Another case where gccgo and gc report similar but not
identical errors for a recursive interface.
bug251.go:11: error: invalid recursive interface
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2094041
This introduces GC_ERROR to mark an error only issued by the
gc compiler. GCCGO_ERROR already exists to mark errors only
issued by the gccgo compiler. Obviously these should be used
sparingly.
bug195.go:9: error: interface contains embedded non-interface
bug195.go:12: error: interface contains embedded non-interface
bug195.go:15: error: interface contains embedded non-interface
bug195.go:18: error: invalid recursive interface
bug195.go:22: error: invalid recursive interface
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2040043
Also, if the header is bad, exit with a non-zero status.
Other calls to Brdline in the tree, by category:
Reading symbol name from object file:
./cmd/5l/obj.c:486: name = Brdline(f, '\0');
./cmd/6l/obj.c:535: name = Brdline(f, '\0');
./cmd/8l/obj.c:564: name = Brdline(f, '\0');
./libmach/sym.c:292: cp = Brdline(bp, '\0');
Reading archive header line (fixed, short):
./cmd/gc/lex.c:287: if((a = Brdline(b, '\n')) == nil)
./cmd/gc/lex.c:303: if((p = Brdline(b, '\n')) == nil)
Reading object file header line (fixed, short):
./cmd/ld/lib.c:421: line = Brdline(f, '\n');
Reading undefined symbol list (unused code):
./cmd/ld/lib.c:773: while((l = Brdline(b, '\n')) != nil){
Implementing Brdstr:
./libbio/brdstr.c:36: p = Brdline(bp, delim);
The symbol names ones will cause a problem loudly if they
fail: they'll error out with symbol name too long. This means
that you can't define an enormous struct without giving the
type a name and then stick it in an interface, because the
type's symbol name will be too long for the object file.
Since this will be a loud failure instead of a silent one,
I'm willing to wait until it comes up in practice.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1982041
these tests work fine on n1 and gumstix. it's unclear
why they keep failing on the godashboard build.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1664056
Background: The current spec is imprecise with respect to the parsing ambiguity
for composite literals: It says that the ambiguity arises when the TypeName form
of the LiteralType is used. The following code:
if (B) {} ...
is not using the TypeName form (but the parenthesized TypeName form) and thus
could be interpreted as:
if ((B){}) ...
instead of
if B {} ...
Both compilers and gofmt choose the latter interpretation. One could fix the
spec by making the clause regarding the parsing ambiguity more precise ("...using
the _possibly parenthesized_ TypeName form of the LiteralType..."). The alternative
(chosen here) is to simply disallow parenthesized literal types. Except for a single
test case (test/parentype.go) there appears to be no Go code under $GOROOT containing
parenthesized literal types. Furthermore, parentheses are never needed around a
literal type for correct parsing.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1913041
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
but with less precision than hardware counterparts.
fixed a number of tests to output BUG when they failed.
changed the runner to distinghuish between output
and output containing ^BUG
R=rsc
CC=dho, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1778041
remove the print statements.
This change is because of the port of gccgo to RTEMS.
These tests use the GCC DejaGNU framework. In some cases,
the tests need to be run on qemu where the status code
cannot be sent back to DejaGNU, so it prints the exit status
by putting a wrapper around the exit and abort calls.
This testcase closes the stdout, and hence prohibits DejaGNU
from knowing the status in such cases, and causes this test
to be wrongly declared as a failure.
R=rsc, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1792042
x.go:13: cannot use t (type T) as type Reader in assignment:
T does not implement Reader (Read method requires pointer receiver)
x.go:19: cannot use q (type Q) as type Reader in assignment:
Q does not implement Reader (missing Read method)
have read()
want Read()
x.go:22: cannot use z (type int) as type Reader in assignment:
int does not implement Reader (missing Read method)
x.go:24: too many arguments to conversion to complex: complex(1, 3)
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1736041
This shortens, simplifies and regularizes the code significantly.
(Improvements to reflect could make another step.)
Passes all.bash.
One semantic change occurs: The String() method changes
behavior. It used to run only for string formats such as %s and %q.
Instead, it now runs whenever the item has the method and the
result is then processed by the format as a string. Besides the
regularization, this has three effects:
1) width is honored for String() items
2) %x works for String() items
3) implementations of String that merely recur will recur forever
Regarding point 3, example from the updated documentation:
type X int
func (x X) String() string { return Sprintf("%d", x) }
should cast the value before recurring:
func (x X) String() string { return Sprintf("%d", int(x)) }
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1613045
* Code for assignment, conversions now mirrors spec.
* Changed some snprint -> smprint.
* Renamed runtime functions to separate
interface conversions from type assertions:
convT2I, assertI2T, etc.
* Correct checking of \U sequences.
Fixes#840.
Fixes#830.
Fixes#778.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1303042