It is probably a mistake to have these here at all -
os is supposed to be portable - but this only fixes
the build issue.
R=golang-dev, r, r, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5487073
I have included a few important microbenchmarks,
but the overall intent is to have mostly end-to-end
benchmarks timing real world operations.
The jsondata.go file is a summary of agl's
activity in various open source repositories.
It gets used as test data for many of the benchmarks.
Everything links into one binary (even the test data)
so that it is easy to run the benchmarks on many
computers: there is just one file to copy around.
R=golang-dev, r, bradfitz, adg, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5484071
This avoids degraded performance caused by extra labels
emitted by inlining (breaking strconv ftoa alloc count unittest) and is better in any case.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5483071
clean is gone; all the intermediate files are created
in a temporary tree that is wiped when the command ends.
Not using go/build's Script because it is not well aligned
with this API. The various builder methods are copied from
go/build and adapted. Probably once we delete goinstall
we can delete the Script API too.
R=rogpeppe, adg, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5483069
Pass tests6.dat, test 26:
foo<col>
| <col>
Also pass tests through test 35:
<table><tr><div><td>
R=nigeltao
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5482074
I realize I didn't send the tests in last time. Anyway, I added
a test that knows too much about the package's internal structure,
and I'm not sure whether it's the right thing to do.
Vadik.
R=bradfitz, rsc, go.peter.90
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5450073
This redefinition means that the public signature of html/template
does not refer to text/template.
Fixes#2546.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5487083
We only want to attempt to un-gzip if there's a body (not in
response to a HEAD)
This was accidentally passing before, but revealed to be broken
when c3c6e72d7cc went in.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5477093
The obvious fix is breaking the build in non-obvious ways.
Reverting while waiting for the correct fix, if any is needed.
««« original CL description
net/http: fix bug in error checking
Thanks to josef86@gmail.com for pointing this out.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5477092
»»»
R=iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5488085
Cross- and intra package inlining of single assignments or return <expression>.
Minus some hairy cases, currently including other calls, expressions with closures and ... arguments.
R=rsc, rogpeppe, adg, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5400043
breaks 64-bit build
««« original CL description
8c: handle 64-bit switch value
Cases must still be 32-bit values, but one thing at a time.
R=ality, ken2, ken
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5485063
»»»
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5488075
The transmitter must encode an interface value if it is to be decoded
into an interface value, but it's a common and confusing error to
encode a concrete value and attempt to decode it into an interface,
particularly *interface{}. This CL attempts to explain things better.
Fixes#2367.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5485072
Testing total space fails for gccgo when not using split
stacks, because then each goroutine has a large stack, and so
the total memory usage is large.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5487068
I was confused by the existence of two portable Hypot
routines in the tree when I cleaned things up, and I made
ARM use the wrong (imprecise) one. Use the right one,
and delete the wrong one.
Fixes arm build.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5485065
breaks build
««« original CL description
http: close connection after printing panic stack trace
In a testing situation, it's possible for a local http
server to panic and the test exit without the stack trace
ever being printed.
Fixes#2480.
R=rsc, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5414048
»»»
R=bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5482061
In a testing situation, it's possible for a local http
server to panic and the test exit without the stack trace
ever being printed.
Fixes#2480.
R=rsc, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5414048
This will be nicer to the automatic tools.
It requires a few more assembly stubs
but fewer Go files.
There are a few instances where it looks like
there are new blobs of code, but they are just
being copied out of deleted files.
There is no new code here.
Suppose you have a portable implementation for Sin
and a 386-specific assembly one. The old way to
do this was to write three files
sin_decl.go
func Sin(x float64) float64 // declaration only
sin_386.s
assembly implementation
sin_port.go
func Sin(x float64) float64 { ... } // pure-Go impl
and then link in either sin_decl.go+sin_386.s or
just sin_port.go. The Makefile actually did the magic
of linking in only the _port.go files for those without
assembly and only the _decl.go files for those with
assembly, or at least some of that magic.
