The compiler currently has two modes for compilation: one where it
compiles each function as it sees them, and another where it enqueues
them all into a work queue. A subsequent CL is going to reorder
function compilation to ensure that functions are always compiled
before any non-trivial function literals they enclose, and this will
be easier if we always use the compile work queue.
Also, fewer compilation modes makes things simpler to reason about.
Change-Id: Ie090e81f7476c49486296f2b90911fa0a466a5dd
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/283313
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Historically, inline function bodies were exported as plain Go source
code, and symbol mangling was a convenient hack because it allowed
variables to be re-imported with largely the same names as they were
originally exported as.
However, nowadays we use a binary format that's more easily extended,
so we can simply serialize all of a function's declared objects up
front, and then refer to them by index later on. This also allows us
to easily report unmangled names all the time (e.g., error message
from issue7921.go).
Fixes#43633.
Change-Id: I46c88f5a47cb921f70ab140976ba9ddce38df216
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/283193
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This CL refactors noder's package import logic so it's easier to reuse
with types2 and gcimports. In particular, this allows the types2
integration to now support vendored packages.
Change-Id: I1fd98ad612b4683d2e1ac640839e64de1fa7324b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/282919
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Currently, during walk we rewrite PAUTOHEAP uses into derefs of their
corresponding Heapaddr, but we can easily do this instead during SSA
construction. This does involve updating two test cases:
* nilptr3.go
This file had a test that we emit a "removed nil check" diagnostic for
the implicit dereference from accessing a PAUTOHEAP variable. This CL
removes this diagnostic, since it's not really useful to end users:
from the user's point of view, there's no pointer anyway, so they
needn't care about whether we check for nil or not. That's a purely
internal detail. And with the PAUTOHEAP dereference handled during SSA
construction, we can more robustly ensure this happens, rather than
relying on setting a flag in walk and hoping that SSA sees it.
* issue20780.go
Previously, when PAUTOHEAPs were dereferenced during walk, it had a
consequence that when they're passed as a function call argument, they
would first get copied to the stack before being copied to their
actual destination. Moving the dereferencing to SSA had a side-effect
of eliminating this unnecessary temporary, and copying directly to the
destination parameter.
The test is updated to instead call "g(h(), h())" where h() returns a
large value, as the first result will always need to be spilled
somewhere will calling the second function. Maybe eventually we're
smart enough to realize it can be spilled to the heap, but we don't do
that today.
Because I'm concerned that the direct copy-to-parameter optimization
could interfere with race-detector instrumentation (e.g., maybe the
copies were previously necessary to ensure they're not clobbered by
inserted raceread calls?), I've also added issue20780b.go to exercise
this in a few different ways.
Change-Id: I720598cb32b17518bc10a03e555620c0f25fd28d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/281293
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Now that CaptureVars is gone, we can remove the extra code in escape
analysis that only served to appease toolstash -cmp.
Change-Id: I8c811834f3d966e76702e2d362e3de414c94bea6
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/281544
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Currently we rely on the type-checker to do some basic data-flow
analysis to help decide whether function literals should capture
variables by value or reference. However, this analysis isn't done by
go/types, and escape analysis already has a better framework for doing
this more precisely.
This CL extends escape analysis to recalculate the same "byval" as
CaptureVars and check that it matches. A future CL will remove
CaptureVars in favor of escape analysis's calculation.
Notably, escape analysis happens after deadcode removes obviously
unreachable code, so it sees the AST without any unreachable
assignments. (Also without unreachable addrtakens, but
ComputeAddrtaken already happens after deadcode too.) There are two
test cases where a variable is only reassigned on certain CPUs. This
CL changes them to reassign the variables unconditionally (as no-op
reassignments that avoid triggering cmd/vet's self-assignment check),
at least until we remove CaptureVars.
Passes toolstash -cmp.
Change-Id: I7162619739fedaf861b478fb8d506f96a6ac21f3
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/281535
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The gc implementation has had precise GC for a while now, so we can
enable these tests more broadly.
Confirmed that they still fail with gccgo 10.2.1.
Change-Id: Ic1c0394ab832024a99e34163c422941a3706e1a2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/281542
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
When exporting signature types, we include the originating package,
because it's exposed via go/types's API. And as a consistency check,
we ensure that the parameter names came from that same package.
However, we were getting this wrong in the case of exported variables
that were initialized with a method value using an imported method. In
this case, when we created the method value wrapper function's
type (which is reused as the variable's type if none is explicitly
provided in the variable declaration), we were reusing the
original (i.e., imported) parameter names, but the newly created
signature type was associated with the current package instead.
The correct fix here is really to preserve the original signature
type's package (along with position and name for its parameters), but
that's awkward to do at the moment because the DeclFunc API requires
an ir representation of the function signature, whereas we only
provide a way to explicitly set packages via the type constructor
APIs.
As an interim fix, we associate the parameters with the current
package, to be consistent with the signature type's package.
Fixes#43479.
Change-Id: Id45a10f8cf64165c9bc7d9598f0a0ee199a5e752
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/281292
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
It's an error to call Int64Val on constants that don't fit into
int64. CL 272654 made the compiler stricter about detecting misuse,
and revealed that we were using it improperly in detecting consecutive
integer-switch cases. That particular usage actually did work in
practice, but it's easy and best to just fix it.
Fixes#43480.
Change-Id: I56f722d75e83091638ac43b80e45df0b0ad7d48d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/281272
Trust: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
After the previous cleanup/optimization CLs, ascompatee now correctly
handles map assignments too. So remove the code from order.mapAssign,
which causes us to assign to the map at the wrong point during
execution. It's not every day you get to fix an issue by only removing
code.
