Broke tests on 386.
««« original CL description
6l/8l: emit correct opcodes to F(SUB|DIV)R?D.
When the destination was not F0, 6l and 8l swapped FSUBD/FSUBRD and
FDIVD/FDIVRD.
R=golang-dev, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6498092
»»»
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6492100
Also, clear Content-Type and Content-Length on Not Modified
responses before server.go strips them and spams the logs with
warnings.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6503090
Refactored build + buildTrie into build + buildOrdering.
Note that since the tailoring code is not checked in yet, all tailorings are identical
to root. The table therefore should not and does not grow at this point.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6500087
After further deliberation, let's back down to the Unicode proposal.
Ignoring aBOMinations anywhere means that things like
grep unsafe *.go
might fail because there's a BOM in the middle: unBOMsafe.
R=golang-dev, rsc, 0xjnml, gri, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6490091
The main case where it happens is when evaluating &s[i] without
bounds checking, which usually happens during range loops (i=0).
This allows registerization of the corresponding variables,
saving 16 bytes of stack frame for each such range loop and a
LEAQ instruction.
R=golang-dev, rsc, dave
CC=golang-dev, remy
https://golang.org/cl/6497073
Fixes#3911.
Requires CL 6449127.
dfc@qnap:~$ ./runtime.test
runtime: this CPU has no floating point hardware, so it cannot run
this GOARM=7 binary. Recompile using GOARM=5.
R=rsc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6442109
When generating enums use the debug data section instead of the
DWARF debug info, if it is available in the ELF file. This allows
mkerrors.sh to work correctly on OpenBSD/386 and NetBSD/386.
Fixes#2470.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6495090
The parser depends on it but the client might not import it, so make sure it's there.
Fixes#4038.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6497094
Fixes#3862.
There were many areas where conn.err was being accessed
outside the mutex. This proposal moves the err value to
an embedded struct to make it more obvious when the error
value is being accessed.
As there are no Benchmark tests in this package I cannot
feel confident of the impact of this additional locking,
although most will be uncontended.
R=dvyukov, agl
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6497070
order.
JPEG images generated prior to this CL are still valid JPEGs, as the
quantization tables used are encoded in the wire format. Such JPEGs just
don't use the recommended quantization tables.
R=r, dsymonds, raph, adg
CC=golang-dev, tuom.larsen
https://golang.org/cl/6497083
The old code was a depth first graph traversal that could, under the
right conditions, end up re-exploring the same subgraphs multiple
times, once for each way to arrive at that subgraph at a given depth.
The new code uses a breadth first search to make sure that it only
visits each reachable embedded struct once.
Also add fast path for the trivial case.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkFieldByName1 1321 187 -85.84%
BenchmarkFieldByName2 6118 5186 -15.23%
BenchmarkFieldByName3 8218553 42112 -99.49%
R=gri, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6458090
All of them call `newFileFD' which must properly restore close-on-exec on
duplicated fds.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6445081
Signal handlers are global resources but many language
environments (Go, C++ at Google, etc) assume they have sole
ownership of a particular handler. Signal handlers in
mixed-language applications must therefore be robust against
unexpected delivery of certain signals, such as SIGPROF.
The default Go signal handler runtime·sigtramp assumes that it
will never be called on a non-Go thread, but this assumption
is violated by when linking in C++ code that spawns threads.
Specifically, the handler asserts the thread has an associated
"m" (Go scheduler).
This CL is a very simple workaround: discard SIGPROF delivered to non-Go threads. runtime.badsignal(int32) now receives the signal number; if it returns without panicking (e.g. sig==SIGPROF) the signal is discarded.
I don't think there is any really satisfactory solution to the
problem of signal-based profiling in a mixed-language
application. It's not only the issue of handler clobbering,
but also that a C++ SIGPROF handler called in a Go thread
can't unwind the Go stack (and vice versa). The best we can
hope for is not crashing.
Note:
- I've ported this to all POSIX platforms, except ARM-linux which already ignores unexpected signals on m-less threads.
- I've avoided tail-calling runtime.badsignal because AFAICT the 6a/6l don't support it.
- I've avoided hoisting 'push sig' (common to both function calls) because it makes the code harder to read.
- Fixed an (apparently incorrect?) docstring.
R=iant, rsc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6498057
Added instructions for starting an http server
to the godoc header for this package. With the old
instructions, the example "go tool pprof..." commands
wouldn't work unless you happen to be running an http
server on port 6060 in your application.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, adg, giacomo.tartari
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6483049
cgo[1-4].go, go1.go couldn't be tested now
(cgo[1-4].go can only be tested when cgo is enabled, go1.go
contain a list of filenames in the current directory)
R=golang-dev, alex.brainman, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6218048
The decorator hides the number of function arguments from Mercurial,
so Mercurial cannot give proper error messages about commands
invoked with the wrong number of arguments.
Left a 'dummy' hgcommand decorator in place as a way to document
what functions are hg commands, and just in case we need some other
kind of hack in the future.
R=adg, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6488059