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
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
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
On 6l and 8l, this is a real instruction, guaranteed to
cause an 'undefined instruction' exception.
On 5l, we simulate it as BL to address 0.
The plan is to use it as a signal to the linker that this
point in the instruction stream cannot be reached
(hence the changes to nofollow). This will help the
compiler explain that panicindex and friends do not
return without having to put a list of these functions
in the linker.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6255064
The old code generated for a bounds check was
CMP
JLT ok
CALL panicindex
ok:
...
The new code is (once the linker finishes with it):
CMP
JGE panic
...
panic:
CALL panicindex
which moves the calls out of line, putting more useful
code in each cache line. This matters especially in tight
loops, such as in Fannkuch. The benefit is more modest
elsewhere, but real.
From test/bench/go1, amd64:
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkBinaryTree17 6096092000 6088808000 -0.12%
BenchmarkFannkuch11 6151404000 4020463000 -34.64%
BenchmarkGobDecode 28990050 28894630 -0.33%
BenchmarkGobEncode 12406310 12136730 -2.17%
BenchmarkGzip 179923 179903 -0.01%
BenchmarkGunzip 11219 11130 -0.79%
BenchmarkJSONEncode 86429350 86515900 +0.10%
BenchmarkJSONDecode 334593800 315728400 -5.64%
BenchmarkRevcomp25M 1219763000 1180767000 -3.20%
BenchmarkTemplate 492947600 483646800 -1.89%
And 386:
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkBinaryTree17 6354902000 6243000000 -1.76%
BenchmarkFannkuch11 8043769000 7326965000 -8.91%
BenchmarkGobDecode 19010800 18941230 -0.37%
BenchmarkGobEncode 14077500 13792460 -2.02%
BenchmarkGzip 194087 193619 -0.24%
BenchmarkGunzip 12495 12457 -0.30%
BenchmarkJSONEncode 125636400 125451400 -0.15%
BenchmarkJSONDecode 696648600 685032800 -1.67%
BenchmarkRevcomp25M 2058088000 2052545000 -0.27%
BenchmarkTemplate 602140000 589876800 -2.04%
To implement this, two new instruction forms:
JLT target // same as always
JLT $0, target // branch expected not taken
JLT $1, target // branch expected taken
The linker could also emit the prediction prefixes, but it
does not: expected taken branches are reversed so that the
expected case is not taken (as in example above), and
the default expectaton for such a jump is not taken
already.
R=golang-dev, gri, r, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6248049
Although Intel considers the three-argument form of IMUL to be a
variant of IMUL, I couldn't make 6l able to differentiate it without
huge changes, so I called it IMUL3.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5686055
As a convenience to people working on the tools,
leave Makefiles that invoke the go dist tool appropriately.
They are not used during the build.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, n13m3y3r, gustavo
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5636050
Also delete gotest, since it's messy to fix and slated for deletion anyway.
A couple of things outside src can't be tested any more. "go test" will be
fixed and these tests will be re-enabled. They're noisy for now.
Fixes#284.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5598049
Uses of $INCLUDE and $NPROC are left over from Plan 9.
Remove them to avoid causing confusion.
R=golang-dev, r2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4445079
The object files begin with a header that is
$GOARCH
on a line by itself. This CL changes that header to
go object $GOOS $GOARCH release.2011-01-01 4567+
where the final two fields are the most recent release
tag and the current hg version number.
All objects imported into a Go compilation or linked into an
executable must have the same header line, and that header
line must match the compiler and linker versions.
The effect of this will be that if you update and run all.bash
and then try to link in objects compiled with an earlier version
of the compiler (or invoke the wrong version of the compiler),
you will get an error showing the different headers instead
of perhaps silent incompatibility.
Normal usage with all.bash should be unaffected, because
all.bash deletes all the object files in $GOROOT/pkg/$GOOS_$GOARCH
and cleans all intermediate object files before starting.
This change is intended to diagnose stale objects arising when
users maintaining alternate installation directories forget to
rebuild some of their files after updating.
It should help make the adoption of $GOPATH (CL 3780043)
less error-prone.
R=ken2, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4023063
Returns R14 and R15 to the available register pool.
Plays more nicely with ELF ABI C code.
In particular, our signal handlers will no longer crash
when a signal arrives during execution of a cgo C call.
Fixes#720.
R=ken2, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1847051
the bash scripts and makefiles for building go didn't take into account
the fact $GOROOT / $GOBIN could both be directories containing whitespaces,
and was not possible to build it in such a situation.
this commit adjusts the various makefiles/scripts to make it aware of that
possibility, and now it builds successfully when using a path with whitespaces
as well.
Fixes#115.
R=rsc, dsymonds1
https://golang.org/cl/157067
if y.tab.c is older than y.tab.h, make
interprets doing nothing as a failure,
because y.tab.c hasn't been updated.
so update it.
R=r
DELTA=4 (0 added, 0 deleted, 4 changed)
OCL=15615
CL=15622
use -j4 (4-way parallel) in make.bash.
halves time for make.bash on r45
also add libregexp, acid to default build
R=r
DELTA=90 (39 added, 37 deleted, 14 changed)
OCL=15485
CL=15487
This makes it easy to build with other flags
(like -ggdb) or other compilers (like cc64).
R=r
DELTA=45 (6 added, 22 deleted, 17 changed)
OCL=13790
CL=13793
these guys really really want long to be 32-bits,
so ,s/long/int32/ (and then manual fixup).
still passes all tests.
(i started out looking for just those longs that
needed to be int32 instead, and it was just too hard
to track them down one by one.)
the longs were rare enough that i don't think
it will cause integration problems.
R=ken
OCL=13787
CL=13789