Thanks to Cuong Manh Le for test cases and continually following up on
this issue.
Passes toolstash -cmp. (Apparently the standard library never uses
tricky map assignments. Go figure.)
Fixes#23017.
Change-Id: Ie0728103d59d884d00c1c050251290a2a46150f9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/281172
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
When deciding whether a captured variable can be passed by value, the
compiler is sensitive to the order that the OCLOSURE node is
typechecked relative to the order that the variable is passed to
"checkassign". Today, for an assignment like:
q, g = 2, func() int { return q }
we get this right because we always typecheck the full RHS expression
list before calling checkassign on any LHS expression.
But I nearly made a change that would interleave this ordering,
causing us to call checkassign on q before typechecking the function
literal. And alarmingly, there weren't any tests that caught this.
So this commit adds one.
Change-Id: I66cacd61066c7a229070861a7d973bcc434904cc
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/280998
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
This CL fixes package initialization order by creating the init task
before the general deadcode-removal pass.
It also changes noder to emit zero-initialization assignments (i.e.,
OAS with nil RHS) for package-block variables, so that initOrder can
tell the variables still need initialization. To allow this, we need
to also extend the static-init code to recognize zero-initialization
assignments.
This doesn't pass toolstash -cmp, because it reorders some package
initialization routines.
Fixes#43444.
Change-Id: I0da7996a62c85e15e97ce965298127e075390a7e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/280976
Trust: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
OTYPE and OMETHEXPR were missing from OpPrec. So add them with the
same precedences as OT{ARRAY,MAP,STRUCT,etc} and
ODOT{,METH,INTER,etc}, respectively. However, ODEREF (which is also
used for pointer types *T) has a lower precedence than other types, so
pointer types need to be specially handled to assign them their
correct, lower precedence.
Incidentally, this also improves the error messages in issue15055.go,
where we were adding unnecessary parentheses around the types in
conversion expressions.
Thanks to Cuong Manh Le for writing the test cases for #43428.
Fixes#43428.
Change-Id: I57e7979babe3ed9ef8a8b5a2a3745e3737dd785f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/280873
Trust: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
The compiler has logic to check whether we implicitly dereferenced a
defined pointer while trying to select a method. However, rather than
checking whether there were any implicit dereferences of a defined
pointer, it was finding the innermost dereference/selector expression
and checking whether that was dereferencing a named pointer. Moreover,
it was only checking defined pointer declared in the package block.
This CL restructures the code to match go/types and gccgo's behavior.
Fixes#43384.
Change-Id: I7bddfe2515776d9480eb2c7286023d4c15423888
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/280392
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Trust: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Trust: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
ODOTMETH is unique among SelectorExpr expressions, in that Sel gets
mangled so that it no longer has the original identifier that was
selected (e.g., just "Foo"), but instead the qualified symbol name for
the selected method (e.g., "pkg.Type.Foo"). This is rarely useful, and
instead results in a lot of compiler code needing to worry about
undoing this change.
This CL changes ODOTMETH to leave the original symbol in place. The
handful of code locations where the mangled symbol name is actually
wanted are updated to use ir.MethodExprName(n).Sym() or (equivalently)
ir.MethodExprName(n).Func.Sym() instead.
Historically, the compiler backend has mistakenly used types.Syms
where it should have used ir.Name/ir.Funcs. And this change in
particular may risk breaking something, as the SelectorExpr.Sel will
no longer point at a symbol that uniquely identifies the called
method. However, I expect CL 280294 (desugar OCALLMETH into OCALLFUNC)
to have substantially reduced this risk, as ODOTMETH expressions are
now replaced entirely earlier in the compiler.
Passes toolstash -cmp.
Change-Id: If3c9c3b7df78ea969f135840574cf89e1d263876
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/280436
Trust: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
The assignment type-checking code previously bounced around a lot
between the LHS and RHS sides of the assignment. But there's actually
a very simple, consistent pattern to how to type check assignments:
1. Check the RHS expression.
2. If the LHS expression is an identifier that was declared in this
statement and it doesn't have an explicit type, give it the RHS
expression's default type.
3. Check the LHS expression.
4. Try assigning the RHS expression to the LHS expression, adding
implicit conversions as needed.
This CL implements this algorithm, and refactors tcAssign and
tcAssignList to use a common implementation. It also fixes the error
messages to consistently say just "1 variable" or "1 value", rather
than occasionally "1 variables" or "1 values".
Fixes#43348.
Passes toolstash -cmp.
Change-Id: I749cb8d6ccbc7d22cd7cb0a381f58a39fc2696b5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/280112
Trust: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
In issue11656.go, it tests that if the runtime can get a
reasonable traceback when it faults at a non-function PC. It does
it by jumping to an address that contains an illegal or trap
instruction. When it traps, the SIGTRAP crashes the runtime.
This CL changes it to use an instruction that triggers SIGSEGV.
This is due to two reasons:
- currently, the handling of bad PC is done by preparePanic,
which is only used for a panicking signal (SIGSEGV, SIGBUS,
SIGFPE), not a fatal signal (e.g. SIGTRAP).
- the test uses defer+recover to get a traceback, which only
works for panicking signals, not fatal signals.
Ideally, we should handle all kinds of faults (SIGSEGV, SIGBUS,
SIGILL, SIGTRAP, etc.) with a nice traceback. I'll leave this
for the future.
This CL also adds RISCV64 support.
Fixes#43283.