The biggest problem with this, beyond being hard
to explain to the build system, is that once you do
explain it to the build system, godoc knows which
of sin_port.go or sin_decl.go are involved on a given
architecture, and it (correctly) ignores the other.
That means you have to put identical doc comments
in both files.
The new approach, which is more like what we did
in the later packages math/big and sync/atomic,
is to have
sin.go
func Sin(x float64) float64 // decl only
func sin(x float64) float64 {...} // pure-Go impl
sin_386.s
// assembly for Sin (ignores sin)
sin_amd64.s
// assembly for Sin: jmp sin
sin_arm.s
// assembly for Sin: jmp sin
Once we abandon Makefiles we can put all the assembly
stubs in one source file, so the number of files will
actually go down.
Chris asked whether the branches cost anything.
Given that they are branching to pure-Go implementations
that are not typically known for their speed, the single
direct branch is not going to be noticeable. That is,
it's on the slow path.
An alternative would have been to preserve the old
"only write assembly files when there's an implementation"
and still have just one copy of the declaration of Sin
(and thus one doc comment) by doing:
sin.go
func Sin(x float64) float64 { return sin(x) }
sin_decl.go
func sin(x float64) float64 // declaration only
sin_386.s
// assembly for sin
sin_port.go
func sin(x float64) float64 { portable code }
In this version everyone would link in sin.go and
then either sin_decl.go+sin_386.s or sin_port.go.
This has an extra function call on all paths, including
the "fast path" to get to assembly, and it triples the
number of Go files involved compared to what I did
in this CL. On the other hand you don't have to
write assembly stubs. After starting down this path
I decided that the assembly stubs were the easier
approach.
As for generating the assembly stubs on the fly, much
of the goal here is to eliminate magic from the build
process, so that zero-configuration tools like goinstall
or the new go tool can handle this package.
R=golang-dev, r, cw, iant, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5488057
This CL is concerned with the basic Package structure
and applies it to the (trivial) implementations of the
doc, fmt, fix, list, and vet commands.
The command as a whole is still very much a work in progress.
In particular, work making the error messages look nice
is deferred to a future CL.
R=golang-dev, adg, dsymonds, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5482048
Apparently it is broken. Disable so that dashboard
will let us see other breakages on Windows.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5477081
Example:
PACKAGE
package utf8
import "unicode/utf8"
Package utf8 implements functions and constants to support text
encoded in UTF-8. This package calls a Unicode character a rune for
brevity.
CONSTANTS
const (
RuneError = unicode.ReplacementChar // the "error" Rune or "replacement character".
RuneSelf = 0x80 // characters below Runeself are represented as themselves in a single byte.
UTFMax = 4 // maximum number of bytes of a UTF-8 encoded Unicode character.
)
Numbers fundamental to the encoding.
FUNCTIONS
func DecodeLastRune(p []byte) (r rune, size int)
DecodeLastRune unpacks the last UTF-8 encoding in p and returns the
rune and its width in bytes.
func DecodeLastRuneInString(s string) (r rune, size int)
DecodeLastRuneInString is like DecodeLastRune but its input is a
string.
func DecodeRune(p []byte) (r rune, size int)
DecodeRune unpacks the first UTF-8 encoding in p and returns the rune
and its width in bytes.
func DecodeRuneInString(s string) (r rune, size int)
DecodeRuneInString is like DecodeRune but its input is a string.
func EncodeRune(p []byte, r rune) int
EncodeRune writes into p (which must be large enough) the UTF-8
encoding of the rune. It returns the number of bytes written.
func FullRune(p []byte) bool
FullRune reports whether the bytes in p begin with a full UTF-8
encoding of a rune. An invalid encoding is considered a full Rune
since it will convert as a width-1 error rune.
func FullRuneInString(s string) bool
FullRuneInString is like FullRune but its input is a string.
func RuneCount(p []byte) int
RuneCount returns the number of runes in p. Erroneous and short
encodings are treated as single runes of width 1 byte.
func RuneCountInString(s string) (n int)
RuneCountInString is like RuneCount but its input is a string.
func RuneLen(r rune) int
RuneLen returns the number of bytes required to encode the rune.
func RuneStart(b byte) bool
RuneStart reports whether the byte could be the first byte of an
encoded rune. Second and subsequent bytes always have the top two
bits set to 10.
func Valid(p []byte) bool
Valid reports whether p consists entirely of valid UTF-8-encoded
runes.
func ValidString(s string) bool
ValidString reports whether s consists entirely of valid UTF-8-encoded
runes.
