE_IGNORE_INSERTS value of the FormatMessage
Flags argument when there are no values to insert.
R=rsc, brainman
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1868043
SNI (Server Name Indication) is a way for a TLS client to
indicate to the server which name it knows the server by. This
allows the server to have several names and return the correct
certificate for each (virtual hosting).
PeerCertificates returns the list of certificates presented by
server.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1741053
OCSP is the preferred X.509 revocation mechanism. X.509 certificates
can contain a URL from which can be fetched a signed response saying
"this certificate is valid until $x" (where $x is usually 7 days in the
future). These are called OCSP responses and they can also be included
in the TLS handshake itself ("OCSP stapling")
R=rsc, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1875043