Change-Id: I5e0fbf8530cc89d16e05c3257d282bc1d4d03405
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/279423
Trust: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Add compiler support for emitting ABI wrappers by creating real IR as
opposed to introducing ABI aliases. At the moment these are "no-op"
wrappers in the sense that they make a simple call (using the existing
ABI) to their target. The assumption here is that once late call
expansion can handle both ABI0 and the "new" ABIInternal (register
version), it can expand the call to do the right thing.
Note that the runtime contains functions that do not strictly follow
the rules of the current Go ABI0; this has been handled in most cases
by treating these as ABIInternal instead (these changes have been made
in previous patches).
Generation of ABI wrappers (as opposed to ABI aliases) is currently
gated by GOEXPERIMENT=regabi -- wrapper generation is on by default if
GOEXPERIMENT=regabi is set and off otherwise (but can be turned on
using "-gcflags=all=-abiwrap -ldflags=-abiwrap"). Wrapper generation
currently only workd on AMD64; explicitly enabling wrapper for other
architectures (via the command line) is not supported.
Also in this patch are a few other command line options for debugging
(tracing and/or limiting wrapper creation). These will presumably go
away at some point.
Updates #27539, #40724.
Change-Id: I1ee3226fc15a3c32ca2087b8ef8e41dbe6df4a75
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/270863
Run-TryBot: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
Trust: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
The files below had conflicts that required manual resolution.
The unresolved conflict in noder.go was just in the import
declaration (trivial). All the other conflicts are in tests
where the ERROR regex patterns changed to accomodate gccgo
error messages (incoming from dev.regabi), and to accomodate
types2 in dev.typeparams. They were resolved by accepting the
dev.regabi changes (so as not to lose them) and then by re-
applying whatever changes needed to make them pass with types2.
Finally, the new test mainsig.go was excluded from run.go when
using types2 due to issue #43308.
src/cmd/compile/internal/gc/noder.go
test/fixedbugs/bug13343.go
test/fixedbugs/bug462.go
test/fixedbugs/issue10975.go
test/fixedbugs/issue11326.go
test/fixedbugs/issue11361.go
test/fixedbugs/issue11371.go
test/fixedbugs/issue11674.go
test/fixedbugs/issue13365.go
test/fixedbugs/issue13471.go
test/fixedbugs/issue14136.go
test/fixedbugs/issue14321.go
test/fixedbugs/issue14729.go
test/fixedbugs/issue15898.go
test/fixedbugs/issue16439.go
test/fixedbugs/issue17588.go
test/fixedbugs/issue19323.go
test/fixedbugs/issue19482.go
test/fixedbugs/issue19880.go
test/fixedbugs/issue20185.go
test/fixedbugs/issue20227.go
test/fixedbugs/issue20415.go
test/fixedbugs/issue20749.go
test/fixedbugs/issue22794.go
test/fixedbugs/issue22822.go
test/fixedbugs/issue22921.go
test/fixedbugs/issue23823.go
test/fixedbugs/issue25727.go
test/fixedbugs/issue26616.go
test/fixedbugs/issue28079c.go
test/fixedbugs/issue28450.go
test/fixedbugs/issue30085.go
test/fixedbugs/issue30087.go
test/fixedbugs/issue35291.go
test/fixedbugs/issue38745.go
test/fixedbugs/issue41247.go
test/fixedbugs/issue41440.go
test/fixedbugs/issue41500.go
test/fixedbugs/issue4215.go
test/fixedbugs/issue6402.go
test/fixedbugs/issue6772.go
test/fixedbugs/issue7129.go
test/fixedbugs/issue7150.go
test/fixedbugs/issue7153.go
test/fixedbugs/issue7310.go
test/fixedbugs/issue8183.go
test/fixedbugs/issue8385.go
test/fixedbugs/issue8438.go
test/fixedbugs/issue8440.go
test/fixedbugs/issue8507.go
test/fixedbugs/issue9370.go
test/fixedbugs/issue9521.go
Change-Id: I26e6e326fde6e3fca5400711a253834d710ab7f4
The list of conflicted files for this merge is:
src/cmd/compile/internal/gc/inl.go
src/cmd/compile/internal/gc/order.go
src/cmd/compile/internal/gc/ssa.go
test/fixedbugs/issue20415.go
test/fixedbugs/issue22822.go
test/fixedbugs/issue28079b.go
inl.go was updated for changes on dev.regabi: namely that OSELRECV has
been removed, and that OSELRECV2 now only uses List, rather than both
Left and List.
order.go was updated IsAutoTmp is now a standalone function, rather
than a method on Node.
ssa.go was similarly updated for new APIs involving package ir.
The tests are all merging upstream additions for gccgo error messages
with changes to cmd/compile's error messages on the dev.regabi branch.
Change-Id: Icaaf186d69da791b5994dbb6688ec989caabec42
For #11656
For #43283
Change-Id: I1fcf2b24800f421e36201af43130b487abe605b1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/279312
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Emmanuel Odeke <emmanuel@orijtech.com>
Reviewed-by: Emmanuel Odeke <emmanuel@orijtech.com>
Previously, reassigned was failing to detect reassignments due to
channel receives in select statements (OSELRECV, OSELRECV2), or due to
standalone 2-value receive assignments (OAS2RECV). This was reported
as a devirtualization panic, but could have caused mis-inlining as
well.
Fixes#43292.
Change-Id: Ic8079c20c0587aeacff9596697fdeba80a697b12
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/279352
Trust: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
The issue11656 code was using the trap instruction as a PC value,
but it is intended to call a PC value that contains the trap instruction.
It doesn't matter too much as in practice the address is not
executable anyhow. But may as well have the code act the way it
is documented to act.
Also, don't run the test with gccgo/GoLLVM, as it can't work.
The illegal instruction will have no unwind data, so the unwinder
won't be able to get past it. In other words, gccgo/GoLLVM suffer
from the exact problem that the issue describes, but it seems insoluble.
