It was needed for the old scheduler,
because there temporary could be more threads than gomaxprocs.
In the new scheduler gomaxprocs is always respected.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12438043
gcpc/gcsp are used by GC in similar situation.
gcpc/gcsp are also more stable than gp->sched,
because gp->sched is mutated by entersyscall/exitsyscall
in morestack and mcall. So it has higher chances of being inconsistent.
Also, rename gcpc/gcsp to syscallpc/syscallsp.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12250043
In the event that code tries to use a hash function that isn't compiled
in and panics, give the developer a fighting chance of figuring out
which hash function it needed.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12420045
Runtime netpoll supports at most one read waiter
and at most one write waiter. It's responsibility
of net package to ensure that. Currently windows
implementation allows more than one waiter in Accept.
It leads to "fatal error: netpollblock: double wait".
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12400045
Whether the keys are concatenated or separate (or a mixture) depends on the server.
Fixes#5979.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12433043
Windows dynamic priority boosting assumes that a process has different types
of dedicated threads -- GUI, IO, computational, etc. Go processes use
equivalent threads that all do a mix of GUI, IO, computations, etc.
In such context dynamic priority boosting does nothing but harm, so turn it off.
In particular, if 2 goroutines do heavy IO on a server uniprocessor machine,
windows rejects to schedule timer thread for 2+ seconds when priority boosting is enabled.
Fixes#5971.
R=alex.brainman
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12406043
The test isn't checking deliberate panics so catching them just makes the code longer.
R=golang-dev, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12420043
This CL makes IPAddr, UDPAddr and TCPAddr implement sockaddr
interface, UnixAddr is already sockaddr interface compliant, and
reduces unnecessary conversions between net.Addr, net.sockaddr and
syscall.Sockaddr.
This is in preparation for runtime-integrated network pollster for BSD
variants.
Update #5199
R=golang-dev, dave, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12010043
Also, add a meaningful error message when an encoding which
can't be parsed is found.
Fixes#5801.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12343043
Fixes#5822.
Will no doubt cause other problems, but Apple has forced our hand.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, khr
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12350044
cmd/api is a tool to prevent the Go developers from breaking
the Go 1 API promise. It has no utility to end users and
doesn't run on arbitrary packages (it's always been full of
hacks for its bespoke type checker to work on the standard
library)
Robert's in-progress rewrite depends on the go.tools repo for
go/types, so we won't be able to ship this tool later
anyway. Just remove it from binary distributions.
A future change to run.bash can conditionally build & run
cmd/api, perhaps automatically fetching go/types if
necessary. I assume people don't want to vendor go/types into
a private gopath just for cmd/api.
I will need help with run.bat.
R=golang-dev, adg, dsymonds, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12316043
It's okay to preempt at ordinary function calls because
compilers arrange that there are no live registers to save
on entry to the function call.
The software floating point routines are function calls
masquerading as individual machine instructions. They are
expected to keep all the registers intact. In particular,
they are expected not to clobber all the floating point
registers.
The floating point registers are kept per-M, because they
are not live at non-preemptive goroutine scheduling events,
and so keeping them per-M reduces the number of 132-byte
register blocks we are keeping in memory.
Because they are per-M, allowing the goroutine to be
rescheduled during software floating point simulation
would mean some other goroutine could overwrite the registers
or perhaps the goroutine would continue running on a different
M entirely.
Disallow preemption during the software floating point
routines to make sure that a function full of floating point
instructions has the same floating point registers throughout
its execution.
R=golang-dev, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12298043
Per suggestion from Russ in February. Then strings.IndexByte
can be implemented in terms of the shared code in pkg runtime.
Update #3751
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12289043
I used just enough of the data provided by Matt in Issue 5915 to trigger
issue 5915. As luck would have it, using slightly less of it triggered
issue 5962.
Fixes#5915.
Fixes#5962.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12288043
Also move chatty recent additions to -v -v.
For what it's worth:
$ go build -o /dev/null -ldflags -v cmd/go
...
0.87 pclntab=1110836 bytes, funcdata total 69700 bytes
...
$
This broke the ELF builds last time because I tried to dedup
the funcdata in case the same funcdata was pointed at by
multiple functions. That doesn't currently happen, so I've
removed that test.
If we start doing bitmap coalescing we'll need to figure out
how to measure the size more carefully, but I think at that
point the bitmaps will be an extra indirection away from the
funcdata anyway, so the dedup I used before wouldn't help.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12269043
This allows to at least determine goroutine "identity".
Now it looks like:
goroutine 12 [running]:
goroutine running on other thread; stack unavailable
created by testing.RunTests
src/pkg/testing/testing.go:440 +0x88e
R=golang-dev, r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12248043