TYPES
type String struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
String wraps a regular string with a small structure that provides
more efficient indexing by code point index, as opposed to byte index.
Scanning incrementally forwards or backwards is O(1) per index
operation (although not as fast a range clause going forwards).
Random access is O(N) in the length of the string, but the overhead is
less than always scanning from the beginning. If the string is ASCII,
random access is O(1). Unlike the built-in string type, String has
internal mutable state and is not thread-safe.
func NewString(contents string) *String
NewString returns a new UTF-8 string with the provided contents.
func (s *String) At(i int) rune
At returns the rune with index i in the String. The sequence of runes
is the same as iterating over the contents with a "for range" clause.
func (s *String) Init(contents string) *String
Init initializes an existing String to hold the provided contents.
It returns a pointer to the initialized String.
func (s *String) IsASCII() bool
IsASCII returns a boolean indicating whether the String contains only
ASCII bytes.
func (s *String) RuneCount() int
RuneCount returns the number of runes (Unicode code points) in the
String.
func (s *String) Slice(i, j int) string
Slice returns the string sliced at rune positions [i:j].
func (s *String) String() string
String returns the contents of the String. This method also means the
String is directly printable by fmt.Print.
Fixes#2479.
R=golang-dev, dsymonds, mattn.jp, r, gri, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5472051
don't crash when printing error messages about symbols in a garbled state.
render OCOMPLIT in export mode.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5466045
To allow these types as map keys, we must fill in
equal and hash functions in their algorithm tables.
Structs or arrays that are "just memory", like [2]int,
can and do continue to use the AMEM algorithm.
Structs or arrays that contain special values like
strings or interface values use generated functions
for both equal and hash.
The runtime helper func runtime.equal(t, x, y) bool handles
the general equality case for x == y and calls out to
the equal implementation in the algorithm table.
For short values (<= 4 struct fields or array elements),
the sequence of elementwise comparisons is inlined
instead of calling runtime.equal.
R=ken, mpimenov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5451105
I had to move readFile into sys_$GOOS.go
since syscall.Open takes only two arguments
on Plan 9.
R=lucio.dere, rsc, alex.brainman
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5447061
Made te and td arrays into variables te0-3 and td0-3,
which improves performance from 7000ns/op to 5800.
R=rsc, rogpeppe, agl
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5449077
src/clean.bash:
Add clean-ups for previously overlooked directories.
doc/codelab/wiki/Makefile:
Dropped "index.html" from CLEANFILES so it will not be
deleted on cleaning.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5476050
syscall_windows.go contains a small demo, which calls the obsolete
syscall.Errstr function.
R=golang-dev, alex.brainman
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5475044
Acosh, Asinh, Atanh, Ceil, Floor, Trunc, Mod and Remainder affected. These changes add some non-finite arguments and results (and -0.0 results).
R=rsc, golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5469046
Although FIPS 186-3 says that we should truncate the hashes, at least
one other library (libgcrypt) doesn't. This means that it's impossible
to interoperate with code using gcrypt if we enforce the truncation
inside of crypto/dsa.
This change shouldn't actually affect anything because nearly
everybody pairs DSA with SHA1, which doesn't need to be truncated in
either case.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5471043
The values have been generated only for the i386 and amd64 architectures.
R=golang-dev, mikioh.mikioh, dsymonds
CC=bradfitz, dsymonds, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5452060
Max returns +Inf if x or y is +Inf; else it returns NaN if either x or y is NaN. Max(-0, -0) returns -0.
Min returns -Inf if x or y is -Inf; else it returns NaN if either x or y is NaN. Min(+0, -0) returns -0.