For golang/go#11656
Change-Id: Ib2e50ffc91d215fd50e78f742fafe476c92d704e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/278473
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
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Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
The language spec only requires a signed binary exponent of 16 bits
for floating point constants. Permit a "exponent too large" error for
larger exponents.
Don't run test 11326b with gccgo, as it requires successful compilation
of floating point constants with exponents that don't fit in 16 bits.
Change-Id: I98688160c76864aba525a151a14aaaf86bc36a6f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/279252
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
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Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Change the run.go driver to recognize the "gc" build tag.
Change existing tests to use the "gc" build tag if they use some
feature that seems specific to the gc compiler, such as passing specific
options to or expecting specific behavior from "go tool compile".
Change tests to use the "!gccgo" build tag if they use "go build" or
"go run", as while those might work with compilers other than gc, they
won't work with the way that gccgo runs its testsuite (which happens
independently of the go command).
For #43252
Change-Id: I666e04b6d7255a77dfc256ee304094e3a6bb15ad
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/279052
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
An automated rewrite will add concrete type assertions after
a test of n.Op(), when n can be safely type-asserted
(meaning, n is not reassigned a different type, n is not reassigned
and then used outside the scope of the type assertion,
and so on).
This sequence of CLs handles the code that the automated
rewrite does not: adding specific types to function arguments,
adjusting code not to call n.Left() etc when n may have multiple
representations, and so on.
This CL focuses on noder.go.
Passes buildall w/ toolstash -cmp.
Change-Id: Ie870126b51558e83c738add8e91a2804ed6d7f92
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/277931
Trust: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
An automated rewrite will add concrete type assertions after
a test of n.Op(), when n can be safely type-asserted
(meaning, n is not reassigned a different type, n is not reassigned
and then used outside the scope of the type assertion,
and so on).
This sequence of CLs handles the code that the automated
rewrite does not: adding specific types to function arguments,
adjusting code not to call n.Left() etc when n may have multiple
representations, and so on.
This CL handles package fmt. There are various type assertions
but also some rewriting to lean more heavily on reflection.
Passes buildall w/ toolstash -cmp.
Change-Id: I503467468b42ace11bff2ba014b03cfa345e6d03
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/277915
Trust: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
The gofrontend code sees that the denominator is not zero,
so it computes the values. Dividing zero by a non-zero value
produces zero. The language spec doesn't require any of these
cases to report an error, so make the errors compiler-specific.
Change-Id: I5ed759a3121e38b937744d32250adcbdf2c4d3c2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/278117
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
The bug429 tests is an exact duplicate of TestSimpleDeadlock in the
runtime package. The runtime package is the right place for this test,
and the version in the runtime package will run faster as the build
step is combined with other runtime package tests.
Change-Id: I6538d24e6df8e8c5e3e399d3ff37d68f3e52be56
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/278173
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
The language spec only requires that floating point values be
represented with 256 bits, which is about 1e75. The issue11371 test
was assuming that the compiler could represent 1e100. Adjusting the
test so that it only assumes 256 bits of precision still keeps the
test valid, and permits it to pass when using the gofrontend.
Change-Id: I9d1006e9adc9438277f4b8002488c912e5d61cc1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/278116
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
With the gc compiler the import path implies the package path,
so keeping a canonical path is important. With the gofrontend
this is not the case, so we don't need to report this as a bug.
Change-Id: I245e34f9b66383bd17e79438d4b002a3e20aa994
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/278115
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
The pattern in NNN.dir directories is that if we have a.go,
the other files import "./a". For gc it happens to work to use a path,
but not for gofrontend. Better to be consistent.
Change-Id: I2e023cbf6bd115f9fb77427b097b0ff9b9992f17
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/278113
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
This CL substantially reworks how imported declarations are handled,
and fixes a number of issues with dot imports. In particular:
1. It eliminates the stub ir.Name declarations that are created
upfront during import-declaration processing, allowing this to be
deferred to when the declarations are actually needed. (Eventually,
this can be deferred even further so we never have to create ir.Names
w/ ONONAME, but this CL is already invasive/subtle enough.)
2. During noding, we now use ir.Idents to represent uses of imported
declarations, including of dot-imported declarations.
3. Unused dot imports are now reported after type checking, so that we
can correctly distinguish whether composite literal keys are a simple
identifier (struct literals) or expressions (array/slice/map literals)
and whether it might be a use of a dot-imported declaration.
4. It changes the "redeclared" error messages to report the previous
position information in the same style as other compiler error
messages that reference other source lines.
Passes buildall w/ toolstash -cmp.
Fixes#6428.
Fixes#43164.
Fixes#43167.
Updates #42990.
Change-Id: I40a0a780ec40daf5700fbc3cfeeb7300e1055981
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/277713
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Trust: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
fixedbugs/issue26416.go:24:16: error: unknown field ‘t1f1’ in ‘t2’
fixedbugs/issue26416.go:25:16: error: unknown field ‘t1f2’ in ‘t3’
fixedbugs/issue26416.go:26:16: error: unknown field ‘t2f1’ in ‘t3’
fixedbugs/issue26616.go:15:9: error: single variable set to multiple-value function call
fixedbugs/issue26616.go:9:5: error: incompatible type in initialization (multiple-value function call in single-value context)
fixedbugs/issue26616.go:12:13: error: incompatible type in initialization (multiple-value function call in single-value context)
fixedbugs/issue26616.go:13:13: error: incompatible type in initialization (multiple-value function call in single-value context)
fixedbugs/issue26616.go:15:9: error: incompatible type in initialization (multiple-value function call in single-value context)
fixedbugs/issue26616.go:14:11: error: incompatible types in assignment (multiple-value function call in single-value context)
fixedbugs/issue26855.go:23:12: error: incompatible type for field 1 in struct construction
fixedbugs/issue26855.go:27:12: error: incompatible type for field 1 in struct construction
fixedbugs/issue25958.go:14:18: error: expected ‘<-’ or ‘=’
fixedbugs/issue25958.go:15:35: error: expected ‘<-’ or ‘=’
fixedbugs/issue28079b.go:13:9: error: array bound is not constant
fixedbugs/issue28079b.go:16:22: error: invalid context-determined non-integer type for left operand of shift
fixedbugs/issue28079c.go:14:22: error: invalid context-determined non-integer type for left operand of shift
fixedbugs/issue28450.go:9:19: error: ‘...’ only permits one name
fixedbugs/issue28450.go:10:18: error: ‘...’ must be last parameter
fixedbugs/issue28450.go:11:16: error: ‘...’ must be last parameter
fixedbugs/issue28450.go:11:24: error: ‘...’ must be last parameter
fixedbugs/issue28450.go:13:25: error: ‘...’ must be last parameter
fixedbugs/issue28450.go:15:19: error: ‘...’ must be last parameter
fixedbugs/issue28450.go:16:21: error: ‘...’ must be last parameter
fixedbugs/issue28450.go:16:31: error: ‘...’ must be last parameter
fixedbugs/issue28268.go:20:1: error: method ‘E’ redeclares struct field name
fixedbugs/issue28268.go:19:1: error: method ‘b’ redeclares struct field name
fixedbugs/issue27356.go:14:14: error: expected function
fixedbugs/issue27356.go:18:9: error: expected function
fixedbugs/issue29855.go:13:11: error: unknown field ‘Name’ in ‘T’
fixedbugs/issue27938.go:14:15: error: expected package
fixedbugs/issue27938.go:18:13: error: expected package
fixedbugs/issue27938.go:22:13: error: expected package
fixedbugs/issue27938.go:22:9: error: expected signature or type name
fixedbugs/issue29870b.go:13:9: error: ‘x’ declared but not used
fixedbugs/issue30085.go:10:18: error: wrong number of initializations
fixedbugs/issue30085.go:11:21: error: wrong number of initializations
fixedbugs/issue30087.go:10:18: error: wrong number of initializations
fixedbugs/issue30087.go:11:11: error: number of variables does not match number of values
fixedbugs/issue30087.go:12:9: error: wrong number of initializations
fixedbugs/issue30087.go:13:9: error: wrong number of initializations
fixedbugs/issue28926.go:16:14: error: use of undefined type ‘G’
fixedbugs/issue28926.go:18:14: error: use of undefined type ‘E’
fixedbugs/issue28926.go:22:24: error: use of undefined type ‘T’
fixedbugs/issue30722.go:13:13: error: invalid numeric literal
fixedbugs/issue30722.go:14:13: error: invalid numeric literal
fixedbugs/issue30722.go:15:13: error: invalid numeric literal
fixedbugs/issue33308.go:12:19: error: invalid context-determined non-integer type for left operand of shift
fixedbugs/issue33386.go:16:9: error: expected operand
fixedbugs/issue33386.go:22:9: error: expected operand
fixedbugs/issue33386.go:26:17: error: expected operand
fixedbugs/issue33386.go:27:18: error: expected operand
fixedbugs/issue33386.go:28:29: error: expected operand
fixedbugs/issue33386.go:15:17: error: reference to undefined name ‘send’
fixedbugs/issue33386.go:27:13: error: reference to undefined name ‘a’
fixedbugs/issue33386.go:21:19: error: value computed is not used
fixedbugs/issue33460.go:34:10: error: duplicate key in map literal
fixedbugs/issue33460.go:21:9: error: duplicate case in switch
fixedbugs/issue33460.go:24:9: error: duplicate case in switch
fixedbugs/issue33460.go:25:9: error: duplicate case in switch
fixedbugs/issue32723.go:12:14: error: invalid comparison of non-ordered type
fixedbugs/issue32723.go:13:13: error: invalid comparison of non-ordered type
fixedbugs/issue32723.go:16:16: error: invalid comparison of non-ordered type
fixedbugs/issue32723.go:17:16: error: invalid comparison of non-ordered type
fixedbugs/issue32723.go:18:15: error: invalid comparison of non-ordered type
fixedbugs/issue32723.go:21:15: error: invalid comparison of non-ordered type
fixedbugs/issue35291.go:13:9: error: duplicate value for index 1
fixedbugs/issue38745.go:12:12: error: reference to undefined field or method ‘M’
fixedbugs/issue38745.go:13:16: error: reference to undefined field or method ‘M’
fixedbugs/issue38745.go:17:19: error: reference to undefined field or method ‘M’
fixedbugs/issue38745.go:17:9: error: not enough arguments to return
fixedbugs/issue41500.go:16:22: error: incompatible types in binary expression
fixedbugs/issue41500.go:17:26: error: incompatible types in binary expression
fixedbugs/issue41500.go:18:22: error: incompatible types in binary expression
fixedbugs/issue41500.go:19:26: error: incompatible types in binary expression
fixedbugs/issue41575.go:23:6: error: invalid recursive type
fixedbugs/issue41575.go:9:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘T1’
fixedbugs/issue41575.go:13:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘T2’
fixedbugs/issue41575.go:17:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘a’
fixedbugs/issue41575.go:18:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘b’
fixedbugs/issue41575.go:19:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘c’
fixedbugs/issue41575.go:25:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘g’
fixedbugs/issue41575.go:32:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘x’
fixedbugs/issue41575.go:33:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘y’
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:10:9: error: not enough arguments to return
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:14:9: error: return with value in function with no return type
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:19:17: error: not enough arguments to return