Dim(+Inf, +Inf) = NaN, Dim(-Inf, -Inf) = NaN and Dim(NaN, anything) = NaN.
Also, change "conditions" to "cases" for Sin (missed it in previous CL).
R=rsc, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5437137
daysBefore[12+1]: index out of range
time.December and Windows SYSTEMTIME.wMonth
are 12 for December.
R=rsc, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5448130
The -w switch actually prints steps of the syntax tree walks
while -W prints a summary before and after the walk.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev, remy
https://golang.org/cl/5444049
I added the clientChan's msg channel to the list of channels that are closed in mainloop when the server sends a channelCloseMsg.
I added an ExitError type that wraps a Waitmsg similar to that of os/exec. I fill ExitStatus with the data returned in the 'exit-status' channel message and Msg with the data returned in the 'exit-signal' channel message.
Instead of having Wait() return on the first 'exit-status'/'exit-signal' I have it return an ExitError containing the status and signal when the clientChan's msg channel is closed.
I added two tests cases to session_test.go that test for exit status 0 (in which case Wait() returns nil) and exit status 1 (in which case Wait() returns an ExitError with ExitStatus 1)
R=dave, agl, rsc, golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5452051
It was fragile and non-portable, and then became spammy with
the os.EINVAL removal. Now it just uses the length of the
Peek return value instead.
R=golang-dev, alex.brainman
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5453065
The code in hash functions themselves could write directly into the
output buffer for a savings of about 50ns. But it's a little ugly so I
wasted a copy.
R=bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5440111
This CL cleans up the client auth tests, making the
individual test body more manageable.
Also, adds tests for rsa and dsa key negotiation.
Finally, remove the package level use of the variable
strings, which avoids conflicting with the strings pkg.
R=gustav.paul, agl, n13m3y3r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5447049
This avoids a problem when creating certificates with parents that
were produce by other code: the Go structures don't contain all the
information about the various ASN.1 string types etc and so that
information would otherwise be lost.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5453067
Allow the text template to handle the error case of no template
with the given name.
Simplification suggested by Mike Samuel.
R=mikesamuel
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5437147
(Note that the Int and Uint benchmarks use different test sets
and thus cannot be compared against each other. Int and Uint
conversions are approximately the same speed).
Before (best of 3 runs):
strconv_test.BenchmarkFormatInt 100000 15636 ns/op
strconv_test.BenchmarkAppendInt 100000 18930 ns/op
strconv_test.BenchmarkFormatUint 500000 4392 ns/op
strconv_test.BenchmarkAppendUint 500000 5152 ns/op
After (best of 3 runs):
strconv_test.BenchmarkFormatInt 200000 10070 ns/op (-36%)
strconv_test.BenchmarkAppendInt 200000 7097 ns/op (-63%)
strconv_test.BenchmarkFormatUint 1000000 2893 ns/op (-34%)
strconv_test.BenchmarkAppendUint 500000 2462 ns/op (-52%)
R=r, rsc, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5449093
When I disallowed map + func comparisons, I only did it
in the static case and missed the comparisons via == on
interface values. Fixing that turned these up.
R=nigeltao, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5440103
This is part one of a small set of CL's that aim to resolve
the outstanding TODOs relating to channel close and blocking
behavior.
Firstly, the hairy handling of assigning the peersId is now
done in one place. The cost of this change is the slightly
paradoxical construction of the partially created clientChan.
Secondly, by creating clientChan.stdin/out/err when the channel
is opened, the creation of consumers like tcpchan and Session
is simplified; they just have to wire themselves up to the
relevant readers/writers.
R=agl, gustav.paul, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5448073
This is a slight change to fmt's semantics, but means that if you use
%d to print an integer with a Stringable value, it will print as an integer.
This came up because Time.Month() couldn't cleanly print as an integer
rather than a name. Using %d on Stringables is silly anyway, so there
should be no effect outside the fmt tests.
As a mild bonus, certain recursive failures of String methods
will also be avoided this way.