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:21:9: error: not enough arguments to return
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:27:17: error: not enough arguments to return
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:29:17: error: too many values in return statement
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:31:17: error: not enough arguments to return
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:43:17: error: not enough arguments to return
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:46:17: error: not enough arguments to return
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:48:9: error: too many values in return statement
fixedbugs/issue4215.go:52:9: error: too many values in return statement
fixedbugs/issue41247.go:10:16: error: incompatible type for return value 1
fixedbugs/issue41440.go:13:9: error: too many arguments
fixedbugs/issue6772.go:10:16: error: ‘a’ repeated on left side of :=
fixedbugs/issue6772.go:17:16: error: ‘a’ repeated on left side of :=
fixedbugs/issue6402.go:12:16: error: incompatible type for return value 1
fixedbugs/issue6403.go:13:23: error: reference to undefined identifier ‘syscall.X’
fixedbugs/issue6403.go:14:15: error: reference to undefined name ‘voidpkg’
fixedbugs/issue7746.go:24:20: error: constant multiplication overflow
fixedbugs/issue7760.go:15:7: error: invalid constant type
fixedbugs/issue7760.go:16:7: error: invalid constant type
fixedbugs/issue7760.go:18:7: error: invalid constant type
fixedbugs/issue7760.go:19:7: error: invalid constant type
fixedbugs/issue7760.go:21:11: error: expression is not constant
fixedbugs/issue7760.go:22:11: error: expression is not constant
fixedbugs/issue7760.go:24:7: error: invalid constant type
fixedbugs/issue7760.go:25:7: error: invalid constant type
fixedbugs/issue7129.go:18:11: error: argument 1 has incompatible type (cannot use type bool as type int)
fixedbugs/issue7129.go:19:11: error: argument 1 has incompatible type (cannot use type bool as type int)
fixedbugs/issue7129.go:20:11: error: argument 1 has incompatible type (cannot use type bool as type int)
fixedbugs/issue7129.go:20:17: error: argument 2 has incompatible type (cannot use type bool as type int)
fixedbugs/issue7150.go:12:20: error: index expression is negative
fixedbugs/issue7150.go:13:13: error: some element keys in composite literal are out of range
fixedbugs/issue7150.go:14:13: error: some element keys in composite literal are out of range
fixedbugs/issue7150.go:15:13: error: some element keys in composite literal are out of range
fixedbugs/issue7150.go:16:13: error: some element keys in composite literal are out of range
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:16:11: error: argument 1 has incompatible type (cannot use type int as type string)
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:16:24: error: argument 3 has incompatible type (cannot use type string as type float64)
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:16:9: error: not enough arguments
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:16:14: error: floating-point constant truncated to integer
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:18:11: error: argument 1 has incompatible type (cannot use type int as type string)
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:18:24: error: argument 3 has incompatible type (cannot use type string as type float64)
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:18:28: error: argument 4 has incompatible type (cannot use type int as type string)
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:18:9: error: too many arguments
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:18:14: error: floating-point constant truncated to integer
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:19:11: error: argument 1 has incompatible type (cannot use type int as type string)
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:19:9: error: not enough arguments
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:19:14: error: floating-point constant truncated to integer
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:21:11: error: argument 1 has incompatible type (cannot use type int as type string)
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:21:19: error: argument 3 has incompatible type
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:21:14: error: floating-point constant truncated to integer
fixedbugs/issue7675.go:23:14: error: floating-point constant truncated to integer
fixedbugs/issue7153.go:11:15: error: reference to undefined name ‘a’
fixedbugs/issue7153.go:11:18: error: incompatible type for element 1 in composite literal
fixedbugs/issue7153.go:11:24: error: incompatible type for element 2 in composite literal
fixedbugs/issue7310.go:12:13: error: left argument must be a slice
fixedbugs/issue7310.go:13:13: error: second argument must be slice or string
fixedbugs/issue7310.go:14:15: error: incompatible types in binary expression
fixedbugs/issue6964.go:10:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type complex128 as type string)
fixedbugs/issue7538a.go:14:9: error: reference to undefined label ‘_’
fixedbugs/issue8311.go:14:9: error: increment or decrement of non-numeric type
fixedbugs/issue8507.go:12:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘T’
fixedbugs/issue9521.go:16:20: error: argument 2 has incompatible type
fixedbugs/issue9521.go:17:20: error: argument 2 has incompatible type (cannot use type float64 as type int)
fixedbugs/issue8385.go:30:19: error: argument 1 has incompatible type (type has no methods)
fixedbugs/issue8385.go:30:14: error: not enough arguments
fixedbugs/issue8385.go:35:9: error: not enough arguments
fixedbugs/issue8385.go:36:9: error: not enough arguments
fixedbugs/issue8385.go:37:10: error: not enough arguments
fixedbugs/issue8385.go:38:10: error: not enough arguments
fixedbugs/issue8385.go:39:10: error: not enough arguments
fixedbugs/issue8385.go:40:10: error: not enough arguments
fixedbugs/issue8385.go:41:13: error: not enough arguments
fixedbugs/issue8438.go:13:23: error: incompatible type for element 1 in composite literal
fixedbugs/issue8438.go:14:22: error: incompatible type for element 1 in composite literal
fixedbugs/issue8438.go:15:23: error: incompatible type for element 1 in composite literal
fixedbugs/issue8440.go:10:9: error: reference to undefined name ‘n’
Change-Id: I5707aec7d3c9178c4f4d794d4827fc907b52efb3
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/278032
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
Also: Adjusted error patterns for passing test that have different
error messages.
Change-Id: I216294b4c4855aa93da22cdc3c0b3303e54a8420
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/277994
Trust: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
If the parser reported an error for (string) literals, don't report
a second error during type checking.
This should have a couple of tests but they are tricky to arrange
with the current testing framework as the ERROR comment cannot be
on the line where the string. But the change is straightforward
and we have test/fixedbugs/issue32133.go that is passing now.
Change-Id: I0cd7f002b04e4092b8eb66009c7413288c8bfb23
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/277993
Trust: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
The following files had merge conflicts and were merged manually:
src/cmd/compile/fmtmap_test.go
src/cmd/compile/internal/gc/noder.go
src/go/parser/error_test.go
test/assign.go
test/chan/perm.go
test/fixedbugs/issue22822.go
test/fixedbugs/issue4458.go
test/init.go
test/interface/explicit.go
test/map1.go
test/method2.go
The following files had manual changes to make tests pass:
test/run.go
test/used.go
src/cmd/compile/internal/types2/stdlib_test.go
Change-Id: Ia495aaaa80ce321ee4ec2a9105780fbe913dbd4c
fixedbugs/issue20602.go:13:9: error: argument must have complex type
fixedbugs/issue20602.go:14:9: error: argument must have complex type
fixedbugs/issue19323.go:12:12: error: attempt to slice object that is not array, slice, or string
fixedbugs/issue19323.go:18:13: error: attempt to slice object that is not array, slice, or string
fixedbugs/issue20749.go:12:11: error: array index out of bounds
fixedbugs/issue20749.go:15:11: error: array index out of bounds
fixedbugs/issue20415.go:14:5: error: redefinition of ‘f’
fixedbugs/issue20415.go:12:5: note: previous definition of ‘f’ was here
fixedbugs/issue20415.go:25:5: error: redefinition of ‘g’
fixedbugs/issue20415.go:20:5: note: previous definition of ‘g’ was here
fixedbugs/issue20415.go:33:5: error: redefinition of ‘h’
fixedbugs/issue20415.go:31:5: note: previous definition of ‘h’ was here
fixedbugs/issue19977.go:12:21: error: reference to undefined name ‘a’
fixedbugs/issue20812.go:10:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type string as type int)
fixedbugs/issue20812.go:11:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type int as type bool)
fixedbugs/issue20812.go:12:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type string as type bool)
fixedbugs/issue20812.go:13:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type bool as type int)
fixedbugs/issue20812.go:14:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type bool as type string)
fixedbugs/issue21256.go:9:5: error: redefinition of ‘main’
fixedbugs/issue20813.go:10:11: error: invalid left hand side of assignment
fixedbugs/issue20185.go:22:16: error: ‘t’ declared but not used
fixedbugs/issue20185.go:13:9: error: cannot type switch on non-interface value
fixedbugs/issue20185.go:22:9: error: cannot type switch on non-interface value
fixedbugs/issue20227.go:11:11: error: division by zero
fixedbugs/issue20227.go:12:12: error: division by zero
fixedbugs/issue20227.go:13:12: error: division by zero
fixedbugs/issue20227.go:15:11: error: division by zero
fixedbugs/issue20227.go:16:12: error: division by zero
fixedbugs/issue19880.go:14:13: error: invalid use of type
fixedbugs/issue23093.go:9:5: error: initialization expression for ‘f’ depends upon itself
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:29:13: error: integer constant overflow
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:39:13: error: complex constant truncated to floating-point
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:10:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type string as type bool)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:11:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type int as type bool)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:12:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type float64 as type bool)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:13:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type complex128 as type bool)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:15:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type bool as type string)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:17:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type float64 as type string)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:18:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type complex128 as type string)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:20:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type string as type int)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:21:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type bool as type int)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:27:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type string as type uint)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:28:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type bool as type uint)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:34:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type string as type float64)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:35:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type bool as type float64)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:41:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type string as type complex128)
fixedbugs/issue21979.go:42:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type bool as type complex128)
fixedbugs/issue21988.go:11:11: error: reference to undefined name ‘Wrong’
fixedbugs/issue22063.go:11:11: error: reference to undefined name ‘Wrong’
fixedbugs/issue22904.go:12:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘a’
fixedbugs/issue22904.go:13:6: error: invalid recursive type ‘b’
fixedbugs/issue22921.go:11:16: error: reference to undefined identifier ‘bytes.nonexist’
fixedbugs/issue22921.go:13:19: error: reference to undefined identifier ‘bytes.nonexist’
fixedbugs/issue22921.go:13:19: error: expected signature or type name
fixedbugs/issue22921.go:17:15: error: reference to undefined identifier ‘bytes.buffer’
fixedbugs/issue23823.go:15:9: error: invalid recursive interface
fixedbugs/issue23823.go:10:9: error: invalid recursive interface
fixedbugs/issue23732.go:24:13: error: too few expressions for struct
fixedbugs/issue23732.go:34:17: error: too many expressions for struct