R=golang-dev, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5453053
All but 3 cases (in gcimporter.go and hixie.go)
are automatic conversions using gofix.
No attempt is made to use the new Append functions
even though there are definitely opportunities.
R=golang-dev, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5447069
By converting array indices to uint8, they are automatically
constrained in the array range, and the binary AND with 0xff
is no longer needed anymore.
Before: aes.BenchmarkEncrypt 363 ns/op
After: aes.BenchmarkEncrypt 273 ns/op
R=golang-dev, gri, agl
CC=golang-dev, remy
https://golang.org/cl/5450084
Equality on structs will require arbitrary code for type equality,
so change algorithm in type data from uint8 to table pointer.
In the process, trim top-level map structure from
104/80 bytes (64-bit/32-bit) to 24/12.
Equality on structs will require being able to call code generated
by the Go compiler, and C code has no way to access Go return
values, so change the hash and equal algorithm functions to take
a pointer to a result instead of returning the result.
R=ken
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5453043
The SSH spec allows for the server to send a banner message to the client at any point during the authentication process. Currently the ssh client auth types all assume that the first response from the server after issuing a userAuthRequestMsg will be one of a couple of possible authentication success/failure messages. This means that client authentication breaks if the ssh server being connected to has a banner message configured.
This changeset refactors the noneAuth, passwordAuth and publickeyAuth types' auth() function and allows for msgUserAuthBanner during authentication.
R=golang-dev, rsc, dave, agl
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5432065
For now a pair of socket options SOL_SOCKET and SO_BINDTODEVICE
is supported on Linux only. I'd like to demote BindToDevice API
to syscall level because it's Linux dependent one.
In the near future, probably we may have a bit more portable
API that using IPROTO_IP/IPV6 level socket options to specify,
identify an inbound, outbound IP interface on incoming, outgoing
UDP and raw IP packets.
R=cw, golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5447071
cmd.exe implicitly looks in "." before consulting PATH.
LookPath should match this behavior.
R=alex.brainman, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5434093
This is a more conservative approach to heading detection and
removes 11 headings from the current repository (several in
fmt). The current headscan output is:
/home/gri/go3/src/cmd/goinstall (package documentation)
Remote Repositories
The GOPATH Environment Variable
/home/gri/go3/src/pkg/exp/gotype (package documentation)
Examples
/home/gri/go3/src/pkg/html/template (package template)
Introduction
Contexts
Errors
A fuller picture
Contexts
Typed Strings
Security Model
/home/gri/go3/src/pkg/text/template (package template)
Actions
Arguments
Pipelines
Variables
Examples
Functions
Associated templates
Nested template definitions
18 headings found
R=golang-dev, adg, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5437105
- this removes extra conversions from strings to bytes and vice versa
for each comment
- minor cleanups
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5434096
- scan all comments not just the package documentation
- declutter output so that false positives are more easily spotted
- count the number of headings to quickly see differences
- minor tweaks
R=golang-dev, r, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5450061
To structure larger sections of comments in html output headings
are detected in comments and formated as h3 in the generated html.
A simple heuristic is used to detect headings in comments:
A heading is a non-blank, non-indented line preceded by a blank
line. It is followed by a blank and a non-blank, non-indented line.
A heading must start with an uppercase letter and end with a letter,
digit or a colon. A heading may not contain punctuation characters.
R=jan.mercl, gri, adg, rsc, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5437056
This is the result of running `gofix -r hashsum` over the tree, changing
the hash function implementations by hand and then fixing a couple of
instances where gofix didn't catch something.
The changed implementations are as simple as possible while still
working: I'm not trying to optimise in this CL.
R=rsc, cw, rogpeppe
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5448065
The problem is that execution can modify the template, so it needs
interlocking to have the same thread-safe guarantee as text/template.
Fixes#2439.
R=golang-dev, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5450056
Not quite done yet but enough is here to review.
Embedding is eliminated so clients can't accidentally reach
methods of text/template.Template that would break the
invariants.
TODO later: Add and Clone are unimplemented.
TODO later: address issue 2349
R=golang-dev, r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5434077