fixedbugs/issue23732.go:37:13: error: too few expressions for struct
fixedbugs/issue23732.go:40:17: error: too many expressions for struct
fixedbugs/issue22794.go:16:14: error: reference to undefined field or method ‘floats’
fixedbugs/issue22794.go:18:19: error: unknown field ‘floats’ in ‘it’
fixedbugs/issue22794.go:19:17: error: unknown field ‘InneR’ in ‘it’
fixedbugs/issue22794.go:18:9: error: ‘i2’ declared but not used
fixedbugs/issue22822.go:15:17: error: expected function
fixedbugs/issue25727.go:12:10: error: reference to unexported field or method ‘doneChan’
fixedbugs/issue25727.go:13:10: error: reference to undefined field or method ‘DoneChan’
fixedbugs/issue25727.go:14:21: error: unknown field ‘tlsConfig’ in ‘http.Server’
fixedbugs/issue25727.go:15:21: error: unknown field ‘DoneChan’ in ‘http.Server’
fixedbugs/issue25727.go:21:14: error: unknown field ‘bAr’ in ‘foo’
Change-Id: I32ce0b7d80017b2367b8fb479a881632240d4161
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/277455
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
fixedbugs/issue14136.go:17:16: error: unknown field ‘X’ in ‘T’
fixedbugs/issue14136.go:18:13: error: incompatible type in initialization (cannot use type int as type string)
fixedbugs/issue14520.go:9:37: error: import path contains control character
fixedbugs/issue14520.go:14:2: error: expected ‘)’
fixedbugs/issue14520.go:14:3: error: expected declaration
fixedbugs/issue14652.go:9:7: error: use of undefined type ‘any’
fixedbugs/issue14729.go:13:17: error: embedded type may not be a pointer
fixedbugs/issue15514.dir/c.go:10: error: incompatible type in initialization
fixedbugs/issue15898.go:11:9: error: duplicate type in switch
fixedbugs/issue15898.go:16:9: error: duplicate type in switch
fixedbugs/issue16439.go:10:21: error: index expression is negative
fixedbugs/issue16439.go:13:21: error: index expression is negative
fixedbugs/issue16439.go:16:21: error: index expression is not integer constant
fixedbugs/issue16439.go:18:22: error: index expression is not integer constant
fixedbugs/issue17328.go:11:20: error: expected ‘{’
fixedbugs/issue17328.go:11:20: error: expected ‘;’ or ‘}’ or newline
fixedbugs/issue17328.go:13:1: error: expected declaration
fixedbugs/issue17588.go:14:15: error: expected type
fixedbugs/issue17631.go:20:17: error: unknown field ‘updates’ in ‘unnamed struct’
fixedbugs/issue17645.go:15:13: error: incompatible type in initialization
fixedbugs/issue17758.go:13:1: error: redefinition of ‘foo’
fixedbugs/issue17758.go:9:1: note: previous definition of ‘foo’ was here
fixedbugs/issue18092.go:13:19: error: expected colon
fixedbugs/issue18231.go:17:12: error: may only omit types within composite literals of slice, array, or map type
fixedbugs/issue18393.go:24:38: error: expected type
fixedbugs/issue18419.dir/test.go:12: error: reference to unexported field or method 'member'
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:14:1: error: redefinition of ‘m’
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:13:1: note: previous definition of ‘m’ was here
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:15:1: error: redefinition of ‘m’
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:13:1: note: previous definition of ‘m’ was here
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:16:1: error: redefinition of ‘m’
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:13:1: note: previous definition of ‘m’ was here
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:17:1: error: redefinition of ‘m’
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:13:1: note: previous definition of ‘m’ was here
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:18:1: error: redefinition of ‘m’
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:13:1: note: previous definition of ‘m’ was here
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:20:1: error: redefinition of ‘m’
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:13:1: note: previous definition of ‘m’ was here
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:21:1: error: redefinition of ‘m’
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:13:1: note: previous definition of ‘m’ was here
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:22:1: error: redefinition of ‘m’
fixedbugs/issue18655.go:13:1: note: previous definition of ‘m’ was here
fixedbugs/issue18915.go:13:20: error: expected ‘;’ after statement in if expression
fixedbugs/issue18915.go:16:21: error: parse error in for statement
fixedbugs/issue18915.go:19:24: error: expected ‘;’ after statement in switch expression
fixedbugs/issue18915.go:13:12: error: ‘a’ declared but not used
fixedbugs/issue18915.go:16:13: error: ‘b’ declared but not used
fixedbugs/issue18915.go:19:16: error: ‘c’ declared but not used
fixedbugs/issue19012.go:16:17: error: return with value in function with no return type
fixedbugs/issue19012.go:18:9: error: return with value in function with no return type
fixedbugs/issue19012.go:22:16: error: argument 2 has incompatible type (cannot use type bool as type uint)
fixedbugs/issue19012.go:22:9: error: too many arguments
fixedbugs/issue19012.go:22:16: error: incompatible types in binary expression
fixedbugs/issue19012.go:24:9: error: too many arguments
fixedbugs/issue19056.go:9:9: error: expected operand
fixedbugs/issue19056.go:9:9: error: expected ‘;’ or newline after top level declaration
fixedbugs/issue19482.go:25:15: error: expected struct field name
fixedbugs/issue19482.go:27:15: error: expected struct field name
fixedbugs/issue19482.go:31:19: error: expected struct field name
fixedbugs/issue19482.go:33:15: error: expected struct field name
fixedbugs/issue19667.go:13:1: error: expected operand
fixedbugs/issue19667.go:13:1: error: missing ‘)’
fixedbugs/issue19667.go:13:105: error: expected ‘;’ after statement in if expression
fixedbugs/issue19667.go:13:105: error: expected ‘{’
fixedbugs/issue19667.go:12:19: error: reference to undefined name ‘http’
Change-Id: Ia9c75b9c78671f354f0a0623dbc075157ef8f181
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/277433
Trust: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
There were only a few places these were still used, none of which
justify generating all this code. Instead rewrite them to use
fmt.Sprint or simpler means.
Passes buildall w/ toolstash -cmp.
Change-Id: Ibd123a1696941a597f0cb4dcc96cda8ced672140
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/276072
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Trust: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>